<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>THE SIEGE OF VICKSBURG</h3>
<div class='intro'>
<p>Life behind Vicksburg—Grant's efforts to procure reinforcements—The
fruitless appeal to General Banks—Mr. Stanton responds to
Mr. Dana's representations—A steamboat trip with Grant—Watching
Joe Johnston—Visits to Sherman and Admiral Porter—The
negro troops win glory—Progress and incidents of the siege—Vicksburg
wakes up—McClernand's removal.</p>
</div>
<p>We had not been many days in the rear of Vicksburg
before we settled into regular habits. The men
were detailed in reliefs for work in the trenches, and being
relieved at fixed hours everybody seemed to lead a
systematic life.</p>
<p>My chief duty throughout the siege was a daily
round through the trenches, generally with the corps
commander or some one of his staff. As the lines of
investment were six or seven miles long, it occupied the
greater part of my day; sometimes I made a portion
of my tour of inspection in the night. One night in
riding through the trenches I must have passed twenty
thousand men asleep on their guns. I still can see the
grotesque positions into which they had curled themselves.
The trenches were so protected that there was
no danger in riding through them. It was not so safe
to venture on the hills overlooking Vicksburg. I went
on foot and alone one day to the top of a hill, and was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</SPAN></span>
looking at the town, when I suddenly heard something
go whizz, whizz, by my ear. "What in the world is
that?" I asked myself. The place was so desolate that
it was an instant before I could believe that these were
bullets intended for me. When I did realize it, I immediately
started to lie down. Then came the question,
which was the best way to lie down. If I lay at right
angles to the enemy's line the bullets from the right and
left might strike me; if I lay parallel to it then those
directly from the front might hit me. So I concluded it
made no difference which way I lay. After remaining
quiet for a time the bullets ceased, and I left the hill-top.
I was more cautious in the future in venturing beyond
cover.</p>
<p>Through the entire siege I lived in General Grant's
headquarters, which were on a high bluff northeast of
Sherman's extreme left. I had a tent to myself, and
on the whole was very comfortable. We never lacked
an abundance of provisions. There was good water,
enough even for the bath, and we suffered very little
from excessive heat. The only serious annoyance was
the cannonade from our whole line, which from the
first of June went on steadily by night as well as by day.
The following bit from a letter I wrote on June 2d, to
my little daughter, tells something of my situation:</p>
<div class='letter'>
<p>It is real summer weather here, and, after coming
in at noon to-day from my usual ride through the
trenches, I was very glad to get a cold bath in my tent
before dinner. I like living in tents very well, especially
if you ride on horseback all day. Every night I sleep
with one side of the tent wide open and the walls put
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</SPAN></span>up all around to get plenty of air. Sometimes I wake
up in the night and think it is raining, the wind roars
so in the tops of the great oak forest on the hillside
where we are encamped, and I think it is thundering
till I look out and see the golden moonlight in all its
glory, and listen again and know that it is only the
thunder of General Sherman's great guns, that neither
rest nor let others rest by night or by day.</p>
</div>
<p>We were no sooner in position behind Vicksburg
than Grant saw that he must have reinforcements. Joe
Johnston was hovering near, working with energy to
collect forces sufficient to warrant an attempt to relieve
Vicksburg. The Confederates were also known to be
reorganizing at Jackson. Johnston eventually gathered
an army behind Grant of about twenty-five thousand
men.</p>
<p>Under these threatening circumstances it was necessary
to keep a certain number of troops in our rear,
more than Grant could well spare from the siege, and
he therefore made every effort to secure reinforcements.
He ordered down from Tennessee, and elsewhere in his
own department, all available forces. He also sent to
General Banks, who was then besieging Port Hudson,
a request to bring his forces up as promptly as practicable,
and assuring him that he (Grant) would gladly
serve under him as his senior in rank, or simply co-operate
with him for the benefit of the common cause,
if Banks preferred that arrangement. To Halleck, on
May 29th, he telegraphed: "If Banks does not come to
my assistance I must be reinforced from elsewhere. I
will avoid a surprise, and do the best I can with the
means at hand." This was about the extent of Grant's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</SPAN></span>
personal appeals to his superiors for additional forces.
No doubt, however, he left a good deal to my representations.</p>
<p>As no reply came from Banks, I started myself on
the 30th for Port Hudson at Grant's desire, to urge
that the reinforcements be furnished.</p>
<p>The route used for getting out from the rear of
Vicksburg at that time was through the Chickasaw
Bayou into the Yazoo and thence into the Mississippi.
From the mouth of the Yazoo I crossed the Mississippi
to Young's Point, and from there went overland across
the peninsula to get a gunboat at a point south of
Vicksburg. As we were going down the river we met
a steamer just above Grand Gulf bearing one of the
previous messengers whom Grant had sent to Banks.
He was bringing word that Banks could send no forces;
on the other hand, he asked reinforcements from Grant
to aid in his siege of Port Hudson, which he had closely
invested. This news, of course, made my trip unnecessary,
and I returned at once to headquarters, having
been gone not over twenty-four hours.</p>
<p>As soon as this news came from Banks, I sent an
urgent appeal to Mr. Stanton to hurry reinforcements
sufficient to make success beyond all peradventure.
The Government was not slow to appreciate Grant's
needs or the great opportunity he had created. Early
in June I received the following dispatch from Mr.
Stanton:</p>
<div class='letter'>
<p class='nr5right'>
<span class="smcap">War Department</span>, <i class='date'>June 5, 1863</i>.</p>
<p>Your telegrams up to the 30th have been received.
Everything in the power of this Government will be
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</SPAN></span>put forth to aid General Grant. The emergency is not
underrated here. Your telegrams are a great obligation,
and are looked for with deep interest. I can not
thank you as much as I feel for the service you are now
rendering. You have been appointed an assistant adjutant
general, with rank of major, with liberty to report
to General Grant if he needs you. The appointment
may be a protection to you. I shall expect daily
reports if possible.</p>
<p class='nr9right'>
<span class="smcap">Edwin M. Stanton</span>,</p>
<p class='nr5right'><i class='title'>Secretary of War</i>.</p>
<p class='nr3left'>
<span class="smcap">C. A. Dana</span>, Esq.,</p>
<p class='nr3left'>Grant's Headquarters near Vicksburg.</p>
</div>
<p>My appointment as assistant adjutant general was
Stanton's own idea. He was by nature a very anxious
man. When he perceived from my dispatches that I
was going every day on expeditions into dangerous territory,
he became alarmed lest I might be caught by the
Confederates; for as I was a private citizen it would
have been difficult to exchange me. If I were in the
regular volunteer service as an assistant adjutant general,
however, there would be no trouble about an exchange,
hence my appointment.</p>
<p>The chief variations from my business of watching
the siege behind Vicksburg were these trips I made to
inspect the operations against the enemy, who was now
trying to shut us in from the rear beyond the Big Black.
His heaviest force was to the northeast. On June 6th
the reports from Satartia, our advance up the Yazoo,
were so unsatisfactory that Grant decided to examine
the situation there himself. That morning he said to
me at breakfast:</p>
<p>"Mr. Dana, I am going to Satartia to-day; would
you like to go along?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I said I would, and we were soon on horseback,
riding with a cavalry guard to Haynes's Bluff, where we
took a small steamer reserved for Grant's use and carrying
his flag. Grant was ill and went to bed soon after
he started. We had gone up the river to within two
miles of Satartia, when we met two gunboats coming
down. Seeing the general's flag, the officers in charge
of the gunboats came aboard our steamer and asked
where the general was going. I told them to Satartia.</p>
<p>"Why," said they, "it will not be safe. Kimball
[our advance was under the charge of Brigadier-General
Nathan Kimball, Third Division, Sixteenth Army
Corps] has retreated from there, and is sending all his
supplies to Haynes's Bluff. The enemy is probably in
the town now."</p>
<p>I told them Grant was sick and asleep, and that I
did not want to waken him. They insisted that it was
unsafe to go on, and that I would better call the general.
Finally I did so, but he was too sick to decide.</p>
<p>"I will leave it with you," he said. I immediately
said we would go back to Haynes's Bluff, which we did.</p>
<p>The next morning Grant came out to breakfast fresh
as a rose, clean shirt and all, quite himself. "Well, Mr.
Dana," he said, "I suppose we are at Satartia now."</p>
<p>"No, general," I said, "we are at Haynes's Bluff."
And I told him what had happened.</p>
<p>He did not complain, but as he was short of officers
at that point he asked me to go with a party of cavalry
toward Mechanicsburg to find if it were true, as reported,
that Joe Johnston was advancing from Canton
to the Big Black. We had a hard ride, not getting back<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</SPAN></span>
to Vicksburg until the morning of the eighth. The
country was like all the rest around Vicksburg, broken,
wooded, unpopulous, with bad roads and few streams.
It still had many cattle, but the corn was pretty thoroughly
cleared out. We found that Johnston had not
moved his main force as rumored, and that he could not
move it without bringing all his supplies with him.</p>
<p>Throughout the siege an attack from Johnston continued
to threaten Grant and to keep a part of our army
busy. Almost every one of my dispatches to Mr. Stanton
contained rumors of the movements of the Confederates,
and the information was so uncertain that
often what I reported one day had to be contradicted
the next. About the 15th of June the movements of
the enemy were so threatening that Grant issued an
order extending Sherman's command so as to include
Haynes's Bluff, and to send there the two divisions of
the Ninth Corps under General Parke. These troops
had just arrived from Kentucky, and Grant had intended
to place them on the extreme left of our besieging line.</p>
<p>Although our spies brought in daily reports of forces
of the enemy at different points between Yazoo City
and Jackson, Johnston's plan did not develop opportunity
until the 22d, when he was said to be crossing
the Big Black north of Bridgeport. Sherman immediately
started to meet him with about thirty thousand
troops, including cavalry. Five brigades more
were held in readiness to reinforce him if necessary.
The country was scoured by Sherman in efforts to beat
Johnston, but no trace of an enemy was found. It was,
however, ascertained that he had not advanced, but was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</SPAN></span>
still near Canton. As there was no design to attack
Johnston until Vicksburg was laid low, Sherman made
his way to Bear Creek, northwest of Canton, where he
could watch the Confederates, and there went into
camp.</p>
<p>I went up there several times to visit him, and always
came away enthusiastic over his qualities as a soldier.
His amazing activity and vigilance pervaded his entire
force. The country where he had encamped was exceedingly
favorable for defense. He had occupied the
commanding points, opened rifle-pits wherever they
would add to his advantage, obstructed the cross-roads
and most of the direct roads also, and ascertained every
point where the Big Black could be forded between the
line of Benton on the north and the line of railroads
on the south. By his rapid movements, also, and by
widely deploying on all the ridges and open headlands,
Sherman produced the impression that his forces were
ten times as numerous as they really were. Sherman
remained in his camp on Bear Creek through the rest of
the siege, in order to prevent any possible attack by Joe
Johnston, the reports about whose movements continued
to be contradictory and uncertain.</p>
<p>Another variation in my Vicksburg life was visiting
Admiral Porter, who commanded the fleet which
hemmed in the city on the river-side. Porter was a very
active, courageous, fresh-minded man, and an experienced
naval officer, and I enjoyed the visits I made to
his fleet. His boats were pretty well scattered, for the
Confederates west of the Mississippi were pressing in,
and unless watched might manage to cross somewhere.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</SPAN></span>
Seven of the gunboats were south of Vicksburg, one at
Haynes's Bluff, one was at Chickasaw Bayou, one at
Young's Point, one at Milliken's Bend, one at Lake
Providence, one at Greenell, one at Island Sixty-five,
two were at White River, and so on, and several were
always in motion. They guarded the river so completely
that no hostile movement from the west ever
succeeded, or was likely to do so.</p>
<p>The most serious attack from the west during the
siege was that on June 7th, when a force of some two
thousand Confederates engaged about a thousand
negro troops defending Milliken's Bend. This engagement
at Milliken's Bend became famous from the conduct
of the colored troops. General E. S. Dennis, who
saw the battle, told me that it was the hardest fought
engagement he had ever seen. It was fought mainly
hand to hand. After it was over many men were found
dead with bayonet stabs, and others with their skulls
broken open by butts of muskets. "It is impossible,"
said General Dennis, "for men to show greater gallantry
than the negro troops in that fight."</p>
<p>The bravery of the blacks in the battle at Milliken's
Bend completely revolutionized the sentiment of the
army with regard to the employment of negro troops.
I heard prominent officers who formerly in private had
sneered at the idea of the negroes fighting express
themselves after that as heartily in favor of it. Among
the Confederates, however, the feeling was very different.
All the reports which came to us showed that
both citizens and soldiers on the Confederate side manifested
great dismay at the idea of our arming negroes.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</SPAN></span>
They said that such a policy was certain to be followed
by insurrection with all its horrors.</p>
<p>Although the presence of Joe Johnston on the east,
and the rumors of invasion by Kirby Smith from the
west, compelled constant attention, the real work behind
Vicksburg was always that of the siege. No
amount of outside alarm loosened Grant's hold on the
rebel stronghold. The siege went on steadily and
effectively. By June 10th the expected reinforcements
began to report. Grant soon had eighty-five thousand
men around Vicksburg, and Pemberton's last hope was
gone. The first troops to arrive were eight regiments
under General Herron. They came from Missouri,
down the Mississippi to Young's Point, where they were
debarked and marched across the peninsula, care being
taken, of course, that the Confederate garrison at Vicksburg
should see the whole march. The troops were
then ferried across the Mississippi, and took a position
south of Vicksburg between Lauman's troops and the
Mississippi River, completely closing the lines, and thus
finally rendering egress and ingress absolutely impossible.
Herron took this position on June 13th. He
went to work with so much energy that on the night
of the 15th he was able to throw forward his lines on
his left, making an advance of five hundred yards, and
bringing his artillery and rifle-pits within two or three
hundred yards of the enemy's lines.</p>
<p>Herron was a first-rate officer, and the only consummate
dandy I ever saw in the army. He was always
handsomely dressed; I believe he never went out without
patent-leather boots on, and you would see him in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</SPAN></span>
the middle of a battle—well, I can not say exactly that
he went into battle with a lace pocket-handkerchief, but
at all events he always displayed a clean white one. But
these little vanities appeared not to detract from his
usefulness. Herron had already proved his ability and
fighting qualities at the battle of Prairie Grove, December
7, 1862.</p>
<p>Just as our reinforcements arrived we began to receive
encouraging reports from within Vicksburg. Deserters
said that the garrison was worn out and hungry;
besides, the defense had for several days been conducted
with extraordinary feebleness, which Grant thought was
due to the deficiency of ammunition or to exhaustion
and depression in the garrison, or to their retirement
to an inner line of defense. The first and third of these
causes no doubt operated to some extent, but the second
we supposed to be the most influential. The deserters
also said that fully one third of the garrison were
in hospital, and that officers, as well as men, had begun
to despair of relief from Johnston.</p>
<p>These reports from within the town, as well as the
progress of the siege and the arrival of reinforcements,
pointed so strongly to the speedy surrender of the place
that I asked Mr. Stanton in my dispatch of June 14th
to please inform me by telegram whether he wished me
to go to General Rosecrans after the fall of Vicksburg
or whether he had other orders for me.</p>
<p>The next day after this letter, however, the enemy
laid aside his long-standing inactivity and opened violently
with both artillery and musketry. Two mortars
which the Confederates got into operation that day in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</SPAN></span>
front of General A. J. Smith particularly interested our
generals. I remember going with a party of some
twenty officers, including Sherman, Ord, McPherson,
and Wilson, to the brow of a hill on McPherson's front
to watch this battery with our field glasses. From
where we were we could study the whole operation.
We saw the shell start from the mortar, sail slowly
through the air toward us, fall to the ground and explode,
digging out a hole which looked like a crater. I
remember one of these craters which must have been
nine feet in diameter. As you watched a shell coming
you could not tell whether it would fall a thousand feet
away or by your side. Yet nobody budged. The men
sat there on their horses, their reins loose, studying and
discussing the work of the batteries, apparently indifferent
to the danger. It was very interesting as a study
of human steadiness.</p>
<p>By the middle of June our lines were so near the
enemy's on Sherman's and McPherson's front that
General Grant began to consider the project of another
general assault as soon as McClernand's, Lauman's, and
Herron's lines were brought up close. Accordingly,
Sherman and McPherson were directed to hold their
work until the others were up to them. Herron, of
course, had not had time to advance, though since his
arrival he had worked with great energy. Lauman had
done little in the way of regular approaches. But the
chief difficulty in the way was the backwardness of McClernand.
His trenches were mere rifle-pits, three or
four feet wide, and would allow neither the passage of
artillery nor the assemblage of any considerable number<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</SPAN></span>
of troops. His batteries were, with scarcely an exception,
in the position they apparently had held when the
siege was opened.</p>
<p class='p2'>This obstacle to success was soon removed. On the
18th of June McClernand was relieved and General Ord
was put into his place. The immediate occasion of McClernand's
removal was a congratulatory address to the
Thirteenth Corps which he had fulminated in May,
and which first reached the besieging army in a copy
of the Missouri Democrat. In this extraordinary address
McClernand claimed for himself most of the glory
of the campaign, reaffirmed that on May 22d he had
held two rebel forts for several hours, and imputed to
other officers and troops failure to support him in their
possession, which must have resulted in the capture of
the town, etc. Though this congratulatory address was
the occasion of McClernand's removal, the real causes
of it dated farther back. These causes, as I understood
at the time, were his repeated disobedience of important
orders, his general unfortunate mental disposition, and
his palpable incompetence for the duties of his position.
I learned in private conversation that in General Grant's
judgment it was necessary that McClernand should be
removed for the reason, above all, that his bad relations
with other corps commanders, especially Sherman and
McPherson, rendered it impossible that the chief command
of the army should devolve upon him, as it would
have done were General Grant disabled, without some
pernicious consequence to the Union cause.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />