<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_38"></SPAN>CHAPTER 38</h2>
<h3>BULL RUN TO MURFREESBORO', 1861-1862</h3>
<p>[Illustration: RAILROADS AND RIVERS OF THE SOUTH.]</p>
<p class="side">The field of war.</p>
<p><b>386. Nature of the Conflict.</b>--The overthrow of the
Confederate states proved to be very difficult. The Alleghany
Mountains cut the South into two great fields of war. Deep and
rapid rivers flowed from the mountains into the Atlantic or into
the Mississippi. Each of these rivers was a natural line of
defense. The first line was the Potomac and the Ohio. But when the
Confederates were driven from this line, they soon found another
equally good a little farther south. Then again the South was only
partly settled. Good roads were rare, but there were many poor
roads. The maps gave only the good roads. By these the Northern
soldiers had to march while the Southern armies were often guided
through paths unknown to the Northerners, and thus were able to
march shorter distances between two battlefields or between two
important points.</p>
<p class="side">Plan of campaign.<br/>
Disaster at Bull Run, July, 1861. <i>Source-Book</i>, 305-308.</p>
<p><b>387. The Bull Run Campaign, July, 1861.</b>--Northern
soldiers crossed the Potomac into Virginia and found the
Confederates posted at Bull Run near Manassas Junction. Other
Northern soldiers pressed into the Shenandoah Valley from Harper's
Ferry. They, too, found a Confederate army in front of them. The
plan of the Union campaign is now clear: General McDowell was to
attack the Confederates at Bull Run, while General Patterson
attacked the Confederates in the Valley, and kept them so busy that
they could not go to the help of their comrades at Bull Run. It
fell out otherwise, for Patterson retreated and left the
Confederate general, Johnston, free to go to the aid of the sorely
pressed Confederates at Bull Run. McDowell attacked vigorously and
broke the Confederate line; but he could not maintain his position.
The Union troops at first retreated slowly. Then they became
frightened and fled, in all haste, back to Washington. The first
campaign ended in disaster.</p>
<p>[Illustration: GENERAL MCCLELLAN.]</p>
<p class="side">The Army of the Potomac, 1862.</p>
<p><b>388. The Army of the Potomac.</b>--While the Bull Run
campaign was going on in eastern Virginia, Union soldiers had been
winning victories in western Virginia. These were led by General
George B. McClellan. He now came to Washington and took command of
the troops operating in front of the capital. During the autumn,
winter, and spring he drilled his men with great skill and care. In
March, 1862, the Army of the Potomac left its camps a splendidly
drilled body of soldiers.</p>
<p class="side">Southern preparations. <i>Source-Book</i>,
308-311.<br/>
Richmond.<br/>
Army of Northern Virginia.</p>
<p><b>389. The Army of Northern Virginia.</b>--Meantime the
government of the Confederacy had gathered great masses of
soldiers. There were not nearly as many white men of fighting age
in the South as there were in the North. But what men there were
could be placed in the fighting line, because the negro slaves
could produce the food needed by the armies and do the hard labor
of making forts. The capital of the Confederacy was now established
at Richmond, on the James River, in Virginia. The army defending
this capital was called the Army of Northern Virginia. It was
commanded by Joseph E. Johnston; but its ablest officers were
Robert E. Lee and Thomas J. Jackson (Stonewall Jackson).</p>
<p class="side">McClellan's plan of campaign, 1862.<br/>
Objections to it.</p>
<p><b>390. Plan of the Peninsular Campaign.</b>--The country
between the Potomac and the James was cut up by rivers, as the
Rappahannock, the Mattapony, and Pamunkey, and part of it was a
wilderness. McClellan planned to carry his troops by water to the
peninsula between the James and the York and Pamunkey rivers. He
would then have a clear road to Richmond, with no great rivers to
dispute with the enemy. Johnston would be obliged to leave his camp
at Bull Run and march southward to the defense of Richmond. The
great objection to the plan was that Johnston might attack
Washington instead of going to face McClellan. General Jackson also
was in the Shenandoah Valley. He might march down the Valley, cross
the Potomac, and seize Washington. So the government kept
seventy-five thousand of McClellan's men for the defense of the
Federal capital.</p>
<p>[Illustration: THE "MONITOR."]</p>
<p class="side">The <i>Monitor</i> and the <i>Merrimac</i>. <i>Hero
Tales</i>, 183, 195.</p>
<p><b>391. The <i>Monitor</i> and the <i>Merrimac</i>.</b>--On
March 8 a queer-looking craft steamed out from Norfolk, Virginia,
and attacked the Union fleet at anchor near Fortress Monroe. She
destroyed two wooden frigates, the <i>Cumberland</i> and the
<i>Congress</i>, and began the destruction of the <i>Minnesota</i>.
She then steamed back to Norfolk. This formidable vessel was the
old frigate <i>Merrimac</i>. Upon her decks the Confederates had
built an iron house. From these iron sides the balls of the Union
frigates rolled harmlessly away. But that night an even
stranger-looking ship appeared at Fortress Monroe. This was the
<i>Monitor</i>, a floating fort, built of iron. She was designed by
John Ericsson, a Swedish immigrant. When the <i>Merrimac</i> came
back to finish the destruction of the <i>Minnesota</i>, the
<i>Monitor</i> steamed directly to her. These two ironclads fought
and fought. At last the <i>Merrimac</i> steamed away and never
renewed the fight.</p>
<p class="side">Battle of Fair Oaks, May, 1862.<br/>
The Seven Days.<br/>
Malvern Hill.</p>
<p><b>392. The Peninsular Campaign, 1862.</b>--By the end of May
McClellan had gained a position within ten miles of Richmond.
Meantime, Jackson fought so vigorously in the Shenandoah Valley
that the Washington government refused to send more men to
McClellan, although Johnston had gone with his army to the defense
of Richmond. On May 31 the Army of the Potomac and the Army of
Northern Virginia fought a hard battle at Fair Oaks. Johnston was
wounded, and Lee took the chief command. He summoned Jackson from
the Valley and attacked McClellan day after day, June 26 to July 2,
1862. These terrible battles of the Seven Days forced McClellan to
change his base to the James, where he would be near the fleet. At
Malvern Hill Lee and Jackson once more attacked him and were beaten
off with fearful loss.</p>
<p class="side">Lee's plan of campaign.<br/>
Second battle of Bull Run, August, 1862.</p>
<p><b>393. Second Bull Run Campaign.</b>--The Army of the Potomac
was still uncomfortably near Richmond. It occurred to Lee that if
he should strike a hard blow at the army in front of Washington,
Lincoln would recall McClellan. Suddenly, without any warning,
Jackson appeared at Manassas Junction (p. 317). McClellan was at
once ordered to transport his army by water to the Potomac, and
place it under the orders of General John Pope, commanding the
forces in front of Washington. McClellan did as he was ordered. But
Lee moved faster than he could move. Before the Army of the Potomac
was thoroughly in Pope's grasp, Lee attacked the Union forces near
Bull Run. He defeated them, drove them off the field and back into
the forts defending Washington (August, 1862).</p>
<p class="side">Lee invades Maryland.<br/>
Antietam, September, 1862. <i>Hero Tales</i>, 199-209.</p>
<p><b>394. The Antietam Campaign, 1862.</b>--Lee now crossed the
Potomac into Maryland. But he found more resistance than he had
looked for. McClellan was again given chief command. Gathering his
forces firmly together, he kept between Lee and Washington, and
threatened Lee's communications with Virginia. The Confederates
drew back. McClellan found them strongly posted near the Antietam
and attacked them. The Union soldiers fought splendidly. But
military writers say that McClellan's attacks were not well
planned. At all events, the Army of the Potomac lost more than
twelve thousand men to less than ten thousand on the Confederate
side, and Lee made good his retreat to Virginia. McClellan was now
removed from command, and Ambrose E. Burnside became chief of the
Army of the Potomac.</p>
<p>[Illustration: ANTIETAM (A WAR-TIME SKETCH).]</p>
<p class="side">Battle of Fredericksburg, December, 1862.</p>
<p><b>395. Fredericksburg, December, 1862.</b>--Burnside found Lee
strongly posted on Marye's Heights, which rise sharply behind the
little town of Fredericksburg on the southern bank of the
Rappahannock River. Burnside attacked in front. His soldiers had to
cross the river and assault the hill in face of a murderous
fire--and in vain. He lost thirteen thousand men to only four
thousand of the Confederates. "Fighting Joe" Hooker now succeeded
Burnside as commander of the Army of the Potomac. We must now turn
to the West, and see what had been doing there in 1861-62.</p>
<p class="side">General Grant.<br/>
He seizes Cairo.<br/>
Battle of Mill Springs, January, 1862.</p>
<p><b>396. Grant and Thomas.</b>--In Illinois there appeared a
trained soldier of fierce energy and invincible will, Ulysses
Simpson Grant. He had been educated at West Point and had served in
the Mexican War. In September, 1861, he seized Cairo at the
junction of the Ohio and the Mississippi. In January, 1862, General
George H. Thomas defeated a Confederate force at Mill Springs, in
the upper valley of the Cumberland River. In this way Grant and
Thomas secured the line of the Ohio and eastern Kentucky for the
Union.</p>
<p>[Illustration: THE BRIDGE AT ANTIETAM. Burnside's soldiers
charged over the bridge from the middle foreground.]</p>
<p class="side">Capture of Fort Henry, February, 1862.<br/>
Fort Donelson.</p>
<p><b>397. Forts Henry and Donelson, February, 1862.</b>--In
February, 1862, General Grant and Commodore Foote attacked two
forts which the Confederates had built to keep the Federal gunboats
from penetrating the western part of the Confederacy. Fort Henry
yielded almost at once, but the Union forces besieged Fort Donelson
for a longer time. Soon the Confederate defense became hopeless,
and General Buckner asked for the terms of surrender.
"Unconditional surrender," replied Grant, and Buckner surrendered.
The lower Tennessee and the lower Cumberland were now open to the
Union forces.</p>
<p class="side">The lower Mississippi.<br/>
Admiral Farragut.</p>
<p><b>398. Importance of New Orleans.</b>--New Orleans and the
lower Mississippi were of great importance to both sides, for the
possession of this region gave the Southerners access to Texas, and
through Texas to Mexico. Union fleets were blockading every
important Southern port. But as long as commerce overland with
Mexico could be maintained, the South could struggle on. The
Mississippi, too, has so many mouths that it was difficult to keep
vessels from running in and out. For these reasons the Federal
government determined to seize New Orleans and the lower
Mississippi. The command of the expedition was given to Farragut,
who had passed his boyhood in Louisiana. He was given as good a
fleet as could be provided, and a force of soldiers was sent to
help him.</p>
<p>[Illustration: A RIVER GUNBOAT.]</p>
<p class="side">Capture of New Orleans, April, 1862.
<i>Higginson</i>, 303-304; <i>Source-Book</i>, 313-315.</p>
<p><b>399. New Orleans captured, April, 1862.</b>--Farragut carried
his fleet into the Mississippi, but found his way upstream barred
by two forts on the river's bank. A great chain stretched across
the river below the forts, and a fleet of river gunboats with an
ironclad or two was in waiting above the forts. Chain, forts, and
gunboats all gave way before Farragut's forceful will. At night he
passed the forts amid a terrific cannonade. Once above them New
Orleans was at his mercy. It surrendered, and with the forts was
soon occupied by the Union army. The lower Mississippi was lost to
the Confederacy.</p>
<p>[Illustration: A WAR-TIME ENVELOPE.]</p>
<p class="side">Shiloh, April, 1862.<br/>
Corinth, May, 1862.</p>
<p><b>400. Shiloh and Corinth, April, May, 1862.</b>--General
Halleck now directed the operations of the Union armies in the
West. He ordered Grant to take his men up the Tennessee to
Pittsburg Landing and there await the arrival of Buell with a
strong force overland from Nashville. Grant encamped with his
troops on the western bank of the Tennessee between Shiloh Church
and Pittsburg Landing. Albert Sidney Johnston, the Confederate
commander in the West, attacked him suddenly and with great fury.
Soon the Union army was pushed back to the river. In his place many
a leader would have withdrawn. But Grant, with amazing courage,
held on. In the afternoon Buell's leading regiments reached the
other side of the river. In the night they were ferried across, and
Grant's outlying commands were brought to the front. The next
morning Grant attacked in his turn and slowly but surely pushed the
Confederates off the field. Halleck then united Grant's, Buell's,
and Pope's armies and captured Corinth.</p>
<p class="side">General Bragg invades Kentucky.<br/>
Battle of Perryville, October, 1862.<br/>
Murfreesboro', December, 1862. <i>Eggleston</i>, 331.</p>
<p><b>401. Bragg in Tennessee and Kentucky.</b>--General Braxton
Bragg now took a large part of the Confederate army, which had
fought at Shiloh and Corinth, to Chattanooga. He then marched
rapidly across Tennessee and Kentucky to the neighborhood of
Louisville on the Ohio River. Buell was sent after him, and the two
armies fought an indecisive battle at Perryville. Then Bragg
retreated to Chattanooga. In a few months he was again on the
march. Rosecrans had now succeeded Buell. He attacked Bragg at
Murfreesboro'. For a long time the contest was equal. In the end,
however, the Confederates were beaten and retired from the
field.</p>
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