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The relief of Knoxville-headquarters moved to Nashville-visiting Knoxville-cipher dispatches --Withholding orders
Chattanooga now being secure to the
National troops beyond any doubt, I immediately turned my attention to relieving
Knoxville, about the situation of which the
President, in particular, was very anxious.
Prior to the battles, I had made preparations for sending troops to the relief of
Burnside at the very earliest moment after securing
Chattanooga.
We had there two little steamers which had been built and fitted up from the remains of old boats and put in condition to run.
General Thomas was directed to have one of these boats loaded with rations and ammunition and move up the
Tennessee River to the mouth of the
Holston, keeping the boat all the time abreast of the troops.
General Granger, with the 4th corps reinforced to make twenty thousand men, was to start the moment
Missionary Ridge was carried, and under no circumstances were the troops to return to their old camps.
With the provisions carried, and the little that could be got in the country, it was supposed he could hold out until
Longstreet was driven away, after which event
East Tennessee would furnish abundance of food for
Burnside's army and his own also.
While following the enemy on the 26th, and again on the morning of the 27th, part of the time by the road to
Ringgold, I directed
Thomas, verbally, not to start
Granger until he received further orders from me; advising him that I was going to the front to more fully see the situation.
I was not right sure but that
Bragg's troops might be over their stampede by the time they reached
Dalton.
In that case
Bragg might think it well to take the road back to
Cleveland, move thence towards
Knoxville, and, uniting with
Longstreet, make a sudden dash upon
Burnside.
When I arrived at
Ringgold, however, on the 27th, I saw that the retreat was most earnest.
The enemy had been throwing away guns, caissons and small-arms, abandoning provisions, and, altogether,
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seemed to be moving like a disorganized mob, with the exception of
Cleburne's division, which was acting as rear-guard to cover the retreat.
When
Hooker moved from
Rossville toward
Ringgold Palmer's division took the road to
Graysville, and
Sherman moved by the way of
Chickamauga Station toward the same point.
As soon as I saw the situation at
Ringgold I sent a staff officer back to
Chattanooga to advise
Thomas of the condition of affairs, and direct him by my orders to start
Granger at once.
Feeling now that the troops were already on the march for the relief of
Burnside I was in no hurry to get back, but stayed at
Ringgold through the day to prepare for the return of our troops.
Ringgold is in a valley in the mountains, situated between
East Chickamauga Creek and
Taylor's Ridge, and about twenty miles south-east from
Chattanooga.
I arrived just as the artillery that
Hooker had left behind at
Chattanooga Creek got up. His men were attacking
Cleburne's division, which had taken a strong position in the adjacent hills so as to cover the retreat of the Confederate army through a narrow gorge which presents itself at that point.
Just beyond the gorge the valley is narrow, and the creek so tortuous that it has to be crossed a great many times in the course of the first mile.
This attack was unfortunate, and cost us some men unnecessarily.
Hooker captured, however, 3 pieces of artillery and 230 prisoners, and 130 rebel dead were left upon the field.
I directed
General Hooker to collect the flour and wheat in the neighboring mills for the use of the troops, and then to destroy the mills and all other property that could be of use to the enemy, but not to make any wanton destruction.
At this point
Sherman came up, having reached
Graysville with his troops, where he found
Palmer had preceded him.
Palmer had picked up many prisoners and much abandoned property on the route.
I went back in the evening to
Graysville with
Sherman, remained there over night and did not return to
Chattanooga until the following night, the 29th.
I then found that
Thomas had not yet started
Granger, thus having lost a full day which I deemed of so much importance in determining the fate of
Knoxville.
Thomas and
Granger were aware that on the 23d of the month
Burnside had telegraphed that his supplies would last for ten or twelve days and during that time he could hold out against
Longstreet, but if not relieved within the time indicated he would be obliged to surrender or attempt
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to retreat.
To effect a retreat would have been an impossibility.
He was already very low in ammunition, and with an army pursuing he would not have been able to gather supplies.
Finding that
Granger had not only not started but was very reluctant to go, he having decided for himself that it was a very bad move to make, I sent word to
General Sherman of the situation and directed him to march to the relief of
Knoxville.
I also gave him the problem that we had to solve — that
Burnside had now but four to six days supplies left, and that he must be relieved within that time.
Sherman, fortunately, had not started on his return from
Graysville, having sent out detachments on the railroad which runs from
Dalton to
Cleveland and
Knoxville to thoroughly destroy that road, and these troops had not yet returned to camp.
I was very loath to send
Sherman, because his men needed rest after their long march from
Memphis and hard fighting at
Chattanooga.
But I had become satisfied that
Burnside would not be rescued if his relief depended upon
General Granger's movements.
Sherman had left his camp on the north side of the
Tennessee River, near
Chattanooga, on the night of the 23d, the men having two days cooked rations in their haversacks.
Expecting to be back in their tents by that time and to be engaged in battle while out, they took with them neither overcoats nor blankets.
The weather was already cold, and at night they must have suffered more or less.
The two days rations had already lasted them five days; and they were now to go through a country which had been run over so much by Confederate troops that there was but little probability of finding much food.
They did, however, succeed in capturing some flour.
They also found a good deal of bran in some of the mills, which the men made up into bread; and in this and other ways they eked out an existence until they could reach
Knoxville.
I was so very anxious that
Burnside should get news of the steps being taken for his relief, and thus induce him to hold out a little longer if it became necessary, that I determined to send a message to him. I therefore sent a member of my staff,
Colonel J. H. Wilson, to get into
Knoxville if he could, report to
Burnside the situation fully, and give him all the encouragement possible.
Mr. Charles A. Dana was at
Chattanooga during the battle, and had been there even before I assumed command.
Mr. Dana volunteered to accompany
Colonel Wilson, and did accompany him. I put the information of what was being done for the relief of
Knoxville into writing, and directed that
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in some way or other it must be secretly managed so as to have a copy of this fall into the hands of
General Longstreet.
They made the trip safely;
General Longstreet did learn of
Sherman's coming in advance of his reaching there, and
Burnside was prepared to hold out even for a longer time if it had been necessary.
Burnside had stretched a boom across the
Holston River to catch scows and flats as they floated down.
On these, by previous arrangements with the loyal people of
East Tennessee, were placed flour and corn, with forage and provisions generally, and were thus secured for the use of the
Union troops.
They also drove cattle into
Knoxville by the east side, which was not covered by the enemy; so that when relief arrived
Burnside had more provisions on hand than when he had last reported.
Our total loss (not including
Burnside's) in all these engagements amounted to 757 killed, 4,529 wounded and 330 missing. We captured 6,142 prisoners — about 50 per cent more than the enemy reported for their total loss-40 pieces of artillery, 69 artillery carriages and caissons and over 7,000 stands of small-arms.
The enemy's loss in arms was probably much greater than here reported, because we picked up a great many that were found abandoned.
I had at
Chattanooga, in round numbers, about 60,000 men.
Bragg had about half this number [not including
Longstreet], but his position was supposed to be impregnable.
It was his own fault that he did not have more men present.
He had sent
Longstreet away with his corps swelled by reinforcements up to over twenty thousand men, thus reducing his own force more than one-third and depriving himself of the presence of the ablest general of his command.
He did this, too, after our troops had opened a line of communication by way of Brown's and Kelly's ferries with
Bridgeport, thus securing full rations and supplies of every kind; and also when he knew reinforcements were coming to me.
Knoxville was of no earthly use to him while
Chattanooga was in our hands.
If he should capture
Chattanooga,
Knoxville with its garrison would have fallen into his hands without a struggle.
I have never been able to see the wisdom of this move.
Then, too, after
Sherman had arrived, and when
Bragg knew that he was on the north side of the
Tennessee River, he sent
Buckner's division to reinforce
Longstreet.
He also started another division a day later, but our attack having commenced before it reached
Knoxville
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Bragg ordered it back.
It had got so far, however, that it could not return to
Chattanooga in time to be of service there.
It is possible this latter blunder may have been made by
Bragg having become confused as to what was going on on our side.
Sherman had, as already stated, crossed to the north side of the
Tennessee River at Brown's Ferry, in full view of
Bragg's troops from
Lookout Mountain, a few days before the attack.
They then disappeared behind foot hills, and did not come to the view of the troops on
Missionary Ridge until they met their assault.
Bragg knew it was
Sherman's troops that had crossed, and, they being so long out of view, may have supposed that they had gone up the north bank of the
Tennessee River to the relief of
Knoxville and that
Longstreet was therefore in danger.
But the first great blunder, detaching
Longstreet, cannot be accounted for in any way I know of. If he had captured
Chattanooga,
East Tennessee would have fallen without a struggle.
It would have been a victory for us to have got our army away from
Chattanooga safely.
It was a manifold greater victory to drive away the besieging army; a still greater one to defeat that army in his chosen ground and nearly annihilate it.
The probabilities are that our loss in killed was the heavier, as we were the attacking party.
The enemy reported his loss in killed at 361: but as he reported his missing at 4,146, while we held over 6,000 of them as prisoners, and there must have been hundred if not thousands who deserted, but little reliance can be placed on this report.
There was certainly great dissatisfaction with
Bragg on the part of the soldiers for his harsh treatment of them, and a disposition to get away if they could.
Then, too,
Chattanooga, following in the same half year with
Gettysburg in the
East and
Vicksburg in the
West, there was much the same feeling in the
South at this time that there had been in the
North the
fall and
winter before.
If the same license had been allowed the people and press in the
South that was allowed in the
North,
Chattanooga would probably have been the last battle fought for the preservation of the
Union.
General William F. Smith's services in these battles had been such that I thought him eminently entitled to promotion.
I was aware that he had previously been named by the
President for promotion to the grade of major-general, but that the Senate had rejected the nomination.
I was not aware of the reasons for this course, and therefore strongly recommended him for a major-generalcy.
My recommendation was heeded and the appointment made.
Upon the raising of the siege of
Knoxville I, of course, informed the
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authorities at
Washington — the
President and
Secretary of War-of the fact, which caused great rejoicing there.
The President especially was rejoiced that
Knoxville had been relieved
1 without further bloodshed.
The safety of
Burnside's army and the loyal people of
East Tennessee had been the subject of much anxiety to the
President for several months, during which time he was doing all he could to relieve the situation; sending a new commander
2 with a few thousand troops by the way of
Cumberland Gap, and telegraphing me daily, almost hourly, to “remember
Burnside,” “do something for
Burnside,” and other appeals of like tenor.
He saw no escape for
East Tennessee until after our victory at
Chattanooga.
Even then he was afraid that
Burnside might be out of ammunition, in a starving condition, or overpowered: and his anxiety was still intense until he heard that
Longstreet had been driven from the field.
Burnside followed
Longstreet only to Strawberry Plains, some twenty miles or more east, and then stopped, believing that
Longstreet would leave the
State.
The latter did not do so, however, but stopped only a short distance farther on and subsisted his army for the entire winter off
East Tennessee.
Foster now relieved
Burnside.
Sherman made disposition of his troops along the
Tennessee River in accordance with instructions.
I left
Thomas in command at
Chattanooga, and, about the 20th of December, moved my headquarters to
Nashville, Tennessee.
Nashville was the most central point from which to communicate with my entire military division, and also with the authorities at
Washington.
While remaining at
Chattanooga I was liable to have my telegraphic communications cut so as to throw me out of communication with both my command and
Washington.
Nothing occurred at
Nashville worthy of mention during the
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winter,
3 so I set myself to the task of having troops in positions from which they could move to advantage, and in collecting all necessary supplies so as to be ready to claim a due share of the enemy's attention upon the appearance of the first good weather in the spring.
I expected to retain the command I then had, and prepared myself for the campaign against
Atlanta.
I also had great hopes of having a campaign made against
Mobile from the
Gulf.
I expected after
Atlanta fell to occupy that place permanently, and to cut off
Lee's army from the
West by way of the road running through
Augusta to
Atlanta and thence south-west.
I was preparing to hold
Atlanta with a small garrison, and it was my expectation to push through to
Mobile if that city was in our possession: if not, to
Savannah; and in this manner to get possession of the only east and west railroad that would then be left to the enemy.
But the spring campaign against
Mobile was not made.
The Army of the Ohio had been getting supplies over
Cumberland Gap until their animals had nearly all starved.
I now determined to go myself to see if there was any possible chance of using that route in the spring, and if not to abandon it. Accordingly I left
Nashville in the latter part of December by rail for
Chattanooga.
From
Chattanooga I took one of the little steamers previously spoken of as having been built there, and, putting my horses aboard, went up to the junction of the
Clinch with the
Tennessee.
From that point the railroad had been repaired up to
Knoxville and out east to Strawberry Plains.
I went by rail therefore to
Knoxville, where I remained for several days.
General John G. Foster was then commanding the Department of the Ohio.
It was an intensely cold winter, the thermometer being down as low as zero every morning for more than a week while I was at
Knoxville and on my way from there on horseback to
Lexington, Kentucky, the first point where I could reach rail to carry me back to my headquarters at
Nashville.
The road over
Cumberland Gap, and back of it, was strewn with
debris of broken wagons and dead animals, much as I had found it on my first trip to
Chattanooga over Waldron's Ridge.
The road had been cut up to as great a depth as clay could be by mules and wagons,
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and in that condition frozen; so that the ride of six days from Strawberry Plains to
Lexington over these holes and knobs in the road was a very cheerless one, and very disagreeable.
I found a great many people at home along that route, both in
Tennessee and
Kentucky, and, almost universally, intensely loyal.
They would collect in little places where we would stop of evenings, to see me, generally hearing of my approach before we arrived.
The people naturally expected to see the
commanding general the oldest person in the party.
I was then forty-one years of age, while my medical director was gray-haired and probably twelve or more years my senior.
The crowds would generally swarm around him, and thus give me an opportunity of quietly dismounting and getting into the house.
It also gave me an opportunity of hearing passing remarks from one spectator to another about their general.
Those remarks were apt to be more complimentary to the cause than to the appearance of the supposed general, owing to his being muffled up, and also owing to the travel-worn condition we were all in after a hard day's ride.
I was back in
Nashville by the 13th of January, 1864.
When I started on this trip it was necessary for me to have some person along who could turn dispatches into cipher, and who could also read the cipher dispatches which I was liable to receive daily and almost hourly.
Under the rules of the War Department at that time,
Mr. Stanton had taken entire control of the matter of regulating the telegraph and determining how it should be used, and of saying who, and who alone, should have the ciphers.
The operators possessed of the ciphers, as well as the ciphers used, were practically independent of the commanders whom they were serving immediately under, and had to report to the War Department through
General Stager all the dispatches which they received or forwarded.
I was obliged to leave the telegraphic operator back at
Nashville, because that was the point at which all dispatches to me would come, to be forwarded from there.
As I have said, it was necessary for me also to have an operator during this inspection who had possession of this cipher to enable me to telegraph to my division and to the War Department without my dispatches being read by all the operators along the line of wires over which they were transmitted.
Accordingly I ordered the cipher operator to turn over the key to
Captain Cyrus B. Comstock, of the
Corps of Engineers, whom I had selected as a wise and discreet man who certainly could be trusted with the cipher if the operator at my headquarters could.
The operator refused point blank to turn over the key to
Captain
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Comstock as directed by me, stating that his orders from the War Department were not to give it to anybody — the
commanding general or any one else.
I told him I would see whether he would or not. He said that if he did he would be punished.
I told him if he did not he most certainly would be punished.
Finally, seeing that punishment was certain if he refused longer to obey my order, and being somewhat remote (even if he was not protected altogether from the consequences of his disobedience to his orders) from the War Department, he yielded.
When I returned from
Knoxville I found quite a commotion.
The operator had been reprimanded very severely and ordered to be relieved.
I informed the
Secretary of War, or his assistant secretary in charge of the telegraph,
Stager, that the man could not be relieved, for he had only obeyed my orders.
It was absolutely necessary for me to have the cipher, and the man would most certainly have been punished if he had not delivered it; that they would have to punish me if they punished anybody, or words to that effect.
This was about the only thing approaching a disagreeable difference between the
Secretary of War and myself that occurred until the war was over, when we had another little spat.
Owing to his natural disposition to assume all power and control in all matters that he had anything whatever to do with, he boldly took command of the armies, and, while issuing no orders on the subject, prohibited any order from me going out of the
adjutant-general's office until he had approved it. This was done by directing the
adjutant-general to hold any orders that came from me to be issued from the
adjutant-general's office until he had examined them and given his approval.
He never disturbed himself, either, in examining my orders until it was entirely convenient for him; so that orders which I had prepared would often lie there three or four days before he would sanction them.
I remonstrated against this in writing, and the
Secretary apologetically restored me to my rightful position of
General-in-Chief of the Army.
But he soon lapsed again and took control much as before.
After the relief of
Knoxville Sherman had proposed to
Burnside that he should go with him to drive
Longstreet out of
Tennessee; but
Burnside assured him that with the troops which had been brought by
Granger, and which were to be left, he would be amply prepared to dispose of
Longstreet without availing himself of this offer.
As before stated
Sherman's command had left their camps north of the
Tennessee, near
Chattanooga, with two days rations in their haversacks, without coats or blankets, and without many wagons, expecting to return to their camps by the end of that time.
The weather was now
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cold and they were suffering, but still they were ready to make the further sacrifice, had it been required, for the good of the cause which had brought them into service.
Sherman, having accomplished the object for which he was sent, marched back leisurely to his old camp on the
Tennessee River.