The
first angry crack of muskets were fired by green Yankees – with
barely a month of training, and largely armed with shoddily made
weapons. But these 285 men, the 8th Louisiana Infantry of
African Descent, had literal “skin in the game”. And in broad
daylight of Saturday, 6 June, 1863, they had surprised the rebel
pickets around the Tallulah depot of the Vicksburg, Shreveport, and
Texas Railroad. The Confederates did as the Yankees had done a week
earlier at the Perkin's plantation. They retreated and reported.
However,
the commander of the black Yankees, Swiss emigrant and lawyer Colonel
Hermann Lieb (above) , had already achieved what he wanted. He had found the
rebels and his men had drawn first blood. Now he quickly marched his under
strength regiment back to the relative safety of Milliken's Bend, and
set them and their companion regiments to work, building defensive
positions along two levees. Lieb also called for assistance. His
boss at Young's Point, Brigadier General Elias Smith Dennis, could
provide only part of the remains of the battered and bloodied 23rd
Iowa Volunteers.
Three weeks earlier, in a single 3 minute charge at
the Big Black River Bridge, these 200 buckeyes had l1 enlisted men and 2
officers – including their Colonel, William Kinsman - killed
outright, and 3 officers and 85 enlisted men wounded - half of all
Federal casualties in that battle. The shattered unit was sent to
safe camps across the river to recover. The 130 survivors were now
tapped to send 100 men to support the black recruits at Milliken's
Bend. Admiral Porter also promised the 1,000 pound rifle, three 9
inch smooth bore cannons and two 30 pound rifles carried by the
stern wheel ironclad ram, the USS Choctaw. But the ram would not
arrived until mid- morning. Colonel Lieb woke his men at 3:00 Sunday
morning, and put them at the ready.
It
was now obvious to the ranking rebel commander at Richmond,
Louisiana, Major General Richard Scott Taylor, that the only Yankees
remaining on the western shore were some “...convalescents and some
negro troops.” But even if he captured Milliken's Bend and Young's
Point and the entire De Soto Peninsula, he still would not be able to
directly aid Vicksburg. Lieutenant General Pemberton would not
withdraw from that city. Taylor had no provisions with which to
resupply the beleaguered garrison. And crossing Taylor's 4,500 men
over to join Pemberton's 20,000, would merely advance the day the
Vicksburg's defenders ran out of food. But Taylor had his orders,
and he authorized General Walker to proceed with the assault.
Setting
off at 6:00 p.m. on 6 June, Major General John George Walker pushed
his division forward, re-capturing Tallulah after dark. A
participant remembered the dramatic night time approach. “ In
breathless silence...through dark and deep defiles marched the dense
array of men, moving steadily forward; not a whisper was heard — no
sound of clanking saber, or rattle of canteen and cup."
By 2:00
a.m, on Wednesday, 7 June, the 1,000 plus man brigade of 39 year old
Brigadier General James Morrison Hawes was approaching the Martin Van
Buren hospital at Young's point, and General Henry McCulloch's 1,000
man brigade was within 2 miles of Milliken's Bend. Walker held
Colonel Horace Randal's brigade in reserve at the Oak Grove
Plantation.
The
Yankee pickets, crouched behind a series of hedges, were methodically
pushed back by the 19th Texas infantry on the right, the
17th regiment in the center, the 16th cavalry
dismounted on the left, The 16th Texas infantry regiment
followed in reserve. Explained a Texan, "It was impossible for
our troops to keep in line of battle, owing to the many hedges we had
to encounter, which it was impossible to pass, except through a few
gaps that had been used as gates or passageways."
Once
through the last line of hedges, the rebels were facing the first
cotton bale barricade. Behind it was the 8th, 9th, 11th, and 13th
Louisiana Infantry Regiments (African Descent), 1st Mississippi
Infantry (African Descent), and the 23d Iowa Infantry, totaling 1,061
men. McCulloch drew his men into a line of battle just under a
hundred yards from the Yankee line. As they did the Yankees unleashed
a volley. Ignoring the blast, McCulloch took the time to order his
men, “No quarter for the officers! Kill the damned abolitionists!"
With fixed bayonets, the Texans then charged.
The
veterans of the 23rd Iowa might have had time for a second
volley, but that broken regiment had no more to give,. They scattered and ran for the
last barricade on the final levee. The black soldiers could only
muster a few scattered shots, either because they lacked the training
with their weapons or the weapons failed. General Lorenzo Thomas noted, "Both
sides freely used the bayonet - a rare occurrence in warfare...two men lay side by side, each having the
other's bayonet in his body. . . .A teenage cook, who had begged for
a gun when the enemy was seen approaching, was badly wounded with one
gunshot and two bayonet wounds. In one Negro company there were six
broken bayonets." It would be the longest bayonet charge of the war. Afterwards, General McCulloch reported that of the
wounds received by his men, 'more are severe and fewer slight than I
have ever witnessed among the same number in my former military
experience....This charge was resisted
by the negro portion of the enemy's force with considerable
obstinacy...” Some might have chosen another word, such as
desperation, or even courage.
As
the Confederates came over that barricade with bayonets and swinging
their muskets as clubs, Yankee Lieutenant David Cornwell saw one of
the Union soldiers, a “very large and strong-willed” Sergeant
named “Big” Jack Jackson, charge forward “...like a rocket.
With the fury of a tiger he sprang into that gang and crushed
everything before him. There was nothing left of Jack's gun except
the barrel and he was smashing everything he could reach. On the
other side of the levee, they were yelling 'Shoot that big nigger!'
Cornwell saw the Jack Jackson, “..daring the whole gang to come up
and fight him. Then a bullet reached his head and he fell full on the
levee.”
For over an hour the untrained Yankees struggled with the rebels,
black and white skinned southerners murdering each other with
abandon. Then the Yankees fell back through their own camp and
toward the second levee and the second barricade. The Confederates
followed , as Joseph Blessington of the 16th Texas
remembered, “bayoneting them by hundreds.” As the
Confederates gathered to storm the second barricade, the USS Choctaw
steamed into view, big guns blazing.
General
McCulloch ordered his men under cover behind the first levee. They
looted the Yankee camp, searching for equipment and food they could
not find in their own army, and they began killing any wounded black
Yankees they found. It was alleged they also killed 2 white Yankee officers. The murdering continued until McCulloch saw a second
Yankee gun boat sailing up the river toward their position. Realizing
he lacked the strength to crush these black men in blue uniforms, he
ordered his entire brigade to pull back to the Oak Grove Plantation.
The
rebel's limped back. Out of the 1,000 men present the Confederates had suffered
44 killed and 131 wounded and 10 missing. For the three under
strength black Yankee regiments, it was a bloody disaster - 100
killed outright, 285 wounded, and 266 captured and murdered or returned to slavery. Except
those numbers deserve a closer look. Black Yankees, with barely a
month of training and substandard equipment, had not run. They had
not melted away. They had stood and fought. They had inflicted almost
200 casualties on their foe, 20% of the attackers. Given the worse of everything, they had
fought back.
At
Young's Point, the rebel's of Hawes' brigade drove in the Yankee
pickets, but then finding themselves facing well armed and organized convalescing patients
behind barricades, and three Federal gunboats providing covering
fire, the Confederates withdrew without even launching an attack.
For all the effort and sacrifice of men and material by Walker's "Greyhounds", General Taylor would later note “As
foreseen, our movement resulted, and could result, in nothing.”
But
there was a result, and even a victory. In December of 1863, United States Secretary of
War Edwin Stanton, (above) an early advocate of black soldiers, wrote a
letter to Lincoln concerning the debate over their fighting ability. "Many
persons believed, or pretended to believe..., that freed slaves would
not make good soldiers,” he told his President. These faint hearts
were worried the ex-slaves “...would lack courage, and could not
be subjected to military discipline. Facts have shown how groundless
were these apprehensions. The slave has proved his manhood, and his
capacity as an infantry soldier, at Milliken's Bend (7 June, 1863),
at the assault upon Port Hudson (27 May, 1863), and the storming of
Fort Wagner (South Carolina, 18 July, 1863)."
The
ground the Confederacy had once stood upon had shifted. And although
the lies and obfuscation used to defend the myths about antebellum
southern culture, would delay the triumph of the truth for almost
another century, the fuse was at least lit. It was already past due time for that to happen.
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