Sergeant
William Henry Tunard, member and historian of the 3rd
Louisiana infantry, remembered the moment the 2,200 pounds of black
powder was ignited in the tunnel beneath the eastward point of the
redan. “Suddenly the earth under our feet gave a convulsive shudder
and with a muffled roar a mighty column of earth, men, poles, spades
and guns arose many feet in the air. About fifty lives were blotted
out in that instant.”
There was no crater, but rather a 35 to 40
foot wide jumble of wood and flesh and yellow clay. It was an abrupt
void in the rebel fort. And before the dirt had settled, about 500
Yankees from Illinois began rushing into the wounded fort.
They
were the 45th Illinois Volunteer regiment, also known as
the “Washburn Lead Mine Regiment.” They mostly came from around
the northwestern town of Galena. In 1845 the dozens of mines in Jo
Davis County had shipped some 27,000 tons of the metal down the
Mississippi River.
So many miners went up the Galena River every
spring to dig for placer deposits of lead, they reminded a farmer of a local
fish, because like White Suckers, “they go up the river to spawn and
return down ag'in in the fall.” But when the thin veins called
“rakes” curved below the water table, the lead fell out of reach.
And after 1849 most of the miners left to chase California gold.
The
region had been represented since 1852 in the U.S. Congress by
Elihu Benjamin Washburne (above). He was one of the founders of the
Republican Party, and an ally of both Abraham Lincoln and
General Ulysses Simpson Grant.
But in 1861, there were still enough lead mines around Galena, Illinois (above), that the regiment could supply miners to
undermine the Louisiana redan. At about 3:35 p.m. on that Friday, 25
June, 1863, the “Suckers” from Illinois stormed four abreast into
the fort.
The
charge was led by 22 year old Color Sergeant Henry Harrison Taylor,
who planted the regimental flag on the lip of the collapsed inner
wall. Riflemen spread out beside him, trying to answer the desperate
fire from the angry 3rd Louisiana men behind that wall.
Leading the Yankee troops was Swiss born Lieutenant Colonel
Melancthon Smith. He had replaced the original commander, his
brother, John Eugene Smith, who had been made a General after the
battle of Shiloh. But Colonel Smith was shot in the head entering
the fort. Command of the 45th then passed to Leander B.
Fisk, who had been a Major for only a little over a month, But he
was killed shortly after taking command.
The
responsibility now fell upon 26 year old Major Jasper (Bob) Adalmorn
Maltby (above). There were some who had little respect for Bob, including
General Smith who opinioned that, “Maltby, I do not think, would
let out a fart without first asserting if there were someone ready to
smell it.”
But the lawyer's son seems to have been a born fighter.
He had been wounded while serving as a private in the Mexican War of
1847-48, and afterward, while struggling to overturn a dishonorable
discharge, in 1850 he had moved to Galena and opened a successful gunsmith and sporting
goods store at 184 Main street. In 1852 Congress overturned
the court martial and gave Bob Maltby a clean record.
Despite
having the most successful gun store in Galena, and a wife and 2
children to support, Jasper Maltby did not hesitate to enlist after First Bull
Run. His fellow volunteers elected him lieutenant. His courage on the
second day at Shiloh, wounded and yet leading his company to sweep the rebels from the field, earned his promotion to captain. He had
survived the 22 May assault, and was promoted to Major because of
vacancies that blood bath created. And now, on 25 June, Major
Maltby, sudden commander of the 45th, and wounded twice
that day already, remained in the pit, helping to erect a wooden
barricade, to hold the devastated ground.
The engineer, Captain
Hickenlooper, never intended his mine to blow a hole in the rebel
lines, straight through to Vicksburg. Rather he saw it as an extension of the siege. Proof of this
was he sent no storming parties into the redan. He did not send a
regiment with bayonets fixed. He sent work crews, with pillars and
buttresses, not logs cut to form ladders, but posts and boards to
build a bulwark. And other than the few marksmen to distract the
rebels, every other man in the 45th was engaged in
erecting a new fortification within the redan, including Major Bob
Maltby.
To
quote from his wife's epitaph, in lauding her husbands achievements, “
Beams were passed into the pit, and these were put into position as a
protection...The joists were placed lengthwise and dirt was quickly
piled about them....(Major) Maltby helped in the lodging of the
beams...put his shoulder under a great piece of timber...pushed it up
and forward into place....(then a rebel cannon)....solid, shot struck
the beam... and split it into kindling. Great sharp pieces of the
wood were driven into....(Major Maltby) was literally hurled to the
bottom of the black pit” The 45th Illinois was soon
replaced by the 20th Illinois, and Bob Maltby was carried
to the rear. Doctors deemed his wounds too numerous to be counted,
the most serious being were head and leg injuries.
Just
like work shifts in the mine, the 20th Illinois was soon
replaced by the 31st Illinois, who were replaced in their
turn by the the 23rd Indiana Volunteers. Next it was the
turn of the 17th Iowa regiment, and then at 2:00 a.m by a
return of the 31st Illinois. At daylight on Saturday, 26
June, 1863, the 45th moved back into the position.
By now
the walls and barricades were strong enough that the regiment's turn
at the work could be extended until 10:00 a.m., when the 124th
Illinois Volunteers went in to finish the job. And even as the rebels of the 3rd Louisiana poured fire down upon the Yankees, the rising barricades offered increasing protection.
By 5:00 p.m. that
Saturday, the new position was secure and fighting was reduced again
to the deadly background of sniping and bomb throwing. With
nightfall, the miners of the 45th began an new tunnel, to
undermine the rest of the Louisiana redan.
The
cost of the new strategy was high, but not as devastating as the
failures of 22 May had been. On 25 June, the 45th Illinois
had suffered 8 killed, and 62 wounded, including Major Maltby, who
would survive and be promoted to Colonel.
The 20th
Illinois suffered 2 dead and 7 wounded – the 31st
Illinois 7 dead and 27 wounded - the 124th Illinois had
6 killed and 49 wounded – the 23rd Indiana 8 dead and 31
wounded – the 17th Iowa Volunteer regiment had 3 killed
and 34 wounded – and the 56th Illinois 4 dead and 13
wounded.
In total, to advance the line a few yards into the 3rd
Louisiana redan cost the Federal army 38 dead and 223 wounded. It was
a high cost but shared between 7 regiments. And in an army built
upon regiments, that meant each could remain effective and in the
siege line. And their opponents, the 3rd Louisiana, suffered 58
killed and 96 wounded.
And
after night fell, on the evening of 26 June, 1863, with the new defense lines firmly in place, the miners began
digging a new tunnel to plant a new mine underneath what was left of the Louisiana redan.
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