<h2>CHAPTER XXXI.</h2>
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<h3>HEADQUARTERS MOVED TO HOLLY SPRINGS—GENERAL M'CLERNAND IN COMMAND—ASSUMING COMMAND AT YOUNG'S POINT—OPERATIONS ABOVE VICKSBURG—FORTIFICATIONS ABOUT VICKSBURG—THE CANAL—LAKE PROVIDENCE—OPERATIONS AT YAZOO PASS.</h3>
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<p>This interruption in my communications north—I was really
cut off from communication with a great part of my own command
during this time—resulted in Sherman's moving from Memphis
before McClernand could arrive, for my dispatch of the 18th did not
reach McClernand. Pemberton got back to Vicksburg before Sherman
got there. The rebel positions were on a bluff on the Yazoo River,
some miles above its mouth. The waters were high so that the
bottoms were generally overflowed, leaving only narrow causeways of
dry land between points of debarkation and the high bluffs. These
were fortified and defended at all points. The rebel position was
impregnable against any force that could be brought against its
front. Sherman could not use one-fourth of his force. His efforts
to capture the city, or the high ground north of it, were
necessarily unavailing.</p>
<p>Sherman's attack was very unfortunate, but I had no opportunity
of communicating with him after the destruction of the road and
telegraph to my rear on the 20th. He did not know but what I was in
the rear of the enemy and depending on him to open a new base of
supplies for the troops with me. I had, before he started from
Memphis, directed him to take with him a few small steamers
suitable for the navigation of the Yazoo, not knowing but that I
might want them to supply me after cutting loose from my base at
Grenada.</p>
<p>On the 23d I removed my headquarters back to Holly Springs. The
troops were drawn back gradually, but without haste or confusion,
finding supplies abundant and no enemy following. The road was not
damaged south of Holly Springs by Van Dorn, at least not to an
extent to cause any delay. As I had resolved to move headquarters
to Memphis, and to repair the road to that point, I remained at
Holly Springs until this work was completed.</p>
<p>On the 10th of January, the work on the road from Holly Springs
to Grand Junction and thence to Memphis being completed, I moved my
headquarters to the latter place. During the campaign here
described, the losses (mostly captures) were about equal, crediting
the rebels with their Holly Springs capture, which they could not
hold.</p>
<p>When Sherman started on his expedition down the river he had
20,000 men, taken from Memphis, and was reinforced by 12,000 more
at Helena, Arkansas. The troops on the west bank of the river had
previously been assigned to my command. McClernand having received
the orders for his assignment reached the mouth of the Yazoo on the
2d of January, and immediately assumed command of all the troops
with Sherman, being a part of his own corps, the 13th, and all of
Sherman's, the 15th. Sherman, and Admiral Porter with the fleet,
had withdrawn from the Yazoo. After consultation they decided that
neither the army nor navy could render service to the cause where
they were, and learning that I had withdrawn from the interior of
Mississippi, they determined to return to the Arkansas River and to
attack Arkansas Post, about fifty miles up that stream and
garrisoned by about five or six thousand men. Sherman had learned
of the existence of this force through a man who had been captured
by the enemy with a steamer loaded with ammunition and other
supplies intended for his command. The man had made his escape.
McClernand approved this move reluctantly, as Sherman says. No
obstacle was encountered until the gunboats and transports were
within range of the fort. After three days' bombardment by the navy
an assault was made by the troops and marines, resulting in the
capture of the place, and in taking 5,000 prisoners and 17 guns. I
was at first disposed to disapprove of this move as an unnecessary
side movement having no especial bearing upon the work before us;
but when the result was understood I regarded it as very important.
Five thousand Confederate troops left in the rear might have caused
us much trouble and loss of property while navigating the
Mississippi.</p>
<p>Immediately after the reduction of Arkansas Post and the capture
of the garrison, McClernand returned with his entire force to
Napoleon, at the mouth of the Arkansas River. From here I received
messages from both Sherman and Admiral Porter, urging me to come
and take command in person, and expressing their distrust of
McClernand's ability and fitness for so important and intricate an
expedition.</p>
<p>On the 17th I visited McClernand and his command at Napoleon. It
was here made evident to me that both the army and navy were so
distrustful of McClernand's fitness to command that, while they
would do all they could to insure success, this distrust was an
element of weakness. It would have been criminal to send troops
under these circumstances into such danger. By this time I had
received authority to relieve McClernand, or to assign any person
else to the command of the river expedition, or to assume command
in person. I felt great embarrassment about McClernand. He was the
senior major-general after myself within the department. It would
not do, with his rank and ambition, to assign a junior over him.
Nothing was left, therefore, but to assume the command myself. I
would have been glad to put Sherman in command, to give him an
opportunity to accomplish what he had failed in the December
before; but there seemed no other way out of the difficulty, for he
was junior to McClernand. Sherman's failure needs no apology.</p>
<p>On the 20th I ordered General McClernand with the entire
command, to Young's Point and Milliken's Bend, while I returned to
Memphis to make all the necessary preparation for leaving the
territory behind me secure. General Hurlbut with the 16th corps was
left in command. The Memphis and Charleston railroad was held,
while the Mississippi Central was given up. Columbus was the only
point between Cairo and Memphis, on the river, left with a
garrison. All the troops and guns from the posts on the abandoned
railroad and river were sent to the front.</p>
<p>On the 29th of January I arrived at Young's Point and assumed
command the following day. General McClernand took exception in a
most characteristic way—for him. His correspondence with me
on the subject was more in the nature of a reprimand than a
protest. It was highly insubordinate, but I overlooked it, as I
believed, for the good of the service. General McClernand was a
politician of very considerable prominence in his State; he was a
member of Congress when the secession war broke out; he belonged to
that political party which furnished all the opposition there was
to a vigorous prosecution of the war for saving the Union; there
was no delay in his declaring himself for the Union at all hazards,
and there was no uncertain sound in his declaration of where he
stood in the contest before the country. He also gave up his seat
in Congress to take the field in defence of the principles he had
proclaimed.</p>
<p>The real work of the campaign and siege of Vicksburg now began.
The problem was to secure a footing upon dry ground on the east
side of the river from which the troops could operate against
Vicksburg. The Mississippi River, from Cairo south, runs through a
rich alluvial valley of many miles in width, bound on the east by
land running from eighty up to two or more hundred feet above the
river. On the west side the highest land, except in a few places,
is but little above the highest water. Through this valley the
river meanders in the most tortuous way, varying in direction to
all points of the compass. At places it runs to the very foot of
the bluffs. After leaving Memphis, there are no such highlands
coming to the water's edge on the east shore until Vicksburg is
reached.</p>
<p>The intervening land is cut up by bayous filled from the river
in high water—many of them navigable for steamers. All of
them would be, except for overhanging trees, narrowness and
tortuous course, making it impossible to turn the bends with
vessels of any considerable length. Marching across this country in
the face of an enemy was impossible; navigating it proved equally
impracticable. The strategical way according to the rule,
therefore, would have been to go back to Memphis; establish that as
a base of supplies; fortify it so that the storehouses could be
held by a small garrison, and move from there along the line of
railroad, repairing as we advanced, to the Yallabusha, or to
Jackson, Mississippi. At this time the North had become very much
discouraged. Many strong Union men believed that the war must prove
a failure. The elections of 1862 had gone against the party which
was for the prosecution of the war to save the Union if it took the
last man and the last dollar. Voluntary enlistments had ceased
throughout the greater part of the North, and the draft had been
resorted to to fill up our ranks. It was my judgment at the time
that to make a backward movement as long as that from Vicksburg to
Memphis, would be interpreted, by many of those yet full of hope
for the preservation of the Union, as a defeat, and that the draft
would be resisted, desertions ensue and the power to capture and
punish deserters lost. There was nothing left to be done but to go
FORWARD TO A DECISIVE VICTORY. This was in my mind from the moment
I took command in person at Young's Point.</p>
<p>The winter of 1862-3 was a noted one for continuous high water
in the Mississippi and for heavy rains along the lower river. To
get dry land, or rather land above the water, to encamp the troops
upon, took many miles of river front. We had to occupy the levees
and the ground immediately behind. This was so limited that one
corps, the 17th, under General McPherson, was at Lake Providence,
seventy miles above Vicksburg.</p>
<p>It was in January the troops took their position opposite
Vicksburg. The water was very high and the rains were incessant.
There seemed no possibility of a land movement before the end of
March or later, and it would not do to lie idle all this time. The
effect would be demoralizing to the troops and injurious to their
health. Friends in the North would have grown more and more
discouraged, and enemies in the same section more and more insolent
in their gibes and denunciation of the cause and those engaged in
it.</p>
<p>I always admired the South, as bad as I thought their cause, for
the boldness with which they silenced all opposition and all
croaking, by press or by individuals, within their control. War at
all times, whether a civil war between sections of a common country
or between nations, ought to be avoided, if possible with honor.
But, once entered into, it is too much for human nature to tolerate
an enemy within their ranks to give aid and comfort to the armies
of the opposing section or nation.</p>
<p>Vicksburg, as stated before, is on the first high land coming to
the river's edge, below that on which Memphis stands. The bluff, or
high land, follows the left bank of the Yazoo for some distance and
continues in a southerly direction to the Mississippi River, thence
it runs along the Mississippi to Warrenton, six miles below. The
Yazoo River leaves the high land a short distance below Haines'
Bluff and empties into the Mississippi nine miles above Vicksburg.
Vicksburg is built on this high land where the Mississippi washes
the base of the hill. Haines' Bluff, eleven miles from Vicksburg,
on the Yazoo River, was strongly fortified. The whole distance from
there to Vicksburg and thence to Warrenton was also intrenched,
with batteries at suitable distances and rifle-pits connecting
them.</p>
<p>From Young's Point the Mississippi turns in a north-easterly
direction to a point just above the city, when it again turns and
runs south-westerly, leaving vessels, which might attempt to run
the blockade, exposed to the fire of batteries six miles below the
city before they were in range of the upper batteries. Since then
the river has made a cut-off, leaving what was the peninsula in
front of the city, an island. North of the Yazoo was all a marsh,
heavily timbered, cut up with bayous, and much overflowed. A front
attack was therefore impossible, and was never contemplated;
certainly not by me. The problem then became, how to secure a
landing on high ground east of the Mississippi without an apparent
retreat. Then commenced a series of experiments to consume time,
and to divert the attention of the enemy, of my troops and of the
public generally. I, myself, never felt great confidence that any
of the experiments resorted to would prove successful. Nevertheless
I was always prepared to take advantage of them in case they
did.</p>
<p>In 1862 General Thomas Williams had come up from New Orleans and
cut a ditch ten or twelve feet wide and about as deep, straight
across from Young's Point to the river below. The distance across
was a little over a mile. It was Williams' expectation that when
the river rose it would cut a navigable channel through; but the
canal started in an eddy from both ends, and, of course, it only
filled up with water on the rise without doing any execution in the
way of cutting. Mr. Lincoln had navigated the Mississippi in his
younger days and understood well its tendency to change its
channel, in places, from time to time. He set much store
accordingly by this canal. General McClernand had been, therefore,
directed before I went to Young's Point to push the work of
widening and deepening this canal. After my arrival the work was
diligently pushed with about 4,000 men—as many as could be
used to advantage—until interrupted by a sudden rise in the
river that broke a dam at the upper end, which had been put there
to keep the water out until the excavation was completed. This was
on the 8th of March.</p>
<p>Even if the canal had proven a success, so far as to be
navigable for steamers, it could not have been of much advantage to
us. It runs in a direction almost perpendicular to the line of
bluffs on the opposite side, or east bank, of the river. As soon as
the enemy discovered what we were doing he established a battery
commanding the canal throughout its length. This battery soon drove
out our dredges, two in number, which were doing the work of
thousands of men. Had the canal been completed it might have proven
of some use in running transports through, under the cover of
night, to use below; but they would yet have to run batteries,
though for a much shorter distance.</p>
<p>While this work was progressing we were busy in other
directions, trying to find an available landing on high ground on
the east bank of the river, or to make water-ways to get below the
city, avoiding the batteries.</p>
<p>On the 30th of January, the day after my arrival at the front, I
ordered General McPherson, stationed with his corps at Lake
Providence, to cut the levee at that point. If successful in
opening a channel for navigation by this route, it would carry us
to the Mississippi River through the mouth of the Red River, just
above Port Hudson and four hundred miles below Vicksburg by the
river.</p>
<p>Lake Providence is a part of the old bed of the Mississippi,
about a mile from the present channel. It is six miles long and has
its outlet through Bayou Baxter, Bayou Macon, and the Tensas,
Washita and Red Rivers. The last three are navigable streams at all
seasons. Bayous Baxter and Macon are narrow and tortuous, and the
banks are covered with dense forests overhanging the channel. They
were also filled with fallen timber, the accumulation of years. The
land along the Mississippi River, from Memphis down, is in all
instances highest next to the river, except where the river washes
the bluffs which form the boundary of the valley through which it
winds. Bayou Baxter, as it reaches lower land, begins to spread out
and disappears entirely in a cypress swamp before it reaches the
Macon. There was about two feet of water in this swamp at the time.
To get through it, even with vessels of the lightest draft, it was
necessary to clear off a belt of heavy timber wide enough to make a
passage way. As the trees would have to be cut close to the
bottom—under water—it was an undertaking of great
magnitude.</p>
<p>On the 4th of February I visited General McPherson, and remained
with him several days. The work had not progressed so far as to
admit the water from the river into the lake, but the troops had
succeeded in drawing a small steamer, of probably not over thirty
tons' capacity, from the river into the lake. With this we were
able to explore the lake and bayou as far as cleared. I saw then
that there was scarcely a chance of this ever becoming a
practicable route for moving troops through an enemy's country. The
distance from Lake Providence to the point where vessels going by
that route would enter the Mississippi again, is about four hundred
and seventy miles by the main river. The distance would probably be
greater by the tortuous bayous through which this new route would
carry us. The enemy held Port Hudson, below where the Red River
debouches, and all the Mississippi above to Vicksburg. The Red
River, Washita and Tensas were, as has been said, all navigable
streams, on which the enemy could throw small bodies of men to
obstruct our passage and pick off our troops with their
sharpshooters. I let the work go on, believing employment was
better than idleness for the men. Then, too, it served as a cover
for other efforts which gave a better prospect of success. This
work was abandoned after the canal proved a failure.</p>
<p>Lieutenant-Colonel Wilson of my staff was sent to Helena,
Arkansas, to examine and open a way through Moon Lake and the Yazoo
Pass if possible. Formerly there was a route by way of an inlet
from the Mississippi River into Moon Lake, a mile east of the
river, thence east through Yazoo Pass to Coldwater, along the
latter to the Tallahatchie, which joins the Yallabusha about two
hundred and fifty miles below Moon Lake and forms the Yazoo River.
These were formerly navigated by steamers trading with the rich
plantations along their banks; but the State of Mississippi had
built a strong levee across the inlet some years before, leaving
the only entrance for vessels into this rich region the one by way
of the mouth of the Yazoo several hundreds of miles below.</p>
<p>On the 2d of February this dam, or levee, was cut. The river
being high the rush of water through the cut was so great that in a
very short time the entire obstruction was washed away. The bayous
were soon filled and much of the country was overflowed. This pass
leaves the Mississippi River but a few miles below Helena. On the
24th General Ross, with his brigade of about 4,500 men on
transports, moved into this new water-way. The rebels had
obstructed the navigation of Yazoo Pass and the Coldwater by
felling trees into them. Much of the timber in this region being of
greater specific gravity than water, and being of great size, their
removal was a matter of great labor; but it was finally
accomplished, and on the 11th of March Ross found himself,
accompanied by two gunboats under the command of
Lieutenant-Commander Watson Smith, confronting a fortification at
Greenwood, where the Tallahatchie and Yallabusha unite and the
Yazoo begins. The bends of the rivers are such at this point as to
almost form an island, scarcely above water at that stage of the
river. This island was fortified and manned. It was named Fort
Pemberton after the commander at Vicksburg. No land approach was
accessible. The troops, therefore, could render no assistance
towards an assault further than to establish a battery on a little
piece of ground which was discovered above water. The gunboats,
however, attacked on the 11th and again on the 13th of March. Both
efforts were failures and were not renewed. One gunboat was
disabled and we lost six men killed and twenty-five wounded. The
loss of the enemy was less.</p>
<p>Fort Pemberton was so little above the water that it was thought
that a rise of two feet would drive the enemy out. In hope of
enlisting the elements on our side, which had been so much against
us up to this time, a second cut was made in the Mississippi levee,
this time directly opposite Helena, or six miles above the former
cut. It did not accomplish the desired result, and Ross, with his
fleet, started back. On the 22d he met Quinby with a brigade at
Yazoo Pass. Quinby was the senior of Ross, and assumed command. He
was not satisfied with returning to his former position without
seeing for himself whether anything could be accomplished.
Accordingly Fort Pemberton was revisited by our troops; but an
inspection was sufficient this time without an attack. Quinby, with
his command, returned with but little delay. In the meantime I was
much exercised for the safety of Ross, not knowing that Quinby had
been able to join him. Reinforcements were of no use in a country
covered with water, as they would have to remain on board of their
transports. Relief had to come from another quarter. So I
determined to get into the Yazoo below Fort Pemberton.</p>
<p>Steel's Bayou empties into the Yazoo River between Haines' Bluff
and its mouth. It is narrow, very tortuous, and fringed with a very
heavy growth of timber, but it is deep. It approaches to within one
mile of the Mississippi at Eagle Bend, thirty miles above Young's
Point. Steel's Bayou connects with Black Bayou, Black Bayou with
Deer Creek, Deer Creek with Rolling Fork, Rolling Fork with the Big
Sunflower River, and the Big Sunflower with the Yazoo River about
ten miles above Haines' Bluff in a right line but probably twenty
or twenty-five miles by the winding of the river. All these
waterways are of about the same nature so far as navigation is
concerned, until the Sunflower is reached; this affords free
navigation.</p>
<p>Admiral Porter explored this waterway as far as Deer Creek on
the 14th of March, and reported it navigable. On the next day he
started with five gunboats and four mortar-boats. I went with him
for some distance. The heavy overhanging timber retarded progress
very much, as did also the short turns in so narrow a stream. The
gunboats, however, ploughed their way through without other damage
than to their appearance. The transports did not fare so well
although they followed behind. The road was somewhat cleared for
them by the gunboats. In the evening I returned to headquarters to
hurry up reinforcements. Sherman went in person on the 16th, taking
with him Stuart's division of the 15th corps. They took large river
transports to Eagle Bend on the Mississippi, where they debarked
and marched across to Steel's Bayou, where they re-embarked on the
transports. The river steamers, with their tall smokestacks and
light guards extending out, were so much impeded that the gunboats
got far ahead. Porter, with his fleet, got within a few hundred
yards of where the sailing would have been clear and free from the
obstructions caused by felling trees into the water, when he
encountered rebel sharp-shooters, and his progress was delayed by
obstructions in his front. He could do nothing with gunboats
against sharpshooters. The rebels, learning his route, had sent in
about 4,000 men—many more than there were sailors in the
fleet.</p>
<p>Sherman went back, at the request of the admiral, to clear out
Black Bayou and to hurry up reinforcements, which were far behind.
On the night of the 19th he received notice from the admiral that
he had been attacked by sharp-shooters and was in imminent peril.
Sherman at once returned through Black Bayou in a canoe, and passed
on until he met a steamer, with the last of the reinforcements he
had, coming up. They tried to force their way through Black Bayou
with their steamer, but, finding it slow and tedious work, debarked
and pushed forward on foot. It was night when they landed, and
intensely dark. There was but a narrow strip of land above water,
and that was grown up with underbrush or cane. The troops lighted
their way through this with candles carried in their hands for a
mile and a half, when they came to an open plantation. Here the
troops rested until morning. They made twenty-one miles from this
resting-place by noon the next day, and were in time to rescue the
fleet. Porter had fully made up his mind to blow up the gunboats
rather than have them fall into the hands of the enemy. More
welcome visitors he probably never met than the "boys in blue" on
this occasion. The vessels were backed out and returned to their
rendezvous on the Mississippi; and thus ended in failure the fourth
attempt to get in rear of Vicksburg.</p>
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