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William Britain 2005



17463 - VICKSBURG COMMAND DECISION SET (Click here to go back)
The City of Vicksburg situated on a hill overlooking the Mississippi was indeed the citadel of the South. Control of the Mississippi River would effectively cut the Confederacy in half. This was a goal for northern strategy early in the war. General Ulysses S. Grant began organizing Federal Forces to march on Vicksburg in late December 1862. Grant had risen from an obscure Colonel of the 21st Illinois Volunteers to command the Union Army in the Tennessee Theater. His victories at Fort Donelson and Shiloh were enchanted with the efforts of William Tecumseh Sherman. Grant's first approached to Vicksburg was by way of Helena, Arkansas and Fort Hindman. The Union Army was repulsed at the Battle of Chickasaw Bluffs. A second attempt to force navigation from Lake Providence also failed. Northern Forces were again foiled in an attempt to bypass Vicksburg by cutting a canal in the Mississippi River.

The Confederate Army in Vicksburg was under the command of Lt. General John C. Pemberton. He had heavily fortified the city from all sides. But on the night of April 16, 1863 Admiral Porter successfully ran past the Vicksburg Batteries with a large flotilla of gunboats. Now that the southern part of the river secured, Grant with Sherman at his side, made a strategic "Command Decision" by altering his battle plans. He ordered part of the army to march south across the Mississippi and then marches inland to Jackson. This overland march placed the Union Army east of Vicksburg and forced Pemberton to re-deploy his units. With the divisions of Sherman and General McClernand in the vanguard, the Federal forces overran Confederate defenses at Champion Hill and two days later were besieging Vicksburg from the land side.

Several direct assaults on the city's defenses failed with bloody consequences. Grant next began a methodical operation of slowly advancing his lines and forcing the Confederates into an ever-smaller defense. Union batteries now directly shelled the city causing the occupants to retreat into caves dug into the bluffs. With no reinforcements in sight, Pemberton knew that it was only a matter of time. By early July, with supplies exhausted, Pemberton opened negotiations for the surrender of the city. At 3:00 on the afternoon of July 3rd, Grant and Pemberton were in face to face negotiations ironically this is the same day and hour Pickett was making his historic charge in the battle of Gettysburg. On the morning of July 4, 1863 the Union Army marched into Vicksburg. Although the Civil War would last for almost two additional years, the fate of the Confederacy was sealed.


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