Another author concludes that Hood's ill-planned campaign was the end of the Confederacy. The situation after the fall of Atlanta was unwinnable for Hood. Had he not wasted thousands of men trying to counterattack Sherman's armies within their trenches it may have been better.
Davis didnt want Atlanta to fall without a fight... I guess he got his wish.
Hindsight is always 20/20 though. Hood had a few opportunities to outflank Sherman but the men of the AoT were not the light infantry Stonewall Jackson led in 1862 and the men Sherman commanded were not the green volunteers of Banks and Milroy that opposed them. Nor was Hood the commander that Jackson was.
Had Jackson only lived! I can only ponder if he would have gone westward in 1863 what may have happened. I dont believe he would have declined to go west as Lee did but instead would have looked upon it as God's Will and would have gone. Having Jackson with the Valley Army (II Corps) in the summer and fall of 1863 in Tennessee instead of on the cornfields around Gettysburg... oh, what could have been in the west!
You take Stonewall and pair him with the likes Forrest to act as his eyes and ears. Throw in AP Hill, Early, and Ewell (all healthy) along with the already formidable AoT division commanders, and you have one very powerful army!

Who Jackson would have chosen as his three Corps Commanders is interesting to consider as well. Hardee, Polk, and Ewell is my own guess.
I sure wish HPS would allow the editing of OOBs so we can start creating these scenarios! ... Pretty Please
