<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>IN CAMP AND BATTLE WITH GRANT AND HIS GENERALS.</h3>
<div class='intro'>
<p>Marching into the enemy's country—A night in a church with a Bible
for pillow—Our communications are cut—Entering the capital of
Mississippi—The War Department gives Grant full authority—Battle
of Champion's Hill—General Logan's peculiarity—Battlefield
incidents—Vicksburg invested and the siege begun—Personal
traits of Sherman, McPherson, and McClernand.</p>
</div>
<p>It was the second day of May, 1863, when I rode
into Port Gibson, Miss., and inquired for Grant's headquarters.
I found the general in a little house of
the village, busily directing the advance of the army.
He told me that in the battle of the day before the
Confederates had been driven back on the roads to
Grand Gulf and Vicksburg, and that our forces were
now in full pursuit. By the next morning, May 3d, our
troops had possession of the roads as far as the Big
Black. As soon as he was sure of this, General Grant
started with a brigade of infantry and some twenty cavalrymen
for Grand Gulf. I accompanied him on the
trip. When within about seven miles of Grand Gulf we
found that the town had been deserted, and leaving the
brigade we entered with the cavalry escort.</p>
<p>During this ride to Grand Gulf Grant made inquiries
on every side about the food supplies of the country we
were entering. He told me he had been gathering in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</SPAN></span>formation
on this point ever since the army crossed the
Mississippi, and had made up his mind that both beef
and cattle and corn were abundant in the country. The
result of this inquiry was that here at Grand Gulf Grant
took the resolve which makes the Vicksburg campaign
so famous—that of abandoning entirely his base of supplies
as soon as the army was all up and the rations on
the way arrived, boldly striking into the interior, and
depending on the country for meat and even for bread.</p>
<p>We did not reach Grand Gulf until late on May 3d,
but at one o'clock on the morning of the 4th Grant was
off for the front. He had decided that it was useless to
bring up the army to this place, to the capture of which
we had been so long looking, and which had been
abandoned so quickly now that our army was across
the Mississippi. I did not follow until later in the day,
and so had an opportunity of seeing General Sherman.
His corps was marching from above as rapidly as possible
down to Hard Times landing, and he had come
over to Grand Gulf to see about debarking his troops
there; this he succeeded in doing a couple of days later.</p>
<p>That evening I joined Grant at his new headquarters
at Hankinson's Ferry on the Big Black, and now
began my first experience with army marching into an
enemy's territory. A glimpse of my life at this time is
given in a letter to a child, written the morning after I
rejoined Grant:</p>
<p>"All of a sudden it is very cold here. Two days ago
it was hot like summer, but now I sit in my tent in my
overcoat, writing, and thinking if I only were at home
instead of being almost two thousand miles away.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Away yonder, in the edge of the woods, I hear
the drum-beat that calls the soldiers to their supper. It
is only a little after five o'clock, but they begin the day
very early and end it early. Pretty soon after dark they
are all asleep, lying in their blankets under the trees,
for in a quick march they leave their tents behind.
Their guns are all ready at their sides, so that if they
are suddenly called at night they can start in a moment.
It is strange in the morning before daylight to hear the
bugle and drums sound the reveille, which calls the army
to wake up. It will begin perhaps at a distance and
then run along the whole line, bugle after bugle and
drum after drum taking it up, and then it goes from
front to rear, farther and farther away, the sweet sounds
throbbing and rolling while you lie on the grass with
your saddle for a pillow, half awake, or opening your
eyes to see that the stars are all bright in the sky, or
that there is only a faint flush in the east, where the
day is soon to break.</p>
<p>"Living in camp is queer business. I get my meals
in General Grant's mess, and pay my share of the expenses.
The table is a chest with a double cover, which
unfolds on the right and the left; the dishes, knives and
forks, and caster are inside. Sometimes we get good
things, but generally we don't. The cook is an old
negro, black and grimy. The cooking is not as clean as
it might be, but in war you can't be particular about
such things.</p>
<p>"The plums and peaches here are pretty nearly ripe.
The strawberries have been ripe these few days, but the
soldiers eat them up before we get a sight of them. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</SPAN></span>
figs are as big as the end of your thumb, and the green
pears are big enough to eat. But you don't know what
beautiful flower gardens there are here. I never saw
such roses; and the other day I found a lily as big as a
tiger lily, only it was a magnificent red."</p>
<p>Grant's policy now was to push the Confederates
ahead of him up the Big Black River, threatening Jackson,
the State capital, and the Big Black bridge behind
Vicksburg, and capturing both if necessary. His
opinion was that this maneuver would draw Pemberton
out of Vicksburg and bring on a decisive battle
within ten days.</p>
<p>From Hankinson's Ferry, the headquarters were
changed on the 7th to Rocky Springs, and there we
remained until the 11th. By that time McClernand
and McPherson had advanced to within ten or twelve
miles of the railroad which runs from Vicksburg to
Jackson, and were lying nearly in an east and west line;
and Sherman's entire corps had reached Hankinson's
Ferry. Supplies which Grant had ordered from Milliken's
Bend had also arrived. The order was now given
to Sherman to destroy the bridge at Hankinson's Ferry,
the rear guards were abandoned, and our communications
cut. So complete was our isolation that it was ten
days after we left Rocky Springs, on May 11th, before I
was able to get another dispatch to Mr. Stanton.</p>
<p>This march toward Jackson proved to be no easy
affair. More than one night I bivouacked on the
ground in the rain after being all day in my saddle. The
most comfortable night I had, in fact, was in a church
of which the officers had taken possession. Having no<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</SPAN></span>
pillow, I went up to the pulpit and borrowed the Bible
for the night. Dr. H. L. Hewitt, who was medical
director on Grant's staff, slept near me, and he always
charged me afterward with stealing that Bible.</p>
<p>In spite of the roughness of our life, it was all of intense
interest to me, particularly the condition of the
people over whose country we were marching. A fact
which impressed me was the total absence of men
capable of bearing arms. Only old men and children
remained. The young men were all in the army or
had perished in it. The South was drained of its youth.
An army of half a million with a white population of
only five millions to draw upon, must soon finish the
stock of raw material for soldiers. Another fact of
moment was that we found men who had at the first
sympathized with the rebellion, and even joined in it,
now of their own accord rendering Grant the most
valuable assistance, in order that the rebellion might
be ended as speedily as possible, and something saved
by the Southern people out of the otherwise total and
hopeless ruin. "Slavery is gone, other property is
mainly gone," they said, "but, for God's sake, let us save
some relic of our former means of living."</p>
<p>In this forward movement the left of the army was
ordered to hug the Big Black as closely as possible,
while the right moved straight on Raymond. On the
12th, the right wing, under McPherson, met the enemy
just west of Raymond. Grant at the time had his
headquarters about at the center of the army, with Sherman's
corps, some seven miles west of Raymond.
I left him to go to the scene of the battle at once. It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</SPAN></span>
was a hard-fought engagement, lasting some three
hours. McPherson drove the Confederates back to and
through Raymond, and there stopped. The next day
the advance of the army toward Jackson was continued.
It rained heavily on the march and the roads were very
heavy, but the troops were in the best of spirits at their
successes and prospects. This work was a great improvement
on digging canals and running batteries. On
the afternoon of the 14th, about two and a half miles
west of Jackson, McPherson and Sherman were temporarily
stopped by the enemy, but he was quickly defeated,
and that night we entered the capital of Mississippi.</p>
<p>At Jackson I received an important telegram from
Stanton, though how it got to me there I do not remember.
General Grant had been much troubled by
the delay McClernand had caused at New Carthage, but
he had felt reluctant to remove him as he had been
assigned to his command by the President. My reports
to the Secretary on the situation had convinced
him that Grant ought to have perfect independence in
the matter, so he telegraphed me as follows:</p>
<div class='letter'>
<p class='nr5right'>
<span class="smcap">Washington, D.C.</span>, <i class='date'>May 6, 1863</i>.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">C. A. Dana</span>, Esq., Smith's Plantation, Ia.</p>
<p>General Grant has full and absolute authority to
enforce his own commands and to remove any person
who by ignorance in action or any cause interferes
with or delays his operations. He has the full confidence
of the Government, is expected to enforce his
authority, and will be firmly and heartily supported,
but he will be responsible for any failure to exert his
powers. You may communicate this to him.</p>
<p class='nr5right'>
<span class="smcap">E. M. Stanton</span>, <i class='title'>Secretary of War</i>.</p>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The very evening of the day that we reached Jackson,
Grant learned that Lieutenant-General Pemberton
had been ordered by General Joe Johnston to come
out of Vicksburg and attack our rear. Grant immediately
faced the bulk of his army about to meet the enemy,
leaving Sherman in Jackson to tear up the railroads
and destroy all the public property there that could be
of use to the Confederates. I remained with Sherman
to see the work of destruction. I remember now nothing
that I saw except the burning of vast quantities of
cotton packed in bales, and that I was greatly astonished
to see how slowly it burned.</p>
<p>On the afternoon of the 15th I joined Grant again
at his headquarters at Clinton. Early the next morning
we had definite information about Pemberton.
He was about ten miles to the west, with twenty-five
thousand men, as reported, and our advance was almost
up with him. We at once went forward to the front.
Here we found Pemberton in a most formidable position
on the crest of a wooded ridge called Champion's
Hill, over which the road passed longitudinally.
About eleven o'clock in the morning of the 16th
the battle began, and by four in the afternoon it was
won.</p>
<p>After the battle I started out on horseback with
Colonel Rawlins to visit the field. When we reached
Logan's command we found him greatly excited. He
declared the day was lost, and that he would soon be
swept from his position. I contested the point with
him. "Why, general," I said, "we have gained the
day."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He could not see it. "Don't you hear the cannon
over there?" he answered. "They will be down on us
right away! In an hour I will have twenty thousand
men to fight."</p>
<p>I found afterward that this was simply a curious
idiosyncrasy of Logan's. In the beginning of a fight he
was one of the bravest men that could be, saw no
danger, went right on fighting until the battle was over.
Then, after the battle was won, his mind gained an
immovable conviction that it was lost. Where we were
victorious, he thought that we were defeated. I had a
very interesting conversation with Logan on this day,
when he attempted to convince me that we had lost the
battle of Champion's Hill. It was merely an intellectual
peculiarity. It did not in the least impair his value as a
soldier or commanding officer. He never made any
mistake on account of it.</p>
<p>On leaving Logan, Rawlins and I were joined by
several officers, and we continued our ride over the
field. On the hill where the thickest of the fight had
taken place we stopped, and were looking around at
the dead and dying men lying all about us, when suddenly
a man, perhaps forty-five or fifty years old, who
had a Confederate uniform on, lifted himself up on his
elbow, and said:</p>
<p>"For God's sake, gentlemen, is there a Mason
among you?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Rawlins, "I am a Mason." He got
off his horse and kneeled by the dying man, who gave
him some letters out of his pocket. When he came
back Rawlins had tears on his cheeks. The man, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</SPAN></span>
told us, wanted him to convey some souvenir—a miniature
or a ring, I do not remember what—to his wife,
who was in Alabama. Rawlins took the package, and
some time afterward he succeeded in sending it to the
woman.</p>
<p>I remained out late that night conversing with the
officers who had been in the battle, and think it must
have been about eleven o'clock when I got to Grant's
headquarters, where I was to sleep. Two or three
officers who had been out with me went with me into
the little cottage which Grant had taken possession of.
We found a wounded man there, a tall and fine-looking
man, a Confederate. He stood up suddenly and said:
"Kill me! Will some one kill me? I am in such anguish
that it will be mercy to do it—I have got to die—kill
me—don't let me suffer!" We sent for a surgeon,
who examined his case, but said it was hopeless. He
had been shot through the head, so that it had cut off
the optic nerve of both eyes. He never could possibly
see again. Before morning he died.</p>
<p>I was up at daylight the next day, and off with Grant
and his staff after the enemy. We rode directly west,
and overtook Pemberton at the Big Black. He had
made a stand on the bottom lands at the east head of the
Big Black bridge. Here he fought in rifle-pits, protected
by abatis and a difficult bayou. Lawler's brigade,
of McClernand's corps, charged the left of the Confederate
rifle-pits magnificently, taking more prisoners
than their own numbers. The others fled. Pemberton
burned his bridge and retreated rapidly into Vicksburg,
with only three cannon out of sixty-three with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</SPAN></span>
which he had entered upon this short, sharp, and decisive
campaign.</p>
<p>There was nothing for Grant to do now but build
bridges and follow. Before morning four bridges had
been thrown across the Big Black, and by the evening
of that day, the 18th, the army had arrived behind
Vicksburg, which was now its front. In twenty-four
hours after Grant's arrival the town was invested,
the bluffs above the town had been seized so that we
could get water from the Mississippi, and Haynes's Bluff
up the Yazoo had been abandoned by the Confederates.
With the Yazoo highlands in our control there was no
difficulty in establishing a line of supplies with our original
base on the Mississippi. On the 20th I was able
to get off to Mr. Stanton the first dispatch from the
rear of Vicksburg. In it I said, "Probably the town
will be carried to-day."</p>
<p>The prediction was not verified. The assault we
expected was not made until the morning of the 22d.
It failed, but without heavy loss. Early in the afternoon,
however, McClernand, who was on the left of
our lines, reported that he was in possession of two
forts of the rebel line, was hard pressed, and in great
need of re-enforcements. Not doubting that he had
really succeeded in taking and holding the works he
pretended to hold, General Grant sent a division to his
support, and at the same time ordered Sherman and
McPherson to make new attacks. McClernand's report
was false, for, although a few of his men had broken
through in one place, he had not taken a single fort, and
the result of the second assault was disastrous. We<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</SPAN></span>
were repulsed, losing quite heavily, when but for his
error the total loss of the day would have been inconsiderable.</p>
<p>The failure of the 22d convinced Grant of the
necessity of a regular siege, and immediately the army
settled down to that. We were in an incomparable
position for a siege as regarded the health and comfort
of our men. The high wooded hills afforded pure
air and shade, and the deep ravines abounded in springs
of excellent water, and if they failed it was easy to bring
it from the Mississippi. Our line of supplies was beyond
the reach of the enemy, and there was an abundance of
fruit all about us. I frequently met soldiers coming into
camp with buckets full of mulberries, blackberries, and
red and yellow wild plums.</p>
<p>The army was deployed at this time in the following
way: The right of the besieging force was held by General
Sherman, whose forces ran from the river along the
bluffs around the northeast of the town. Sherman's
front was at a greater distance from the enemy than that
of any other corps, and the approach less advantageous,
but he began his siege works with great energy and
admirable skill. Everything I saw of Sherman at the
Vicksburg siege increased my admiration for him. He
was a very brilliant man and an excellent commander
of a corps. Sherman's information was great, and he
was a clever talker. He always liked to have people
about who could keep up with his conversation; besides,
he was genial and unaffected. I particularly admired
his loyalty to Grant. He had criticised the plan of
campaign frankly in the first place, but had supported<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</SPAN></span>
every movement with all his energy, and now that we
were in the rear of Vicksburg he gave loud praise to the
commander in chief.</p>
<p>To the left of Sherman lay the Seventeenth Army
Corps, under Major-General J. B. McPherson. He was
one of the best officers we had. He was but thirty-two
years old at the time, and a very handsome, gallant-looking
man, with rather a dark complexion, dark eyes,
and a most cordial manner. McPherson was an engineer
officer of fine natural ability and extraordinary
acquirements, having graduated Number One in his
class at West Point, and was held in high estimation by
Grant and his professional brethren. Halleck gave him
his start in the civil war, and he had been with Grant
at Donelson and ever since. He was a man without
any pretensions, and always had a pleasant hand-shake
for you.</p>
<p>It is a little remarkable that the three chief figures in
this great Vicksburg campaign—Grant, Sherman, and
McPherson—were all born in Ohio. The utmost cordiality
and confidence existed between these three men,
and it always seemed to me that much of the success
achieved in these marches and battles was owing to this
very fact. There was no jealousy or bickering, and in
their unpretending simplicity they were as alike as three
peas. No country was ever more faithfully, unselfishly
served than was ours in the Vicksburg campaign by
these three Ohio officers.</p>
<p class='p2'>To McPherson's left was the Thirteenth Army
Corps, under Major-General John A. McClernand.
Next to Grant he was the ranking officer in the army.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</SPAN></span>
The approaches on his front were most favorable to us,
and the enemy's line of works evidently much the weakest
there, but he was very inefficient and slow in pushing
his siege operations. Grant had resolved on the
23d to relieve McClernand for his false dispatch of the
day before stating that he held two of the enemy's
forts, but he changed his mind, concluding that it would
be better on the whole to leave him in his command
till the siege was concluded. From the time that I
had joined Grant's army at Milliken's Bend and heard
him criticising Porter, Sherman, and other officers,
I had been observing McClernand narrowly myself.
My own judgment of him by this time was that he had
not the qualities necessary for commander even of a
regiment. In the first place, he was not a military man;
he was a politician and a member of Congress. He was
a man of a good deal of a certain kind of talent, not of a
high order, but not one of intellectual accomplishments.
His education was that which a man gets who is in
Congress five or six years. In short, McClernand was
merely a smart man, quick, very active-minded, but his
judgment was not solid, and he looked after himself a
good deal. Mr. Lincoln also looked out carefully for
McClernand, because he was an Illinois Democrat, with
a considerable following among the people. It was a
great thing to get McClernand into the war in the first
place, for his natural predisposition, one would have
supposed, would have been to sympathize with the
South. As long as he adhered to the war he carried
his Illinois constituency with him; and chiefly for this
reason, doubtless, Lincoln made it a point to take<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</SPAN></span>
special care of him. In doing this the President really
served the greater good of the cause. But from the
circumstances of Lincoln's supposed friendship, McClernand
had more consequence in the army than he deserved.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />