<h2>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
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<h3>GENERAL HALLECK IN COMMAND—COMMANDING THE DISTRICT OF CAIRO—MOVEMENT ON FORT HENRY—CAPTURE OF FORT HENRY.</h3>
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<p>While at Cairo I had frequent opportunities of meeting the rebel
officers of the Columbus garrison. They seemed to be very fond of
coming up on steamers under flags of truce. On two or three
occasions I went down in like manner. When one of their boats was
seen coming up carrying a white flag, a gun would be fired from the
lower battery at Fort Holt, throwing a shot across the bow as a
signal to come no farther. I would then take a steamer and, with my
staff and occasionally a few other officers, go down to receive the
party. There were several officers among them whom I had known
before, both at West Point and in Mexico. Seeing these officers who
had been educated for the profession of arms, both at school and in
actual war, which is a far more efficient training, impressed me
with the great advantage the South possessed over the North at the
beginning of the rebellion. They had from thirty to forty per cent.
of the educated soldiers of the Nation. They had no standing army
and, consequently, these trained soldiers had to find employment
with the troops from their own States. In this way what there was
of military education and training was distributed throughout their
whole army. The whole loaf was leavened.</p>
<p>The North had a great number of educated and trained soldiers,
but the bulk of them were still in the army and were retained,
generally with their old commands and rank, until the war had
lasted many months. In the Army of the Potomac there was what was
known as the "regular brigade," in which, from the commanding
officer down to the youngest second lieutenant, every one was
educated to his profession. So, too, with many of the batteries;
all the officers, generally four in number to each, were men
educated for their profession. Some of these went into battle at
the beginning under division commanders who were entirely without
military training. This state of affairs gave me an idea which I
expressed while at Cairo; that the government ought to disband the
regular army, with the exception of the staff corps, and notify the
disbanded officers that they would receive no compensation while
the war lasted except as volunteers. The register should be kept
up, but the names of all officers who were not in the volunteer
service at the close, should be stricken from it.</p>
<p>On the 9th of November, two days after the battle of Belmont,
Major-General H. W. Halleck superseded General Fremont in command
of the Department of the Missouri. The limits of his command took
in Arkansas and west Kentucky east to the Cumberland River. From
the battle of Belmont until early in February, 1862, the troops
under my command did little except prepare for the long struggle
which proved to be before them.</p>
<p>The enemy at this time occupied a line running from the
Mississippi River at Columbus to Bowling Green and Mill Springs,
Kentucky. Each of these positions was strongly fortified, as were
also points on the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers near the
Tennessee state line. The works on the Tennessee were called Fort
Heiman and Fort Henry, and that on the Cumberland was Fort
Donelson. At these points the two rivers approached within eleven
miles of each other. The lines of rifle pits at each place extended
back from the water at least two miles, so that the garrisons were
in reality only seven miles apart. These positions were of immense
importance to the enemy; and of course correspondingly important
for us to possess ourselves of. With Fort Henry in our hands we had
a navigable stream open to us up to Muscle Shoals, in Alabama. The
Memphis and Charleston Railroad strikes the Tennessee at Eastport,
Mississippi, and follows close to the banks of the river up to the
shoals. This road, of vast importance to the enemy, would cease to
be of use to them for through traffic the moment Fort Henry became
ours. Fort Donelson was the gate to Nashville—a place of
great military and political importance—and to a rich country
extending far east in Kentucky. These two points in our possession
the enemy would necessarily be thrown back to the Memphis and
Charleston road, or to the boundary of the cotton states, and, as
before stated, that road would be lost to them for through
communication.</p>
<p>The designation of my command had been changed after Halleck's
arrival, from the District of South-east Missouri to the District
of Cairo, and the small district commanded by General C. F. Smith,
embracing the mouths of the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers, had
been added to my jurisdiction. Early in January, 1862, I was
directed by General McClellan, through my department commander, to
make a reconnoissance in favor of Brigadier-General Don Carlos
Buell, who commanded the Department of the Ohio, with headquarters
at Louisville, and who was confronting General S. B. Buckner with a
larger Confederate force at Bowling Green. It was supposed that
Buell was about to make some move against the enemy, and my
demonstration was intended to prevent the sending of troops from
Columbus, Fort Henry or Donelson to Buckner. I at once ordered
General Smith to send a force up the west bank of the Tennessee to
threaten forts Heiman and Henry; McClernand at the same time with a
force of 6,000 men was sent out into west Kentucky, threatening
Columbus with one column and the Tennessee River with another. I
went with McClernand's command. The weather was very bad; snow and
rain fell; the roads, never good in that section, were intolerable.
We were out more than a week splashing through the mud, snow and
rain, the men suffering very much. The object of the expedition was
accomplished. The enemy did not send reinforcements to Bowling
Green, and General George H. Thomas fought and won the battle of
Mill Springs before we returned.</p>
<p>As a result of this expedition General Smith reported that he
thought it practicable to capture Fort Heiman. This fort stood on
high ground, completely commanding Fort Henry on the opposite side
of the river, and its possession by us, with the aid of our
gunboats, would insure the capture of Fort Henry. This report of
Smith's confirmed views I had previously held, that the true line
of operations for us was up the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers.
With us there, the enemy would be compelled to fall back on the
east and west entirely out of the State of Kentucky. On the 6th of
January, before receiving orders for this expedition, I had asked
permission of the general commanding the department to go to see
him at St. Louis. My object was to lay this plan of campaign before
him. Now that my views had been confirmed by so able a general as
Smith, I renewed my request to go to St. Louis on what I deemed
important military business. The leave was granted, but not
graciously. I had known General Halleck but very slightly in the
old army, not having met him either at West Point or during the
Mexican war. I was received with so little cordiality that I
perhaps stated the object of my visit with less clearness than I
might have done, and I had not uttered many sentences before I was
cut short as if my plan was preposterous. I returned to Cairo very
much crestfallen.</p>
<p>Flag-officer Foote commanded the little fleet of gunboats then
in the neighborhood of Cairo and, though in another branch of the
service, was subject to the command of General Halleck. He and I
consulted freely upon military matters and he agreed with me
perfectly as to the feasibility of the campaign up the Tennessee.
Notwithstanding the rebuff I had received from my immediate chief,
I therefore, on the 28th of January, renewed the suggestion by
telegraph that "if permitted, I could take and hold Fort Henry on
the Tennessee." This time I was backed by Flag-officer Foote, who
sent a similar dispatch. On the 29th I wrote fully in support of
the proposition. On the 1st of February I received full
instructions from department headquarters to move upon Fort Henry.
On the 2d the expedition started.</p>
<p>In February, 1862, there were quite a good many steamers laid up
at Cairo for want of employment, the Mississippi River being closed
against navigation below that point. There were also many men in
the town whose occupation had been following the river in various
capacities, from captain down to deck hand But there were not
enough of either boats or men to move at one time the 17,000 men I
proposed to take with me up the Tennessee. I loaded the boats with
more than half the force, however, and sent General McClernand in
command. I followed with one of the later boats and found
McClernand had stopped, very properly, nine miles below Fort Henry.
Seven gunboats under Flag-officer Foote had accompanied the
advance. The transports we had with us had to return to Paducah to
bring up a division from there, with General C. F. Smith in
command.</p>
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<p>Before sending the boats back I wanted to get the troops as near
to the enemy as I could without coming within range of their guns.
There was a stream emptying into the Tennessee on the east side,
apparently at about long range distance below the fort. On account
of the narrow water-shed separating the Tennessee and Cumberland
rivers at that point, the stream must be insignificant at ordinary
stages, but when we were there, in February, it was a torrent. It
would facilitate the investment of Fort Henry materially if the
troops could be landed south of that stream. To test whether this
could be done I boarded the gunboat Essex and requested Captain Wm.
Porter commanding it, to approach the fort to draw its fire. After
we had gone some distance past the mouth of the stream we drew the
fire of the fort, which fell much short of us. In consequence I had
made up my mind to return and bring the troops to the upper side of
the creek, when the enemy opened upon us with a rifled gun that
sent shot far beyond us and beyond the stream. One shot passed very
near where Captain Porter and I were standing, struck the deck near
the stern, penetrated and passed through the cabin and so out into
the river. We immediately turned back, and the troops were debarked
below the mouth of the creek.</p>
<p>When the landing was completed I returned with the transports to
Paducah to hasten up the balance of the troops. I got back on the
5th with the advance the remainder following as rapidly as the
steamers could carry them. At ten o'clock at night, on the 5th, the
whole command was not yet up. Being anxious to commence operations
as soon as possible before the enemy could reinforce heavily, I
issued my orders for an advance at 11 A.M. on the 6th. I felt sure
that all the troops would be up by that time.</p>
<p>Fort Henry occupies a bend in the river which gave the guns in
the water battery a direct fire down the stream. The camp outside
the fort was intrenched, with rifle pits and outworks two miles
back on the road to Donelson and Dover. The garrison of the fort
and camp was about 2,800, with strong reinforcements from Donelson
halted some miles out. There were seventeen heavy guns in the fort.
The river was very high, the banks being overflowed except where
the bluffs come to the water's edge. A portion of the ground on
which Fort Henry stood was two feet deep in water. Below, the water
extended into the woods several hundred yards back from the bank on
the east side. On the west bank Fort Heiman stood on high ground,
completely commanding Fort Henry. The distance from Fort Henry to
Donelson is but eleven miles. The two positions were so important
to the enemy, AS HE SAW HIS INTEREST, that it was natural to
suppose that reinforcements would come from every quarter from
which they could be got. Prompt action on our part was
imperative.</p>
<p>The plan was for the troops and gunboats to start at the same
moment. The troops were to invest the garrison and the gunboats to
attack the fort at close quarters. General Smith was to land a
brigade of his division on the west bank during the night of the
5th and get it in rear of Heiman.</p>
<p>At the hour designated the troops and gunboats started. General
Smith found Fort Heiman had been evacuated before his men arrived.
The gunboats soon engaged the water batteries at very close
quarters, but the troops which were to invest Fort Henry were
delayed for want of roads, as well as by the dense forest and the
high water in what would in dry weather have been unimportant beds
of streams. This delay made no difference in the result. On our
first appearance Tilghman had sent his entire command, with the
exception of about one hundred men left to man the guns in the
fort, to the outworks on the road to Dover and Donelson, so as to
have them out of range of the guns of our navy; and before any
attack on the 6th he had ordered them to retreat on Donelson. He
stated in his subsequent report that the defence was intended
solely to give his troops time to make their escape.</p>
<p>Tilghman was captured with his staff and ninety men, as well as
the armament of the fort, the ammunition and whatever stores were
there. Our cavalry pursued the retreating column towards Donelson
and picked up two guns and a few stragglers; but the enemy had so
much the start, that the pursuing force did not get in sight of any
except the stragglers.</p>
<p>All the gunboats engaged were hit many times. The damage,
however, beyond what could be repaired by a small expenditure of
money, was slight, except to the Essex. A shell penetrated the
boiler of that vessel and exploded it, killing and wounding
forty-eight men, nineteen of whom were soldiers who had been
detailed to act with the navy. On several occasions during the war
such details were made when the complement of men with the navy was
insufficient for the duty before them. After the fall of Fort Henry
Captain Phelps, commanding the iron-clad Carondelet, at my request
ascended the Tennessee River and thoroughly destroyed the bridge of
the Memphis and Ohio Railroad.</p>
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