The pro – Union newspaper, the
Memphis Evening Bulletin, had only publishing for a few weeks when
the Civil War broke out. Editor Ralphael Semmes was hoping to build
circulation with a series of articles investigating corruption
surrounding Tennessee's Democratic Senator Andrew Johnson. Then,
abruptly, Semmes was replaced by his business partner James Brewster
Bingham, and the paper began supporting Johnson. The reason for the
sudden editorial shift could be explained in two words – Abraham
Lincoln.
The 51 year old Democrat Andrew Johnson (above) was
the only senator from a succeed state to remain in Washington after
the war broke out. That made him a favorite of Republican President
Lincoln. And first among the favors bestowed upon Johnson was the
sudden retirement of Ralphael Semmes. The biggest problem was that
Johnson's term in the senate was set to expire in January of 1863, which would limit his usefulness. Before that happened, Nashville and Memphis were captured by Federal
troops and in November of 1862, Johnson was named Tennessee's
Military Governor. To further assist Johnson, Lincoln even exempted
Tennessee from the Emancipation Proclamation.
But if he was to be effective at helping Lincoln hold the states together (above) Andrew
Johnson needed to broaden his own base of support. And this was one of
the reasons editor James Bingham decided on 10 June, 1863, that the
Memphis Evening Standard would be one of the first newspapers to
publish Illinois Democrat Major General John Alexander McClerand's
General Order Number 72 – his version of the failed
federal assaults of 22 May. Bingham thought he was doing McClernand
a political favor. In fact he was laying down the fuse to a bomb
that would blow up McClernand's political dreams.
It
was General Francis “Frank” Preston Blair junior who ignited
that fuse, and Lincoln needed the powerful Blair family much more
than he needed Andrew Johnson. Newspaper owner Francis Preston Blair (above) had helped Lincoln win the Republican nomination in 1860. His eldest
son Montgomery Blair was Lincoln's Postmaster General. Together with
younger brother Frank, they had delivered Missouri solidly into the
Union camp at the very outset of the war.
By
the summer of 1863 General Frank Blair (above) was commander of the 2nd
division in William Tecumseh Sherman's XVth Corps, which was pressing
the northern flank of Vicksburg. And on Tuesday, 16 June, 1863,
Blair read McClernand's tortured version of the assault on the
Railroad Redoubt as published by the Memphis Evening Standard.
McClernand claimed not only to have captured the redoubt, he added,
“...assistance was asked for...(which) would have probably insured
success.”
McClernand's
account made it seem Grant and the rest of the Union army had
abandoned the XIII corps on the edge of victory. But General Blair
knew McClernand had not captured the redoubt. He knew McClernand's
men had barely dented its defenses. And Blair was fully aware of his
own men's sacrifices in supporting the already failed XIII corps
assault. The Missourian immediately stormed off to Sherman's
headquarters with a copy of the newspaper clenched in his tightly
balled fist.
Sherman
was just as outraged as his subordinate, but he wisely and somewhat
uncharacteristically let his temper cool until Wednesday, 17 June,
before dispatching the newspaper up the chain of command to General
Grant. And in a display of political legerdemain Sherman rarely
possessed, he now pretended to doubt McClernand “ever published
such an order officially to his corps. I know too well that the brave
and intelligent soldiers and officers who compose that corps will not
be humbugged by such....vain-glory and hypocrisy.”
That
evening an almost carbon copy of Sherman's letter, this one allegedly
written by XVII corps commander Major General James Birdseye McPherson (above), was delivered to Grant's headquarters. “I cannot help arriving at the
conclusion,” wrote McPherson, that McClernand's offending missive, “...was
written more to influence public sentiment....with the magnificent
strategy, superior tactics, and brilliant deeds of [McClernand]...”
McPherson then went on to add, “It little becomes Major General
McClernand to complain of want of cooperation on the part of other
Corps... when 1218 men of my command...fell... If General
McClernand’s assaulting columns, were not immediately
supported...it most assuredly was his own fault.”
Two
letters, representing two thirds of his command staff, had now been filed, both questioning the motives and accuracy of McClernand's public
version of events. Grant (above) immediately forwarded a copy of the Memphis
Standard's article to General McClernand, along with a short note.
“Enclosed I send you what purports to be your congratulatory
address to the XIII Army Corps. I would respectfully ask if it is a
true copy. If it is not a correct copy, furnish me one by bearer, as
required both by regulations and existing orders of the Department.”
McClernand
replied immediately, and claimed to be blindsided. “The newspaper
slip is a correct copy of my congratulatory order, No 72. I am
prepared to maintain its statements. I regret that my adjutant did
not send you a copy promptly, as he ought, and I thought he had.”
Whether
the letters protesting General McClernand's boasting were ghost
written or not was now beside the point. Months ago, Grant (above) had
ordered all communications within the Army of the Tennessee
must be presented to his headquarters before they were published by
the corps commanders, and no orders were to be released to the
public except by Army headquarters. And with the army now stationary
outside of Vicksburg, with Grant's star supreme in the west, with
permission to fire McClernand from General-in-Chief Henry Hallack,
still in his pocket, and having maneuvered McClernand into a written
admission he had violated orders, Grant was now ready to act.
About
1:00a.m. on Thursday, 18 June, 1863, Grant signed the order. “Major
General John A. McClernand is hereby relieved of command of the XIII
corps. He will proceed to any point he may select in the state of
Illinois and report by letter to Headquarters of the Army – meaning
Army of the Tennessee - for orders.”
The words were those of
Grant's chief of staff, Major John Aaron Rawlings (above). Rawlings then
gave the order to the 25 year old Inspector General of the Army,
Lieutenant Colonel James Harrison Wilson, with instructions to
deliver it first thing in the morning.
An
historian has described the young James Wilson (above) as “....ambitious,
impatient, outspoken...(and) a stranger to humility and self-doubt”. In short, a younger version of McClernand. A West Point graduate, Wilson had briefly been an acolyte of General
McClernand, but only used him to finagle his way onto Grant's staff. And Wilson urged that he be allowed to deliver the message
immediately. Rawlings was a stickler for protocol and offered half-
hearted resistance. But he also despised McClernand, and finally
released the vengeful Wilson into the night.
The colonel arrived at
XIII corps headquarters about 3:00 a.m. Thursday morning, accompanied
by a provost marshal and a squad of soldiers. He was told McClernand
was asleep, but insisted the orderly awaken the general.
It
must have been obvious to McClernand that he was in some trouble,
because he took the time to put on his dress uniform. He received
Wilson in his office, the room illuminated by a pair of tall candles
and his sheathed sword symbolically lying across the table. Wilson
saluted and informed McClernand, “General I have an important order
for you which I am directed to deliver into your hands.”
Wilson handed the envelope to McClernand, who dismissively tossed it
unopened onto the desk. Wilson then added,”I was to be certain you
had read the order in my presence, that you understand it, and that
you signify your immediate obedience to it.”
Troubled
by Wilson's tone, McClernand put on his reading glasses, opened the
order, and read it. The shock was immediate. Obviously it had never
occurred to him that he was about to loose his command.
And McClernand could not help but notice the second half of the order actually named his successor to command of the XIIIth Corps - Major General Edward Otho Cresap (O.C.) Ord. He had been recovering from a head wound, but the inclusion of his appointment made it clear Grant was not acting on an impulse.
McClernand blurted
out, “Well, sir! I am relieved!” Then seeing the smile on
Wilson's face, McClernand said, “By God, sir, we are both
relieved.!” McClernand then sat, and pugnaciously announced that he
“very much doubted the authority of General Grant to relieve a
general officer appointed by the President.” It
might have been a telling point in a legal debate. In the reality of
the moment it was meaningless.
Later
that morning McClernand expanded his opinion in writing. He told
Grant, “Having been appointed by the President to command...under a
definite act of Congress, I might justly challenge your
authority...but forbear to do so at present.” Clearly over the
intervening hours, it had been explained to McClernand that Grant
would not have acted if he did not hold all the cards. Grant ignored the latest missive, but did now respond to McClernand's General Order Number 72, saying it contained
“...so many inaccuracies that to correct it...would require the
rewriting of most of it. It is pretentious and egotistical..."
Then, since
technically he was now in Mississippi illegally, Major General John
Alexander McClerand rode through the stream of reinforcements pouring into the Vicksburg lines, and boarded one of the steamboats returning nearly empty to Memphis and points
north.
By Wednesday 23 June – 4 days later – and from Illinois -
McClernand sent a telegram to his doppelganger, President
Abraham Lincoln. “I have been relieved for an omission of my
adjutant. Hear me.” But it turned out that at the moment, with a 45,000 man rebel army invading the the state of Pennsylvania, not even Lincoln, the
ultimate politician, was interested in anything else John McClernand had to say.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please share your reaction.