<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
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<h3>MARCH TO JALAPA—BATTLE OF CERRO GORDO—PEROTE—PUEBLA—SCOTT AND TAYLOR.</h3>
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<p>General Scott had less than twelve thousand men at Vera Cruz. He
had been promised by the administration a very much larger force,
or claimed that he had, and he was a man of veracity. Twelve
thousand was a very small army with which to penetrate two hundred
and sixty miles into an enemy's country, and to besiege the
capital; a city, at that time, of largely over one hundred thousand
inhabitants. Then, too, any line of march that could be selected
led through mountain passes easily defended. In fact, there were at
that time but two roads from Vera Cruz to the City of Mexico that
could be taken by an army; one by Jalapa and Perote, the other by
Cordova and Orizaba, the two coming together on the great plain
which extends to the City of Mexico after the range of mountains is
passed.</p>
<p>It was very important to get the army away from Vera Cruz as
soon as possible, in order to avoid the yellow fever, or vomito,
which usually visits that city early in the year, and is very fatal
to persons not acclimated; but transportation, which was expected
from the North, was arriving very slowly. It was absolutely
necessary to have enough to supply the army to Jalapa, sixty-five
miles in the interior and above the fevers of the coast. At that
point the country is fertile, and an army of the size of General
Scott's could subsist there for an indefinite period. Not counting
the sick, the weak and the garrisons for the captured city and
fort, the moving column was now less than ten thousand strong. This
force was composed of three divisions, under Generals Twiggs,
Patterson, and Worth. The importance of escaping the vomito was so
great that as soon as transportation enough could be got together
to move a division the advance was commenced. On the 8th of April,
Twiggs's division started for Jalapa. He was followed very soon by
Patterson, with his division. General Worth was to bring up the
rear with his command as soon as transportation enough was
assembled to carry six days' rations for his troops with the
necessary ammunition and camp and garrison equipage. It was the
13th of April before this division left Vera Cruz.</p>
<p>The leading division ran against the enemy at Cerro Gordo, some
fifty miles west, on the road to Jalapa, and went into camp at Plan
del Rio, about three miles from the fortifications. General
Patterson reached Plan del Rio with his division soon after Twiggs
arrived. The two were then secure against an attack from Santa
Anna, who commanded the Mexican forces. At all events they
confronted the enemy without reinforcements and without
molestation, until the 18th of April. General Scott had remained at
Vera Cruz to hasten preparations for the field; but on the 12th,
learning the situation at the front, he hastened on to take
personal supervision. He at once commenced his preparations for the
capture of the position held by Santa Anna and of the troops
holding it.</p>
<p>Cerro Gordo is one of the higher spurs of the mountains some
twelve to fifteen miles east of Jalapa, and Santa Anna had selected
this point as the easiest to defend against an invading army. The
road, said to have been built by Cortez, zigzags around the
mountain-side and was defended at every turn by artillery. On
either side were deep chasms or mountain walls. A direct attack
along the road was an impossibility. A flank movement seemed
equally impossible. After the arrival of the commanding-general
upon the scene, reconnoissances were sent out to find, or to make,
a road by which the rear of the enemy's works might be reached
without a front attack. These reconnoissances were made under the
supervision of Captain Robert E. Lee, assisted by Lieutenants P. G.
T. Beauregard, Isaac I. Stevens, Z. B. Tower, G. W. Smith, George
B. McClellan, and J. G. Foster, of the corps of engineers, all
officers who attained rank and fame, on one side or the other, in
the great conflict for the preservation of the unity of the nation.
The reconnoissance was completed, and the labor of cutting out and
making roads by the flank of the enemy was effected by the 17th of
the month. This was accomplished without the knowledge of Santa
Anna or his army, and over ground where he supposed it impossible.
On the same day General Scott issued his order for the attack on
the 18th.</p>
<p>The attack was made as ordered, and perhaps there was not a
battle of the Mexican war, or of any other, where orders issued
before an engagement were nearer being a correct report of what
afterwards took place. Under the supervision of the engineers,
roadways had been opened over chasms to the right where the walls
were so steep that men could barely climb them. Animals could not.
These had been opened under cover of night, without attracting the
notice of the enemy. The engineers, who had directed the opening,
led the way and the troops followed. Artillery was let down the
steep slopes by hand, the men engaged attaching a strong rope to
the rear axle and letting the guns down, a piece at a time, while
the men at the ropes kept their ground on top, paying out
gradually, while a few at the front directed the course of the
piece. In like manner the guns were drawn by hand up the opposite
slopes. In this way Scott's troops reached their assigned position
in rear of most of the intrenchments of the enemy, unobserved. The
attack was made, the Mexican reserves behind the works beat a hasty
retreat, and those occupying them surrendered. On the left General
Pillow's command made a formidable demonstration, which doubtless
held a part of the enemy in his front and contributed to the
victory. I am not pretending to give full details of all the
battles fought, but of the portion that I saw. There were troops
engaged on both sides at other points in which both sustained
losses; but the battle was won as here narrated.</p>
<p>The surprise of the enemy was complete, the victory
overwhelming; some three thousand prisoners fell into Scott's
hands, also a large amount of ordnance and ordnance stores. The
prisoners were paroled, the artillery parked and the small arms and
ammunition destroyed. The battle of Buena Vista was probably very
important to the success of General Scott at Cerro Gordo and in his
entire campaign from Vera Cruz to the great plains reaching to the
City of Mexico. The only army Santa Anna had to protect his capital
and the mountain passes west of Vera Cruz, was the one he had with
him confronting General Taylor. It is not likely that he would have
gone as far north as Monterey to attack the United States troops
when he knew his country was threatened with invasion further
south. When Taylor moved to Saltillo and then advanced on to Buena
Vista, Santa Anna crossed the desert confronting the invading army,
hoping no doubt to crush it and get back in time to meet General
Scott in the mountain passes west of Vera Cruz. His attack on
Taylor was disastrous to the Mexican army, but, notwithstanding
this, he marched his army to Cerro Gordo, a distance not much short
of one thousand miles by the line he had to travel, in time to
intrench himself well before Scott got there. If he had been
successful at Buena Vista his troops would no doubt have made a
more stubborn resistance at Cerro Gordo. Had the battle of Buena
Vista not been fought Santa Anna would have had time to move
leisurely to meet the invader further south and with an army not
demoralized nor depleted by defeat.</p>
<p>After the battle the victorious army moved on to Jalapa, where
it was in a beautiful, productive and healthy country, far above
the fevers of the coast. Jalapa, however, is still in the
mountains, and between there and the great plain the whole line of
the road is easy of defence. It was important, therefore, to get
possession of the great highway between the sea-coast and the
capital up to the point where it leaves the mountains, before the
enemy could have time to re-organize and fortify in our front.
Worth's division was selected to go forward to secure this result.
The division marched to Perote on the great plain, not far from
where the road debouches from the mountains. There is a low, strong
fort on the plain in front of the town, known as the Castle of
Perote. This, however, offered no resistance and fell into our
hands, with its armament.</p>
<p>General Scott having now only nine or ten thousand men west of
Vera Cruz, and the time of some four thousand of them being about
to expire, a long delay was the consequence. The troops were in a
healthy climate, and where they could subsist for an indefinite
period even if their line back to Vera Cruz should be cut off. It
being ascertained that the men whose time would expire before the
City of Mexico could possibly fall into the hands of the American
army, would not remain beyond the term for which they had
volunteered, the commanding-general determined to discharge them at
once, for a delay until the expiration of their time would have
compelled them to pass through Vera Cruz during the season of the
vomito. This reduced Scott's force in the field to about five
thousand men.</p>
<p>Early in May, Worth, with his division, left Perote and marched
on to Puebla. The roads were wide and the country open except
through one pass in a spur of mountains coming up from the south,
through which the road runs. Notwithstanding this the small column
was divided into two bodies, moving a day apart. Nothing occurred
on the march of special note, except that while lying at the town
of Amozoque—an easy day's march east of Puebla—a body
of the enemy's cavalry, two or three thousand strong, was seen to
our right, not more than a mile away. A battery or two, with two or
three infantry regiments, was sent against them and they soon
disappeared. On the 15th of May we entered the city of Puebla.</p>
<p>General Worth was in command at Puebla until the latter end of
May, when General Scott arrived. Here, as well as on the march up,
his restlessness, particularly under responsibilities, showed
itself. During his brief command he had the enemy hovering around
near the city, in vastly superior numbers to his own. The brigade
to which I was attached changed quarters three different times in
about a week, occupying at first quarters near the plaza, in the
heart of the city; then at the western entrance; then at the
extreme east. On one occasion General Worth had the troops in line,
under arms, all day, with three days' cooked rations in their
haversacks. He galloped from one command to another proclaiming the
near proximity of Santa Anna with an army vastly superior to his
own. General Scott arrived upon the scene the latter part of the
month, and nothing more was heard of Santa Anna and his myriads.
There were, of course, bodies of mounted Mexicans hovering around
to watch our movements and to pick up stragglers, or small bodies
of troops, if they ventured too far out. These always withdrew on
the approach of any considerable number of our soldiers. After the
arrival of General Scott I was sent, as quartermaster, with a large
train of wagons, back two days' march at least, to procure forage.
We had less than a thousand men as escort, and never thought of
danger. We procured full loads for our entire train at two
plantations, which could easily have furnished as much more.</p>
<p>There had been great delay in obtaining the authority of
Congress for the raising of the troops asked for by the
administration. A bill was before the National Legislature from
early in the session of 1846-7, authorizing the creation of ten
additional regiments for the war to be attached to the regular
army, but it was the middle of February before it became a law.
Appointments of commissioned officers had then to be made; men had
to be enlisted, the regiments equipped and the whole transported to
Mexico. It was August before General Scott received reinforcement
sufficient to warrant an advance. His moving column, not even now
more than ten thousand strong, was in four divisions, commanded by
Generals Twiggs, Worth, Pillow and Quitman. There was also a
cavalry corps under General Harney, composed of detachments of the
1st, 2d, and 3d dragoons. The advance commenced on the 7th of
August with Twiggs's division in front. The remaining three
divisions followed, with an interval of a day between. The marches
were short, to make concentration easier in case of attack.</p>
<p>I had now been in battle with the two leading commanders
conducting armies in a foreign land. The contrast between the two
was very marked. General Taylor never wore uniform, but dressed
himself entirely for comfort. He moved about the field in which he
was operating to see through his own eyes the situation. Often he
would be without staff officers, and when he was accompanied by
them there was no prescribed order in which they followed. He was
very much given to sit his horse side-ways—with both feet on
one side—particularly on the battlefield. General Scott was
the reverse in all these particulars. He always wore all the
uniform prescribed or allowed by law when he inspected his lines;
word would be sent to all division and brigade commanders in
advance, notifying them of the hour when the commanding general
might be expected. This was done so that all the army might be
under arms to salute their chief as he passed. On these occasions
he wore his dress uniform, cocked hat, aiguillettes, sabre and
spurs. His staff proper, besides all officers constructively on his
staff—engineers, inspectors, quartermasters, etc., that could
be spared—followed, also in uniform and in prescribed order.
Orders were prepared with great care and evidently with the view
that they should be a history of what followed.</p>
<p>In their modes of expressing thought, these two generals
contrasted quite as strongly as in their other characteristics.
General Scott was precise in language, cultivated a style
peculiarly his own; was proud of his rhetoric; not averse to
speaking of himself, often in the third person, and he could bestow
praise upon the person he was talking about without the least
embarrassment. Taylor was not a conversationalist, but on paper he
could put his meaning so plainly that there could be no mistaking
it. He knew how to express what he wanted to say in the fewest
well-chosen words, but would not sacrifice meaning to the
construction of high-sounding sentences. But with their opposite
characteristics both were great and successful soldiers; both were
true, patriotic and upright in all their dealings. Both were
pleasant to serve under—Taylor was pleasant to serve with.
Scott saw more through the eyes of his staff officers than through
his own. His plans were deliberately prepared, and fully expressed
in orders. Taylor saw for himself, and gave orders to meet the
emergency without reference to how they would read in history.</p>
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