he signaled. She steamed up, and to its commander
the cavalry turned over the battery at Haines’s
Bluff, and rejoined me in front of Vicksburg.
Allowing a couple of hours for rest and to close
up the column, I resumed the march straight on Vicksburg.
About two miles before reaching the forts, the road
forked; the left was the main Jackson road, and the
right was the “graveyard” road, which entered
Vicksburg near a large cemetery. General Grant
in person directed me to take the right-hand road,
but, as McPherson had not yet got up from the direction
of the railroad-bridge at Big Black, I sent the Eighth
Missouri on the main Jackson road, to push the rebel
skirmishers into town, and to remain until relieved
by McPherson’s advance, which happened late
that evening, May 18th. The battalion of the
Thirteenth United States Regulars, commanded by Captain
Washington, was at the head of the column on the right-hand
road, and pushed the rebels close behind their parapets;
one of my staff, Captain Pitzman, receiving a dangerous
wound in the hip, which apparently disabled him for
life. By night Blair’s whole division had
closed up against the defenses of Vicksburg, which
were found to be strong and well manned; and, on General
Steele’s head of column arriving, I turned it
still more to the right, with orders to work its way
down the bluff, so as to make connection with our
fleet in the Mississippi River. There was a
good deal of desultory fighting that evening, and
a man was killed by the aide of General Grant and
myself, as we sat by the road-side looking at Steele’s
division passing to the right. General Steele’s
men reached the road which led from Vicksburg up to
Haines’s Bluff, which road lay at the foot of
the hills, and intercepted some prisoners and wagons
which were coming down from Haines’s Bluff.
All that night McPherson’s troops were arriving
by the main Jackson road, and McClernand’a by
another near the railroad, deploying forward as fast
as they struck the rebel works. My corps (the
Fifteenth) had the right of the line of investment;
McPherson’s (the Seventeenth) the centre; and
McClernand’s (the Thirteenth) the left, reaching
from the river above to the railroad below. Our
lines connected, and invested about three-quarters
of the land-front of the fortifications of Vicksburg.
On the supposition that the garrison of Vicksburg
was demoralized by the defeats at Champion Hills and
at the railroad crossing of the Big Black, General
Grant ordered an assault at our respective fronts on
the 19th. My troops reached the top of the parapet,
but could not cross over. The rebel parapets
were strongly manned, and the enemy fought hard and
well. My loss was pretty heavy, falling chiefly
on the Thirteenth Regulars, whose commanding officer,
Captain Washington, was killed, and several other
regiments were pretty badly cut up. We, however,
held the ground up to the ditch till night, and then
drew back only a short distance, and began to counter-trench.
On the graveyard road, our parapet was within less
than fifty yards of the rebel ditch.