|
Pgs 326-347 Two-thirds of the loss sustained during the siege of Port Hudson by the left wing occurred on this day. The casualties were almost entirely confined to the Tenth Arkansas, Colonel Witt--eighty (80) killed, wounded, and missing; Fifteenth Arkansas, Colonel Ben. Johnson--seventy (70); First Alabama, Lieutenant Colonel Locke--seventy-five (75). Total, two hundred and twenty-five (225). The total number of men in these regiments on this day make a loss of one man out of every four. The loss in the negro regiments above exceeded our whole loss (Steedman). Two small, breech-loading (Whitfield) guns, under charge of detachment of Wingfield's battalion. At various times since the beginning of the siege other regiments had been stationed on this line but for a day or two at a time. "A battalion of Miles's Legion, under command of Major Coleman, relieved the First Alabama for a few days, and rendered good service by adding very greatly to the works. They worked almost incessantly while they occupied this line." (Steedman). OUR LINE PENETRATED. On the 10th of June a furious bombardment all day and night indicated to us an approaching attack, and at three o'clock on the morning of the 11th, a show of an assault was made near the centre of our line of fortifications, while, at the same time, the real attack was made on our left in the woods. During the fighting two regiments of the enemy, favored by the extreme darkness, crept up through a gorge among the abattis, penetrating within our lines of defence. Had they known the ground and been strongly reinforced, this movement might have proved disastrous to us. As it was, they captured a courier going to Colonel Steedman from one of his regimental commanders, calling for reinforcements. On the night of June 11th, the enemy threw up a battery, pierced for eleven guns, in the centre of Slaughter's field, and within four hundred yards of our works, connected by a line of breastworks with the woods, both on the right and left. They succeeded in placing their pieces in position during the next night. Along our whole line, at eleven o'clock A.M., the mortar boats having been moved up nearer to us, they joined the land batteries in a terrific bombardment of two hours' duration, during which a line of battle was formed in Slaughter's field and moved forward, as if to charge, but fell back to the woods as soon as we opened upon it with artillery. At one o'clock P.M., General Banks sent in a demand for the surrender of the post and its garrison, as follows: HEADQUARTERS UNITED STATES FORCES, Before Port Hudson, June 13th, 1863. SIR,--Respect for the usages of war, and a desire to avoid unnecessary sacrifice of life, impose on me the necessity of formally demanding the surrender of the garrison 'of Port Hudson. I am not unconscious, in making this demand, that the garrison is capable of continuing a vigorous and gallant defence. The events that have transpired during the pending investment exhibit in the commander and the garrison a spirit of constancy and courage that, in a different cause, would be universally regarded as heroism, but I know the extremities to which they are reduced. I have many prisoners of war and deserters. I have captured the couriers of the garrison, and have in my possession the secret dispatches of its commander. I have at my command a train of artillery seldom equalled in extent and efficiency, which no ordinary fortress can successfully resist, and an infantry force of greatly superior numbers and most determined purpose, that cannot fail to place Port Hudson in my possession at my will. To push the contest to extremities, however, may place the protection of life beyond the control of the commanders of the respective forces. I desire to avoid unnecessary slaughter, and I, therefore, demand the immediate surrender of the garrison, subject to such conditions only as are imposed by the usages of civilized warfare. I have the honor to be, sir, very respectfully, Your obedient servant, [Signed] N.P. BANKS, Major-General Commanding. Major-General FRANK GARDNER, Confederate States Army, commanding at Port Hudson. [Reply.] HEADQUARTERS PORT HUDSON, June 13, 1863. SIR,--Your note of this date has just been handed to me, and in reply have to state that my duty requires me to defend this position, and, therefore, I decline to surrender. I have the honor to be, sir, Very respectfully, your obedient servant, [Signed] FRANK GARDNER, Major-General commanding Confederate States Forces. Major-General N. P. BANKS, commanding United States Forces, near Port Hudson. From eleven o'clock that night until half-past two on the morning of the 14th, the mortar boats rained a perfect torrent of shells upon us, and as soon as they ceased fire the !and batteries took up the work and poured forth their volleys of destructive missiles, rending the very air with their deafening roar. Just before daylight they were observed to be massing their forces in front of the left of our centre, and shortly afterwards a vigorous assault was made, under a heavy fire from their artillery, upon that portion of our lines. The attack was simultaneous upon the First Mississippi and Forty-ninth Alabama regiments, and the isolated position held by the Fifteenth Arkansas. Against the latter but one charge was made, and in it the enemy were completely routed and could not be rallied Four desperate efforts were made against the former, but with no better success. The ground immediately in front being very much broken, afforded facilities for the enemy to form their troops in line of battle protected from our fire, which they accordingly did. Their advanced line was composed of three picked regiments--the Fourth Wisconsin, Eighth New Hampshire and a New York regiment, preceded by two hundred and fifty select men, deployed as skirmishers, and carrying "hand grenades" to throw over our breastworks. These all fought gallantly, but the main body in the rear evidently could not be induced to come up to their support. The enemy at first pressed heavily upon the right, where the Forty-ninth Alabama was stationed, and it became necessary to close our men down in that direction, leaving a portion of the lines almost entirely unprotected, which movement came near proving highly disastrous to us--the smoke was so thick that nothing could be seen more than twenty steps in advance, and before our troops were aware of it the enemy were pouring into the ditches and scaling our breastworks on the left. A rapid counter-movement, however, frustrated their designs, and they were driven back with considerable slaughter. Again and again they rallied, but were each time repulsed, and forced to seek shelter in the ravines behind them, and there reform their shattered ranks. In several instances their skirmishers succeeded in gaining our ditches and hurling their grenades over the parapets, many of which failed to explode, and were thrown back at them by our boys. The engagement lasted from 4 o'clock until 8 o'clock, when the enemy being driven back for the last time, most of them sought shelter in the woods behind them, leaving a large number of dead and wounded on the field. The ground in front of our works was blue with their uniforms, and the weeds and bushes still further forward were strewn with them. At one point in our ditches fourteen dead bodies were counted in a single group. Two attempts were made at different points in that quarter to storm our works, both of which completely failed. Across the road leading to Troth's Landing, and in front of our extreme right, the enemy formed in line of battle in the open field extending from the woods on our extreme right to the "gin house" on the left and came charging on with four regimental colors streaming in the wind. When their line reached the deep and tangled ravine, some three hundred yards in our front, they obliqued to their left so as to rush down the road in column to the creek below. No sooner had they reached this point than a heavy fire of artillery was opened upon them from our advanced work and the batteries to the left, which scattered them in every direction. Simultaneous with this attack another line of battle was formed in front of the left of the right wing, stretching across the lower part of Gibbons's field. Here they made a feeble attempt to charge our works, but did not succeed in approaching within three hundred yards before they, too, were driven back by the fire of our artillery. After this, our ammunition being scarce, the men were not allowed to fire at their inclination, but a few of the best shots in each command were selected to fire at intervals, when good opportunity offered, to the incessant fire we were receiving. Under the direction of the Chief of Artillery, Colonel Marshall J. Smith, the Columbiads were so arranged as to shell the enemy on the land line over the heads of our own troops, and for several nights we dropped our eight and ten-inch shells among them, until reliable fuses became exhausted. Two weeks of this kind of work passed away without rest to our men, either by night or by day, on account of the nightly shelling of the land and water forces; and the continued exposure to the sun, rain, and night dews brought on much sickness, materially reducing our effective strength. Our stock of medicines proved to be even shorter than our stock of provisions, and with a large and constantly increasing list of chills and fever eases the quinine was exhausted. Ipecac was resorted to in its place, but that also came to an end, and finally there was nothing to be had to check fever except a decoction of indigenous barks, which did not effect any wonderful cures so far as heard from. Several batteries were built by the enemy right in the face of our works, enfilading portions of our line. An 8-inch gun, which had such a position, fired shells with a reduced charge of powder, so as to roll them slowly, as a ball in a bowling alley, for some distance right in the rear of our parapet. About the 5th of June, the enemy planted a battery of rifled guns on a commanding position opposite to the slaughter-pen, and kept up a most annoying fire during the day, and frequently during the night. It was only about four hundred yards from our battery at Bennett's House. The enemy's fire was so destructive to our guns, the cannoneers so much exposed to sharpshooters, and our ammunition so scarce, that our guns were rarely fired except in cases of emergency or necessity. Pits were dug in rear of the platforms, in which the guns were placed from under fire until required for an emergency. About the 10th of June the enemy planted four mortars in position near their battery opposite Bennett's House. These mortars gave us great annoyance; they were fired day and night, to the very great disturbance of our troops; yet few were killed by these shells. The enemy rapidly completed a line of rifle pits immediately confronting our lines; being in the edge of the woods, gave them great advantage. Their rifle-pits confronted ours at every point, at distances varying from one hundred to four hundred yards. On the extreme left the nature of the country did not admit of an advance except by one route; this was guarded by the advanced ridge spoken of in Colonel Shelby's report. The enemy erected a series of rifle-pits, with the view of capturing this hill; but, owing to the extreme vigilance and energy displayed by the troops from Colonel Shelby's regiment, who defended it, no progress was ever made. On the night of the 12th, the troops were changed, so as to occupy permanent positions for the remainder of the siege. The following was the disposition of my command under this arrangement, from right to left: Fifteenth Arkansas, Colonel Ben. Johnson; First Alabama, Lieutenant-Colonel Locke; Eighteenth Arkansas, Lieutenant-Colonel Parish; Tenth Arkansas, Lieutenant-Colonel Vaughan; Wingfield's (or the Company of Ninth Louisiana battalion cavalry, commanded by Lieutenant Daliet); Thirty-ninth Mississippi regiment, Colonel W. B. Shelby. The artillery consisted of ten pieces--scattered as circumstances demanded--two Blakely 12-pounder rifles, Lieutenant Cook (First Lieutenant artillery); six pieces Herrod's battery and two pieces Watson's battery, Lieutenant Toledano; two pieces in Colonel Johnson's position having been dismantled on May 27. A JUNE DAY AT PORT HUDSON. * * A sheltered road had been cut around the base of the hill upon which the angle we were to assault was built, and we should be able to rush from shelter directly upon the works. The Seventy-fifth New York were to advance as skirmishers; the Ninety-first New York were to close in rapidly with hand-grenades and drive the Rebels back from the angle; the Twenty-fourth Connecticut were next to rush forward and fill up the ditch with cotton bags; and then the balance of Weitzel's old brigade. The Eighth Vermont, the One-hundred-and-fifteenth and One-hundred-and-sixtieth New York, must scale the works, attack with the bayonet, and fight vigorously, till the whole division could be poured in the bridge. The column plunged into a thick wood, traversed it, and emerged upon the other side in view of the Rebel position. Daylight was hardly with us yet. * * I consulted my watch. The hour was just 5 o'clock. The sunken road, referred to in a previous paragraph, was cut closely around the hill, whose base we had reached, and wound in a semi-circle up toward the summit. It must have been two hundred yards in length, and was excavated to a depth of seven feet. There had been a brief halt at the edge of the wood for some purpose, but the column now moved rapidly forward, and as my regiment entered the shelter of the road, I heard the clear voice of the General shouting the order: "Fix bayonets." The road was quite narrow--a group of fours filled it from side to side. Struggling to urge forward the men in front of us, we tried in vain to press on. Step by step, little by little, the column struggled upward. Two human currents were setting past each other--one strong and vigorous, the other feeble and halting--limping back to the rear in a ghastly procession, which warned us of the reception with which we were to meet. General Weitzel's aides were endeavoring to make their way on foot through the dense mass, now up towards the front, and again back to the rear. It must have been more than half an hour from the time that my regiment entered the sunken road until it emerged from the other extremity under fire. The sides of the cut began to slope toward the level of our feet; two rods more and we were out of the covered way. There was an abrupt ascent, then a small area of rough, uneven ground, then a ditch seven feet deep and quite as wide, while beyond all rose a perpendicular earthwork, not less than twelve feet above the ditch, built in the form of a retreating angle. There was not sufficient ground to allow a regiment to deploy to advantage; as fast as they were unmasked from the cut the companies rushed with a shout up the ascent, across the intervening ground, and into the ditch. From the parapet of the Rebel works came a continued flash of rifles, not in volleys, but in an irregular burst, which never ceased while the attack lasted. The Rebels were entirely protected behind their defences--hardly a head was to be seen above the parapet. The open space before the work was strewn with soldiers in blue, dead, dying, and severely wounded; they lay among the bushes on the hillside, and covered the bottom of that awful ditch, yawning like a grave, at the foot of the work. For a whole hour there was a continued repetition of this scene; a yell, a rush, shouts, musket shots, cries and groans. The ditch was at last filled with the living and the dead; the former striving within six yards of the muzzles of the Rebel rifles to climb the face of the earthwork, and continually dropping back with bullet holes perforated clear through their bodies. The hand-grenades, upon which much reliance had been placed, exploded harmlessly against the face of the work. Wounded men were killed while trying to crawl beyond the range of the fire, or lay helpless under it unable to hazard the attempt. The contracted space before the ditch was swept with rifle balls and buckshot; every repetition of the assault was met by the same murderous discharge, covering the ground thickly with its victims, and adding to the horror of the scene The close of the first hour, when the east was reddening with sunrise, found the regiments scattered and broken up in hopeless confusion. Charge after charge had been made and repulsed; the ditch was an obstacle which could not be overcome, and most of those who reached it unhurt, were shot down in the attempt to return. Of my own regiment, one-third was placed hors de combat; three officers, including the colonel, were mortally wounded, and four others severely hurt, and other regiments suffered proportionately. Our losses, in killed and wounded, were not less than twelve hundred; those of the rebels were slight, owing to their protected situation, and it is supposed that less than one hundred fell inside their works.
ANOTHER FLAG OF TRUCE.
On the 15th, an unusual quiet reigned, apparently from the exhaustion consequent
upon such severe exertion. In the evening, General Banks sent in a flag of
truce to ask General Gardner to receive medicines and delicacies for the
wounded Federal soldiers in our hands. General Gardner replied that he would
receive all such articles, and have them used as purposed. He also took occasion
to express surprise at the fact that no cessation of hostilities had yet
been asked for by the enemy for the purpose of removing their dead and wounded,
who had been lying on an open field--a number of them--under a hot sun, for
two days.The medicines were sent in, but still no request was made of us for a truce to remove the dead and wounded, although the enemy had been engaged during the night in carrying off their wounded as well as they might under our fire. A party of our men had gone out to succor a soldier whose appeals for water were painful to their ears, but they were fired upon by the enemy's skirmishers, and had to return without accomplishing their charitable object. On the 16th, the effluvia from the decomposing bodies having become very offensive at our line, Brigadier-General Beall sent a flag of truce to the division commander in front of him, proposing to deliver his dead to him for burial. This offer was accepted, and a truce declared on that part of the lines. Our men collected and delivered one hundred and sixty-seven corpses, besides which they found one poor fellow able to speak though desperately wounded, who was parched with the dreadful pangs of thirst, and whose face, neck and hands had been completely fly-blown. On the evening of the 16th, a feeble attempt was made against the extreme left. The siege had now, on the 16th of June continued forty days since the commencement of the bombardment by the fleet, twenty-seven days of constant fighting on every side, and twenty-four days since the investment de facto had begun. It was now left to engineering skill alone to try its schemes for reducing the place. Three points of our line were selected by the enemy's engineers as the weakest and most easily reduced by their regular approaches. These were Fort Desperate, the position of which has been heretofore described; an acute salient angle on the left of our line of fortifications, defended by the First Mississippi regiment, and a projecting work extending far out on the river bluff below the town, on the right of our fortifications, called by us Battery No. 11, and by the enemy the "Citadel." A rifle-pit was constructed by the enemy along the crest of the bluff opposite to Battery No. 11, running down to the river bank, which was in advance of their marine battery, the most formidable fortification opposed to us, and from which we anticipated considerable annoyance. About the same time they commenced their approaches, with zigzag ditches, in front of Fort Desperate and the position held by the First Mississippi. Lieutenant Dabney and our engineers immediately perceived these operations, and commenced to meet them with counter operations, and oppose engineering against engineering. Colonel Johnson had galleries dug under his breastworks, through which his men could crawl into the outer ditch and sharpshoot from that, while he also built an upper work on the top of his parapet to give a commanding position to his marksmen, enabling them to shoot down into the enemy' ditches so soon as they should approach near enough. Captain L. J. Girard, of the ordnance, prepared some 13-inch shells to plant outside of these threatened points, and he himself placed some of them in the night, buried a short distance beneath the surface of the ground, having friction primers in the vent holes with wires attached, leading within our fortifications, so that they could be exploded under the feet of an advancing column. On the 18th June the mortar boats brought their bombardment to a close. After the 24th of May they had adopted a slow and regular system of throwing shells, each boat firing in its turn, except on certain occasions of extra exertion, but now they gave it up altogether. An informal kind of truce was arranged between the men of both sides on our extreme right on the 16th, which lasted about a week, during which both sides stopped sharpshooting; in some cases soldiers would meet each other half way between the hostile lines and make exchanges, in which the Federals showed much liberality, making presents of tobacco, coffee, and newspapers, at times getting small quantities of sugar and molasses in return As soon as this came to the knowledge of our superior officers it was stopped, although the informal armistice was not interfered with for awhile on account of shortness of ammunition. During this time we strengthened our work on the point (Battery 11) considerably, our men working during the day in full view of the enemy, who were also busily engaged in constructing their marine battery opposite. The men who were working would occasionally exchange words with each other regarding their respective avocations as amicably and jovially as if the siege was only a joke and the contending parties were the best of friends. At three o'clock on the morning of the 20th, Lieutenant Bankston, of Miles's Legion, went out with fifty men, and, deploying them to the right and left in front of our fortifications, drove in the enemy's skirmishers. At the same hour on the morning of the 23d, two of the enemy's regiments attempted to approach our right centre at the sally port of the Plains's Store road, but were discovered and driven back. The enemy were now bringing their approaches very close to us in front of the First Mississippi position, and every preparation was made to meet an expected onslaught there. In front of the salient angle of our line, Lieutenant Dabney planted a large number of stakes, slightly inclining' outward, the points of which were sharpened with a draw knife. Among these wires were stretched at the height of a foot and a half from the ground, so as to trip an advancing line of men, and torpedoes were also placed at proper positions. The enemy were digging their approaches under cover of cotton bales, which they rolled over in front of them as they advanced. On the 25th of June, Corporal Skelton, of the First Mississippi, volunteered to go out and destroy this cotton. The first time he made the attempt he reached the cotton, but could not fire it with a burning brand which he carried. He, therefore, returned within the lines, and getting a port fire from the artillery went forth again, set the cotton bales in a blaze and returned unhurt. For this courage and devotion he was complimented by General Gardner in an order of the day. About dusk next evening, Lieutenant McKennon, of the Sixteenth Arkansas, with thirty men of his regiment, who volunteered to accompany him, went out and captured, at the point of the bayonet, an earthwork on the Clinton road, which was being made at some distance from our lines. They took an officer and several men prisoners, and brought them safely within our works with their guns and a number of sand bags, out of which they had emptied the earth.
RUNNING THE GAUNTLET.
An event of great note among the besieged was the arrival, during the night
of the 26th, of Captain R. S. Pruyn, of the Fourth Louisiana regiment, with
dispatches from General Johnston to General Gardner, and
full news from the outer world for the garrison, the latter being immediately
published in newspaper form and circulated among our men. Captain Pruyn was
one of those who had been sent out with dispatches by General Gardner during
the siege, and the only one of them who returned.He had floated down the river supported by a dozen canteens well corked and tied together to form a life preserver, with his dispatches secured in an India rubber army pillow. As he passed the Richmond, the current carried him uncomfortably close to her, and he distinctly heard a voice, probably that of the officer of the watch to one of the sailors, exclaim: "Look out sharp for that object and see what it is." In returning, Captain Pruyn took a somewhat similar route. After getting into Pointe Coupée he made his way through the enemy's position on the river opposite Port Hudson, crawling on his hands and knees nearly a quarter of a mile through an open space, where he saw them all around him, and then taking to the water he swam across and was picked up in front of one of our batteries.
HOT WORK AT THE POINT.
The marine battery having been finished, the enemy started to dig a ditch
straight up to our bluff on the extreme right, by running it along the river
bank. This was discovered as early as the 22d, but the enemy did not make
much progress, although from our position we could not materially interrupt
them in the prosecution of their work. At four o'clock on the afternoon of
the 26th of June, a terrific fire was concentrated on this point, which was
kept up until dark, the fleet taking a prominent part.The Richmond came up and poured in her broadsides two or three times, but did not maintain her position. During the firing our flag was shot down four times, the staff being shattered to pieces every time, and the bunting torn to shreds. Each time it was raised by Lieutenant Schirmer, of de Gournay's artillery, who was himself killed at the last attempt to replace it.
AT BATTERY ELEVEN.
The enemy now paid their special attention to our lower point where stood
Battery 11, which could hardly be termed a "citadel," as it was an ordinary
breastwork and enclosure of earth. From the 25th to 30th the concentration
of fire on this place was fearful, though our loss was not
as heavy as could have been expected, because we kept there no more men than
were actually required to hold it, in the event of an assault, until reinforcements
could be thrown in. Our parapet there was breached every day, but our men
would repair the damage every night, although under constant fire of shells,
grape, and cannisterWhile superintending these repairs, Lieutenant James Freret, of the engineer corps was badly wounded. The enemy worked their way steadily up until they had effected a lodgment on the end of the same bluff with us, and not more than thirty yards from our work. Their sharpshooters were crowded around this battery, keeping up a constant fire even when they could see no one to shoot at. Holding this extreme point at Battery No. 11, under such tremendous fire, was extremely exhausting to the men there. Captain J. Watts Kearney had defended the post until the muzzle of his piece had been split and a trunnion shot off. The companies of Miles's Legion, the three of Maxey's brigade, under Captain C. W. Cushman, and a detached company under Lieutenant Wilkins, had all done severe duty here and lost heavily in officers and men. The detached company from Natchez, Mississippi, was left without an officer, Lieutenants Wilkins and Chase being killed, and their only other officer wounded. Captain Charles R. Purdy, of the Fourth Louisiana, also lost his life here. On the night of the 28th General Gardner sent Colonel O. R. Lyle to hold the position with one hundred men of the Eighteenth and Twenty-third Arkansas regiments, which they did for several days until they were again relieved by Captain Cushman, who volunteered to perform the service with his three companies. Colonel Lyle's men succeeded on the 29th in burning the cotton bales which the enemy were using as sap-rollers to protect their approach. On the same evening they attempted to storm our works here and got up very close, throwing hand-grenades among us by scores, but they were driven back to their ditch. We had a small detachment of men from Colonel de Gournay's command who were provided with 12-pounder and 24-pounder shells to use as hand-grenades. The fuse had to be lighted while in the hand, and the shell then immediately hurled over the parapet. A wooden gutter was put outside our work during the night, to enable us to roll heavy shells down among the foe. The interchange of these compliments was kept up with considerable spirit. As it was expected that the enemy were undermining the point, no more men were kept in the work there than were considered sufficient to hold it, in case of an assault, until we could throw in reinforcements, which were held in readiness close at hand during night and day. At six o'clock on the evening of the 30th the enemy made a very determined effort to carry our work by assault. While our men were eating their supper, with their guns lying beside them, a storming column swarmed out of the enemy's ditch only a short distance from our position, and made a dash upon us, gaining our exterior ditch, from which they drove the few men who were surprised there. A detachment of the Eighth Wisconsin, Fourth Wisconsin, and Fifth Michigan undertook to scale the parapet, but the first six men who got inside paid their lives as the entrance fee, and our men held their own until our reinforcements, coming in at a full run, attacked the troops in our ditch with such fury and impetuosity that they were immediately driven out. We kept a large force in the battery that night, but the attack not being resumed, as we anticipated, the reserve was withdrawn before daylight. The engineers having decided that the point would undoubtedly be blown up by the enemy, the line of our fortifications was continued across to the river behind Battery 11, so that when that was destroyed the enemy would find as strong a work still confronting them. The exterior lunette, commanding a projecting ridge to the left of Battery 11, was also made the object of a concentrated fire, which razed to the ground a rifle-pit in front of it. This position was held at the time by Major Merchant, with a section of Boone's battery, and a detachment from Colonel de Gournay's command acting as infantry, the latter being afterwards relieved by Miles's Legion. All this while the enemy were making slow but steady approach toward Colonel Johnson's position and that of the First Mississippi; at the latter place, expecting the point of the salient angle to be undermined and blown up, Lieutenant Dabney built a rifle-pit across the base of the angle, so as to present a new line of defence if the outer one was lost. As a counter-mine, a gallery was run out at some depth under ground, the prosecution of which was voluntarily assumed by Captain Girard. After working his gallery about half-way to the enemy's ditch, he could distinctly hear their workmen making slow progress with a gallery toward us. On account of the close proximity of their shaft, Captain Girard was obliged to work with great caution and silence, and the enemy kept quietly on. Getting immediately underneath their ditch our gallery was extended a short distance. Shortly after midnight of the 3d of July, our train was fired, and a tremendous explosion followed, apparently, however, without loss 'of life. At the same time the approaches to Fort Desperate were checked by the fire of the Arkansas marksmen there, who, perched up in their sharpshooting tower, could fire down into every part of the enemy's ditch. EATING MULE-MEAT. The last quarter ration of beef had been given out to the troops on the 29th of June. On the 1st of July, at the request of many officers, a wounded mule was killed and cut up for experimental eating. The flesh of mules is of a darker color than beef, of a finer grain, quite tender and juicy, and has a flavor something between that of beef and venison. Some horses were slaughtered, and their flesh was found to be very good eating, but not equal to mule. Rats, of which there were plenty about the deserted camps, were also caught by many officers and men, and were found to be quite a luxury. Mule meat was regularly served out in rations to the troops from and after the 4th of July. The stock of corn was getting very low, and besides that nothing was left but peas, sugar, molasses and salt. That a large quantity of peas was left on hand was probably accounted for by the fact that most of the troops would not have them on any consideration. The sugar and molasses were put to good use by the troops in making a weak description of beer, which was constantly kept at the lines by the barrel full, and drank by the soldiers in preference to the miserable water with which they were generally supplied. On the 1st of July, some of the splendid Parrott guns of the Indiana regiment were taken across the river and put in battery there. They now maintained a constant fire upon our batteries every day, to which we occasionally replied, and at times with effect. They dismounted altogether three of our guns, splitting a rifled 32-pounder on the 5th of July; knocking off the trunnion of an 8-inch howitzer on the morning of the 6th, and permanently disabling a rifled 24-pounder on the evening of the same day. This artillery practice was probably equal, if not superior, to anything which has ever been accomplished of the kind, the distance being from one thousand to fourteen hundred yards. Our guns on the river side were now reduced to seven, and the lower batteries were screened with brush, while the upper guns only engaged the Parrotts. We had been obliged to mask most of our guns on the land side for some time back, so many of them having been disabled. Every extra gun-carriage in the place had been used up, and those in service were all patched and repaired as much as they could be. There were a number of broken guns or pieces of ordnance without carriages, which were fastened upon blocks and put in masked positions where they could be used in cases of emergency. Most of them were crammed with bags containing a motley assortment of old bullets, nails, pieces of horseshoes, bits of iron chain, etc., which were to be fired in the face of a storming party, it being of little consequence whether the disabled guns were good for another discharge or not. On the evening of the 3d of July, a long line of troops was discovered bivouacking in line of battle opposite our left centre, and every one was confident that before daylight we would be attacked on every side, but the day wore on and everything was going on as usual, the sharpshooting commencing as soon as the fog lifted.
AN APPROACHING STRUGGLE.
The approach of the enemy to Battery 11 was slow enough to cause us to doubt,
at last, our previous suppositions that they intended to blow up the point.
They had been engaged since the 3d on a work of which, at first, we could
not understand the nature, but as it gradually rose in height it became evident
to us that it was to be an elevated mound--was to be used as a tower for
their sharpshooters to fire down into our work.This point of land, running out beyond our natural line of defence to within one hundred yards of a high ridge held by the enemy, flanked on its weaker side by the fleet, and almost entirely unsupported by any other fortification, had always been considered a weak point with us, and it could not be permanently held without a loss that would be severely felt by our weakened garrison.
THE FALL OF VICKSBURG.
During the forenoon, on the 7th of July, the Federals called out to our men
in many places that Vicksburg had been surrendered to General Grant on the
4th of July, with its garrison.To give us greater assurance of the truth of their assertions, there was sent in to General Gardner, through some of the pickets, an official copy of General Grant's dispatch to General Banks, announcing the capitulation of Vicksburg. A COUNCIL OF WAR. That night a council of war was held at General Gardner's headquarters, which was protracted until 2 o'clock on the morning of the 8th. The situation of Port Hudson was well worthy of serious consideration by the chief officers of its garrison. It was sixty-one days since the commencement of the bombardment by the fleet; forty-eight days since the virtual beginning of the siege, and there had been forty-five days of actual investment, comprising two grand attacks, and twenty-four charges or attempts to storm our lines. A fortified position, constructed for a garrison of twenty thousand men, after its abandonment had been ordered, had been held by less than one-third that force for a much longer period than could have been expected by our forces outside. At 2 o'clock, on the morning of the 8th of July, General Gardner sent to General Banks, by flag of truce, for confirmation of the fall of Vicksburg, which was accorded him. (And yet General Banks in his report, page 149, says that Gardner stated that the surrender was not on account of the fall of Vicksburg.) About 9 o'clock, the same morning, he dispatched Colonels J. G. W. Steedman and W. R. Miles, and Lieutenant-Colonel Marshall J. Smith as commissioners, to treat for the surrender of the post. They did not return until afternoon, and then announced that the following unconditional surrender of the place and garrison had been agreed upon: Articles of capitulation proposed between the commissioners on the part of the garrison of Port Hudson, Louisiana, and the forces of the United States before said place, July 8th, 1863. Article I. Major-General F. Gardner to surrender to the United States forces, under Major-General Banks, the place of Port Hudson and its dependencies with its garrison, armament, munitions, public funds, and material of war, in the condition, as nearly as may be, in which they were at the hour of cessation of hostilities, viz.: 6 o'clock A.M., July 8, 1863 Article II. The surrender, stipulated in Article I, is qualified by no condition save that the officers and enlisted men composing the garrison shall receive the treatment due to prisoners of war according to the usage of civilized warfare. Article III. All private property of officers and enlisted men shall be respected and left to their respective owners. Article IV. The position of Port Hudson shall be occupied tomorrow, at 7 o'clock A.M., by the forces of the United States, and its garrison received as prisoners of war by such general officer of the United States service as may be designated by Major General Banks, with the ordinary formalities of rendition. The Confederate troops will be drawn up in line, officers in their position, the right of the line resting on the edge of the prairie south of the railroad depot, the left extending in the direction of the village of Port Hudson; the arms and colors will be conveniently piled, and will be received by the officers of the United States. Article V. The sick and wounded of the garrison will be cared for by the authorities of the United States, assisted, if desired by either party, by the medical officers of the garrison. Approved: W. R. MILES, Commanding right wing. J. G. W. STEEDMAN, Commanding left wing. MARSHALL J. SMITH, Lieutenant-Colonel Heavy Artillery. CHARLES P. STONE, Brigadier-General. W. DWIGHT, Brigadier-General HENRY W. BIRG, Colonel Commanding Third Brigade, Grover's Division. Approved: FRANK GARDNER, Major-General. Approved: N.P. BANKS, Major-General COMBATANTS FRATERNIZING. Soldiers swarmed from their places of concealment on either side and met each other in the most cordial and fraternal spirit. Here you would see a group of Federal soldiers escorted round our works and shown the effects of their shots, and entertained with accounts of such part of the siege operations as they could not have learned before. In the same way our men went into the Federal lines and gazed with curiosity upon the work which had been giving them so much trouble, escorted by Federal soldiers who vied with each other in courtesy and a display of magnanimous spirit. Not a single case occurred in which the enemy, either officers or privates, exhibited a disposition to exult over their victory, but, on the contrary, whenever the subject came up in conversation, it elicited from them only compliments upon the skill and bravery of the defence. One of their surgeons came in during a heavy rain storm and brought medicines for our sick, repeating his visit the next morning, and bringing a large quantity of quinine, which he dosed out to the fever patients. During the afternoon and evening of the 8th a large number of Federals were within our lines visiting at our camps, whither most of our men had repaired to pack up their little stock of clothing preparatory to an expected departure on the morrow. The following order was published: HEADQUARTERS PORT HUDSON, LOUISIANA, July 8, 1863. GENERAL ORDERS, No. 61: I. Nobly have the troops performed their duty in the defence of this position, continued from the 21st of May to the present date. The cheerfulness, bravery, and zeal displayed by the troops during the hardships and suffering of this long siege have never been surpassed, and every man can feel the proud satisfaction that he has done his part in this heroic defence of Port Hudson. The place is surrendered at the last moment it is proper to hold it, and after a most gallant defence in several severe attacks, in all of which the enemy have been signally repulsed. Let all continue, during the duties that still remain to be performed, to show that cheerful obedience which has distinguished them as soldiers up to this time. II. The troops will be paraded at 6 o'clock A.M. to morrow for surrender, in line of battle in the same order as they are now at the breastworks, with the heavy artillery on the right in the edge of the prairie, in the rear of the railroad depot, the left extending towards the town of Port Hudson. All officers and men will be in their places under arms. By command of Major General Frank Gardner, [Signed] C.M. JACKSON, Acting Assistant Adjutant General. <shv14_344> Shortly after dark a train of wagons brought in a liberal supply of provisions for the garrison from the enemy's commissariat. They were issued to the troops during the night-time, and early the next morning our men enjoyed the first good meal they had partaken of for a long time. At seven o'clock on the morning of the 9th, our line was formed in the field back of the railroad depot, near the landing, every man not too sick to be confined in the hospital being in the ranks. As General Gardner rode along the line, with his staff, he was enthusiastically cheered by the men who had served so faithfully under him, and whose affection and confidence he had permanently gained during days and weeks of trial. The enemy's column, marching down the road to the landing, approached the right of our line, preceded by General Andrews and staff. When Brigadier-General Andrews approached, General Gardner advanced with his sword drawn and presented the hilt to General Andrews with the following words: "Having thoroughly defended this position as long as I deemed it necessary, I now surrender to you my sword, and with it this post and its garrison." To which General Andrews replied: "I return your sword as a proper compliment to the gallant commander of such gallant troops--conduct that would be heroic in another cause." To which General Gardner replied as he returned his sword, with emphasis, into the scabbard: "This is neither the time nor place to discuss the cause." The order was given along our line to ground arms, which was obeyed, and our men stood in line while the enemy had marched from right to left until they had formed in line before us, when they hoisted their flag upon the bluff, fired a salute, and the ceremony was over. It was now announced to our men that they would be paroled--news that was received by them with great satisfaction, particularly as they had made up their minds already to a term of imprisonment. ROSTER OF CONFEDERATE FORCES ENGAGED IN THE DEFENCE OF PORT HUDSON, MAY 2IST TO JULY 8, 1863. Major-General Frank Gardner commanding. Staff--Major T Friend Wilson, Adjutant-General; Captains Jackson and Lanier, Assistant Adjutant-Generals; Major Spratley, Chief Quartermaster; Captain Geo. Simpson, Inspector-General; Lieutenant-Colonel Marshall J. Smith, Chief of Heavy Artillery; Lieutenant-Colonel Jas. P. Parker, Chief of Light Artillery; Captain L. J. Girard, Chief of Ordnance; Lieutenant F. Y. Dabney, Chief Engineer; Colonel J. A. Jacquess, Captain A. Dupree, Aides-de-Camp. Engineers--Fred. Y. Dabney, First Lieutenant and Chief Engineer; Stork and Jas. Freret, Second Lieutenants, Engineers; Butler, Assistant Engineer. River Batteries--Lieutenant-Colonel MARSHALL J. SMITH Commanding Right Wing in front of the village of Port Hudson. I.--One 30-pound Parrott, one 12-pound brass-rifled (removed), First Alabama regiment, Captain J.'F. Whitfield. II.--One 42-smooth, two 24-rifled siege, First Alabama regiment, Captain J. D. Meadows. III.--One 42-smooth, one 32-rifled, First Alabama regiment, Captain R. H. Riley. IV.--One 8-inch Columbiad, one 10-inch Columbiad, Twelfth Louisiana battalion artillery, Captain Seawell. V.--One 10-inch Columbiad, one 42-smooth, one 32-smooth, First Alabama, Captain D. W. Ramsey. VI.--Two 24-pound rifled, 12th Louisiana battalion, Captain Kean. VII--Two 24-pound smooth and hot shot, First Tennessee battalion, Captain Waller; moved to land lines at Clinton road, Captain Lahey. Left Wing--Lieutenant-Colonel DE GOURNAY Commanding. VIII--Two rifled 24-pound siege, Twelfth Louisiana battalion--one moved to land lines at Slaughter's field--Captain Coffin. IX--One 8-inch howitzer (Paixon), Lieutenant Rodriguez. X--One 32 pound smooth, Lieutenant McDowell. XI--One 20-pound Parrott, Lieutenant Watts Kearney and twenty-two men (Miles's Legion). <shv14_346> Land Line, Right Wing, Right Resting on Mississippi River--W. R. MILES, Colonel Commanding. Miles's Legion, F. B. Brand, Lieutenant-Colonel commanding; J. T. Coleman, Major. Infantry--Ninth battalion Louisiana infantry, Bowling R. Chinn commanding; battalion miscellaneous commands of Maxey's brigade, organized under Captain S. A. Whitesides (Fourth and Thirtieth Louisiana, Forty second, Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, Fifty-third and Fifty-fifth Tennessee, and Seventh Texas); detachment of De Gournay's battery, acting as infantry, Anderson Merchant, Major commanding. Artillery--Boone's battery; two sections of Roberts's battery. Centre, Right Resting on Advanced Work--W. N. R. BEALE, Brigadier-General Commanding. Infantry--Twelfth Arkansas regiment, T. J. Reed, Colonel commanding; First Arkansas battalion, Jones, Lieutenant-Colonel commanding; Sixteenth Arkansas regiment, Provence, Colonel commanding; First Mississippi regiment, Hamilton, Lieutenant Colonel commanding--Johnson, Major; Twenty-third Arkansas regiment, O. P. Lyle, Lieutenant-Colonel commanding--Black, Major; one company of Forty-ninth Alabama regiment, Street, Major commanding. Artillery--Abbay's battery, First Mississippi regiment, light artillery; two sections of Watson's battery; two 24-pounders, Captains Waller and Lahey, at Clinton road; one 24-pounder, Captain Coffin, at Slaughter's field. Left Wing, Right Resting on Railroad--J. G. W. STEEDMAN, Colonel Commanding. Order of rune 12th--Fifteenth Arkansas, Ben. Johnson, Colonel commanding, 384 men, with full complement of officers On 27th May surrendered 92 muskets. Lost, May 27th, 71 killed and wounded, and 14 prisoners; afterwards, about 70 killed and wounded; First Alabama, Lieutenant-Colonel Locke, commanding; Eighteenth Arkansas, Parish, Lieutenant-Colonel commanding; Tenth Arkansas, Vaughn, Lieutenant-Colonel commanding; Ninth Louisiana (Wingfield's) battalion of cavalry, dismounted, Amacker, Captain commanding (only one company during siege, First Lieutenant Oct. Daliet commanding); Thirty-ninth Mississippi, W. B. Shelby Colonel commanding. Signal Corps--Lieutenant STEVENS, Commanding. Artillery--Seven pieces Herrod's battery, First Mississippi regiment light artillery; two 12-pound Blakely guns, Lieutenant Cook; two guns Watson's battery, Lieutenant Toledano; two small breech loaders, Whitworth, of Wingfield's battalion, Captain Sparkman. CONFEDERATE LOSS. May 20--Killed, wounded, missing and prisoners. Total, 89--Report of Miles. May 27--Killed, wounded, missing and prisoners. Total, 225. Surrendered. "Banks's" report--6,408 men. (Page 137), twenty pieces heavy artillery, 31 pieces light artillery, 30 pieces dismounted; 5,000 good muskets, and 5,000 not good; 32,000 pounds powder in magazine; 12,000 made up; 150,000 cartridges for small arms. Colonel Ben. Johnson, say about 3,000 active, and 1,250 sick and wounded--total, 4,250. FEDERAL FORCES. Nathaniel P. Banks, Major-General commanding (from General Banks's Campaign of Port Hudson). Right--General Weitzel and General Grover. (Banks's Report, page 146). Centre--General Augur, 3,500 men (Banks's Report). Artillery--Seventeen 3 inch rifle, Rambridge, Hebrard, &e.; four 6-inch rifle, heavy; nine naval batteries, Dahlgren-Ferry; four siege mortars, Terry; twelve 8-inch siege howitzer-mortars, &c.; six 6-pounders, Sawyer; two 9-pounders, Dahlgren; eighteen 12-pounder howitzers, Napoleons, &c.; fifteen 20-pounder Parrotts; five 24-pounder Parrotts, and seven 30-pounder Parrotts. Left--General T. W. Sherman. Effective Force--"Banks's Report," pages 128 and 146--13,000 on May 27; March 14th, 12,000; J. Franklin Fitts (in "June Day," &c.), about 20,000; Orville Victor, about 18,000--about three times the besieged. FEDERAL LOSS. "Banks," page 146, May 27--Killed, 293; wounded, 1,549; missing, about 300--total, 2,142. June 14--No correct report--Orville Victor says about 2,000. Part 1 |