id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 31783 Boynton, Henry V. (Henry Van) Was General Thomas Slow at Nashville? With a Description of the Greatest Cavalry Movement of the War and General James H. Wilson's Cavalry Operations in Tennessee, Alabama, and Georgia .txt text/plain 10164 429 64 Arriving at Nashville, the first point of concentration, General Thomas, after General Sherman had marched away from Hood and left Thomas in "trash" either destroyed or "sent to Thomas." The entire cavalry force was The nucleus around which General Thomas was to organize an army to take Wilson's cavalry an essential factor in the attack on Hood for which he have been accepted,--General Thomas was peremptorily ordered to "attack till General Wilson mounts all his cavalry you will wait till doomsday, veteran army, reveal at every step what General Thomas had in mind when he But General Thomas's plan turned on cavalry refitting a great cavalry force, even as Thomas was organizing a new With the dispersion of Hood's army General Thomas set about preparing for General Wilson then urged with great ability and power that the cavalry Wilson's praises and with new honors for General Thomas. ./cache/31783.txt ./txt/31783.txt