Shiloh and the Western Campaign of 1862

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Shiloh and the Western Campaign of 1862 Page 34

by Edward Cunningham


  The excitement died down but on May 21, Colonel Thomas T. Sedgewick led four regiments in a reconnaissance of the Corinth position on the Widow Serratt’s house, where they were assaulted by a small force of Confederate infantry. A lively fight followed, lasting until darkness fell, when the troops retired on Buell’s command. Confederate losses were unknown, but the Federals lost at least one killed and twenty-six wounded.28

  The following morning the Southerners countered with a reconnaissance in force, consisting of a battalion-sized cavalry party under N. B. Forrest. The Southerners split into two groups, one party advancing directly on an enemy picket post while the other, led by Colonel Forrest in person, made a flanking movement. The Federals were taken by surprise and routed with several casualties, including a Reverend Dr. Ware and his sorrel stud, captured.29 As Forrest succinctly put it, “I Suceded in gaining thir rear…. they wair not looking for me I taken them by surprise they run like Suns of Biches.”30

  The tempo of fighting gradually picked up with increased skirmishing and offensive patrolling on both sides. On May 27, Sherman launched a new attack on a log cabin, serving as a Confederate command post and strong point, in front of his position. Attacking with his own outfit, supported by James Veatch’s and John Logan’s, he moved up straight at and around on both flanks of the strong point. Federal artillery moved up within a few hundred yards of the Confederate position before unleashing a savage fire that literally demolished the building. Sherman’s infantry then stormed the position. Union losses were light, and the Federals soon advanced on other Southern works in the rear of the shattered house. Southern artillery peppered the advancing Northerners, inflicting considerable casualties on Veatch’s brigade. Confederate skirmishers also harried the advance, but the Bluecoats kept up the pressure until they were within three-fourths of a mile of the main Southern works outside Corinth.31

  On May 28, almost the entire Federal army began a series of probing attacks on the Corinth works. The Northerners were within approximately four miles of Corinth all along the line of their siege works, and in most places they were less than a mile and a half from the main Confederate fortifications. If they could gain a few more yards of ground, they could bring up the heavy guns for the final bombardment, to be followed by an all-out assault that would capture the rail center, destroy Beauregard’s army, and probably end the war in the Mississippi Valley. It was a nice dream, but it was not to be, for the Confederates were already quietly pulling out southward.

  On May 19, Beauregard first began the delicate task of preparing Richmond for the idea of abandoning Corinth. In a clever opening gambit, he informed General Samuel Cooper that since he had received no orders as to what to do at Corinth, he was holding the town and risking a major defeat instead of evacuating and letting the enemy have the town. Having paved the way, the Creole then explained that if by some chance he had to leave the town, that his best line of retreat was along the Mobile and Ohio Railroad. He would defend Corinth to the last, unless the government wished him to do otherwise, or if the enemy’s numbers proved overwhelming. Robert E. Lee, acting as President Jefferson Davis’ advisor, answered Beauregard, approving of the suggested line of retreat. Even before Lee’s missive arrived, the Rebels were already milling out of the town.32

  On May 25, the Confederate high command met in council. Beauregard proposed an immediate retreat before the enemy isolated the town. General Hardee was especially in favor of an immediate evacuation, and he drew up a lengthy memorandum advocating it.33 Once the evacuation was agreed, it only remained to execute it. Secrecy was vital, and in order to help deceive the enemy, the corps and divisional commanders were to spread the rumor that an attack was being planned. Detailed instructions were issued for everyone, including specific orders on the routes to be used to reach Baldwin, Mississippi. On May 28, Beauregard telegraphed Richmond that he was retreating to Baldwin, where he hoped to be able to turn and smash any pursuers.34

  The Creole’s biggest worry was that the Federals would learn of the proposed retreat and attack while his army was half in and half out of the town and fortification. Partly to keep the Federals off balance and partly to keep Halleck’s attention away from the town itself, the Confederates began a series of aggressive attacks on the advancing Federal army on May 28 and 29. On one occasion, Colonel Wesley Winans led the Nineteenth Louisiana in a vigorous charge on a party of attacking Yanks. The Eleventh and Thirteenth Louisiana joined in the fight, finally driving Halleck’s soldiers back.35

  The Southern soldiers not engaged were ordered to have their baggage packed and rations cooked and to be ready to move out at a moment’s notice. The sick and wounded were shipped first, and about midday on May 28, the line troops began to move out. On the night of May 29, the last of the Southerners prepared to leave. Parties of men were detailed to keep the campfires burning, while drummers were ordered to stay behind and beat reveille at the usual hour. There were dummy guns posted all along the Confederate works, while an empty train of cars ran back and forth through the town. Occasionally the engineer would let go a loud whistle from his engine, while Rebel demolition parties cheered each time the train stopped to give the Federals the impression that reinforcements were arriving. As the last parties of Southerners left the town, they burned all the nearby bridges and took down the road signs.36

  About 5:00 a.m. on the morning of May 30, the Union army heard a series of explosions from Corinth, as the demolition parties blew up some supplies that could not be carried off. Generals Pope and Sherman decided the Rebels were evacuating and ordered patrols to probe the town’s defenses. The patrols found no resistance, and indeed no sign of life except a few Southern soldiers who were too ill to be moved and some rather battered looking civilians.

  Gradually the news spread around to the army that the Confederates had gone. One Union regiment informally received the news from an elderly Negro, who wandered into their picket line. He told them, “Dey’s all gone, boss, shuah! … You-uns can jess walk right into de town ef yer wants to!”37

  Halleck quickly ordered a pursuit, and Pope and Buell followed Beauregard for about thirty miles before breaking off the chase. Except for some light skirmishing, the Corinth campaign was over. The railroad center was under the Union flag, but little else was achieved, a singularly barren victory. Most of the Union soldiers were not overwhelmed with their prize. Ambrose Bierce described Corinth as “the capitol of a swamp.”38 Neither Corinth nor its female inhabitants caught the fancy of a young disgruntled Yankee. He described the little town as follows:

  I don’t now remember that any of the Sixth boys got particularly struck on the place. Nor did I ever hear of any of them deserting the regiment to remain there on account of being captivated by any of Corinth’s tobacco-chewing, snuff-rubbing, flax-haired, sharp-nosed, hatchet-faced, yellow-eyed, sallow-skinned, cotton-dressed, flat-breasted, big-footed, bare-headed, long-waisted, hump-shouldered, stoop-necked, bare-footed, straddle-toed, sharp-shinned, thin-lipped, pale-faced, lantern-jawed, hollow-eyed, silly-looking female damsels.39

  The Northerners had taken Corinth, but the escape of Beauregard’s army meant the war was a long way from being over. Halleck thought he had gained a great victory, but Grant and many others believed he had botched the whole affair by permitting the Confederate army to escape.

  From Fishing Creek to Corinth, Southerners had suffered a succession of staggering disasters that would be difficult and perhaps impossible to make good. Despite this, the Confederacy in the West was still very much alive and dangerous. The mob that fought at Shiloh was now a dangerous, experienced fighting army capable of quickly shifting over to the offensive once Halleck scattered his grand host across the upper South. After Fort Donelson, Grant and millions of others believed that one more battle would end the Civil War; instead the conflict was only just beginning.

  Perryville, Stone’s River, Chickamauga, and a vast array of bloody battles waited in the future for Grant, Sherman, Buell, Hardee, Polk, a
nd all the others to fight.

  Appendix 1

  Organization of the Confederate Army

  Army of the Mississippi

  Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston (killed)

  Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard

  First Army Corps

  Maj. Gen. Leonidas Polk

  First Division

  Brig. Gen. Charles Clark (wounded)

  Brig. Gen. Alexander P. Stewart

  First Brigade

  Col. Robert M. Russell, 12th Tennessee

  11th Louisiana:

  Col. Samuel F. Marks (wounded)

  Lieut. Col. Robert H. Barrow

  12th Tennessee:

  Lieut. Col. Tyree H. Bell

  Maj. Robert P. Caldwell

  13th Tennessee:

  Col. Alfred J. Vaughan, Jr.

  22d Tennessee:

  Col. Thomas J. Freeman (wounded)

  Bankhead’s Tennessee Battery:

  Capt. Smith P. Bankhead

  Second Brigade

  Brig. Gen. Alexander P. Stewart

  13th Arkansas:

  Lieut. Col. A. D. Grayson (killed)

  Maj. James A. McNeely (wounded)

  Col. James C. Tappan

  4th Tennessee:

  Col. Rufus P. Neely

  Lieut. Col. Otho F. Strahl

  5th Tennessee:

  Lieut. Col. Calvin D. Venable

  33d Tennessee:

  Col. Alexander W. Campbell (wounded)

  Stanford’s Mississippi Battery:

  Capt. Thomas J. Stanford

  Second Division

  Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Cheatham (wounded)

  First Brigade

  Brig. Gen. Bushrod R. Johnson (wounded)

  Col. Preston Smith, 154th Tennessee (wounded)

  Blythe’s Mississippi:

  Col. A. K. Blythe (killed)

  Lieut. Col. David L. Herron (killed)

  Maj. James Moore

  2d Tennessee:

  Col. J. Knox Walker

  15th Tennessee:

  Lieut. Col. Robert C. Tyler (wounded)

  Maj. John F. Hearn

  154th Tennessee (senior):

  Col. Preston Smith

  Lieut. Col. Marcus J. Wright (wounded)

  Polk’s Tennessee Battery:

  Capt. Marshall T. Polk (wounded)

  Second Brigade

  Col. William H. Stephens, 6th Tennessee

  Col. George Maney, 1st Tennessee

  7th Kentucky:

  Col. Charles Wickliffe (mortally wounded)

  Lieut. Col. William D. Lannom

  1st Tennessee (Battalion):

  Col. George Maney

  Maj. Hume R. Field

  6th Tennessee:

  Lieut. Col. Timothy P. Jones

  9th Tennessee:

  Col. Henry L. Douglass

  Smith’s Mississippi Battery:

  Capt. Melancthon Smith

  Cavalry

  1st Mississippi:

  Col. Andrew J. Lindsay

  Mississippi and Alabama Battalion:

  Lieut. Col. Richard H. Brewer

  Unattached

  47th Tennessee:

  Col. Munson R. Hill

  (arrived on field April 7)

  Second Army Corps

  Maj. Gen. Braxton Bragg

  Escort

  Company Alabama Cavalry, Capt. Robert W. Smith

  First Division

  Brig. Gen. Daniel Ruggles

  First Brigade

  Col. Randall L. Gibson, 13th Louisiana

  1st Arkansas:

  Col. James F. Fagan

  4th Louisiana:

  Col. Henry W. Allen (wounded)

  Lieut. Col. Samuel E. Hunter

  13th Louisiana:

  Maj. Anatole P. Avegno (mortally wounded)

  Capt. Stephen O’Leary (wounded)

  Capt. Edgar M. Dubroca

  19th Louisiana:

  Col. Benjamin L. Hodge

  Lieut. Col. James M. Hollingsworth

  Vaiden or Bain’s Mississippi Battery:

  Capt. S. C. Bain

  Second Brigade

  Brig. Gen. Patton Anderson

  1st Florida Battalion:

  Maj. Thaddeus A. McDonell (wounded)

  Capt. W. G. Poole

  Capt. W. Capers Bird

  17th Louisiana:

  Lieut. Col. Charles Jones (wounded)

  20th Louisiana:

  Col. August Reichard

  Confederate Guards Response Battalion:

  Maj. Franklin H. Clack

  9th Texas:

  Col. Wright A. Stanley

  Washington (Louisiana) Artillery, Fifth Company:

  Capt. W. Irving Hodgson

  Third Brigade

  Col. Preston Pond, Jr., 16th Louisiana

  16th Louisiana:

  Maj. Daniel Gober

  18th Louisiana:

  Col. Alfred Mouton (wounded)

  Lieut. Col. Alfred Roman

  Crescent (Louisiana) Regiment:

  Col. Marshall J. Smith

  Orleans Guard (Louisiana) Battalion:

  Maj. Leon Querouze (wounded)

  38th Tennessee:

  Col. Robert F. Looney

  Ketchum’s Alabama Battery:

  Capt. William H. Ketchum

  Cavalry

  Alabama Battalion

  (5 companies-Jenkins, Cox, Robins, Tomlinson, and Smith)

  Capt. Thomas F. Jenkins

  Second Division

  Brig. Gen. Jones M. Withers

  First Brigade

  Brig. Gen. Adley H. Gladden (mortally wounded)

  Col. Daniel W. Adams (wounded), 22d Alabama

  Col. Zach C. Deas

  21st Alabama:

  Lieut. Col. Stewart W. Cayce

  Maj. Frederick Stewart

  22d Alabama:

  Col. Zach C. Deas

  Lieut. Col. John C. Marrast

  25th Alabama:

  Col. John Q. Loomis (wounded)

  Maj. George D. Johnston

  26th Alabama:

  Lieut. Col. John G. Coltart (wounded)

  Lieut. Col. William D. Chadick

  1st Louisiana:

  Col. Daniel W. Adams

  Maj. Fred H. Farrar, Jr.

  Robertson’s Alabama Battery:

  Capt. Felix H. Robertson

  Second Brigade

  Brig. Gen. James R. Chalmers

  5th Mississippi:

  Col. Albert E. Fant

  7th Mississippi:

  Lieut. Col. Hamilton Mayson

  9th Mississippi:

  Lieut. Col. William A. Rankin (mortally wounded)

  10th Mississippi:

  Col. Robert A. Smith

  52d Tennessee:

  Col. Benjamin J. Lea

  Gage’s Alabama Battery:

  Capt. Charles P. Gage

  Third Brigade

  Brig. Gen. John K. Jackson

  17th Alabama:

  Lieut. Col. Robert C. Fariss

  18th Alabama:

  Col. Eli S. Shorter

  19th Alabama:

  Col. Joseph Wheeler

  2d Texas:

  Col. John C. Moore

  Lieut. Col. William P. Rogers

  Maj. Hal G. Runnels

  Girardey’s Georgia Battery:

  Capt. Isadore P. Girardey

  Cavalry

  Clanton’s Alabama Regiment:

  Col. James H. Clanton (wounded)

  Third Army Corps

  Maj. Gen. William J. Hardee (wounded)

  First Brigade

  Brig. Gen. Thomas C. Hindman (disabled),

  commanding his own and Third Brigade

  Col. R. G. Shaver, 7th Arkansas (disabled)

  2d Arkansas:

  Col. Daniel C. Govan

  Maj. Reuben F. Harvey

  6th Arkansas:

  Col. Alexander T. Hawthorn

  7th Arkansas:

  Lieut. Col. John M. Dean (killed)

  Maj. James T.
Martin

  3d Confederate:

  Col. John S. Marmaduke

  Warren Light Artillery or Swett’s Mississippi Battery:

  Capt. Charles Swett

  Pillow’s Flying Artillery or Miller’s Tennessee Battery:

  Capt. William Miller

  Second Brigade

  Brig. Gen. Patrick R. Cleburne

  15th Arkansas:

  Lieut. Col. Archibald K. Patton (killed)

  6th Mississippi:

  Col. John J. Thornton (wounded)

  Lieut. Col. W. A. Harper

  2d Tennessee:

  Col. William B. Bate (wounded)

  Lieut. Col. David L. Goodall

  5th (35th) Tennessee:

  Col. Benjamin J. Hill

  23d Tennessee:

  Lieut. Col. James F. Neill (wounded)

  Maj. Robert Cantrell

  24th Tennessee:

  Lieut. Col. Thomas H. Peebles

  Shoup’s Battalion

  Trigg’s (Austin) Arkansas Battery:

  Capt. John T. Trigg

  Calvert’s (Helena) Arkansas Battery:

  Capt. J. H. Calvert

  Hubbard’s Arkansas Battery:

  Capt. George T. Hubbard

  Third Brigade

  Brig. Gen. Sterling A.M. Wood (disabled)

  Col. William K. Patterson, 8th Arkansas, temporarily

  16th Alabama:

  Lieut. Col. John W. Harris

  8th Arkansas:

  Col. William K. Patterson

  9th (14th ) Arkansas (battalion):

  Maj. John H. Kelly

  3d Mississippi Battalion:

  Maj. Aaron B. Hardcastle

  27th Tennessee :

  Col. Christopher H. Williams (killed)

  Maj. Samuel T. Love (killed)

  44th Tennessee:

  Col. Coleman A. McDaniel

  55th Tennessee:

  Col. James L. McKoin

  Harper’s (Jefferson Mississippi) Battery:

  Capt. William L. Harper (wounded)

  Lieut. Putnam Darden

  Georgia Dragoons:

  Capt. Isaac W. Avery

  Reserve Corps

  Brig. Gen. John C. Breckinridge

  First Brigade

  Col. Robert P. Trabue, 4th Kentucky

  (Clifton’s) 4th Alabama Battalion:

  Maj. James M. Clifton

  31st Alabama:

  Lieut. Col. Montgomery Gilbreath

  3d Kentucky:

  Lieut. Col. Benjamin Anderson (wounded)

  4th Kentucky:

  Lieut. Col. Andrew R. Hynes (wounded)

 

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