and the second, composed of Steele’s and Stuart’s
divisions, to be commanded by me. Up to that
time the army had been styled the right wing of (General
Grant’s) Thirteenth Army Corps, and numbered
about thirty thousand men. The aggregate loss
during the time of any command, mostly on the 29th
of December, was one hundred and seventy-five killed,
nine hundred and thirty wounded, and seven hundred
and forty-three prisoners. According to Badeau,
the rebels lost sixty-three killed, one hundred and
thirty-four wounded, and ten prisoners. It afterward
transpired that Van Dorn had captured Holly Springs
on the 20th of December, and that General Grant fell
back very soon after. General Pemberton, who
had telegraphic and railroad communication with Vicksburg,
was therefore at perfect liberty to reenforce the
place with a garrison equal, if not superior, to my
command. The rebels held high, commanding ground,
and could see every movement of our men and boats,
so that the only possible hope of success consisted
in celerity and surprise, and in General Grant’s
holding all of Pemberton’s army hard pressed
meantime. General Grant was perfectly aware
of this, and had sent me word of the change, but it
did not reach me in time; indeed, I was not aware of
it until after my assault of December 29th, and until
the news was brought me by General McClernand as related.
General McClernand was appointed to this command
by President Lincoln in person, who had no knowledge
of what was then going on down the river. Still,
my relief, on the heels of a failure, raised the usual
cry, at the North, of “repulse, failure, and
bungling.” There was no bungling on my
part, for I never worked harder or with more intensity
of purpose in my life; and General Grant, long after,
in his report of the operations of the siege of Vicksburg,
gave us all full credit for the skill of the movement,
and described the almost impregnable nature of the
ground; and, although in all official reports I assumed
the whole responsibility, I have ever felt that had
General Morgan promptly and skillfully sustained the
lead of Frank Blair’s brigade on that day, we
should have broken the rebel line, and effected a
lodgment on the hills behind Vicksburg. General
Frank Blair was outspoken and indignant against Generals
Morgan and De Courcey at the time, and always abused
me for assuming the whole blame. But, had we
succeeded, we might have found ourselves in a worse
trap, when General Pemberton was at full liberty to
turn his whole force against us. While I was
engaged at Chickasaw Bayou, Admiral Porter was equally
busy in the Yazoo River, threatening the enemy’s
batteries at Haines’s and Snyder’s Bluffs
above. In a sharp engagement he lost one of
his best officers, in the person of Captain Gwin,
United States Navy, who, though on board an ironclad,
insisted on keeping his post on deck, where he was
struck in the breast by a round shot, which carried
away the muscle, and contused the lung within, from
which he died a few days after. We of the army
deplored his loss quite as much as his fellows of the
navy, for he had been intimately associated with us
in our previous operations on the Tennessee River,
at Shiloh and above, and we had come to regard him
as one of us.