The thirteenth, fifteenth, and seventeenth corps in Union trench under command of General U.S. Grant. Courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, LC-USZC4-1754
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Position of Union Major General John A. Logan’s division. Courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, LC-USZ62-13184
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Siege of Vicksburg. The fight in the crater of Fort Hill after the Union explosion June 25, 1863. Courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, LC-USZ62-5558
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Currier & Ives hand-colored lithograph of the siege and capture of Vicksburg, July 4, 1863. Courtesy Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, LC-USZC2-2998
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Mary Ann Loughborough’s book, My Cave Life in Vicksburg, was published in 1864. Courtesy Mississippi Department of Archives and History
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Vicksburg During the Civil War (1862-1863): A Campaign; A Siege
By Michael B. Ballard
When Vicksburg fell to Union troops on July 4, 1863, the Confederacy
lost its last chance to control the Mississippi River.
Control of the Mississippi River during the American Civil War was an
economic and psychological factor for both the North and the South. For
many years, the river had served as a vital waterway for mid-western farmers
shipping their goods to the eastern states by way of the Gulf of Mexico.
The farmers, along with politicians and merchants, did not like the idea
of the river being closed because of Confederate artillery looming along
the banks where the “Father of Waters” flowed through the
Confederacy.
For the Confederacy, control of the lower Mississippi River was vital
to the union of its states. The portion of Louisiana west of the river
plus Texas and Arkansas formed the Transmississippi which held manpower
and materiel that the rest of the southern military machine needed.
Vicksburg was “the key,” as U. S. President Abraham Lincoln
termed it, to the Union gaining control of the river. Lincoln looked at
a map of the Mississippi River and saw that its hairpin turn in front
of Vicksburg, which sat high on bluffs above the river, made boats traveling
in both directions vulnerable to artillery fire from the Confederate batteries
on the shore line and on the high bluffs.
A campaign
The effort of United States troops to capture Vicksburg took over a year,
from the spring of 1862 to the summer of 1863, and it involved thousands
of soldiers and caused much bloodshed.
The Vicksburg campaign can best be understood when divided into four
phases. First came the spring 1862 upriver attack by Union gunboats. Then
came General U. S. Grant’s fall campaign, which involved the invasion
of north Mississippi and an attempt to flank the Confederates with General
William T. Sherman’s Mississippi River expedition to a point just
north of Vicksburg called Chickasaw Bayou. Grant then launched his spring
1863 campaign of diversions that eventually allowed him to get his army
across the river south of Vicksburg. The final phase included Grant’s
hard-hitting overland campaign into central Mississippi and his siege
operations at Vicksburg.
In the spring of 1862 during the initial Union attempt to take Vicksburg,
women in Vicksburg got their first taste of war and often found themselves
in harm’s way. While men fought the campaign, most Vicksburg women
left to stay with acquaintances in safer areas, or to camp out in Warren
County hills beyond the range of Union guns. The initial Federal attempt
proved more inconvenient than dangerous for most Vicksburg women. When
the Union navy gave up and departed, life returned to normal.
A siege
But tougher times lay ahead. During the night of April 30-May 1, 1863,
General Grant crossed his army from Louisiana into Mississippi, and citizens
in Vicksburg were on the verge of encountering Union troops.
Grant won the Battle of Port Gibson on May 1 and moved quickly inland,
marching northeast toward Edwards and the Southern Railroad of Mississippi,
the vital supply line that connected Vicksburg with Jackson and points
east. Meanwhile, from May 12 to May 17, Union forces won a battle at Raymond,
captured Jackson, and defeated General John C. Pemberton's main army at
Champion Hill and the Big Black River. Pemberton retreated into Vicksburg
and Grant followed.
So war on a large scale came to Vicksburg again, with the Union army
arched around the city from north to east to south and the Union navy
on the river. As Pemberton’s dispirited army came into Vicksburg,
many women, children, and other noncombatants tried to leave, but with
Confederate troops retreating into Vicksburg, and most of the roads out
of town leading east into Grant’s army, many had to return.
Grant’s army tried twice to overwhelm Pemberton’s army, and,
having failed, settled in for a siege that ultimately lasted 47 days.
The siege had various impacts on the lives of people caught in the city.
Upper-class white women often went from comfortable circumstances to deprivation
and humiliation, lower-class white females went from not having much to
having even less, and slave women went from a structured existence to
uncertainty.
Whatever their station, the women who stayed in their hometown rather
than escaping before Grant arrived struggled to survive. The women had
to look out for themselves and try to keep their lives going while the
war whirled around them. Their story is one of courage, sacrifice, and
persistence. Their surviving letters and diaries tell stories of both
physical and mental terror. Their story is one of courage, sacrifice,
and persistence.
The citizens
Diarist Emma Balfour of Vicksburg worried about trapped citizens like
herself and her physician husband. Between Grant’s army and Union
gunboats she wondered, “What is to become of all the living things
in this place when the boats commend shelling--God only knows--shut up
as in a trap--no ingress or egress--and thousands of women and children,”
who had earlier sought safety in Vicksburg. Food supplies would not last
long. Confederate commanders urged citizens to occupy caves built the
previous summer and to dig more.
Emma Balfour wrote of the early fighting: “I was up in my room sewing
and praying in my heart . . . when Nancy [her servant girl] rushed up,
actually pale . . . .” Nancy warned of the falling shells, which
sent people “rushing into caves.”
“Just as we got in, several . . . [shells] exploded . . . just
over our heads, and at the same time two riders were killed in the valley.
. . . As all this rushed over me and the sense of suffocation from being
underground, the certainty that there was no way of escape, that we were
hemmed in, caged:--for one moment my heart seemed to stand still. Nearly
all the families in town spent the night in their caves.”
For civilians trapped in the city, the siege proved to be a time of hourly
uncertainty. Between brief lulls came terror and extreme mental stress.
Caves provided the only security. The soil around Vicksburg was mostly
easy to dig, yet firm enough so that caves could be dug into the sides
of the hills without great fear of cave-ins. People carefully selected
cave sites in order to minimize risks of being hit with artillery shells.
Both white citizens and their slaves labored with shovels, though most
of the work fell on the latter.
The caves could be simple one-room abodes or multi-room suites. They
contained parlors and bedrooms that were furnished with items from home;
most cooking was done outside the main cave entrance. Sometimes there
were connecting openings from one family cave to another for escape purposes
in case an artillery shell caused the earth to crumble.
Cave dweller Mary Loughborough penned vivid scenes of her experiences:
“Our policy in building had been to face directly away from the
river. All caves were prepared, as near as possible, in this manner. As
the fragments of shells continued with the same impetus after the explosion,
in but one direction, onward, they were not likely to reach us, fronting
in this manner with their course. On one occasion, I was reading in safety,
I imagined, when the unmistakable whirring of Parrott shells told us that
the battery we so much feared had opened from the entrenchments. I ran
to the entrance to call the servants in; and immediately after they entered,
a shell struck the earth a few feet from the entrance, burying itself
without exploding. I ran to the little dressing room, and could hear them
striking around us on all sides. One fell near the cave entrance, and
a servant boy grabbed it and threw it outside; it never exploded. And
so the weary days went on . . . when we could not tell in what terrible
form death might come to us before the sun went down.”
While some women coped with caves, others braved the streets to help
out at hospitals. One such volunteer nurse earned the admiration of a
pastor, who noted her dedication: “Week after week, with untiring
diligence would she nurse & feed this young man. Now her cheek becomes
pale from constant labor & her strength evidently begins to fail.”
Women, like all others in besieged Vicksburg, civilian and soldier alike,
suffered also from a lack of food and good drinking water. By the time
Pemberton surrendered his army, there were still ample supplies in town,
but rations had been cut severely in an effort to make food last longer.
Women, as did Confederate soldiers in the trenches, lost weight, became
dehydrated, and suffered from severe malnutrition.
When the 47-day siege ended on July 4, 1863, Vicksburg women shed tears,
but many remained defiant. Margaret Lord, wife of a local minister who
served in a Mississippi regiment, refused to be disheartened. She turned
down the offer of a hated Yankee to help find supplies for her family.
Many Confederate soldiers who survived the war eventually came to terms
with the bitterness of the harsh four years, and they attended joint reunions
with former foes. The men who had fought each other shared a common legacy
of experiences, a legacy that healed psychological scars wrought by the
horrors of battle.
For women in Mississippi, and elsewhere in the South, forgiving attitudes
did not come that easy. They worked to make sure that succeeding generations
of southerners did not forget what they had suffered. Though both armies
brought war and deprivation to their worlds, these women blamed the North
for the war and honored Confederate soldiers. They were the driving force
behind the post-war Lost Cause movement that celebrated positive memories
of the Confederacy.
Michael B. Ballard, Ph.D., is archivist in Mississippi State University’s
Mitchell Memorial Library. He is the author of five books, including A
Long Shadow: Jefferson Davis and the Final Days of the Confederacy,
and Pemberton: A Biography.
Posted April 2004
Sources:
Emma Balfour Diary. Mississippi Department of Archives and History, Jackson.
Ballard, Michael B. Civil War Mississippi: A Guide. Jackson:
University Press of Mississippi, 2000.
Foster, Gaines M. Ghosts of the Confederacy: Defeat, The Lost Cause,
and the Emergence of the New South. New York: Oxford University Press,
1987.
Hoeling, A.H., et. al., eds. Vicksburg: 47 Days of Siege, May 18-July
4, 1863. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1969.
[Mary Ann Loughborough], My Cave Life in Vicksburg with Letters of
Trial and Travel, By a Lady. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1864.
Poppenheim, Mary B., et. al. The History of the United Daughters
of the Confederacy, 3 volumes in 2. Raleigh, North Carolina: Edward
and Broughten Co., volume 1-2.
Urquhart, Kenneth Trist, ed. Vicksburg: Southern City Under Siege,
William Lovelace Foster's Letter Describing the Defense and Surrender
of the Confederate Fortress on the Mississippi. New Orleans: The
Historic New Orleans Collection, 1987.
Walker, Peter F. Vicksburg: A People at War. Chapel Hill, North
Carolina: University of North Carolina Press, 1960.
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