When
34 year old Brigadier General John Gregg (above) awoke on that Tuesday
morning, he was bone weary.
His
4,500 man brigade had left Port Hudson just 7 days earlier, on
Tuesday, 5 May, 1863, and after a 200 mile long odyssey - by foot and by rail - they had
staggered into Jackson, Mississippi, having lost perhaps 500 men
through injury and 'straggling'. After a day of rest, on Monday, 11
May, Gregg had been forced to urge his men another dusty 27 miles to
the southwest, to the county seat of Raymond. The exhausted rebels
found just six of Wirt Adam's cavalrymen in the town, leaving Gregg
with little idea what was waiting just over his horizon.
He
was forced to rely on guidance from his superior, 48 year old
Lieutenant General John Clifford Pemberton, who on 12 May was finally
taking a journey of his own, 20 miles east of the Vicksburg
entrenchments. Around the little village of Bovina Station (above, center), a mile
west of the Big Black River, Pemberton was struggling to concentrate
the 18,000 men of the divisions of Major General Carter Littlepage
Stevenson, Major General John Stevens Bowen and – the biggest
pebble in his shoe – the one armed Major General William Wing
Loring. It seemed every order Pemberton issued inspired the
vainglorious “Old Blizzards” to respond with at least 3 telegrams
of protest, suggestion and or complaints.
Right
now, the arrogant and rude Loring was urging his commander to strike
out toward the line of Baker's and Fourteen Mile creeks to force
Grant into battle before he was ready. But forced into a straight
jacket of passivity by Jefferson Davis's orders to defend Vicksburg
and Port Hudson at all costs, Pemberton had little choice but to
wait for Grant to launch a direct assault via the Big Black River
Bridge. Which is why he had his men digging entrenchments to defend
the bridge and adjacent fords, instead of probing for the Yankees as
Loring kept urging.
In
fact most of Wirt Adam's cavalry was available for such a mission,
just a few miles up the road at Edward's Depot. Except nobody shared
that fact with the commanding general, not even Wirt Adams. Nor did
anyone in Richmond think to inform Pemberton of the imminent arrival
in Jackson of his superior, General Johnson. Not even Johnson. The
infection of suspicion and mistrust in the Confederate command
originated with Jefferson Davis, and fed a lack of discipline in
Pemberton's junior officers.
So,
struggling with the burdens of his first combat command, Pemberton
vented his frustrations on General John Gregg and his 6 regiments,
forty miles away on the other side of Grant's army. While the
telegraph line to Jackson and Raymond was still working, Pemberton
lectured the Texan. “Do not attack the enemy until he is engaged
at Edwards or Big Black River Bridge. Be ready to fall on his rear or
flank at any moment. Do not allow yourself to be flanked or taken in
the rear. Be careful that you do not lose your command.”
However,
this morning, 12 May, 1863, General Gregg learned from local militia of a Federal
infantry brigade marching up the Utica Road, and decided to take the
opportunity to stage a mini-Cannae. First he would tempt the Yankees
into attacking the small bridge over the Fourteen Mile Creek, 2 miles
south of Raymond. Once the Yankees had crossed the bridge, 1,500
Rebel infantry would sweep across the creek below the bridge, and
then turning back, cut the Yankees off and crush them against
Gregg's main body. To achieve that, however, Gregg would have to
push his weary soldiers a little further.
Private
Frank Herron of the 3rd
Tennessee infantry, remembered that morning. “"Without
breakfast, tired, hungry and with blistered feet, sadness was
pictured on the faces of my companions as we were hastening on
through the dust...But our sadness was suddenly relieved when we saw
on a porch of a palatial home some beautiful girls waving the Bonnie
Blue Flag. We gave the old and familiar yell in return and no sad
faces were seen for awhile...”
Gregg's
plan was perfectly reasonable, but for two things. First, with
Pemberton's warnings ringing in his ears, and without cavalry to
screen his flanks, Gregg was forced to assign the 400 soldiers of the
41st Tennessee regiment, under 49 year old Scottish born
Colonel Robert Farquarson, to control the road north to Bolton and
Edward's Depot. He also assigned the 350 men of the 50th
Tennessee regiment under Lieutenant Colonel Thomas W. Beaumont, to
block the Auburn road. Together those assignments cut Gregg's
offensive strength by almost a thousand men. And secondly, what was
marching north from Utica was not a Federal brigade, but the 7,000
men of John Logan's 3rd division, with two more divisions
of 34 year old Major General James Birdseye McPherson's Corps, right
behind them – over 17,000 soldiers in total.
The
Yankees were looking for water. It was the only essential which the
Federal army could not bring along. And while hungry men might
march for a week, a thirsty army would begin to collapse within 72
hours. And after 12 straight days of sunny skies, the entire state of
Mississippi was drying up. Wells were beginning to run dry. Creeks
were reduced to a trickle. The only reliable source of water in the
area was Fourteen Mile Creek, fed by springs south of Raymond. That
was McPherson's immediate goal, get to the creek and fill his
canteens. And only after that, march on to Raymond.
But McPherson's Corps was not totally blind. The 6th Missouri
raid on the Mobile and Ohio railroad of the day before had revealed
that a rebel brigade had passed through Crystal Springs on the way to
Jackson. In addition the rails destroyed had prevented a second rebel battalion from reaching Jackson. Worse for the rebels, the roads out of Raymond had not been picketed.
Civilians - and there were always random civilians – trickled out
of Raymond and were captured by Yankee pickets on the Auburn and
Utica roads. Each traveler, no matter their loyalties, carried
details of the rebel troops in Raymond.
Gregg
put the 548 men of the 7th
Texas infantry across the Utica Road, to hold the bridge. It's
commander, the recently widowed 32 year old Colonel Hiram Bronson
Granbury, sent skirmishers across Fortymile Creek, to hide among the
trees and brush on the south bank.
In a support position a thousand
yards behind the 7th
Texas, Gregg set the Irishmen of the composite 10th
and 30th
Tennessee regiment. He told their commander, 36 year old
ex-Nashville mayor Colonel Randal William McGavock, to also be ready
to also assist the 50th
Tennessee, a thousand yards to the west, at the Auburn Road.
As
his strategic reserve, on high ground at the eastern end of his line,
Gregg placed the 315 men of the 3rd Tennessee Regiment,
under 39 year old Colonel Doctor Calvin Harvey Walker. And to their
west, on a knoll beside the Utica road, he placed Captain Bledsoe
and his little 3 gun battery – two 12-pound Napoleon cannon, one
bronze and one iron, and a single Whitworth Rifle, with the 500 men
of the 1st Tennessee infantry battalion protecting the
only artillery he had.
The
timing was close. As Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Beaumont of the 50th
Tennessee noted after the battle, even before reached his position
astride the Auburn road, “...the battle was opened by the
artillery, with occasional musketry.” Beaumont added, “It was
not long before General Gregg rode up and ordered me to move...into a
woods in rear of the enemy's battery, and attack...unless I should
find it too strongly protected...”
The
50th Tennessee, with the 10th/30th
composite regiment in support, crossed Fortymile Creek, and quickly
found themselves facing an entire line of Yankee infantry.
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