
Sorry if I'm kinda brief right now. I'm just a little frusturated because I spent most of my day writing an essay and I didn't save it, so of course I lost the information. I'm trying to forget that, so I came here.
Anyway, I was wondering if you guys could give some advice to a newcomer like myself. I'm just coming out of a long and bloody campaign in Kentucky and northern tennessee. It's Nov 1861 and I'm playing as the Union. I have control of all of Kentucky finally except for one town on the Kentucky/Tennessee border. General Grant is in Bowling Green with about 7,000 troops and almost zero cohesion, although he is well supplied. Gen McDowell (one of his divisional commanders is Lyon) is in Ft Henry and Donnelson with about 30,000 troops. He has fairly good cohesion levels but has about three-fourths of his max supply and ammunitions.
Between Gen Grant and McDowell is Clarksville, which is in Union hands but is being besieged by Gen Polk. I have reason to suspect that Polk has about 18,000 men with fairly low cohesion and/or supply. He would've been stronger (before he had about 24,000 men), but Grant (who previously had almost 11,000 men) fought a battle with him. It was a tough fight that ended in a Union victory (Grant inflicted 6,000 casualties but took about 3,500). Anyway, both forces were greatly weakened, and Grant was forced to retreat to Bowling Green.
Nashville is nearby and I have reason to suspect that it is only garrisoned with about 5,000 men.
I suspect that Polk will either pursue Grant, and advance to try to capture Bowling Green (which is a confederate objective town); or maybe Polk will race back to defend Nashville to make sure that it does not get captured by McDowell.
So the question is do I use McDowell's force (in Henry and Donnelson) to capture Nashville before Polk can race back to defend it, or do I attack Polk (using McDowell) in order to stop him from pursuing Grant and capturing Bowling Green?
If you need me to clarify anything, I have no problem in doing so. Sometimes it is hard to understand my sensleess babble.