The Memoirs of General Ulysses S. Grant, Part 6. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 270 pages of information about The Memoirs of General Ulysses S. Grant, Part 6..

The Memoirs of General Ulysses S. Grant, Part 6. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 270 pages of information about The Memoirs of General Ulysses S. Grant, Part 6..

Merritt’s cavalry had struck the enemy at Deep Creek, and driven them north to the Appomattox, where, I presume, most of them were forced to cross.

On the morning of the 4th I learned that Lee had ordered rations up from Danville for his famishing army, and that they were to meet him at Farmville.  This showed that Lee had already abandoned the idea of following the railroad down to Danville, but had determined to go farther west, by the way of Farmville.  I notified Sheridan of this and directed him to get possession of the road before the supplies could reach Lee.  He responded that he had already sent Crook’s division to get upon the road between Burkesville and Jetersville, then to face north and march along the road upon the latter place; and he thought Crook must be there now.  The bulk of the army moved directly for Jetersville by two roads.

After I had received the dispatch from Sheridan saying that Crook was on the Danville Road, I immediately ordered Meade to make a forced march with the Army of the Potomac, and to send Parke’s corps across from the road they were on to the South Side Railroad, to fall in the rear of the Army of the James and to protect the railroad which that army was repairing as it went along.

Our troops took possession of Jetersville and in the telegraph office, they found a dispatch from Lee, ordering two hundred thousand rations from Danville.  The dispatch had not been sent, but Sheridan sent a special messenger with it to Burkesville and had it forwarded from there.  In the meantime, however, dispatches from other sources had reached Danville, and they knew there that our army was on the line of the road; so that they sent no further supplies from that quarter.

At this time Merritt and Mackenzie, with the cavalry, were off between the road which the Army of the Potomac was marching on and the Appomattox River, and were attacking the enemy in flank.  They picked up a great many prisoners and forced the abandonment of some property.

Lee intrenched himself at Amelia Court House, and also his advance north of Jetersville, and sent his troops out to collect forage.  The country was very poor and afforded but very little.  His foragers scattered a great deal; many of them were picked up by our men, and many others never returned to the Army of Northern Virginia.

Griffin’s corps was intrenched across the railroad south of Jetersville, and Sheridan notified me of the situation.  I again ordered Meade up with all dispatch, Sheridan having but the one corps of infantry with a little cavalry confronting Lee’s entire army.  Meade, always prompt in obeying orders, now pushed forward with great energy, although he was himself sick and hardly able to be out of bed.  Humphreys moved at two, and Wright at three o’clock in the morning, without rations, as I have said, the wagons being far in the rear.

I stayed that night at Wilson’s Station on the South Side Railroad.  On the morning of the 5th I sent word to Sheridan of the progress Meade was making, and suggested that he might now attack Lee.  We had now no other objective than the Confederate armies, and I was anxious to close the thing up at once.

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The Memoirs of General Ulysses S. Grant, Part 6. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.