The Vicksburg Campaign was a series of battles and maneuvers in the Western Theater of the American Civil War directed against Vicksburg, Mississippi, a fortress city that dominated the last Confederate-controlled section of the Mississippi River. The Union Army of the Tennessee under Major General Ulysses S. Grant gained control of the Mississippi River by capturing this stronghold and defeating John C. Pemberton's forces stationed there.
The campaign consisted of many important naval operations, troop maneuvers, failed initiatives, and eleven distinct battles over the period December 26, 1862, to July 4, 1863. Military historians divide the campaign into two formal phases: Operations Against Vicksburg (December 1862 – January 1863) and Grant's Operations Against Vicksburg (March – July 1863).
After Pemberton's army surrendered (one day after the Confederate defeat at Gettysburg), and when Nathaniel P. Banks captured Port Hudson, the entire Mississippi River belonged to the Union. These events are widely considered the turning point of the war. And Grant's Vicksburg Campaign is considered one of the masterpieces of American military history.
Vicksburg was of great strategic importance to the Confederates. In their hands, it blocked Union navigation down the Mississippi and it allowed communication with the states west of the river, upon which the Confederates depended extensively for agricultural supplies. The natural defenses of the city were ideal, earning it the nickname "The Gibraltar of the Confederacy." It was located on a high bluff overlooking a horseshoe-shaped bend in the river, DeSoto Peninsula, making it almost impossible to approach by ship. North and east of Vicksburg was the Yazoo Delta, 200 miles north to south and up to 50 across, a practically impenetrable swamp. About twelve miles up the Yazoo River were powerful Confederate batteries at Haines Bluff. The Louisiana land west of Vicksburg was also difficult, riven with streams and poor country roads, and on the wrong side of the river from the fortress.
The city had been under Union naval attack before. Admiral David Farragut moved up the river after he captured New Orleans and on May 18, 1862, demanded the surrender of Vicksburg. Farragut had insufficient troops to force the issue and he moved back to New Orleans. He returned with a flotilla in June of 1862, but their attempts June 26–28 to bombard the fortress into surrender failed. They shelled Vicksburg throughout July and fought some minor battles with a few Confederate vessels in the area, but their forces were insufficient to attempt a landing and they abandoned attempts to force the surrender of the city. Farragut investigated the possibility of bypassing the fortified cliffs by digging a canal across the neck of the river's bend. Brig. Gen. Thomas Williams, attached to Farragut's command, began digging work on the canal by employing local laborers and some soldiers, but it was an enterprise that would take many months to complete.
By the fall of 1862, Maj. Gen. Henry W. Halleck had graduated from command of the Western Theater to be general-in-chief of all Union armies. On November 23, he indicated to Grant his preference for a major move down the Mississippi to Vicksburg; in Halleck's style, he left considerable initiative to design a campaign, an opportunity that the pugnacious Grant seized. Halleck has received criticism for not moving promptly overland from Memphis to seize Vicksburg during the summer when he was in command on the scene. But he was justified in believing that the Navy could capture the fortress on its own, not knowing that the naval force was insufficiently manned with ground troops to finish the job. What might have achieved success in the summer of 1862 was no longer possible by November because the Confederates had amply reinforced the garrison by that time.
Grant's army marched south down the Mississippi Central Railroad, making a forward base at Holly Springs. He planned a two-pronged assault in the direction of Vicksburg. His principal subordinate, William T. Sherman, was to advance down the river with four divisions (about 32,000 men) and Grant would continue with the remaining forces (about 40,000) down the railroad line to Oxford, where he would wait for developments, hoping to lure the Confederate army out of the city to attack him in the vicinity of Granada, Mississippi.
On the Confederate side, forces in Mississippi were under the command of Lt. Gen. John C. Pemberton, an officer from New England who chose to fight for the South. Pemberton had approximately 12,000 men in Vicksburg and Jackson, Mississippi, and General Earl Van Dorn had approximately 24,000 at Granada.
Meanwhile, political forces were at work. Abraham Lincoln had long recognized the key importance of Vicksburg; he wrote "Vicksburg is the key. The war can never be brought to a close until the key is in our pocket." Lincoln also envisioned a two-pronged offensive, but one up and down the river. General and politician John A. McClernand, a "war Democrat", had convinced Lincoln that he could lead an army down the river and take Vicksburg. Lincoln approved his proposal and wanted Nathaniel P. Banks to advance up river from New Orleans at the same time. Filled with dreams of military and consequent political conquest, the ambitious McClernand began organizing regiments, sending them to Memphis, Tennessee. Back in Washington, D.C., Halleck was likewise nervous about McClernand, giving Grant control of all troops in his own department. McClernand's troops were split into two corps, one under McClernand, the other under Sherman. McClernand complained, but to no avail. Grant appropriated his troops, one of several maneuvers in a private war within the Union army between Grant and McClernand that would be waged throughout the campaign.
During this period, Grant's half of the offensive was failing. His lines of communication were disrupted by raids by Van Dorn and Nathan Bedford Forrest, who destroyed his advance base at Holly Springs, forcing him to live off the country. Grant abandoned his overland advance.
That winter, Grant conducted a series of initiatives to approach and capture Vicksburg, termed "Grant's Bayou Operations". Their general theme was to use or construct alternative waterways so that troops could be positioned within striking distance of Vicksburg, without requiring a direct approach on the Mississippi under the Confederate guns.
All of the Bayou Operations were failures, but Grant was known for his stubborn determination and would not quit. His final option was bold but risky: March the army down the west side of the Mississippi, cross the river south of Vicksburg, and attack from the south and the east. Success would require good luck. Porter would have to sneak past the guns to get sufficient gunboats and transport ships south of the city. Once they had completed the downstream passage, they would not be able to return due to the river current. And maintaining supply lines across the river might be difficult, forcing his army to subsist off the land for a long period.
On March 29, McClernand set his troops to work building bridges and corduroy roads. They filled in the swamps in their way as well, and by April 17 had a 70-mile road from Milliken's Bend to the proposed River crossing at Hard Times, Louisiana, below Vicksburg.
On April 16, a clear night with no moon, Porter sent seven gunboats and three empty troop transports loaded with stores to run the bluff, taking care to minimize noise and lights. But the preparations were ineffective. Confederate sentries sighted the boats and the bluff exploded in massive artillery fire. Fires were set along the banks to improve visibility. The Union gunboats answered back. Porter observed that the Confederates mainly hit the high parts of his boats, reasoned that they could not depress their guns, and had them hug the east shore, right under Confederate cannon, so close he could hear rebel commanders giving orders, shells flying overhead. The fleet survived with surprisingly little damage, and only thirteen men were wounded; none killed. The Henry Clay was disabled and burned to the water's edge. On April 22, six more boats loaded with supplies made the run; one did not make it, though no one was killed, the crew having floated downstream on the boat's remnants.
The final piece of the strategy was to divert Pemberton's attention from the river crossing site that the Union troops would use. Grant chose two operations: a feint by Sherman against Snyder's Bluff, Mississippi, north of Vicksburg (see the Battle of Snyder's Bluff below), and a daring cavalry raid through central Mississippi by Colonel Benjamin Grierson, known as Grierson's Raid. The former was inconclusive, but the latter was a spectacular success. Grierson was able to draw out significant Confederate forces to chase him and Pemberton's defenses were dispersed too far around the state. (Pemberton was also wary of Nathaniel Banks's impending advance up the river from Baton Rouge to threaten Port Hudson.)
John C. Pemberton's Army of Mississippi, approximately 30,000 men, consisted of five divisions, under Maj. Gen. William W. Loring, Maj. Gen. Carter L. Stevenson, Maj. Gen. John H. Forney, Maj. Gen. Martin L. Smith, and Maj. Gen. John S. Bowen.
General Joseph E. Johnston's forces in Raymond and Jackson, Mississippi, about 6,000 men, were elements of the Department of the West, including the brigades of Brig. Gen. John Gray, Col. Peyton H. Colquitt, and Brig. Gen. William H. T. Walker.
This was the second of a one-two punch to the Confederacy. July 3 saw the collapse of the Robert E. Lee's invasion of the North at Gettysburg. July 4 saw the Stars and Stripes rising over Vicksburg. To the Confederates, surrendering on Independence Day was a bitter defeat. Union troops behaved well, mixing with Confederates and giving rations to starving soldiers who days before would have been glad to kill them. Speculators who had been hoarding food for higher prices saw their stores broken open and the contents thrown on the streets for the starving rebels. In his Personal Memoirs, Grant observed, "The men of the two armies fraternized as if they had been fighting for the same cause." But resentments lingered: the city refused to celebrate July 4th for another 81 years.
The most significant result of the campaign was control of the Mississippi River, which the Union obtained completely after Banks captured Port Hudson on July 8, also by siege. The Confederacy was now cut in two; one week later, an unarmed ship arrived in Union-held New Orleans from St. Louis after an uneventful trip down the river. President Lincoln announced, "The Father of Waters again goes unvexed to the sea."
Grant deployed Sherman and 50,000 troops against Johnston's 31,000 in Jackson. Johnston tried to lure Sherman into a frontal assault, but Sherman had seen the results of such at Vicksburg. He demurred, and began surrounding the city. Johnston escaped with his army, which was more than Pemberton had achieved, but all of central Mississippi was now under Sherman's control. He would use a subsequent operation against Meridian, Mississippi, as a dress rehearsal for the scorched earth tactics he would later employ in his March to the Sea through Georgia, and then South Carolina.
One of Grant's final moves of the campaign was to settle a lingering rivalry. In June, General McClernand wrote a self-adulatory note to his troops, claiming much of the credit for the soon-to-be victory. Grant had been waiting six months for him to slip, ever since they clashed early in the campaign, around the Battle of Arkansas Post. He received permission to relieve McClernand in January, but needed a visible provocation. Grant finally sacked McClernand on June 18. He so diligently prepared his trap that McClernand was left without recourse. McClernand's corps was inherited by Maj. Gen. Edward Ord. In May 1864 McClernand was again restored to a command in remote Texas.
Grant was the undisputed victor of the Vicksburg Campaign. He would go on to rescue Union forces besieged at Chattanooga and then to replace Halleck as general in chief of all Union armies, at the newly created rank of lieutenant general. Despite his ultimate success in winning the war, Vicksburg is considered his finest campaign—imaginative, audacious, relentless, and a masterpiece of maneuver warfare.
The blame for losing Vicksburg fell not on John Pemberton, but on the overly cautious Joseph E. Johnston. Jefferson Davis said of the defeat, "Yes, from a want of provisions inside and a General outside who wouldn't fight." Anguished soldiers and civilians starving in the siege held hopes that he would come to their aid, but he never did. Accusations of cowardice that had dogged him since the 1862 Peninsula Campaign continued to follow him in the 1864 Atlanta Campaign against Sherman. However, Johnston was far outnumbered, and while he was one of few Confederate generals whom Grant respected, he was outgeneraled.
Battles of the Operations Against Vicksburg of the American Civil War | Battles of Grant's Operations Against Vicksburg of the American Civil War
Sieben Fehlschläge vor der Einnahme von Vicksburg | Siège de Vicksburg
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