Flag-Officer Davis had been relieved
in command of the Mississippi flotilla on the 15th
of October, by Commander David D. Porter, holding
the local rank of acting rear-admiral. The new
commander was detained in Cairo for two months, organizing
and equipping his squadron, which had been largely
increased. A division of vessels was still stationed
at Helena, patrolling the lower river, under the command
of Captain Henry Walke.
During the fall of 1862 and the following
winter, two new types of vessels were added to the
squadron. The first, familiarly called tinclads,
but officially light-draughts, were river stern-wheel
steamers purchased for the service after the suggestion
of Flag-Officer Davis, and covered all round to a
height of eleven feet with iron from half to three-quarters
of an inch thick, which made them proof against musketry.
The protection around the boilers was increased to
resist the light projectiles of field artillery.
They quartered their crew comfortably, and could on
a pinch, for an expedition, carry 200 men. The
usual battery for these vessels was six or eight 24-pound
brass howitzers, four on each side, with sometimes
two light rifled guns in the bows. This armament
was of little use against works of any strength, but
with canister or shrapnel could keep off the riflemen,
and meet on equal terms the field artillery brought
against them on the banks of the narrow streams, often
thickly timbered or covered with underbrush, into which
they were called to penetrate and engage in that kind
of warfare significantly called bushwhacking.
For this service their light draught, not exceeding
three feet when deep, and diminishing to eighteen or
twenty inches when light, peculiarly fitted them;
but they were also useful in connection with the operations
of the larger vessels, and some of them generally
went along as a kind of light force fitted for raids
and skirmishing.
The other vessels, which were not
completed till later, were of an entirely different
kind, being intended to supply a class of fighting
ships of superior power, armor, and speed to those
which had fought their way down to Vicksburg from
Cairo. The fighting power of the Confederates
had increased, and the successes of the Union arms,
by diminishing the extent of their line to be defended,
had enabled them to concentrate their men and guns.
The defences of Vicksburg, both on the Mississippi
and Yazoo, had become greatly stronger. The new
armored vessels that were ready for some part of the
coming operations were the Lafayette, Tuscumbia, Indianola,
Choctaw, and Chillicothe. Of these the Tuscumbia,
of 565 tons, the Indianola, of 442, and the Chillicothe,
of 303, were specially built for the Government at
Cincinnati. They were side-wheel, flat-bottomed
boats, without keels; the wheels being carried well
aft, three-fourths of the entire length from the bow,
and acting independently of each other to facilitate
turning in close quarters. The Indianola and Tuscumbia
had also two screw propellers. On the forward
deck there was a rectangular casemate, twenty-two
feet long in each vessel, but of differing widths,
as the vessels were of different size. Thus that
of the Tuscumbia was sixty-two feet wide, that of
the Chillicothe only forty-two. The sides of
the casemate sloped at an angle of thirty degrees
from the perpendicular, and they, as well as the hull
before the wheels, were plated with two-or three-inch
iron, according to the locality; the heaviest plating
being on the forward end of the casemate. In
the Tuscumbia this forward plating was six inches thick.
The casemates were pierced with ports for all
their guns at the forward end only; on each beam one
port, and two aft. The ports were closed with
two three-inch iron shutters which slid back on tracks
on either side. In these casemates
the Tuscumbia carried three XI-inch guns, the Indianola
and Chillicothe each two XI-inch. In the two
larger vessels there was also, between the wheels,
a stern casemate seventeen feet long, built of thick
oak, not armored on the forward end, but having two-inch
plating aft and one-inch on each side. In this
stern casemate, pointing aft and capable of being trained
four points (45 deg.) on each quarter, the Tuscumbia
carried two 100-pound rifles, and the Indianola two
IX-inch guns. The hulls inside and abaft the
wheels, and the decks, except inside the main casemate,
were plated, but more lightly than the forward parts.
In the Tuscumbia and Indianola, iron bulwarks, half
an inch thick and pierced with loop-holes for musketry,
extended all round the boats, except against the wheelhouses;
they were so arranged as to let down on deck when
desired. When ready for service, with guns and
stores on board, these boats drew from five to seven
feet of water; but they were so weakly built as to
be dangerous and comparatively inefficient vessels,
quickly “disabled,” as is apt to be the
case with such preparations for war as are postponed
to the time of its outbreak. The contingency
of civil war on our inland waters was not indeed to
be anticipated nor prepared for; but what was the
history of the ocean navy, on whose hasty creation
such harmful boasts and confidence were and are based?
They served their turn, for that enemy had no seamen,
no navy, and few mechanics; but they were then swept
from the list, rotten and broken down before their
time. At this day nearly every ship that can
carry the United States flag was built before the war
or long after it.
The Lafayette and Choctaw, of one
thousand tons each, were purchased by the Government
and converted into ironclad gunboats with rams.
Built deliberately, they were strong and serviceable
vessels, but not able to carry as much armor as had
originally been intended. They were side-wheel
steamers, the wheels acting independently, but had
no screws. The Choctaw had a forward turret with
inclined sides and curved top, armored with two inches
of iron on twenty-four inches of oak, except on the
after end and crown, where the iron was only one inch.
Just forward of the wheels was a thwartship casemate
containing two 24-pound howitzers pointing forward
and intended to sweep the decks if boarders should
get possession. Over this casemate was the pilot-house,
conical, with two inches of iron on twenty-four of
oak. From turret to wheelhouses the sides were
inclined like casemates and covered with one-inch
iron, as was the upper deck. Abaft the wheels
there was another thwartship casemate, sides and ends
also sloping, in which were two 30-pound Parrott rifles
training from aft to four points on the quarter.
It had been at first proposed to carry in the forward
casemate two guns on a turn-table; but as this did
not work, four stationary guns were placed, three
IX-inch and one 100-pound rifle, two of which pointed
ahead and one on each beam. The Lafayette had
a sloping casemate carried across the deck forward,
and as far aft as the wheels, covered in the lower
part with one inch of iron over one inch of indiarubber;
the upper part of the bulwarks had three-quarter-inch
plating, and the deck half-inch. She carried two
XI-inch bow guns, four IX-inch in broadside but well
forward, two 24-pound brass howitzers, and two 100-pound
stern guns. The draught of these two boats was
about nine feet.
Besides these vessels may be mentioned
the Black Hawk, a fine steamer, unarmored, but with
a battery of mixed guns, which had been remodelled
inside and fitted as a schoolship with accommodations
for five hundred officers and men. She carried
also syphon-pumps capable of raising any vessel that
might sink. The old ram Sampson had been fitted
as a floating smithery. The two accompanied the
fleet, the former taking her place often in battle
and serving as a swift flag-ship on occasions.
Active operations again began toward
the end of November, when the rivers were rising from
the autumnal rains. The great object of the combined
Union forces was the reduction of Vicksburg, upon which
the authorities at Washington preferred to move by
way of the river, as it gave, under the convoy of
the navy, an easy line of communication not liable
to serious interruptions. The Confederate line
of which Vicksburg was the centre then faced the river,
the right resting on Haines’s Bluff, a strongly
fortified position twelve miles away, near to and
commanding the Yazoo; while the left was on the Mississippi
at Grand Gulf, sixty miles below Vicksburg by the
stream, though not over thirty by land. The place,
in the end, was reduced much in the same way as Island
N; the troops landing above it on the opposite
bank, and marching down to a point below the works.
The naval vessels then ran by the batteries and protected
the crossing of the army to the east bank. A
short, sharp campaign in the rear of the city shut
the Confederates up in their works, and the Union troops
were able to again secure their communications with
the river above the town. There were, however,
grave risks in this proceeding from the time that the
army abandoned its water-base, adding to its line of
communication thirty miles of bad roads on the river
bank, and then throwing itself into the enemy’s
country, leaving the river behind it. It was
therefore preferred first to make every effort to turn
the position from the north, through the Yazoo country.
The Yazoo Valley is a district of
oval form, two hundred miles long by sixty wide, extending
from a short distance below Memphis to Vicksburg,
where the hills which form its eastern boundary again
reach the Mississippi. The land is alluvial and,
when not protected by levees, subject to overflow
in ordinary rises of the river, with the exception
of a long narrow strip fifteen miles from and parallel
to the eastern border. It is intersected by numerous
bayous and receives many streams from the hills, all
of which, from the conformation of the ground, find
their way first to the Yazoo River, and by it to the
Mississippi. The Yazoo is first called, in the
northern portion of the basin, the Cold Water, then
the Tallahatchie, and, after receiving the Yallabusha
from the east, the Yazoo. In the latter part of
its course it is a large stream with an average width
of three hundred yards, and navigable always, for
vessels drawing three feet of water, as far as Greenwood,
a distance of two hundred and forty miles. It
flows in a southerly direction along the eastern side
of the basin, between the hills and the narrow strip
of dry land before mentioned, receiving the streams
from the former, which it does not touch except at
Yazoo City, eighty miles from its mouth. After
passing Yazoo City the river makes several successive
bends to the west, and then begins to receive the
various bayous which have been pursuing their own southerly
course on the other side of the strip of dry land,
the principal one of which is the Big Sunflower.
At the present day the Yazoo enters the Mississippi
eight miles above Vicksburg, but formerly did so by
another bed, now a blind lead known as the Old River,
which diverges from the existing channel about six
miles above its mouth.
Neither rivers nor bayous are the
simple streams thus described. Separating at
times into two or more branches which meet again lower
down, having perhaps undergone further subdivisions
in the meanwhile, connected one with the other by
lateral bayous, they form a system of watercourses,
acquaintance with which confers the same advantage
as local knowledge of a wild and desolate country.
Opposite Helena, in the natural state of the ground
is a large bayou called Yazoo Pass, leading from the
Mississippi to the Cold Water, by which access was
formerly had to Yazoo City; but before the war it had
been closed by the continuation of the levees across
its mouth.
When not under cultivation, the land
and the banks of the streams are covered with a thick
growth of timber. Where the troops or gunboats
penetrated, it was found that there was abundance of
live stock, stores of cotton, and rich harvests of
grain. The streams carried on their waters many
steamers, the number of which had been increased by
those that fled from New Orleans when the city fell;
and at Yazoo City the Confederates had established
a navy yard, where at least three powerful war vessels
were being built for the river service.
The first step by the navy was undertaken
early in December, when the autumn rains had caused
the rivers to rise. Admiral Porter issued orders,
dated November 21st, to Captain Walke to enter the
Yazoo with all his gunboats, except the Benton and
General Bragg left at Helena, and to destroy any batteries
that he could. The object was to get possession
of as much of the river as possible and keep it clear
for General McClernand, who was to land and make the
first attempt on Vicksburg by that way.
In accordance with his orders, Walke,
on arriving off the mouth of the river, sent two light-draught
gunboats, the Signal and Marmora, which made a reconnoissance
twenty miles up, where they fell in with a number
of torpedoes, one of which exploded near them.
Having received their report, Captain Walke determined,
as the river was rising, to send them up again with
two of the heavy boats, the Cairo and Pittsburg, to
cover them while they lifted the torpedoes. The
ram Queen of the West also went with them.
These vessels left the main body at
8 A.M., December 12th. When the torpedoes were
reached they began removing them, the two light-draughts
in advance, the ram next, the two heavy boats bringing
up the rear. While thus engaged the Marmora began
firing musketry, and Lieutenant-Commander Selfridge,
in the Cairo, pushed ahead to support her. It
was found that she was firing at an object floating
in the water, which turned out to be a torpedo that
had already been exploded. The Marmora was then
ordered to proceed slowly again, the Cairo following;
but before the latter had gone her length two sharp
explosions occurred in quick succession, one under
the bow and one under the stern, the former so severe
as to lift the guns from the deck. The ship was
at once shoved into the bank, and hawsers run out
to keep her from slipping off into deep water; but
all was useless. She filled and sank in twelve
minutes, going down in a depth of six fathoms, the
tops of her chimneys alone remaining visible.
The work of destroying the torpedoes was continued
after the accident, in which no lives were lost.
Thus, at the very beginning of operations, the flotilla
was deprived of one of its best vessels, the first
to go of the original seven.
The torpedoes by which the Cairo was
sunk were merely demijohns filled with powder and
ignited by a common friction primer rigidly secured
inside. To the primer was fastened a wire passing
through a water-tight cork of gutta percha and
plaster of Paris. The first very primitive idea
was to explode them by pulling from the shore, and
it is possible that the first to go off near the light-draughts
was thus fired. The matter was then taken in
hand by a Confederate naval officer, who arranged
them in pairs, anchored twenty feet apart, the wire
leading from the primer of one to that of the other.
Torpedoes had hardly yet come to be looked on as a
respectable mode of warfare, especially by seamen,
and the officer who laid these, and was looking on
when the Cairo went down, describes himself as feeling
much as a schoolboy might whose practical joke had
taken a more serious shape than he expected.
The work of removing the torpedoes
was continued by the boats under Lieutenant-Commander
John G. Walker, of the Baron de Kalb, formerly the
St. Louis. Two landing-places were at the same
time secured. After the arrival of the admiral
the work went on still more vigorously from the 23d
to the 26th of December. A bend in the river was
then reached, which brought the vessels under fire
of the forts on Drumgoold’s Bluff. Every
step of the ground so far gained had been won under
a constant fire of musketry, which the armored portion
of the light-draught gunboats resisted, but their
upper works were badly cut up. The batteries
of the enemy being now only twelve hundred yards off,
the flag-ship Benton took position to cover the lighter
vessels, having to tie up to the bank because the
wind blowing up stream checked the current and threw
her across it. She remained in this position
for two hours, receiving the enemy’s fire and
being struck thirty times, but without serious injury.
Unfortunately her captain, Lieutenant-Commander William
Gwin, a valuable officer, who had distinguished himself
at Shiloh and in the fight with the Arkansas, was
mortally wounded; having, in his anxiety to see how
effective was the fire of the vessels, left the armored
pilot-house, saying, with a noble rashness, that the
captain’s place was on his quarterdeck.
The army, 32,000 strong, under General
W.T. Sherman, had arrived on the 26th, and landed
on the low ground above the old mouth of the Yazoo,
the gunboats occupying the sweep of river around them
for a length of eight miles. Heavy rains had
set in, making the ground almost impassable and causing
the water to rise. After various preliminary
operations the troops assaulted the works on the hills
in front on the 29th, but the attack failed entirely.
Sherman considered the works too strong to justify
its renewal at the same point, but determined to hold
his ground and make a night assault with 10,000 men
higher up the river, upon the right of the Confederate
works at Haines’s Bluff, where the navy could
get near enough to try and silence the batteries.
Colonel Charles Rivers Ellet, of the ram fleet,
volunteered to go ahead with the ram Lioness and attempt
to blow up a raft which was laid across the stream.
Everything was ready on the night of the 31st, but
a dense fog setting in prevented the movement.
The continued rains now rendered the
position of the army dangerous, and it was re-embarked
on the 2d of January. The enemy apparently did
not discover the movement till it was nearly finished,
when they sent down three regiments with field pieces
to attack the transports, a movement quickly checked
by the fire of the gunboats.
When Sherman’s army was embarked,
the transports moved out into the Mississippi and
anchored five miles above Vicksburg, where General
McClernand joined and assumed the chief command.
Soon after his arrival he determined upon a movement
against Fort Hindman, on the Arkansas River, fifty
miles from its mouth. This point, better known
as Arkansas Post, commanded the approach to Little
Rock, the capital of Arkansas, but was specially obnoxious
to the Union forces at this time, as being the base
from which frequent small expeditions were sent out
to embarrass their communications by the line of the
Mississippi, from which it was but fifteen miles distant
in a straight line. A few days before, the capture
of the Blue Wing, a transport loaded with valuable
stores, had emphasized the necessity of destroying
a work that occupied such a menacing position upon
the flank and rear of the projected movement against
Vicksburg.
The admiral detailed the three ironclads,
De Kalb, Louisville, and Cincinnati, and all the light-draught
gunboats to accompany the expedition; the gunboats,
on account of their low speed, being taken in tow
by the transports. Passing by the mouth of the
Arkansas, to keep the enemy as long as possible uncertain
as to the real object of the movement, the fleet entered
the White River and from the latter passed through
the cut-off which unites it with the Arkansas.
On the 9th of January the army landed
about four miles below the fort. This was a square
bastioned work of three hundred feet on the side,
standing on ground elevated above the reach of floods
on the left bank, at the head of a horse-shoe bend.
It had three casemates, one in the curtain facing
the approach up the bend, and one in the face of the
northeast and southeast bastions looking in the same
direction. In each bastion casemate was a IX-inch,
and in that of the curtain an VIII-inch shell-gun.
These were the special antagonists of the navy, but
besides them there were four rifled and four smooth-bore
light pieces on the platform of the fort, and six
similar pieces in a line of rifle-pits exterior to
and above it. Some trenches had been dug a mile
and a half below the fort, but they were untenable
in presence of the gunboats, which enfiladed and shelled
them out.
While the army was moving round to
the rear of the fort the admiral sent up the ironclads
to try the range, and afterward the light-draught
Rattler to clear out the rifle-pits, which was done
at 5.30 P.M. Hearing from General McClernand
that the troops were ready, the Louisville, Lieutenant-Commander
Owen; De Kalb, Lieutenant-Commander Walker, and Cincinnati,
Lieutenant Bache, advanced to within four hundred
yards of the work and opened fire; the Louisville in
the centre, the De Kalb on the right and the Cincinnati
on the left, each having one of the enemy’s
casemate guns assigned to it. The vessels fought
bows on, three guns each; the odds being thus three
guns afloat to one in casemate on shore, leaving the
advantage by the old calculation, four to one, rather
with the fort, without counting the light pieces in
the latter. When the ironclads were hotly engaged
the admiral brought up the light-draught vessels,
with the Black Hawk and Lexington, to throw in shrapnel
and light rifled shell. Later, when the battery
was pretty well silenced, the Rattler, Lieutenant-Commander
Watson Smith, was ordered to pass the fort and enfilade
it, which he did in handsome style, suffering a good
deal from the enemy’s fire; when above, however,
he became entangled in snags and was obliged to return.
No assault was made this day by the army.
The following day, at 1.30 P.M., the
army again being reported ready, the attack was renewed
in the same order by the navy, the artillery on shore
in rear of the fort opening at the same time.
The guns opposed to the fleet were silenced by 4 P.M.,
when the Rattler and Glide, with the ram Monarch,
Colonel Ellet, pushed by the fort and went up the
river, destroying a ferry ten miles above, so that
not over thirty or forty of the enemy escaped by it.
At 4.30 P.M., when the army had worked its way close
to the intrenchments and orders had been issued for
a general assault, but before it could be made, white
flags were displayed on the face of the works.
The commanding officer of the fort, Colonel Dunnington,
formerly an officer in the United States Navy, surrendered
to Admiral Porter; General Churchill, commanding the
troops, to General McClernand. The total number
of Confederate troops taken was 5,000.
It was impossible that the work of
the navy could be done more thoroughly than in this
instance. Every gun opposed to it was either
destroyed or dismounted, and the casemates were
knocked to pieces, the fire of the X-inch guns of
the De Kalb being in the opinion of the enemy most
injurious. In performing this service the vessels
did not come off scatheless. The De Kalb had
one 32-pounder gun dismounted and one X-inch destroyed,
besides undergoing severe damage to the hull.
The other vessels were repeatedly struck, but none
were rendered unfit for immediate service. The
armor was found to protect them well, the injuries
to the crew being by shot entering the ports.
The casualties, confined to the Louisville and De
Kalb, were 6 killed and 25 wounded.
The next morning, January 12th, the
admiral despatched the De Kalb and Cincinnati, under
Lieutenant-Commander Walker, to the White River; transports
and troops, under General Gorman, accompanying.
St. Charles was reached at 11 A.M. of the 14th, and
found to be evacuated; the garrison, having left on
the evening of the 12th, in the Blue Wing, taking
with them two VIII-inch guns and a field battery.
Leaving the Cincinnati here, the De Kalb with the
troops pushed on to Duvall’s Bluff, fifty miles
further up, where is the crossing of the railroad
to Little Rock, on the Arkansas River. The transports
were left four miles below, while the De Kalb steamed
up to the bluff, arriving there at 3 P.M. of the 16th.
She was close on the heels of the Blue Wing, which
got away fifteen minutes before her arrival, but the
two VIII-inch guns were seized in the act of being
loaded on the cars for Little Rock. At this point
of his progress, the orders issued by General Grant
for the return of McClernand’s forces to before
Vicksburg were received. The depot buildings and
captured rolling stock having been destroyed, the
gunboats and transports rejoined the main body in
the Mississippi.
The naval vessels, on the 24th of
January, lay off the mouth of the Yazoo, and from
there to the neck of land opposite Vicksburg, where
the army under Grant’s orders was disembarking.
A few days before Porter had been obliged to withdraw
the gunboats, because the coal supply of the fleet
was exhausted. During their absence eleven Confederate
transports that had been employed on the river between
Vicksburg and Port Hudson went up the Yazoo for supplies,
and were there caught by the unexpected return of
the squadron, a serious embarrassment to the enemy.
At this time the vessels of the squadron
near Vicksburg, or within easy reach, were: The
Benton, Cincinnati, De Kalb, Louisville, Mound City,
Pittsburg, and Chillicothe, ironclads; Rattler, Glide,
Linden, Signal, Romeo, Juliet, Forest Rose, Marmora,
light-draughts; the Tyler and Black Hawk, wooden armed
steamers; Queen of the West, Monarch, Switzerland,
Lioness, rams. During the following month the
Carondelet and Indianola, ironclads, joined the fleet.
The heavy vessels remained near the army and the principal
scene of operations, but some of these lighter vessels
and rams, with others farther up, were scattered at
intervals along the river from Island N downward,
cruising up and down, keeping off guérillas,
preventing contraband traffic, and convoying transports
and supply boats; in a word, keeping open the communications
of the army. A small squadron of five light-draughts
performed the same service constantly in the Tennessee
and Cumberland Rivers.
General Grant arrived on the 30th
of January. The army were busy digging on the
canal across the neck, which had been begun the previous
summer, and the various plans as yet discussed had
mainly reference to turning the right flank of the
Confederates. Meantime there was no hindrance
to the complete control of the river between Vicksburg
and Port Hudson by the enemy, who continued their traffic
across it and by the Red River unmolested.
Porter, therefore, determined to send
some vessels below. The batteries were much stronger
than when Farragut had last passed, but the importance
of the step justified the risk. Once below, the
possession of the west bank by the Union troops gave
a safe base to which to retreat. The honor of
leading in such an enterprise was given to Colonel
Charles R. Ellet, of the ram fleet, a man of tried
daring. Many considerations pointed to the rams
being the fittest to make such an attempt. They
had greater speed, were well able to cope with any
vessel they were likely to meet, their greater height
gave them more command of the levees, and they were
not needed to fight batteries, which the heavier boats
might be. The Queen of the West was chosen and
prepared with two thicknesses of cotton bales.
Her commander received minute orders as to his undertaking,
and was directed to proceed by night, under low speed
until near the town, or discovered, to ram a steamer
called the Vicksburg lying at the wharf, at the same
time firing turpentine balls into her, and then to
pass on down under the guns of the army. She
started on what was to prove a chequered career at
4.30 A.M. of the 2d of February. Unfortunately
it was found that a recent change in the arrangement
of her wheel kept her from being steered as nicely
as was needful, and the delay to remedy this defect
brought daylight upon her as she rounded the point.
A heavy fire opened at once, but still she went straight
on, receiving three shots before she reached the Vicksburg.
Rounding to partly, she succeeded in ramming, and
at the same time firing the enemy with her turpentine
balls. Just then two shells from the Confederate
batteries passed through her cotton armor, one of
them setting it on fire near the starboard wheel,
while the discharge of her own bow guns produced the
same effect forward. The flames spread rapidly,
and the dense smoke was suffocating the men in the
engine-room. Seeing that, if he delayed longer
in order to ram again, he would probably lose his vessel,
Ellet turned her head down stream and arrived safely
abreast the army below. The fire was subdued
by cutting her burning bales adrift and throwing them
overboard.
In this gallant affair the Queen of
the West was struck twelve times by heavy shot, besides
undergoing a steady fire from the Confederate sharpshooters.
One of her guns was dismounted, but the other harm
was trifling, and none of her company were hurt.
The Vicksburg was badly injured.
The ram was at once sent down the
river, starting at 1 P.M. of the same day. At
Warrenton, just below Vicksburg, she encountered two
batteries, which fired upon without hurting her.
The following day, when fifteen miles below the mouth
of the Red River, she captured two Confederate steamers,
one of which was loaded down with provisions for the
army; and when returning up stream, a third, similarly
loaded, was taken coming out of the Red River.
The coal supply running short, it became necessary
to burn them. A quantity of meal on a wharf,
awaiting transportation, was also destroyed, and seven
Confederate officers captured. The Queen returned
from this raid on the 5th.
On the night of the 7th a barge, with
coal enough to last nearly a month, was set adrift
from the fleet above and floated safely by the batteries
to the ram. Having filled up, she took the barge
in tow and again went down the river on the 10th,
accompanied by the De Soto, a small ferryboat which
the army had seized below and turned over to the navy;
she was partly protected with iron and cotton.
At 10.15 P.M. of the 12th the admiral sent down the
ironclad steamer Indianola, Lieutenant-Commander George
Brown. Taking with her two coal barges, she proceeded
slowly and quietly, and was not discovered till she
had passed the upper batteries. When the first
gun was fired, she started ahead full speed, and,
though under fire for twenty minutes longer, was not
struck. With justifiable elation the admiral could
now write: “This gives us complete control
of the Mississippi, except at Vicksburg and Port Hudson.
We have now below two XI-inch guns, two IX-inch, two
30-pounder rifles, six 12-pounders, and three vessels.”
Yet, with the same mockery of human foresight that
followed Farragut’s satisfaction when he felt
he controlled the whole Gulf coast, on the same day
that these lines were penned two of the three passed
out of Union hands, and the third had but a few days’
career before her.
The Queen of the West went down the
Mississippi, destroying skiffs and flatboats whenever
found, as far as the Red River, which was reached
on the morning of the 12th. Going up the Red River
to the point where the Atchafalaya Bayou branches
off on its way to the Gulf, the De Soto and barge
were secured there, while the Queen went down the bayou
destroying Confederate Government property. In
performing this service one of her officers was wounded
by a party of guérillas. Returning to the
De Soto, the two started up Red River. On the
morning of the 14th a transport, called the Era N, was captured with two Confederate officers.
Hearing that there were three large boats lying, with
steam down, at Gordon’s Landing, thirty miles
higher up (about seventy-five miles from the mouth
of the river), Colonel Ellet decided to attempt their
capture. On rounding the bluff above which they
were lying, the Queen was fired upon by a battery
of four 32-pounders. Orders were immediately
given to back down behind the bluff, but by some mishap
she ran aground on the right side, in plain view of
the battery, within easy range and powerless for offence.
Here she received several shots, one of which, cutting
the steam-pipe, stopped the engines, that had been
backing vigorously. Nothing further in the way
of escape was tried, and the commanding officer was
deterred from setting fire to the ship by the impossibility
of removing the wounded officer.
The Queen and the De Soto each had
but one boat, and in the panic that followed the explosion
a party took possession of the Queen’s and made
off with it to the De Soto, under the pretext of hurrying
that vessel up to the assistance of her consort; so
the remainder of the ship’s company, including
her commander, made their escape to the other steamer
on cotton bales. The De Soto sent up her yawl,
which took off one load, getting away just before
the Confederates boarded their prize.
The De Soto now started on a hurried
retreat down the river, but running into the bank
she lost her rudder. Deprived of the power of
directing her motions, she was allowed to drift with
the stream, picking up, from time to time, a fugitive
on a bale, and was rejoined by her yawl about ten
miles lower down. Shortly after this the parties
fell in with the prize of the morning, when the De
Soto was burned and the hasty flight continued in
the Era. The following morning the Mississippi
was reached, and the day after, the 16th, they met
the Indianola eight miles below Natchez.
The Queen of the West had thus passed
practically unhurt into Confederate hands, the manner
of her loss giving another instance of how lack of
heed in going into action is apt to be followed by
a precipitate withdrawal from it and unnecessary disaster.
Colonel Ellet’s only reason for not burning
the Queen was that he could not remove one of her
officers, who had been wounded the day before.
If he had transferred him to the De Soto before going
under the battery with the Queen, the fighting ship,
this difficulty would not have existed. No one
seems to have been hurt, by the Union and Confederate
reports, and it is hard to avoid the conclusion that
Ellet’s rashness in exposing his vessel, though
he knew the Indianola was to be sent down, was not
atoned for by sticking to her until he had destroyed
her. The accidents were of a kind most likely
to happen, and very simple appliances that might have
been all ready would have ensured her burning.
It is to be remembered, however, that Colonel Ellet
was at this time not twenty years old.
On receiving the news of the disaster,
Lieutenant-Commander Brown decided to go down as far
as the mouth of the Red River. The same day was
met off Ellis’s Cliff the Confederate gunboat
Webb, which had been lying at Alexandria and had started
in hot pursuit of the fugitives from the Queen of
the West. Upon making out the Indianola, which
she had not expected, the Webb at once turned, and
having greater speed easily escaped; the Indianola
following down to the mouth of the Red River.
Here she anchored and remained three days, while the
Era, on the 18th, returned to the neck below Vicksburg.
Brown now learned that the Queen of
the West had not been so much injured as her late
commander had thought, and that a combined attack
would probably be made by her and the Webb upon the
Indianola. Two cottonclad boats were also in
preparation by the Confederates for the same purpose.
In view of these facts he determined to go up the
Mississippi and get cotton, with which better to protect
the Indianola against boarders by filling up the gangways
between the casemates and the wheels. By
the time this was done, having as yet met no other
vessel of the squadron, though he had hoped for reinforcements
when the loss of the Queen became known, he had reached
the decision to return and communicate with the admiral.
With two barges alongside, the progress
of the Indianola against the current was slow-too
slow, for the swift rams of the enemy were already
on her track; but although Brown had kept the bunkers
of the Indianola full, he confidently expected to
meet another boat which would need the coal, and was
unwilling to sink it. The smoke of the pursuers
had been seen throughout the day, and at 9.30 P.M.
of the 24th four steamers were made out. These
were the rams Queen and Webb, the former in charge
of Captain McCloskey, the latter of Captain Pierce;
Major J.L. Brent, of General Taylor’s staff,
having command of this part of the expedition, which
was fitted out in Alexandria and accompanied by a
tender called the Grand Era. These had been joined
before leaving the Red River by the cottonclad steamer
Batey from Port Hudson, carrying 250 riflemen under
Lieutenant-Colonel Brand, whose rank entitled him
to command the whole.
The enemy used the advantage of their
greatly superior speed to choose the night for attacking,
that the Indianola might not fire with the certainty
of clear sight. They first saw her near Palmyra
Island, a little above New Carthage, and were themselves
made out at the same instant. The Indianola at
once went to quarters and cleared for action, continuing
up stream till her preparations were made; then she
turned and stood down. The channel above Palmyra
Island at that time hugged the eastern shore, crossing
to the western just above the island, and the Indianola
seems to have been in this place when the enemy coming
up describes her as “with her head quartering
across and down river,” presenting the port
bow to their approach. The order of advance was
with the Queen leading, the Webb five hundred yards
astern, and the two other boats lashed together some
distance in the rear. The Queen dashed up, firing
her light pieces to no purpose when one hundred and
fifty yards off, and endeavored to ram the Indianola
abaft the port wheel; but the latter, backing, received
the blow on the barge, through which the enemy’s
sharp bow passed but without injuring her opponent.
The barge went adrift and sunk. The Webb followed,
and, the Indianola standing for her at full speed,
the two came together bows on with a crash that knocked
down most of their crews. The Webb’s bow
was cut in for a distance of eight feet, extending
from two feet above the water-line to the keelson,
but as she was filled in solid for more than eight
feet she did not sink. The Indianola received
no damage.
A third blow was delivered on the
starboard side by the Webb, in what manner does not
appear precisely, with the effect of crushing the
other barge, leaving it hanging by the lashings, which
were then cut adrift. The Webb passed up following
the Queen. The latter, having gained sufficient
distance, turned and charged down, but as the Indianola
was turning up at the same moment the blow on the starboard
bow glanced, the vessels rasping by each other; and
as the Queen cleared the stern of her enemy, the latter
planted two IX-inch shot successfully, killing 2 and
wounding 4 of her crew and disabling two guns.
During all this time the Indianola kept firing her
guns whenever they could be made to bear, but, as
the enemy had calculated, the darkness of the night
prevented them from doing as much execution as they
otherwise would. The rams also kept up a constant
firing with their musketry and light guns. In
the uncertain light it was very difficult to watch
the two assailants through the peep-holes in the pilot-house
of the gunboat, but yet a fifth blow was received forward
of the wheels without injury. At last, however,
the Queen was able to strike just abaft the starboard
wheel-house, crushing the wheel, disabling the starboard
rudder, and starting a number of leaks abaft the shaft.
The starboard engine was thus useless and the Indianola
helpless to avoid the onset of the Webb, which struck
her fair in the stern, starting the timbers and starboard
rudder-box so that the water poured in in large volumes.
This settled the fight, and Brent reported to Colonel
Brand that the enemy was disabled. The Batey then
dashed up to board, but the Indianola, after delaying
a few moments in mid river, till the water had risen
nearly to the grate-bars, to assure her sinking, had
run her bows into the west bank, and surrendered as
soon as the cottonclads came alongside. The enemy,
finding that she must sink and not willing that this
should happen on the side where the Union army was,
made fast at once two steamers and towed her down
and over to the east bank, where she sank in ten feet
of water near the plantation of the President of the
Confederacy. The loss of the Indianola was 1
killed, 1 wounded, and 7 missing. The latter probably
got ashore on the west bank, for 3 were captured there
the following day and more than one got through to
Porter’s squadron. The loss of the enemy
was officially stated at 3 killed and 5 wounded, but
a Confederate officer admitted to the commander of
the Indianola that it was much greater.
This ended Porter’s sanguine
hopes of blockading the river by detached vessels
while he kept the body of the fleet above. After
being harassed and stirred up during three weeks,
the Confederates again found themselves masters of
the line from Vicksburg to Port Hudson for a few days
longer, and with two Union vessels in their hands,
one of which was serviceable, while the other, badly
damaged and partly sunk, it is true, had still her
armament intact and was possibly not beyond repair.
Their possession of the Indianola, however, was of
short duration. The second day after the capture,
a detail of 100 men with a lieutenant was sent to
try and save her, by the army officer commanding near
by, while the Queen of the West went up to Warrenton,
to act as picket for the fleet, and with despatches
to General Stevenson, commanding at Vicksburg, asking
for pumps and other help. In a short time, the
Queen returned in great haste and reported a gunboat
approaching. All the vessels that had behaved
so gallantly two nights before got under way in a
panic and went hurriedly down, leaving the working
party and the lieutenant. The gunboat did not
come nearer than two miles and a half, and seemed
very apprehensive of an attack herself, sticking close
to the bank. The lieutenant stood his ground
for one day; but then finding himself deserted by his
own fleet, which by this time was up Red River, and
the gunboat still lying, terrible though inert, just
above him, he, the next evening, laid the two XI-inch
guns muzzle to muzzle, and so fired them. One
was burst, the other apparently only kicked over.
He next threw overboard two field pieces he had with
him, made an attempt to blow up the vessel, which
resulted in destroying the forward casemate and burning
most of the wreck above water, and then fled with his
command.
The gunboat which caused all this
consternation with such happy results to the Union
fleet was a mock monitor, built upon the hull of an
old coal barge, with pork barrels piled to resemble
smoke-stacks, through which poured volumes of smoke
from mud furnaces. She went down swiftly with
the current, passing the Vicksburg batteries just before
daylight, and drawing from them a furious cannonade.
As day broke she drifted into the lower end of the
canal, and was again sent down stream by the amused
Union soldiers, who as little as the admiral dreamed
of the good service the dummy was to do. Such
was the end of the Indianola, a striking instance
of the moral power of the gunboats. The Queen
of the West was subsequently sent through the Bayou
Atchafalaya to Grand Lake, and there destroyed two
months later by the gunboats of the Gulf Squadron.
When the news of these reverses reached
New Orleans, Admiral Farragut, who had for some time
contemplated a movement up the river, felt that the
time was come. On the 12th of March he was at
Baton Rouge, where he inspected the ships of the squadron
the next day; and then moved up to near Profit’s
Island, seven miles below the bend on which Port Hudson
is situated. On the 14th, early, the vessels again
weighed and anchored at the head of the island, where
the admiral communicated with Commander Caldwell,
of the Essex, who for some time had occupied this
station with a half dozen mortar-schooners.
As one ascends the river to Port Hudson,
the course pursued is nearly due north; then it takes
a sharp turn to the west-southwest for a distance
of one or two miles. The little town of Port Hudson
is on the east bank just below the bend. The
bluffs on which the batteries were placed begin at
the bend, extending for a mile and a half down the
river, and are from eighty to one hundred feet high.
From the opposite bank, at and just below the point,
a dangerous shoal spot makes out. At the time
of the passage of the fleet there were mounted in battery
nineteen heavy guns, viz.: two X-inch
and two VIII-inch columbiads; two 42-, two 32-, and
three 24-pound smooth-bores; and eight rifles, varying
from 80- to 50-pounders.
The object of the admiral was simply
to pass the batteries with his fleet, so as to blockade
the river above. The vessels he had with him
were the Hartford (flag-ship), twenty-four guns, Captain
James S. Palmer; Monongahela, ten guns, Captain J.P.
McKinstry; Mississippi, seventeen guns, Captain Melancthon
Smith; Richmond, twenty-four guns, Commander James
Alden; Genesee, eight guns, Commander William H. Macomb;
Albatross, six guns, Lieutenant-Commander John E. Hart;
Kineo, six guns, Lieutenant-Commander John Watters.
The larger ships, except the Mississippi,
were directed to take a gunboat on the port side,
securing her well aft, so as to leave as much of the
port battery as possible clear. Each was to keep
a little to starboard of her next ahead, so as to
be free to use her bow guns as soon as possible with
the least danger from premature explosions of projectiles.
In accordance with this order, the Hartford took the
Albatross, the Monongahela, the Kineo, and the Richmond
the Genesee; the Richmond being the slowest ship and
the Genesee the most powerful gunboat. The ships
were prepared as at the passage of the lower forts,
and in the Hartford the admiral had placed his pilot
in the mizzen-top, where he could see more clearly,
and had arranged a speaking-tube thence to the deck.
The Essex and Sachem were not to attempt the passage,
but with some mortar-boats to engage the lower batteries
to cover the movement.
Shortly before 10 P.M. the ships weighed
and advanced in the following order: Hartford,
Richmond, Monongahela, Mississippi. At eleven,
as they drew near the batteries, the lowest of which
the Hartford had already passed, the enemy threw up
rockets and opened their fire. Prudence, and
the fact of the best water being on the starboard hand,
led the ships to hug the east shore of the river, passing
so close under the Confederate guns that the speech
of the gunners and troops could be distinguished.
Along the shore, at the foot of the bluffs, powerful
reflecting lamps, like those used on locomotives, had
been placed, to show the ships to the enemy as they
passed; and for the same purpose large fires, already
stacked on the opposite point, were lit. The
fire of the fleet and from the shore soon raised a
smoke which made these precautions useless, while
it involved the ships in a danger greater than any
from the enemy’s guns. Settling down upon
the water, in a still damp atmosphere, it soon hid
everything from the eyes of the pilots. The flag-ship,
leading, had the advantage of pushing often ahead
of her own smoke; but those who followed ran into
it and incurred a perplexity which increased from van
to rear. At the bend of the river the current
caught the Hartford on her port bow, sweeping her
round with her head toward the batteries and nearly
on shore, her stem touching the ground slightly; but
by her own efforts and the assistance of the Albatross
she was backed clear. Then, the Albatross backing
and the Hartford going ahead strong with the engines,
her head was fairly pointed up the stream, and she
passed by without serious injury. Deceived possibly
by the report of the howitzers in her top, which were
nearly on their own level, the Confederates did not
depress their guns sufficiently to hit her as often
as they did the ships that followed her. One killed
and two wounded is her report; and one marine fell
overboard, his cries for help being heard on board
the other ships as they passed by, unable to save
him.
The Richmond, with the Genesee alongside,
following the Hartford, had reached the last battery
and was about to make the turn when a plunging shot
entering about four feet above the berth-deck, passed
through a barricade of clothes-bags and hawsers into
the engine-room, upsetting the starboard safety-valve;
then glancing a little upward, it displaced the port
safety-valve weight and twisted the lever, leaving
the valve partly opened. The steam escaped so
rapidly as to reduce the pressure at once to nine
pounds, while filling the fire-room and berth-deck.
Deprived thus of her motive force, it was found that
the Genesee was not able to drag both vessels up against
the strong current then running. Commander Alden
was therefore compelled to turn down stream, and after
some narrow escapes from the fire of his own fleet,
was soon carried by the gunboat out of range.
The two vessels lost 3 killed and 15 wounded; among
the latter the first lieutenant of the Richmond, A.
Boyd Cummings, mortally.
The Monongahela and Kineo were third
in line. While under the fire of the principal
batteries, musketry opened upon them from the west
bank, which was soon silenced by shrapnel and grape
from the Kineo. A few moments later a chance
shot lodged between the stern-post and rudder-post
of the gunboat, wedging the rudder and making it completely
useless. The density of the smoke, complained
of by all the officers of the fleet that night, caused
the pilots to miss their way; and the larger ship
took the ground on the spit opposite the town.
The Kineo, not touching, with the way she had tore
clear of her fasts, and, ranging a short distance
ahead, grounded also. Both vessels received considerable
though not serious damage from the violence of the
separation. The Kineo was soon able to back clear
and, though disabled, managed to get a hawser from
the Monongahela and pull that ship off after she had
been twenty-five minutes aground. The latter
then went ahead again, while the Kineo, unable to steer
properly, drifted down stream out of range. While
aground a shot came in, cutting away the bridge under
Captain McKinstry’s feet, and throwing him to
the deck below; the fall incapacitated him from remaining
at his station, and Lieutenant-Commander N.W.
Thomas took command of the Monongahela. Meanwhile
the Mississippi had passed, unseen and unseeing, in
the smoke, and had herself grounded a little farther
up near the head of the spit. She was observed
to be on fire as the Monongahela again drew near the
bend, and at the same moment the latter vessel’s
engines ceased to move, a crank-pin being heated.
Thus unmanageable she drifted down within thirty yards
of the batteries, and had to anchor below. Her
loss was 6 killed and 21 wounded; the Kineo, though
repeatedly struck, had no one hurt.
The Mississippi had passed the lower
batteries and had reached the bend, going fast, when
she struck, heeling at once three streaks to port.
The engines were reversed and backed to the full extent
of their power, and the port battery run in to bring
the ship on an even keel. After working for thirty-five
minutes it was found impossible to get her off.
The port battery and pivot gun were then ordered to
be thrown overboard, but before that was done Captain
Smith decided that the ship would have to be abandoned,
as three batteries had her range and were hulling
her constantly.
The sick and wounded were brought
up, and three small boats, all that were left, were
employed in landing the crew. The fire of the
starboard battery had been kept up until this time,
but now ceased. The ship was then set on fire
in the forward store-room; but before the fire had
gained sufficient headway, three shot entering there
let in water and put it out. She was then fired
in four different places aft, and as soon as it was
sure that she would be destroyed, the captain and
first lieutenant left her, passing down to the Richmond
in safety. The Mississippi remained aground till
3 A.M., when she floated off and drifted down the
river, passing the other ships without injuring them.
At 5.30, being then some distance below, she blew up,
thus meeting the same fate that had befallen her sister
ship, the Missouri, twenty years before, in the harbor
of Gibraltar.
From the circumstances of the case
the exact number of killed and wounded of the Mississippi
could not be ascertained. Upon mustering the
ship’s company after the action, 64 were found
missing out of a total of 297. Of these 25 were
believed to have been killed.
It is sufficiently apparent, from
the above accounts of the experiences of each vessel,
that the failure of the greater part of the fleet
to pass was principally due to other circumstances
than the Confederate fire. The darkness of the
night, the stillness of the air, which permitted the
smoke to settle undisturbed, the intricacy of the
navigation, the rapidity of the current, then running
at the rate of five knots, the poor speed of the ships,
not over eight knots, were known beforehand, and were
greater elements of danger than the simple fire of
the enemy. To these is to be added the difficulty
of making the turn, with the swift current of the
river round the bend tending to throw the ship bodily
on to the hostile shore before she could be brought
to head in the new direction. The Hartford and
her consort alone reached this final trial, and were
by it nearly involved in the common disaster.
Nearly, but not quite; and the success
of the two vessels, though it placed them in a trying
and hazardous position, ensured the attainment of
the object for which the risk had been run. The
Red River was blockaded, not again to be open to the
Confederates during the war; and though nearly four
months were still to elapse before the Mississippi
would be freely used throughout its length by Union
vessels, it slipped finally from the control of the
enemy as Farragut with his two ships passed from under
the batteries at Port Hudson.
The morning after the action the flag-ship
dropped down nearly within range of the enemy, to
communicate, if possible, by signal with the fleet
below, but they could not be seen from her mast-heads;
therefore after firing three guns, as before concerted
with General Banks, the admiral went on up the river.
The following morning he anchored off the mouth of
the Red River, remaining twenty-four hours; and then
went on to below Vicksburg to communicate with Porter,
arriving there on the 20th. On the way the ships
engaged a battery of four rifled pieces at Grand Gulf,
losing 2 men killed and 6 wounded, but met with no
other opposition. Porter was absent in Deer Creek,
one of the bayous emptying into the Yazoo, when Farragut’s
messenger arrived, but communication was held with
General Grant, Captain Walke, the senior naval officer
present, and General A.W. Ellet, commanding the
ram flotilla. Farragut, deprived of the greater
part of his own fleet, was very desirous of getting
reinforcements from above; asking specially for an
ironclad and a couple of rams to assist him in maintaining
the blockade of Red River and to patrol the Mississippi.
In the absence of Porter he was not willing to urge
his request upon the subordinate officers present,
but General Ellet assumed the responsibility of sending
down two rams, without waiting to hear from the admiral,
of whose concurrence he expressed himself as feeling
assured; an opinion apparently shared by the others
present at the consultation. It would seem, however,
that Porter did not think the rams actually sent fit
to be separated from a machine-shop by enemies’
batteries; and his ironclads could not be spared from
the work yet to be done above. The rams Switzerland
and Lancaster, the former under command of Colonel
Charles E. Ellet, late of the Queen of the West, the
latter under Lieutenant-Colonel John A. Ellet, were
detailed for this duty and started during the night
of the 24th, but so late that they did not get by
before the sun had risen. The batteries opened
upon them between 5.30 and 6 A.M. of the 25th.
The Lancaster, an old and rotten boat, received a
shell in her boilers; and her hull was so shattered
by the explosion that she went to pieces and sank,
the officers and crew escaping on cotton bales.
The Switzerland was hulled repeatedly and received
two shots in her boilers; but being a stronger boat
survived her injuries and drifted down safely to her
destination, where a week’s labor put her again
in fighting condition. The recklessness of the
daring family whose name is so associated with the
ram fleet had thus caused the loss of two of them,
and led Porter to caution Farragut to keep the one
now with him always under his own eye.
Soon after the coming of General Grant,
while the army was digging canals at two or three
different points, with the view of opening new waterways
from above to below Vicksburg, Admiral Porter had suggested
that by cutting the levee across the old Yazoo Pass,
six miles below Helena, access might be had to the
Yazoo above Haines’s Bluff and Vicksburg turned
by that route. Grant ordered the cutting, and
Porter sent the light-draught Forest Rose to stand
by to enter when open.
There are two entrances from the Mississippi
to the pass, the upper one direct, the lower one turning
to the left and running parallel to the course of
the river. Just within their junction the levee,
built in 1856, crosses the pass, which is here only
seventy-five feet wide between the timber on either
side. At the distance of a mile from the great
river the pass enters the northern end of Moon Lake,
a crescent-shaped sheet of water, probably an old
bed of the Mississippi. The lake is seven or
eight miles long and from eight hundred to a thousand
yards wide, with a uniform depth enough to float the
largest steamboats. Two or three plantations were
then on the east shore, but the rest was unbroken
forest, quiet and isolated, abounding in game as the
waters did in fish. The pass issues again half
way down the eastern side, through an opening so shut
in with trees that it can scarcely be seen a hundred
yards away, and pursues a tortuous course of twelve
or fourteen miles to the Coldwater River, the upper
portion of the Yazoo. In this part of the route,
which never exceeds one hundred feet in width and
often narrows to seventy-five or less, the forest
of cyprus and sycamore trees, mingled with great
cottonwoods and thickly twining wild grape-vines,
formed a perfect arch overhead, shutting out the rays
of the sun; and, though generally high enough to allow
the tall smoke-stacks to pass underneath, sometimes
grazed their tops and again swept them down to the
deck as the swift current bore the vessels along.
Digging on the levee was begun on
the 2d of February, under the direction of Lieutenant-Colonel
James H. Wilson, of the Engineers. At this time
the difference of level between the water inside and
out of the levee was eight and a half feet. At
seven the next evening, the digging having gone far
enough, a mine was exploded and the water rushed in.
By eleven the opening was forty yards wide and the
water pouring in like a cataract, tearing aways logs,
trees, and great masses of earth with the utmost ease.
Owing to the vast tract of country to be flooded before
the waters could attain their level, it was not possible
to enter for four or five days; during that time they
were spreading north and south and east, driving the
wild animals from their lairs and the reptiles to
take refuge in the trees.
Meanwhile news of the project had
reached the Confederates, who, though they could have
little idea of the magnitude of the force which intended
to penetrate where few but flat-boats had gone before,
had taken the easy precaution of felling large trees
across the stream. On the 10th Colonel Wilson
had passed through Moon Lake and into the pass beyond.
Then it took three days of constant labor to get through
five miles of felled timber and drifted wood.
Some of the trees reached quite across the stream,
and were four feet in diameter. To add to the
difficulties of the pioneers, the country all around
was overflowed, except a mere strip a few inches out
of water on the very bank. Still they persevered,
and the way was opened through to the Coldwater.
Porter detailed for this expedition
the ironclads Chillicothe, Lieutenant-Commander James
P. Foster, and De Kalb, Lieutenant-Commander John
G. Walker; light-draught steamers Rattler, Marmora,
Signal, Romeo, Petrel, and Forest Rose; rams Lioness
and Fulton; the whole being under Lieutenant-Commander
Watson Smith, of the Rattler. The expedition
went through Yazoo Pass, meeting many obstructions
and difficulties, despite the work of Wilson’s
corps.
Three and a half days were consumed
in making the twelve miles from the lake to the Coldwater;
for, though the current ran swiftly-five
or six miles an hour-the low, overhanging
trees threatened the chimneys, and big projecting
limbs would come sweeping and crashing along the light
upper works, making a wreck of anything they met.
The great stern-wheels were constantly backing, and
a small boat lay on either quarter in readiness to
run a line to the trees to check the way of the vessels
and to ease them round the sharp bends, which were
so frequent it was impossible to see ahead or astern
one hundred yards in any part of the route. Huge
rafts of driftwood still remained to be dislodged.
On the 28th of February the vessels
entered the Coldwater. Here the stream was wider
and the current slacker, the trees rarely meeting
overhead; but the channel was nearly as crooked, and
accidents almost as frequent. Six days were consumed
in advancing thirty miles through an almost unbroken
wilderness. The stream widened and the country
became more promising in the lower part of the Coldwater
and the upper part of the Tallahatchie, into which
the vessels steamed on the evening of the 6th in a
sorely damaged condition. The Petrel had lost
her wheel and was wholly disabled; both smoke-stacks
of the Romeo were gone; the Chillicothe had run upon
the stump of a tree and started a plank in her bottom,
which was now kept in place by being shored down from
the beams of the deck above; and though none, except
the Petrel, were unfit for fighting, all had suffered
greatly in hull and upper works. The transports,
which had joined with 6,000 troops, were yet more
roughly handled.
The lower part of the Tallahatchie
again became narrow and crooked, and for forty or
fifty miles no break appeared in a wild and forbidding
wilderness until they began to draw near Fort Pemberton,
when the stream grew to a fair size. Tokens of
the enemy now were seen in burning piles of cotton,
and a Confederate steamer, which was picking up what
she could, was so closely pressed as to be burned by
her crew. The position of the Confederates had
been chosen but a few days before, and the works were
only partially up. The Tallahatchie here sweeps
sharply to the east, and then returns again, forming
a horseshoe bend thirteen miles long, the two parts
of the stream approaching each other so closely that
the neck of the enclosed peninsula is less than a
quarter of a mile wide. It is in this bend that
the Yallabusha enters, the river then taking the name
of Yazoo; so that the works erected across the neck
were said to be between the Tallahatchie and Yazoo,
though the stream is one. The fort, which was
called Pemberton, was built of cotton and earth; in
front of it was a deep slough, and on its right flank
the river was barricaded by a raft and the hull of
the ocean steamer Star of the West, which, after drawing
the first shots fired in the war, when the batteries
in Charleston stopped her from reinforcing Fort Sumter
in January, 1861, had passed by some chance to New
Orleans, where she was seized by the Government of
Louisiana when that State seceded. When Farragut
took New Orleans, she, with many river steamers, was
taken to the Yazoo, and now met her end sunk in the
swollen waters of a Southern creek. The cannon
mounted in the works were one six-and-a-half-inch rifled
gun, three 20-pounder Parrott rifles, and some field
pieces, among which was a Whitworth rifle. Lieutenant
F.E. Shepperd, of the Confederate Navy, who had
been busy felling trees in the upper river, was put
in charge of these pieces because none of the army
officers present, except General Loring, were familiar
with the use of great guns. The heavy rifle,
the main reliance of the fort, was only got into position
by blocking it up from the ground, no other appliances
being at hand; and as there was not enough blocking,
the attempt had nearly failed. It was in place
barely in time to meet the gunboats.
The Chillicothe, at 10 A.M. of the
11th of March, steamed round the bend above and engaged
the battery. She was twice struck on the turret,
being materially injured, and withdrew to fortify with
cotton bales. At 4.25 P.M. she again went into
action, at a distance of eight hundred yards, with
the De Kalb, but after firing four times, a shell
from the Confederate battery struck in the muzzle of
the port XI-inch just as the loaders had entered a
shell and were stripping the patch from the fuze;
both projectiles exploded, killing 2 and wounding 11
of the gun’s crew, besides injuring the gun.
The Chillicothe was then withdrawn, after receiving
another shot, which killed one of her ship’s
company, and showing her unfitness for action through
scamped work put upon her. The stream was so
narrow that two vessels could with difficulty act,
and therefore a 30-pound rifled gun was landed from
the Rattler on the 13th and an VIII-inch from the De
Kalb on the 15th. The action was renewed again
on the 13th, by both ironclads at 10.45 A.M., at a
distance of eight hundred yards, and was severe until
2 P.M., when the Chillicothe was forced to retire,
her ammunition running short. The De Kalb remained
in position until dark, firing every fifteen minutes,
but receiving no reply from the enemy. In this
day’s fight the fort was much damaged, the earth
covering and bales being knocked away and the cotton
set on fire in many places. None of the guns
were dismounted, but the large rifle was struck on
the side of the muzzle. The greater part of the
powder was in a powder-boat a mile away in the Yazoo,
but small supplies for the immediate service of the
battery were kept in temporary receptacles in the fort.
One of these was struck by a shot and the cotton bale
covering it knocked off; before it could be replaced
a bursting shell exploded the powder, killing and
wounding a number of the garrison.
On the 16th another attack was made
by the two boats, but the Chillicothe was disabled
in a few minutes and both were withdrawn. The
difficulty of handling when fighting down stream prevented
the vessels from getting that nearness to the enemy
which is so essential in an attack by ships upon fortifications.
Besides the damage sustained by the Chillicothe, the
De Kalb was much cut up, losing ten gun-deck beams
and having the wheel-house and steerage badly knocked
to pieces, but was not rendered unfit for service
as the Chillicothe was. The latter lost 4 killed
and 16 wounded; the De Kalb 3 killed and 3 wounded.
On the 17th, the troops being unable to land because
the country was overflowed and the ships unable to
silence the fort, the expedition fell back. On
the 22d General Quimby and his command was met coming
down, and at his desire the whole expedition returned
to Fort Pemberton; but after remaining twelve days
longer without effect the attempt was finally abandoned.
Though thus inconclusive, the attempt
by Yazoo Pass has an interest of its own from the
unique character of the difficulties encountered by
the ships. Although forewarned, the enemy were
taken unawares, and there is reason to believe, as
we have seen, that had a little more feverish energy
been displayed the vessels might have got possession
of Fort Pemberton before its guns were mounted.
As it was, by the Confederate reports, “notwithstanding
every exertion the enemy found us but poorly prepared
to receive him.” There was no other favorable
position for defensive works down to Yazoo City.
While the result of the Yazoo Pass
expedition was uncertain and the vessels still before
Fort Pemberton, an enterprise of similar character
was undertaken by Admiral Porter in person, having
for its object to reach the Yazoo below Yazoo City
but far above the works at Haines’s Bluff.
The proposed route was from the Yazoo up Steele’s
Bayou, through Black Bayou to Deer Creek, and thence
by Rolling Fork, a crooked stream of about four miles,
to the Big Sunflower, whence the way was open and
easy to the Yazoo River. Fort Pemberton would
then be taken between two divisions of the fleet,
and must fall; while the numerous steamers scattered
through the streams of the Yazoo country would be
at the mercy of the gunboats.
After a short preliminary reconnoissance
as far as Black Bayou, which indicated that the enterprise
was feasible, though arduous, and having received
encouraging accounts of the remainder of the route,
the admiral started on the 16th of March with five
ironclads: the Louisville, Lieutenant-Commander
E.K. Owen; Cincinnati, Lieutenant George M. Bache;
Carondelet, Lieutenant J.M. Murphy; Mound City,
Lieutenant Byron Wilson; Pittsburg, Lieutenant W.B.
Hoel; four mortars, and four tugs. All went well
till Black Bayou was reached. This is about four
miles long, narrow, and very crooked, and was then
filled with trees. Here the crews had to go to
work, dragging the trees up by the roots, or pushing
them over with the ironclads, and cutting away the
heavy overhanging branches. Having done this the
ironclads were able to force their way through the
bushes and trees which lined the banks and clung closely
to the bows and sides of the vessels, but the way
remained impracticable for transports and wooden boats.
In twenty-four hours the ironclads had gotten through
these four miles to Hill’s plantation, at the
junction of Black Bayou and Deer Creek.
General W.T. Sherman had been
directed to support the movement with one division
of his corps and a body of pioneers. The number
of steamers fit for the bayou navigation being limited,
the division was landed on the east bank of the Mississippi
and crossed by land to Steele’s Bayou, which
there approaches to within a mile of the river.
The pioneers followed the admiral up Black Bayou, and
when the gunboats entered Deer Creek remained to further
clear the bayou. On the 20th the work had progressed
so that two transports entered as far as a mile and
a half below Hill’s, where was the first piece
of dry land between that point and the mouth of the
Yazoo, the country generally being under water.
Meanwhile the admiral had pushed on
up Deer Creek, where the water was deep but the channel
narrow, crooked, and filled with young willows, which
bound the boats and made progress very difficult.
The bends were sharp, and much trouble was experienced
in heaving the vessels around them, while the banks
were lined with heavy trees and overhanging branches
that would tear down the chimneys and demolish boats
and light woodwork. Still they worked on, making
from half a mile to a mile an hour. The enemy,
notwithstanding what had been done at Yazoo Pass,
were taken by surprise, not having believed that even
gunboats would try to penetrate by those marshy, willowy
ditches. On the night of the 17th, Colonel Ferguson,
commanding the district, first received word at his
headquarters on Deer Creek, forty miles above Rolling
Fork, that the gunboats had entered the creek.
He at once hurried a battalion of sharpshooters and
some artillery on board a steamer and hastened down
to Rolling Fork, being so lucky as to get there before
the vessels, on the afternoon of the 19th. A small
detached body of cavalry were ahead of him, and, acting
on their own account, had begun to cut down trees
across the stream. Anticipating this, the admiral
had sent Lieutenant Murphy ahead in a tug and he had
come up in time to stop the felling of the first;
but the horsemen galloped across country faster than
the tug could force her way through the channel and
at last got down a large tree, which arrested the tug
till the rest of the force came up. Then the
slaves, with muskets to their breasts, were compelled
to ply their axes to stop the advance of those to
whom they looked for freedom.
The situation was critical, and the
crews turned to with a will, working night and day
to clear away these obstacles, without sleep and snatching
their food. They were now five or six miles from
Rolling Fork, and hearing that the enemy were landing,
Lieutenant Murphy was sent forward with 300 men and
two howitzers to hold the stream until the gunboats
could cover it with their guns; which he did, occupying
an Indian mound sixty feet high. After working
all night and the next day, the 19th, the squadron
had hewed its way by sundown to within eight hundred
yards of Rolling Fork. They rested that night,
and the morning of the 20th again started to work
through the willows, but the lithe trees resisted
all their efforts to push through, and had either
to be pulled up one by one or cut off under water,
both tedious processes. Meanwhile Ferguson, having
collected 800 men and six pieces of artillery, attacked
Murphy’s little body of men, who had to be recalled.
At three in the afternoon Featherstone’s brigade,
with a section of artillery, arrived from Vicksburg
to reinforce the enemy, and toward sundown opened
a sharp fire upon the gunboats from a distance.
Though this was easily silenced by the vessels, the
difficulty of throwing out working parties in the presence
of the enemy’s force was apparent. Word
was at once sent to Sherman of the state of things,
and reached him at 3 A.M. of the 21st; but before
that time the admiral, learning that some of the enemy
had reached his rear and had begun felling trees behind
him to prevent his retreat, had decided to withdraw.
Advance through Rolling Fork was no longer possible,
it having been so obstructed that two or three days’
labor would have been needed to clear it, even if
unopposed.
Having but ten or twelve feet to spare
on either side it was impossible to turn the boats,
so the rudders were unshipped and they began that
night to back down, rebounding from tree to tree on
either bank as they struck them. The country
from Rolling Fork to Black Bayou was mostly a chain
of plantations, in which the trees at few points came
down to the bank of the stream thickly enough to afford
cover for troops in numbers; but yet there was shelter
for sharpshooters at such a distance as enabled them
to pick off any of the crews that exposed themselves.
The guns were three feet below the levee, depriving
them of much of their power to annoy the assailants.
At 4 P.M. of the 21st, however, Colonel Giles A. Smith,
of Sherman’s command, arrived with 800 men;
Sherman, as soon as he heard of the admiral’s
dilemma, having sent every man he had by the east
bank of Deer Creek, remaining himself alone at Hill’s
until nightfall. Three steamboat loads of troops
then arrived below, and were conducted by him, with
lighted candles, through two and a half miles of dense
cane-brake to the plantation.
When Smith reached the vessels, they
had been stopped for an hour or two by a coal barge
sunk across the creek, and were kept from sending
out working parties by the enemy’s sharpshooters.
Smith now took charge of the banks, being reinforced
with 150 men and two howitzers from the fleet, and
before midnight the barge was blown up. The retreat
continued next day, the boats backing, and the Louisville,
which was the farthest down, clearing away the obstructions
while the troops kept the enemy from molesting the
workers. Owing to the number of trees to be removed,
only six miles had been gained by 3 P.M., at which
hour a large body of the enemy were seen passing by,
along the edge of the woods, and taking position about
a mile ahead of the advance of the troops. The
gunboats opened upon them, and at this time General
Sherman himself opportunely came up with his reinforcements
and drove the Confederates well back to the north and
rear of the squadron, thus finally freeing it from
a very anxious and critical dilemma. On the 24th
Hill’s plantation was reached, and the vessels
returned without further adventure to the mouth of
the Yazoo, where Porter communicated with Farragut,
who still remained near the lower end of the canal.
On the 29th and 30th it blew a gale
of wind from the north, during which the steamer Vicksburg,
that had been rammed two months before by the Queen
of the West, broke adrift from her moorings at the
city, and went ashore on the bank opposite the Hartford.
Upon examination it was found that her machinery had
been removed, and before any further action had been
taken by Farragut, the Confederates sent down and
burned her. Meanwhile coal from the army and provisions
from the upper squadrons were floated down in barges,
and on the 31st, having waited for the completion
of the repairs on the Switzerland, the admiral got
under way, with the Albatross and the ram in company,
and went down the river. At Grand Gulf the batteries
again opened on the ships, striking the Switzerland
twice and the Hartford once; the latter losing one
man killed. On the evening of April 1st the little
squadron reached Red River, having destroyed on its
passage down a large number of skiffs and flat-boats,
available for the transport of stores across the Mississippi
from the western country, on which Vicksburg now mainly
depended for supplies.
In their isolated condition, and occupying
a position so obnoxious to the enemy, there was reason
to expect a repetition on a larger scale of the attack
made upon the Indianola. The Hartford was specially
prepared for such a meeting. The lower yards were
lowered down to the rail and the stream-chain, lashed
to the bowsprit end, was carried aft, clove-hitched
to the yard-arms and brought in again at the warping
chocks. This barrier, while it remained intact,
would keep an assailant fifteen to twenty feet from
the ship; then, if it were passed, as a further protection
against boarders, hawsers were stretched along fore
and aft by the lower rigging, thirty feet above the
deck, carrying a heavy boarding netting which extended
from that height to the ship’s rail. The
hammock-cloths were kept triced up, and the poop-deck
and topgallant-forecastle, which were flush with the
rail of the ship, were barricaded with hammocks and
sails. For protection against rams large cypress
logs were slung around the vessel, a foot above the
water line. During the time they were thus alone
the guns’ crews always slept by the guns and
the ship was kept in a constant state of preparation
for instant action.
On the 6th Farragut went down again
to Port Hudson, anxious for news about his other ships,
from which he had now been for three weeks separated,
and desiring to communicate with General Banks.
The ordinary methods of signalling having failed to
attain these objects, the admiral’s secretary,
Mr. Gabaudan, volunteered to pass Port Hudson in a
skiff by night. The boat was covered with twigs,
arranged to resemble one of the floating trees not
uncommon in the Mississippi.
At a quarter past eight on the evening
of the 7th Mr. Gabaudan stepped into his ark, and
lying down in the bottom of it, with a paddle and
revolver by his side, was committed to the current.
This bore him safely by; but once grazing the shore,
the sentinels were heard commenting on the size of
the log, and a boat put out to make an examination.
Fortunately the men were contented with a glance, which
satisfied them that the object was what it seemed;
and Gabaudan’s safe arrival was signalled from
the vessels below at 10 P.M.
The next morning the admiral returned
to Red River and caught two steamers outside, one
of which managed to get in again; but the other was
captured, and with her a Confederate commissary, who
was making arrangements for crossing a large number
of cattle from the West at various points. Red
River was effectually closed, but the smallness of
his force made it necessary to keep them all together,
in case of attack, and though intercourse across the
Mississippi was seriously impaired, it was not wholly
checked. On the 15th the admiral again returned
to the bend above Port Hudson, and communicated by
signal with the Richmond, which had come up in accordance
with instructions transmitted through Mr. Gabaudan.
This officer at the same time returned to the ship,
under protection of an escort, overland, there being
no regular Confederate force on the right bank.
Meanwhile General Grant had been maturing
his plans for the movement by which Vicksburg was
eventually reduced. The bayou expeditions had
failed, and with them every hope of turning the enemy’s
right flank. The idea had been entertained of
opening a water route by cutting a channel from the
west bank of the Mississippi, seventy-five miles above
Vicksburg, to Lake Providence, from which there was
communication by bayous to the Tensas, Wachita, and
Red Rivers, and so to the Mississippi below Vicksburg.
Yet another water-way by bayous was contemplated from
Milliken’s Bend, twenty miles above, through
the Tensas, to New Carthage, thirty miles below, Vicksburg.
Work was done upon both these routes by the army;
but the rapid falling of the river toward the middle
of April at once made them less desirable and the
roads on the west bank passable. Three army corps
had already moved, one after the other, beginning
on the 29th of March, toward New Carthage on the west
bank; but though not over twenty miles by land in
a straight line, the condition of the country from
broken levees and bad roads made necessary a circuit
of thirty-five miles to reach this point. As
soon as the movement was definitely decided upon, Admiral
Porter made his preparations for running the batteries
of Vicksburg with the greater portion of his fleet.
To assure a supply of fuel below, the vessels detailed
for the duty took each a coal barge on the starboard
side, leaving the port guns, which would bear upon
the batteries, clear for firing. There being
no intention to engage the enemy except for the purpose
of covering the passage, every precaution was taken
to avoid being seen or heard. All lights were
extinguished, ports carefully covered, and the fires
well lighted before starting, so as to show, if possible,
no smoke; while to lessen the noise, the steam, as
with the Carondelet at Island N, was to exhaust
into the wheel, and the vessels were to proceed at
low speed. To avoid collisions, fifty yards were
prescribed as the interval to be observed, and each
boat was to keep a little to one side of its next
ahead, so that, in case of the latter stopping, the
follower would be able to pass without change of course.
The sterns of the vessels-their weakest
part-were to be specially protected against
raking shots, which was done by piling wet bales of
hay and slinging heavy logs near the water line.
At a quarter past nine of the night
of April 16th, the fleet destined for this service
got under way from the mouth of the Yazoo River, the
flag-ship Benton, sixteen guns, Lieutenant-Commander
James A. Greer, leading, and the other vessels in
the following order: Lafayette, eight guns, Captain
Henry Walke; Louisville, twelve guns, Lieutenant-Commander
Elias K. Owen; Mound City, fourteen guns, Lieutenant
Byron Wilson; Pittsburg, thirteen guns, Lieutenant
W.R. Hoel; Carondelet, eleven guns, Lieutenant
J. McLeod Murphy; Tuscumbia, five guns, Lieutenant-Commander
James W. Shirk. The Lafayette carried with her,
lashed to the other side of her coal barge, the ram
General Price, Lieutenant S.E. Woodworth, which
had continued in the service after being taken from
the Confederates at Memphis. After the Carondelet,
between her and the Tuscumbia, came three army transports,
the Silver Wave, Henry Clay, and Forest Queen, unprotected
except by bales of hay and cotton round the boilers.
They carried stores, but no troops.
A month later, and probably at this
time also, the river batteries before which the fleet
was to pass contained thirty-one pieces of heavy artillery
and thirteen of light. Among them were eight X-inch,
one IX-inch, and one VIII-inch columbiad, smooth-bore
guns; and eleven rifled guns of a calibre of 6.5 inches
and upward.
At 11.10 P.M., the fleet then moving
at a speed scarcely exceeding the drift of the current,
a musketry fire began from the upper batteries of
the enemy. At 11.16 the great guns began, slowly
at first, but soon more rapidly. A few moments
later a large fire was lit on the point, bringing
the vessels, as they passed before it, into bold relief,
and serving to confuse, to some extent, the pilots
of the fleet. Each ship as she brought her guns
to bear on rounding the point, opened her fire, first
from the bow and then from the port battery. The
engagement thus soon became general and animated.
The confusion of the scene was increased by the eddying
currents of the river, which, catching the slowly
moving steamers, now on the bow, now on the quarter,
swung them round with their broadside to the stream,
or even threw the bow up river again. Unable
to see through the smoke and perplexed by the light
of the fire, the majority of the vessels, thus cut
around, made a full turn in the stream under the guns
of the enemy, and one, at least, went round twice.
The flag-ship Benton, though heavily struck, passed
through without special adventure escaping this involuntary
wheel. The Lafayette, in the smoke, found her
nose nearly on shore on the enemy’s side, and
her coal barge received a shell in the bow which reduced
it to a sinking condition. The Louisville, next
astern, coming up, fouled the Lafayette’s consort,
the General Price; which, being already badly cut up
by shot and shell, cast off her fasts and made the
rest of the journey alone. The Lafayette then
let go her barge and went down without further adventure.
The Louisville also lost her barge, apparently, at
this time, but picked it up again while still under
fire. The Mound City following came down upon
the three vessels thus sported with by the current
and the difficulties of the night, and to avoid a like
disaster passed them by. The Pittsburg came next
in her appointed station; like the Mound City, she
escaped the pranks of the eddy, and both vessels,
steaming leisurely on, used their guns with good effect;
receiving, while passing the burning pile ashore, several
shot from the enemy. The Pittsburg was struck
on the quarter, where the logs alone prevented the
shot from entering the magazine. The Carondelet
met with no other mishap than making an involuntary
circle in the river. The Tuscumbia remained in
rear of the transports, which had a hard time.
Either swung by the eddy, or daunted by the tremendous
fire which they were certainly ill-fitted to resist,
two of them at one time pointed up stream. The
Tuscumbia stopped, prepared to compel their passage
down; but force was not needed. The Henry Clay
caught fire, was burnt and sank; the other resumed
her course. When rounding the point, the Tuscumbia
touched, and as she backed off fouled the Forest Queen,
causing great hurrahs among the enemy. The vessels
soon got apart, but the transport had a shot through
her steam-pipe; so the Tuscumbia stuck to her, the
two drifting down together until out of range, when
the gunboat towed the other ashore. The Tuscumbia
had a shot in the bows under water, starting seven
planks and causing her to leak badly.
Though repeatedly hulled, the armed
vessels received no injury unfitting them for instant
service, and of their crews lost only 13 wounded.
By three o’clock in the morning they were all
anchored twelve miles above New Carthage, ready to
co-operate with the movements of the army.
Encouraged by the comparative success
of the transports on the 16th, Grant directed six
more to run the batteries, which was done on the night
of the 22d. One got a shot under water, and sank
after getting by; the others were more or less damaged,
but were repaired by the orders of Admiral Porter.
Still the number was so limited, in proportion to
the amount of transportation required, that the general
decided to move the troops by land to Hard Times Landing,
twenty-five miles below New Carthage by the course
of the river. The ships of war and transports
followed, the latter carrying as many men as they
could.
Five miles below Hard Times, on the
opposite shore, is Grand Gulf, where a battery had
fired upon Farragut, both on his passage to Vicksburg
and return from there, after the fight at Port Hudson.
The Confederates had begun to strengthen the works
immediately after that time to prevent him from going
by with impunity; but as he considered his task limited
to the blockade of the Red River and the Mississippi
below, to which alone his force was adequate, he had
not again come within their range. Immediately
above Grand Gulf is the mouth of the Big Black River,
a considerable stream, by which supplies from the Red
River country were transported to the interior of the
Confederacy on the east of the Mississippi.
Eight hundred yards below the mouth
of the Big Black is the Point of Rocks, rising about
seventy-five feet above the river at its then height.
On this was the upper battery, mounting, at the time
of attack, two VII-inch rifles, one VIII-inch smooth-bore,
and a 30-pound rifled gun on wheels. A line of
rifle-pits and a covered way led from there to the
lower fort, three-quarters of a mile farther down,
in which were mounted one 100-pound rifle, one VIII-inch
smooth-bore, and two 32-pounders. There were
in addition five light rifled guns, 10-and 20-pounders,
in different parts of the works. The Point of
Rocks battery was close over the river, but the bluffs
below receded so as to leave a narrow strip of land,
three to four hundred yards wide, along the water
and in front of the lower fort. All the fortifications
were earthworks.
The intention was to silence the works
by the fleet, after which the army was to cross in
transports, under cover of the gunboats, and carry
the place by storm. The orders prescribing the
manner of attack were issued by the admiral on the
27th. On the 29th, at 7 A.M., the fleet got under
way, the Pittsburg leading; her commander, Lieutenant
Hoel, a volunteer officer, being himself a pilot for
the Mississippi, obtained the honor of leading through
his local knowledge. The Louisville, Carondelet,
and Mound City followed in the order named, firing
upon the upper fort so long as their guns bore, but
passing by it to attack the lower work, which was
allotted to them. The Pittsburg rounded to as
she reached her station, keeping up her fire all the
time, and took position close into the bank with her
head up stream. The Louisville, following the
Pittsburg’s motions, passed her, rounded to
and took her station immediately astern. The Carondelet
and Mound City successively performed the same manoeuvre.
All four then went into close action with the lower
fort, at the same time directing any of their guns
that would bear upon other points of the works.
The remaining vessels, Lafayette, Tuscumbia, and flag-ship
Benton, followed the first four, but rounded to above
the town to engage the upper fort; the Lafayette taking
position at first in an eddy of the river, and using
her two stern guns, 100-pound rifles. The Benton
and Tuscumbia fought their bow and starboard guns;
all the vessels keeping under way during the engagement,
and being at times baffled by the eddies in the stream.
At eleven o’clock, the admiral signalled the
Lafayette to change her position to the lower battery,
which she did. About eleven, a shot came into
the Benton’s pilot-house, wounding the pilot
and shattering the wheel. The vessel was for a
moment unmanageable, got into an eddy, and was carried
down three-quarters of a mile before she could again
be brought under control; but her place was promptly
supplied by the Pittsburg, which had just moved up
with that division of the fleet, the lower fort being
silenced. The whole squadron now concentrated
its fire upon the Point of Rocks battery, keeping
under way, and from the difficulties of the stream
and the eddying current, at varying ranges. The
Lafayette took again her position in the eddy to the
north of the battery. Half an hour after noon,
the Tuscumbia’s port engine was disabled, and
being unable to stem the stream with her screws, she
was compelled to drop down below Grand Gulf.
The action was continued vigorously until 1 P.M., when
the enemy’s fire, which had not been silenced
in the upper fort, slackened materially. The
admiral then passed up the river to consult with Grant,
who had seen the fight from the deck of a tug and realized,
as did Porter, that the works had proved themselves
too high and too strong to be taken from the water
side. He therefore decided to land the troops,
who were already on board the transports waiting to
cross, and march down to the point immediately below
Grand Gulf, while Porter signalled his ships to withdraw,
which they did, after an action lasting four hours
and a quarter, tying up again to the landing at Hard
Times. The limitation to the power of the vessels
was very clearly shown here, as at Fort Donelson;
the advantage given by commanding height could not
be overcome by them. On a level, as at Fort Henry,
or with slight advantage of command against them, as
at Arkansas Post, the chances were that they would
at close quarters win by disabling or silencing the
guns; but when it came to a question of elevation
the guns on shore were too much sheltered. Even
so, it may be looked upon as an unusual misfortune
that after tearing the works to pieces as they did,
no gun of the Confederates was seriously injured.
On the other hand, though the gunboats were roughly
handled, it could be claimed for them, too, that they
were not silenced, and that, like the earthworks,
they were not, with one exception, seriously injured.
The loss of the fleet was: the Benton, 7 killed
and 19 wounded; Tuscumbia, 5 killed and 24 wounded;
Pittsburg, 6 killed and 13 wounded. The Lafayette
had one man wounded, while the remaining vessels lost
none.
In the afternoon the Confederates
were observed to be repairing their works, so the
Lafayette was ordered down to stop them. She soon
drove off the working parties, and then kept up a
steady fire at five-minute intervals against the upper
battery until 8 P.M., getting no reply from a work
which had responded so vigorously in the morning.
That evening the fleet got under way
at 8 P.M., the Benton leading, followed by the other
gunboats and the transports, the Lafayette joining
as they reached her station. The armed vessels
again engaged the batteries and the transports slipped
safely by under cover of this attack, receiving no
injury; in fact, being struck not more than two or
three times. As soon as they had passed, the gunboats
followed, and tied up again on the Louisiana shore,
four miles below Grand Gulf. One life only was
lost in the night action, on board the Mound City.
At daylight the following morning
the work of carrying the army across the Mississippi
to Bruinsburg began, the gunboats as well as the transports
aiding in the operation.
The same day, April 30th, a feigned
attack was made at Haines’s Bluff by the vessels
of the squadron remaining above Vicksburg, under Lieutenant-Commander
K.R. Breese, in conjunction with the Fifteenth
Army Corps, under General W.T. Sherman. The
object of General Grant in ordering this demonstration
was to hinder the Confederates at Vicksburg from sending
heavy reinforcements to Grand Gulf to oppose the troops
on their first landing. The expedition was most
successful in attaining this end, but the vessels
were very roughly handled, having been much exposed
with the wish to make the attack appear as real as
possible. The Choctaw, Lieutenant-Commander F.M.
Ramsay, was struck as often as forty-six times.
Despite the heavy fire of the enemy, no serious casualties
occurred on board the fleet in an action which lasted
three hours, from 11 A.M. to 2 P.M. The demonstration
was continued during the following day, but at 8 P.M.
General Sherman withdrew his troops to the other side
of the Mississippi, taking up his march to join the
main body of the army; and the vessels returned to
their anchorage off the mouth of the Yazoo.
On the morning of the 3d Porter advanced
upon Grand Gulf with his fleet below, intending to
attack if the enemy were still there; but the place
was found to be evacuated, as had been expected, the
march of the army inland having rendered it untenable.
The earthworks were torn to pieces by the fire of
the fleet, and Colonel Wade, the commandant, had been
killed; but the guns were still in position, except
two 32-pounders in the lower battery, which were dismounted
and broken. A large quantity of ammunition was
also obtained, showing that lack of it was not the
cause of the fire slackening on the 29th of April.
The same day General Grant arrived, and made the necessary
arrangements for transferring his base of supplies
to Grand Gulf instead of Bruinsburg.
On the day that Porter ran by the
batteries of Vicksburg, April 16th, Farragut, having
received his secretary and the despatches brought by
him, went back from Port Hudson to the mouth of the
Red River. During the next fortnight he kept
up the blockade of the Mississippi between those two
points, twice catching stores crossing in flat-boats,
besides destroying a number of boats along the river
and a large quantity of commissary stores at Bayou
Sara. Besides cutting off Port Hudson from the
west bank of the Mississippi, his presence in this
position prevented reinforcements from that place being
sent by the Red River, as they otherwise might have
been, to the Confederate General Taylor, who was now
being pressed by Banks toward Alexandria. Farragut
had also in view blockading the Black River, a tributary
of the Red, which enters it from the north and northwest
about thirty miles from the Mississippi and by which
it was reported that reinforcements to Taylor were
expected to arrive from Arkansas.
These military movements in Western
Louisiana were due to the operations of General Banks,
who had abandoned the demonstration made from Baton
Rouge against Port Hudson, at the time Farragut passed,
and resumed his operations by the Bayous Teche and
Atchafalaya. This expedition was accompanied
by four light gunboats, the Calhoun, Clifton, Arizona,
and Estrella, under the command of Lieutenant-Commander
A.P. Cooke, of the latter vessel. The land
forces reached Opelousas near the Teche, sixty miles
from Alexandria, on the 20th of April; and the same
day the gunboats took Butte-a-la-Rose, on the Atchafalaya,
sixty miles from Brashear City, a fortified place,
mounting two heavy guns. Banks continued his
advance upon Alexandria, and the gunboats pushed on
through the Atchafalaya for the mouth of the Red River.
On the evening of the 1st of May the
Arizona arrived where the Hartford was then lying,
bringing with her despatches from Banks to Farragut,
asking his co-operation against Alexandria. The
Estrella coming a few hours later, the admiral sent
the two, with the Albatross, under Lieutenant-Commander
John E. Hart, senior officer, up the Red River on
the 3d. The little detachment reached the mouth
of the Black River that afternoon, and there learned
that none of the Confederate reinforcements expected
by that stream had as yet passed. At sunset they
anchored thirteen miles below Gordon’s Landing.
The next day, at 5 A.M., they again went up the stream,
reaching, at 8.40, the bluff and bend which had been
the scene of the capture of the Queen of the West
ten weeks before. When the Albatross, which was
leading, looked out from behind the bluff her people
saw a battery with three casemates, now called
Fort De Russey, commanding the river, covering two
river steamers with steam up; alongside one of these
was a flat-boat loaded with a heavy gun, believed
to be one of those taken from the Indianola.
Below the battery was a heavy raft, stretching across
the stream and secured by chains to both banks.
The Albatross went at once into action at a distance
of five hundred yards, having, at that distance, to
deal not only with the battery but with sharpshooters
sheltered behind cotton barricades on board the steamers.
The ship was much embarrassed by the eddies and the
intricacy of the channel, touching several times; but
the fight was maintained for forty minutes, after
which she withdrew, having been hulled eleven times,
her spars and rigging seriously injured, and having
lost two men killed and four wounded. The force
was too small to grapple successfully with the work,
so Lieutenant-Commander Hart gave the order to return.
On the way down the vessels met Admiral
Porter, who had delayed at Grand Gulf no longer than
was necessary to take possession. Leaving there
at noon of the day of its occupation he reached the
mouth of the Red River on the 4th, and communicated
with Farragut. The next day he went up the Red
River, taking with him, besides the flag-ship Benton,
the Lafayette, Pittsburg, and Price. The ram Switzerland,
which Farragut no longer needed, and the tug Ivy accompanied
him.
When he fell in with Hart’s
expedition, Porter took the Estrella and Arizona in
addition to his own force, leaving the Albatross to
rejoin Farragut alone. On the 5th, toward sundown,
Fort De Russey was reached, but found to be abandoned
and the guns removed, except one 64-pounder.
Losing no time in destroying the abandoned works, the
squadron pushed on at once for Alexandria; a passage
through the raft being opened by the Price’s
ram. The Arizona having speed was sent ahead
to surprise any steamer that might be at the town,
where she arrived the evening of the 6th, the rest
of the vessels coming up the following morning.
Most of the Confederate public property had been already
removed to Shreveport, three hundred and fifty miles
farther up, in the northwest corner of Louisiana,
where the gunboats in that stage of the river could
not follow. General Banks arrived on the evening
of the 7th from Opelousas.
As the river was beginning to fall,
Porter went down again on the 8th with all the vessels
but the Lafayette, Captain Walke, who was left at
Alexandria to co-operate with the army. The Benton
stopped for a short time at Fort De Russey, while
a detached expedition, consisting of the Price, Switzerland,
Pittsburg, and Arizona was sent up the Black River.
They got as far as Harrisonburg, seventy miles up,
where were found batteries on high hills too heavy
for the force, which was recalled after communicating
with the admiral, having succeeded in destroying $300,000
worth of the enemy’s provisions. The Switzerland,
Estrella, and Arizona were now sent up to Captain Walke
at Alexandria, and the admiral returned to Grand Gulf
on the 13th. The Black River expedition was in
itself of no great consequence; but, taken in connection
with others of the same character through these waters,
after the fall of Vicksburg, and the expected reinforcements
of Taylor by the same route, it illustrates the facilities
for rapidly traversing the enemy’s country afforded
by the navigable streams, and the part played by them
in the conduct of the war by either party.
Farragut now felt that his personal
presence was no longer required above Port Hudson,
and returned to New Orleans by one of the bayous;
leaving Commodore Palmer with the Hartford, Albatross,
Estrella, and Arizona to maintain the blockade above
until Porter was ready to assume the entire charge.
The Hartford, however, did not come down till after
the surrender of Port Hudson, two months later.
After the capture of Alexandria and
the dispersal of the enemy in that quarter, General
Banks moved down with his army to Simmesport, on the
Atchafalaya Bayou, five miles from the Red River, and
thence across the Mississippi at Bayou Sara, five
or six miles above Port Hudson. General Augur
of his command at the same time moved up from Baton
Rouge. The two bodies met on the 23d of May, and
Port Hudson was immediately invested. An assault
was made on the 27th, but proved unsuccessful, and
the army settled down to a regular siege. A battery
of four IX-inch shell-guns from the navy was efficiently
served throughout the siege by a detachment of seamen
from the Richmond and Essex under Lieutenant-Commander
Edward Terry, executive officer of the former vessel.
The Essex, Commander Caldwell, and the half dozen
mortar-schooners under his orders maintained a
constant bombardment and succession of artillery fights
with the river batteries of the enemy, being exposed
to the fire of four VIII-and X-inch columbiads and
two heavy rifles. Between the 23d of May and 26th
of June Caldwell estimated that one thousand shot
and shell had been fired at him from these guns.
During these daily engagements the Essex was hulled
twenty-three times, besides being frequently struck
above her decks, and had received severe injury.
The mortar-schooners also came in for their share
of hard knocks, and their captains were all specially
commended both by Caldwell and Farragut.
On the 15th of May Porter went to
the Yazoo and there awaited news from the army.
On the 18th heavy firing in the rear of the city assured
him of Grant’s approach. That afternoon
the advance of Sherman’s corps came in below
Snyder’s Bluff, between the city and Haines’s
Bluff. The works at the latter point had been
abandoned the evening before on the approach of the
army; a small party only being left to destroy or
remove whatever they could. Upon the appearance
of the troops the admiral sent up a force of gunboats
under Lieutenant-Commander K.R. Breese, whereupon
the party ran off, leaving everything in good order.
The works mounted fourteen heavy guns, VIII-and X-inch
smooth-bores, and VII1/2-inch rifles; the carriages
of these were burned, as were the Confederate encampments,
and the magazines blown up. Porter now received
letters from Grant, Sherman, and Steele, informing
him of the entire success of the campaign in the rear
of Vicksburg, and asking that provisions might be sent
up, the army having lived off the country almost entirely
during a fortnight of constant marching and fighting.
Lieutenant-Commander J.G. Walker in the De Kalb
was sent up to Yazoo City with sufficient force to
destroy the enemy’s property which he might find,
and the gunboats below Vicksburg were moved up to
fire on the hill batteries, an annoyance to the garrison
which they kept up off and on during the night.
On the 19th six mortar-boats were got into position,
with orders to fire night and day as rapidly as possible.
Grant, having completed the investment
of Vicksburg, sent word on the evening of the 21st
that he intended to make a general assault upon the
enemy’s works at 10 A.M. the following day, and
asked that the fleet might shell the batteries from
9.30 to 10.30. Porter complied by keeping up
his mortar fire all night and sending up the gunboats
to shell the water batteries, and other places where
he thought the enemy might find rest. At 7 A.M.
the next day the Mound City, followed at eight by
the Benton, Tuscumbia, and Carondelot, moved up abreast
the lower end of the canal, opening upon the hill
batteries; then they attacked the water batteries,
the duel between them and the ships at a range of
four hundred and fifty yards being maintained incessantly
for two hours. The Tuscumbia proved, as before,
too weak to withstand such close action and had to
drop down. The admiral wrote that this was the
hottest fire that the gunboats had yet endured, but
the water batteries having little elevation, the ships
contended on more even terms than at Grand Gulf, and
fighting bows on, received little damage.
The fire was maintained for an hour
longer than Grant had asked, when the vessels dropped
out of range, having lost only a few wounded.
The assault of the army was not successful and regular
siege operations were begun. Vicksburg and Port
Hudson, the two extremes of the Confederate line,
were thus formally invested by the 27th of May.
On that day, Porter, having received a request from
Grant and Sherman to try whether the enemy had moved
from the batteries the guns on their extreme left,
as they had from many of the other hill batteries,
sent down the gunboat Cincinnati, Lieutenant George
M. Bache, to draw their fire if still there; and,
if possible, to enfilade the enemy’s rifle-pits
in that quarter and drive them out. The Cincinnati
started from the upper division of the squadron at
7 A.M.; the vessels of the lower division, Price,
Benton, Mound City, and Carondelet, steaming up at
the same time to cover her movement by engaging the
lower batteries, which might have played upon her.
General Sherman took a position upon a hill at the
extreme right of the Union lines, overlooking the
river, so as to see the affair and take advantage of
any success gained by the Cincinnati’s attack.
The gunboat, protected as usual by logs and hay, came
within range shortly after nine o’clock, and
the enemy began firing rapidly from all their batteries,
the guns whose position had been doubted proving to
be in their old place. When abreast the position
assigned her for enfilading the rifle-pits the Cincinnati
rounded to, and as she did so a shot pierced her side
and entered the shell-room, capsizing nearly all the
boxes on one side of the alley. As she came to
with her head up stream, another ball entered the
shell-room below the water-line, and a third pierced
her stern, always the weakest part of these vessels,
going into the magazine, also below the water-line,
flooding it instantly and causing the vessel to fill
rapidly. A heavy shot drove through the pilot-house,
and shortly afterward the starboard tiller was carried
away. The plunging fire of many big guns, concentrated
on a single vessel, wrought great injury in a short
time; penetrating her light deck, five of her guns
were disabled by it. All three flag-staffs were
shot away, carrying the colors down with them; upon
which, a quartermaster, Frank Bois by name, went out
and nailed a flag to the stump that was left of the
forward staff. Finding the vessel must sink,
Lieutenant Bache kept running up stream, hugging the
east bank to be as far as possible out of the enemy’s
range, and about ten minutes before she went down
sheered in, ran out a hawser, and a plank by which
the wounded were landed. Unfortunately the men
who went ashore with the hawser did not secure it
properly, the boat began drifting out into the stream,
and the officers and crew had to swim for their lives.
She sank in three fathoms of water within range of
the enemy’s batteries, the second to go down
of the seven first built. The loss was 5 killed,
14 wounded, and 15 missing; supposed to have been
drowned.
The detached expedition to Yazoo City,
under Lieutenant-Commander Walker, had returned on
the evening of the 23d. On the approach of the
vessels, the Confederates had set fire to the navy
yard and three steamers on the stocks building for
ships of war, one a very large vessel, 310 feet long
by 70 feet beam and intended to carry 41/2-inch plating.
All that had not been destroyed or removed by the enemy
the gunboats finished, the loss being estimated at
two million dollars. An attack was made upon
the gunboats at a bend of the river by a small force
of riflemen with three field pieces, but was repelled
without trouble, one man only being killed and eight
slightly wounded. The morning after their return
the same vessels were again sent up. One of the
light-draughts, the Signal, met with the curious accident
of knocking down her smoke-stacks, an incident which
again illustrates the peculiar character of this bayou
warfare. Sending her back, and leaving his own
vessel, the De Kalb, to follow as rapidly as possible,
Walker pushed on with the Forest Rose, Linden, and
Petrel to within fifteen miles of Fort Pemberton,
by which the Yazoo Pass expedition had been baffled.
Here four fine steamers had been sunk on a bar, stopping
farther progress. Having no means of raising them,
they were fired and burned to the water’s edge.
The vessels then passed down the Yazoo, burning a
large saw-mill twenty-five miles above Yazoo City,
till they came to the Big Sunflower River. They
ascended this stream one hundred and eighty miles,
branch expeditions being sent into the bayous that
enter it, destroying or causing the destruction of
four more steamers. Transportation on the Yazoo
by the Confederates was now broken up below Fort Pemberton,
while above it a few steamers only remained.
From this time until the surrender
of Vicksburg little occurred to vary the routine siege
operations. Thirteen heavy cannon, from IX-inch
to 32-pounders, were landed from the fleet to take
their place in the siege batteries, in charge, at
different points of the lines, of Lieutenant-Commander
T.O. Selfridge, and Acting-Masters C.B. Dahlgren
and J.F. Reed; and as many officers and men as
could be spared were sent with them. Three heavy
guns, a X-inch, IX-inch, and 100-pound rifle, under
the command of Lieutenant-Commander F.M. Ramsay,
of the Choctaw, were placed in scows close to the
point opposite the town, but where they were protected
by the bank, enfilading the batteries and rifle-pits
on the enemy’s left, against which the Cincinnati
had made her unsuccessful attack. The gunboats
below were constantly under fire and the mortars steadily
shelling. On the 19th of June Grant notified
the admiral that he intended to open a general bombardment
at 4 A.M. the following day and continue it till 10
A.M. The lower division, the scow battery, and
the mortars joined in this, shelling the hill batteries
and the city, but no reply was made by the enemy from
the water front.
The great service of the navy during
the siege was keeping open the communications, which
were entirely by the river from the time that Sherman’s
corps reached Snyder’s Bluff. The danger
of Vicksburg thrilled from the heart of the Confederacy
through every nerve to its extremities. It was
felt that its fall would carry down Port Hudson also,
leave the Mississippi open, and hopelessly sever the
East and West. Every man, therefore, that could
be moved was in motion, and though the enemy had no
vessel on the river, the banks on either side swarmed
with guérillas, moving rapidly from spot to spot,
rarely attempting to attack any body of troops, but
falling back into the interior and dispersing when
followed up. Provided with numerous field pieces,
they sought to cut off the transports carrying reinforcements
and the steamers carrying supplies. The tortuous
course of the stream in many places enabled those
who knew the ground to move rapidly across the country
and attack the same vessel a second time if she escaped
the first assault. On several occasions batteries
were built, and a large force attempted the destruction
of transports. From these dangers the navy was
the only, as it was the best protection. The long
line from Cairo to Vicksburg was patrolled by the smaller
class of gunboats, and, thanks to their skilful distribution
and the activity and courage of the individual commanders,
no serious interruption of travel occurred. One
steamer only was badly disabled and a few men killed
or wounded.
On the 4th of July, 1863, Vicksburg
surrendered, and on the 9th the garrison of Port Hudson
also laid down its arms. The Mississippi was
now open from Cairo to the Gulf, and the merchant steamboat
Imperial, leaving St. Louis on the 8th, reached New
Orleans on the 10th of this month without molestation.
The Navy Department now directed that
the command of the river as far down as New Orleans
should be assumed by Porter, Farragut to confine himself
henceforth to the coast operations and blockade.
Toward the end of July the two admirals met in New
Orleans, and, the transfer having been made, Farragut
sailed on the 1st of August for the North to enjoy
a short respite from his labors. Porter then returned
to Cairo, where he at once divided the long line of
waterways under his command into eight districts,
of which six were on the Mississippi. The seventh
extended on the Ohio from Cairo to the Tennessee,
and thence through the course of the latter river,
while the eighth embraced the upper Ohio and the Valley
of the Cumberland. Each district had its own
commander, who was responsible to the admiral, but
was not to interfere with another unless in case of
great need. For the present all was quiet, but
there were already rumors of trouble to come when
the enemy should recover from the stunning blows he
had just received.