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The strategy included a two-pronged
simultaneous attack against Colonel Nathan Kimball's fortress on
the summit of Cheat Mountain and against Brig. Gen. Joseph J.
Reynolds' entrenchments at Elk Water on the Tygart's Valley River.
Approximately 4500 Confederates moved to attack Cheat Summit. The
Union defenders numbered 1800 men at Cheat Summit. The approach
routes by each of the three Confederate brigades were
uncoordinated.
Rain, fog, mountainous terrain,
and a dense forest limited visibility to minimal distances. As a
result, each of the three Confederate Brigades assigned to attack
Cheat Summit Fort acted independently and never made contact with
either of the other two Confederate brigades. The Union defenders
on Cheat Summit were very familiar with the terrain and mountain
trails.
Information from captured Federal
soldiers were so misleading and two Federal probing attacks from
Cheat Summit Fort were so aggressive that Confederate Colonel
Albert Rust and Brigadier General Samuel R. Anderson, each leading
approximately 1500 Confederates at Cheat Mountain, were convinced
that they confronted an overwhelming force. Rust and Anderson
withdrew their 3000 men although they actually faced only about
300 determined Federals outside the Union fortifications. At Elk
Water, General Reynolds' brigade faced three more Confederate
brigades but refused to budge from his entrenchments.
The Confederates did not press an
attack after Colonel John A. Washington, of Lee's staff, was
killed during a reconnaissance of the Union right. Reynolds was so
confident in the face of such timidity that he dispatched two of
his own regiments from Elk Water up the mountain road to relieve
the supposedly besieged fortress garrison, but the arriving Union
reinforcements were unnecessary.
Lee called off the attack and,
after maneuvering in the vicinity, withdrew to Valley Head on
September 17. Reynolds, meanwhile, planned an offensive against
the Confederate forces stationed at the Greenbrier River.
In October, Lee renewed
operations against Laurel Mountain with the troops of Floyd and
William W. Loring, but the operation was called off because of
poor communication and lack of supplies. Lee was recalled to
Richmond on October 30 after achieving little in western Virginia.
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