Upon the fall of Vicksburg and Port
Hudson two objects in the Southwest were presented
to the consideration of the Government at Washington-Mobile
and Texas. General Banks, commanding the Department
of the Gulf, was anxious to proceed against the former;
a desire fully shared by the navy, which knew that
sooner or later it must be called upon to attack that
seaport, and that each day of delay made its defences
stronger. Considerations of general policy, connected
with the action of France in Mexico and the apparent
unfriendly attitude of the Emperor Napoleon III. toward
the United States, decided otherwise. On the
10th of June, 1863, just a month before the fall of
the strongholds of the Mississippi, the French army
entered the city of Mexico. On the 24th of July
General Banks was instructed to make immediate preparations
for an expedition to Texas. This was speedily
followed by other urgent orders to occupy some point
or points of Texan territory, doubtless as an indication
that the course of interference begun in the weaker
republic would not be permitted to extend to lands
over which the United States claimed authority, though
actually in revolt. The expectation that France
would thus attempt to interfere was far from lacking
foundation, and was shared, with apprehension, by
the Confederate Government. A year before, M.
Theron, a French consul in Texas, acting in his official
capacity, had addressed a letter to the Governor of
the State, suggesting that the re-establishment of
the old republic of Texas, in other words, the secession
of the State from the Confederacy, might be well for
his “beloved adopted country;” and ended
by saying that the Governor’s answer would be
a guide to him in his political correspondence with
the government he represented. In consequence
of this letter, M. Theron and the French consul at
Richmond, who had also been meddling with Texan affairs,
were ordered to leave the Confederate States.
The object evidently was to set up an independent
republic between the new empire in Mexico and whichever
power, Union or Confederacy, should triumph in the
Civil War.
The Commander-in-Chief, General Halleck,
expressed his own preference for a movement by the
Red River to Shreveport, in the northwest corner of
Louisiana, and the military occupation from that point
of northern Texas, but left the decision as to taking
that line of operation, or some other, to General
Banks. The latter, for various reasons, principally
the great distance of Shreveport, seven hundred miles
from New Orleans, and the low state of the Red River,
which entirely precluded water transportation, chose
to operate by the sea-coast, and took as the first
point of attack Sabine Pass and city, three hundred
miles from Southwest Pass, where the river Sabine,
separating the States of Louisiana and Texas, enters
the Gulf. If he could make good his footing here
at once, he hoped to be able to advance on Beaumont,
the nearest point on the railroad, and thence on Houston,
the capital and railway centre of the State, which
is less than one hundred miles from Sabine City, before
the enemy could be ready to repel him.
Owing to lack of transportation, all
the troops for the destined operations could not go
forward at once. The first division of 4,000,
under Major-General Franklin, sailed from New Orleans
on the 5th of September. Commodore Henry H. Bell,
commanding the Western Gulf Squadron in the absence
of Farragut, detailed the gunboats Clifton, Sachem,
Arizona, and Granite City to accompany the expedition,
Lieutenant Frederick Crocker of the Clifton being senior
officer. With the exception of the Clifton they
were all of very light armament, but were the only
available vessels of sufficiently small draught, the
naval-built gunboats of the Cayuga class drawing too
much water to cross the bar.
The transports arrived off the Pass
on the morning of the 7th, the gunboats coming in
the same evening. The next morning at eight the
Clifton, followed soon after by the other gunboats
and the transports, crossed the bar and anchored inside
about two miles from the fort. At 3.30 P.M. the
Clifton, Sachem, and Arizona advanced to attack the
works. At four the Sachem received a shot in her
boilers and was at once enveloped in steam. A
few minutes later the Clifton grounded and also was
struck in the boilers, but kept up her fire for twenty
or thirty minutes longer; then both the disabled vessels
hauled down their flags. The army now abandoned
the expedition, and the transports with the remaining
gunboats withdrew during the night. In this unfortunate
affair the Clifton lost 10 killed and 9 wounded, the
Sachem 7 killed, the wounded not being given.
There were 39 missing from the two vessels, many of
whom were drowned.
The hopes of success being dependent
upon a surprise, this route was now abandoned.
Banks entertained for a little while the idea of advancing
from Berwick Bay by land, crossing the Sabine at Niblett’s
Bluff; but the length of the communication and difficulty
of the country deterred him. The Red River Route
would not be available before the spring rise.
To carry out the wish of the Government he next determined
to land at the extreme end of the Texas coast line,
near the Rio Grande, and work his way to the eastward.
A force of 3,500 men, under General Dana, was organized
for this expedition, which sailed from New Orleans
on the 26th of October, Banks himself going with it.
The transports were convoyed by the ships-of-war Monongahela,
Owasco, and Virginia, Captain James H. Strong of the
Monongahela being senior officer. The fleet was
somewhat scattered by a norther on the 30th, but on
the 2d of November a landing was made on Brazos Island
at the mouth of the Rio Grande. The next day another
detachment was put on shore on the main-land, and Brownsville,
thirty miles from the mouth of the river, was occupied
on the 6th. Leaving a garrison here, the troops
were again embarked on the 16th and carried one hundred
and twenty miles up the coast to Corpus Christi, at
the southern end of Mustang Island, where they landed
and marched to the upper end of the island, a distance
of twenty-two miles. Here was a small work, mounting
three guns, which was shelled by the Monongahela and
surrendered on the approach of the army. The troops
now crossed the Aransas Pass and moved upon Pass Cavallo,
the entrance to Matagorda Bay. There was here
an extensive work called Fort Esperanza, which the
army invested; but on the 30th the enemy withdrew by
the peninsula connecting with the main-land, thus
leaving the control of the bay in the hands of the
Union forces. The light gunboats Granite City
and Estrella were sent inside.
So far all had gone well and easily;
the enemy had offered little resistance and the United
States flag had been raised in Texas. Now, however,
Banks found powerful works confronting him at the mouth
of the Brazos River and at Galveston. To reduce
these he felt it necessary to turn into the interior
and come upon them in the rear, but the forces of
the enemy were such as to deter him from the attempt
unless he could receive reinforcements. Halleck
had looked with evident distrust upon this whole movement,
by which a small force had been separated from the
main body by the width of Louisiana and Texas, with
the enemy’s army between the two, and the reinforcements
were not forthcoming; but recurring to his favorite
plan of operating by the Red River and Shreveport,
without giving positive orders to adopt it, the inducement
was held out that, if that line were taken up, Steele’s
army in Arkansas and such forces as Sherman could detach
should be directed to the same object. The co-operation
of the Mississippi squadron was also promised.
It was necessary, however, that this
proposed expedition should be taken in hand and carried
through promptly, because both Banks’s own troops
and Sherman’s would be needed in time to take
part in the spring and summer campaigns east of the
Mississippi; while at the same time the movement could
not begin until the Red River should rise enough to
permit the passage of the gunboats and heavy transports
over the falls above Alexandria, which would not ordinarily
be before the month of March.
The two months of January and February
were spent in inactivity in the Department of the
Gulf, but frequent communications were held between
the three generals whose forces were to take part in
the movement. On the 1st of March Sherman came
to New Orleans to confer with Banks, and it was then
arranged that he should send 10,000 men under a good
commander, who should meet Porter at the mouth of the
Red River, ascend the Black, and strike a hard blow
at Harrisonburg, if possible, and at all events be
at Alexandria on the 17th of March. Banks on his
part was to reach there at the same date, marching
his army from Franklin by way of Opelousas, and to
conduct his movement on Shreveport with such celerity
as to enable the detachment from Sherman’s corps
to get back to the Mississippi in thirty days from
the time they entered the Red River. General
Steele was directed by Grant to move toward Shreveport
from Little Rock, a step to which he was averse, and
his movements seem to have had little, if any, effect
upon the fortunes of the expedition. Having finished
his business, Sherman went back at once, resisting
the urgent invitation of General Banks, whose military
duties seem to have been somewhat hampered by civil
calls, to remain over the 4th of March and participate
in the inauguration of a civil government for Louisiana,
in which the Anvil Chorus was to be played by all
the bands in the Army of the Gulf, the church bells
rung, and cannons fired by electricity.
General Franklin, who was to command
the army advancing from Franklin by Opelousas, did
not receive his orders to move till the 10th, which
was too late to reach Alexandria, one hundred and seventy-five
miles away, by the 17th. Moreover, the troops
which had been recalled from the Texas coast, leaving
only garrisons at Brownsville and Matagorda, had just
arrived at Berwick Bay and were without transportation;
while the cavalry had not come up from New Orleans.
The force got away on the 13th and 14th and reached
Alexandria on the 25th and 26th.
Meanwhile, Sherman, having none but
military duties to embarrass him, was in Vicksburg
on the 6th, and at once issued his orders to General
A.J. Smith, who was to command the corps detached
up the Red river. On the 11th Smith was at the
mouth of the River, where he met Porter, who had been
there since the 2d, and had with him the following
vessels: Essex, Commander Robert Townsend; Eastport,
Lieutenant-Commander S.L. Phelps; Black Hawk,
Lieutenant-Commander K.R. Breese; Lafayette,
Lieutenant-Commander J.P. Foster; Benton, Lieutenant-Commander
J.A. Greer; Louisville, Lieutenant-Commander
E.K. Owen; Carondelet, Lieutenant-Commander J.G.
Mitchell; Osage, Lieutenant-Commander T.O. Selfridge;
Ouachita, Lieutenant-Commander Byron Wilson; Lexington,
Lieutenant G.M. Bache; Chillicothe, Lieutenant
S.P. Couthouy; Pittsburg, Lieutenant W.B.
Hoel; Mound City, Lieutenant A.R. Langthorne;
Neosho, Lieutenant Samuel Howard; Ozark, Lieutenant
G.W. Browne; Fort Hindman, Lieutenant John Pearce;
Cricket, Master H.H. Gorringe; Gazelle, Master
Charles Thatcher.
Most of these vessels will be recognized
as old acquaintances. The last three were light-draughts,
the Cricket and Gazelle being but little over 200
tons. The Ouachita was a paddle-wheel steamer,
carrying in broadside, on two docks, a numerous battery
of howitzers, eighteen 24-pounders and sixteen 12-pounders
(one of the latter being rifled); and besides these,
five 30-pounder rifles as bow and stern guns.
The Ozark, Osage, and Neosho, were ironclads of very
light draught, having a single turret clad with 6-inch
armor in which were mounted two XI-inch guns.
They were moved by stern paddle-wheels covered with
an iron house, of 3/4-inch plates, which was higher
than the turret, and from a broadside view looked
like a gigantic beehive. The Essex did not go
farther than the mouth of the river.
Early on the morning of March 12th
the gunboats started up, the transports following.
There was just enough water to allow the larger boats
to pass. The transports, with the Benton, Pittsburg,
Louisville, Mound City, Carondelet, Chillicothe, Ouachita,
Lexington, and Gazelle turned off into the Atchafalaya,
the admiral accompanying this part of his squadron;
while Lieutenant-Commander Phelps with the other vessels
continued up the Red River to remove obstructions,
which the enemy had planted across the stream eight
miles below Fort de Russy.
The army landed at Simmesport on the
13th, taking possession there of the camping-ground
of the enemy, who retreated on Fort de Russy.
The next day at daylight they were pursued, and Smith’s
corps, after a march of twenty-eight miles, in which
it was delayed two hours to build a bridge, reached
the fort in time to assault and take it before sundown.
The Confederate General Walker had withdrawn the main
body of his troops, leaving only 300 men, who could
offer but slight resistance. Eight heavy guns
and two field-pieces were taken.
The detachment of vessels under Lieutenant-Commander
Phelps were at first delayed by the difficulty of
piloting the Lafayette and Choctaw, long vessels of
heavy draft, through the narrow and crooked river.
The 13th thus wore away slowly, and on the 14th they
reached the obstructions. Two rows of piles had
been driven across the channel, braced, and tied together;
immediately below them was a raft well secured to
either bank and made of logs which did not float.
Finally a great many trees had been cut and floated
down upon the piles from above. The Fort Hindman
removed a portion of the raft, and then the Eastport
got to work on the piles, dragging out some and starting
others by ramming. By four o’clock in the
afternoon a large enough gap had been made, and the
Eastport, followed by the Hindman, Osage, and Cricket,
hastened up the river. Rapid artillery firing
was heard as they drew near the works, but being ignorant
of the position of the Union troops, few shots were
fired for fear of injuring them. The slight engagement
was ended by the surrender, a few moments after the
boats came up. An order from the admiral to push
on at once to Alexandria was delayed five hours in
transmission. When it was received, the fastest
vessels, the Ouachita and Lexington, were sent on,
followed by the Eastport, but got there just as the
last of the Confederate transports passed over the
Falls. One of them grounded and was burnt.
These advance vessels reached Alexandria
on the evening of the 15th, the admiral with the rest
on the 16th; at which time there had also come up
from 7,000 to 8,000 of Smith’s corps, the remainder
being left at Fort de Russy.
Alexandria was the highest point reached
by the fleet the May before. Shreveport, the
object of the present expedition, is three hundred
and forty miles farther up the Red River. It
was the principal depot of the Confederates west of
the Mississippi, had some machine-shops and dockyards,
and was fortified by a line of works of from two to
three miles radius, commanding the opposite bank.
Between the two places the river, which gets its name
from the color of its water, flows through a fertile
and populous country, the banks in many places being
high, following in a very crooked channel a general
southeasterly direction. In this portion of its
course it has a width of seven hundred to eight hundred
feet, and at low water a depth of four feet. The
slope from Shreveport to Alexandria at high water
is a little over a hundred feet, but immediately above
the latter place there are two small rapids, called
the Falls of Alexandria, which interrupt navigation
when the water is low. The annual rise begins
in the early winter, and from December to June the
river is in fair boating condition for its usual traffic;
but water enough for the gunboats and transports to
pass the Falls could not be expected before the spring
rise in March. The river, however, can never
be confidently trusted. For twenty years before
1864 it had only once failed to rise, in 1855; but
this year it was exceptionally backward, and so caused
much embarrassment to the fleet.
General Banks came in on the 26th
of March and the last of Franklin’s corps on
the 28th. Smith’s command was then moved
on to Bayou Rapides, twenty-one miles above Alexandria.
The slow rise of the river was still detaining the
vessels. There was water enough for the lighter
draughts, but, as the enemy was reported to have some
ironclad vessels not far above, the Admiral was unwilling
to let them go up until one of the heavier gunboats
had passed. The Eastport was therefore sent up
first, being delayed two or three days on the rocks
of the rapids, and at last hauled over by main force.
She at once passed ahead of Smith’s corps.
The Mound City, Carondelet, Pittsburg, Louisville,
Chillicothe, Ozark, Osage, Neosho, Lexington, and
Hindman also went above the Falls, as did some thirty
transports. At this time the Marine Brigade,
which was now under the army and formed part of Smith’s
command, was summoned back to Vicksburg, taking 3,000
men from the expedition. The river continuing
to rise slowly, it was thought best to keep two lines
of transports, one above and one below the Falls, and
to transship stores around them. This made it
necessary to establish a garrison at Alexandria, which
further reduced the force for the field.
Banks’s own army marched by
land to Natchitoches, eighty miles distant, arriving
there on the 2d and 3d of April; but Smith’s
command went forward on transports convoyed by the
gunboats and reached Grand Écore, four miles
from Natchitoches, on the 3d. Here it landed,
except one division of 2,000 men under General T.
Kilby Smith, who took charge of the transports, now
numbering twenty-six, many of them large boats.
These Smith was directed to take to the mouth of Loggy
Bayou, opposite Springfield, where it was expected
he would again communicate with the army. So
far the water had been good, the boats having a foot
to spare; but as the river was rising very slowly,
the admiral would not take his heavy boats any higher.
Leaving Lieutenant-Commander Phelps in command at
Grand Écore, with instructions to watch the water
carefully and not be caught above a certain bar, a
mile lower down, Porter went ahead with the Cricket,
Hindman, Lexington, Osage, Neosho, Chillicothe, and
the transports, on the 7th of April.
The army marched out on the 6th and
7th, directed upon Mansfield. The way led through
a thickly wooded country by a single road, which was
in many places too narrow to admit of two wagons passing.
On the night of the 7th Banks reached Pleasant Hill,
where Franklin then was; the cavalry division, numbering
3,300 mounted infantry, being eight miles in advance,
Smith’s command fifteen miles in the rear.
The next day the advance was resumed, and, at about
fifteen miles from Pleasant Hill, the cavalry, which
had been reinforced by a brigade of infantry, became
heavily engaged with a force largely outnumbering it.
After being pushed back some little distance, this
advanced corps finally gave way in confusion.
Banks had now been some time on the field. At
4.15 P.M. Franklin came up, and, seeing how the
affair was going, sent word back to General Emory
of his corps, to form line of battle at a place he
named, two miles in the rear. The enemy came on
rapidly, and as the cavalry train of one hundred and
fifty wagons and some eighteen or twenty pieces of
artillery were close in rear of the discomfited troops,
it was not possible, in the narrow road, to turn and
save them. Emory, advancing rapidly in accordance
with his orders, met flying down the road a crowd
of disorganized cavalry, wagons, ambulances, and loose
animals, through which his division had to force its
way, using violence to do so. As the enemy’s
bullets began to drop among them, the division reached
a suitable position for deploying, called by Banks
Pleasant Grove, three miles in rear of the first action.
Here the line was formed, and the enemy, seemingly
not expecting to meet any opposition, were received
when within a hundred yards by a vigorous fire, before
which they gave way in about fifteen minutes.
By this time it was dark, and toward midnight the command
fell back to Pleasant Hill, where it was joined by
A.J. Smith’s corps.
The following day, at 5 P.M., the
enemy again attacked at Pleasant Hill, but were repulsed
so decidedly that the result was considered a victory
by the Union forces, and by the Confederates themselves
a serious check; but for various reasons Banks thought
best to fall back again to Grand Écore.
The retreat was continued that night, and on the night
of the 11th the army reached Grand Écore, where
it threw up intrenchments and remained ten days.
As yet there was no intention of retreating farther.
Meanwhile the navy and transports
had pressed hopefully up the river. The navigation
was very bad, the river crooked and narrow, the water
low and beginning to fall, the bottom full of snags
and stumps, and the sides bristling with cypress logs
and sharp, hard timbers. Still, the distance,
one hundred and ten miles, was made in the time appointed,
and Springfield Landing reached on the afternoon of
the 10th. Here the enemy had sunk a large steamer
across the channel, her bow resting on one shore and
her stern on the other, while the body amidships was
broken down by a quantity of bricks and mud loaded
upon her. Porter and Kilby Smith were consulting
how to get rid of this obstacle, when they heard of
the disaster and retreat of the army. Smith was
ordered by Banks to return, and there was no reason
for Porter to do otherwise. The following day
they fell back to Coushattee Chute, and the enemy
began the harassment which they kept up throughout
the descent to, and even below, Alexandria. The
first day, however, the admiral was able to keep them
for the most part in check, though from the high banks
they could fire down on the decks almost with impunity.
The main body of the enemy was on the southern bank,
but on the north there was also a force under a General
Liddell, numbering, with Harrison’s cavalry,
perhaps 2,500 men.
On the 12th a severe and singular
fight took place. At four in the afternoon the
Hastings, transport, on which Kilby Smith was, having
disabled her wheel, had run into the right bank for
repairs. At the same moment the Alice Vivian,
a heavy transport, with four hundred cavalry horses,
was aground in the middle of the stream; as was the
gunboat Osage, Lieutenant-Commander Selfridge.
Two other transports were alongside the Vivian, and
a third alongside the Osage, trying to move them.
Another transport, called the Rob Roy, having on her
decks four siege guns, had just come down and was
near the Osage. The Lexington, gunboat, Lieutenant
Bache, was near the northern shore, but afloat.
The vessels being thus situated, a sudden attack was
made from the right bank by 2,000 of the enemy’s
infantry and four field pieces. The gunboats,
the Rob Roy with her siege guns, and two field pieces
on the other transports all replied, the Hastings,
of course, casting off from her dangerous neighborhood.
This curious contest lasted for nearly two hours,
the Confederate sharpshooters sheltering themselves
behind the trees, the soldiers on board the transports
behind bales of hay. There could be but one issue
to so ill-considered an attack, and the enemy, after
losing 700 men, were driven off; their commander,
General Thomas Green, a Texan, being among the slain.
The large loss is accounted for by the fact that besides
the two thousand actually engaged there were five
thousand more some distance back, who shared in the
punishment.
The following day an attack was made
from the north bank, but no more from the south before
reaching Grand Écore on the 14th and 15th.
The admiral himself, being concerned for the safety
of his heavy vessels in the falling river, hurried
there on the 13th, and on his arrival reported the
condition of things above to Banks, who sent out a
force to clear the banks of guérillas as far
as where the transports lay. Lieutenant-Commander
Phelps had already moved all the vessels below the
bar at Grand Écore, but had recalled four to cover
the army when it returned. The admiral now sent
them all below to move slowly toward Alexandria.
His position was one of great perplexity. The
river ought to be rising, but was actually falling;
there was danger if he delayed that he might lose
some of the boats, but on the other hand he felt it
would be a stain upon the navy to look too closely
to its own safety, and it was still possible that
the river might take a favorable turn. He had
decided to keep four of the light-draughts above the
bar till the very last moment, remaining with them
himself, when he received news that the Eastport had
been sunk by a torpedo eight miles below. The
accident happened on the 15th, the vessel having been
previously detained on the bar nearly twenty-four
hours. The admiral left Lieutenant-Commander
Selfridge in charge at Grand Écore and at once
went to the scene, where he found the Eastport in shoal
water but sunk to her gun-deck, the water on one side
being over it. The Lexington and a towboat were
alongside helping to pump her out. Giving orders
that she should be lightened, he kept on down to Alexandria
to start two pump-boats up to her and to look after
the affairs of the squadron both along the Red River
and in the Mississippi. On his return, two days
later, he found her with her battery and ammunition
out and the pump-boats alongside. By this time
it was known that the army would not advance again,
and that Banks was anxious to get back to Alexandria.
The officers and crew of the Eastport worked night
and day to relieve her, and on the 21st she was again
afloat, with fires started, but as yet they had not
been able to come at the leak. That day she made
twenty miles, but at night grounded on a bar, to get
over which took all the 22d. Four or five miles
farther down she again grounded, and another day was
spent in getting her off. Two or three times
more she was gotten clear and made a few more miles
down the river by dint of extreme effort; but at last,
on the 26th, she grounded on some logs fifty miles
below the scene of the accident, in a position evidently
hopeless.
Selfridge’s division of light
ironclads had been compelled by the falling water
to drop below the bar at Grand Écore, and, as
they were there of no further use to the army, had
continued down to Alexandria, except the Hindman,
which was kept by the Eastport. On the 22d the
army evacuated Grand Écore and marched for Alexandria.
On this retreat the advance and rear-guard had constant
skirmishing with the enemy. At Cane River the
Confederates had taken position to dispute the crossing,
and the advance had a serious fight to drive them off.
The rear-guard also had one or two quite sharp encounters,
but the army reached Alexandria without serious loss
on the 26th.
The Eastport and Fort Hindman were
now in a very serious position, aground in a hostile
river, their own army sixty miles away, and between
it and them the enemy lining the banks of the river.
The admiral, having seen the rest of his fleet in
safety, returned to the crippled boat, taking with
him only two tinclads, the Cricket and Juliet; but
the Osage and Neosho were ordered to move up forty
miles, near the mouth of Cane River, so as to be in
readiness to render assistance. On the 26th,
the commander of the Eastport, whose calmness and
hopefulness had won the admiral’s admiration
and led him to linger longer than was perhaps prudent,
in the attempt to save the vessel, was obliged to
admit that there was no hope. The river was falling
steadily, the pilots said there was already too little
water for her draught on the bars below, and the crew
were worn out with six days of incessant labor.
The attempt was made to remove her plating, but it
was not possible to do so soon enough. Orders
were therefore given to transfer the ship’s
company to the Fort Hindman, whose captain, Lieutenant
Pearce, had worked like her own to save her, and to
blow the Eastport up. Eight barrels of powder
were placed under her forward casemate, a like number
in the stern, and others about the machinery, trains
were laid fore and aft, and at 1.45 P.M. Phelps
himself lit the match and left the vessel. He
had barely time to reach the Hindman before the explosions
took place in rapid succession; then the flames burst
out and the vessel was soon consumed.
The three remaining gunboats and the
two pump-boats now began a hazardous retreat down
the river. Just as the preparations for blowing
up the Eastport were completed, a rush was made by
twelve hundred men from the right bank to board the
Cricket, which was tied up. Her captain, Gorringe,
backed clear, and opening upon them with grape and
canister, supported by a cross fire from the other
boats, the attack was quickly repelled. They
were not again molested until they had gone twenty
miles farther, to about five miles above the mouth
of Cane River. Here they came in sight of a party
of the enemy, with eighteen pieces of artillery, drawn
up on the right bank. At this time the Cricket
was leading with the admiral’s flag; the Juliet
following, lashed to one pump-boat; the Hindman in
the rear. The Cricket opened at once, and the
enemy replied. Gorringe stopped his vessel, meaning
to fight and cover those astern, but the admiral directed
him to move ahead. Before headway was gained
the enemy was pouring in a pelting shower of shot
and shell, the two broadside guns’ crews were
swept away, one gun disabled, and at the same instant
the chief engineer was killed, and all but one of
the men in the fire-room wounded. In these brief
moments the Juliet was also disabled by a shot in her
machinery, the rudder of the pump-boat lashed to her
was struck, and the boiler of the other was exploded.
The captain of the latter, with almost the entire
ship’s company, numbering two hundred, were
scalded to death, while the boat, enveloped in steam,
drifted down and lodged against the bank under the
enemy’s battery, remaining in their power.
The pilot of the boat towing the Juliet abandoned the
wheel-house-an act unparalleled among a
class of men whose steadiness and devotion under the
exposure of their calling elicited the highest praise
from Porter and others; the crew also tried to cut
the hawsers, but were stopped by Watson, the captain
of the gunboat. A junior pilot named Maitland,
with great bravery and presence of mind, jumped to
the wheel and headed the two boats up river.
This confusion in the centre of the line prevented
the Hindman from covering the admiral as Phelps wished,
but he now got below the Juliet and engaged the enemy
till she was out of range. Meanwhile the admiral
had found the pilot of the Cricket to be among the
wounded, and taking charge of the vessel himself, ran
by the battery under the heaviest fire he ever
experienced. When below he turned and engaged
the batteries in the rear, but seeing that the Hindman
and the others were not coming by he continued down
to the point where he expected to meet the Osage and
Neosho.
In this truly desperate fight the
Cricket, a little boat of one hundred and fifty-six
tons, was struck thirty-eight times in five minutes,
and lost 25 killed and wounded, half her crew.
Soon after passing below she ran aground and remained
fast for three hours, so that it was dark when she
reached the Osage, lying opposite another battery
of the enemy, which she had been engaging during the
day.
During that night the vessels still
above were busy repairing damages and getting ready
for the perils of the next day. Fearing the enemy
might obstruct the channel by sinking the captured
pump-boat across it, a shell was fired at her from
time to time. The repairs were made before noon,
but the Juliet being still crippled, the Hindman took
her alongside, and so headed down for the batteries.
Before going far the Juliet struck a snag, which made
it necessary to go back and stop the leak. Then
they started again, the remaining pump-boat following.
When within five hundred yards the enemy opened a
well-sustained fire, and a shot passed through the
pilot-house of the Hindman, cutting the wheel-ropes.
This made the vessel unmanageable, and the two falling
off broadside to the stream drifted down under fire,
striking now one shore and now the other but happily
going clear. The guns under these circumstances
could not be used very effectively, and the pump-boat
suffered the more from the enemy’s fire.
Maitland was still piloting her, and when nearly opposite
the batteries he was wounded in both legs by a shell.
He dropped on his knees, unable to handle the wheel,
and the boat ran into the bank on the enemy’s
side. Another shell struck the pilot-house, wounding
him again in several places, and a third cut away
a bell-rope and the speaking-tube. Rallying a
little, Maitland now got hold of and rang another
bell and had the boat backed across the river.
The crew attempted to escape, but were all taken prisoners,
the captain and one other having been killed.
In the two days encounters the Juliet was hit nearly
as often as the Cricket and lost 15 killed and wounded;
the Hindman, though repeatedly struck and much cut
up, only 3 killed and 5 wounded. The fire of the
enemy’s sharpshooters was very annoying for
some miles farther down, but twelve miles below the
batteries they met the Neosho going up to their assistance.
The main interest of the retreat of
the squadron centres in the Eastport and her plucky
little consorts, but the other vessels had had their
own troubles in getting down the river. The obstacles
to be overcome are described as enough to appal the
stoutest heart by the admiral, who certainly was not
a man of faint heart. Guns had to be removed
and the vessels jumped over sand-bars and logs, but
the squadron arrived in time to prevent any attack
on the reserve stores before the main body of the
army came up.
At Alexandria the worst of their troubles
awaited them, threatening to make all that had yet
been done vain. The river, which ordinarily remains
high till June, had not only failed to reach its usual
height but had so fallen that they could not pass
the rapids. General W.T. Sherman, who had
lived at Alexandria before the war, thought twelve
feet necessary before going up, a depth usually found
from March to June. At the very least seven were
needed by the gunboats to go down, and on the 30th
of April of this year there were actually only three
feet four inches. The danger was the greatest
that had yet befallen the fleet, and seemingly hopeless.
A year before, in the Yazoo bayous, the position had
been most critical, but there the peril came from the
hand of man and was met and repelled by other men.
Here Nature herself had turned against them, forsaking
her usual course to do them harm. Ten gunboats
and two tugs were thus imprisoned in a country soon
to pass into the enemy’s hands by the retreat
of the army.
Desperate as the case seemed, relief
came. Lieutenant-Colonel Joseph Bailey, of the
Fourth Wisconsin Volunteers, was at this time acting
as Chief Engineer of the Nineteenth Army Corps, General
Franklin’s. He was a man who had had much
experience on the watercourses of the Northwestern
country, and had learned to use dams to overcome obstacles
arising from shallow water in variable streams.
The year before he had applied this knowledge to free
two transport steamers, which had been taken when
Port Hudson fell, from their confinement in Thompson’s
Creek, where the falling water had left them sunk in
the sand. As the army fell back, and during its
stay at Grand Écore, he had heard rumors about
the scant water at the Falls, and the thought had
taken hold of his mind that he might now build a dam
on a greater scale and to a more vital purpose than
ever before.
His idea, first broached to General
Franklin, was through him conveyed to Banks and Porter,
and generally through the army. Franklin, himself
an engineer, thought well of it, and so did some others;
but most doubted, and many jeered. The enemy
themselves, when they became aware of it, laughed,
and their pickets and prisoners alike cried scoffingly,
“How about that dam?” But Bailey had the
faith that moves mountains, and he was moreover happy
in finding at his hands the fittest tools for the
work. Among the troops in the far Southwest were
two or three regiments from Maine, the northeasternmost
of all the States. These had been woodmen and
lumbermen from their youth, among their native forests,
and a regiment of them now turned trained and willing
arms upon the great trees on the north shore of the
Red River; and there were many others who, on a smaller
scale and in different scenes, had experience in the
kind of work now to be done. Time was pressing,
and from two to three thousand men were at once set
to work on the 1st of May. The Falls are about
a mile in length, filled with rugged rocks which,
at this low water, were bare or nearly so, the water
rushing down around, or over, them with great swiftness.
At the point below, where the dam was to be built,
the river is 758 feet wide, and the current was then
between nine and ten miles an hour. From the
north bank was built what was called the “tree
dam,” formed of large trees laid with the current,
the branches interlocking, the trunks down stream
and cross-tied with heavy timber; upon this was thrown
brush, brick, and stone, and the weight of water as
it rose bound the fabric more closely down upon the
bottom of the river. From the other bank, where
the bottom was more stony and trees less plenty, great
cribs were pushed out, sunk and filled with stone and
brick-the stone brought down the river
in flat-boats, the bricks obtained by pulling down
deserted brick buildings. On this side, a mile
away, was a large sugar-house; this was torn down
and the whole building, machinery, and kettles went
to ballast the dam. Between the cribs and the
tree dam a length of 150 feet was filled by four large
coal barges, loaded with brick and sunk. This
great work was completed in eight working days, and
even on the eighth, three of the lighter vessels,
the Osage, Neosho, and Fort Hindman, were able to pass
the upper falls and wait just above the dam for the
chance to pass; but the heavier vessels had yet to
delay for a further rise. In the meantime the
vessels were being lightened by their crews. Nearly
all the guns, ammunition, provisions, chain cables,
anchors, and everything that could affect the draught,
were taken out and hauled round in wagons below the
falls. The iron plating was taken off the Ozark,
and the sides of our old friends the Eads gunboats,
the four survivors of which were here, as ever where
danger was. This iron, for want of wagons, could
not be hauled round, so the boats ran up the river
and dumped it overboard in a five-fathom hole, where
the shifting sand would soon swallow it up. Iron
plating was then too scarce and valuable to the Confederates
to let it fall into their hands. Eleven old 32-pounders
were also burst and sunk.
The dam was finished, the water rising,
and three boats below, when, between 7 and 10 A.M.
of the 9th, the pressure became so great as to sweep
away two of the barges in midstream and the pent-up
water poured through. Admiral Porter rode round
to the upper falls and ordered the Lexington to pass
them at once and try to go through the dam without
a stop. Her steam was ready and she went ahead,
passing scantly over the rapids, the water falling
all the time; then she steered straight for the opening,
where the furious rushing of the waters seemed to
threaten her with destruction. She entered the
gap, which was but 66 feet wide, with a full head
of steam, pitched down the roaring torrent, made two
or three heavy rolls, hung for a moment on the rocks
below, and then, sweeping into deep water with the
current, rounded to at the bank, safe. One great
cheer rose from the throats of the thousands looking
on, who had before been hushed into painful silence,
awaiting the issue with beating hearts. The Neosho
followed, but stopping her engine as she drew near
the opening, was carried helplessly through; for a
moment her low hull disappeared in the water, but
she escaped with a hole in her bottom, which was soon
repaired. The Hindman and Osage came through without
touching.
The work on the dam had been done
almost wholly by the soldiers, who had worked both
day and night, often up to their waists and even to
their necks in the water, showing throughout the utmost
cheerfulness and good humor. The partial success,
that followed the first disappointment of the break,
was enough to make such men again go to work with
good will. Bailey decided not to try again, with
his limited time and materials, to sustain the whole
weight of water with one dam; and so, leaving the
gap untouched, went on to build two wing-dams on the
upper falls. These, extending from either shore
toward the middle of the river and inclining slightly
down stream, took part of the weight, causing a rise
of 1 foot 2 inches, and shed the water from either
side into the channel between them. Three days
were needed to build these, one a crib-and the other
a tree-dam, and a bracket-dam a little lower down
to help guide the current. The rise due to the
main dam when breached was 5 feet 41/2 inches, so
that the entire gain in depth by this admirable engineering
work was 6 feet 61/2 inches. On the 11th the
Mound City, Carondelet, and Pittsburg came over the
upper falls, but with trouble, the channel being very
crooked and scarcely wide enough. The next day
the remaining boats, Ozark, Louisville, and Chillicothe,
with the two tugs, also came down to the upper dam,
and during that and the following day they all passed
through the gap, with hatches closely nailed down
and every precaution taken against accident.
No mishap befell them beyond the unshipping of rudders,
and the loss of one man swept from the deck of a tug.
The two barges which had been carried out at the first
break of the dam stuck just below and at right angles
to it, and there staid throughout, affording an excellent
cushion on the left side of the shoot. What had
been a calamity proved thus a benefit. The boats
having taken on board their guns and stores as fast
as they came below, that work was completed, even
by the last comers, on the 13th, and all then steamed
down the river with the transports in company.
The water had become very low in the lower part, but
providentially a rise of the Mississippi sent up so
much back-water that no stoppage happened.
For the valuable services rendered
to the fleet in this hour of great danger, Lieutenant-Colonel
Bailey was promoted to the rank of brigadier-general
and received the thanks of Congress. The stone
cribs of the dam have long since been swept away,
but the tree-dam has remained until this day, doubtless
acquiring new strength from year to year by the washing
of the river. Its position has forced the channel
over to the south shore, encroaching seriously upon
the solid land, especially when the water is high.
A very large part of the front of Alexandria, at the
upper suburb, has thus been washed away, and the caving
still continues.
While the fleet and army were at Alexandria,
the enemy had passed round the city and appeared on
the banks below, where they made the passage of light
steamers very dangerous. Two light-draught gunboats,
the Covington and Signal, were thus lost to the service.
They had gone down convoying a transport called the
Warner. The Warner was put in advance, the gunboats
following in line ahead. The enemy began with
heavy musketry and two field pieces, by which the Warner’s
rudders were disabled; she continued on a short distance
till a bend was reached, and here, being unable to
make the turn, she went ashore, blocking also the
channel to the two armed vessels. A heavy force
of infantry with artillery now opened on the three,
the gunboats replying for three hours, when the Warner
hoisted a white flag. Lieutenant Lord of the
Covington still kept up his fire and sent to burn the
transport; but learning from the colonel in charge
that there were nearly 125 killed and wounded on board
he desisted. Soon after this the Signal was disabled.
The Covington then rounded to and took the others
in tow up stream, but her own rudders were disabled
and the Signal went adrift. The latter then anchored,
and the Covington running to the left bank tied up
with her head up stream. In this position the
action was continued with the enemy, reinforced now
by the first battery which had been brought down,
till the steam-drum was penetrated and a shot entering
the boilers let out all the water; the ammunition
gave out and several guns were disabled, one officer
and several men being killed. Lord set the vessel
on fire and escaped with the crew to the banks.
On mustering, 9 officers and 23 men were found out
of a crew of 76. Most of those who reached the
banks escaped through the woods to Alexandria.
The Covington was riddled, having received some fifty
shots. The disabled Signal was fought with equal
obstinacy by her commander, Lieutenant Morgan, but
after the destruction of the Covington was surrendered,
not burned; it being found impossible to remove the
wounded under the fire of the enemy.
The army marched out of Alexandria
on the 14th toward Simmesport, which they reached
on the 16th. Having no regular pontoon train,
the Atchafalaya, which is here about six hundred yards
wide, was crossed by a bridge of transport steamers
moored side by side; an idea of Colonel Bailey’s.
The crossing was made on the 20th, and on that same
day General Banks was relieved by General Canby, who
had been ordered to command the Department of the
West Mississippi, with headquarters at New Orleans.
A.J. Smith’s corps embarked and went up
the river, and the expedition was over. The disastrous
ending and the lateness of the season made it impracticable
to carry out Grant’s previous plan of moving
on Mobile with force sufficient to insure its capture.
After the Red River expedition little
is left to say, in a work of this scope, of the operations
of the Mississippi Squadron during the rest of the
war. Admiral Porter was relieved during the summer,
leaving Captain Pennock in temporary charge. Acting
Rear-Admiral S.P. Lee took the command on the
1st of November. The task and actions of the
squadron were of the same general character as those
described in Chapter VI. Guérillas and light
detached bodies of the enemy continued to hover on
the banks of the Mississippi, White, Arkansas, Tennessee,
and Cumberland Rivers. The Red River was simply
blockaded, not occupied, and much of the Yazoo Valley,
having no present importance, had been abandoned to
the enemy. The gunboats scattered throughout
those waters were constantly patrolling and convoying,
and often in action. The main operations of the
army being now far east of the Mississippi, the work
and exposure of the boats became greater. Masked
batteries of field pieces were frequently sprung upon
them, or upon unarmed steamers passing up and down;
in either case the nearest gunboat must hasten and
engage it. Weak isolated posts were suddenly
attacked; a gunboat, usually not far off, must go to
the rescue. Reconnoissances into the enemy’s
country, as the Yazoo Valley, were to be made, or
troops carried in transports from point to point;
gunboats went along with their heavy yet manageable
artillery, feeling doubtful places with their shells
and clearing out batteries or sharpshooters when found.
The service was not as easy as it sounds. It
would be wrong to infer that their power was always
and at once recognized. Often they were outnumbered
in guns, and a chance shot in a boiler or awkward
turn of a wheel, throwing the vessel aground, caused
its loss. Even when victorious they were often
hardly used. The limits of this book will permit
the telling of but two or three stories.
In the latter part of June, 1864,
General Steele, commanding the Union troops in Arkansas,
wished to move some round in transports from Duval’s
Bluff on the White River to the Arkansas, hoping to
reach Little Rock in this way. One attempt was
made, but, the enemy being met in force on the Arkansas,
the transports were turned back. Lieutenant Bache
assured him that the trip could not be made, but as
the General thought otherwise, he consented to try
again and left the Bluff with a large convoy on the
24th, having with him of armed vessels the Tyler,
his own, the Naumkeag and Fawn. The two latter
were tinclads, the first an unarmored boat. When
about twenty miles down, two men were picked up, part
of the crew of the light-draught Queen City, which
had been captured by the Confederates five hours before.
It was then nine o’clock. Bache at once
turned the transports back and went ahead fast himself
to take or destroy the lost boat before her guns could
be removed. Before reaching Clarendon two reports
were heard, which came from the Queen City, blown
up by the enemy when the others were known to be coming.
The three boats formed line ahead, the Tyler leading,
Naumkeag second, and Fawn third, their broadsides
loaded with half-second shrapnel and canister.
As they drew near, the enemy opened with seven field
pieces and some two thousand infantry and put one
of their first shots through the pilot-house of the
Tyler, the vessels being then able to reply only with
an occasional shell from their bow guns. As they
came nearly abreast they slowed down and steamed by,
firing their guns rapidly. When under the batteries
the Fawn received a shot through her pilot-house,
killing the pilot and carrying away the bell gear,
at the same time ringing the engine-room bell, causing
the engineers to stop the boat under fire. Some
little delay ensued in fixing the bells, the paymaster
took the wheel, and the Fawn, having another shot
in the pilot-house, passed on. As soon as the
Tyler and Naumkeag were below they turned and steamed
up again, delivering a deliberate fire as they passed,
in the midst of which the enemy ran off, leaving behind
them most of their captures, including a light gun
taken from the Queen City. The boats were struck
twenty-five times, and lost 3 killed and 15 wounded.
The Queen City had been taken by surprise, and her
engines disabled at the first fire. She lost 2
killed and 8 wounded, including her commander; and,
while many of her crew escaped to the opposite bank,
many were taken prisoners.
The main course of the war in the
West having now drifted away from the Mississippi
Valley to the region south and southeast of Nashville,
embracing Southern and Eastern Tennessee and the northern
parts of Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, the convoy
and gunboat service on the Tennessee and Cumberland
assumed new importance. An eleventh division
was formed on the upper waters of the Tennessee, above
Muscle Shoals, under the command of Lieutenant Moreau
Forrest; Lieutenant-Commander Shirk had the lower
river, and Fitch still controlled the Cumberland.
When Hood, after the fall of Atlanta, began his movement
toward Tennessee in the latter part of October, General
Forrest, the active Confederate cavalry leader, who
had been stationed at Corinth with his outposts at
Eastport and on the Tennessee River, moved north along
the west bank, and with seventeen regiments of cavalry
and nine pieces of artillery appeared on the 28th before
Fort Heiman, an earthwork about seventy-five miles
from Paducah. Here he captured two transports
and a light-draught called the Undine. On the
2nd of November he had established batteries on the
west bank both above and below Johnsonville, one of
the Union army’s bases of supplies and a railway
terminus, thus blockading the water approach and isolating
there eight transports, with barges, and three light-draughts,
the Key West, Elfin, and Tawah. Nevertheless,
the three boats went down and engaged the lower battery,
and though they found it too strong for them they
retook one of the transports. Meantime Shirk
had telegraphed the Admiral and Fitch, and the latter
came to his assistance with three of the Cumberland
River light-draughts. Going on up the Tennessee
Fitch picked up three other light-draughts, and on
the morning of the 4th approached the lower battery
from below, Lieutenant King, the senior officer above,
coming down at the same time. The enemy then
set fire to the Undine, but the channel was so narrow
and intricate that Fitch did not feel justified in
attempting to take his boats up, and King was not able
to run by. Fitch, whose judgment and courage
were well proved, said that the three blocked gunboats
were fought desperately and well handled, but that
they could not meet successfully the heavy rifled batteries
then opposed to them in such a channel. All three
were repeatedly struck and had several of their guns
disabled. They then retired to the fort, where
the enemy opened on them in the afternoon with a battery
on the opposite shore. After firing away nearly
all their ammunition, and being further disabled,
Lieutenant King, fearing that they might fall into
the enemy’s hands, burnt them with the transports.
The place was relieved by General Schofield twenty-four
hours later, so that if King had patiently held on
a little longer his pluck and skill would have been
rewarded by saving his vessels. At about the same
time, October 28th, General Granger being closely
pressed in Decatur, Alabama, above the Muscle Shoals,
the light-draught General Thomas, of the Eleventh
Division, under the command of Acting-Master Gilbert
Morton, at great risk got up in time to render valuable
service in repelling the attack.
The Union forces continued to fall
back upon Nashville before the advance of Hood, who
appeared before the city on the 2d of December, and
by the 4th had established his lines round the south
side. His left wing struck the river at a point
four miles below by land, but eighteen by the stream,
where they captured two steamers and established a
battery. Fitch, receiving word of this at 9 P.M.,
at once went down with the Carondelet and four light-draughts
to attack them. The boats moved quietly, showing
no lights, the Carondelet and Fairplay being ordered
to run below, giving the enemy grape and canister
as they passed in front, and then to round to and continue
the fight up stream, Fitch intending to remain above
with the other boats. The Carondelet began firing
when midway between the upper and lower batteries,
and the enemy replied at once with heavy musketry
along the whole line and with his field pieces.
The river at this place is but eighty yards wide,
but the enemy, though keeping up a hot fire, fortunately
aimed high, and the boats escaped without loss in an
action lasting eighty minutes. The two steamers
were retaken and the enemy removed their batteries;
but they were shortly reestablished. On the 6th
Fitch again engaged them with the Neosho and Carondelet,
desiring to pass a convoy below, but the position was
so well chosen, behind spurs of hills and at a good
height above the river, that only one boat could engage
them at one time and then could not elevate her guns
to reach the top without throwing over the enemy.
The Neosho remained under a heavy fire, at thirty
yards distance, for two and a half hours, being struck
over a hundred times and having everything perishable
on decks demolished; but the enemy could not be driven
away. The river being thus blockaded the only
open communication for the city was the Louisville
Railroad, and during the rest of the time the gunboats,
patrolling the Cumberland above and below, prevented
the enemy’s cavalry from crossing and cutting
it.
When Thomas made his attack of the
15th, which resulted in the entire defeat and disorganization
of Hood’s army, Fitch, at his wish, went down
and engaged the attention of the batteries below until
a force of cavalry detached for that special purpose
came down upon their rear. These guns were taken
and the flotilla then dropped down to the scene of
its previous fights and engaged till dark such batteries
as it could see. The routed and disorganized
army of the enemy were pressed as closely as the roads
allowed down to the Tennessee, where Lieutenant Forrest
of the Eleventh District aided in cutting off stragglers.
Admiral Lee, who was at once notified, pressed up the
river with gunboats and supply steamers as far as the
shoals; but the low state of the river prevented his
crossing them. The destruction of boats and flats
along the river, however, did much to prevent stragglers
from crossing and rejoining their army.
This was the last of the very important
services of the Mississippi Squadron. Five months
later, in June, 1865, its officers received the surrender
of a small naval force still held by the Confederates
in the Red River. Our old friend, the ram Webb,
which had heretofore escaped capture, ran out of the
Red River in April with a load of cotton and made
a bold dash for the sea. She succeeded in getting
by several vessels before suspected, and even passed
New Orleans; but the telegraph was faster than she,
and before reaching the forts she was headed off by
the Richmond, run ashore, and burned. On the 14th
of August, 1865, Admiral Lee was relieved and the
Mississippi Squadron, as an organization, ceased to
be. The vessels whose careers we have followed,
and whose names have become familiar, were gradually
sold, and, like most of their officers, returned to
peaceful life.