<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>THE REMOVAL OF ROSECRANS.</h3>
<div class='intro'>
<p>Preparing to defend Chattanooga—Effect on the army of the day of
disaster and glory—Mr. Dana suggests Grant or Thomas as Rosecrans's
successor—Portrait of Thomas—The dignity and loyalty
of his character illustrated—The army reorganized—It is threatened
with starvation—An estimate of Rosecrans—He is relieved
of the command of the Army of the Cumberland.</p>
</div>
<p>All the news we could get the next day of the enemy's
movements seemed to show that the Confederate
forces were concentrating on Chattanooga. Accordingly,
Rosecrans gave orders for all our troops to gather
in the town at once and prepare for the attack which
would probably take place within a day or two. By
midnight the army was in Chattanooga. The troops
were in wonderful spirits, considering their excessive
fatigues and heavy losses, and the next morning went
to work with energy on the fortifications. All the morning
of the 22d the enemy were approaching, resisted
by our advance parties, and by the middle of the afternoon
the artillery firing was so near that it seemed certain
that the battle would be fought before dark. No
attack was made that day, however, nor the next, and
by the morning of the 24th the Herculean labors of the
army had so fortified the place that it was certain that
it could be taken only by a regular siege or by a turn<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</SPAN></span>ing
movement. The strength of our forces was about
forty-five thousand effective men, and we had ten days'
full rations on hand. Chattanooga could hold out, but
it was apparent that no offensive operations were possible
until re-enforcements came. These we knew had
been hurried toward us as soon as the news of the disaster
of the 20th reached Washington. Burnside was
coming from Knoxville, we supposed, Hooker had
been ordered from Washington by rail, Sherman from
Vicksburg by steamer, and some of Hurlbut's troops
from Memphis.</p>
<p>The enemy by the 24th were massed in Chattanooga
Valley, and held Missionary Ridge and Lookout Mountain.
The summit of Lookout Mountain, almost the
key to Chattanooga, was not given up by Rosecrans
until the morning of the 24th; then he ordered the
withdrawal of the brigade which held the heights, and
the destruction of the wagon road which winds along
its side at about one third of its height and connects the
valleys of Chattanooga and Lookout. Both Granger
and Garfield earnestly protested against this order, contending
that the mountain and the road could be held
by not more than seven regiments against the whole
power of the enemy. They were obviously right, but
Rosecrans was sometimes as obstinate and inaccessible
to reason as at others he was irresolute, vacillating, and
inconclusive, and he pettishly rejected all their arguments.
The mountain was given up.</p>
<p>As soon as we felt reasonably sure that Chattanooga
could hold out until re-enforcements came, the
disaster of the 20th of September became the absorb<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</SPAN></span>ing
topic of conversation in the Army of the Cumberland.
At headquarters, in camp, in the street, on the
fortifications, officers and soldiers and citizens wrangled
over the reasons for the loss of the day. By the end
of the first week after the disaster a serious fermentation
reigned in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Army
Corps, and, indeed, throughout the whole army, growing
out of events connected with the battle.</p>
<p>There was at once a manifest disposition to hold
McCook and Crittenden, the commanders of the two
corps, responsible, because they had left the field of
battle amid the rout of the right wing and made their
way to Chattanooga.<SPAN name="FNanchor_D_4" id="FNanchor_D_4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_D_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</SPAN> It was not generally understood
or appreciated at that time that, because of Thomas's
repeated calls for aid and Rosecrans's consequent alarm
for his left, Crittenden had been stripped of all his troops
and had no infantry whatever left to command, and that
McCook's lines also had been reduced to a fragment
by similar orders from Rosecrans and by fighting. A
strong opposition to both sprang up, which my telegrams
to Mr. Stanton immediately after the battle fully
reflect. The generals of division and of brigade felt the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</SPAN></span>
situation deeply, and said that they could no longer
serve under such superiors, and that, if this was required
of them, they must resign. This feeling was
universal among them, including men like Major-Generals
Palmer and Sheridan and Brigadier-Generals
Wood, Johnson, and Hazen.</p>
<p>The feeling of these officers did not seem in the least
to partake of a mutinous or disorderly character; it was
rather conscientious unwillingness to risk their men and
the country's cause in hands which they thought to be
unsafe. No formal representation of this unwillingness
was made to Rosecrans, but he was made aware of the
state of things by private conversations with several of
the parties. The defects of his character complicated
the difficulty. He abounded in friendliness and approbativeness,
and was greatly lacking in firmness and
steadiness of will. In short, he was a temporizing man;
he dreaded so heavy an alternative as was now presented,
and hated to break with McCook and Crittenden.</p>
<p>Besides, there was a more serious obstacle to Rosecrans's
acting decisively in the fact that if Crittenden
and McCook had gone to Chattanooga, with the sound
of artillery in their ears, from that glorious field where
Thomas and Granger were saving their army and their
country's honor, he had gone to Chattanooga also. It
might be said in his excuse that, under the circumstances
of the sudden rout, it was perfectly proper for the commanding
general to go to the rear to prepare the next
line of defense. Still, Rosecrans felt that that excuse
could not entirely clear him either in his own eyes or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</SPAN></span>
in those of the army. In fact, it was perfectly plain
that, while the subordinate commanders would not
resign if he was retained in the chief command, as I
believe they certainly would have done if McCook and
Crittenden had not been relieved, their respect for
Rosecrans as a general had received an irreparable
blow.</p>
<p>The dissatisfaction with Rosecrans seemed to me to
put the army into a very dangerous condition, and, in
writing to Mr. Stanton on September 27th, I said that
if it was decided to change the chief commander I would
suggest that some Western commander of high rank
and great prestige, like Grant, would be preferable as
Rosecrans's successor to one who had hitherto commanded
in the East alone.</p>
<p>The army, however, had its own candidate for Rosecrans's
post. General Thomas had risen to the highest
point in their esteem, as he had in that of every one
who witnessed his conduct on that unfortunate and
glorious day, and I saw that, should there be a change
in the chief command, there was no other man whose
appointment would be so welcome. I earnestly recommended
Mr. Stanton that in event of a change in the
chief command Thomas's merits be considered. He
was certainly an officer of the very highest qualities,
soldierly and personally. He was a man of the greatest
dignity of character. He had more the character of
George Washington than any other man I ever knew.
At the same time he was a delightful man to be with;
there was no artificial dignity about Thomas. He was
a West Point graduate, and very well educated. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</SPAN></span>
was very set in his opinions, yet he was not impatient
with anybody—a noble character.</p>
<p>In reply to my recommendation of Thomas, I received
a telegram from the Secretary of War, saying:
"I wish you to go directly to see General Thomas, and
say to him that his services, his abilities, his character,
his unselfishness, have always been most cordially appreciated
by me, and that it is not my fault that he has not
long since had command of an independent army."</p>
<p>Accordingly, I went at once over to General Thomas's
headquarters. I remember that I got there just
after they had finished dinner; the table was not cleared
off, but there was nobody in the dining room. When
General Thomas came in, I read to him the telegram
from the Secretary. He was too much affected by it
to reply immediately. After a moment he said:</p>
<p>"Mr. Dana, I wish you would say to the Secretary
of War that I am greatly affected by this expression
of his confidence; that I should have long since liked
to have had an independent command, but what I
should have desired would have been the command of
an army that I could myself have organized, disciplined,
distributed, and combined. I wish you would add also
that I would not like to take the command of an army
where I should be exposed to the imputation of having
intrigued or of having exercised any effort to supplant
my previous commander."</p>
<p>This was on October 4th. Four days later General
Thomas sent a confidential friend to me, saying rumors
had come to him that he was to be put in Rosecrans's
place; that, while he would gladly accept any other<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</SPAN></span>
command to which Mr. Stanton should see fit to assign
him, he could not consent to become the successor of
General Rosecrans. He would not do anything to give
countenance to the suspicion that he had intrigued
against his commander's interest. He declared that he
had perfect confidence in the fidelity and capacity of
General Rosecrans.</p>
<p>The first change in the Army of the Cumberland was
an order from Washington consolidating the Twentieth
and Twenty-first Corps. The news reached Chattanooga
on October 5th in a Nashville newspaper, and,
not having been previously promulgated, it caused a
sensation. Crittenden was much excited, and said that,
as the Government no longer required his services, he
would resign; at any rate, he would not hibernate like
others, drawing pay and doing no work. McCook took
it easily. The consolidation of the two corps was generally
well received, and, as it was to be followed by a
general reorganization of the army, it seemed as if the
most happy consequences would be produced. The
only serious difficulty which followed the change was
that the men in the consolidated corps were troubled
by letters from home, showing that their friends regarded
a consolidation as a token of disgrace and punishment.</p>
<p>Although the reorganization of the army was going
on, there was no real change in our situation, and by
the middle of October it began to look as if we were
in a helpless and precarious position. No re-enforcements
had yet reached us, the enemy was growing
stronger every day, and, worse still, we were threatened<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</SPAN></span>
with starvation. Rosecrans's error in abandoning Lookout
Mountain to the enemy on September 24th was
now apparent. Our supplies came by rail from Nashville
to Bridgeport; but the enemy controlled the south
shore of the Tennessee between us and Bridgeport, and
thus prevented our rebuilding the railroad from Bridgeport
to Chattanooga; with their shore batteries they
stopped the use of our steamboats. They even made
the road on the north shore impassable, the sharpshooters
on the south bank being able to pick off our
men on the north. The forage and supplies which we
had drawn from the country within our reach were now
exhausted, and we were dependent upon what could
be got to us over the roads north of the river. These
were not only disturbed by the enemy, but were so bad
in places that the mud was up to the horses' bellies.
The animals themselves had become too weak to haul
the empty train up the mountain, while many had died
of starvation. On October 15th the troops were on half
rations, and officers as they went about where the men
were working on the fortifications frequently heard the
cry of "Crackers!"</p>
<p>In the midst of these difficulties General Rosecrans
seemed to be insensible to the impending danger; he
dawdled with trifles in a manner which scarcely can be
imagined. With plenty of zealous and energetic officers
ready to do whatever needed to be done, precious
time was lost because our dazed and mazy commander
could not perceive the catastrophe that was close upon
us, nor fix his mind upon the means of preventing it.
I never saw anything which seemed so lamentable and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</SPAN></span>
hopeless. Our animals were starving, the men had
starvation before them, and the enemy was bound soon
to make desperate efforts to dislodge us. Yet the commanding
general devoted that part of the time which
was not employed in pleasant gossip to the composition
of a long report to prove that the Government was to
blame for his failure on the 20th.</p>
<p>While few persons exhibited more estimable social
qualities, I have never seen a public man possessing
talent with less administrative power, less clearness and
steadiness in difficulty, and greater practical incapacity
than General Rosecrans. He had inventive fertility and
knowledge, but he had no strength of will and no concentration
of purpose. His mind scattered; there was
no system in the use of his busy days and restless nights,
no courage against individuals in his composition, and,
with great love of command, he was a feeble commander.
He was conscientious and honest, just as he was imperious
and disputatious; always with a stray vein of
caprice and an overweening passion for the approbation
of his personal friends and the public outside.</p>
<p>Although the army had been reorganized as a result
of the consolidation of the Twentieth and Twenty-first
Corps, it was still inefficient and its discipline defective.
The former condition proceeded from the fact that General
Rosecrans insisted on directing personally every
department, and kept every one waiting and uncertain
till he himself could directly supervise every operation.
The latter proceeded from his utter lack of firmness, his
passion for universal applause, and his incapacity to
hurt any man's feelings by just severity.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>My opinion of Rosecrans and my fears that the army
would soon be driven from Chattanooga by starvation,
if not by the Confederates, I had reiterated in my letters
to Mr. Stanton. On the morning of October 19th I
received a dispatch from Mr. Stanton, sent from Washington
on October 16th, asking me to meet him that
day at the Gait House in Louisville. I wired him that,
unless he ordered to the contrary, Rosecrans would retreat
at once from Chattanooga, and then I started for
Louisville. It was a hard trip by horseback over
Walden's Ridge and through Jasper to Bridgeport, and
the roads were not altogether safe. Ten days before
this, in riding along the edge of a bank near the river
shore, the earth had given way under my horse's hind
feet, and he and I had been tumbled together down a
bank, about fourteen feet high; we rolled over each
other in the sand at the bottom. I got off with no worse
injury than a bruise of my left shoulder and a slight
crack on the back of my head from the horse's hind
foot, which made the blood run a little. The roads
over Walden Ridge and along the river were even worse
now than when I got my tumble, and, besides, they
were filled with wagons trying to get supplies to Chattanooga.
It took at that time ten days for wagon teams
to go from Stevenson, where we had a depot, to Chattanooga.
Though subsistence stores were so nearly exhausted,
the wagons were compelled to throw overboard
portions of their precious cargo in order to get
through. The returning trains were blockaded. On the
17th of October five hundred teams were halted between
the mountain and the river without forage for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</SPAN></span>
the animals, and unable to move in any direction; the
whole road was strewn with dead animals.</p>
<p>The railway from Bridgeport to Nashville was not
much more comfortable or safer than the road. Early
in the month I had gone to Nashville on business, and
had come back in a tremendous storm in a train of
eighteen cars crowded with soldiers, and was twenty-six
hours on the road instead of ten. On the present
trip, however, I got along very well until within about
eight miles from Nashville, when our train narrowly
escaped destruction. A tie had been inserted in a
cattle guard to throw the train down an embankment,
but it had been calculated for a train going south, so
that ours simply broke it off. From what we learned
afterward, we thought it was intended for a train on
which it was supposed General Grant was going to
Bridgeport.</p>
<p>My train was bound through to Louisville. Indeed,
I think there was no one with me except the train hands
and the engineer. We reached Nashville about ten
o'clock on the night of October 20th, and there were
halted. Directly there came in an officer—I think it
was Lieutenant-Colonel Bowers, of General Grant's staff—who
said:</p>
<p>"General Grant wants to see you."</p>
<p>This was the first that I knew Grant was in Tennessee.
I got out of my train and went over to his. I
hadn't seen him since we parted at Vicksburg.</p>
<p>"I am going to interfere with your journey, Mr.
Dana," he said as soon as I came in. "I have got the
Secretary's permission to take you back with me to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</SPAN></span>
Chattanooga. I want you to dismiss your train and
get in mine; we will give you comfortable quarters."</p>
<p>"General," I said, "did you ask the Secretary to
let me go back with you?"</p>
<p>"I did," he said; "I wanted to have you."</p>
<p class='p2'>So, of course, I went. On the way down he told
me that he had been appointed to the command of the
"Military Division of the Mississippi," with permission
to leave Rosecrans in command of the Department of
the Cumberland or to assign Thomas in his place. He
had done the latter, he said, and had telegraphed
Thomas to take charge of the army the night after Stanton,
at Louisville, had received my dispatch of the 19th
saying Rosecrans would retreat from Chattanooga unless
ordered to remain. Rosecrans was assigned to the
Department of the Missouri, with headquarters at St.
Louis.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />