
This remarkable wartime photograph, taken by a
Confederate Secret Service agent, shows Grierson's cavalrymen near the
end of their 600-mile raid behind the Confederate lines. From
Photographic History of the Civil War.
The Vicksburg
Campaign: Grant Moves Against Vicksburg and
Succeeds (continued)
THE RIVER CROSSING. Grant's plan was to make an
assault landing at Grand Gulf, a fortified road junction on the bluffs
at the mouth of the Big Black River. On April 29, the Union gunboats
pounded the Grand Gulf fortifications for 6 hours, seeking to neutralize
the defenses and clear the landing for 10,000 Federal infantry aboard
transports just beyond range of the Confederate cannon. The naval attack
failed to reduce the Confederate works, and that night Grant marched
southward along the Louisiana shore to a landing opposite Bruinsburg.
There he was met by the fleet which then slipped downstream under cover
of darkness. By noon of the following day, April 30, Grant was across
the Mississippi, experiencing
a degree of relief scarcely ever equaled since. . . .
I was now in the enemy's country, with a vast river and the stronghold
of Vicksburg between me and my base of supplies. But I was on dry ground
on the same side of the river with the enemy. All the campaigns, labors,
hardships, and exposures, from the month of December previous to this
time, that had been made and endured, were for the accomplishment of
this one object.
Grant's landing was unopposed, partly because of two
diversionary movements and partly because of Pemberton's decision to
hold his army close to Vicksburg and fight a defensive campaign. Both
diversions were completely successful. On April 17, the day after
Porter's running of the batteries had indicated Grant's strategy of
striking from the south, Col. B. H. Grierson with 1,000 cavalrymen moved
out from southwestern Tennessee on one of the celebrated cavalry raids
of the war. They rode entirely through the State of Mississippi behind
Pemberton's army to a junction with Union forces at Baton Rouge, La. In
16 days Grierson covered 600 miles, interfering with Confederate
telegraph and railroad communications and forcing Pemberton to detach a
division of infantry to protect his supply and communication lines.
Sherman, whose corps had not yet made the march from Milliken's Bend,
made an elaborate feint above Vicksburg. Loading his men aboard every
available gunboat, transport, and tug, he landed at Haynes' Bluff, north
of Vicksburg, leading Pemberton to expect the real attack from that
direction. Both moves helped screen Grant's true objective.

Maj. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman,
commanding the Union XV Corps. Courtesy National Archives.
|

Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, commanding
Confederate military operations in the West. Courtesy National Archives.
|
The events immediately following Grant's landing
revealed a basic difference in tactical concepts between Pemberton,
commanding the Army of Vicksburg, and Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, his
superior, who was in charge of Confederate operations in the West.
Johnston believed that to defeat Grant it would be necessary for
Pemberton to unite his whole force in order to smash the Union Army,
preferably before Grant could consolidate his position on the east bank.
Accordingly, he wired Pemberton on May 2 "If Grant's army crosses, unite
all your troops to beat him; success will give you back what was
abandoned to win it."
It was Pemberton's concept that holding Vicksburg was
vital to the Confederacy and that he must primarily protect the city and
its approaches. To have marched his army to meet Grant "would have
stripped Vicksburg and its essential flank defenses of their garrisons,
and the city itself might have fallen an easy prey into the eager hands
of the enemy." This inability of Pemberton and Johnston to reach
agreement upon the tactics that might thwart Grant's invasion seriously
affected subsequent Confederate operations and prevented effective
cooperation between the two commanders in the Vicksburg campaign.
THE BATTLE OF PORT GIBSON. McClernand's Corps,
immediately upon debarking on April 30, headed for the bluffs 3 miles
inland. By night fall the Federal soldiers had reached the high ground
and pushed on toward Port Gibson, 30 miles south of Vicksburg. From this
point, roads led to Grand Gulf, Vicksburg, and Jackson. Maj. Gen. John
S. Bowen moved his Grand Gulf command toward Port Gibson to intercept
the threat, and, at daylight on May 1, leading elements of the Union
advance clashed with Bowen's troops, barring the two roads which led to
Port Gibson.
The battle of Port Gibson was a series of furious
day-long engagements over thickly wooded ridges cut by deep, precipitous
gullies and covered with dense undergrowth. While greatly outnumbering
Bowen, McClernand was prevented by the rugged terrain from bringing his
whole force into action. Slowly forced backward, Bowen conducted an
orderly retreat through the town, which he evacuated. The holding action
had cost Bowen 800 casualties from his command of 8,000; Union losses
were about the same from a force at hand of about 23,000. Pemberton
determined not to contest Grand Gulf lest he risk being cut off from
Vicksburg and withdrew across the Big Black River. Thus he permitted
Grant to occupy Grand Gulf and gave him a strong foothold on the east
bank of the Mississippi.
|