<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
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<h3>HALLECK ASSUMES COMMAND IN THE FIELD—THE ADVANCE UPON CORINTH—OCCUPATION OF CORINTH—THE ARMY SEPARATED.</h3>
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<p>General Halleck arrived at Pittsburg landing on the 11th of
April and immediately assumed command in the field. On the 21st
General Pope arrived with an army 30,000 strong, fresh from the
capture of Island Number Ten in the Mississippi River. He went into
camp at Hamburg landing five miles above Pittsburg. Halleck had now
three armies: the Army of the Ohio, Buell commanding; the Army of
the Mississippi, Pope commanding; and the Army of the Tennessee.
His orders divided the combined force into the right wing, reserve,
centre and left wing. Major-General George H. Thomas, who had been
in Buell's army, was transferred with his division to the Army of
the Tennessee and given command of the right wing, composed of all
of that army except McClernand's and Lew. Wallace's divisions.
McClernand was assigned to the command of the reserve, composed of
his own and Lew. Wallace's divisions. Buell commanded the centre,
the Army of the Ohio; and Pope the left wing, the Army of the
Mississippi. I was named second in command of the whole, and was
also supposed to be in command of the right wing and reserve.</p>
<p>Orders were given to all the commanders engaged at Shiloh to
send in their reports without delay to department headquarters.
Those from officers of the Army of the Tennessee were sent through
me; but from the Army of the Ohio they were sent by General Buell
without passing through my hands. General Halleck ordered me,
verbally, to send in my report, but I positively declined on the
ground that he had received the reports of a part of the army
engaged at Shiloh without their coming through me. He admitted that
my refusal was justifiable under the circumstances, but explained
that he had wanted to get the reports off before moving the
command, and as fast as a report had come to him he had forwarded
it to Washington.</p>
<p>Preparations were at once made upon the arrival of the new
commander for an advance on Corinth. Owl Creek, on our right, was
bridged, and expeditions were sent to the north-west and west to
ascertain if our position was being threatened from those quarters;
the roads towards Corinth were corduroyed and new ones made;
lateral roads were also constructed, so that in case of necessity
troops marching by different routes could reinforce each other. All
commanders were cautioned against bringing on an engagement and
informed in so many words that it would be better to retreat than
to fight. By the 30th of April all preparations were complete; the
country west to the Mobile and Ohio railroad had been reconnoitred,
as well as the road to Corinth as far as Monterey twelve miles from
Pittsburg. Everywhere small bodies of the enemy had been
encountered, but they were observers and not in force to fight
battles.</p>
<p>Corinth, Mississippi, lies in a south-westerly direction from
Pittsburg landing and about nineteen miles away as the bird would
fly, but probably twenty-two by the nearest wagon-road. It is about
four miles south of the line dividing the States of Tennessee and
Mississippi, and at the junction of the Mississippi and Chattanooga
railroad with the Mobile and Ohio road which runs from Columbus to
Mobile. From Pittsburg to Corinth the land is rolling, but at no
point reaching an elevation that makes high hills to pass over. In
1862 the greater part of the country was covered with forest with
intervening clearings and houses. Underbrush was dense in the low
grounds along the creeks and ravines, but generally not so thick on
the high land as to prevent men passing through with ease. There
are two small creeks running from north of the town and connecting
some four miles south, where they form Bridge Creek which empties
into the Tuscumbia River. Corinth is on the ridge between these
streams and is a naturally strong defensive position. The creeks
are insignificant in volume of water, but the stream to the east
widens out in front of the town into a swamp impassable in the
presence of an enemy. On the crest of the west bank of this stream
the enemy was strongly intrenched.</p>
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<p>Corinth was a valuable strategic point for the enemy to hold,
and consequently a valuable one for us to possess ourselves of. We
ought to have seized it immediately after the fall of Donelson and
Nashville, when it could have been taken without a battle, but
failing then it should have been taken, without delay on the
concentration of troops at Pittsburg landing after the battle of
Shiloh. In fact the arrival of Pope should not have been awaited.
There was no time from the battle of Shiloh up to the evacuation of
Corinth when the enemy would not have left if pushed. The
demoralization among the Confederates from their defeats at Henry
and Donelson; their long marches from Bowling Green, Columbus, and
Nashville, and their failure at Shiloh; in fact from having been
driven out of Kentucky and Tennessee, was so great that a stand for
the time would have been impossible. Beauregard made strenuous
efforts to reinforce himself and partially succeeded. He appealed
to the people of the South-west for new regiments, and received a
few. A. S. Johnston had made efforts to reinforce in the same
quarter, before the battle of Shiloh, but in a different way. He
had negroes sent out to him to take the place of teamsters, company
cooks and laborers in every capacity, so as to put all his white
men into the ranks. The people, while willing to send their sons to
the field, were not willing to part with their negroes. It is only
fair to state that they probably wanted their blacks to raise
supplies for the army and for the families left at home.</p>
<p>Beauregard, however, was reinforced by Van Dorn immediately
after Shiloh with 17,000 men. Interior points, less exposed, were
also depleted to add to the strength at Corinth. With these
reinforcements and the new regiments, Beauregard had, during the
month of May, 1862, a large force on paper, but probably not much
over 50,000 effective men. We estimated his strength at 70,000. Our
own was, in round numbers, 120,000. The defensible nature of the
ground at Corinth, and the fortifications, made 50,000 then enough
to maintain their position against double that number for an
indefinite time but for the demoralization spoken of.</p>
<p>On the 30th of April the grand army commenced its advance from
Shiloh upon Corinth. The movement was a siege from the start to the
close. The National troops were always behind intrenchments, except
of course the small reconnoitring parties sent to the front to
clear the way for an advance. Even the commanders of these parties
were cautioned, "not to bring on an engagement." "It is better to
retreat than to fight." The enemy were constantly watching our
advance, but as they were simply observers there were but few
engagements that even threatened to become battles. All the
engagements fought ought to have served to encourage the enemy.
Roads were again made in our front, and again corduroyed; a line
was intrenched, and the troops were advanced to the new position.
Cross roads were constructed to these new positions to enable the
troops to concentrate in case of attack. The National armies were
thoroughly intrenched all the way from the Tennessee River to
Corinth.</p>
<p>For myself I was little more than an observer. Orders were sent
direct to the right wing or reserve, ignoring me, and advances were
made from one line of intrenchments to another without notifying
me. My position was so embarrassing in fact that I made several
applications during the siege to be relieved.</p>
<p>General Halleck kept his headquarters generally, if not all the
time, with the right wing. Pope being on the extreme left did not
see so much of his chief, and consequently got loose as it were at
times. On the 3d of May he was at Seven Mile Creek with the main
body of his command, but threw forward a division to Farmington,
within four miles of Corinth. His troops had quite a little
engagement at Farmington on that day, but carried the place with
considerable loss to the enemy. There would then have been no
difficulty in advancing the centre and right so as to form a new
line well up to the enemy, but Pope was ordered back to conform
with the general line. On the 8th of May he moved again, taking his
whole force to Farmington, and pushed out two divisions close to
the rebel line. Again he was ordered back. By the 4th of May the
centre and right wing reached Monterey, twelve miles out. Their
advance was slow from there, for they intrenched with every forward
movement. The left wing moved up again on the 25th of May and
intrenched itself close to the enemy. The creek with the marsh
before described, separated the two lines. Skirmishers thirty feet
apart could have maintained either line at this point.</p>
<p>Our centre and right were, at this time, extended so that the
right of the right wing was probably five miles from Corinth and
four from the works in their front. The creek, which was a
formidable obstacle for either side to pass on our left, became a
very slight obstacle on our right. Here the enemy occupied two
positions. One of them, as much as two miles out from his main
line, was on a commanding elevation and defended by an intrenched
battery with infantry supports. A heavy wood intervened between
this work and the National forces. In rear to the south there was a
clearing extending a mile or more, and south of this clearing a
log-house which had been loop-holed and was occupied by infantry.
Sherman's division carried these two positions with some loss to
himself, but with probably greater to the enemy, on the 28th of
May, and on that day the investment of Corinth was complete, or as
complete as it was ever made. Thomas' right now rested west of the
Mobile and Ohio railroad. Pope's left commanded the Memphis and
Charleston railroad east of Corinth.</p>
<p>Some days before I had suggested to the commanding general that
I thought if he would move the Army of the Mississippi at night, by
the rear of the centre and right, ready to advance at daylight,
Pope would find no natural obstacle in his front and, I believed,
no serious artificial one. The ground, or works, occupied by our
left could be held by a thin picket line, owing to the stream and
swamp in front. To the right the troops would have a dry ridge to
march over. I was silenced so quickly that I felt that possibly I
had suggested an unmilitary movement.</p>
<p>Later, probably on the 28th of May, General Logan, whose command
was then on the Mobile and Ohio railroad, said to me that the enemy
had been evacuating for several days and that if allowed he could
go into Corinth with his brigade. Trains of cars were heard coming
in and going out of Corinth constantly. Some of the men who had
been engaged in various capacities on railroads before the war
claimed that they could tell, by putting their ears to the rail,
not only which way the trains were moving but which trains were
loaded and which were empty. They said loaded trains had been going
out for several days and empty ones coming in. Subsequent events
proved the correctness of their judgment. Beauregard published his
orders for the evacuation of Corinth on the 26th of May and fixed
the 29th for the departure of his troops, and on the 30th of May
General Halleck had his whole army drawn up prepared for battle and
announced in orders that there was every indication that our left
was to be attacked that morning. Corinth had already been evacuated
and the National troops marched on and took possession without
opposition. Everything had been destroyed or carried away. The
Confederate commander had instructed his soldiers to cheer on the
arrival of every train to create the impression among the Yankees
that reinforcements were arriving. There was not a sick or wounded
man left by the Confederates, nor stores of any kind. Some
ammunition had been blown up—not removed—but the
trophies of war were a few Quaker guns, logs of about the diameter
of ordinary cannon, mounted on wheels of wagons and pointed in the
most threatening manner towards us.</p>
<p>The possession of Corinth by the National troops was of
strategic importance, but the victory was barren in every other
particular. It was nearly bloodless. It is a question whether the
MORALE of the Confederate troops engaged at Corinth was not
improved by the immunity with which they were permitted to remove
all public property and then withdraw themselves. On our side I
know officers and men of the Army of the Tennessee—and I
presume the same is true of those of the other commands—were
disappointed at the result. They could not see how the mere
occupation of places was to close the war while large and effective
rebel armies existed. They believed that a well-directed attack
would at least have partially destroyed the army defending Corinth.
For myself I am satisfied that Corinth could have been captured in
a two days' campaign commenced promptly on the arrival of
reinforcements after the battle of Shiloh.</p>
<p>General Halleck at once commenced erecting fortifications around
Corinth on a scale to indicate that this one point must be held if
it took the whole National army to do it. All commanding points two
or three miles to the south, south-east and south-west were
strongly fortified. It was expected in case of necessity to connect
these forts by rifle-pits. They were laid out on a scale that would
have required 100,000 men to fully man them. It was probably
thought that a final battle of the war would be fought at that
point. These fortifications were never used. Immediately after the
occupation of Corinth by the National troops, General Pope was sent
in pursuit of the retreating garrison and General Buell soon
followed. Buell was the senior of the two generals and commanded
the entire column. The pursuit was kept up for some thirty miles,
but did not result in the capture of any material of war or
prisoners, unless a few stragglers who had fallen behind and were
willing captives. On the 10th of June the pursuing column was all
back at Corinth. The Army of the Tennessee was not engaged in any
of these movements.</p>
<p>The Confederates were now driven out of West Tennessee, and on
the 6th of June, after a well-contested naval battle, the National
forces took possession of Memphis and held the Mississippi river
from its source to that point. The railroad from Columbus to
Corinth was at once put in good condition and held by us. We had
garrisons at Donelson, Clarksville and Nashville, on the Cumberland
River, and held the Tennessee River from its mouth to Eastport. New
Orleans and Baton Rouge had fallen into the possession of the
National forces, so that now the Confederates at the west were
narrowed down for all communication with Richmond to the single
line of road running east from Vicksburg. To dispossess them of
this, therefore, became a matter of the first importance. The
possession of the Mississippi by us from Memphis to Baton Rouge was
also a most important object. It would be equal to the amputation
of a limb in its weakening effects upon the enemy.</p>
<p>After the capture of Corinth a movable force of 80,000 men,
besides enough to hold all the territory acquired, could have been
set in motion for the accomplishment of any great campaign for the
suppression of the rebellion. In addition to this fresh troops were
being raised to swell the effective force. But the work of
depletion commenced. Buell with the Army of the Ohio was sent east,
following the line of the Memphis and Charleston railroad. This he
was ordered to repair as he advanced—only to have it
destroyed by small guerilla bands or other troops as soon as he was
out of the way. If he had been sent directly to Chattanooga as
rapidly as he could march, leaving two or three divisions along the
line of the railroad from Nashville forward, he could have arrived
with but little fighting, and would have saved much of the loss of
life which was afterwards incurred in gaining Chattanooga. Bragg
would then not have had time to raise an army to contest the
possession of middle and east Tennessee and Kentucky; the battles
of Stone River and Chickamauga would not necessarily have been
fought; Burnside would not have been besieged in Knoxville without
the power of helping himself or escaping; the battle of Chattanooga
would not have been fought. These are the negative advantages, if
the term negative is applicable, which would probably have resulted
from prompt movements after Corinth fell into the possession of the
National forces. The positive results might have been: a bloodless
advance to Atlanta, to Vicksburg, or to any other desired point
south of Corinth in the interior of Mississippi.</p>
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