In
the late afternoon of Sunday, 16 May, 1863, troopers of Captain
William Yerger's company of General William Wirt Adams' Mississippi
cavalry regiment, slipped back into the state capital of Jackson. The
town of 4,000 had been occupied by the Yankees for less than 48
hours, but Adam's troopers discovered that Federal troops had
destroyed the state arsenal and foundry, burned down a gun carriage
factory and associated shops, including a tent maker, and – most
importantly - burned the trestles of the long Vicksburg and Alabama
railroad bridge over the Pearl River. Sherman's corps had also torn
up and bent the rails for miles in all directions. It was Sherman's
opinion that as a military asset the city of Jackson would be out of
business for 6 months.
General
Joseph (“Old Joe”) Johnston (above), the Confederate commander for
Tennessee and Mississippi, knew the Pearl River bridge must be his
top priority, more important than even support of Pemberton's army in
Vicksburg.
One hundred miles north of Jackson (above), safely beyond Yankee
reach, was the town of Grenada, where Johnston had ordered 400
locomotives and rail cars to be safely parked. All that rolling
stock was now trapped west of the Pearl River. The longer those
locomotives sat in Grenada – or anywhere else - the greater the
chance Yankee cavalry would destroy them all. It was the core of
Jefferson Davis' fallacy that Vicksburg was a nail, a point to be
defended. Or to put it another way, Vicksburg may have been Lincoln's
key, but the Pearl River bridge was the lock. With the lock smashed,
the key was meaningless.
So
while in the Mississippi capital Governor John Jones Pettus fretted
over stolen draperies, Johnston huddled with his Chief Quartermaster,
30 year old Major Livingston Mims, on how to replace the Pearl River
bridge. While that was happening, Johnston struggled to assemble an
army. He had less than 4,000 men, mostly General John Gregg's
brigade. But within 48 hours, as expected, more troops arrived.
First came the South Carolina brigade of General State's Rights Gist.
With them came General William Henry Talbot Walker's (above) Georgia brigade.
Johnston quickly recognized Walker's experience in the “old army”
made him “the only officer in my command competent to lead a
division” and on 23 May he promoted Walker to Major General and
folded his and Gregg's and Gists brigades into a division.
Evander
McNair's brigade of Tennessee regiments arrived soon after, along
with 4 Texas regiments under 41 year old lawyer, General Mathew
Duncan Ector. On 19 May, Brigadier General Samuel B. Maxey marched
into Jackson with his troops, the last of the Port Hudson defenders
to escape before the Yankees surrounded that place. None of these
men had wagons, and they brought little artillery with them, but they
were present and accounted for.
These 6, 498 men formed a division
under 44 year old Mississippi planter, Major General Samuel Gibbs
French (above). Johnston's newly named Army of Relief now numbered about 11,000 men. And that afternoon the division of Major General William Wing
Loring came stumbling in as well.
Separated
- intentionally or not - from Pemberton's main force during the
battle of Champion Hill on 16 May - - Loring (above)'s men had 'force marched' 40 miles in 24 hours to escape. His artillerymen spiked 12 of their
own cannon and freed their horses. Many of the infantry dropped their
muskets and ammunition while crossing rivers to lighten their load.
At 3:00 am on 17 May they had reached Dillon, where both Loring and
Pemberton had expected to find Grant's supply trains.
There were no
Yankees in Dillon, but scouts soon found 500 Federal troops at Utica,
forcing Loring to march his exhausted 6,000 men around the town. That
evening they reached Crystal Springs, where they finally felt safe
enough to collapse and sleep.
Taking
a day to recover, Loring's division reached Jackson on the evening of
19 May. He had lost “...our artillery, wagons, knapsacks, blankets,
and everything we had.” They had also lost 3,000 stragglers. Most
of those men would stumble in over the next week. But Loring's
division of 6,049 men would not be an offensive force for weeks.
Three days later a brigade from North Carolina arrived in Jackson,
having been on the move since early May. It's commander was the
brilliant tactician, foul mouthed and argumentative and often drunk
General Nathan George “Shanks” Evens. This brigade was folded
into French's division. Johnston's Army of relief now numbered about
23,000 men.
Adam's
troopers gave Johnston a good idea what he faced in trying to relieve
Vicksburg. As early as 10 June, Grant had assigned General John
Parke's IX Corps to defend his supply base at Snyder's Bluff. And he
had pushed a division from Sherman's Corps eastward to defend the
crossing at the Big Black River Bridge, and pushed a second toward
Sataritia, about half way to Yazoo City. As reinforcements continued
to arrive in Jackson, Johnston countered by sending General Walker's
division to Yazoo City, and Loring's division 6 miles behind at
Benton, along the Southern Railroad to Vicksburg.
By
31 May, Major Mims had gathered “large numbers” of slaves and
enough iron rails and cross ties, to begin replacing the tracks and short bridges immediately around Jackson. But the Pearl River bridge was a greater
challenge.
The river itself was only about 50 feet wide. But the the
approach from Jackson first dropped 5 to 8 feet off the lip of of an
escarpment – part of the Jackson Hills. Wooden trestles were the
obvious solution there. However, a hundred yards or so on, the
roadbed abruptly dropped over a 20 foot cliff, to the river itself.
A pair of surviving stone towers had and would again carry rails across that
muddy stream.
But
on the eastern shore, the construction engineers had to deal with a
quarter mile wide flood plain, with a water table inches below the
surface. Trestles here had been mounted on broad stone bases until
higher and firmer ground was reached. But the Yankees had burned all
those trestles. The charred wood and bent rails had to be cleared
from these stones, heat cracked stones replaced, and new trestles cut
and transported to the site. It would not be until mid June before
Major Mims could even begin rebuilding the long bridge.
On
Friday, 29 May, Johnston (above) sent a dispatch rider to Lieutenant General
Pemberton, 50 miles to the west. As usual it was a less than cheerful
note. It began, “I am too weak to save Vicksburg. Can do no more
than attempt to save you and your garrison. It will be impossible to
extricate you, unless you co-operate, and we make mutually supporting
movements. Communicate your plans and suggestions, if possible.”
That
same day, 50 miles away in Vicksburg, Lieutenant General John Clifford Pemberton (above) sent his own message
to Johnston. “I have 18,000 men to man the lines and river front;
no reserves. I do not think you should move with less than 30,000 or
35,000, and then, if possible, toward Snyder's Mill, (Chickasaw
Bayou, after) giving me notice...My men are in good spirits, awaiting
your arrival...You may depend on my holding the place as long as
possible...”.
On
Monday, 1 June, 43 year old Kentucky politician, General John Cabell
Breckinridge (above) arrived from Chattanooga, with his 5,200 man division.
Breckenridge was a friend of Johnston's, and had suffered in
Tennessee under General Braxton Bragg. And, finally, on Wednesday, 3
June, the 3,000 man cavalry division of 27 year old William Hicks
“Red” Jackson rode in from Tennessee. All told, Johnston now
had about 27,000 men. It was unlikely he would ever be stronger, as
Confederate Secretary of War James Seddon (below), continually reminded
Johnston.
Seddon (above) offered to send him even more of
Bragg's army, if Johnston would just attack. But
Johnston cautioned, “To take from Bragg what is required to deal
effectively with Grant will involve yielding Tennessee.” Johnston
could almost hear Confederate President Jefferson Davis screaming in
the background when Sedden replied on Tuesday, 16 June. “I rely on
you” said Seddon/Davis, “to avert the loss. If better resources
do not offer, you must attack.”
Davis (above) was determined to hold Tennessee and Vicksburg. Johnston had long
tried to explain his President, that the Confederacy lacked the
strength to do both. Better to lose one, allowing the south to
concentrate its full strength to save the second, after which the
first might be retaken. The two men had argued this point for 3 years
now, without either one convincing the other. They had now been
reduced to using Seddon as a cut out, to avoid Johnston resigning or
Davis firing him.
Still,
Johnston tried one more time on Tuesday, 19 June. “You do not
appreciate the difficulties in the course you direct,” - “that”
being an all out attack on Grant - “nor the probability and
consequence of failure. Grant's position, naturally strong, is
entrenched...His reinforcements have been at least equal to my whole
force. The Big Black covers him from attack, and would cut off our
retreat if defeated. We cannot combine operations with Pemberton,
from uncertain and slow communication. The defeat of this little army
would at once open Mississippi and Alabama to Grant.”
Seddon/Davis'
reply showed clearly that Davis was again on the verge of firing
Johnston. And that would have done no one any good. “Consequences realized,” Seddon/Davis bluntly responded. “I take the responsibility, and leave you free to follow
the most desperate course the occasion may demand. Rely upon it, the
eyes and hopes of the whole Confederacy are upon you, with the full
confidence that you will act, and with the sentiment that it is
better to fail nobly daring, than, through prudence even, to be
inactive. I rely upon you to save Vicksburg.'"
To
Save Vicksburg. This was Johnston's new mission. How he was to
achieve this Davis offered no advice, and would accept no advice.
Maybe there was no way to do what Davis insisted upon. But
Davis insisted it be tried.
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