Authors: Bruce Catton
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
Winter of Discontent
1 | Oran Perry, pamphlet, |
2 | Army Memoirs of Lucius W. Barber |
3 | Ms. letter of Isaac Jackson, of the 83rd Ohio, dated March 23, 1863; |
4 | New York World |
5 | Letter of Joseph Medill to E. H. Washburne, dated January 16, 1863, in the Washburne Papers. |
6 | Shortly after Grant's arrival on the Mississippi, Russ Jones saw him “out on the point with 1½ miles of the city” and reported, “with a glass everything is perfectly distinct.” Letter of Jones to Washburne, dated January 29, 1863, in the Washburne Papers. |
7 | Grant's Memoirs, Vol. I, p. 435; Badeau, Vol. I, pp. 140â141; Charles A. Dana and James H. Wilson, |
8 | O. R., Vol. XVII, Part Two, p. 542. |
9 | Department of Tennessee returns for January 31, 1863, O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, p. 20. |
10 | Chicago Journal |
11 | Letter of General Washburn to Congressman Washburne, dated January 28, 1863, from Gaillard Hunt, |
12 | Grant's order, and the exchange between Grant and McClernand, are in O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part One, pp. 11â13; and Part Three, p. 19. |
13 | Badeau, Vol. I, pp. 163â165; Greene, pp. 21â23. Oddly enough, the Mississippi did break through the peninsula some years after the war, although it did not precisely follow the canal on which Grant's soldiers worked so hard. The hairpin bend no longer exists, and the main channel of the river no longer flows by the Vicksburg waterfront. |
14 | Grant to Porter, O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, p. 17; Greene, pp. 95â96. Grant's geography was hazy. In going from Lake Providence to the Red River, one would not navigate the Ouachita River. |
15 | O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three: Grant to McPherson, p. 33; Sherman to Grant, p. 32. |
16 | James H. Wilson, |
17 | Letters of W. T. Sherman to Mrs. Sherman, dated January 28 and February 15, in the Sherman Papers; Badeau, Vol. I, p. 165. |
18 | Edmund Newsome, |
19 | Wilson, |
20 | Badeau, Vol. I, pp. 169â171; O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, pp. 35â36. |
21 | O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part One, pp. 379â381; Badeau, Vol. I, p. 172; A. T. Mahan, “The Gulf and Inland Waters,” pp. 141â146. For Porter's account, see his |
22 | Porter, pp. 145â171; Badeau, Vol. I, pp. 173â178. |
23 | Grant to Washburne, letter dated March 10, 1863, in the Grant Papers, Illinois State Historical Library; Grant to Banks, letter dated |
CHAPTER NINETEEN
The Man on the River
1 | Charles A. Dana, |
2 | Dana, pp. 61â62. |
3 | New York World |
4 | Interview with Dr. E. A. Duncan, McPherson's former medical officer, printed in the |
5 | Interview with W. T. Sherman in the |
6 | There is no way to document this, yet I think that anyone who plows through the endless pages of dispatches and reports in the Official Records (O. R.) will find that early in the winter of 1863 Grant's dispatches become recognizable. The reader can identify them without looking for the signature; suddenly, Grant's writings become unmistakably Grant. Here, in the midst of barren acres of official jargon, are things written by a man who knows exactly what he is doing and exactly what he wants to say. |
7 | Mary Livermore, |
8 | Chicago Tribune |
9 | Letters of C. S. Hamilton to Senator Doolittle, dated October 22, 1862, January 30, 1863, and February 11, 1863; in the Doolittle Papers. Hamilton's friendly letter to Grant is in O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, p. 41; for Grant's letter to Halleck, and additional correspondence on the matter, see the same volume, pp. 137â151. |
10 | Eaton, pp. 64, 89â90. Lincoln's remark about Grant's whisky has come to be regarded as myth, apparently because similar stories have been told about other soldiers in earlier wars. Eaton, however, is accepted as a reliable source on other matters; the story is precisely the sort of story Lincoln would tell; and this writer can see no good reason for doubting its authenticity. |
11 | Emmet Crozier, pp. 292â305, gives an extended account of the Knox affair. The documents in the case are in O. R., Vol. XVII, Part Two, |
12 | Sylvanus Cadwallader, |
13 | New York World |
14 | Richardson, p. 295. McPherson was a man of character, deeply devoted to Grant. If he could casually invite the General to stop working and have a drink, the old legend that the inner circle at headquarters conspired tirelessly to keep Grant away from the bottle must have a flaw in it. Rawlins was a dedicated teetotaler, to be sureâand his unremitting campaign to protect Grant left a lasting stain on Grant's name by making it appear that if left to himself Grant would give way to an appetite he could not control. McPherson appears not to have had this feeling; the obvious implication is that he found Grant to be like most other generalsâa man who could occasionally enjoy a drink without immediately lapsing into drunkenness. |
15 | Grant to Hurlbut, January 3, 1863; O. R., Vol. XVII, Part Two, p. 525. |
16 | Grant's Special Field Orders No. 2, dated February 12, in O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, pp. 46â47; also Grant to McPherson, p. 105; Halleck to Grant, p. 157. |
17 | O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, pp. 186â187. |
18 | George W. Williams, |
19 | History of the 53rd Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry |
20 | Grant's General Orders No. 25, dated April 22, in O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, p. 220. |
21 | O. R., Series Two, Vol. IV, pp. 857, 916; Series Four, Vol. II, p. 345. |
CHAPTER TWENTY
An End to Worry
1 | On April 2 Halleck notified Grant that President Lincoln “seems to be rather impatient” about the Vicksburg campaign, and asked if Grant could not co-operate with Banks in an assault on Port Hudson. (Badeau, Vol. I, p. 181.) |
2 | O. R. Vol. XXIV, Part Three: Grant to Banks, dated March 22, p. 125; Grant to Farragut, March 23, p. 131. See also the report of Col. L. B. Parsons, p. 115. |
3 | There is an engaging account of this advance in Oran Perry's pamphlet, |
4 | O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three: McClernand to Grant, April 4, pp. 170â71; Grant to Porter, March 29, pp. 151â152. |
5 | O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three: Porter to Grant, March 29, p. 152; Grant to Porter, April 2, p. 168. Grant continues to refer to Snyder's Bluff as “Haynes'.” |
6 | J. D. Ringwalt, “Anecdotes of General Grant,” pp. 63â64; Dana, pp. 32â33; Sherman to Grant, April 8, O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, p. 180; Badeau, Vol. I, pp. 183, 616â618. Sherman's profound distrust of McClernand caused him to urge Rawlins that corps commanders should be required to go on record, in writing, before the new campaign began. “There are men,” wrote Sherman, most certainly thinking of McClernand, “who will, in any result falling below the popular standard, claim that their advice was unheeded and that fatal consequences resulted therefrom.” It is interesting to note that Frank Blair had just written to his brother Montgomery that Sherman “is the only man of brains in this army,” adding that Grant usually did as Sherman advised. He went on to say that Grant “is surrounded by a bunch of fools” who tried to undercut Sherman's good ideas. (Blair Family Papers, Library of Congress: letter of Frank Blair to “Dear Judge” dated March 10, 1863.) |
7 | General John B. Sanborn, “The Campaign Against Vicksburg,” in Vol. II, |
8 | A. T. Mahan, |
9 | Wilson, |
10 | Greene, pp. 110â112; O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, pp. 188, 201, 205, 211, 212â213; |
11 | William Conant Church, “ |
12 | General John B. Sanborn, p. 126; |
13 | Wilson, |
14 | S. H. M. Byers, “Some Recollections of Grant,” in |
15 | Sanborn, p. 125; Dana, pp. 43â44. |
16 | O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, p. 231. |
17 | On February 13, Grant notified Hurlbut at Memphis to give some thought to this project, and he specified Grierson as a good man to lead the expedition. (O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three, pp. 50, 95.) For a detailed account of the raid, see D. Alexander Brown, |
18 | O. R., Vol. XXIV, Part Three: Grant to Sherman, p. 240; Sherman to Grant, pp. 242â244; W. L. B. Jenney, “Personal Recollections of Vicksburg,” in |
19 | Apparently no Federal soldier in the war was ever able to transcribe Negro speech accurately. Invariably, the scribe has the Negro saying “dese” and “dar” in one sentence, and “these” and “there” in the next; and no writer felt that he was presenting the slave properly unless he reduced at least part of his speech to a gumbo. The account followed here is from General Isaac H. Elliott, |
20 | Grant's Memoirs, Vol. I, pp. 480â481. |