In mid May the new commander of the
Trans-Mississippi – just 3 months on the job - 39 year old General
Edmund Kirby “Seminole” Smith (above) , faced a mounting crises with
shrinking resources.
Two years before, in March, the Confederacy had
lost its most populous city, New Orleans. In April of 1862 the
Yankees of had driven the government of Louisiana from Baton Rouge -
in January of 1863, from Oposlusa – and in early May, from
Alexandria on the Red River. Since March the government of the
richest state in the Confederacy had been isolated 124 miles
northwest of Alexandria, in the small town of Shreveport - half a
mile to the east of Smith's headquarters at Fort Johnston, and just
40 miles from the Texas border.
The little capital of Shreveport (above) - between hills and the Red River - was jammed with
about 6,000 whites and 3,000 slaves – almost double it's antebellum
population. The Shreveport Arsenal, under
Captain Frederick Peabody Leavenworth, was busily producing
ammunition and repairing weapons, now with additional workers
evacuated from the Arkadelphia,
Arkansas Ordnance Works. But the only way to get that production to
the armies was by horse drawn wagon. The Red River supply line was
now blocked at Alexandria. The closest railroad to Shreveport was the
line from Marshal, Texas - which stopped 5 miles short of town. The
rest of the Vicksburg line came no nearer than Monroe, 100 miles to
the east.
Almost 200,000 men from the Trans
Mississippi were serving in Confederate armies - 60,000 from
Arkansas, almost 60,000 from Texas, 50,000 from Louisiana, 30,000
from Missouri and 2,500 from New Mexico Territory. But by mid-May
all those men were beyond reach. Kirby Smith could muster barely
30,000 men in the Trans Mississippi. And those few were short of
training, uniforms, food, ammunition and medicine because the “gray
back” Confederate currency used to buy supplies was almost
worthless. The view from Fort Johnson was so depressing, Smith began
to consider resigning from the army and retreating into a Jesuit
monastery.
Seventy
miles southeast of Shreveport, at Natchitoches, commanding about
4,000 scattered men, was 36 year old Major General Richard Scott
"Dick" Taylor. He had spent the spring being pushed up the
Bayou Teche, even suffering the insult of having his own plantation
burned to the ground. Even after Yankee Major General Nathaniel Banks
withdrew 3 divisions down the Red River to attack Port Hudson,
Taylor's army was still too small to confront the 10,000 Yankees as
they backtracked down Teche Bayou to Brashear City, the western
terminus of the railroad out of New Orleans. Never the less, the ex –
President's son had a plan.
General
Taylor would write after the war that as he re-entered Alexandria, he
received word that, “...Major-General Walker, with a division of
infantry (Walker's Greyhounds)...would reach me within the next few
days”. Taylor had no doubt how best to use 4,000 fresh soldiers.
“I was confident that, with Walker's force, Brashear City could be
captured...Banks's communication with New
Orleans...threatened....(which) would raise such a storm as to bring
General Banks from Port Hudson, the garrison of which could then
unite with General Joseph Johnston in the rear of General Grant.”
Major
General John George Walker (above) was another of the qualified field
officers in the Army of Northern Virginia who were transferred west
in June of 1862, after Robert E. Lee took over. So, in November, Walker
took command of 12 Texas regiments in 3 training camps in Lonoke
County, central Arkansas. The staging posts had originally been
called Camp Hope, but in the fall 1862 measles and typhoid swept
through the 20,000 recruits, killing 1,500 of them, including newly
promoted Brigadier General Allison Nelson. Thereafter the soldiers
referred to the place as Camp Death, but the War Department
preferred Camp Nelson. Walker earned his men's respect by paying
attention to camp hygiene, which cut the death rate by two thirds.
A
brigade of the Texas Division, under Brigadier General Thomas J.
Churchill, was detached to occupy Fort Hindman at the Arkansas Post
in January of 1863, but was lost when that position was captured by
Major General John Alexander McClernand. Until late April, Walker's
men remained in central Arkansas, in case the Yankees made another
strike toward the capital of Little Rock. But once General Smith
could confirm that Grant had crossed the Mississippi to attack
Vicksburg, he decided he could risk 6,000 of Walker's men to cut the
Yankee supply line.
They
set out on foot the morning of Friday, 24 April, 1863. Eight days and
78 miles later they crossed the border into Louisiana. They made 16
miles on Saturday, 2 May, and another 16 on Sunday, 3 May, camping
that night on the banks of Bayou Bartholomew. Following that
tributary south for 2 more days, and 15 miles, brought Walker's
division to Washita, Arkansas, where they were met by a dozen steam
boats, which carried them to the town of Trenton, opposite the town
of Monroe, western terminus of the Vicksburg railroad. The 6,000
rebels camped that night, 2 miles south of Trenton.
It
was in Trenton where they received word that Alexandria, Louisiana
had fallen to the Yankees.
While
General Smith reconsidered what to do with Walker's Texas division,
local commander, and Texan, 44 year old Brigadier General Paul Octave
Hébert, tried to pilfer a brigade for his own needs. But Walker was
able to fall back on his orders from General Smith, to keep his
division together.
Eventually,
Smith decided it would be better to send the Texans back to Arkansas,
where they would be safe from both the Yankees and sticky fingered
Confederate generals. So at 8:00 a.m., on Saturday, 9 May, the 6,000 Texas
soldiers re-boarded transports (above) for a return voyage to Washita.
But as the boats headed north, General Taylor would re-direct Walker
and his men to his join his southern assault on Brashear City.
The
Texans waited until Friday, 15 May, for their supply wagons to arrive
from Washita. The next day, Saturday, 16 May, as Grant's Yankees were driving
Pemberton's rebels back behind the forts at Vicksburg, the Texas
Division retraced their steps 17 miles southward. Over the next 8
days General Walker's Greyhounds marched 150 miles, finally reaching
Alexandria, on Wednesday 27 May –which is when General Smith in
Shreveport finally learned of Taylor's revival of his proposed
advance down Bayou Teche.
Taylor
would claim that both Confederate Secretary of War James Seddon and
President Jefferson Davis had approved his fantastic, almost fantasy,
plan to threaten New Orleans. But Taylor's boss, General Kirby
Smith (above), did not. As they retreated from Alexandria, the Yankees had
burned and destroyed everything in Cajun Country which might support
an advancing rebel army. So Taylor's plan depended upon capturing
Yankee supply depots to feed and arm his 8,000 men, and that, at lest
in the opinion of General Smith, was not likely to happen. And even
if it did, it would leave half of the Trans Mississippi army isolated
in the far south west corner of the theater. Besides, Smith had been
receiving an almost endless stream of orders from President Davis to
do something directly to rescue Vicksburg – under cutting the claim
Davis supported Taylor's fantasy.
General
Taylor (above) whined, “ I was informed that...public opinion would condemn
us if we did not try to do something.” So Smith's original orders
stood. On Thursday, 28 May the Texans changed their line of march,
now heading 40 miles over 3 days toward the port called Little River.
There they prepared 2 day's rations before again boarding steamboats,
this time heading north up the Tenas River.
Taylor
and Walker were to advance toward Richmond, Louisiana, on the Shreveport and Vicksburg railroad, and strike
from there to capture Young's Point and Milliken’s Bend, thus
cutting Grant's supply line down the western bank of the Mississippi.
Taylor remained skeptical. “The problem was to withdraw the
garrison (of Vicksburg), not to re- enforce it”, he wrote. But in
all fairness, that was not Smith's plan, either. He wanted to force
Grant to withdraw from his positions in central Mississippi, by cutting his supply line.
The
problem was that the week earlier, Grant had shifted his supply base to
the Yazoo River at Chickasaw Bayou and Snyder's Bluff. General Smith's plan had failed before it had ever
been launched.
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