<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
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<h3>COMMISSIONED BRIGADIER-GENERAL—COMMAND AT IRONTON, MO.—JEFFERSON CITY—CAPE GIRARDEAU—GENERAL PRENTISS—SEIZURE OF PADUCAH—HEADQUARTERS AT CAIRO.</h3>
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<p>I had not been in Mexico many weeks when, reading a St. Louis
paper, I found the President had asked the Illinois delegation in
Congress to recommend some citizens of the State for the position
of brigadier-general, and that they had unanimously recommended me
as first on a list of seven. I was very much surprised because, as
I have said, my acquaintance with the Congressmen was very limited
and I did not know of anything I had done to inspire such
confidence. The papers of the next day announced that my name, with
three others, had been sent to the Senate, and a few days after our
confirmation was announced.</p>
<p>When appointed brigadier-general I at once thought it proper
that one of my aides should come from the regiment I had been
commanding, and so selected Lieutenant C. B. Lagow. While living in
St. Louis, I had had a desk in the law office of McClellan, Moody
and Hillyer. Difference in views between the members of the firm on
the questions of the day, and general hard times in the border
cities, had broken up this firm. Hillyer was quite a young man,
then in his twenties, and very brilliant. I asked him to accept a
place on my staff. I also wanted to take one man from my new home,
Galena. The canvass in the Presidential campaign the fall before
had brought out a young lawyer by the name of John A. Rawlins, who
proved himself one of the ablest speakers in the State. He was also
a candidate for elector on the Douglas ticket. When Sumter was
fired upon and the integrity of the Union threatened, there was no
man more ready to serve his country than he. I wrote at once asking
him to accept the position of assistant adjutant-general with the
rank of captain, on my staff. He was about entering the service as
major of a new regiment then organizing in the north-western part
of the State; but he threw this up and accepted my offer.</p>
<p>Neither Hillyer nor Lagow proved to have any particular taste or
special qualifications for the duties of the soldier, and the
former resigned during the Vicksburg campaign; the latter I
relieved after the battle of Chattanooga. Rawlins remained with me
as long as he lived, and rose to the rank of brigadier general and
chief-of-staff to the General of the Army—an office created
for him—before the war closed. He was an able man, possessed
of great firmness, and could say "no" so emphatically to a request
which he thought should not be granted that the person he was
addressing would understand at once that there was no use of
pressing the matter. General Rawlins was a very useful officer in
other ways than this. I became very much attached to him.</p>
<p>Shortly after my promotion I was ordered to Ironton, Missouri,
to command a district in that part of the State, and took the 21st
Illinois, my old regiment, with me. Several other regiments were
ordered to the same destination about the same time. Ironton is on
the Iron Mountain railroad, about seventy miles south of St. Louis,
and situated among hills rising almost to the dignity of mountains.
When I reached there, about the 8th of August, Colonel B. Gratz
Brown—afterwards Governor of Missouri and in 1872
Vice-Presidential candidate—was in command. Some of his
troops were ninety days' men and their time had expired some time
before. The men had no clothing but what they had volunteered in,
and much of this was so worn that it would hardly stay on. General
Hardee—the author of the tactics I did not study—was at
Greenville some twenty-five miles further south, it was said, with
five thousand Confederate troops. Under these circumstances Colonel
Brown's command was very much demoralized. A squadron of cavalry
could have ridden into the valley and captured the entire force.
Brown himself was gladder to see me on that occasion than he ever
has been since. I relieved him and sent all his men home within a
day or two, to be mustered out of service.</p>
<p>Within ten days after reading Ironton I was prepared to take the
offensive against the enemy at Greenville. I sent a column east out
of the valley we were in, with orders to swing around to the south
and west and come into the Greenville road ten miles south of
Ironton. Another column marched on the direct road and went into
camp at the point designated for the two columns to meet. I was to
ride out the next morning and take personal command of the
movement. My experience against Harris, in northern Missouri, had
inspired me with confidence. But when the evening train came in, it
brought General B. M. Prentiss with orders to take command of the
district. His orders did not relieve me, but I knew that by law I
was senior, and at that time even the President did not have the
authority to assign a junior to command a senior of the same grade.
I therefore gave General Prentiss the situation of the troops and
the general condition of affairs, and started for St. Louis the
same day. The movement against the rebels at Greenville went no
further.</p>
<p>From St. Louis I was ordered to Jefferson City, the capital of
the State, to take command. General Sterling Price, of the
Confederate army, was thought to be threatening the capital,
Lexington, Chillicothe and other comparatively large towns in the
central part of Missouri. I found a good many troops in Jefferson
City, but in the greatest confusion, and no one person knew where
they all were. Colonel Mulligan, a gallant man, was in command, but
he had not been educated as yet to his new profession and did not
know how to maintain discipline. I found that volunteers had
obtained permission from the department commander, or claimed they
had, to raise, some of them, regiments; some battalions; some
companies—the officers to be commissioned according to the
number of men they brought into the service. There were recruiting
stations all over town, with notices, rudely lettered on boards
over the doors, announcing the arm of service and length of time
for which recruits at that station would be received. The law
required all volunteers to serve for three years or the war. But in
Jefferson City in August, 1861, they were recruited for different
periods and on different conditions; some were enlisted for six
months, some for a year, some without any condition as to where
they were to serve, others were not to be sent out of the State.
The recruits were principally men from regiments stationed there
and already in the service, bound for three years if the war lasted
that long.</p>
<p>The city was filled with Union fugitives who had been driven by
guerilla bands to take refuge with the National troops. They were
in a deplorable condition and must have starved but for the support
the government gave them. They had generally made their escape with
a team or two, sometimes a yoke of oxen with a mule or a horse in
the lead. A little bedding besides their clothing and some food had
been thrown into the wagon. All else of their worldly goods were
abandoned and appropriated by their former neighbors; for the Union
man in Missouri who staid at home during the rebellion, if he was
not immediately under the protection of the National troops, was at
perpetual war with his neighbors. I stopped the recruiting service,
and disposed the troops about the outskirts of the city so as to
guard all approaches. Order was soon restored.</p>
<p>I had been at Jefferson City but a few days when I was directed
from department headquarters to fit out an expedition to Lexington,
Booneville and Chillicothe, in order to take from the banks in
those cities all the funds they had and send them to St. Louis. The
western army had not yet been supplied with transportation. It
became necessary therefore to press into the service teams
belonging to sympathizers with the rebellion or to hire those of
Union men. This afforded an opportunity of giving employment to
such of the refugees within our lines as had teams suitable for our
purposes. They accepted the service with alacrity. As fast as
troops could be got off they were moved west some twenty miles or
more. In seven or eight days from my assuming command at Jefferson
City, I had all the troops, except a small garrison, at an advanced
position and expected to join them myself the next day.</p>
<p>But my campaigns had not yet begun, for while seated at my
office door, with nothing further to do until it was time to start
for the front, I saw an officer of rank approaching, who proved to
be Colonel Jefferson C. Davis. I had never met him before, but he
introduced himself by handing me an order for him to proceed to
Jefferson City and relieve me of the command. The orders directed
that I should report at department headquarters at St. Louis
without delay, to receive important special instructions. It was
about an hour before the only regular train of the day would start.
I therefore turned over to Colonel Davis my orders, and hurriedly
stated to him the progress that had been made to carry out the
department instructions already described. I had at that time but
one staff officer, doing myself all the detail work usually
performed by an adjutant-general. In an hour after being relieved
from the command I was on my way to St. Louis, leaving my single
staff officer [C. B. Lagow, the others not yet having joined me.]
to follow the next day with our horses and baggage.</p>
<p>The "important special instructions" which I received the next
day, assigned me to the command of the district of south-east
Missouri, embracing all the territory south of St. Louis, in
Missouri, as well as all southern Illinois. At first I was to take
personal command of a combined expedition that had been ordered for
the capture of Colonel Jeff. Thompson, a sort of independent or
partisan commander who was disputing with us the possession of
south-east Missouri. Troops had been ordered to move from Ironton
to Cape Girardeau, sixty or seventy miles to the south-east, on the
Mississippi River; while the forces at Cape Girardeau had been
ordered to move to Jacksonville, ten miles out towards Ironton; and
troops at Cairo and Bird's Point, at the junction of the Ohio and
Mississippi rivers, were to hold themselves in readiness to go down
the Mississippi to Belmont, eighteen miles below, to be moved west
from there when an officer should come to command them. I was the
officer who had been selected for this purpose. Cairo was to become
my headquarters when the expedition terminated.</p>
<p>In pursuance of my orders I established my temporary
headquarters at Cape Girardeau and sent instructions to the
commanding officer at Jackson, to inform me of the approach of
General Prentiss from Ironton. Hired wagons were kept moving night
and day to take additional rations to Jackson, to supply the troops
when they started from there. Neither General Prentiss nor Colonel
Marsh, who commanded at Jackson, knew their destination. I drew up
all the instructions for the contemplated move, and kept them in my
pocket until I should hear of the junction of our troops at
Jackson. Two or three days after my arrival at Cape Girardeau, word
came that General Prentiss was approaching that place (Jackson). I
started at once to meet him there and to give him his orders. As I
turned the first corner of a street after starting, I saw a column
of cavalry passing the next street in front of me. I turned and
rode around the block the other way, so as to meet the head of the
column. I found there General Prentiss himself, with a large
escort. He had halted his troops at Jackson for the night, and had
come on himself to Cape Girardeau, leaving orders for his command
to follow him in the morning. I gave the General his
orders—which stopped him at Jackson—but he was very
much aggrieved at being placed under another brigadier-general,
particularly as he believed himself to be the senior. He had been a
brigadier, in command at Cairo, while I was mustering officer at
Springfield without any rank. But we were nominated at the same
time for the United States service, and both our commissions bore
date May 17th, 1861. By virtue of my former army rank I was, by
law, the senior. General Prentiss failed to get orders to his
troops to remain at Jackson, and the next morning early they were
reported as approaching Cape Girardeau. I then ordered the General
very peremptorily to countermarch his command and take it back to
Jackson. He obeyed the order, but bade his command adieu when he
got them to Jackson, and went to St. Louis and reported himself.
This broke up the expedition. But little harm was done, as Jeff.
Thompson moved light and had no fixed place for even nominal
headquarters. He was as much at home in Arkansas as he was in
Missouri and would keep out of the way of a superior force.
Prentiss was sent to another part of the State.</p>
<p>General Prentiss made a great mistake on the above occasion, one
that he would not have committed later in the war. When I came to
know him better, I regretted it much. In consequence of this
occurrence he was off duty in the field when the principal campaign
at the West was going on, and his juniors received promotion while
he was where none could be obtained. He would have been next to
myself in rank in the district of south-east Missouri, by virtue of
his services in the Mexican war. He was a brave and very earnest
soldier. No man in the service was more sincere in his devotion to
the cause for which we were battling; none more ready to make
sacrifices or risk life in it.</p>
<p>On the 4th of September I removed my headquarters to Cairo and
found Colonel Richard Oglesby in command of the post. We had never
met, at least not to my knowledge. After my promotion I had ordered
my brigadier-general's uniform from New York, but it had not yet
arrived, so that I was in citizen's dress. The Colonel had his
office full of people, mostly from the neighboring States of
Missouri and Kentucky, making complaints or asking favors. He
evidently did not catch my name when I was presented, for on my
taking a piece of paper from the table where he was seated and
writing the order assuming command of the district of south-east
Missouri, Colonel Richard J. Oglesby to command the post at Bird's
Point, and handing it to him, he put on an expression of surprise
that looked a little as if he would like to have some one identify
me. But he surrendered the office without question.</p>
<p>The day after I assumed command at Cairo a man came to me who
said he was a scout of General Fremont. He reported that he had
just come from Columbus, a point on the Mississippi twenty miles
below on the Kentucky side, and that troops had started from there,
or were about to start, to seize Paducah, at the mouth of the
Tennessee. There was no time for delay; I reported by telegraph to
the department commander the information I had received, and added
that I was taking steps to get off that night to be in advance of
the enemy in securing that important point. There was a large
number of steamers lying at Cairo and a good many boatmen were
staying in the town. It was the work of only a few hours to get the
boats manned, with coal aboard and steam up. Troops were also
designated to go aboard. The distance from Cairo to Paducah is
about forty-five miles. I did not wish to get there before daylight
of the 6th, and directed therefore that the boats should lie at
anchor out in the stream until the time to start. Not having
received an answer to my first dispatch, I again telegraphed to
department headquarters that I should start for Paducah that night
unless I received further orders. Hearing nothing, we started
before midnight and arrived early the following morning,
anticipating the enemy by probably not over six or eight hours. It
proved very fortunate that the expedition against Jeff. Thompson
had been broken up. Had it not been, the enemy would have seized
Paducah and fortified it, to our very great annoyance.</p>
<p>When the National troops entered the town the citizens were
taken by surprise. I never after saw such consternation depicted on
the faces of the people. Men, women and children came out of their
doors looking pale and frightened at the presence of the invader.
They were expecting rebel troops that day. In fact, nearly four
thousand men from Columbus were at that time within ten or fifteen
miles of Paducah on their way to occupy the place. I had but two
regiments and one battery with me, but the enemy did not know this
and returned to Columbus. I stationed my troops at the best points
to guard the roads leading into the city, left gunboats to guard
the river fronts and by noon was ready to start on my return to
Cairo. Before leaving, however, I addressed a short printed
proclamation to the citizens of Paducah assuring them of our
peaceful intentions, that we had come among them to protect them
against the enemies of our country, and that all who chose could
continue their usual avocations with assurance of the protection of
the government. This was evidently a relief to them; but the
majority would have much preferred the presence of the other army.
I reinforced Paducah rapidly from the troops at Cape Girardeau; and
a day or two later General C. F. Smith, a most accomplished
soldier, reported at Cairo and was assigned to the command of the
post at the mouth of the Tennessee. In a short time it was well
fortified and a detachment was sent to occupy Smithland, at the
mouth of the Cumberland.</p>
<p>The State government of Kentucky at that time was rebel in
sentiment, but wanted to preserve an armed neutrality between the
North and the South, and the governor really seemed to think the
State had a perfect right to maintain a neutral position. The
rebels already occupied two towns in the State, Columbus and
Hickman, on the Mississippi; and at the very moment the National
troops were entering Paducah from the Ohio front, General Lloyd
Tilghman—a Confederate—with his staff and a small
detachment of men, were getting out in the other direction, while,
as I have already said, nearly four thousand Confederate troops
were on Kentucky soil on their way to take possession of the town.
But, in the estimation of the governor and of those who thought
with him, this did not justify the National authorities in invading
the soil of Kentucky. I informed the legislature of the State of
what I was doing, and my action was approved by the majority of
that body. On my return to Cairo I found authority from department
headquarters for me to take Paducah "if I felt strong enough," but
very soon after I was reprimanded from the same quarters for my
correspondence with the legislature and warned against a repetition
of the offence.</p>
<p>Soon after I took command at Cairo, General Fremont entered into
arrangements for the exchange of the prisoners captured at Camp
Jackson in the month of May. I received orders to pass them through
my lines to Columbus as they presented themselves with proper
credentials. Quite a number of these prisoners I had been
personally acquainted with before the war. Such of them as I had so
known were received at my headquarters as old acquaintances, and
ordinary routine business was not disturbed by their presence. On
one occasion when several were present in my office my intention to
visit Cape Girardeau the next day, to inspect the troops at that
point, was mentioned. Something transpired which postponed my trip;
but a steamer employed by the government was passing a point some
twenty or more miles above Cairo, the next day, when a section of
rebel artillery with proper escort brought her to. A major, one of
those who had been at my headquarters the day before, came at once
aboard and after some search made a direct demand for my delivery.
It was hard to persuade him that I was not there. This officer was
Major Barrett, of St. Louis. I had been acquainted with his family
before the war.</p>
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