of paper, and was in General McClernand’s handwriting,
to the effect that “his troops had captured the
rebel parapet in his front,” that, “the
flag of the Union waved over the stronghold of Vicksburg,”
and asking him (General Grant) to give renewed orders
to McPherson and Sherman to press their attacks on
their respective fronts, lest the enemy should concentrate
on him (McClernand). General Grant said, “I
don’t believe a word of it;” but I reasoned
with him, that this note was official, and must be
credited, and I offered to renew the assault at once
with new troops. He said he would instantly
ride down the line to McClernand’s front, and
if I did not receive orders to the contrary, by 3
o’clock p.m., I might try it again. Mower’s
fresh brigade was brought up under cover, and some
changes were made in Giles Smith’s brigade;
and, punctually at 3 p.m., hearing heavy firing down
along the line to my left, I ordered the second assault.
It was a repetition of the first, equally unsuccessful
and bloody. It also transpired that the same
thing had occurred with General McPherson, who lost
in this second assault some most valuable officers
and men, without adequate result; and that General
McClernand, instead of having taken any single point
of the rebel main parapet, had only taken one or two
small outlying lunettes open to the rear, where his
men were at the mercy of the rebels behind their main
parapet, and most of them were actually thus captured.
This affair caused great feeling with us, and severe
criticisms on General McClernand, which led finally
to his removal from the command of the Thirteenth
Corps, to which General Ord succeeded. The immediate
cause, however, of General McClernand’s removal
was the publication of a sort of congratulatory order
addressed to his troops, first published in St. Louis,
in which he claimed that he had actually succeeded
in making a lodgment in Vicksburg, but had lost it,
owing to the fact that McPherson and Sherman did not
fulfill their parts of the general plan of attack.
This was simply untrue. The two several assaults
made May 22d, on the lines of Vicksburg, had failed,
by reason of the great strength of the position and
the determined fighting of its garrison. I have
since seen the position at Sevastopol, and without
hesitation I declare that at Vicksburg to have been
the more difficult of the two.
Thereafter our proceedings were all in the nature
of a siege. General Grant drew more troops from
Memphis, to prolong our general line to the left,
so as completely to invest the place on its land-side,
while the navy held the river both above and below.
General Mower’s brigade of Tuttle’s division
was also sent across the river to the peninsula, so
that by May 31st Vicksburg was completely beleaguered.
Good roads were constructed from our camps to the
several landing-places on the Yazoo River, to which
points our boats brought us ample supplies; so that
we were in a splendid condition for a siege, while
our enemy was shut up in a close fort, with a large
civil population of men, women, and children to feed,
in addition to his combatant force. If we could
prevent sallies, or relief from the outside, the fate
of the garrison of Vicksburg was merely a question
of time.