One
Vicksburg woman remembered that June began with a “clear and
unusually warm day. The men sought shelter from the sun's scorching
rays beneath the shade of outstretched blankets and in small
excavations and huts in the hill sides...” However she was also forced to admit that it was not only the sun from which the besieged
citizens sought protection. “We have slept scarcely none now for
two days and two nights.” What was disturbing the lady's sleep were
the 200 Federal artillery cannon arrayed against the city.
For
Lida Lord (above), daughter of a minister , the siege meant sharing a large
cave complex with up to 65 others, “packed in, black and white, like
sardines in a box.” Forced underground by the Yankee guns the
civilians suffered an endless lists of indignities. “We were...in
hourly dread of snakes,” she wrote. “...A large rattlesnake was
found one morning under a mattress on which some of us had slept all
night.”
An
18 year old Confederate signal corpsman from Virginia, Edward Sanford
Gregory, remembered, “...hardly any part of the city was
outside the range of the enemy’s artillery. … Just across the
Mississippi … mortars were put in position and trained directly on
the homes of the people. … Twenty-four hours of each day....their
deadly hail of iron dropped through roofs and tore up the deserted
and denuded streets. …How many
of them came and burst, nobody can have the least idea …”
In
fact the Federal commissary had to account for every shell. On
average each Yankee gun fired 14 rounds a day - an average one round
every 2 minutes. But the guns moored across the river on rafts were
not army weapons, but 6 ugly, brutal U.S. Navy 13 inch Seacoast
mortars (above) forged in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Their squat barrels alone
weighed 17,250 pounds, the carriages another ton. These were not
mobile artillery, but they were unusually accurate. And they weren't
aimed at people's homes. They arched 200 pound projectiles from the
DeSoto peninsula and precisely dropped them, half a mile away, at
the corner of Washington and First Streets, along the Vicksburg
waterfront.
Their
target was the foundry operated by Adam Breach Reading and his
brother, C.A.. Antebellum the firm had serviced the steamboat trade,
and repaired the occasional locomotive (above).
Once the war broke out they
began producing 6 and 12 pound bronze cannon. Their production was
only about 2 a month and perhaps 40 in all were cast before the
supply of copper was cut off. But day and night the big mortars kept
pounding the site, 7,000 shells in all. Occasionally they overshot,
in the process destroying the offices of “The Vicksburg Whig”
newspaper, and some private homes. Such insults fell into the
category of collateral damage.
And
these were not the only Naval guns belching fire upon the city. In
the original run passed the Vicksburg batteries on the night of 16
April, 1863, the charge had been led by the ironclad USS Benton (above). She
suffered damage that night, and a more serious injury on 29 April
during the ironclad duel with rebel guns at Grand Gulf. Over the
last month the Benton had been tied up along the Mississippi shore
while her engines were being repaired. But Admiral Porter was never
one to let a gun grow cold.
Two
1 ton 42 pound rifled cannons from the USS Benton were off-loaded at
the abandoned port town of Warrenton, 2 miles south of Vicksburg. They were manhandled to within range of the South Fort (above), where they were operated by a detachment from the
34th
Iowa Infantry, and commanded by a Missouri artillery lieutenant named
Joseph Atwater, Battery Benton began to methodically pound the South
Fort into silence.
At the opposite end of the 5 mile long Federal
line was Battery Selfridge, whose weapons were navy owned an operated
– operated in this case by the very brave and the often sunk,
Thomas Oliver Selfridge.
The
outbreak of the civil war found the 26 year old naval lieutenant, and
son of a Naval Captain, Thomas Selfridge (above), in command of the 6 gun forward battery
aboard the 50 gun frigate the USS Cumberland.
On Saturday, 8 March,
1862, the Cumberland was rammed and sunk by the Confederate Ironclad
CSS Virginia. Thomas did not allow his men to abandon their guns
until ordered to do so, despite their shots failing to penetrate the iron
skin of the rebel ship.
As reward for his bravery, Thomas was then
given command of the first Yankee submarine, the 47 foot long USS
Alligator. She broke down on a test cruise up the Potomac, and had to
be towed back to the naval yard by a passing schooner (above). Disgusted
with the sub, and having lost his place in the promotion line for the
blue water navy, Thomas now begged a transfer to the brown water
navy.
In
November he was promoted to Lieutenant Commander, and given command
of the city class ironclad the USS Cairo, with a crew of 215 men and
officers. On Thursday, 11 December, 1862, the USS Cairo was steaming up the rain swollen Yazoo river, following 2 tin-clad gun boats, the USS Marmora and the Signal. When they
suspected trouble and slowed, the impatient Lieutenant Commander
Selfridge steamed ahead and ran into two torpedoes (above). The ironclad
went down in only 12 minutes, luckily without any loss of
life. The "Oft Sunk" Thomas was then transferred to gun boats in less exposed
positions. But he still kept pushing to get in the fight.
On
27 May of 1863, the ironclad USS Cincinnati had been sunk in 18 feet
of water just north of the Vicksburg lines. Naval engineers were
able to quickly raise three 9,200 pound 8 inch Columbiad cannons from
the wreck. The first week in June these were mounted atop Steele's
Hill, in “Battery Selfridge” (above), maned by crewmen from the USS
Cairo, and commanded by its namesake. At least on land the "oft sunk" Lieutenant could not be sunk so easily.
On
Saturday, 6 June, 1863, one of the Navy's mortar shells punctured
the roof of the 4 story tall Washington Hotel (above, at the corner of
Washington and China Street hill). Luckily the shell exploded on
contact, only destroying three adjacent storage rooms. The hotel had
been converted into a hospital, and as yet did not have many
patients. So the only person injured was a surgeon whose leg was so
mangled it had to be amputated. But the round also destroyed most the
rebel morphine and quinine supplies. The siege was not beginning well for the rebel forces.
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