You are on page 1of 2

Cumberland Pontoons

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Cumberland pontoons were folding pontoon bridges developed during the American Civil War to
facilitate the movement of Union forces across the rivers of the Mid-South as the Federal forces
advanced southward through Tennessee and Georgia.
Early pontoon bridges during the Civil War were heavy and awkward, and required special long-geared
pontoon carriers to transport them to the site of the planned river crossing. There were two main types
the French-designed wooden bateau (known in the army as a "Cincinnati pontoon") and the Russian
pontoon, a canvas boat. Both types were twenty-two feet in length and took considerable time to set up,
requiring several men to lift into position and pin the individual sections together.[1]
Early in 1864, the commander of the Army of the Cumberland, Major General George H. Thomas, was
seeking a light-weight, easy-to-haul and erect pontoon bridge to move his troops across unfordable
rivers and streams. Knowing the limitations of the two systems used by the armies in the Western
Theater, he had folding pontoons developed. A similar idea had been instigated by his predecessor
William S. Rosecrans earlier in the war, but had not been adopted. Captain William E. Merrill,
Thomas's chief engineer, improved on Rosecrans's prototype, making it lighter and stronger. He
replaced the pins that held individual sections together with hinges so that the side frame sections
folded together instead of separating. The new design yielded a portable boat that was lightweight,
small enough to carry on a standard supply wagon, and easier to construct in the field. It was also
strong enough to support horse-drawn artillery and fully loaded wagons.[2]
These boats soon became popularly known as Cumberland pontoons. Merrill had the first ones
constructed in the army's engineer workshops in Nashville, Tennessee, under the supervision of
Lieutenant James R. Willet. Soon, a train of fifty new boats was transported to the field armies. William
T. Sherman used the new bridges extensively during the first two months of the Atlanta Campaign, first
laying them across the Etowah River. He later used them during the March to the Sea and the 1865
Carolinas Campaign.[3]

References
Partridge, Charles A., History of the Ninety-sixth Regiment, Illinois Volunteers. Brown,
Pettibone, 1887.
Woodward, Steven E., The Art of Command in the Civil War, University of Nebraska Press,
1998. ISBN 0-8032-4785-0.

Notes
1.
Partridge, p. 630.
Woodward, p. 107.
3. Partridge, 630-31.

This article about the American Civil War is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by
expanding it.

Categories:

American Civil War stubs


Civil War military equipment of the United States
Georgia (U.S. state) in the American Civil War
Pontoon bridges
Military bridging equipment

You might also like