<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
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<h3>APPOINTED COLONEL OF THE 21ST ILLINOIS—PERSONNEL OF THE REGIMENT—GENERAL LOGAN—MARCH TO MISSOURI—MOVEMENT AGAINST HARRIS AT FLORIDA, MO.—GENERAL POPE IN COMMAND—STATIONED AT MEXICO, MO.</h3>
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<p>While I was absent from the State capital on this occasion the
President's second call for troops was issued. This time it was for
300,000 men, for three years or the war. This brought into the
United States service all the regiments then in the State service.
These had elected their officers from highest to lowest and were
accepted with their organizations as they were, except in two
instances. A Chicago regiment, the 19th infantry, had elected a
very young man to the colonelcy. When it came to taking the field
the regiment asked to have another appointed colonel and the one
they had previously chosen made lieutenant-colonel. The 21st
regiment of infantry, mustered in by me at Mattoon, refused to go
into the service with the colonel of their selection in any
position. While I was still absent Governor Yates appointed me
colonel of this latter regiment. A few days after I was in charge
of it and in camp on the fair grounds near Springfield.</p>
<p>My regiment was composed in large part of young men of as good
social position as any in their section of the State. It embraced
the sons of farmers, lawyers, physicians, politicians, merchants,
bankers and ministers, and some men of maturer years who had filled
such positions themselves. There were also men in it who could be
led astray; and the colonel, elected by the votes of the regiment,
had proved to be fully capable of developing all there was in his
men of recklessness. It was said that he even went so far at times
as to take the guard from their posts and go with them to the
village near by and make a night of it. When there came a prospect
of battle the regiment wanted to have some one else to lead them. I
found it very hard work for a few days to bring all the men into
anything like subordination; but the great majority favored
discipline, and by the application of a little regular army
punishment all were reduced to as good discipline as one could
ask.</p>
<p>The ten regiments which had volunteered in the State service for
thirty days, it will be remembered, had done so with a pledge to go
into the National service if called upon within that time. When
they volunteered the government had only called for ninety days'
enlistments. Men were called now for three years or the war. They
felt that this change of period released them from the obligation
of re-volunteering. When I was appointed colonel, the 21st regiment
was still in the State service. About the time they were to be
mustered into the United States service, such of them as would go,
two members of Congress from the State, McClernand and Logan,
appeared at the capital and I was introduced to them. I had never
seen either of them before, but I had read a great deal about them,
and particularly about Logan, in the newspapers. Both were
democratic members of Congress, and Logan had been elected from the
southern district of the State, where he had a majority of eighteen
thousand over his Republican competitor. His district had been
settled originally by people from the Southern States, and at the
breaking out of secession they sympathized with the South. At the
first outbreak of war some of them joined the Southern army; many
others were preparing to do so; others rode over the country at
night denouncing the Union, and made it as necessary to guard
railroad bridges over which National troops had to pass in southern
Illinois, as it was in Kentucky or any of the border slave states.
Logan's popularity in this district was unbounded. He knew almost
enough of the people in it by their Christian names, to form an
ordinary congressional district. As he went in politics, so his
district was sure to go. The Republican papers had been demanding
that he should announce where he stood on the questions which at
that time engrossed the whole of public thought. Some were very
bitter in their denunciations of his silence. Logan was not a man
to be coerced into an utterance by threats. He did, however, come
out in a speech before the adjournment of the special session of
Congress which was convened by the President soon after his
inauguration, and announced his undying loyalty and devotion to the
Union. But I had not happened to see that speech, so that when I
first met Logan my impressions were those formed from reading
denunciations of him. McClernand, on the other hand, had early
taken strong grounds for the maintenance of the Union and had been
praised accordingly by the Republican papers. The gentlemen who
presented these two members of Congress asked me if I would have
any objections to their addressing my regiment. I hesitated a
little before answering. It was but a few days before the time set
for mustering into the United States service such of the men as
were willing to volunteer for three years or the war. I had some
doubt as to the effect a speech from Logan might have; but as he
was with McClernand, whose sentiments on the all-absorbing
questions of the day were well known, I gave my consent. McClernand
spoke first; and Logan followed in a speech which he has hardly
equalled since for force and eloquence. It breathed a loyalty and
devotion to the Union which inspired my men to such a point that
they would have volunteered to remain in the army as long as an
enemy of the country continued to bear arms against it. They
entered the United States service almost to a man.</p>
<p>General Logan went to his part of the State and gave his
attention to raising troops. The very men who at first made it
necessary to guard the roads in southern Illinois became the
defenders of the Union. Logan entered the service himself as
colonel of a regiment and rapidly rose to the rank of
major-general. His district, which had promised at first to give
much trouble to the government, filled every call made upon it for
troops, without resorting to the draft. There was no call made when
there were not more volunteers than were asked for. That
congressional district stands credited at the War Department to-day
with furnishing more men for the army than it was called on to
supply.</p>
<p>I remained in Springfield with my regiment until the 3d of July,
when I was ordered to Quincy, Illinois. By that time the regiment
was in a good state of discipline and the officers and men were
well up in the company drill. There was direct railroad
communication between Springfield and Quincy, but I thought it
would be good preparation for the troops to march there. We had no
transportation for our camp and garrison equipage, so wagons were
hired for the occasion and on the 3d of July we started. There was
no hurry, but fair marches were made every day until the Illinois
River was crossed. There I was overtaken by a dispatch saying that
the destination of the regiment had been changed to Ironton,
Missouri, and ordering me to halt where I was and await the arrival
of a steamer which had been dispatched up the Illinois River to
take the regiment to St. Louis. The boat, when it did come,
grounded on a sand-bar a few miles below where we were in camp. We
remained there several days waiting to have the boat get off the
bar, but before this occurred news came that an Illinois regiment
was surrounded by rebels at a point on the Hannibal and St. Joe
Railroad some miles west of Palmyra, in Missouri, and I was ordered
to proceed with all dispatch to their relief. We took the cars and
reached Quincy in a few hours.</p>
<p>When I left Galena for the last time to take command of the 21st
regiment I took with me my oldest son, Frederick D. Grant, then a
lad of eleven years of age. On receiving the order to take rail for
Quincy I wrote to Mrs. Grant, to relieve what I supposed would be
her great anxiety for one so young going into danger, that I would
send Fred home from Quincy by river. I received a prompt letter in
reply decidedly disapproving my proposition, and urging that the
lad should be allowed to accompany me. It came too late. Fred was
already on his way up the Mississippi bound for Dubuque, Iowa, from
which place there was a railroad to Galena.</p>
<p>My sensations as we approached what I supposed might be "a field
of battle" were anything but agreeable. I had been in all the
engagements in Mexico that it was possible for one person to be in;
but not in command. If some one else had been colonel and I had
been lieutenant-colonel I do not think I would have felt any
trepidation. Before we were prepared to cross the Mississippi River
at Quincy my anxiety was relieved; for the men of the besieged
regiment came straggling into town. I am inclined to think both
sides got frightened and ran away.</p>
<p>I took my regiment to Palmyra and remained there for a few days,
until relieved by the 19th Illinois infantry. From Palmyra I
proceeded to Salt River, the railroad bridge over which had been
destroyed by the enemy. Colonel John M. Palmer at that time
commanded the 13th Illinois, which was acting as a guard to workmen
who were engaged in rebuilding this bridge. Palmer was my senior
and commanded the two regiments as long as we remained together.
The bridge was finished in about two weeks, and I received orders
to move against Colonel Thomas Harris, who was said to be encamped
at the little town of Florida, some twenty-five miles south of
where we then were.</p>
<p>At the time of which I now write we had no transportation and
the country about Salt River was sparsely settled, so that it took
some days to collect teams and drivers enough to move the camp and
garrison equipage of a regiment nearly a thousand strong, together
with a week's supply of provision and some ammunition. While
preparations for the move were going on I felt quite comfortable;
but when we got on the road and found every house deserted I was
anything but easy. In the twenty-five miles we had to march we did
not see a person, old or young, male or female, except two horsemen
who were on a road that crossed ours. As soon as they saw us they
decamped as fast as their horses could carry them. I kept my men in
the ranks and forbade their entering any of the deserted houses or
taking anything from them. We halted at night on the road and
proceeded the next morning at an early hour. Harris had been
encamped in a creek bottom for the sake of being near water. The
hills on either side of the creek extend to a considerable height,
possibly more than a hundred feet. As we approached the brow of the
hill from which it was expected we could see Harris' camp, and
possibly find his men ready formed to meet us, my heart kept
getting higher and higher until it felt to me as though it was in
my throat. I would have given anything then to have been back in
Illinois, but I had not the moral courage to halt and consider what
to do; I kept right on. When we reached a point from which the
valley below was in full view I halted. The place where Harris had
been encamped a few days before was still there and the marks of a
recent encampment were plainly visible, but the troops were gone.
My heart resumed its place. It occurred to me at once that Harris
had been as much afraid of me as I had been of him. This was a view
of the question I had never taken before; but it was one I never
forgot afterwards. From that event to the close of the war, I never
experienced trepidation upon confronting an enemy, though I always
felt more or less anxiety. I never forgot that he had as much
reason to fear my forces as I had his. The lesson was valuable.</p>
<p>Inquiries at the village of Florida divulged the fact that
Colonel Harris, learning of my intended movement, while my
transportation was being collected took time by the forelock and
left Florida before I had started from Salt River. He had increased
the distance between us by forty miles. The next day I started back
to my old camp at Salt River bridge. The citizens living on the
line of our march had returned to their houses after we passed, and
finding everything in good order, nothing carried away, they were
at their front doors ready to greet us now. They had evidently been
led to believe that the National troops carried death and
devastation with them wherever they went.</p>
<p>In a short time after our return to Salt River bridge I was
ordered with my regiment to the town of Mexico. General Pope was
then commanding the district embracing all of the State of Missouri
between the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, with his headquarters
in the village of Mexico. I was assigned to the command of a
sub-district embracing the troops in the immediate neighborhood,
some three regiments of infantry and a section of artillery. There
was one regiment encamped by the side of mine. I assumed command of
the whole and the first night sent the commander of the other
regiment the parole and countersign. Not wishing to be outdone in
courtesy, he immediately sent me the countersign for his regiment
for the night. When he was informed that the countersign sent to
him was for use with his regiment as well as mine, it was difficult
to make him understand that this was not an unwarranted
interference of one colonel over another. No doubt he attributed it
for the time to the presumption of a graduate of West Point over a
volunteer pure and simple. But the question was soon settled and we
had no further trouble.</p>
<p>My arrival in Mexico had been preceded by that of two or three
regiments in which proper discipline had not been maintained, and
the men had been in the habit of visiting houses without invitation
and helping themselves to food and drink, or demanding them from
the occupants. They carried their muskets while out of camp and
made every man they found take the oath of allegiance to the
government. I at once published orders prohibiting the soldiers
from going into private houses unless invited by the inhabitants,
and from appropriating private property to their own or to
government uses. The people were no longer molested or made afraid.
I received the most marked courtesy from the citizens of Mexico as
long as I remained there.</p>
<p>Up to this time my regiment had not been carried in the school
of the soldier beyond the company drill, except that it had
received some training on the march from Springfield to the
Illinois River. There was now a good opportunity of exercising it
in the battalion drill. While I was at West Point the tactics used
in the army had been Scott's and the musket the flint lock. I had
never looked at a copy of tactics from the time of my graduation.
My standing in that branch of studies had been near the foot of the
class. In the Mexican war in the summer of 1846, I had been
appointed regimental quartermaster and commissary and had not been
at a battalion drill since. The arms had been changed since then
and Hardee's tactics had been adopted. I got a copy of tactics and
studied one lesson, intending to confine the exercise of the first
day to the commands I had thus learned. By pursuing this course
from day to day I thought I would soon get through the volume.</p>
<p>We were encamped just outside of town on the common, among
scattering suburban houses with enclosed gardens, and when I got my
regiment in line and rode to the front I soon saw that if I
attempted to follow the lesson I had studied I would have to clear
away some of the houses and garden fences to make room. I perceived
at once, however, that Hardee's tactics—a mere translation
from the French with Hardee's name attached—was nothing more
than common sense and the progress of the age applied to Scott's
system. The commands were abbreviated and the movement expedited.
Under the old tactics almost every change in the order of march was
preceded by a "halt," then came the change, and then the "forward
march." With the new tactics all these changes could be made while
in motion. I found no trouble in giving commands that would take my
regiment where I wanted it to go and carry it around all obstacles.
I do not believe that the officers of the regiment ever discovered
that I had never studied the tactics that I used.</p>
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