When 41 year old Major General Ulysses Simpson Grant (above) entered Jackson, Mississippi
there were warehouses full of Confederate supplies burning furiously.
These fires had been set by Johnston's retreating men, to destroy
military equipment they could not evacuate. But as yet Grant took
little notice of the destruction. Instead, wrote Grant, “I rode
immediately to the State House, where I was soon followed by
Sherman.”
About 4:00pm, Thursday, 14 May, 1863, Grant held a
council of war with his 3 corps commanders. He ordered 43 year old Major General William Tecumseh Sherman (above) to destroy everything of value to the Confederacy in the
state capital, before returning it's burned out shell to the
Confederates and marching his XV Corps west, toward Clinton.
Grant
ordered 34 yea old Major General James Birdseye McPherson (above) to halt hisXVII Corps on Jackson's west side,
and in the morning, march them 30 miles back to Clinton, and then
another 8 miles further west to Bolton.
Grant's ordered 49 year old Major General John Alexander McClernand,
whose XIII Corps was now centered around Raymond, to march toward Bolton
as well. Grant was concentrating his army. He had been inspired by
the first message from Johnston to Pemberton, ordering him to
advance on Clinton.
His
work done, Grant and Sherman then took a tour of a nearby factory.
Remembered Grant, “Our presence did not seem to attract the
attention of either the manager, or of the operatives (most of whom
were girls). We looked on awhile to see the tent-cloth which they
were making roll out of the looms, with C. S. A. woven in each bolt.
There was an immense amount of cotton in bales stacked outside.
Finally I told Sherman I thought they had done work enough. The
operatives were told they might leave and take with them what cloth
they could carry. In a few minutes cotton and factory were in a
blaze.”
Grant
then checked into the Bowman House Hotel, across the street from the
capital building. He received the room occupied the night before by
his opponent, General Joseph Johnston. Scattered about the city in
public and private houses were the 16,000 men of Sherman's corps. The
31st Iowa was encamped in the state house chamber, and
entertained themselves for an hour or so by holding a mock session to
repeal Mississippi's 9 January 1861 Ordinance of Secession.
The
688 word long justification for Mississippi secession referred to
slavery either directly or indirectly 12 times. “Our position is
thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery...a blow at
slavery is a blow at commerce and civilization...” Complained the
slave owners, northern hostility had deprived them, “...of more
than half the vast territory acquired from France....dismembered
Texas and seized upon all the territory acquired from Mexico...(and)
denies the right of property in slaves, and refuses protection to
that right on the high seas, (and) in the Territories...” (In fact
the British Royal Navy had been choking off the transatlantic slave
trade since 1807.) Further, said those who had built their wealth on
the backs others, the Federal government, “...refuses the admission
of new slave States....denying (slavery) the power of expansion...”
And
what was Mississippi's justification for the lifelong bondage of 4
million human beings, the commonplace humiliation and rape of slave
men, women and children, the beatings, the murders, the toil and
early deaths demanded by a soul crushing life of servitude? It was
because “...none but the black race can bear exposure to the
tropical sun...”. Light skinned people got sunburned, and they
sweated. That was the justification. It was a laughable rational for
moral bankruptcy in the state of Mississippi, and had been since at
least 1807.
In orders received from General
Johnston on 13 May, 49 year old Lieutenant General John Clifford
Pemberton (above) was to advance with his entire force from Bovina Station 40 miles east toward Clinton, Mississippi – the last reported position
of Grant's army – and meet up with Johnston's gathering force.
So
on Thursday, 14 May the division of 45 year old Major
General Carter Littlepage Stevenson...
...and that of 32 year old Major General
John Stevens Bowen crossed the Big Black River and marched 20 miles
to Edward's Depot.
That evening Pemberton was joined by 44 year old
Major General Willing Wing Loring (above), whose infantry division...
...and The
Mississippi Cavalry regiment under 44 year old Colonel William Wirt
Adams were added to his command - some 17,000 men in total. And
that evening Pemberton also held a council of war.
Pemberton
began by explaining his orders from Johnston. He had left 2 division
in Vicksburg, because protecting the riverfront town was his primary
duty, per his instructions from President Jefferson Davis. But moving
all his remaining men to Clinton might give Grant a chance to slip
south and capture Vicksburg behind him. Pemberton was also concerned
that marching on Clinton might be leave his flank vulnerable to an
attack by McClernand's XIII Corps, which Adams accurately reported was
near Raymond. So the paper pusher, struggling with his first field
command, asked his 4 subordinates for their opinions. Should he
advance on Clinton? Or should the army stay were it was?
It
seems obvious that none of the officers in that room had much respect
for Pemberton. But was the fault actually Pemberton's or his
disorderly officers? Perhaps the most objective estimation of
Pemberton we have, comes from a man not in that room - Captain G.
Campbell Brown (above).
The
Captain was the son of Lizinka Campbell Brown. She was first cousin
and the great love of Virginia born Army officer Richard Stoddard
Ewell (above). Broken hearted when Lizinka was forced to marry Tennessee Lawyer and player, James
Percy Brown in 1839, Ewell exiled himself on the western frontier.
Then James Brown committed suicide in 1844, leaving Lizinka a widow with 2
children. But “the widow Brown” as Ewell ever after referred to
her, proved a smart business woman, and increased her inheritance and
property holdings. The outbreak of war brought Richard back east,
where he renewed his love affair with Lizinka, and making her eldest
son, G. Campbell Brown, his personal aide.
In
that position, Captain Brown met most of the famous and infamous
Confederate officers and politicians in the first two years of the
war, and formed concise, vivid and accurate opinions of them. In
August of 1862, at the Second Battle of Mananas, a minie ball
shattered Richard Ewell's right knee, and his leg had to be removed. While
Ewell recovered, Captain Brown was transferred to Joe Johnston's
staff in Tennessee, and came with him to
Vicksburg. Now he found himself reading the telegrams and letters of
John Clifford Pemberton. And it was Brown's firm belief that
Pemberton was an idiot. The Captain wrote, “I never knew, in all my
life, so provoking a stupidity as Pemberton’s.”
So
the officers facing General Pemberton that 14 May evening were on the
spot. What was this fool asking of them? Permission to disobey
orders? And if the campaign led to disaster, lost the war and lost their men's lives. they would be blamed
right along with the stupid fool Pemberton. Major
General Stevenson and Major General Bowen did the equivalent of
saying nothing. They advised Pemberton he should follow his orders
from General Johnston. But the one armed Major General Loring was made of more
aggressive metal.
Since
30,000 men were tied down in the Vicksburg trenches, explained
Loring , an advance on Clinton would place 17,000 Confederate
soldiers up against 45,000 Yankees. That was a battle they could not
win. Johnston might be besieged in Jackson with 20 or 30,000 men. Or
he could have only 10,000. He had never told Pembeton exactly how many men he had.
Advancing on Clinton was too risky.
Staying in Edward's Depot meant waiting for Grant to destroy
Johnston's force, before turning on them. Again, that was a battle
they could not win. But, advised Major General Loring, there was
third option.
Grant's
army must still be drawing supplies from Grand Gulf. So, suggested
Loring, put 17,000 rebels astride the roads between Grand Gulf and
Raymond (above), and the Yankees would be forced to withdraw from Jackson to
defend their supply line. That would give Johnston time to advance
his new army to combine with theirs, giving them, perhaps 50,000 men total.
It
was an aggressive approach, the kind of bold attack typical of Loring. When asked to comment, both Stevenson and Bowen agreed
that it was bold move, and not something Grant would be expecting.
General Pemberton took their non-committal statements for advocacy.
And when Wirt Adams suggest they aim their attacks at Raymond, and the Natchez Trace, just south of 14 Mile Creek,
because that was the last reported position of General Grant, Pemberton decided to follow Loring's advice.
Come
the dawn, of 15 May, 1863, Pemberton's army of 17,000 men, would be
advancing south, to cut Grant's supply line. The only problem was, there was no supply line for Pemberton to cut.
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