<h2><SPAN name="XVIII" id="XVIII"></SPAN>XVIII</h2>
<br/>
<p><i>Blockade—Hatteras Inlet—Port Royal
Captured—The Trent Affair—Lincoln Suggests
Arbitration—Seward's Despatch—McClellan at
Washington—Army of the Potomac—McClellan's Quarrel with
Scott—Retirement of Scott—Lincoln's
Memorandum—"All Quiet on the Potomac"—Conditions in
Kentucky—Cameron's Visit to Sherman—East
Tennessee—Instructions to Buell—Buell's
Neglect—Halleck in Missouri</i></p>
<br/>
<br/>
<p>Following the fall of Fort Sumter, the navy of the United States
was in no condition to enforce the blockade from Chesapeake Bay to
the Rio Grande declared by Lincoln's proclamation of April 19. Of
the forty-two vessels then in commission nearly all were on foreign
stations. Another serious cause of weakness was that within a few
days after the Sumter attack one hundred and twenty-four officers
of the navy resigned, or were dismissed for disloyalty, and the
number of such was doubled before the fourth of July. Yet by the
strenuous efforts of the department in fitting out ships that had
been laid up, in completing those under construction, and in
extensive purchases and arming of all classes of vessels that could
be put to use, from screw and side-wheel merchant steamers to
ferry-boats and tugs, a legally effective blockade was established
within a period of six months. A considerable number of new
war-ships was also immediately placed under construction. The
special session of Congress created a commission to study the
subject of ironclads, <SPAN name="page245" id="page245"></SPAN>and on its recommendation three
experimental vessels of this class were placed under contract. One
of these, completed early in the following year, rendered a
momentous service, hereafter to be mentioned, and completely
revolutionized naval warfare.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, as rapidly as vessels could be gathered and prepared,
the Navy Department organized effective expeditions to operate
against points on the Atlantic coast. On August 29 a small fleet,
under command of Flag Officer Stringham, took possession of
Hatteras Inlet, after silencing the forts the insurgents had
erected to guard the entrance, and captured twenty-five guns and
seven hundred prisoners. This success, achieved without the loss of
a man to the Union fleet, was of great importance, opening, as it
did, the way for a succession of victories in the interior waters
of North Carolina early in the following year.</p>
<p>A more formidable expedition, and still greater success soon
followed. Early in November, Captain Du-Pont assembled a fleet of
fifty sail, including transports, before Port Royal Sound. Forming
a column of nine war-ships with a total of one hundred and twelve
guns, the line steamed by the mid-channel between Fort Beauregard
to the right, and Fort Walker to the left, the first of twenty and
the second of twenty-three guns, each ship delivering its fire as
it passed the forts. Turning at the proper point, they again gave
broadside after broadside while steaming out, and so repeated their
circular movement. The battle was decided when, on the third round,
the forts failed to respond to the fire of the ships. When
Commander Rodgers carried and planted the Stars and Stripes on the
ramparts, he found them utterly deserted, everything having been
abandoned by the flying garrisons. Further reconnaissance proved
that the panic extended <SPAN name="page246" id="page246"></SPAN>itself over the whole network of sea
islands between Charleston and Savannah, permitting the immediate
occupation of the entire region, and affording a military base for
both the navy and the army of incalculable advantage in the further
reduction of the coast.</p>
<p>Another naval exploit, however, almost at the same time,
absorbed greater public attention, and for a while created an
intense degree of excitement and suspense. Ex-Senators J.M. Mason
and John Slidell, having been accredited by the Confederate
government as envoys to European courts, had managed to elude the
blockade and reach Havana. Captain Charles Wilkes, commanding the
<i>San Jacinto</i>, learning that they were to take passage for
England on the British mail steamer <i>Trent</i>, intercepted that
vessel on November 8 near the coast of Cuba, took the rebel
emissaries prisoner by the usual show of force, and brought them to
the United States, but allowed the <i>Trent</i> to proceed on her
voyage. The incident and alleged insult produced as great
excitement in England as in the United States, and the British
government began instant and significant preparations for war for
what it hastily assumed to be a violation of international law and
an outrage on the British flag. Instructions were sent to Lord
Lyons, the British minister at Washington, to demand the release of
the prisoners and a suitable apology; and, if this demand were not
complied with within a single week, to close his legation and
return to England.</p>
<p>In the Northern States the capture was greeted with great
jubilation. Captain Wilkes was applauded by the press; his act was
officially approved by the Secretary of the Navy, and the House of
Representatives unanimously passed a resolution thanking him for
his "brave, adroit, and patriotic conduct." While the President<SPAN name="page247" id="page247"></SPAN> and cabinet shared the first impulses of
rejoicing, second thoughts impressed them with the grave nature of
the international question involved, and the serious dilemma of
disavowal or war precipitated by the imperative British demand. It
was fortunate that Secretary Seward and Lord Lyons were close
personal friends, and still more that though British public opinion
had strongly favored the rebellion, the Queen of England
entertained the kindliest feelings for the American government.
Under her direction, Prince Albert instructed the British cabinet
to formulate and present the demand in the most courteous
diplomatic language, while, on their part, the American President
and cabinet discussed the affair in a temper of judicious
reserve.</p>
<p>President Lincoln's first desire was to refer the difficulty to
friendly arbitration, and his mood is admirably expressed in the
autograph experimental draft of a despatch suggesting this
course.</p>
<p>"The President is unwilling to believe," he wrote, "that her
Majesty's government will press for a categorical answer upon what
appears to him to be only a partial record, in the making up of
which he has been allowed no part. He is reluctant to volunteer his
view of the case, with no assurance that her Majesty's government
will consent to hear him; yet this much he directs me to say, that
this government has intended no affront to the British flag, or to
the British nation; nor has it intended to force into discussion an
embarrassing question; all which is evident by the fact hereby
asserted, that the act complained of was done by the officer
without orders from, or expectation of, the government. But, being
done, it was no longer left to us to consider whether we might not,
to avoid a controversy, waive an unimportant though a strict right;
be<SPAN name="page248" id="page248"></SPAN> cause we, too, as well as Great Britain,
have a people justly jealous of their rights, and in whose presence
our government could undo the act complained of only upon a fair
showing that it was wrong, or at least very questionable. The
United States government and people are still willing to make
reparation upon such showing.</p>
<p>"Accordingly, I am instructed by the President to inquire
whether her Majesty's government will hear the United States upon
the matter in question. The President desires, among other things,
to bring into view, and have considered, the existing rebellion in
the United States; the position Great Britain has assumed,
including her Majesty's proclamation in relation thereto; the
relation the persons whose seizure is the subject of complaint bore
to the United States, and the object of their voyage at the time
they were seized; the knowledge which the master of the
<i>Trent</i> had of their relation to the United States, and of the
object of their voyage, at the time he received them on board for
the voyage; the place of the seizure; and the precedents and
respective positions assumed in analogous cases between Great
Britain and the United States.</p>
<p>"Upon a submission containing the foregoing facts, with those
set forth in the before-mentioned despatch to your lordship,
together with all other facts which either party may deem material,
I am instructed to say the government of the United States will, if
agreed to by her Majesty's government, go to such friendly
arbitration as is usual among nations, and will abide the
award."</p>
<p>The most practised diplomatic pen in Europe could not have
written a more dignified, courteous, or succinct presentation of
the case; and yet, under the <SPAN name="page249" id="page249"></SPAN>necessities of the moment, it
was impossible to adopt this procedure. Upon full discussion, it
was decided that war with Great Britain must be avoided, and Mr.
Seward wrote a despatch defending the course of Captain Wilkes up
to the point where he permitted the <i>Trent</i> to proceed on her
voyage. It was his further duty to have brought her before a prize
court. Failing in this, he had left the capture incomplete under
rules of international law, and the American government had thereby
lost the right and the legal evidence to establish the contraband
character of the vessel and the persons seized. Under the
circumstances, the prisoners were therefore willingly released.
Excited American feeling was grievously disappointed at the result;
but American good sense readily accommodated itself both to the
correctness of the law expounded by the Secretary of State, and to
the public policy that averted a great international danger;
particularly as this decision forced Great Britain to depart from
her own and to adopt the American traditions respecting this class
of neutral rights.</p>
<p>It has already been told how Captain George B. McClellan was
suddenly raised in rank, at the very outset of the war, first to a
major-generalship in the three months' militia, then to the command
of the military department of the Ohio; from that to a
major-generalship in the regular army; and after his successful
campaign in West Virginia was called to Washington and placed in
command of the Division of the Potomac, which comprised all the
troops in and around Washington, on both sides of the river. Called
thus to the capital of the nation to guard it against the results
of the disastrous battle of Bull Run, and to organize a new army
for extended offensive operations, the surrounding conditions
naturally suggested to him that in all <SPAN name="page250" id="page250"></SPAN>
likelihood he would play a conspicuous part in the great drama of
the Civil War. His ambition rose eagerly to the prospect. On the
day on which he assumed command, July 27, he wrote to his wife:</p>
<p>"I find myself in a new and strange position here; President,
cabinet, General Scott, and all, deferring to me. By some strange
operation of magic I seem to have become the power of the
land."</p>
<p>And three days later:</p>
<p>"They give me my way in everything, full swing and unbounded
confidence.... Who would have thought, when we were married, that I
should so soon be called upon to save my country?"</p>
<p>And still a few days afterward:</p>
<p>"I shall carry this thing <i>en grande</i>, and crush the rebels
in one campaign."</p>
<p>From the giddy elevation to which such an imaginary achievement
raised his dreams, there was but one higher step, and his colossal
egotism immediately mounted to occupy it. On August 9, just two
weeks after his arrival in Washington, he wrote:</p>
<p>"I would cheerfully take the dictatorship and agree to lay down
my life when the country is saved;" while in the same letter he
adds, with the most naïve unconsciousness of his
hallucination: "I am not spoiled by my unexpected new
position."</p>
<p>Coming to the national capital in the hour of deepest public
depression over the Bull Run defeat, McClellan was welcomed by the
President, the cabinet, and General Scott with sincere friendship,
by Congress with a hopeful eagerness, by the people with
enthusiasm, and by Washington society with adulation. Externally he
seemed to justify such a greeting. He was young, handsome,
accomplished, genial and winning in conversation and manner. He at
once manifested <SPAN name="page251" id="page251"></SPAN>great industry and quick decision, and
speedily exhibited a degree of ability in army organization which
was not equaled by any officer during the Civil War. Under his eye
the stream of the new three years' regiments pouring into the city
went to their camps, fell into brigades and divisions, were
supplied with equipments, horses, and batteries, and underwent the
routine of drill, tactics, and reviews, which, without the least
apparent noise or friction, in three months made the Army of the
Potomac a perfect fighting machine of over one hundred and fifty
thousand men and more than two hundred guns.</p>
<p>Recognizing his ability in this work, the government had indeed
given him its full confidence, and permitted him to exercise almost
unbounded authority; which he fully utilized in favoring his
personal friends, and drawing to himself the best resources of the
whole country in arms, supplies, and officers of education and
experience. For a while his outward demeanor indicated respect and
gratitude for the promotion and liberal favors bestowed upon him.
But his phenomenal rise was fatal to his usefulness. The dream that
he was to be the sole savior of his country, announced
confidentially to his wife just two weeks after his arrival in
Washington, never again left him so long as he continued in
command. Coupled with this dazzling vision, however, was soon
developed the tormenting twofold hallucination: first, that
everybody was conspiring to thwart him; and, second, that the enemy
had from double to quadruple numbers to defeat him.</p>
<p>For the first month he could not sleep for the nightmare that
Beauregard's demoralized army had by a sudden bound from Manassas
seized the city of Washington. He immediately began a quarrel with
General Scott, which, by the first of November, drove the old<SPAN name="page252" id="page252"></SPAN> hero into retirement and out of his
pathway. The cabinet members who, wittingly or unwittingly, had
encouraged him in this he some weeks later stigmatized as a set of
geese. Seeing that President Lincoln was kind and unassuming in
discussing military questions, McClellan quickly contracted the
habit of expressing contempt for him in his confidential letters;
and the feeling rapidly grew until it reached a mark of open
disrespect. The same trait manifested itself in his making
exclusive confidants of only two or three of his subordinate
generals, and ignoring the counsel of all the others; and when,
later on, Congress appointed a standing committee of leading
senators and representatives to examine into the conduct of the
war, he placed himself in a similar attitude respecting their
inquiry and advice.</p>
<p>McClellan's activity and judgment as an army organizer naturally
created great hopes that he would be equally efficient as a
commander in the field. But these hopes were grievously
disappointed. To his first great defect of estimating himself as
the sole savior of the country, must at once be added the second,
of his utter inability to form any reasonable judgment of the
strength of the enemy in his front. On September 8, when the
Confederate army at Manassas numbered forty-one thousand, he rated
it at one hundred and thirty thousand. By the end of October that
estimate had risen to one hundred and fifty thousand, to meet which
he asked that his own force should be raised to an aggregate of two
hundred and forty thousand, with a total of effectives of two
hundred and eight thousand, and four hundred and eighty-eight guns.
He suggested that to gather this force all other points should be
left on the defensive; that the Army of the Potomac held the fate
of the country in its hands; that <SPAN name="page253" id="page253"></SPAN>the advance should not be
postponed beyond November 25; and that a single will should direct
the plan of accomplishing a crushing defeat of the rebel army at
Manassas.</p>
<p>On the first of November the President, yielding at last to
General Scott's urgent solicitation, issued the orders placing him
on the retired list, and in his stead appointing General McClellan
to the command of all the armies. The administration indulged the
expectation that at last "The Young Napoleon," as the newspapers
often called him, would take advantage of the fine autumn weather,
and, by a bold move with his single will and his immense force,
outnumbering the enemy nearly four to one, would redeem his promise
to crush the army at Manassas and "save the country." But the
November days came and went, as the October days had come and gone.
McClellan and his brilliant staff galloped unceasingly from camp to
camp, and review followed review, while autumn imperceptibly gave
place to the cold and storms of winter; and still there was no sign
of forward movement.</p>
<p>Under his own growing impatience, as well as that of the public,
the President, about the first of December, inquired pointedly, in
a memorandum suggesting a plan of campaign, how long it would
require to actually get in motion. McClellan answered: "By December
15,—probably 25"; and put aside the President's suggestion by
explaining: "I have now my mind actively turned toward another plan
of campaign that I do not think at all anticipated by the enemy,
nor by many of our own people."</p>
<p>December 25 came, as November 25 had come, and still there was
no plan, no preparation, no movement. Then McClellan fell seriously
ill. By a spontaneous and most natural impulse, the soldiers of the
various <SPAN name="page254" id="page254"></SPAN>camps began the erection of huts to
shelter them from snow and storm. In a few weeks the Army of the
Potomac was practically, if not by order, in winter quarters; and
day after day the monotonous telegraphic phrase "All quiet on the
Potomac" was read from Northern newspapers in Northern homes, until
by mere iteration it degenerated from an expression of deep
disappointment to a note of sarcastic criticism.</p>
<p>While so unsatisfactory a condition of affairs existed in the
first great military field east of the Alleghanies, the outlook was
quite as unpromising both in the second—between the
Alleghanies and the Mississippi—and in the third—west
of the Mississippi. When the Confederates, about September 1, 1861,
invaded Kentucky, they stationed General Pillow at the strongly
fortified town of Columbus on the Mississippi River, with about six
thousand men; General Buckner at Bowling Green, on the railroad
north of Nashville, with five thousand; and General Zollicoffer,
with six regiments, in eastern Kentucky, fronting Cumberland Gap.
Up to that time there were no Union troops in Kentucky, except a
few regiments of Home Guards. Now, however, the State legislature
called for active help; and General Anderson, exercising nominal
command from Cincinnati, sent Brigadier-General Sherman to
Nashville to confront Buckner, and Brigadier-General Thomas to Camp
Dick Robinson, to confront Zollicoffer.</p>
<p>Neither side was as yet in a condition of force and preparation
to take the aggressive. When, a month later, Anderson, on account
of ill health turned over the command to Sherman, the latter had
gathered only about eighteen thousand men, and was greatly
discouraged by the task of defending three hundred miles of
frontier with that small force. In an interview with<SPAN name="page255" id="page255"></SPAN> Secretary
of War Cameron, who called upon him on his return from
Frémont's camp, about the middle of October, he strongly
urged that he needed for immediate defense sixty thousand, and for
ultimate offense "two hundred thousand before we were done." "Great
God!" exclaimed Cameron, "where are they to come from?" Both
Sherman's demand and Cameron's answer were a pertinent comment on
McClellan's policy of collecting the whole military strength of the
country at Washington to fight the one great battle for which he
could never get ready.</p>
<p>Sherman was so distressed by the seeming magnitude of his burden
that he soon asked to be relieved; and when Brigadier-General Buell
was sent to succeed him in command of that part of Kentucky lying
east of the Cumberland River, it was the expectation of the
President that he would devote his main attention and energy to the
accomplishment of a specific object which Mr. Lincoln had very much
at heart.</p>
<p>Ever since the days in June, when President Lincoln had presided
over the council of war which discussed and decided upon the Bull
Run campaign, he had devoted every spare moment of his time to the
study of such military books and leading principles of the art of
war as would aid him in solving questions that must necessarily
come to himself for final decision. His acute perceptions,
retentive memory, and unusual power of logic enabled him to make
rapid progress in the acquisition of the fixed and accepted rules
on which military writers agree. In this, as in other sciences, the
main difficulty, of course, lies in applying fixed theories to
variable conditions. When, however, we remember that at the
outbreak of hostilities all the great commanders of the Civil War
had experience only as captains and lieutenants, it is not strange <SPAN name="page256" id="page256"></SPAN>
that in speculative military problems
the President's mature reasoning powers should have gained almost
as rapidly by observation and criticism as theirs by practice and
experiment. The mastery he attained of the difficult art, and how
intuitively correct was his grasp of military situations, has been
attested since in the enthusiastic admiration of brilliant
technical students, amply fitted by training and intellect to
express an opinion, whose comment does not fall short of declaring
Mr. Lincoln "the ablest strategist of the war."</p>
<p>The President had early discerned what must become the
dominating and decisive lines of advance in gaining and holding
military control of the Southern States. Only two days after the
battle of Bull Run, he had written a memorandum suggesting three
principal objects for the army when reorganized: First, to gather a
force to menace Richmond; second, a movement from Cincinnati upon
Cumberland Gap and East Tennessee; third, an expedition from Cairo
against Memphis. In his eyes, the second of these objectives never
lost its importance; and it was in fact substantially adopted by
indirection and by necessity in the closing periods of the war. The
eastern third of the State of Tennessee remained from the first
stubbornly and devotedly loyal to the Union. At an election on June
8, 1861, the people of twenty-nine counties, by more than two to
one, voted against joining the Confederacy; and the most rigorous
military repression by the orders of Jefferson Davis and Governor
Harris was necessary to prevent a general uprising against the
rebellion.</p>
<p>The sympathy of the President, even more than that of the whole
North, went out warmly to these unfortunate Tennesseeans, and he
desired to convert their mountain fastnesses into an impregnable
patriotic <SPAN name="page257" id="page257"></SPAN>stronghold. Had his advice been
followed, it would have completely severed railroad communication,
by way of the Shenandoah valley, Knoxville, and Chattanooga,
between Virginia and the Gulf States, accomplishing in the winter
of 1861 what was not attained until two years later. Mr. Lincoln
urged this in a second memorandum, made late in September; and
seeing that the principal objection to it lay in the long and
difficult line of land transportation, his message to Congress of
December 3, 1861, recommended, as a military measure, the
construction of a railroad to connect Cincinnati, by way of
Lexington, Kentucky, with that mountain region.</p>
<p>A few days after the message, he personally went to the
President's room in the Capitol building, and calling around him a
number of leading senators and representatives, and pointing out on
a map before them the East Tennessee region, said to them in
substance:</p>
<p>I am thoroughly convinced that the closing struggle of the war
will occur somewhere in this mountain country. By our superior
numbers and strength we will everywhere drive the rebel armies back
from the level districts lying along the coast, from those lying
south of the Ohio River, and from those lying east of the
Mississippi River. Yielding to our superior force, they will
gradually retreat to the more defensible mountain districts, and
make their final stand in that part of the South where the seven
States of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia,
Tennessee, Kentucky, and West Virginia come together. The
population there is overwhelmingly and devotedly loyal to the
Union. The despatches from Brigadier-General Thomas of October 28
and November 5 show that, with four additional good regiments, he
is willing to undertake the campaign and is confident <SPAN name="page258" id="page258"></SPAN>he can
take immediate possession. Once established, the people will rally
to his support, and by building a railroad, over which to forward
him regular supplies and needed reinforcements from time to time,
we can hold it against all attempts to dislodge us, and at the same
time menace the enemy in any one of the States I have named.</p>
<p>While his hearers listened with interest, it was evident that
their minds were still full of the prospect of a great battle in
Virginia, the capture of Richmond, and an early suppression of the
rebellion. Railroad building appeared to them altogether too slow
an operation of war. To show how sagacious was the President's
advice, we may anticipate by recalling that in the following summer
General Buell spent as much time, money, and military strength in
his attempted march from Corinth to East Tennessee as would have
amply sufficed to build the line from Lexington to Knoxville
recommended by Mr. Lincoln—the general's effort resulting
only in his being driven back to Louisville; that in 1863,
Burnside, under greater difficulties, made the march and
successfully held Knoxville, even without a railroad, which Thomas
with a few regiments could have accomplished in 1861; and that in
the final collapse of the rebellion, in the spring of 1865, the
beaten armies of both Johnston and Lee attempted to retreat for a
last stand to this same mountain region which Mr. Lincoln pointed
out in December, 1861.</p>
<p>Though the President received no encouragement from senators and
representatives in his plan to take possession of East Tennessee,
that object was specially enjoined in the instructions to General
Buell when he was sent to command in Kentucky.</p>
<p>"It so happens that a large majority of the inhabitants of
eastern Tennessee are in favor of the Union; <SPAN name="page259" id="page259"></SPAN>it
therefore seems proper that you should remain on the defensive on
the line from Louisville to Nashville, while you throw the mass of
your forces by rapid marches by Cumberland Gap or Walker's Gap on
Knoxville, in order to occupy the railroad at that point, and thus
enable the loyal citizens of eastern Tennessee to rise, while you
at the same time cut off the railway communication between eastern
Virginia and the Mississippi."</p>
<p>Three times within the same month McClellan repeated this
injunction to Buell with additional emphasis. Senator Andrew
Johnson and Representative Horace Maynard telegraphed him from
Washington:</p>
<p>"Our people are oppressed and pursued as beasts of the forest;
the government must come to their relief."</p>
<p>Buell replied, keeping the word of promise to the ear, but, with
his ambition fixed on a different campaign, gradually but doggedly
broke it to the hope. When, a month later, he acknowledged that his
preparations and intent were to move against Nashville, the
President wrote him:</p>
<p>"Of the two, I would rather have a point on the railroad south
of Cumberland Gap than Nashville. <i>First</i>, because it cuts a
great artery of the enemy's communication which Nashville does not;
and, <i>secondly</i>, because it is in the midst of loyal people,
who would rally around it, while Nashville is not.... But my
distress is that our friends in East Tennessee are being hanged and
driven to despair, and even now, I fear, are thinking of taking
rebel arms for the sake of personal protection. In this we lose the
most valuable stake we have in the South."</p>
<p>McClellan's comment amounted to a severe censure, and this was
quickly followed by an almost positive <SPAN name="page260" id="page260"></SPAN>command
to "advance on eastern Tennessee at once." Again Buell promised
compliance, only, however, again to report in a few weeks his
conviction "that an advance into East Tennessee is impracticable at
this time on any scale which would be sufficient." It is difficult
to speculate upon the advantages lost by this unwillingness of a
commander to obey instructions. To say nothing of the strategical
value of East Tennessee to the Union, the fidelity of its people is
shown in the reports sent to the Confederate government that "the
whole country is now in a state of rebellion"; that "civil war has
broken out in East Tennessee"; and that "they look for the
reëstablishment of the Federal authority in the South with as
much confidence as the Jews look for the coming of the
Messiah."</p>
<p>Henry W. Halleck, born in 1815, graduated from West Point in
1839, who, after distinguished service in the Mexican war, had been
brevetted captain of Engineers, but soon afterward resigned from
the army to pursue the practice of law in San Francisco, was,
perhaps, the best professionally equipped officer among the number
of those called by General Scott in the summer of 1861 to assume
important command in the Union army. It is probable that Scott
intended he should succeed himself as general-in-chief; but when he
reached Washington the autumn was already late, and because of
Frémont's conspicuous failure it seemed necessary to send
Halleck to the Department of the Missouri, which, as reconstituted,
was made to include, in addition to several northwestern States,
Missouri and Arkansas, and so much of Kentucky as lay west of the
Cumberland River. This change of department lines indicates the
beginning of what soon became a dominant feature of military
operations; namely, that instead of the vast regions lying west of
the Mississippi, <SPAN name="page261" id="page261"></SPAN>the great river itself, and the country
lying immediately adjacent to it on either side, became the third
principal field of strategy and action, under the necessity of
opening and holding it as a great military and commercial
highway.</p>
<p>While the intention of the government to open the Mississippi
River by a powerful expedition received additional emphasis through
Halleck's appointment, that general found no immediate means
adequate to the task when he assumed command at St. Louis.
Frémont's régime had left the whole department in the
most deplorable confusion. Halleck reported that he had no army,
but, rather, a military rabble to command and for some weeks
devoted himself with energy and success to bringing order out of
the chaos left him by his predecessor. A large element of his
difficulty lay in the fact that the population of the whole State
was tainted with disloyalty to a degree which rendered Missouri
less a factor in the larger questions of general army operations,
than from the beginning to the end of the war a local district of
bitter and relentless factional hatred and guerrilla or, as the
term was constantly employed, "bushwhacking" warfare, intensified
and kept alive by annual roving Confederate incursions from
Arkansas and the Indian Territory in desultory summer
campaigns.</p>
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