<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
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<h3>PROMOTED MAJOR-GENERAL OF VOLUNTEERS—UNOCCUPIED TERRITORY—ADVANCE UPON NASHVILLE—SITUATION OF THE TROOPS—CONFEDERATE RETREAT—RELIEVED OF THE COMMAND—RESTORED TO THE COMMAND—GENERAL SMITH.</h3>
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<p>The news of the fall of Fort Donelson caused great delight all
over the North. At the South, particularly in Richmond, the effect
was correspondingly depressing. I was promptly promoted to the
grade of Major-General of Volunteers, and confirmed by the Senate.
All three of my division commanders were promoted to the same grade
and the colonels who commanded brigades were made
brigadier-generals in the volunteer service. My chief, who was in
St. Louis, telegraphed his congratulations to General Hunter in
Kansas for the services he had rendered in securing the fall of
Fort Donelson by sending reinforcements so rapidly. To Washington
he telegraphed that the victory was due to General C. F. Smith;
"promote him," he said, "and the whole country will applaud." On
the 19th there was published at St. Louis a formal order thanking
Flag-officer Foote and myself, and the forces under our command,
for the victories on the Tennessee and the Cumberland. I received
no other recognition whatever from General Halleck. But General
Cullum, his chief of staff, who was at Cairo, wrote me a warm
congratulatory letter on his own behalf. I approved of General
Smith's promotion highly, as I did all the promotions that were
made.</p>
<p>My opinion was and still is that immediately after the fall of
Fort Donelson the way was opened to the National forces all over
the South-west without much resistance. If one general who would
have taken the responsibility had been in command of all the troops
west of the Alleghanies, he could have marched to Chattanooga,
Corinth, Memphis and Vicksburg with the troops we then had, and as
volunteering was going on rapidly over the North there would soon
have been force enough at all these centres to operate offensively
against any body of the enemy that might be found near them. Rapid
movements and the acquisition of rebellious territory would have
promoted volunteering, so that reinforcements could have been had
as fast as transportation could have been obtained to carry them to
their destination. On the other hand there were tens of thousands
of strong able-bodied young men still at their homes in the
South-western States, who had not gone into the Confederate army in
February, 1862, and who had no particular desire to go. If our
lines had been extended to protect their homes, many of them never
would have gone. Providence ruled differently. Time was given the
enemy to collect armies and fortify his new positions; and twice
afterwards he came near forcing his north-western front up to the
Ohio River.</p>
<p>I promptly informed the department commander of our success at
Fort Donelson and that the way was open now to Clarksville and
Nashville; and that unless I received orders to the contrary I
should take Clarksville on the 21st and Nashville about the 1st of
March. Both these places are on the Cumberland River above Fort
Donelson. As I heard nothing from headquarters on the subject,
General C. F. Smith was sent to Clarksville at the time designated
and found the place evacuated. The capture of forts Henry and
Donelson had broken the line the enemy had taken from Columbus to
Bowling Green, and it was known that he was falling back from the
eastern point of this line and that Buell was following, or at
least advancing. I should have sent troops to Nashville at the time
I sent to Clarksville, but my transportation was limited and there
were many prisoners to be forwarded north.</p>
<p>None of the reinforcements from Buell's army arrived until the
24th of February. Then General Nelson came up, with orders to
report to me with two brigades, he having sent one brigade to
Cairo. I knew General Buell was advancing on Nashville from the
north, and I was advised by scouts that the rebels were leaving
that place, and trying to get out all the supplies they could.
Nashville was, at that time, one of the best provisioned posts in
the South. I had no use for reinforcements now, and thinking Buell
would like to have his troops again, I ordered Nelson to proceed to
Nashville without debarking at Fort Donelson. I sent a gunboat also
as a convoy. The Cumberland River was very high at the time; the
railroad bridge at Nashville had been burned, and all river craft
had been destroyed, or would be before the enemy left. Nashville is
on the west bank of the Cumberland, and Buell was approaching from
the east. I thought the steamers carrying Nelson's division would
be useful in ferrying the balance of Buell's forces across. I
ordered Nelson to put himself in communication with Buell as soon
as possible, and if he found him more than two days off from
Nashville to return below the city and await orders. Buell,
however, had already arrived in person at Edgefield, opposite
Nashville, and Mitchell's division of his command reached there the
same day. Nelson immediately took possession of the city.</p>
<p>After Nelson had gone and before I had learned of Buell's
arrival, I sent word to department headquarters that I should go to
Nashville myself on the 28th if I received no orders to the
contrary. Hearing nothing, I went as I had informed my superior
officer I would do. On arriving at Clarksville I saw a fleet of
steamers at the shore—the same that had taken Nelson's
division—and troops going aboard. I landed and called on the
commanding officer, General C. F. Smith. As soon as he saw me he
showed an order he had just received from Buell in these words:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>NASHVILLE, February 25, 1862.</p>
<p>GENERAL C. F. SMITH,<br/>
Commanding U. S. Forces, Clarksville.</p>
<p>GENERAL:—The landing of a portion of our troops, contrary
to my intentions, on the south side of the river has compelled me
to hold this side at every hazard. If the enemy should assume the
offensive, and I am assured by reliable persons that in view of my
position such is his intention, my force present is altogether
inadequate, consisting of only 15,000 men. I have to request you,
therefore, to come forward with all the available force under your
command. So important do I consider the occasion that I think it
necessary to give this communication all the force of orders, and I
send four boats, the Diana, Woodford, John Rain, and Autocrat, to
bring you up. In five or six days my force will probably be
sufficient to relieve you.</p>
<p>Very respectfully, your ob't srv't,<br/>
D. C. BUELL,<br/>
Brigadier-General Comd'g.</p>
<p>P. S.—The steamers will leave here at 12 o'clock
to-night.</p>
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<p>General Smith said this order was nonsense. But I told him it
was better to obey it. The General replied, "of course I must
obey," and said his men were embarking as fast as they could. I
went on up to Nashville and inspected the position taken by
Nelson's troops. I did not see Buell during the day, and wrote him
a note saying that I had been in Nashville since early morning and
had hoped to meet him. On my return to the boat we met. His troops
were still east of the river, and the steamers that had carried
Nelson's division up were mostly at Clarksville to bring Smith's
division. I said to General Buell my information was that the enemy
was retreating as fast as possible. General Buell said there was
fighting going on then only ten or twelve miles away. I said:
"Quite probably; Nashville contained valuable stores of arms,
ammunition and provisions, and the enemy is probably trying to
carry away all he can. The fighting is doubtless with the
rear-guard who are trying to protect the trains they are getting
away with." Buell spoke very positively of the danger Nashville was
in of an attack from the enemy. I said, in the absence of positive
information, I believed my information was correct. He responded
that he "knew." "Well," I said, "I do not know; but as I came by
Clarksville General Smith's troops were embarking to join you."</p>
<p>Smith's troops were returned the same day. The enemy were trying
to get away from Nashville and not to return to it.</p>
<p>At this time General Albert Sidney Johnston commanded all the
Confederate troops west of the Alleghany Mountains, with the
exception of those in the extreme south. On the National side the
forces confronting him were divided into, at first three, then four
separate departments. Johnston had greatly the advantage in having
supreme command over all troops that could possibly be brought to
bear upon one point, while the forces similarly situated on the
National side, divided into independent commands, could not be
brought into harmonious action except by orders from
Washington.</p>
<p>At the beginning of 1862 Johnston's troops east of the
Mississippi occupied a line extending from Columbus, on his left,
to Mill Springs, on his right. As we have seen, Columbus, both
banks of the Tennessee River, the west bank of the Cumberland and
Bowling Green, all were strongly fortified. Mill Springs was
intrenched. The National troops occupied no territory south of the
Ohio, except three small garrisons along its bank and a force
thrown out from Louisville to confront that at Bowling Green.
Johnston's strength was no doubt numerically inferior to that of
the National troops; but this was compensated for by the advantage
of being sole commander of all the Confederate forces at the West,
and of operating in a country where his friends would take care of
his rear without any detail of soldiers. But when General George H.
Thomas moved upon the enemy at Mill Springs and totally routed him,
inflicting a loss of some 300 killed and wounded, and forts Henry
and Heiman fell into the hands of the National forces, with their
armaments and about 100 prisoners, those losses seemed to
dishearten the Confederate commander so much that he immediately
commenced a retreat from Bowling Green on Nashville. He reached
this latter place on the 14th of February, while Donelson was still
besieged. Buell followed with a portion of the Army of the Ohio,
but he had to march and did not reach the east bank of the
Cumberland opposite Nashville until the 24th of the month, and then
with only one division of his army.</p>
<p>The bridge at Nashville had been destroyed and all boats removed
or disabled, so that a small garrison could have held the place
against any National troops that could have been brought against it
within ten days after the arrival of the force from Bowling Green.
Johnston seemed to lie quietly at Nashville to await the result at
Fort Donelson, on which he had staked the possession of most of the
territory embraced in the States of Kentucky and Tennessee. It is
true, the two generals senior in rank at Fort Donelson were sending
him encouraging dispatches, even claiming great Confederate
victories up to the night of the 16th when they must have been
preparing for their individual escape. Johnston made a fatal
mistake in intrusting so important a command to Floyd, who he must
have known was no soldier even if he possessed the elements of one.
Pillow's presence as second was also a mistake. If these officers
had been forced upon him and designated for that particular
command, then he should have left Nashville with a small garrison
under a trusty officer, and with the remainder of his force gone to
Donelson himself. If he had been captured the result could not have
been worse than it was.</p>
<p>Johnston's heart failed him upon the first advance of National
troops. He wrote to Richmond on the 8th of February, "I think the
gunboats of the enemy will probably take Fort Donelson without the
necessity of employing their land force in cooperation." After the
fall of that place he abandoned Nashville and Chattanooga without
an effort to save either, and fell back into northern Mississippi,
where, six weeks later, he was destined to end his career.</p>
<p>From the time of leaving Cairo I was singularly unfortunate in
not receiving dispatches from General Halleck. The order of the
10th of February directing me to fortify Fort Henry strongly,
particularly to the land side, and saying that intrenching tools
had been sent for that purpose, reached me after Donelson was
invested. I received nothing direct which indicated that the
department commander knew we were in possession of Donelson. I was
reporting regularly to the chief of staff, who had been sent to
Cairo, soon after the troops left there, to receive all reports
from the front and to telegraph the substance to the St. Louis
headquarters. Cairo was at the southern end of the telegraph wire.
Another line was started at once from Cairo to Paducah and
Smithland, at the mouths of the Tennessee and Cumberland
respectively. My dispatches were all sent to Cairo by boat, but
many of those addressed to me were sent to the operator at the end
of the advancing wire and he failed to forward them. This operator
afterwards proved to be a rebel; he deserted his post after a short
time and went south taking his dispatches with him. A telegram from
General McClellan to me of February 16th, the day of the surrender,
directing me to report in full the situation, was not received at
my headquarters until the 3d of March.</p>
<p>On the 2d of March I received orders dated March 1st to move my
command back to Fort Henry, leaving only a small garrison at
Donelson. From Fort Henry expeditions were to be sent against
Eastport, Mississippi, and Paris, Tennessee. We started from
Donelson on the 4th, and the same day I was back on the Tennessee
River. On March 4th I also received the following dispatch from
General Halleck:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>MAJ.-GEN. U. S. GRANT,<br/>
Fort Henry:</p>
<p>You will place Maj.-Gen. C. F. Smith in command of expedition,
and remain yourself at Fort Henry. Why do you not obey my orders to
report strength and positions of your command?</p>
<p>H. W. HALLECK,<br/>
Major-General.</p>
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<p>I was surprised. This was the first intimation I had received
that General Halleck had called for information as to the strength
of my command. On the 6th he wrote to me again. "Your going to
Nashville without authority, and when your presence with your
troops was of the utmost importance, was a matter of very serious
complaint at Washington, so much so that I was advised to arrest
you on your return." This was the first I knew of his objecting to
my going to Nashville. That place was not beyond the limits of my
command, which, it had been expressly declared in orders, were "not
defined." Nashville is west of the Cumberland River, and I had sent
troops that had reported to me for duty to occupy the place. I
turned over the command as directed and then replied to General
Halleck courteously, but asked to be relieved from further duty
under him.</p>
<p>Later I learned that General Halleck had been calling lustily
for more troops, promising that he would do something important if
he could only be sufficiently reinforced. McClellan asked him what
force he then had. Halleck telegraphed me to supply the information
so far as my command was concerned, but I received none of his
dispatches. At last Halleck reported to Washington that he had
repeatedly ordered me to give the strength of my force, but could
get nothing out of me; that I had gone to Nashville, beyond the
limits of my command, without his authority, and that my army was
more demoralized by victory than the army at Bull Run had been by
defeat. General McClellan, on this information, ordered that I
should be relieved from duty and that an investigation should be
made into any charges against me. He even authorized my arrest.
Thus in less than two weeks after the victory at Donelson, the two
leading generals in the army were in correspondence as to what
disposition should be made of me, and in less than three weeks I
was virtually in arrest and without a command.</p>
<p>On the 13th of March I was restored to command, and on the 17th
Halleck sent me a copy of an order from the War Department which
stated that accounts of my misbehavior had reached Washington and
directed him to investigate and report the facts. He forwarded also
a copy of a detailed dispatch from himself to Washington entirely
exonerating me; but he did not inform me that it was his own
reports that had created all the trouble. On the contrary, he wrote
to me, "Instead of relieving you, I wish you, as soon as your new
army is in the field, to assume immediate command, and lead it to
new victories." In consequence I felt very grateful to him, and
supposed it was his interposition that had set me right with the
government. I never knew the truth until General Badeau unearthed
the facts in his researches for his history of my campaigns.</p>
<p>General Halleck unquestionably deemed General C. F. Smith a much
fitter officer for the command of all the forces in the military
district than I was, and, to render him available for such command,
desired his promotion to antedate mine and those of the other
division commanders. It is probable that the general opinion was
that Smith's long services in the army and distinguished deeds
rendered him the more proper person for such command. Indeed I was
rather inclined to this opinion myself at that time, and would have
served as faithfully under Smith as he had done under me. But this
did not justify the dispatches which General Halleck sent to
Washington, or his subsequent concealment of them from me when
pretending to explain the action of my superiors.</p>
<p>On receipt of the order restoring me to command I proceeded to
Savannah on the Tennessee, to which point my troops had advanced.
General Smith was delighted to see me and was unhesitating in his
denunciation of the treatment I had received. He was on a sick bed
at the time, from which he never came away alive. His death was a
severe loss to our western army. His personal courage was
unquestioned, his judgment and professional acquirements were
unsurpassed, and he had the confidence of those he commanded as
well as of those over him.</p>
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