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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ On the Trail of Grant and Lee, by Frederick Trevor Hill
+ </title>
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's On the Trail of Grant and Lee, by Frederick Trevor Hill
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: On the Trail of Grant and Lee
+
+Author: Frederick Trevor Hill
+
+
+Release Date: May, 2003 [Etext #4098]
+The actual date this file first posted = 11/27/01
+Last Updated: July 8, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ON THE TRAIL OF GRANT AND LEE ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by William Fishburne and Jenny Francisco
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ ON THE TRAIL OF GRANT AND LEE
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Frederick Trevor Hill
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ To Howard Ogden Wood, Jr.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Forward
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ During the early years of the Civil War someone tauntingly asked Mr.
+ Charles Francis Adams, the United States Minister to England, what he
+ thought of the brilliant victories which the confederate armies were then
+ gaining in the field. "I think they have been won by my fellow
+ countrymen," was the quiet answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost half a century has passed since that reproof was uttered, but its
+ full force is only just beginning to be understood. For nearly fifty years
+ the story of the Civil War has been twisted to suit local pride or
+ prejudice in various parts of the Union, with the result that much which
+ passes for American history is not history at all, and whatever else it
+ may be, it is certainly not American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Assuredly, the day has now arrived when such historical "make-believes"
+ should be discountenanced, both in the North and in the South. Americans
+ of the present and the coming generations are entitled to take a common
+ pride in whatever lent nobility to the fraternal strife of the sixties,
+ and to gather equal inspiration from every achievement that reflected
+ credit on American manhood during those years when the existence of the
+ Union was at stake. Until this is rendered possible by the elimination of
+ error and falsehood, the sacrifices of the Civil War will, to a large
+ extent, have been endured in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some respects this result has already been realized. Lincoln is no
+ longer a local hero. He is a national heritage. To distort or belittle the
+ characters of other men who strove to the end that their land "might have
+ a new birth of freedom," is to deprive the younger generations of part of
+ their birthright. They are entitled to the facts from which to form a just
+ estimate of the lives of all such men, regardless of uniforms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is in this spirit that the strangely interwoven trials of Grant and Lee
+ are followed in these pages. Both were Americans, and widely as they
+ differed in opinions, tastes and sympathies, each exhibited qualities of
+ mind and character which should appeal to all their fellow countrymen and
+ make them proud of the land that gave them birth. Neither man, in his
+ life, posed before the public as a hero, and the writer has made no
+ attempt to place either of them on a pedestal. Theirs is a very human
+ story, requiring neither color nor concealment, but illustrating a high
+ development of those traits that make for manhood and national greatness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The writer hereby acknowledges his indebtedness to all those historians
+ whose scholarly research has made it possible to trace the careers of
+ these two great commanders with confidence in the accuracy of the facts
+ presented. Where equally high authorities have differed he has been guided
+ by those who, in his judgment, have displayed the most scrupulous
+ impartiality, and wherever possible he has availed himself of official
+ records and documents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The generous service rendered by Mr. Samuel Palmer Griffin in testing the
+ vast record upon which these pages are based, his exhaustive research and
+ scientific analysis of the facts, have given whatever of authority may be
+ claimed for the text, and of this the writer hereby makes grateful
+ acknowledgment. To Mr. Arthur Becher he is likewise indebted for his
+ careful studies at West Point and elsewhere which have resulted in
+ illustrations conforming to history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frederick Trevor Hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ New York, September, 1911.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> Forward </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> Chapter I. &mdash; Three Civil Wars </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> Chapter II. &mdash; Washington and Lee </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> Chapter III. &mdash; Lee at West Point </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> Chapter IV. &mdash; The Boyhood of Grant </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> Chapter V. &mdash; Grant at West Point </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> Chapter VI. &mdash; Lieutenant Grant Under Fire
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> Chapter VII. &mdash; Captain Lee at the Front
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> Chapter VIII. &mdash; Colonel Lee After the
+ Mexican War </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> Chapter IX. &mdash; Captain Grant in a Hard Fight
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> Chapter X. &mdash; Grant's Difficulties in
+ Securing a Command </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> Chapter XI. &mdash; Lee at the Parting of the
+ Ways </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> Chapter XII. &mdash; Opening Moves </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> Chapter XIII. &mdash; Grant's First Success </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> Chapter XIV. &mdash; The Battle of Shiloh </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> Chapter XV. &mdash; Lee in the Saddle </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> Chapter XVI. &mdash; A Game of Strategy </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> Chapter XVII. &mdash; Lee and the Invasion of
+ Maryland </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> Chapter XVIII. &mdash; The Battle of Antietam or
+ Sharpsburg </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> Chapter XIX. &mdash; Lee against Burnside and
+ Hooker </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> Chapter XX. &mdash; In the Hour of Triumph </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> Chapter XXI. &mdash; Grant at Vicksburg </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> Chapter XXII. &mdash; The Battle of Gettysburg
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> Chapter XXIII. &mdash; In the Face of Disaster
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> Chapter XXIV. &mdash; The Rescue of Two Armies
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> Chapter XXV. &mdash; Lieutenant-General Grant
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> Chapter XXVI. &mdash; A Duel to the Death </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> Chapter XXVII. &mdash; Check and Countercheck
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0029"> Chapter XXVIII. &mdash; The Beginning of the End
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0030"> Chapter XXIX. &mdash; At Bay </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0031"> Chapter XXX. &mdash; The Surrender </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0032"> Chapter XXXI. &mdash; Lee's Years of Peace </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0033"> Chapter XXXII. &mdash; The Head of the Nation
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> Authorities </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ List of Illustrations (not available in this edition)
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Illustrations in Color
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Grant running the gauntlet of the Mexicans at Monterey
+ in riding to the relief of his comrades . . Frontispiece
+ September 23, 1846.
+
+ Lee with Mrs. Lewis (Nellie Custis) applying to General
+ Andrew Jackson to aid in securing his cadetship at
+ West Point . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
+ 1825.
+
+ Grant on his horse, "York," making exhibition jump in
+ the Riding Academy at West Point . . . . . . . . . . 32
+ June, 1843.
+
+ Lee sending the Rockbridge battery into action for the
+ second time at Antietam or Sharpsburg . . . . . . . 144
+ September 17, 1862.
+
+ Lee rallying his troops at the Battle of the
+ Wilderness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232
+ May 6, 1864.
+
+ Grant at the entrenchments before Petersburg . . . . . 260
+ March, 1865.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Illustrations in the Text
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Signature of Grant on reporting at West Point . . . . 25
+ (From the original records of the U. S. Military
+ Academy.)
+
+ First signature of Grant as U. S. Grant . . . . . . . 27
+ (From the original records of the U.S. Military
+ Academy.)
+
+ Grant's letter demanding unconditional surrender of
+ forces at Fort Donnelson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
+
+ Diagram map (not drawn to scale) showing strategy of
+ the opening of the Battle of Chancellorsville, May
+ 1 and 2, 1863 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
+
+ Diagram map (not drawn to scale) showing Grant's series
+ of movements by the left flank from the Wilderness
+ to Petersburg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 229
+
+ Facsimile of telegraphic message drafted by Lieutenant-
+ General Grant, announcing Lee's surrender, May 9,
+ 1865 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 275
+
+ Lee's letter of August 3, 1866, acknowledging receipt of
+ the extension of his furlough . . . . . . . . . . . 283
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter I. &mdash; Three Civil Wars
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ England was an uncomfortable place to live in during the reign of Charles
+ the First. Almost from the moment that that ill-fated monarch ascended the
+ throne he began quarreling with Parliament; and when he decided to dismiss
+ its members and make himself the supreme ruler of the land, he practically
+ forced his subjects into a revolution. Twelve feverish years followed&mdash;years
+ of discontent, indignation and passion&mdash;which arrayed the Cavaliers,
+ who supported the King, against the Roundheads, who upheld Parliament, and
+ finally flung them at each other's throats to drench the soil of England
+ with their blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the gathering storm of civil war caused many a resident of the
+ British Isles to seek peace and security across the seas, and among those
+ who turned toward America were Mathew Grant and Richard Lee. It is not
+ probable that either of these men had ever heard of the other, for they
+ came from widely separated parts of the kingdom and were even more
+ effectually divided by the walls of caste. There is no positive proof that
+ Mathew Grant (whose people probably came from Scotland) was a Roundhead,
+ but he was a man of humble origin who would naturally have favored the
+ Parliamentary or popular party, while Richard Lee, whose ancestors had
+ fought at Hastings and in the Crusades, is known to have been an ardent
+ Cavalier, devoted to the King. But whether their opinions on politics
+ differed or agreed, it was apparently the conflict between the King and
+ Parliament that drove them from England. In any event they arrived in
+ America at almost the same moment; Grant reaching Massachusetts in 1630,
+ the year after King Charles dismissed his Parliament, and Lee visiting
+ Virginia about this time to prepare for his permanent residence in the
+ Dominion which began when actual hostilities opened in the mother land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trails of Grant and Lee, therefore, first approach each other from out
+ of the smoke of a civil war. This is a strangely significant fact, but it
+ might be regarded merely as a curious coincidence were it not for other
+ and stranger events which seem to suggest that the hand of Fate was
+ guiding the destinies of these two men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mathew Grant originally settled in Massachusetts but he soon moved to
+ Connecticut, where he became clerk of the town of Windsor and official
+ surveyor of the whole colony&mdash;a position which he held for many
+ years. Meanwhile Richard Lee became the Colonial Secretary and a member of
+ the King's Privy Council in Virginia, and thenceforward the name of his
+ family is closely associated with the history of that colony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lee bore the title of colonel, but it was to statesmanship and not to
+ military achievements that he and his early descendants owed their fame;
+ while the family of Grant, the surveyor, sought glory at the cannon's
+ mouth, two of its members fighting and dying for their country as officers
+ in the French and Indian war of 1756. In that very year, however, a
+ military genius was born to the Virginia family in the person of Harry
+ Lee, whose brilliant cavalry exploits were to make him known to history as
+ "Light Horse Harry." But before his great career began, the house of Grant
+ was represented in the Revolution, for Captain Noah Grant of Connecticut
+ drew his sword in defense of the colonies at the outbreak of hostilities,
+ taking part in the battle of Bunker Hill; and from that time forward he
+ and "Light Horse Harry" served in the Continental army under Washington
+ until Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the trails of the two families, AGAIN DRAWN TOGETHER BY A CIVIL
+ STRIFE, merge for an historic moment and then cross; that of the Grants
+ turning toward the West, and that of the Lees keeping within the confines
+ of Virginia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in 1799 that Captain Noah Grant migrated to Ohio, and during the
+ same year Henry Lee delivered the memorial address upon the death of
+ Washington, coining the immortal phrase "first in war, first in peace and
+ first in the hearts of his countrymen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ulysses Grant, the Commander of the Union forces in the Civil War, was the
+ grandson of Captain Grant, who served with "Light Horse Harry" Lee during
+ the Revolution; and Robert Lee, the Confederate General, was "Light Horse
+ Harry's" son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, for the THIRD time in two and a half centuries, a civil conflict
+ between men of the English-speaking race blazed the trails of Grant and
+ Lee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter II. &mdash; Washington and Lee
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Wakefield," Westmoreland County, Virginia, was the birthplace of
+ Washington, and at Stratford in the same county and state, only a few
+ miles from Wakefield, Robert Edward Lee was born on January 19, 1807.
+ Seventy-five years had intervened between those events but, except in the
+ matter of population, Westmoreland County remained much the same as it had
+ been during Washington's youth. Indians, it is true, no longer lurked in
+ he surrounding forests or paddled the broad Potomac in their frail canoes,
+ but the life had much of the same freedom and charm which had endeared it
+ to Washington. All the streams and woods and haunts which he had known and
+ loved were known and loved by Lee, not only for their own sake, but
+ because they were associated with the memory of the great
+ Commander-in-Chief who had been his father's dearest friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would have been surprising, under such circumstances, if Washington had
+ not been Lee's hero, but he was more than a hero to the boy. From his
+ father's lips he had learned to know him, not merely as a famous personage
+ of history, but as a man and a leader of men. Indeed, his influence and
+ example were those of a living presence in the household of "Light Horse
+ Harry;" and thus to young Lee he early became the ideal of manhood upon
+ which, consciously or unconsciously, he molded his own character and life.
+ But quite apart from this, the careers of these two great Virginians were
+ astonishingly alike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Washington's father had been married twice, and so had Lee's; each was a
+ son of the second marriage, and each had a number of brothers and sisters.
+ Washington lost his father when he was only eleven years old, and Lee was
+ exactly the same age when his father died. Mrs. Washington had almost the
+ entire care of her son during his early years, and Lee was under the sole
+ guidance of his mother until he had almost grown to manhood. Washington
+ repaid his mother's devotion by caring for her and her affairs with
+ notable fidelity, and Lee's tenderness and consideration for his mother
+ were such that she was accustomed to remark that he was both a son and a
+ daughter to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Washington's ancestors were notable, if not distinguished, people in
+ England; while Lee could trace his descent, through his father, to
+ Lancelot Lee, who fought at the battle of Hastings, and through his mother
+ to Robert the Bruce of Scotland. Neither man, however, prided himself in
+ the least on his ancestry. Indeed, neither of them knew anything of his
+ family history until his own achievements brought the facts to light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Washington was a born and bred country boy and so was Lee. Both delighted
+ in outdoor life, loving horses and animals of all kinds and each was noted
+ for his skillful riding in a region which was famous for its horsemanship.
+ There was, however, a vast difference between Washington's education and
+ that of Lee. The Virginian schools were very rudimentary in Washington's
+ day; but Lee attended two excellent institutions of learning, where he had
+ every opportunity, and of this he availed himself, displaying much the
+ same thoroughness that characterized Washington's work, and the same manly
+ modesty about any success that he achieved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By reason of his father's death and other circumstances Washington was
+ burdened with responsibility long before he arrived at manhood, making him
+ far more reserved and serious-minded than most school boys. This was
+ precisely the case with Lee, for his father's death, the ill health of his
+ mother and the care of younger children virtually made him the head of the
+ family, so that he became unusually mature and self-contained at an early
+ age. Neither boy, however, held aloof from the sports and pastimes of his
+ schoolmates and both were regarded as quiet, manly fellows, with no
+ nonsense about them, and with those qualities of leadership that made each
+ in turn the great military leader of his age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never has history recorded a stranger similarity in the circumstances
+ surrounding the youth of two famous men, but the facts which linked their
+ careers in later years are even stranger still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter III. &mdash; Lee at West Point
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As his school days drew to a close, it became necessary for Lee to
+ determine his future calling. But the choice of a career, often so
+ perplexing to young men, presented no difficulty to "Light Horse Harry's"
+ son. He had apparently always intended to become a soldier and no other
+ thought had seemingly ever occurred to any member of his family.
+ Appointments to the United States Military Academy were far more a matter
+ of favor than they are to-day, and young Lee, accompanied by Mrs. Lewis
+ (better known as Nellie Custis, the belle of Mount Vernon and Washington's
+ favorite grandchild), sought the assistance of General Andrew Jackson.
+ Rough "Old Hickory" was not the easiest sort of person to approach with a
+ request of any kind and, doubtless, his young visitor had grave misgivings
+ as to the manner in which his application would be received. But Jackson,
+ the hero of the battle of New Orleans in the War of 1812, only needed to
+ be told that his caller was "Light Horse Harry's" son to proffer
+ assistance; and in his nineteenth year, the boy left home for the first
+ time in his life to enroll himself as a cadet at West Point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very few young men enter that institution so well prepared for military
+ life as was Lee, for he had been accustomed to responsibility and had
+ thoroughly mastered the art of self-control many years before he stepped
+ within its walls. He was neither a prig nor a "grind," but he regarded his
+ cadetship as part of the life work which he had voluntarily chosen, and he
+ had no inclination to let pleasure interfere with it. With his comrades he
+ was companionable, entering into all their pastimes with zest and spirit,
+ but he let it be understood, without much talk, that attention to duty was
+ a principle with him and his serious purpose soon won respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rigid discipline was then, as it is to-day, strictly enforced at West
+ Point, and demerits were freely inflicted upon cadets for even the
+ slightest infraction of the rules. Indeed, the regulations were so severe
+ that it was almost impossible for a cadet to avoid making at least a few
+ slips at some time during his career. But Lee accomplished the impossible,
+ for not once throughout his entire four years did he incur even a single
+ demerit&mdash;a record that still remains practically unique in the
+ history of West Point. This and his good scholarship won him high rank;
+ first, as cadet officer of his class, and finally, as adjutant of the
+ whole battalion, the most coveted honor of the Academy, from which he
+ graduated in 1829, standing second in a class of forty-six.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Men of the highest rating at West Point may choose whatever arm of the
+ service they prefer, and Lee, selecting the Engineer Corps, was appointed
+ a second lieutenant and assigned to fortification work at Hampton Roads,
+ in his twenty-second year. The work there was not hard but it was dull.
+ There was absolutely no opportunity to distinguish oneself in any way, and
+ time hung heavy on most of the officers' hands. But Lee was in his native
+ state and not far from his home, where he spent most of his spare time
+ until his mother died. Camp and garrison life had very little charm for
+ him, but he was socially inclined and, renewing his acquaintance with his
+ boyhood friends, he was soon in demand at all the dances and country
+ houses at which the young people of the neighborhood assembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the many homes that welcomed him at this time was that of Mr. George
+ Washington Parke Custis (Washington's adopted grandson), whose beautiful
+ estate known as "Arlington" lay within a short distance of Alexandria,
+ where Lee had lived for many years. Here he had, during his school days,
+ met the daughter of the house and, their boy-and-girl friendship
+ culminating in an engagement shortly after his return from West Point, he
+ and Mary Custis were married in his twenty-fifth year. Lee thus became
+ related by marriage to Washington, and another link was formed in the
+ strange chain of circumstances which unite their careers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more ideal marriage than that of these two young people cannot be
+ imagined. Simple in their tastes and of home-loving dispositions, they
+ would have been well content to settle down quietly to country life in
+ their beloved Virginia, surrounded by their family and friends. But the
+ duties of an army officer did not admit of this, and after a few years'
+ service as assistant to the chief engineer of the army in Washington, Lee
+ was ordered to take charge of the improvements of the Mississippi River at
+ St. Louis, where, in the face of violent opposition from the inhabitants,
+ he performed such valuable service that in 1839 he was offered the
+ position of instructor at West Point. This, however, he declined, and in
+ 1842 he was entrusted with the task of improving the defenses of New York
+ harbor and moved with his family to Fort Hamilton, where he remained for
+ several years. Meanwhile, he had been successively promoted to a first
+ lieutenancy and a captaincy, and in his thirty-eighth year he was
+ appointed one of the visitors to West Point, whose duty it was to inspect
+ the Academy and report at stated intervals on its condition. This
+ appointment, insignificant in itself, is notable because it marks the
+ point at which the trails of Grant and Lee first approach each other, for
+ at the time that Captain Lee was serving as an official visitor, Ulysses
+ Grant was attempting to secure an assistant professorship at West Point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IV. &mdash; The Boyhood of Grant
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Deerfield, Ohio, was not a place of any importance when Captain Noah Grant
+ of Bunker Hill fame arrived there from the East. Indeed, it was not then
+ much more than a spot on the map and it has ever won any great renown. Yet
+ in this tiny Ohio village there lived at one and the same time Owen Brown,
+ the father of John Brown, who virtually began the Civil War, and Jesse
+ Grant, the father of Ulysses Grant, who practically brought it to a close.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is certainly strange that these two men should, with all the world to
+ choose from, have chanced upon the same obscure little village, but it is
+ still stranger that one of them should have become the employer of the
+ other and that they should both have lived in the very same house. Such,
+ however, is the fact, for when Jesse Grant first began to earn his living
+ as a tanner, he worked for and boarded with Owen Brown, little dreaming
+ that his son and his employer's son would some day shake the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not at Deerfield, however, but at Point Pleasant, Ohio, that Jesse
+ Grant's distinguished son was born on April 27, 1822, in a cottage not
+ much larger than the cabin in which Abraham Lincoln first saw the light.
+ Mr. and Mrs. Grant and other members of their family differed among
+ themselves as to what the boy should be called, but they settled the
+ question by each writing his or her favorite name on a slip of paper and
+ then depositing all the slips in a hat, with the understanding that the
+ child should receive the first two names drawn from that receptacle. This
+ resulted in the selection of Hiram and Ulysses, and the boy was
+ accordingly called Hiram Ulysses Grant until the United States government
+ re-christened him in a curious fashion many years later. To his immediate
+ family, however, he was always known as Ulysses, which his playmates soon
+ twisted into the nickname "Useless," more or less good-naturedly applied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant's father moved to Georgetown, Ohio, soon after his son's birth, and
+ there his boyhood days were passed. The place was not at that time much
+ more than a frontier village and its inhabitants were mostly pioneers&mdash;not
+ the adventurous, exploring pioneers who discover new countries, but the
+ hardy advance-guard of civilization, who clear the forests and transform
+ the wilderness into farming land. Naturally, there was no culture and very
+ little education among these people. They were a sturdy, self-respecting,
+ hard-working lot, of whom every man was the equal of every other, and to
+ whom riches and poverty were alike unknown. In a community of this sort
+ there was, of course, no pampering of the children, and if there had been,
+ Grant's parents would probably have been the last to indulge in it. His
+ father, Jesse Grant, was a stern and very busy man who had neither the
+ time nor the inclination to coddle the boy, and his mother, absorbed in
+ her household duties and the care of a numerous family, gave him only such
+ attention as was necessary to keep him in good health. Young Ulysses was,
+ therefore, left to his own devices almost as soon as he could toddle, and
+ he quickly became self-reliant to a degree that alarmed the neighbors.
+ Indeed, some of them rushed into the house one morning shouting that the
+ boy was out in the barn swinging himself on the farm horses' tails and in
+ momentary danger of being kicked to pieces; but Mrs. Grant received the
+ announcement with perfect calmness, feeling sure that Ulysses would not
+ amuse himself in that way unless he knew the animals thoroughly understood
+ what he was doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly this confidence in the boy's judgment was entirely justified as
+ far as horses were concerned, for they were the joy of his life and he was
+ never so happy as when playing or working in or about the stables. Indeed,
+ he was not nine years old when he began to handle a team in the fields.
+ From that time forward he welcomed every duty that involved riding,
+ driving or caring for horses, and shirked every other sort of work about
+ the farm and tannery. Fortunately, there was plenty of employment for him
+ in the line of carting materials or driving the hay wagons and harrows,
+ and his father, finding that he could be trusted with such duties, allowed
+ him, before he reached his teens, to drive a 'bus or stage between
+ Georgetown and the neighboring villages entirely by himself. In fact, he
+ was given such free use of the horses that when it became necessary for
+ him to help in the tannery, he would take a team and do odd jobs for the
+ neighbors until he earned enough, with the aid of the horses, to hire a
+ boy to take his place in the hated tan-yard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This and other work was, of course, only done out of school hours, for his
+ parents sent him as early as possible to a local "subscription" school,
+ which he attended regularly for many years. "Spare the rod and spoil the
+ child" was one of the maxims of the school, and the first duty of the boys
+ on assembling each morning was to gather a good-sized bundle of beech-wood
+ switches, of which the schoolmaster made such vigorous use that before the
+ sessions ended the supply was generally exhausted. Grant received his fair
+ share of this discipline, but as he never resented it, he doubtless got no
+ more of it than he deserved and it probably did him good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among his schoolmates he had the reputation of talking less than any of
+ the other boys and of knowing more about horses than all of them put
+ together. An opportunity to prove this came when he was about eleven, for
+ a circus appeared in the village with a trick pony, and during the
+ performance the clown offered five dollars to any boy who could ride him.
+ Several of Ulysses' friends immediately volunteered, but he sat quietly
+ watching the fun while one after another of the boys fell victim to the
+ pony's powers. Finally, when the little animal's triumph seemed complete,
+ Grant stepped into the ring and sprang upon his back. A tremendous tussle
+ for the mastery immediately ensued, but though he reared and shied and
+ kicked, the tricky little beast was utterly unable to throw its fearless
+ young rider, and amid the shouts of the audience the clown at last stopped
+ the contest and paid Ulysses the promised reward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that time forward his superiority as a horseman was firmly
+ established, and as he grew older and his father allowed him to take
+ longer and longer trips with the teams, he came to be the most widely
+ traveled boy in the village. Indeed, he was only about fifteen when he
+ covered nearly a hundred and fifty miles in the course of one of his
+ journeys, taking as good care of his horses as he did of himself, and
+ transacting the business entrusted to him with entire satisfaction to all
+ concerned. These long, and often lonely, trips increased his independence
+ and so encouraged his habit of silence that many of the village people
+ began to think him a dunce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His father, however, was unmistakably proud of the quiet boy who did what
+ he was told to do without talking about it, and though he rarely displayed
+ his feelings, the whole village knew that he thought "Useless" was a
+ wonder and smiled at his parental pride. But the smile almost turned to a
+ laugh when it became known that he proposed to send the boy to West Point,
+ for the last cadet appointed from Georgetown had failed in his
+ examinations before he had been a year at the Academy, and few of the
+ neighbors believed that Ulysses would survive as long. Certainly, the boy
+ himself had never aspired to a cadetship, and when his father suddenly
+ remarked to him one morning that he was likely to obtain the appointment,
+ he receive the announcement with uncomprehending surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What appointment?" he asked
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To West Point," replied his father. "I have applied for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I won't go!" gasped the astonished youth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think you will," was the quiet but firm response, and Grant, who had
+ been taught obedience almost from his cradle, decided that if his father
+ thought so, he did, too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, though the young man yielded to his parent's wishes, he had no desire
+ to become a soldier and entirely agreed with the opinion of the village
+ that he had neither the ability nor the education to acquit himself with
+ credit. In fact, the whole idea of military life was so distasteful to him
+ that he almost hoped he would not fulfill the physical and other
+ requirements for admission. Indeed, the only thought that reconciled him
+ to the attempt was that it necessitated a trip from Ohio to New York,
+ which gratified his longing to see more of the world. This was so
+ consoling that it was almost with a gay heart that he set out of the
+ Hudson in the middle of May, 1839.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a boy who had lived all his life in an inland village on the outskirts
+ of civilization the journey was absolutely adventurous, for although he
+ was then in his eighteenth year, he had never even as much as seen a
+ railroad and his experiences on the cars, canal boats and steamers were
+ all delightfully surprising. Therefore, long as the journey was, it was
+ far too short for him, and on May 25th he reached his destination. Two
+ lonely and homesick weeks followed, and then, much to his astonishment and
+ somewhat to his regret, he received word that he had passed the
+ examination for admission and was a full-fledged member of the cadet corps
+ of West Point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter V. &mdash; Grant at West Point
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Grant's father had obtained his son's appointment to the Academy through
+ the intervention of a member of Congress, who, remembering that the boy
+ was known as Ulysses and that his mother's name before her marriage was
+ Simpson, had written to the Secretary of War at Washington, requesting a
+ cadetship for U. S. Grant. This mistake in his initials was not discovered
+ until the young man presented himself at West Point, but when he explained
+ that his name was Hiram Ulysses Grant and not U. S. Grant, the officials
+ would not correct the error. The Secretary of War had appointed U. S.
+ Grant to the Academy and U. S. Grant was the only person they would
+ officially recognize without further orders. They, therefore, intimated
+ that he could either enroll himself as U. S. Grant or stay out of the
+ Academy, making it quite plain that they cared very little which course he
+ adopted. Confronted with this situation, he signed the enlistment paper as
+ U. S. Grant and the document, bearing his name, which thus became his, can
+ be seen to-day among the records at West Point. This re-christening, of
+ course, supplied his comrades with endless suggestions for nicknames and
+ they immediately interpreted his new initials to suit themselves. "United
+ States," "Under Sized" and "Uncle Sam" all seemed to be appropriate, but
+ the last was the favorite until the day arrived when a more significant
+ meaning was found in "Unconditional Surrender" Grant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The restrictions and discipline of West Point bore much more harshly on
+ country-bred boys in those years than they do to-day when so many schools
+ prepare students for military duties. But to a green lad like Grant, who
+ had been exceptionally independent all his life, the preliminary training
+ was positive torture. It was then that his habitual silence stood him in
+ good stead, for a talkative, argumentative boy could never have survived
+ the breaking-in process which eventually transformed him from a slouchy
+ bumpkin into a smart, soldier-like young fellow who made the most of his
+ not excessive inches. Still, he hated almost every moment of his first
+ year and ardently hoped that the bill for abolishing the Academy, which
+ was under discussion in Congress, would become a law and enable him to
+ return home without disgrace. But no such law was passed and more
+ experience convinced him that West Point was a very valuable institution
+ which should be strengthened rather than abolished. He had not reached
+ this conclusion, however, at the time of his first furlough, and when he
+ returned to his more and found that his father had procured a fine horse
+ for his exclusive use during his holiday, it was hard to tear himself away
+ and resume his duties. Nevertheless, he did so; and, considering the fact
+ that he was not fond of studying, he made fair progress, especially in
+ mathematics, never reaching the head of his class, but never quite sinking
+ to the bottom. Indeed, if he had not been careless in the matter of
+ incurring demerits from small infractions of the rules, he might have
+ attained respectable, if not high rank in the corps, for he was a clean
+ living, clean spoken boy, without a vicious trait of any kind. Even as it
+ was, he became a sergeant, but inattention to details of discipline
+ finally cost him his promotion and reduced him again to the ranks. At no
+ time, however, did he acquire any real love for the military profession.
+ His sole ambition was to pass the examinations and retire from the service
+ as soon as he could obtain a professorship at some good school or college.
+ At this, he might easily have succeeded with his unmistakable talent for
+ mathematics, and it is even conceivable that he might have qualified as a
+ drawing master or an architect, if not as an artist, for he was fond of
+ sketching and some of his works in this line which have been preserved
+ shows a surprisingly artistic touch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Graduation day at the Academy brought no distinguished honors to Grant,
+ where he stood twenty-first in a class of thirty-nine, but it did win him
+ one small triumph. As almost everyone knows, the West Point cadets are
+ trained for all arms of the service, sometimes doing duty as infantry,
+ sometimes as artillery and at other times acting as engineers or cavalry;
+ and during the closing week of the year, they give public exhibitions of
+ their proficiency before the official visitors. On this particular
+ occasion the cavalry drill was held in the great riding hall, and after
+ the whole corps had completed their evolutions and were formed in line
+ ready to be dismissed, the commanding officer ordered an extraordinarily
+ high hurdle to be placed in position, and while the great throng of
+ spectators were wondering what this meant they heard the sharp command,
+ "Cadet Grant."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young man of slight stature, not weighing more than a hundred and twenty
+ pounds, and mounted on a powerful chestnut horse, sprang from the ranks
+ with a quick salute, dashed to the further end of the hall and, swinging
+ his mount about, faced the hurdle. There was a moment's pause and then the
+ rider, putting spurs to his steed, rushed him straight at the obstruction
+ and, lifting him in masterly fashion, cleared the bar as though he and the
+ animal were one. A thunder of applause followed as the horseman quietly
+ resumed his place in the ranks, and after the corps had been dismissed
+ Grant was sought out and congratulated on his remarkable feat. But his
+ response was characteristic of the boy that was, and the man that was to
+ be. "Yes, 'York' is a wonderfully good horse," was all he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A lieutenancy in the engineers or cavalry was more than a man of low
+ standing in the Academy could expect, and Grant was assigned to the Fourth
+ Infantry, with orders to report for duty at Jefferson Barracks, St. Louis,
+ Missouri, at the end of a short leave of absence. The prospect of active
+ service, far from his native state, was anything but pleasing to the new
+ officer; but he had come home with a bad cough, and had he not been
+ ordered to the South, it is highly probable that he would have fallen a
+ victim to consumption, of which two of his uncles had already died. The
+ air of Camp Salubrity, Louisiana, where his regiment was quartered, and
+ the healthy, outdoor life, however, quickly checked the disease, and at
+ the end of two years he had acquired a constitution of iron.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, he had met Miss Julia Dent, the sister of one of his classmates
+ whose home was near St. Louis, and had written to the Professor of
+ Mathematics at West Point, requesting his aid in securing an appointment
+ there as his assistant, to which application he received a most
+ encouraging reply. Doubtless, his courtship of Miss Dent made him doubly
+ anxious to realize his long-cherished plan of settling down to the quiet
+ life of a professor. But all hope of this was completely shattered by the
+ orders of the Fourth Infantry which directed it to proceed at once to
+ Texas. Long before the regiment marched, however, he was engaged to "the
+ girl he left behind him" and, although his dream of an instructorship at
+ West Point had vanished, he probably did not altogether abandon his
+ ambition for a career at teaching. But Fate had other plans for him as he
+ journeyed toward Mexico, where the war clouds were gathering. Lee was
+ moving in the same direction and their trails were soon to merge at the
+ siege of Vera Cruz.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VI. &mdash; Lieutenant Grant Under Fire
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The movement of the United States troops towards Mexico did not take the
+ country by surprise. It was the direct result of the action of Congress
+ admitting Texas to the Union. Ever since it had won its independence from
+ Mexico, Texas had been seeking to become part of the United States; but
+ there had been violent objection in the North to the admission of any new
+ slave state, and this opposition had effectually prevented its annexation.
+ At the last election (1844), however, a majority of the voters apparently
+ favored the admission of Texas, which was accordingly received into the
+ Union, and the long-standing dispute which it had waged with Mexico as to
+ its proper boundaries was assumed by the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Texas claimed to own far more territory than Mexico was willing to
+ concede, but the facts might easily have been ascertained had the United
+ States government desired to avoid a war. Unfortunately, it had no such
+ desire, and General Zachary Taylor was soon ordered to occupy the disputed
+ territory with about 3,000 men. This force, of which Grant's regiment
+ formed a part, was called the Army of Observation, but it might better
+ have been called the Army of Provocation, for it was obviously intended to
+ provoke an attack on the part of Mexico and to give the United States an
+ excuse for declaring war and settling the boundary question to suit
+ itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably, there were not many in the army who thought much about the
+ rights or the wrongs of the impending war. There had been no fighting in
+ the United States for more than thirty years, and most of the officers
+ were more interested in seeing real service in the field than they were in
+ discussing the justice or injustice of the cause. Grant was as anxious for
+ glory as any of his comrades, but he cherished no illusions as to the
+ merits of the dispute in which his country was involved. With the clear
+ vision of the silent man who reads and thinks for himself, he saw through
+ the thinly disguised pretenses of the politicians and, recognizing that
+ force was being used against a weaker nation in order to add more slave
+ states to the Union, he formed a very positive opinion that the war was
+ unjustifiable. But though he was forced to this disagreeable conclusion,
+ the young Lieutenant was not the sort of man to criticize his country once
+ she was attacked, or to shirk his duty as a soldier because he did not
+ agree with his superiors on questions of national policy. He thought and
+ said what he liked in private, but he kept his mouth closed in public,
+ feeling that his duties as an officer were quite sufficient without
+ assuming responsibilities which belonged to the authorities in Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ War was inevitable almost from the moment that Texas was annexed, but with
+ full knowledge of this fact neither the President nor Congress made any
+ effective preparations for meeting the impending crisis, and when
+ hostilities actually began, General Taylor was directed to advance under
+ conditions which virtually required him to fight his way to safety.
+ Indeed, he was practically cut off from all hope of reënforcement as soon
+ as the first shot was fired, for his orders obliged him to move into the
+ interior of the country, and had his opponents been properly commanded,
+ they could have overwhelmed him and annihilated his whole force. The very
+ audacity of the little American army, however, seemed to paralyze the
+ Mexicans who practically made no resistance until Taylor reached a place
+ called Palo Alto, which in Spanish means "Tall Trees."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Grant had been made regimental quartermaster, charged with the
+ duty of seeing that the troops were furnished with proper food and caring
+ for all property and supplies. Heartily as he disliked this task, which
+ was not only dull and difficult, but also bade fair to prevent him from
+ taking active part in the prospective battles, he set to work with the
+ utmost energy. By the time the enemy began to dispute the road, he had
+ overcome the immense difficulty of supplying troops on a march through a
+ tropical country and was prepared to take part in any fighting that
+ occurred. But the Mexicans gathered at TALL TREES on May 8, 1846, were not
+ prepared for a serious encounter. They fired at the invaders, but their
+ short-range cannon loaded with solid shot rarely reached the Americans,
+ and when a ball did come rolling towards them on the ground, the troops
+ merely stepped to one side and allowed the missile to pass harmlessly
+ through their opened ranks. After the American artillery reached the
+ field, however, the enemy was driven from its position and the next day
+ the advance was resumed to Resaca de la Palma, where stronger opposition
+ was encountered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant was on the right wing of the army as it pressed forward through
+ dense undergrowth to drive the Mexicans from the coverts in which they had
+ taken shelter. It was impossible to give any exact orders in advancing
+ through this jungle, and the men under Grant's command struggled forward
+ until they reached a clearing where they caught sight of a small body of
+ Mexicans. The young Lieutenant instantly ordered a charge and, dashing
+ across the open ground, captured the party only to discover that they were
+ merely stragglers left behind by other American troops who had already
+ charged over the same ground. No one appreciated the humor of this exploit
+ more than Grant. It reminded him, he said, of the soldier who boasted that
+ he had been in a charge and had cut off the leg of one of the enemy's
+ officers. "Why didn't you cut off his head?" inquired his commander. "Oh,
+ somebody had done that already," replied the valiant hero.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slight as the fighting was at Resaca, it completely satisfied the
+ Mexicans, and for over three months they left the Americans severely
+ alone. Meanwhile, General Taylor received reënforcements and in August,
+ 1846, he proceeded against the town of Monterey, which the enemy had
+ fortified with considerable skill and where they were evidently prepared
+ to make a desperate resistance. Grant was again quartermaster, and the
+ terrific heat which forced the army to do its marching at night or during
+ the early hours of the morning, greatly increased his labors and severely
+ tested his patience. Almost all the transportation animals were mules, and
+ as very few of them were trained for the work, they were hard to load and
+ even harder to handle after their burdens were adjusted. One refractory
+ animal would often stampede all the rest, scattering provisions and
+ ammunition in their tracks, driving the teamsters to the point of frenzy
+ and generally hurling confusion through the camp. Even Grant, who never
+ uttered an oath in his life, was often sorely tried by these exasperating
+ experiences, but he kept command of his temper and by his quiet
+ persistence brought order out of chaos in spite of beasts and men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His disappointment was bitter, however, when the attack on Monterey began
+ and he found himself left without any assignment in the field. Lieutenant
+ Meade, destined at a later date to command the Union forces at Gettysburg,
+ was one of the officers entrusted with the preliminary reconnoissance
+ against the city, and when the fighting actually commenced on September
+ 21st, 1846, the deserted Quartermaster mounted his horse and rode to the
+ scene of the action, determined to see something of the battle even if he
+ could not take part in it. He arrived at the moment when his regiment was
+ ordered to charge against what was known as the Black Fort, and dashed
+ forward with his men into the very jaws of death. Certainly "someone had
+ blundered," for the charge which had been intended merely as a feint was
+ carried too far and scores of men were mowed down under the terrible fire
+ of the enemy's guns. Temporary shelter was at last reached, however, and
+ under cover of it the Adjutant borrowed Grant's horse; but he fell soon
+ after the charge was renewed and the Colonel, noticing the impetuous
+ Quartermaster, promptly appointed him to take the fallen officer's place.
+ By this time the troops had fought their way into the town and the enemy,
+ posted in the Plaza or Principal Square, commanded every approach to it.
+ As long as the Americans kept in the side streets they were comparatively
+ safe, but the moment they showed themselves in any of the avenues leading
+ to the Plaza, they encountered a hail of bullets. This was serious enough;
+ but at the end of two days the situation became critical, for the
+ ammunition began to run low, and it was realized that, if the Mexicans
+ discovered this, they would sweep down and cut their defenseless opponents
+ to pieces. Face to face with this predicament, the Colonel on September
+ 23rd, called for a volunteer to carry a dispatch to Headquarters, and
+ Grant instantly responded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To reach his destination it was necessary to run the gantlet of the enemy,
+ for every opening from the Plaza was completely exposed to their fire. But
+ trusting in the fleetness of his horse, the young lieutenant leaped into
+ the saddle and, swinging himself down, Indian fashion, on one side of his
+ steed so as to shield himself behind its body, he dashed away on his
+ perilous mission. A roar of muskets greeted him at every corner, but he
+ flashed safely by, leaping a high wall which lay across his path and then,
+ speeding straight for the east end of the town, reached the commanding
+ General and reported the peril of his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the Americans began one of the most curious advances ever made
+ by an army, for General Worth, finding that he could not force his troops
+ through the streets leading to the Plaza without great loss of life,
+ ordered them to enter the houses and break down the intervening walls, so
+ that they could pass from one adjoining house to another under cover,
+ directly to the heart of the city. This tunneling maneuver was executed
+ with great skill, and when the walls of the houses nearest the Plaza were
+ reached and masses of men stood ready to pour through the openings into
+ the Square, its astonished defenders gave up the fight and promptly
+ surrendered the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VII. &mdash; Captain Lee at the Front
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Astonishing as General Taylor's success had been, the authorities at
+ Washington decided, largely for political reasons, to appoint a new
+ commander, and three months after the battle of Monterey, General Winfield
+ Scott, the Commander-in-Chief of the United States army, was ordered to
+ the seat of the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be impossible to imagine two officers more utterly different than
+ Taylor and Scott, but each in his own way exerted a profound influence
+ upon the careers of Grant and Lee. Taylor was a rough, uncultivated man,
+ fearless, shrewd and entirely capable, but with nothing to suggest the
+ soldier in his appearance, dress or dignity. On the contrary, he usually
+ appeared sitting slouchily on some woe-begone old animal, his long legs
+ dangling on one side of the saddle, the bridle rein looped over his arm
+ and a straw hat on his head, more like a ploughman than an officer of high
+ rank. Indeed, he seldom donned a uniform of any description, and his only
+ known appearance in full dress occurred during an official meeting with an
+ admiral, when, out of regard for naval etiquette, he attired himself in
+ his finest array. But this effort at politeness was not calculated to
+ encourage him, for the admiral, knowing his host's objection to uniforms,
+ had been careful to leave his on his ship and appeared in civilian attire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scott, on the other hand, was a fussy and rather pompous individual, who
+ delighted in brass buttons and gold lace and invariably presented a
+ magnificent appearance. But, like Taylor, he was an excellent officer and
+ thoroughly competent to handle an army in the field. He was, moreover,
+ entirely familiar with the material of which the American army was
+ composed, and his first move on assuming command was to order practically
+ all the regular United States troops and their officers to join him near
+ Vera Cruz, leaving Taylor virtually nothing but volunteer regiments. The
+ Fourth Infantry accordingly parted with its old commander and reported to
+ Scott, where it was assigned to the division of General Worth, and for the
+ first time Grant met many of the men with and against whom he was to be
+ thrown during the Civil War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was certainly a remarkable body of officers that Scott gathered about
+ him at the outset of his campaign, for it included such men as Stonewall
+ Jackson, Jefferson Davis, McClellan, Joseph Johnson, Jubal Early, A. P.
+ Hill, Meade, Beauregard, Hooker, Longstreet, Hancock, Thomas and, last but
+ not least, Ulysses Grant and Robert Lee. Lee had arrived in Mexico soon
+ after the battle of Monterey, but he had no opportunity for distinction
+ until the spring of 1847, when preparations were begun for the siege of
+ Vera Cruz. He had, however, already demonstrated his ability as an
+ engineer, and with Lieutenant Beauregard who, fourteen years later,
+ commanded the attack on Fort Sumter, he was entrusted with posting the
+ American batteries at Vera Cruz. This he did to such advantage that they
+ made short work of the city which fell into the invaders' hands, March 29,
+ 1847, after a week's siege. Scott was quick to recognize the merit of
+ officers, and Lee was straightway attached to his personal staff, with the
+ result that when the army began its forward movement most of the difficult
+ and delicate work was confided to his care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scott's object was the capture of the City of Mexico, the capital of the
+ Republic, and against this stronghold he moved with energy and skill. At
+ Cerro Gordo the Mexicans opposed him with considerable force, but
+ maneuvers, suggested by Lee, enabled him to outflank the enemy and drive
+ them, without much trouble, from his path. Again at Contreras a check
+ occurred, part of the army having advanced over a well-nigh impassable
+ country and lost touch with the Commander-in-Chief. One after another
+ seven officers were dispatched to carry the necessary orders, but all
+ returned without effecting their purpose. But at midnight, in the midst of
+ a torrential storm Lee arrived from the front, having overcome all
+ difficulties&mdash;an achievement which Scott subsequently described as
+ "the greatest feat of physical and moral courage performed by any
+ individual in my knowledge, pending the campaign."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lee was more than merely brave and daring. He was thorough. When work
+ was entrusted to his care he performed it personally, never relying on
+ others further than was absolutely necessary, and never resting satisfied
+ until he was certain that he had accomplished his task. On one of his most
+ important reconnoissances he rode into the interior of the country at
+ night to locate the position of the enemy, and after he had proceeded a
+ considerable distance his guide informed him that if he went any further
+ he would be a prisoner, for the whole Mexican army lay directly in his
+ path. He, accordingly, advanced more cautiously, but the guide again
+ begged him to halt, declaring that he could already see the enemies' tents
+ lying on the hillside below. Peering through the darkness in the direction
+ indicated, Lee discovered what appeared to be an encampment of many
+ thousand men, and for the moment he was tempted to accept his companion's
+ conclusion that this was the main force of the Mexicans. Second thoughts,
+ however, convinced him that he ought not to make a report based upon the
+ eyes of the guide, and, despite the man's frightened protests, he decided
+ to stay where he was and see the situation for himself by daylight. But,
+ before the morning fairly dawned, it was apparent that the supposed army
+ of Mexicans was nothing but a huge flock of sheep and, galloping back with
+ the news that the road was clear, he led a troop of cavalry forward and
+ located the enemy posted many miles away in an entirely different
+ position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Mexicans stubbornly, though unsuccessfully, resisted the American army
+ as it pushed toward their capital, and in the battles which ensued Lee was
+ so active that his gallant conduct was praised in almost every dispatch of
+ his Chief, who subsequently attributed much of his success "to the skill
+ and valor of Robert E. Lee," whom he did not hesitate to describe as "the
+ greatest military genius in America." Continuous praise from such a source
+ would have been more than sufficient to turn the average officer's head,
+ but Lee continued to perform his duties without showing the least sign of
+ vanity or conceit. Quiet, thoughtful, quick to take advantage of any
+ opportunity, but greedy of neither honors nor personal distinction of any
+ kind, he won the admiration of his comrades as well as the confidence of
+ his superiors, and his promotion, first to the rank of major and then to
+ that of lieutenant-colonel, was universally approved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Grant had been acquitting himself with high credit in all the
+ work which fell to his share. He was in no position to render service of
+ anything like the importance of Lee's, but he did what he was ordered to
+ do and did it well, being brevetted a first lieutenant for conspicuous
+ gallantry at the battle of Molino del Rey, September 8, 1847. Again, on
+ September 13, in the fighting around Chapultepec, where Lee, though
+ wounded, remained in the saddle until he fell fainting from his horse,
+ Grant gained considerable distinction by his quick action in relieving a
+ dangerous pressure on part of the American lines by posting a small gun in
+ the belfry of a church and galling the enemy with his deadly accurate
+ fire. It was characteristic of the man that when complimented upon this
+ achievement and told that a second gun would be sent to him, Grant merely
+ saluted. He might, with truth, have informed his commanding officer that
+ the belfry could not accommodate another gun, but it was not his habit to
+ talk when there was no need of it, or to question the wisdom of his
+ superior officer. He, therefore, quietly accepted the praise and the
+ superfluous gun and, returning to his post, resumed his excellent service.
+ This and other similar conduct won him further promotion, and on September
+ 14, 1847, when the Americans marched triumphantly into the Mexican
+ capital, he was brevetted a captain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war practically ended with this event and within a year Grant was
+ married to Miss Julia Dent and stationed at Sackett's Harbor, New York,
+ while Lee was assigned to the defenses of Baltimore, not far from his old
+ home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter VIII. &mdash; Colonel Lee After the Mexican War
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is probable that Lee would have been well content to remain
+ indefinitely at Baltimore, for his duties there enabled him to be more
+ with his family than had been possible for some years. To his boys and
+ girls he was both a companion and a friend and in their company he took
+ the keenest delight. In fact, he and his wife made their home the center
+ of attraction for all the young people of the neighborhood, and no happier
+ household existed within the confines of their beloved Virginia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not to be expected, however, that an officer of Lee's reputation
+ would be allowed to remain long in obscurity, and in 1852, he was
+ appointed Superintendent at West Point. A wiser selection for this
+ important post could scarcely have been made, for Colonel Lee, then in his
+ forty-sixth year, possessed rare qualifications for the duties entrusted
+ to his charge. He was not only a man whose splendid presence, magnificent
+ physique and distinguished record were certain to win the admiration and
+ respect of young men, but he combined in his character and temperament all
+ the qualities of a tactful teacher and an inspiring leader. Quiet and
+ dignified, but extremely sympathetic, he governed the cadets without
+ seeming to command them and, as at his own home, he exerted a peculiarly
+ happy influence upon all with whom he came into personal contact. Among
+ the cadets during his service at West Point were J. E. B. Stuart, who was
+ to prove himself one of the greatest cavalry leaders that this country has
+ ever produced, and his elder son, Custis Lee, who, improving on his
+ father's almost perfect record, graduated first in his class.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About this time certain important changes were effected in the
+ organization of the regular army, and the popular Superintendent of West
+ Point was immediately appointed Lieutenant-Colonel of the newly formed
+ Second Cavalry, with orders to proceed to Texas and protect the settlers
+ against the attacks of hostile Indians. It was with keen regret that Lee
+ received this assignment, for, though intended as a promotion, it removed
+ him from the corps of engineers to which he had always been attached and
+ obliged him to break all his home ties for what was practically police
+ duty in the wilderness. Nevertheless, no thought of resigning from the
+ army apparently crossed his mind. He soon joined his regiment in Texas,
+ where, for almost three years, he patrolled the country, ruling the
+ Indians by diplomacy or force, as occasion required, practically living in
+ the saddle and experiencing all the discomforts and privations of garrison
+ life at an outpost of civilization.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost his only relaxation during this lonely and exhausting service was
+ his correspondence with his wife and children, and his letters to them,
+ written in rough camps and on the march, show that his thoughts were
+ constantly with his home and loved ones. "It has been said that our
+ letters are good representations of our minds," he wrote his youngest
+ daughter from Texas in 1857; and certainly Lee's correspondence,
+ exhibiting as it does, consideration for others, modesty,
+ conscientiousness, affection and a spirit of fun, affords an admirable
+ reflection of the writer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did I tell you that 'Jim Nooks,' Mrs. Waite's cat, was dead?" he wrote
+ one of his girls. "He died of apoplexy. I foretold his end. Coffee and
+ cream for breakfast, pound cake for lunch, turtle and oysters for dinner,
+ buttered toast for tea and Mexican rats, taken raw, for supper! He grew
+ enormously and ended in a spasm. His beauty could not save him.... But I
+ saw 'cats as is cats' at Sarassa.... The entrance of Madame [his hostess]
+ was foreshadowed by the coming in of her stately cats with visages grim
+ and tails erect, who preceded, surrounded and followed her. They are of
+ French breed and education, and when the claret and water were poured out
+ for my refreshment they jumped on the table for a sit-to.... I had to
+ leave the wild-cat on the Rio Grande; he was too savage and had grown as
+ large as a small sized dog. He would pounce on a kid as Tom Tita [his
+ daughter's cat] would on a mouse and would whistle like a tiger when you
+ approached him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was not always in this chatty fashion that he wrote, for in 1856,
+ when the question of slavery was being fiercely discussed throughout the
+ country, he expressed his views on the subject with a moderation and
+ broadmindedness exceedingly rare in those excited times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In this enlightened age," he wrote his wife, "there are few, I believe,
+ but will acknowledge that slavery as an institution is a moral and
+ political evil in any country. I think it, however, a greater evil to the
+ white than to the black race; and while my feelings are strongly
+ interested in behalf of the latter, my sympathies are stronger for the
+ former. The blacks are immeasurably better off here than in Africa&mdash;morally,
+ socially and physically. The painful discipline they are undergoing is
+ necessary for their instruction as a race and I hope it will prepare and
+ lead them to better things. How long this subjection may be necessary is
+ known and ordered by a wise and merciful Providence. Their emancipation
+ will sooner result from a mild and melting influence than from the storms
+ and contests of fiery controversy. This influence though slow is sure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were the views of Robert Lee on this great question of the day, and
+ even as he wrote the country was beginning to notice a country lawyer
+ named Abraham Lincoln, who was expressing almost identically the same
+ opinions in no uncertain terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the calm advice of Lincoln and Lee did not appeal to the hot-heads who
+ were for abolishing slavery instantly at any and every cost. In October,
+ 1859, when Lee was on a short visit to Arlington, John Brown, whose father
+ had once lived with Grant's father, attempted to take the whole matter
+ into his already blood-stained hands. It is a strange coincidence that Lee
+ should have chanced to be in Virginia just at this particular crisis, and
+ still stranger that the errand which had called him home should have
+ related to the emancipation of slaves. But the facts were that Mr. Custis,
+ his father-in-law, had died a few weeks previously, leaving him as the
+ executor of his will, which provided, among other things, for the gradual
+ emancipation of all his slaves. Lee had accordingly obtained leave of
+ absence to make a flying trip to Virginia for the purpose of undertaking
+ this duty, and he was actually making arrangements to carry out Mr.
+ Custis's wishes in respect to his slaves when the news of John Brown's
+ raid on Harper's Ferry reached Arlington. Word of this reckless attempt to
+ free the slaves by force reached him in the form of a dispatch from the
+ Secretary of War, ordering him to take immediate charge of the United
+ States marines who were being hurried to the scene of action. He instantly
+ obeyed and, with Lieutenant J. E. B. Stuart as his second in command,
+ hastened to Harper's Ferry and, directing his troops to storm the
+ engine-house where Brown and his followers had taken refuge, effected
+ their capture almost without striking a blow. Then, after delivering his
+ prisoners to the proper authorities, he completed his work at Arlington
+ and returned to Texas and the rough life of guarding the frontier line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this duty he was recalled to Washington in March, 1861, when the
+ Southern States were rapidly forming the Confederacy, the whole country
+ was in wild confusion and the nation was facing the prospect of a terrific
+ civil war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter IX. &mdash; Captain Grant in a Hard Fight
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, what had become of Grant? The War Department did not know and
+ apparently did not care. Jefferson Davis, the Secretary of War, responded
+ to his father's anxious inquiry that Captain U. S. Grant had resigned from
+ the army in July, 1854, but that he had no official knowledge as to why he
+ had taken this action. Mr. Grant, however, soon learned the facts from
+ other sources, and in his bitter disappointment was heard to exclaim that
+ "West Point had ruined one of his boys for him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was natural enough that the stern and proud old gentleman should have
+ blamed West Point for the heart-breaking failure of his favorite son, but,
+ as a matter of fact, West Point was in no way responsible for what had
+ occurred. Neither during his cadetship at the Academy nor for some years
+ after his graduation from that institution had Ulysses Grant touched wine
+ or stimulants in any form. He had, indeed, tried to learn to smoke during
+ his West Point days but had merely succeeded in making himself ill. During
+ his hard campaigning in Mexico, however, he had learned not only to smoke,
+ but to drink, though it was not until some years after the war closed that
+ he began to indulge to excess. As a matter of fact, he ought never to have
+ touched a drop of any intoxicant, for a very little was always too much
+ for him, and the result was that he soon came to be known in the army as a
+ drinking man. Had he been at home, surrounded by his wife and children and
+ busily engaged, perhaps he might not have yielded to his weakness. But his
+ orders carried him to lonely posts on the Pacific, many hundreds of miles
+ away from his family, with no duties worthy of the name, and the habit
+ grew on him until the exasperated Colonel of his regiment at last gave him
+ the choice of resigning or being court-martialed for conduct unbecoming an
+ officer and a gentleman. Face to face with this ugly alternative, he chose
+ resignation, and the army, officially, knew him no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not only social and professional disgrace, but financial ruin which
+ confronted the broken officer as he bade good-bye to his regiment at its
+ desolate quarters in California, after fifteen years of service to the
+ army. He was absolutely without money and, at the age of thirty-two, it
+ was by no means easy for him to begin life all over again and earn his own
+ living at a new calling. His fellow officers provided him with enough cash
+ for his immediate wants, and with their help he managed to find his way
+ back to Sackett's Harbor, New York, where there was a little money owing
+ him. But he failed to collect this and remained hopelessly stranded until
+ another officer came to his rescue and provided him with sufficient funds
+ to take him to his home. This friend in time of need was Simon B. Buckner,
+ whom he was to meet again under strange and dramatic circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was hardly to be expected, under such conditions, that stern old Jesse
+ Grant would welcome the home-coming of his eldest son. Nevertheless, he
+ helped him on his way to his wife and children, and, sick at heart and
+ broken in health, the young man joined his family and began a desperate
+ struggle to earn his own living. Mrs. Grant's father was a slave owner and
+ a sympathizer with the South in the growing trouble between that section
+ of the country and the North. But the quarrel had not yet reached the
+ breaking point, and although he did not approve of his son-in-law's
+ northern views and heartily disapproved of his conduct, he gave him a
+ start as a farmer and then left him to work out his own salvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Farming was the only occupation at which Grant could hope to make a
+ living, but he soon found that he did not know enough about this to make a
+ success of it, and gradually fell back on his youthful experience as a
+ teamster, hauling wood to the city where he sold it to the railroad or to
+ anyone that would buy. At this he was fairly successful and, encouraged by
+ his wife who stood bravely by him, he built a house with his own hands,
+ which, although it was not much more than a log cabin, was sufficiently
+ large to shelter his small family. All this time he was making a hard
+ fight to conquer his drinking habits, but the vice had taken a terrible
+ hold on him and he could not easily shake it off. It was only a matter of
+ time, therefore, before his experiment at farming failed and with the aid
+ of his father-in-law he entered business as a real estate broker in St.
+ Louis. But for this calling he had no qualification whatsoever, and after
+ a disheartening experience in attempting to secure the post of county
+ engineer, he accepted his father's suggestion that he join his brothers in
+ the leather business in Galena, Illinois, and retired there with his
+ family in the spring of 1860.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The position which his father had made for him was not much more than a
+ clerkship and the work was dull for a man who had been accustomed to
+ active, outdoor life; but he was received with tact and kindness, no
+ reference was made to his past record of failure and all this helped him
+ to continue the successful struggle which he was making to regain control
+ of himself and his habits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, from the time he began his residence in Galena he already had the
+ battle well in hand and he fought it out with such grim resolution that
+ before a year had passed his victory was complete. Scarcely anyone in the
+ little town knew of this silent struggle for self-mastery. Indeed, very
+ few people knew anything at all about the newcomer, save that he was a
+ quiet, hard-working man who occasionally appeared on the streets wearing a
+ blue army overcoat which had seen rough service. This weather-stained
+ garment, however, forced Grant to break his habitual silence, for he fully
+ shared General Taylor's prejudice against a uniform and felt obliged to
+ apologize for wearing even part of one. So one day he explained to a
+ neighbor that he wore the coat because it was made of good material and he
+ thought he ought to use it as long as it lasted. That was all the citizens
+ of Galena then learned of the record of the man who had served with high
+ honor in well-nigh every battle of the Mexican War. Had it depended upon
+ him, their information would probably have begun and ended there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During all this time the feeling between the North and the South was
+ growing more and more bitter, but Galena was a town divided against itself
+ on the slavery question. Grant himself was a Democrat. If he was not in
+ favor of slavery, he certainly was not opposed to it, for he favored
+ Douglas and not Lincoln in the contest for the Presidency, and Douglas was
+ strongly against any interference with slavery. Indeed, it is a curious
+ coincidence that at or about the time when Lee's family was ceasing to own
+ slaves, Grant's family acquired some. Such, however, is the fact, for on
+ the death of her father, Mrs. Grant inherited several Negroes and there is
+ some evidence that Grant himself sold or attempted to sell them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, though he was at that time no champion of the black race, Grant was
+ always a strong Union man, opposed heart and soul to secession. Indeed,
+ when news of the attack upon Fort Sumter arrived in Galena, he arrayed
+ himself with the defenders of the flag gathered at a mass meeting held in
+ the town to form a company in response to the President's call for 75,000
+ volunteers. Moreover, this meeting had no sooner been called to order than
+ someone proposed him as chairman, and to his utter astonishment, he found
+ himself pushed from the rear of the room to the front and from the front
+ to the platform. Probably few in the audience knew who or what he was, and
+ his embarrassment was such that for a few minutes no words came to his
+ lips. Finally, however, he managed to announce the object of the meeting,
+ warning those who intended to enlist that they would be engaged in serious
+ business involving hard work and privation, expressing his willingness to
+ aid in forming the Galena Company and ending with a simple statement of
+ his own intention to reënter the army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was nothing eloquent about his short speech but it had the tone of a
+ man who knew what he was talking about, and the audience, availing itself
+ of his military experience, immediately voted to entrust the organization
+ and drilling of the volunteers to his care, and from that moment he never
+ again entered his father's place of business.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter X. &mdash; Grant's Difficulties in Securing a Command
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The command of the local company was, of course, offered to Grant as soon
+ as it was formed, but he declined, believing himself qualified for
+ somewhat higher rank than a captaincy of volunteers. Nevertheless, he did
+ all he could to prepare the recruits for active service in the field and
+ when they were ordered to Springfield, the capital of Illinois, he
+ journeyed there to see them properly mustered into the service of the
+ state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Springfield was a hubbub of noise and a rallying point for well-meaning
+ incompetence when he arrived upon the scene. New officers in new uniforms
+ swaggered in every public meeting place, bands of music played martial
+ airs at every street corner and volunteers sky-larked and paraded in all
+ sorts of impossible uniforms and with every form of theatric display. But
+ system and order were absolutely lacking, and the adjutant-general's
+ office, littered with blanks and well-nigh knee deep with papers, was the
+ most helpless spot in the welter of confusion. All the material for a
+ respectable army was at hand, but how to form it into an effective force
+ was more than anyone seemed to know. The mass of military forms and blanks
+ intended for that purpose was mere waste paper in the hands of the amiable
+ but ignorant insurance agent who bore the title of adjutant-general, and
+ no one of the patriotic mob had sufficient knowledge to instruct him in
+ his duties. In the midst of all this hopeless confusion, however, someone
+ suggested that a man by the name of Grant, who had come down with the
+ Galena Company, had been in the army and ought to know about such things.
+ The Governor accordingly sought out "the man from Galena" just as he was
+ starting for his home, with the result that he was soon at a desk in the
+ adjutant's office, filling out the necessary papers at three dollars a
+ day, while the brand new captains, colonels and generals posed in the
+ foreground to the tune of popular applause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this time forward order gradually took the place of chaos and the
+ political generals and comic-opera soldiers were slowly shifted from the
+ scene. But scarcely anyone noticed the silent man, hard at work in his
+ shirt sleeves in a corner of the adjutant's room, and such inquiries as
+ were made concerning him elicited the information that he was a cast-off
+ of the regular army, with a dubious reputation for sobriety, who had been
+ hired as a clerk. But the Governor of Illinois was an intelligent man, and
+ he was well aware of the service which the ex-Captain of regulars was
+ performing for the State, and on the completion of his work in the
+ adjutant's office Grant was given a nominal title and assigned to visit
+ the various regiments at their encampments to see that they were properly
+ mustered in. He, accordingly, straightway set to work at this task, and
+ his brisk, business-like manner of handling it made an impression upon
+ those with whom he came in contact, for one of the temporary camps became
+ known as Camp Grant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, seeing his duties coming to an end without much hope of further
+ employment, he wrote the following letter to the Adjutant-General of the
+ United States Army at Washington:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sir:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Having served for fifteen years in the regular army, including four years
+ at West Point, and feeling it the duty of every one who has been educated
+ at the Government expense to offer their services for the support of that
+ Government, I have the honor, very respectfully, to tender my services
+ until the close of the war in such capacity as may be offered. I would say
+ in view of my present age and length of service, I feel myself competent
+ to command a regiment, if the President, in his judgment, should see fit
+ to entrust one to me. Since the first call of the President I have been
+ serving on the staff of the Governor of this State, rendering such aid as
+ I could in the organization of our State militia, and am still engaged in
+ that capacity. A letter addressed to me at Springfield, Ill., will reach
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the authorities at Washington took no notice whatsoever of this modest
+ letter, which was evidently tossed aside and completely forgotten. Indeed,
+ it was so completely buried in the files of the War Department that it
+ disappeared for years and, when it was at last discovered, the war was a
+ thing of the past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This silent rebuff was enough to discourage any sensitive man and Grant
+ felt it keenly, but he did not entirely despair of accomplishing his end.
+ He tried to gain an interview with General Frémont who was stationed in a
+ neighboring state and, failing in this, sought out McClellan, his comrade
+ in the Mexican War, who had been made a major-general and was then in the
+ vicinity of Covington, Kentucky, where Grant had gone to visit his
+ parents. But McClellan either would not or could not see him. Indeed, he
+ had about reached the conclusion that his quest was hopeless, when he
+ happened to meet a friend who offered to tell the Governor of Ohio that he
+ wished to reenter the army, with the result that before long he was
+ tendered the colonelcy of an Ohio regiment. In the meantime, however, he
+ had unexpectedly received a telegram from the Governor of Illinois,
+ appointing him to the command of the 21st Illinois regiment, and this he
+ had instantly accepted. Had he known the exact circumstances under which
+ this post was offered him, perhaps he might not have acted so promptly,
+ but he knew enough to make him aware that the appointment was not
+ altogether complimentary and it is quite likely that he would have
+ accepted it in any event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The facts were, however, that the Colonel of the 21st Regiment had proved
+ to be an ignorant and bombastic adventurer, who had appeared before his
+ troops clothed in a ridiculous costume and armed like a pirate king, and
+ there was such dissatisfaction among both the officers and men that a new
+ commander was urgently demanded. Of this Grant already knew something, but
+ he was not advised that the regiment had become so utterly demoralized by
+ its incompetent leader that it was nothing less than a dangerous and
+ unruly mob, of which the Governor could not induce any self-respecting
+ officer to take charge. He had, indeed, offered the command to at least
+ half a dozen other men before he tendered it to Grant, and he must have
+ been intensely relieved to receive his prompt acceptance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new Colonel did not wait to procure a new uniform before reporting for
+ duty, but, hastening to the Fair Grounds close to Springfield where his
+ troops were stationed, ordered them to assemble for inspection. But
+ incompetent leadership had played havoc with the discipline of the
+ regiment, and the men shambled from their tents without any attempt at
+ military formation, more from curiosity than in obedience to orders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new Colonel stepped to the front, wearing a rusty suit of civilian's
+ clothes, his trousers tucked into his dusty boots, a battered hat on his
+ head, a bandanna handkerchief tied around his waist in place of a sash and
+ carrying a stick in place of a sword. Altogether he presented a most
+ unimpressive figure and it would not have been surprising if a wild guffaw
+ of laughter had greeted him, but the troops, studying his strong, calm
+ face, contented themselves with calling for a speech. Then they waited in
+ silence for his response and they did not have to wait long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Men!" he commanded sharply. "Go to your quarters!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The regiment fairly gasped its astonishment. It had never heard a speech
+ like that before and, taken completely by surprise, it moved quietly from
+ the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sentries were instantly posted, camp limits established and preparations
+ made for enforcing strict discipline. It was not to be supposed that such
+ prompt reforms would pass unchallenged, but arrests followed the first
+ signs of disobedience and punishment swiftly followed the arrests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For every minute I'm kept here I'll have an ounce of your blood!"
+ threatened a dangerous offender whom the Colonel had ordered to be tied
+ up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gag that man!" was the quiet response. "And when his time is up I'll cut
+ him loose myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before night, all was quiet in the camp of the 21st Regiment of Illinois
+ Volunteers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant was in command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XI. &mdash; Lee at the Parting of the Ways
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While Grant was thus striving to reënter the army, Lee was having a
+ struggle of a very different sort. Summoned from his distant post in
+ Texas, where only an occasional rumble of the coming tempest reached his
+ ears, he suddenly found himself in the center of the storm which
+ threatened to wreck the Republic. In the far South seven states had
+ already seceded; in Washington, Congressmen, Senators, and members of the
+ Cabinet were abandoning their posts; in the army and navy his friends were
+ daily tendering their resignations; and his own state, divided between
+ love for the Union and sympathy with its neighbors, was hovering on the
+ brink of secession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The issue in Lee's mind was not the existence of slavery. He had long been
+ in favor of emancipation, and Virginia had more than once come so close to
+ abolishing slavery by law that its disappearance from her borders was
+ practically assured within a very short period. All his own slaves he had
+ long since freed and he was gradually emancipating his father-in-law's,
+ according to the directions of Mr. Custis's will. But the right of each
+ state to govern itself without interference from the Federal Government
+ seemed to Lee essential to the freedom of the people. He recognized,
+ however, that secession was revolution and, calmly and conscientiously
+ examining the question, he concluded that, if force were used to compel
+ any state to remain in the Union, resistance would be justifiable. Most
+ Virginians reached this decision impulsively, light-heartedly, defiantly
+ or vindictively, and more or less angrily, according to their temperaments
+ and the spirit of the times, but not so Lee. He unaffectedly prayed God
+ for guidance in the struggle between his patriotism and his devotion to a
+ principle which he deemed essential to liberty and justice. He loved his
+ country as only a man in close touch with its history and with a deep
+ reverence for its great founder, Washington, could love it; he had fought
+ for its flag; he wore its uniform; he had been educated at its expense;
+ and General Scott, the Commander of the army, a devoted Union man, was his
+ warm personal friend. Patriotism, personal pride, loyalty and even
+ gratitude, therefore, urged him toward the support of the Union, and only
+ his adherence to a principle and the claims of his kinsmen and friends
+ forbade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time Virginia resisted every effort to induce her to cast her lot
+ with the Confederacy. Indeed she actually voted against secession when the
+ question was first presented. But when Fort Sumter resisted attack on
+ April 12, 1861, and the President called upon the various states to
+ furnish troops to enforce the national authority, practically all
+ affection for the Union disappeared and by a decisive vote Virginia
+ determined to uphold the Southern cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that crisis President Lincoln made a strong effort to induce Lee to
+ support the Union, for he actually offered him the command of the United
+ States Army which was about to take the field. The full force of this
+ remarkable tribute to his professional skill was not lost upon Lee. He had
+ devoted his whole life to the army, and to be a successor of Washington in
+ the command of that army meant more to him than perhaps to any other
+ soldier in the land. Certainly, if he had consulted his own ambition or
+ been influenced by any but the most unselfish motives, he would have
+ accepted the call as the highest honor in the gift of the nation. But to
+ do so he would have been obliged to surrender his private principles and
+ desert his native state, and it is impossible to imagine that a man of his
+ character would, even for an instant, consider such a course. Gravely and
+ sadly he declined the mighty office, and two days later he tendered his
+ resignation from the service he had honored for almost six and thirty
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For this and his subsequent action Lee has been called a traitor and
+ severely criticized for well-nigh fifty years. But, when a nation has been
+ divided against itself upon a great issue of government, millions upon one
+ side and millions upon the other, and half a century has intervened, it is
+ high time that justice be given to the man who did what he thought right
+ and honorably fought for a principle which he could have surrendered only
+ at the expense of his conscience and his honor. Lee was a traitor to the
+ United States in the same sense that Washington was a traitor to England.
+ No more and no less. England takes pride to-day in having given Washington
+ to the world. Americans deprive their country of one of her claims to
+ greatness when they fail to honor the character and the genius of Robert
+ Lee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in a letter to his old commander, Scott, that Lee announced his
+ momentous decision, and its tone well indicated what the parting cost him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Arlington, Va., April 20, 1861.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "General:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Since my interview with you on the 18th inst., I have felt that I ought
+ not longer to retain my commission in the army. I, therefore, tender my
+ resignation, which I request you will recommend for acceptance. It would
+ have been presented at once but for the struggle it has cost me to
+ separate myself from a service to which I have devoted the best years of
+ my life and all the ability I possessed. During the whole of that time...I
+ have experienced nothing but kindness from my superiors and a most cordial
+ friendship from my comrades. To no one, General, have I been as much
+ indebted as to yourself for uniform kindness and consideration.... Save in
+ the defense of my native State, I never desire again to draw my sword."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lee was fully aware of the serious nature of the conflict in which the
+ country was about to engage. Americans were to be pitted against Americans
+ and he knew what that meant. Wise men, both North and South, were
+ prophesying that the war would not last more than ninety days, and foolish
+ ones were bragging of their own powers and questioning the courage of
+ their opponents, quite oblivious of the adage that when Greek meets Greek
+ there comes a tug of war. But Lee did not concern himself with such
+ childish exhibitions of judgment and temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do not put your faith in rumors of adjustment," he wrote his wife before
+ serious fighting had begun. "I see no prospect of it. It cannot be while
+ passions on both sides are so infuriated. MAKE YOUR PLANS FOR SEVERAL
+ YEARS OF WAR. I agree with you that the inflammatory articles in the
+ papers do us much harm. I object particularly to those in the Southern
+ papers, as I wish them to take a firm, dignified course, free from bravado
+ and boasting. The times are indeed calamitous. The brightness of God's
+ countenance seems turned from us. It may not always be so dark and He may
+ in time pardon our sins and take us under his protection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to this time his son Custis, who had graduated first in his class at
+ West Point, was still in the service of the United States as a lieutenant
+ in the Engineers and of him Lee wrote to his wife in the same comradely
+ spirit that he had always shown toward his boys. "Tell Custis he must
+ consult his own judgment, reason and conscience, as to the course he may
+ take. The present is a momentous question which every man must settle for
+ himself, and upon principle. I do not wish him to be guided by my wishes
+ or example. If I have done wrong let him do better."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Virginia was not slow in recognizing that she had within her borders the
+ soldiers whom the chief general of the United States described as the
+ greatest military genius in America, and within three days of his
+ resignation from the old army, Lee was tendered the command of all the
+ Virginia troops. Convinced that the brunt of the heavy fighting would fall
+ on his native state, to whose defense he had dedicated his sword, he
+ accepted the offer and thus there came to the aid of the Confederacy one
+ of the few really great commanders that the world has ever seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XII. &mdash; Opening Moves
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was to no very agreeable task that Lee was assigned at the outset of
+ his command. The forces of the Confederacy were even less prepared to take
+ the field than those of the United States, and for three months Lee was
+ hard at work organizing and equipping the army for effective service. This
+ important but dull duty prevented him from taking any active part in the
+ first great battle of the War at Bull Run (July 21, 1861), but it was his
+ rare judgment in massing the troops where they could readily reënforce
+ each other that enabled the Confederate commanders on that occasion to
+ form the junction which resulted in the overwhelming defeat of the Union
+ army. This fact was well recognized by the authorities and, when the
+ situation in western Virginia assumed a threatening aspect, he was ordered
+ there with the highest hopes that he would repeat the success of Bull Run
+ and speedily expel the Union forces from that part of the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A more unpromising field of operation than western Virginia could scarcely
+ have been selected for the new commander. The people of that region
+ generally favored the Union, and the Federal troops had already obtained
+ possession of the strongest positions, while some of the Confederate
+ commanders were quarreling with each other and otherwise working at cross
+ purposes. For a time, therefore, Lee had to devote himself to smoothing
+ over the differences which had arisen among his jealous subordinates, but
+ when he at last began an aggressive movement, bad weather and a lack of
+ coöperation between the various parts of his small army defeated his
+ designs, and in October, 1861, the three-months' campaign came to an
+ inglorious close.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This complete failure was a bitter disappointment to the Confederate hopes
+ and Lee was severely blamed for the result. Indeed, for the time being he
+ was regarded as an overrated individual who had had his opportunity and
+ had proved unequal to the task of conducting military operations on a
+ large scale. It was not easy to suffer this unjust criticism to pass
+ unnoticed, but the discipline of the army life had taught Lee to control
+ his tongue, and he made no protest even when he found himself removed from
+ the front to superintend the fortifying of the coast. A small-minded man
+ would probably have retired in sulky silence under such circumstances, but
+ Lee entered upon his new duties with cheerful energy, and in four months
+ he devised such skillful defenses for Charleston, Savannah and other
+ points on the Confederate coast line, that they were enabled to defy all
+ assaults of the Union army and navy until almost the close of the war.
+ This invaluable service attracted no public attention, but it was fully
+ appreciated by the Confederate authorities, who in no wise shared the
+ popular opinion concerning Lee's talents. On the contrary, President
+ Jefferson Davis, himself a graduate of West Point, continued to have the
+ highest regard for his ability, and in March, 1862, he reappointed him as
+ his chief military adviser at Richmond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about this time that the roar of cannon in the West attracted the
+ attention of the country, making it realize for the first time how far
+ flung was the battle line of the contending armies; and on hard-fought
+ fields, hundreds and hundreds of miles away from Washington and Richmond,
+ the mud-splashed figure of Grant began to loom through heavy clouds of
+ smoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was by no brilliant achievement that Grant regained his standing in the
+ army. The unruly 21st Illinois had been sufficiently disciplined within a
+ fortnight after he assumed command to take some pride in itself as an
+ organization and when its short term of service expired, it responded to
+ the eloquence of McClernand and Logan, two visiting orators, by
+ reënlisting almost to a man. Then the Colonel set to work in earnest to
+ make his regiment ready for the field, drilling and hardening the men for
+ their duties and waiting for an opportunity to show that this was a
+ fighting force with no nonsense about it. The opportunity came sooner than
+ he expected, for about two weeks after he had assumed command, his
+ regiment was ordered to northern Missouri, and a railroad official called
+ at his camp to inquire how many cars he would need for the transportation
+ of his men. "I don't want any," was the bluff response; and, to the
+ astonishment of the local authorities who, at that period of the war,
+ never dreamed of moving troops except by rail or river, the energetic
+ Colonel assembled his regiment in marching order and started it at a brisk
+ pace straight across country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, though he had moved with such commendable promptness, Grant was not
+ nearly so confident as his actions seemed to imply. In fact, before he
+ reached his destination, he heartily wished himself back again, and by the
+ time he arrived at the point where the enemy was expected his nerves were
+ completely unstrung. It was not the fright of cowardice that unmanned him,
+ but rather the terror of responsibility. Again and again he had braved
+ death in battle but now, for the first time, the safety of an entire
+ regiment depended solely upon him as he approached the summit of the hill
+ from which he expected to catch sight of his opponents he dreaded to fight
+ them, lest he prove unequal to the emergency. But, while he was tormenting
+ himself with this over-anxiety, he suddenly remembered that his opponent
+ was just as new at his duties as he was and probably quite as nervous, and
+ from that moment his confidence gradually returned. As a matter of fact,
+ Colonel Harris, who commanded the Confederate force, displayed far more
+ prudence than valor, for, on hearing of the advance of the Union troops,
+ he speedily retreated and the 21st Illinois encountered no opposition
+ whatever. But the march taught Grant a lesson he never forgot and,
+ thereafter, in the hour of peril, he invariably consoled himself by
+ remembering that his opponents were not free from danger and the more he
+ made them look to their own safety the less time they would have for
+ worrying him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in July, 1861, when Grant entered Missouri, and about a month later
+ the astonishing news reached his headquarters that President Lincoln had
+ appointed him a Brigadier General of Volunteers. The explanation of this
+ unexpected honor was that the Illinois Congressmen had included his name
+ with seven others on a list of possible brigadiers, and the President had
+ appointed four of them without further evidence of their qualifications.
+ Under such circumstances, the promotion was not much of an honor, but it
+ placed Grant in immediate command of an important district involving the
+ control of an army of quite respectable size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time the new General was exclusively occupied with perfecting the
+ organization of his increased command, but to this hard, dull work he
+ devoted himself in a manner that astonished some of the other brigadiers
+ whose ideas of the position involved a showy staff of officers and a deal
+ of picturesque posing in resplendent uniforms. But Grant had no patience
+ with such foolery. He had work to do and when his headquarters were
+ established at Cairo, Illinois, he took charge of them himself, keeping
+ his eyes on all the details like any careful business man. In fact he was,
+ as far as appearances were concerned, a man of business, for he seldom
+ wore a uniform and worked at his desk all day in his shirt sleeves, behind
+ ramparts of maps and papers, with no regard whatever for military ceremony
+ or display.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A month of this arduous preparation found his force ready for active duty
+ and about this time he became convinced that the Confederates intended to
+ seize Paducah, an important position in Kentucky at the mouth of the
+ Tennessee River, just beyond the limits of his command. He, accordingly,
+ telegraphed his superiors for permission to occupy the place. No reply
+ came to this request and a more timid man would have hesitated to move
+ without orders. But Grant saw the danger and, assuming the responsibility,
+ landed his troops in the town just in time to prevent its capture by the
+ Confederates. Paducah was in sympathy with the South, and on entering it
+ the Union commander issued an address to the inhabitants which attracted
+ far more attention than the occupation of the town, for it contained
+ nothing of the silly brag and bluster so common then in military
+ proclamations on both sides. On the contrary, it was so modest and
+ sensible, and yet so firm, that Lincoln, on reading it, is said to have
+ remarked: "The man who can write like that is fitted to command."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Paducah was destined to be the last of Grant's bloodless victories, for in
+ November, 1861, he was ordered to threaten the Confederates near Belmont,
+ Missouri, as a feint to keep them from reënforcing another point where a
+ real assault was planned. The maneuver was conducted with great energy and
+ promised to be completely successful, but after Grant's raw troops had
+ made their first onslaught and had driven their opponents from the field,
+ they became disorderly and before he could control them the enemy
+ reappeared in overwhelming numbers and compelled them to fight their way
+ back to the river steamers which had carried them to the scene of action.
+ This they succeeded in doing, but such was their haste to escape capture
+ that they actually tumbled on board the boats and pushed off from the
+ shore without waiting for their commander. By this time the Confederates
+ were rapidly approaching with the intention of sweeping the decks of the
+ crowded steamboats before they could get out of range, and Grant was
+ apparently cut off from all chance of escape. Directly in front of him lay
+ the precipitous river bank, while below only one transport was within hail
+ and that had already started from its moorings. Its captain, however,
+ caught sight of him as he came galloping through a corn field and
+ instantly pushed his vessel as close to the shore as he dared, at the same
+ time throwing out a single plank about fifteen feet in length to serve as
+ an emergency gangway. To force a horse down the cliff-like bank of the
+ river and up the narrow plank to the steamer's deck, was a daring feat,
+ but the officer who was riding for his life had not forgotten the skill
+ which had marked him at West Point and, compelling his mount to slide on
+ its haunches down the slippery mud precipice, he trotted coolly up the
+ dangerous incline to safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The battle of Belmont (November 7, 1861), as this baptism of fire was
+ called, is said to have caused more mourning than almost any other
+ engagement of the war, for up to that time there had been but little loss
+ of life and its list of killed and wounded, mounting into the hundreds,
+ made a painfully deep impression. In this respect, it was decidedly
+ ominous of Grant's future record, but it accomplished his purpose in
+ detaining the Confederates and he was soon to prove his willingness to
+ accept defeats as necessary incidents to any successful campaign and to
+ fight on undismayed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIII. &mdash; Grant's First Success
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Up to this time the war in the West had been largely an affair of
+ skirmishes. A body of Union troops would find itself confronting a
+ Confederate force, one of the two commanders would attack and a fight
+ would follow; or the Confederates would march into a town and their
+ opponents would attempt to drive them out of it, not because it was of any
+ particular value, but because the other side held it.
+ "See-a-head-and-hit-it" strategy governed the day and no plan worthy of
+ the name had been adopted for conducting the war on scientific principles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Grant had studied the maps to some purpose in his office at Cairo and
+ he realized that the possession of the Mississippi River was the key to
+ the situation in the West. As long as the Confederates controlled that
+ great waterway which afforded them free access to the ocean and fairly
+ divided the Eastern from the Western States, they might reasonably hope to
+ defy their opponents to the end of time. But, if they lost it, one part of
+ the Confederacy would be almost completely cut off from the rest.
+ Doubtless, other men saw this just as clearly and quite as soon as Grant
+ did; but having once grasped an idea he never lost sight of it, and while
+ others were diverted by minor matters, he concentrated his whole attention
+ on what he believed to be the vital object of all campaigning in the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tennessee River and the Cumberland River both flow into the Ohio, not
+ far from where that river empties into the Mississippi. They, therefore,
+ formed the principal means of water communication with the Mississippi for
+ the State of Tennessee, and the Confederates had created forts to protect
+ them at points well within supporting distance of each other. Fort Henry,
+ guarding the Tennessee River, and Fort Donelson, commanding the Cumberland
+ River, were both in Grant's district, and in January, 1862, he wrote to
+ General Halleck, his superior officer in St. Louis, calling attention to
+ the importance of these posts and offering suggestions for their capture.
+ But Halleck did not take any notice of this communication and Grant
+ thereupon resolved to go to St. Louis and present his plans in person.
+ This was the first time he had been in the city since the great change in
+ his circumstances and those who had known him only a few years before as a
+ poverty-stricken farmer and wagoner could scarcely believe that he was the
+ same man. He had, as yet, done nothing very remarkable, but he held an
+ important command, his name was well and favorably known and he had
+ already begun to pay off his old debts. All this enabled his father and
+ mother to regain something of the pride they had once felt for their
+ eldest son, and his former friends were glad to welcome him and claim his
+ acquaintance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pleasant as this was, the trip to St. Louis was a bitter disappointment in
+ other respects, for Halleck not only rejected his subordinate's
+ proposition for the capture of Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, but dismissed
+ him without even listening to the details of his plan. Most officers would
+ have been completely discouraged by such treatment, but Grant had been
+ accustomed to disappointments for many years and did not readily despair.
+ Meeting Flag-Officer Foote who had charge of a fleet of gun boats near
+ Cairo, he explained his idea and finding him not only sympathetic, but
+ enthusiastic, he and Foote each sent a telegram to Halleck assuring him
+ that Fort Henry could be taken if he would only give his consent. These
+ messages brought no immediate response, but Grant continued to request
+ permission to advance until, on the 1st of February, 1862, the necessary
+ order was obtained and within twenty-four hours the persistent officer had
+ his expedition well upon its way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His force consisted of some 15,000 men and seven gun boats, and Halleck
+ promised him reënforcements, sending a capable officer to see that they
+ were promptly forwarded. This officer was Brigadier General Sherman who
+ thus, for the first time, came in touch with the man with whom he was
+ destined to bring the war to a close. Four days after the troops started
+ they were ready to attack and the gun-boats at once proceeded to shell the
+ fort, with the result that its garrison almost immediately surrendered
+ (February 6, 1862), practically all of its defenders having retreated to
+ Fort Donelson as soon as they saw that their position was seriously
+ threatened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant promptly notified his Chief of this easy conquest, at the same time
+ adding that he would take Fort Donelson within forty-eight hours, but he
+ soon had reason to regret this boast&mdash;one of the few of which he was
+ ever guilty. Indeed, his troops had scarcely started on their journey when
+ rapid progress became impossible, for the rain descended in torrents,
+ rendering the roads impassable for wagons and cannon, and almost
+ impracticable for infantry or cavalry. Moreover, many of the men had
+ foolishly thrown away their blankets and overcoats during the march from
+ Fort Henry and their suffering under the freezing winter blasts was
+ exceedingly severe, especially as camp fires were not permitted for fear
+ that their smoke would attract the gunners in the fort. Under these
+ circumstances the advance was seriously delayed, and it was February 14,
+ 1862&mdash;six days after he had prophesied that he would take the place&mdash;before
+ Grant had his army in position. By this time, however, the gun-boats had
+ arrived and he determined to attack at once, although Halleck had advised
+ him to wait for reënforcements to occupy Fort Henry, lest the Confederates
+ should recapture it while his back was turned. There was, of course, a
+ chance of this, but Grant felt sure that if he delayed the Confederates
+ would seize the opportunity to strengthen Fort Donelson, and then 50,000
+ men would not be able to accomplish what 15,000 might immediately effect.
+ He, accordingly, directed Foote to bombard the fort at once from the river
+ front and try to run its batteries. Desperate as this attempt appeared his
+ orders were instantly obeyed, the fearless naval officer forcing his
+ little vessels into the very jaws of death under a terrific fire, to which
+ he responded with a hail of shot and shell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant watched this spectacular combat with intense interest, waiting for a
+ favorable moment to order an advance of his troops, but to his bitter
+ disappointment one after another of Foote's vessels succumbed to the
+ deadly fire of the water batteries and drifted helplessly back with the
+ current. Indeed, the flagship was struck more than sixty times and Foote
+ himself was so severely wounded that he could not report in person, but
+ requested that the General come on board his ship for a conference, which
+ disclosed the fact that the fleet was in no condition to continue the
+ combat and must retire for repairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was nothing for Grant to do, therefore, but prepare for a siege, and
+ with a heavy heart he returned from the battered gun-boat to give the
+ necessary orders. He had scarcely set his foot on shore, however, before a
+ staff officer dashed up with the startling intelligence that the
+ Confederates had sallied forth and attacked a division of the army
+ commanded by General McClernand and that his troops were fleeing in a
+ panic which threatened to involve the entire army. Grant knew McClernand
+ well. He was one of the Congressmen who had made speeches to the 21st
+ Illinois and, realizing that the man was almost wholly ignorant of
+ military matters and utterly incapable of handling such a situation, he
+ leaped on his horse and, spurring his way across the frozen ground to the
+ sound of the firing, confronted the huddled and beaten division just in
+ the nick of time. Meanwhile, General Lew Wallace&mdash;afterwards famous
+ as the author "Ben Hur"&mdash;had arrived and thrown forward a brigade to
+ cover the confused retreat, so that for the moment the Confederate advance
+ was held in check. But despite this, McClernand's men continued to give
+ way, muttering that their ammunition was exhausted. There were tons of
+ ammunition close at hand, as the officers ought to have known had they
+ understood their duties, but even when assured of this the panic-stricken
+ soldiers refused to return to the field. They were in no condition to
+ resist attack, they declared, and the enemy was evidently intending to
+ make a long fight of it, as the haversacks of those who had fallen
+ contained at least three days' rations. This excuse was overheard by Grant
+ and instantly riveted his attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me see some of those haversacks," he commanded sharply, and one
+ glance at their contents convinced him that the Confederates were not
+ attempting to crush his army, but were trying to break through his lines
+ and escape. If they intended to stay and defend the fortress, they would
+ not carry haversacks at all; but if they contemplated a retreat, they
+ would not only take them, but fill them with enough provisions to last for
+ several days. In reaching this conclusion Grant was greatly aided by his
+ knowledge of the men opposing him. He had served in Mexico with General
+ Pillow, the second in command at Fort Donelson, and, knowing him to be a
+ timid man, felt certain that nothing but desperation would ever induce him
+ to risk an attack. He also knew that Floyd, his immediate superior, who
+ had recently been the United States Secretary of War, had excellent
+ reasons for avoiding capture and, putting all these facts together, he
+ instantly rose to the occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fill your cartridge boxes, quick, and get into line," was his order to
+ the men as he dashed down the wavering lines. "The enemy is trying to
+ escape and he must not be permitted to do so!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The word flew through the disordered ranks, transforming them as it
+ passed, and at the same time orders were issued for the entire left wing
+ to advance and attack without a moment's delay. This unexpected onslaught
+ quickly threw the Confederates back into the fortress, but before they
+ again reached the shelter of its walls the Union forces had carried all
+ the outer defenses and had virtually locked the door behind their
+ retreating adversaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that moment the capture of the imprisoned garrison was only a
+ question of time, and within twenty-four hours Grant received a
+ communication from the Confederate commander asking for a truce to
+ consider the terms of surrender. To his utter astonishment, however, this
+ suggestion did not come from either General Floyd or General Pillow but
+ from Simon Buckner, his old friend at West Point, who had so generously
+ aided him when he reached New York, penniless and disgraced after his
+ resignation from the army. This was an embarrassing situation, indeed, but
+ while he would have done anything he could for Buckner personally, Grant
+ realized that he must not allow gratitude or friendship to interfere with
+ his duty. He, therefore, promptly answered the proposal for a truce in
+ these words:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No terms except an unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted.
+ I propose to move immediately upon your works."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [NOTE from Brett: The full letter is also shown in Grant's handwriting
+ which leaves something to be desired. I will do my best to transcribe it
+ below:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hd Qrs. Army in the Field Camp Fort Donelson, Feb. 16th 1862
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cmdr. S. B. Buckner Confed. Army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yours of this inst. proposing armistice, and appointment of Commissioners
+ to settle terms of Capitulation is just received. No terms except an
+ unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I propose to move immediately upon your works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I am Sir, very respectfully, your obt. svt. [obedient servant], U. S.
+ Grant Brig. Gen.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no more fighting was necessary, for Buckner yielded as gracefully as
+ he could, and on February 16, 1862, he and the entire garrison of about
+ 15,000 men became prisoners of war. Generals Pillow and Floyd, it
+ appeared, had fled with some 4,000 men the night before, leaving Buckner
+ in charge and as Grant's force had by that time been increased to 27,000
+ men, further resistance would have been useless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The capture of these two forts gave the Union forces command of the
+ Tennessee and the Cumberland Rivers, and to that extent cleared the way
+ for the control of the Mississippi. It was the first real success which
+ had greeted the Union cause and it raised Grant to a Major-Generalship of
+ Volunteers, gave him a national reputation and supplied a better
+ interpretation of his initial than West Point had provided, for from the
+ date of his letter to Buckner he was known as "Unconditional Surrender"
+ Grant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIV. &mdash; The Battle of Shiloh
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Grant did not waste any time in rejoicing over his success. The capture of
+ Fort Henry and Fort Donelson was an important achievement but it was only
+ one step toward the control of the Mississippi River, which was the main
+ object of the campaign. The next step in that direction was toward Corinth
+ a strategically important point in Mississippi, and he immediately
+ concentrated his attention upon getting the army in position to attack
+ that stronghold. Some of his fellow commanders, however, were extremely
+ cautious and he had to labor for days before he could persuade General
+ Buell, who was stationed at Nashville, Tennessee, with a large army, to
+ advance his troops to a point where they could be of service. But in the
+ midst of this work he was suddenly interrupted by an order which removed
+ him from his command and virtually placed him under arrest on charges of
+ disregarding instructions and of being absent from his department without
+ permission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These astonishing accusations were caused by his failure to answer
+ dispatches from Headquarters which had never reached him, and by his visit
+ to General Buell which had obliged him to travel beyond the strict limits
+ of his command. The whole matter was soon explained by the discovery that
+ a Confederate had been tampering with the dispatches in the telegraph
+ office, but it was exceedingly annoying to Grant to find himself publicly
+ condemned without a hearing. Nevertheless, it supplied a very fair test of
+ his character, for he neither lost his temper nor displayed any excitement
+ whatsoever. On the contrary, he remained perfectly calm in the face of
+ grave provocation, replying firmly but respectfully to the harsh
+ criticisms of his superiors, and behaving generally with a dignity and
+ composure that won the silent approval of all observers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, as soon as the facts were known he was restored to his command
+ with an ample apology, but his preparations for the advance against
+ Corinth had been seriously interrupted and it was some time before he
+ again had the work in hand. Nevertheless, within five weeks of the
+ surrender of Fort Donelson, he was headed toward Mississippi with over
+ 30,000 men, having arranged with General Buell to follow and support him
+ with his army of 40,000, the combined forces being amply sufficient to
+ overpower the Confederates who were guarding Corinth. This vast
+ superiority, however, probably served to put Grant off his guard, for on
+ March 16, 1862, his advance under General Sherman reached Pittsburg
+ Landing, not far from Corinth, and encamped there without taking the
+ precaution to intrench. Sherman reported on April 5th that he had no fear
+ of being attacked and Grant, who had been injured the day before by the
+ fall of his horse and was still on crutches, remained some distance in the
+ rear, feeling confident that there would be no serious fighting for
+ several days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Union commander, who had studied his opponents with such good
+ results at Fort Donelson, made a terrible mistake in failing to do so on
+ this occasion, for he knew, or ought to have known, that General Albert
+ Sidney Johnston and General Beauregard, the Confederate commanders were
+ bold and energetic officers who were well advised of the military
+ situation and ready to take advantage of every opportunity. Indeed, their
+ sharp eyes had already noted the gap between Grant's and Buell's armies
+ and at the moment Sherman was penning his dispatch to his superior,
+ informing him that all was well, a force of 40,000 men was preparing to
+ crush his unprotected advance guard before Buell could reach the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Sunday morning, April 6, 1862, when the ominous sound of firing in
+ the direction of Shiloh Church smote Grant's ears. For a few moments he
+ could not believe that it indicated a serious attack, but the roar of
+ heavy guns soon convinced him that a desperate battle had begun and,
+ directing his orderlies to lift him into the saddle, he dashed to the
+ nearest boat landing and proceeded to the front with all possible speed.
+ Before he reached the ground, however, the Confederates had driven the
+ Union outposts from the field in frightful disorder and were hurling
+ themselves with ferocious energy upon those who still held fast. The
+ surprise had been well-nigh complete and the first rush of the gray
+ infantry carried everything before it, leaving the foremost Union camp in
+ their hands. Indeed, for a time the Federal army was not much more than a
+ disorganized mob, completely bewildered by the shock of battle, and
+ thousands of men blindly sought refuge in the rear, heedless of their
+ officers who, with a few exceptions, strove valiantly to organize an
+ effective defense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tumult and confusion were at their worst when Grant reached the field
+ and it seemed almost hopeless to check the panic and prevent the
+ destruction of his entire army. But in the midst of the maddening turmoil
+ and wild scenes of disaster he kept his head and, dashing from one end of
+ the line to the other, ordered regiments into position with a force and
+ energy that compelled obedience. There was no time to formulate any plan
+ of battle. Each officer had to do whatever he thought best to hold back
+ the Confederates in his immediate front, and for hours the fight was
+ conducted practically without orders. But Grant supplied his gallant
+ subordinates with something far more important than orders at that crisis.
+ Undismayed by the chaos about him he remained cool and inspired them with
+ confidence. Not for one instant would he admit the possibility of defeat,
+ and under his strong hand the huddled lines were quickly reformed, the
+ onrush of the Confederates was gradually checked and a desperate conflict
+ begun for every inch of ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time the victorious gray-coats continued to push their opponents
+ back and another line of tents fell into their hands. But their advance
+ was stubbornly contested and knowing that Buell was at hand, Grant fought
+ hard for delay, using every effort to encourage his men to stand fast and
+ present the boldest possible front to the foe. Meanwhile, however, Sherman
+ was wounded, and when darkness put an end to the furious combat the
+ shattered Union army was on the verge of collapse. So perilous, indeed,
+ was the situation that when Buell arrived on the field his first inquiry
+ was as to what preparations Grant had made to effect a retreat. But the
+ silent commander instantly shook his head and announced, to the intense
+ astonishment of his questioner, that he did not intend to retreat but to
+ attack at daylight the next morning with every man at his disposal,
+ leaving no reserves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Grant at one of the darkest moments of his career. Behind him lay
+ the battered remnants of regiments, screening a welter of confusion and
+ fear; before him stretched the blood-soaked field of Shiloh held by the
+ confident Confederate host; while at his elbow stood anxious officers,
+ well satisfied to have saved the army from destruction and ready to point
+ out a convenient line of retreat. All his surroundings, in fact, were
+ calculated to discourage him and the intense pain of his injured leg,
+ which allowed him neither rest nor sleep, was a severe strain upon his
+ nerves. Yet he would not yield to weakness of any kind. He was responsible
+ for the position in which the Union army found itself and he determined to
+ retrieve its fortunes. Therefore, all night long while reënforcements were
+ steadily arriving, he developed his plans for assuming the offensive, and
+ at break of day his troops hurled themselves against the opposing lines
+ with dauntless energy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the Confederates had sustained an irreparable loss, for Albert
+ Sidney Johnston, their brilliant leader, had fallen. Moreover, they had no
+ reserves to meet the Union reënforcements. Nevertheless, they received the
+ vigorous onslaught with splendid courage and another terrible day of
+ carnage followed. Again and again Grant exposed himself with reckless
+ daring, narrowly escaping death from a bullet which carried away the
+ scabbard of his sword as he reconnoitered in advance of his men, but
+ despite his utmost efforts the gray lines held fast, and for hours no
+ apparent advantage was gained. Then, little by little, the heavy Union
+ battalions began to push them back until all the lost ground was
+ recovered, but the Confederates conducted their retreat in good order and
+ finally reached a point of safety, leaving very few prisoners in their
+ pursuers' hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant had saved his army from destruction and had even driven his
+ adversary from the field, but at a fearful cost, for no less than 10,000
+ Union soldiers were killed or wounded in the two days' desperate fighting
+ at Shiloh and almost 3,000 had been captured. The Confederates, it is
+ true, had lost nearly 10,000 men, but their army, which should have been
+ crushed by the combined efforts of Grant and Buell, was still in
+ possession of Corinth and had come dangerously near to annihilating half
+ of the Union forces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The results of the battle were, therefore, received at Washington with
+ surprise and indignation; the country at large, horrified at the frightful
+ slaughter, denounced it as a useless butchery; Halleck hastily assumed
+ charge of all the forces in the field and from that time forward Grant,
+ though nominally the second in command, was deprived of all power and
+ virtually reduced to the rôle of a mere spectator. Indeed, serious efforts
+ were made to have him dismissed from the service, but Lincoln after
+ carefully considering the charges, refused to act. "I can't spare this
+ man," was his comment. "He FIGHTS."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln intended to imply by that remark that there were generals in the
+ army who did not fight, and Halleck was certainly one of them, for he took
+ thirty-one days to march the distance that the Confederates had covered in
+ three. Indeed, he displayed such extraordinary caution that with an army
+ of 100,000 at his back he inched his way toward Corinth, erecting
+ intrenchments at every halt, only to find, after a month, that he had been
+ frightened by shadows and dummy guns and that the city had been abandoned
+ by the Confederates. No commander responsible for such a ridiculous
+ performance could retain the confidence of an army in the field, and
+ Sherman assured Grant that Halleck would not long survive the fiasco. This
+ advice was sorely needed, for Grant had grown tired of being constantly
+ humiliated and had already requested Halleck to relieve him from duty when
+ Sherman persuaded him to remain and wait for something to happen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something happened sooner then either man expected, for Halleck was
+ suddenly "kicked up stairs" by his appointment to the chief command with
+ headquarters in Washington, and on July 11, 1862, about three months after
+ the battle of Shiloh, Grant found himself again at the head of a powerful
+ army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XV. &mdash; Lee in the Saddle
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While Grant was earning a reputation as a fighting general in the West,
+ Lee had been at a desk in Richmond attending to his duties as chief
+ military adviser to the Confederate President, which prevented him from
+ taking active part in any operations in the field. As a matter of fact,
+ however, there had been no important engagements in the East, for "On to
+ Richmond!" had become the war cry of the North, and all the energies of
+ the Federal government had been centered on preparations for the capture
+ of the Southern capital. Indeed, if Richmond had been the treasure house
+ and last refuge of the Confederacy, no greater efforts could have been
+ made to secure it, although it was by no means essential to either the
+ North or the South and the war would have continued no matter which flag
+ floated above its roofs. Nevertheless, the idea of marching into the
+ enemy's capital appealed to the popular imagination and this undoubtedly
+ dictated much of the early strategy of the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At all events, while the opening moves in the campaign for the possession
+ of the Mississippi were being made, a vast army was being equipped near
+ Washington for the express purpose of capturing Richmond. The preparation
+ of this force had been entrusted to General George B. McClellan whose
+ ability in organizing, drilling and disciplining the troops had made him a
+ popular hero and given him such a reputation as a military genius that he
+ was universally hailed as "the young Napoleon." He had, indeed, created
+ the most thoroughly equipped army ever seen in America, and when he
+ advanced toward Virginia in April, 1862, at the head of over 100,000 men
+ the supporters of the Union believed that the doom of the Confederacy was
+ already sealed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this office in Richmond Lee watched these formidable preparations for
+ invading the South with no little apprehension. He knew that the
+ Confederates had only about 50,000 available troops with which to oppose
+ McClellan's great army and had the Union commander been aware of this he
+ might have moved straight against the city and swept its defenders from
+ his path. But McClellan always believed that he was outnumbered and on
+ this occasion he wildly exaggerated his opponents' strength. In fact, he
+ crept forward so cautiously that the Confederates, who had almost resigned
+ themselves to losing the city, hastened to bring up reënforcements and
+ erect defensive works of a really formidable character. The best that was
+ hoped for, however, was to delay the Union army. To defeat it, or even to
+ check its advance, seemed impossible, and doubtless it would have proved
+ so had it not been for the brilliant exploits of the man who was destined
+ to become Lee's "right hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This man was General Thomas Jonathan Jackson, who had earned the nickname
+ of "Stonewall" at Bull Run and was at that time in command of about 15,000
+ men guarding the fertile Shenandoah Valley, the "granary of Virginia."
+ Opposing this comparatively small army were several strong Union forces
+ which were considered amply sufficient to capture or destroy it, and
+ McClellan proceeded southward, with no misgivings concerning Jackson. But
+ the wily Confederate had no intention of remaining idle and McClellan's
+ back was scarcely turned before he attacked and utterly routed his nearest
+ opponents. A second, third and even a fourth army was launched against
+ him, but he twisted, turned and doubled on his tracks with bewildering
+ rapidity, cleverly luring his opponents apart; and then, falling on each
+ in turn with overwhelming numbers, hurled them from his path with
+ astonishing ease and suddenly appeared before Washington threatening its
+ capture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Astounded and alarmed at this unexpected peril, the Federal authorities
+ instantly ordered McDowell's corps of 40,000 men, which was on the point
+ of joining McClellan, to remain and defend the capital. This was a serious
+ blow to McClellan who had counted upon using these troops, though even
+ without them he greatly outnumbered the Confederates. But the idea that he
+ was opposed by an overwhelming force had taken such a firm hold on his
+ mind that he was almost afraid to move, and while he was timidly feeling
+ his way General Joseph Johnston, commanding the defenses at Richmond,
+ attacked his advance corps at Seven Pines, May 31, 1862. A fierce contest
+ followed, during which Johnston was severely wounded, and Jefferson Davis,
+ who was on the field, promptly summoned General Lee to the command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a serious situation which confronted Lee when he was thus suddenly
+ recalled to active duty, for McClellan's army outnumbered his by at least
+ 40,000 men and it was within six miles of Richmond, from the roofs of
+ whose houses the glow of the Union campfires was plainly visible.
+ Nevertheless, he determined to put on a bold front and attack his opponent
+ at his weakest point. But how to discover this was a difficult problem and
+ the situation did not admit of a moment's delay. Under ordinary
+ circumstances the information might have been secured through spies, but
+ there was no time for this and confronted by the necessity for immediate
+ action, Lee thought of "Jeb" Stuart, his son's classmate at West Point,
+ who had acted as aide in the capture of John Brown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stuart was only twenty-nine years old but he had already made a name for
+ himself as a general of cavalry, and Lee knew him well enough to feel
+ confident that, if there was any one in the army who could procure the
+ needed information, he was the man. He, accordingly, ordered him to take
+ 1,200 troopers and a few field guns and ride straight at the right flank
+ of the Union army until he got near enough to learn how McClellan's forces
+ were posted at that point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This perilous errand was just the opportunity for which Stuart had been
+ waiting, and without the loss of a moment he set his horsemen in motion.
+ Directly in his path lay the Federal cavalry but within twenty-four hours
+ he had forced his way through them and carefully noted the exact position
+ of the Union troops. His mission was then accomplished, but by this time
+ the Federal camp was thoroughly aroused and, knowing that if he attempted
+ to retrace his steps his capture was almost certain, he pushed rapidly
+ forward and, passing around the right wing, proceeded to circle the rear
+ of McClellan's entire army. So speedily did he move that the alarm of his
+ approach was no sooner given in one quarter than he appeared in another
+ and thus, like a boy disturbing a row of hornets' nests with a long stick,
+ he flashed by the whole line, reached the Union left, swung around it and
+ reported to Lee with his command practically intact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That a few squadrons of cavalry should have been able to ride around his
+ army of 100,000 men and escape unscathed astonished and annoyed McClellan
+ but he utterly failed to grasp the true purpose of this brilliant exploit,
+ and Lee took the utmost care to see that his suspicions were not aroused.
+ Stuart's information had convinced him that the right wing of the Union
+ army was badly exposed and might be attacked with every prospect of
+ success, but to insure this it was necessary that McClellan's attention
+ should be distracted from the real point of danger. The Confederate
+ commander thoroughly understood his opponent's character and failings, for
+ he had taken his measure during the Mexican War and knowing his cautious
+ nature, he spread the news that heavy reënforcements had been forwarded to
+ Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley. This he felt sure would confirm
+ McClellan's belief that he had such overwhelming numbers that he could
+ afford to withdraw troops from Richmond, and the ruse was entirely
+ successful, for the Union commander hesitated to advance, and the Federal
+ authorities, hearing of Jackson's supposed reënforcement, became
+ increasingly alarmed for the safety of Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, a courier had been secretly hurried to Jackson, ordering him to
+ rush his troops from the Shenandoah Valley and attack McClellan's right
+ wing from the rear while Lee assaulted it from the front. But the Union
+ right wing numbered fully 25,000 men and Jackson had only 15,000. So to
+ make the attack overwhelming it was necessary for Lee to withdraw 40,000
+ men from the defenses of Richmond, leaving the city practically
+ unprotected. Unquestionably, this was a most dangerous move, for had
+ McClellan suspected the truth he might have forced his way into the
+ capital without much difficulty. But here again Lee counted upon his
+ adversary's character, for he directed the troops that remained in the
+ trenches to keep up a continuous feint of attacking the Union left wing,
+ in the hope that this show of force would cause McClellan to look to his
+ safety in that quarter, which is precisely what he did. Indeed, he was
+ still busy reporting the threatening movements against his left, when Lee
+ and Jackson's combined force of 55,000 men fell upon his right with
+ fearful effect at Gaines' Mill (June 27, 1862). From that moment his
+ campaign for the capture of Richmond became a struggle to save his own
+ army from capture or destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only safety lay in flight but at the moment of defeat and impending
+ disaster it was not easy to extricate the troops from their dangerous
+ position, and McClellan showed high skill in masking his line of retreat.
+ Lee did not, therefore, immediately discover the direction in which he was
+ moving and this delay probably prevented him from annihilating the
+ remnants of the Union army. Once on the trail, however, he lost no time
+ and, loosing "his dogs of war," they fell upon the retreating columns
+ again and again in the series of terrible conflicts known as the "Seven
+ Days' Battles." But the Union army was struggling for its life and, like a
+ stag at bay, it fought off its pursuers with desperate courage, until
+ finally at Malvern Hill (July 1, 1862), it rolled them back with such
+ slaughter that a bolder leader might have been encouraged to advance again
+ toward Richmond. As it was, however, McClellan was well content to remove
+ his shattered legions to a point of safety at Harrison's Landing, leaving
+ Lee in undisturbed possession of the field dyed with the blood of
+ well-nigh 30,000 men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XVI. &mdash; A Game of Strategy
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While the remnants of McClellan's fine army were recuperating from the
+ rough handling they had received, Lee was developing a plan to remove them
+ still further from the vicinity of Richmond. Harrison's Landing was too
+ close to the Confederate capital for comfort and the breastworks which the
+ Union commander erected there were too formidable to be attacked. But,
+ though he could not hope to drive his adversary away by force, Lee
+ believed that he could lure him from his stronghold by carrying the war
+ into another part of Virginia. The opportunity to do this was particularly
+ favorable, for the Union forces in front of Washington, consisting of
+ about 45,000 men, had been placed under the command of General John Pope.
+ Pope had served with Grant in the Mississippi campaign and had begun his
+ career in the East by boasting of the great things he was about to
+ accomplish, referring contemptuously to his opponents and otherwise
+ advertising himself as a braggart and a babbler. He had come, so he told
+ his soldiers in a flamboyant address, from an army which had seen only the
+ backs of its enemies. He had come to lead them to victories. He wanted to
+ hear no more of "lines of retreat" or backward movements of any kind. His
+ headquarters were "in the saddle" and his mission was to terrorize the
+ foe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These absurd proclamations pretty thoroughly exposed Pope's character, but
+ he had been at West Point with General Longstreet, one of Lee's ablest
+ advisers, and that officer speedily acquainted his chief with the full
+ measure of his opponent's weaknesses. This was exceedingly useful to Lee
+ and when he discovered that McClellan and Pope were pulling at different
+ directions like balky circus horses, while Halleck with one foot on each
+ was in imminent peril of a fall, he determined to take advantage of the
+ situation and hasten the disaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ McClellan, having 90,000 men, wanted Pope to reënforce him with his
+ 45,000, and thus insure a renewal of his campaign against Richmond. But
+ this, of course, did not suit Pope who wished McClellan's army to
+ reënforce him and march to victory under his banner. But while each of the
+ rivals was insisting that his plan should be adopted and Halleck, who held
+ the chief of command, was wobbling between them, trying to make up his
+ mind to favor one or the other, Lee took the whole matter out of his hands
+ and decided it for him. He did not want McClellan to be reënforced; first,
+ because he was the abler officer and, second, because he had or soon would
+ have more than sufficient men to capture Richmond and might wake to a
+ realization of this fact at any moment. From the Confederate standpoint it
+ was much safer to have Pope reënforced, for he did not have the experience
+ necessary to handle a large army. Therefore, the more troops he had to
+ mismanage the better. Moreover, Lee knew that McClellan would cease to be
+ dangerous as soon as he was obliged to send any part of his forces away,
+ for, as usual, he imagined that his opponents already outnumbered him and
+ that the withdrawal of even a single regiment would place him practically
+ at their mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carefully bearing all these facts in mind and thinking that it was about
+ time to force Halleck to transfer some of McClellan's troops to Pope, Lee
+ ordered Jackson to attack the man who thus far had seen "only the backs of
+ his foes." But at the Battle of Cedar Mountain, which followed (August 9,
+ 1862), his enemies would not turn their backs and the fact evidently
+ alarmed him, for he immediately began shouting lustily for help. Perhaps
+ he called a little louder than was necessary in order to get as many of
+ his rival's men as possible under his own command, but the result was that
+ McClellan's army began rapidly melting away under orders to hurry to the
+ rescue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lee's first object was, therefore, accomplished at one stroke and, as fast
+ as McClellan's troops moved northward, he withdrew the forces guarding
+ Richmond and rushed them by shorter routes to confront Pope, whom he had
+ determined to destroy before his reënforcements reached the field. Indeed,
+ a very neat trap had already been prepared for that gentleman who was on
+ the point of stepping into it when he intercepted one of his adversary's
+ letters which gave him sufficient warning to escape by beating a hasty
+ retreat across the Rappahannock River. This was a perfectly proper
+ movement under the circumstances, but in view of his absurd ideas
+ concerning retreats it opened him up to public ridicule which was almost
+ more than a man of his character could endure. He was soon busy,
+ therefore, complaining, explaining, and protesting his readiness to
+ recross the river at a moment's notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, while he was thus foolishly wearing out the telegraph lines between
+ his headquarters and Washington, Lee was putting into operation a plan
+ which would have been rash to the point of folly against a really able
+ soldier but which was perfectly justified against an incompetent. This
+ plan was to divide his army, which numbered less than 50,000 men, into two
+ parts, sending "Stonewall" Jackson with 25,000 to get behind the Union
+ forces, while he attracted their commander's attention at the front. Of
+ course, if Pope had discovered this audacious move, he could easily have
+ crushed the divided Confederate forces in turn before either could have
+ come to the other's rescue, for he had 70,000 at his command. But the
+ armies were not far from Manassas or Bull Run, where the first important
+ engagement of the war had been fought and Lee know every inch of the
+ ground. Moreover, he believed that all Pope's provisions and supplies upon
+ which he depended for feeding his army were behind him, and that, if
+ Jackson succeeded in seizing them and getting between the Union army and
+ Washington, Pope would lose his head and dash to the rescue regardless of
+ consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great, therefore, as the risk was he determined to take it, and Jackson
+ circled away with his 25,000 men, leaving Lee with the same number
+ confronting an army of 70,000 which might have swept the field. But its
+ commander never dreamed of the opportunity which lay before him and he
+ remained utterly unsuspicious until the night of August 26, 1862, when his
+ flow of telegrams was suddenly checked and he was informed that there was
+ something the matter with the wires connecting him to Washington. There
+ was, indeed, something the matter with them, for Jackson's men had cut
+ them down and were at that moment greedily devouring Pope's provisions,
+ helping themselves to new uniforms and shoes and leaving facetious letters
+ complaining of the quality of the supplies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while, however, the Union general had no suspicion of what was
+ happening, for he interpreted the interference with the telegraph wires as
+ the work of cavalry riders whom a comparatively small force could quickly
+ disperse. But when the troops dispatched for this purpose came hurrying
+ back with the news that Jackson's whole army was behind them, he acted
+ precisely as Lee had expected, and completely forgetting to close the
+ doors behind him, dashed madly after "Stonewall," whom he regarded as safe
+ as a cat in a bag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door which he should have closed was Thoroughfare Gap, for that was
+ the only opening through which Lee could have led his men with any hope of
+ arriving in time to help his friends, and a few troops could have blocked
+ it with the utmost ease. But it was left unguarded and Pope had scarcely
+ turned his back to spring on Jackson before Lee slid through the Gap and
+ sprang on him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The contest that followed, called the Second Battle of Bull Run or
+ Manassas (August 30, 1862), was almost a repetition of the first, except
+ that in the earlier battle the Union soldiers had a fair chance and on
+ this occasion they had none at all. Indeed, Lee and Jackson had Pope so
+ situated that, despite the bravery of his men, they battered and pounded
+ him until he staggered from the field in a state of hysterical confusion,
+ wildly telegraphing that the enemy was badly crippled and that everything
+ would be well, and following up this by asking if the capital would be
+ safe, if his army should be destroyed. It is indeed possible that his army
+ would have been reduced to a mere mob, had it not been for the proximity
+ of the fortifications of Washington, into which his exhausted regiments
+ were safely tumbled on the 2nd of September, 1862.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, for the second time in two months, Lee calmly confronted the wreck
+ of an opposing host, which, at the outset, had outnumbered him and
+ confidently planned for his destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XVII. &mdash; Lee and the Invasion of Maryland
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Lee's masterly defense of Richmond, and his complete triumph over
+ McClellan and Pope had, in three months, made him the idol of the
+ Confederacy. In all military matters his word was law, while the army
+ adored him and the people of the South as a whole regarded him with a
+ feeling akin to reverence. This was not entirely the result of his
+ achievements on the field. Jackson had displayed an equal genius for the
+ art of war and in the opinion of many experts he was entitled to more
+ credit than his chief. But Jackson was regarded with awe and curiosity
+ rather than affection. He was hailed as a great commander, while Lee was
+ recognized as a great man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not by spectacular efforts or assertiveness of any kind that Lee
+ had gained this hold upon his countrymen. He avoided everything that even
+ tended toward self-display. His army reports were not only models of
+ modesty, but generous acknowledgements of all he owed to his officers and
+ men. He addressed none but respectful words to his superiors and indulged
+ in no criticisms or complaints. He accepted the entire responsibility for
+ whatever reverses occurred to the forces under his command and never
+ attempted to place the blame on the shoulders of any other man. In a word,
+ he was so absolutely free from personal ambition that the political
+ schemers unconsciously stood abashed in his presence, and citizens and
+ soldiers alike instinctively saluted the mere mention of his name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never by any chance did he utter a word of abuse against the North. Even
+ when his beloved Arlington was seized, and the swords, pictures,
+ silverware and other precious mementos of Washington were carried off, his
+ protest was couched in quiet and dignified language, well calculated to
+ make those to whom it was addressed (and later every American) blush with
+ shame. Likewise in the heat of battle, when wild tongues were loosed and
+ each side accused the other of all that hate could suggest, he never
+ forgot that his opponents were Americans. "Drive those people back," or
+ "Don't let those people pass you," were the harshest words he ever uttered
+ of his foes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To him war was not a mere license to destroy human life. It was a terrible
+ weapon to be used scientifically, not with the idea of slaughtering as
+ many of the enemy as possible, but to protect the State for whose defense
+ he had drawn his sword. This was distinctly his attitude as he watched
+ Pope's defeated columns reeling from the field. Neither by word nor deed
+ did he exult over the fallen foe or indulge in self-glorification at his
+ expense. His sole thought was to utilize the victory that the war would be
+ speedily brought to a successful close; and, spreading out his maps in the
+ quiet of his tent, he proceeded to study them with this idea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost directly in front of his victorious army stretched the
+ intrenchments of Washington but, although he knew something of the panic
+ into which that city had been thrown by the last battle, he had not troops
+ enough to risk assaulting fortifications to the defense of which well-nigh
+ every able-bodied man in the vicinity had been called. The fall of
+ Washington might perhaps have ended the war, but the loss of the
+ neighboring state of Maryland and an attack on some of the Pennsylvania
+ cities, such as Harrisburg and Philadelphia, promised to prove equally
+ effective. The chances of wresting Maryland from the Union seemed
+ particularly favorable, for it had come very close to casting its lot with
+ the Confederacy and thousands of its citizens were serving in the Southern
+ ranks. He, accordingly, made up his mind to march through Maryland,
+ arousing its people to the support of the Confederate cause, and then
+ carry the war into Pennsylvania where a decisive victory might pave the
+ way to an acknowledgment of the independence of the Southern States and
+ satisfactory terms of peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, four days after Pope's defeat at Manassas saw Lee's tattered battle
+ flags slanted toward the North, and on September 6, 1862, the vanguard
+ under "Stonewall" Jackson passed through the streets of Frederick City,
+ singing "Maryland, My Maryland!" This was the moment which Whittier
+ immortalized in his verses recording the dramatic meeting between
+ "Stonewall" and Barbara Frietchie [Note from Brett: The poem is entitled
+ "Barbara Frietchie" and there is some question as to the accuracy of the
+ details of the poem. In general, however, Whittier retold the story
+ (poetically) that he claims he heard ("from respectable and trustworthy
+ sources") and Barbara Frietchie was strongly against the Confederacy and
+ was not a fictional character. It is believed that Ms. Frietchie, who was
+ 95 at the time, was sick in bed on the day the soldiers marched through,
+ but did wave her flag when the Union army marched through two days later.
+ A Ms. Quantrill and her daughters, however, did wave the Union flag as the
+ Confederate soldiers marched through the town, so there is some thought
+ that the two got combined.]; but, though no such event ever took place,
+ the poet was correctly informed as to the condition of Jackson's men, for
+ they certainly were a "famished rebel horde." Indeed, several thousand of
+ them had to be left behind because they could no longer march in their
+ bare feet, and those who had shoes were sorry-looking scarecrows whose one
+ square meal had been obtained at Pope's expense. For all practical
+ purposes Maryland was the enemy's country, but into this hostile region
+ they advanced carrying very little in the way of provisions except salt
+ for the ears of corn that they might pick up in the fields.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The authorities at Washington watched Lee's movement with mingled feelings
+ of anxiety and relief. They were relieved because he was evidently not
+ aiming at the national capital. They were alarmed because the real point
+ of attack was unknown. Sixty thousand men, flushed with triumph and under
+ seemingly invincible leadership were headed somewhere, and as the rumor
+ spread that that "somewhere" was Harrisburg or Philadelphia, the North
+ stood aghast with consternation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Face to face with this desperate crisis, McClellan, who had been
+ practically removed from command, was restored to duty and given charge of
+ all the Union forces in the field. Had he been invested with supreme
+ authority, at least one grievous blunder might have been avoided, for as
+ he proceeded to the front, calling loudly as usual for reënforcements, he
+ advised the evacuation of Harper's Ferry, garrisoned by some 12,000 men
+ who were exposed to capture by Lee's advance on Frederick City. But
+ Halleck rejected this advice and on September 15, 1862, "Stonewall"
+ Jackson, with about 20,000 men, swooped down upon the defenseless post and
+ gobbled up almost the entire garrison with all its guns and stores. To
+ accomplish this, however, he was forced to separate himself from Lee, and
+ while McClellan, with over 87,000 men, was protesting that his opponent
+ had 120,000 and that it was impossible to win against such odds, Lee's
+ strength had been reduced to about 35,000 and his safety absolutely
+ depended upon his adversary's fears. It was hardly to be hoped, however,
+ that McClellan's imagination would cause him to see three men for every
+ one opposed to him, but such was the fact, and even when one of Lee's
+ confidential orders fell into his hands, revealing the fact that Jackson's
+ whole force was absent, he still thought himself outnumbered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The discovery of this order was a serious blow to Lee, for it not only
+ exposed his immediate weakness, but actually disclosed his entire plan.
+ How it was lost has never been explained, for its importance was so fully
+ realized that one of the officers who received a copy pinned it in the
+ inside pocket of his coat, another memorized his copy and then chewed it
+ up and others took similar precautions to protect its secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some officer, however, must have been careless, for when the Union troops
+ halted at Frederick City, through which the Confederates had just passed,
+ a private in an Indiana regiment found it lying on the ground wrapped
+ around some cigars and, recognizing its value, carried it straight to his
+ superiors who promptly bore it to Headquarters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Lee remained ignorant of this discovery it is possible that McClellan
+ might have effected the capture of his army. But a civilian, favoring the
+ South who happened to be present when the paper reached Headquarters,
+ slipped through the Union lines and put the Confederate commander on his
+ guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lee had already noted that McClellan was moving toward him at unusual
+ speed for so cautious an officer and, this was readily explained by the
+ news that his plans were known and Jackson's absence discovered. He
+ accordingly posted his troops so that he could form a junction with the
+ rest of the army at the earliest possible moment and halted in the
+ vicinity of Sharpsburg near Antietam Creek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XVIII. &mdash; The Battle of Antietam or Sharpsburg
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Had McClellan not absurdly overestimated the number of troops opposed to
+ him when his army neared Sharpsburg on the 15th of September, 1862, he
+ might have defeated Lee and possibly destroyed or captured his entire
+ force. Never before had a Union commander had such an opportunity to
+ deliver a crushing blow. He had more than 80,000 men under his control&mdash;fully
+ twice as many as his adversary; he had the Confederate plan of campaign in
+ his hands and such fighting as had occurred with the exception of that at
+ Harper's Ferry had been decidedly in his favor. Moreover, Lee had recently
+ met with a serious accident, his horse having knocked him down and
+ trampled on him, breaking the bones of one hand, and otherwise injuring
+ him so severely that he had been obliged to superintend most of the
+ posting of his army from an ambulance. By a curious coincidence, too,
+ "Stonewall" Jackson had been hurt in a similar manner a few days
+ previously, so that if the battle had begun promptly, it is highly
+ probable that he, too, would have been physically handicapped, and it is
+ certain that his troops could not have reached the field in time to be of
+ any assistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To Lee's immense relief, however, McClellan made no serious attack on
+ either the 15th or 16th of September, but spent those two days in putting
+ his finishing touches on his preparations, and before he completed them
+ that Opportunity "which knocks but once at each man's gate" had passed him
+ by, never to return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The battle of Antietam or Sharpsburg began at dawn of the 17th, but by
+ that time Jackson had arrived and both he and Lee had so far recovered
+ from their injuries that they were able to be in the saddle and personally
+ direct the movements of their men. The Confederate position had been
+ skillfully selected for defense on the hills back of Antietam Creek and
+ McClellan's plan was to break through his opponent's line, gain his rear
+ and cut him off from retreat. But Lee, who had closely watched the
+ elaborate massing of the Union forces for this attempt, was fully prepared
+ for it and the first assault against his line was repulsed with fearful
+ slaughter. No subtle strategy or brilliant tactics of any kind marked
+ McClellan's conduct of the battle. Time and again he hurled his heavy
+ battalions against his opponent's left, center and right in a desperate
+ effort to pierce the wall of gray, and once or twice his heroic veterans
+ almost succeeded in battering their way through. But at every crisis Lee
+ rose to the emergency and moved his regiments as a skillful chess player
+ manipulates his pieces on the board, now massing his troops at the danger
+ point and now diverting his adversary's attack by a swift counter-stroke
+ delivered by men unacquainted with defeat. Both his hands were heavily
+ swathed in bandages and far too painful to admit of his even touching the
+ bridle rein, but he had had himself lifted into the saddle and for fully
+ fourteen hours he remained mounted on "Traveller," his famous war horse,
+ watching every movement with the inspiring calmness of a commander born to
+ rule the storm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was perilous and no one realized its dangers more keenly
+ than he, but not a trace of anxiety appeared upon his face. Only twice was
+ he betrayed into an expression of his feelings, once when he asked General
+ Hood where the splendid division was which he had commanded in the morning
+ and received the reply: "They are lying in the field where you sent them,"
+ and again when he directed the Rockbridge battery to go into action for a
+ second time after three of its four guns had been disabled. The captain of
+ this battery had halted to make a report of its condition and receive
+ instructions, and Lee, gazing at the group of begrimed and tattered
+ privates behind the officer, ordered them to renew their desperate work
+ before he recognized that among them stood his youngest son, Robert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very few men in the Confederate commander's position would have suffered a
+ son to serve in the ranks. A word from him would, of course, have made the
+ boy an officer. But that was not Lee's way. To advance an inexperienced
+ lad over the heads of older men was, to his mind, unjust and he would not
+ do it even for his own flesh and blood. Nor had his son himself expected
+ it, for he had eagerly accepted his father's permission to enter the ranks
+ and had cheerfully performed his full duty, never presuming on his
+ relationship to the Commander-in-Chief or asking favors of any kind. All
+ this was known to Lee but this unexpected meeting at a moment when
+ privates were being mowed down like grass was a terrible shock and strain.
+ Nevertheless, it was characteristic of the man that no change was made in
+ the orders of the Rockbridge battery, which continued on its way to the
+ post of danger and, with young Lee, gallantly performed the work he had
+ called on it to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By night the Confederates still held the field, but the struggle had cost
+ them nearly 11,000 men, reducing their force to less than 45,000, while
+ McClellan, despite even heavier losses, had more than 74,000 left. Lee,
+ accordingly, withdrew his army under cover of darkness to another part of
+ the field and again awaited attack. But McClellan neither attacked nor
+ attempted anything like a pursuit until his opponent was safely out of
+ reach, being well satisfied with having checked the advance of his
+ formidable foe and spoiled his plans. This he was certainly entitled to
+ claim, for Lee's campaign against Maryland and Pennsylvania was
+ effectually balked by his enforced retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, it is quite possible that had McClellan been adventurous he might
+ have ended the war at Antietam, for the day after the battle he
+ outnumbered his opponents at least two to one and possessed enormous
+ advantage in the way of equipment and supplies. But the Union commander,
+ though he possessed a genius for army organization and knew the art of
+ inspiring confidence in his men, was no match for Lee in the field, and he
+ probably realized this. At all events, he displayed no anxiety to renew
+ hostilities and when urged, and at last positively ordered to advance, he
+ argued, protested, offered excuses for delay and in fact did everything
+ but obey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Weeks thus slipped by and finally Lee himself became impatient to know
+ what his adversary was doing. He, accordingly, again summoned Stuart and
+ ordered him to repeat the experiment of riding around the opposing army.
+ News of this second, almost derisive defiance of McClellan soon reached
+ the North, for Stuart, swiftly circling his right flank, suddenly appeared
+ with 1,800 men at Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, terrorizing the country and
+ destroying vast quantities of stores. Stern and indignant orders from
+ Washington warned the Union Commander that this time he must not permit
+ the daring troopers to escape. But only a few scouts were captured, and
+ once more Stuart sped safely back to his chief with full information as to
+ the strength and position of the Federal lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even this did not arouse McClellan, and two more weeks of inaction passed
+ before he again set his vast army in motion. But by this time, the demand
+ for his dismissal had become clamorous and, on November 5, 1862, President
+ Lincoln reluctantly removed him from command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XIX. &mdash; Lee against Burnside and Hooker
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Lincoln had good reason for hesitating to change commanders, for,
+ unsatisfactory as McClellan had proved, the President was by no means sure
+ that any of his other generals would do better. In fact, with all his
+ defects, there was much to be said in McClellan's favor. As an organizer
+ of troops or chief of staff he had displayed talents of the highest
+ possible order, transforming the armed mob which had flocked to the
+ defense of the Union at the opening of the war into a well-drilled and
+ disciplined army. That he had not accomplished much with this great engine
+ of war after it had been constructed, had not been wholly his fault, for
+ he had never been entirely free from interference at the hands of
+ incompetent superiors, and he had had the misfortune to be pitted against
+ a past master of the art of war. Moreover, he had been called to the chief
+ command at a moment of panic and peril and, if he had not succeeded in
+ defeating Lee, he had, at Antietam, given the North the only semblance of
+ victory which it could claim in all its campaigning in the South. But that
+ one taste of triumph had whetted the public appetite for more. Despite
+ McClellan's continuous talk about the overpowering numbers of his foes,
+ the supporters of the Union knew that they outmatched the Confederacy in
+ men, arms, ships, money, and resources of every kind. They accordingly
+ insisted that the immense army which had lain idle in its camps for almost
+ two months after the drawn battle at Antietam should be set to work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In response to this popular demand, General Ambrose Burnside was appointed
+ to take McClellan's place, and a more utterly unfitted man for prosecuting
+ a successful campaign against Lee could scarcely have been selected. He
+ himself fully realized this. Indeed, he had already twice refused the
+ chief command on the ground that he did not feel competent to conduct a
+ great campaign. But the public, which had become disgusted with boasters,
+ admired his modesty, and his preparations for carrying the war again into
+ Virginia were followed with high hopes for his success. The officers of
+ the army, however, did not share the popular confidence in their new chief
+ and some of those highest in authority gave him only a half-hearted
+ support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But nothing could have saved Burnside's extraordinary campaign. Had he
+ been assigned to lead a forlorn hope, regardless of consequences, his
+ plan, if it can be called a plan, might have been justified, but under the
+ existing circumstances it was reckless to the point of madness. His first
+ moves, however, were characterized by an excess of caution and so slowly
+ did he advance that before he was fairly started for the South, Lee
+ blocked the road, concentrating his whole army on the hills behind the
+ City of Fredericksburg in a position practically defying attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To attempt a direct assault against this fortress-like post was suicidal,
+ but apparently no thought of maneuvering crossed Burnside's mind. His one
+ idea was to brush aside the foe. But before he could even reach him his
+ army had to cross the Rappahannock, a formidable river, and march over an
+ open plain, absolutely at the mercy of its intrenched opponents, who
+ could, as one of their artillery officers expressed it, "comb the ground"
+ with their cannon. Nevertheless, into this death trap the Union troops
+ were plunged on the 13th of December, 1862, and they advanced to
+ destruction with a dash and courage that won the admiration of friends and
+ foes alike. The result was, of course, inevitable. No human beings could
+ withstand the storm of shot and shell which burst upon them, and though
+ some of the devoted columns actually reached the foot of the Confederate
+ breastworks, they could do no more, and over 12,000 men fell victims to
+ the disastrous attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For once, Lee was at an utter loss to comprehend his adversary's plan. He
+ could not believe that this wanton butchery of men was all there was to
+ the contest. To his mind such an awful sacrifice of human life would never
+ have been made unless for the purpose of paving the way for another
+ enterprise absolutely certain of success. But nothing more was attempted
+ and the battle of Fredericksburg, reflecting the conception of a
+ disordered brain rather than the trained intelligence of a graduate of
+ West Point, was added to the already long list of blunders which prolonged
+ the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burnside brought severe charges against several of his generals for their
+ failure to support his sorry tactics, and even went so far as to demand
+ their dismissal from the army. There was undoubtedly some ground for his
+ complaints, but such obviously incompetent leadership was enough to
+ demoralize any army, and not long after his crippled battalions retreated
+ behind the Rappahannock he was relieved of his command, which was given to
+ General Joseph Hooker, one of the officers he most seriously accused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hooker was familiarly known to the country as "Fighting Joe," a name he
+ had well earned on many a hard-fought field. He, like his predecessors,
+ was a graduate of West Point and his record, in many respects worthy of
+ the best traditions of that famous school, inspired the army with the
+ belief that it had, at last, found a leader who would pilot it to victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, the new commander was not troubled with Burnside's
+ self-distrust. His confidence in himself and in his plans was unbounded,
+ and there was no little justification for his hopes, for his campaign was
+ well thought out and he had a force of over 130,000 men under his orders&mdash;fully
+ 70,000 more than his adversary could bring into the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lee still lay intrenched on the hills behind Fredericksburg, and there
+ Hooker ordered General Sedgwick to hold him with part of the army while he
+ himself, with another and more powerful part, crossed the Rappahannock
+ River by a ford twenty-seven miles above. By this move he hoped to get
+ behind Lee and then crush him, as nut-crackers would crush a nut, by
+ closing in on him with a front and rear attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not a strikingly original plan. It was in fact merely a flanking
+ movement on a huge scale, but compared to Burnside's performance it was
+ highly scientific and the vast superiority of the Union forces almost
+ insured its success. Hooker was certainly convinced that he had at last
+ solved the great problem of the war and that Lee was practically in his
+ power. Indeed, as his flanking army forded the river, he issued an address
+ of congratulation in which he informed his troops that they had the
+ Confederates in a position from which they must either "ingloriously fly"
+ or come out in the open where certain defeat awaited them. But "Fighting
+ Joe" was soon to learn the folly of crowing until one is out of the woods,
+ for as he emerged from the forests sheltering the fords, he discovered
+ that Lee's army had not remained tamely in its intrenchments, but had
+ quietly slipped away and planted itself squarely across his path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment the Union commander was fairly astounded. He had prophesied
+ that his adversary would fly from Fredericksburg, but he had not expected
+ him to move so soon or in this direction. Indeed, his well-matured plans
+ were based on the supposition that Lee would remain where he wanted him to
+ be until he was ready to spring his trap, quite forgetting that though it
+ is easy to catch birds after you have put salt on their tails, it is
+ rather difficult to make them wait while you salt them. As a matter of
+ fact, Lee had taken alarm the moment his cavalry scouts reported his
+ opponent's movement towards the fords and, realizing that he would be
+ caught if he remained where he was, he had rapidly departed from
+ Fredericksburg, leaving only enough force to occupy Sedgwick's attention.
+ Even then he was in a precarious position, for Hooker's flanking army
+ alone outnumbered him and the force threatening Fredericksburg would
+ certainly start in pursuit of him as soon as it discovered that the bulk
+ of his army had withdrawn from that city. All this was equally clear to
+ Hooker after his first gasp of astonishment, and as he hurriedly ordered
+ Sedgwick to attack Fredericksburg with part of his forces and to send the
+ rest as reënforcement against Lee, he confidently believed that his foe
+ had delivered himself into his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lee, though cornered, was not yet caught. He had to think and act
+ quickly but though he had only 45,000 men and Hooker had 70,000 on the
+ spot, his idea was not to escape but to attack. A close examination of the
+ opposing lines in front and at the Federal left disclosed no weakness, but
+ the right beyond Chancellorsville looked more hopeful. Then a brilliant
+ idea suddenly occurred to his mind. The Union commander was evidently
+ awaiting or meditating a direct attack and had no fear except that his
+ prey might escape him. Might it not be possible to keep him busily
+ occupied in front, while a force stole behind his right wing and caught it
+ between two fires?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was precisely what Hooker had been endeavoring to do to him, but Lee
+ was well aware that what was safe for a large army might be ruinous for a
+ small one and that his proposed maneuver would require him to divide his
+ small army into two smaller parts, both of which would be annihilated if
+ the move was discovered. But capture or destruction stared him in the face
+ any way, so, learning from a certain Colonel Welford that a road used by
+ him in former years for transporting materials to a local furnace could be
+ utilized to swing a considerable force behind Hooker's right, he
+ determined to take the desperate chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The necessary orders were accordingly issued during the night of May 1,
+ 1863, and by daylight the next morning Jackson started off on the back
+ trail with about 30,000 men, leaving Lee with only 15,000 to face Hooker's
+ overwhelming array. The success of the whole enterprise depended upon the
+ secrecy and speed with which it was conducted, but Jackson had already
+ proved his ability in such work and his men set off at a brisk pace well
+ screened by vigilant cavalry. It was not possible, however, wholly to
+ conceal the march, and not long after it began several quite definite
+ reports of its progress reached Hooker. But though he duly warned his
+ Corps Commanders to be on their guard against a flank movement, he himself
+ evidently interpreted it as the beginning of a retreat. Indeed, by four
+ o'clock in the afternoon of May 2nd he became convinced that his victims
+ were striving to escape, for he advised Sedgwick, "We know that the enemy
+ is fleeing, trying to save his trains." But even as he dispatched this
+ message Jackson was behind at the Union right and his men were forming in
+ line of battle under cover of a heavy curtain of woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, some of the division commanders at the threatened position had
+ become disquieted by the reports that a large body of Confederates was
+ marching somewhere, though just where no one seemed to know. Two of them
+ accordingly faced their men toward the rear in readiness for an attack
+ from that direction. But the assurances which reached them from
+ headquarters that the enemy was in full flight discouraged precautions of
+ this kind, and when Jackson crept up a neighboring hill to examine the
+ Union position, he found most of the troops had their backs turned to the
+ point of danger. In fact, the camp, as a whole presented a most inviting
+ spectacle, for the soldiers were scattered about it, playing cards or
+ preparing their evening meal, with their arms stacked in the rear, little
+ dreaming that one of their most dreaded foes was watching them from a
+ hilltop, behind which crouched thousands of his men. Every detail of the
+ scene was impressed on Jackson's memory when he quietly slipped back into
+ the woods, and for the next two hours he busied himself posting his troops
+ to the best advantage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was six o'clock when the order to attack was given and most of the
+ Union soldiers were still at their suppers when deer, foxes, rabbits and
+ other animals, alarmed by a mass of men advancing through the forest,
+ began to tear through the camp as though fleeing from a prairie fire. But
+ before the startled soldiers could ask an explanation of this strange
+ stampede, the answer came in the form of a scattering musketry fire and
+ the fearsome yells of 26,000 charging men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The panic that followed beggars description. Regiments huddled against
+ regiments in helpless confusion; artillery, infantry and cavalry became
+ wedged in narrow roads and remained hopelessly jammed; officers and men
+ fought with one another; generals were swept aside or carried forward on
+ the human waves, hoarsely bellowing orders which no one heeded, while into
+ the welter the Confederates poured a deadly fire and rounded up masses of
+ bewildered prisoners. It was well-nigh dusk before even the semblance of a
+ line of defense could be formed to cover the disorganized masses of men,
+ but the gathering darkness increased the terror of the hapless fugitives,
+ who, stumbling and crashing their way to safety, carried confusion in
+ their wake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Lee, advised of what was happening at the Union right,
+ vigorously attacked Hooker's left, and a fierce conflict at that point
+ added to the general turmoil until the contending forces could no longer
+ distinguish each other, save by the flashing of their guns. The fighting
+ then ceased all along the line and both sides busied themselves with
+ preparations for renewing the struggle at the earliest possible moment.
+ Jackson, accompanied by some of his staff, instantly began a
+ reconnoissance of the Union position. He had just completed this and was
+ returning to his lines when some of his own pickets, mistaking his party
+ for Union cavalry, fired on them killing a captain and a sergeant. The
+ Confederate commander immediately turned his horse and sought safety at
+ another point, but he had not progressed far before he drew the fire of
+ another picket squad and fell desperately wounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ General A. P. Hill then assumed command, but fighting had scarcely been
+ resumed the next morning before he was wounded and Jeb Stuart took his
+ place. Meanwhile, Hooker had been injured and the next day Lee fiercely
+ assailed Sedgwick. For the best part of two days the battle raged with
+ varying success. But, little by little, the Confederates edged their
+ opponents toward the Rappahannock, and by the night of May 5th, 1863,
+ Hooker withdrew his exhausted forces across the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The battle of Chancellorsville cost Lee over 12,000 men; but with a force
+ which never exceeded 60,000, he had not only extricated himself from a
+ perilous position, but had inflicted a crushing blow on an army of
+ 130,000, an achievement which has passed into history as one of the most
+ brilliant feats of modern warfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XX. &mdash; In the Hour of Triumph
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Great as Lee's reputation had been before the battle of Chancellorsville,
+ it was immensely increased by that unexpected triumph. But no trace of
+ vanity or self-gratulation of any kind marked his reception of the chorus
+ of praise that greeted him. On the contrary, he modestly disclaimed the
+ honors from the very first and insisted that to Jackson belonged the
+ credit of the day. "Could I have directed events," he wrote the wounded
+ General, "I should have chosen to have been disabled in your stead. I
+ congratulate you on the victory which is due to your skill and energy."
+ Indeed, when the news first reached him that Jackson's left arm had been
+ amputated, he sent him a cheery message, saying, "You are better off than
+ I am, for while you have only lost your LEFT, I have lost my RIGHT arm."
+ And when, at last, he learned that "Stonewall" had passed away, he no
+ longer thought of the victory but only of his dead comrade and friend.
+ "Any victory would be dear at such a price," was his sorrowful comment on
+ the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jackson was indeed Lee's "right arm" and his place among the great
+ captains of the world is well indicated by the fact that a study of his
+ campaign is to-day part of the education of all English and American
+ officers. Nevertheless, it was unquestionably Lee's genius that enabled
+ his great Lieutenant to accomplish what he did, and this Jackson himself
+ fully realized. "Better that ten Jacksons should fall than one Lee," was
+ his response to his commander's generous words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though Lee had won an international reputation, anyone seeing him in
+ the field among his soldiers might well have imagined that he was wholly
+ unaware that the world was ringing with his fame. He steadily declined all
+ offers to provide comfortable quarters for his accommodation, preferring
+ to live in a simple tent and share with his men the discomforts of the
+ field. Indeed, his thoughts were constantly of others, never of himself,
+ and when gifts of fruit and other dainties for his table were tendered
+ him, he thanked the givers but suggested that they were needed for the
+ sick and wounded in the hospitals, where they would be gratefully
+ received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...I should certainly have endeavored to throw the enemy north of the
+ Potomac," he wrote his wife, "but thousands of our men were barefooted,
+ thousands with fragments of shoes, and all without overcoats, blankets or
+ warm clothing. I could not bear to expose them to certain suffering.... I
+ am glad you have some socks for the army. Send them to me.... Tell the
+ girls to send all they can. I wish they could make some shoes, too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the hardships of the dumb animals moved him to a ready sympathy, and
+ he was constantly planning to spare them in every possible way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our horses and mules suffer most," he wrote one of his daughters. "They
+ have to bear the cold and rain, tug through the mud and suffer all the
+ time with hunger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And again on another occasion he wrote his wife:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This morning the whole country is covered with a mantle of snow, fully a
+ foot deep.... Our poor horses were enveloped. We have dug them out...but
+ it will be terrible.... I fear our short rations for man and horse will
+ have to be curtailed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole army realized the great-hearted nature of its Chief, and its
+ confidence in his thought and care is well illustrated by a letter which a
+ private addressed to him, asking him if he knew upon what short rations
+ the men were living. If he did, the writer stated, their privations were
+ doubtless necessary and everyone would cheerfully accept them, knowing
+ that he had the comfort of his men continually in mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ War had no illusions for this simple, God-fearing man. He regarded it as a
+ terrible punishment for the shortcomings of mankind. For him it had no
+ glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The country here looks very green and pretty, notwithstanding the ravages
+ of war," he wrote his wife. "What a beautiful world God, in His loving
+ kindness to His creatures, has given us! What a shame that men endowed
+ with reason and knowledge of right should mar His gifts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The awful responsibility of his public duty was almost more than any man
+ could bear, but he had also to endure personal anxiety and sorrow of the
+ keenest kind. During his absence in the field one of his daughters died,
+ his wife was in failing health and his three sons were in the army daily
+ exposed to injury and death. Fitzhugh and Custis had been made generals,
+ and Robert had been promoted to a lieutenancy and assigned to his elder
+ brother's staff. Up to the battle of Chancellorsville they had escaped
+ unharmed, but while the contending armies lay watching each other on
+ either side of the Rappahannock, Fitzhugh was severely wounded in a
+ cavalry engagement and Lee's first thought was to comfort and reassure the
+ young man's wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am so grieved," ...he wrote her, "to send Fitzhugh to you wounded....
+ With his youth and strength to aid him, and your tender care to nurse him,
+ I trust he will soon be well again. I know that you will unite with me in
+ thanks to Almighty God, who has so often sheltered him in the hour of
+ danger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the news that the young General had been captured by Federal
+ troops who surrounded the house to which he had been removed, and again
+ Lee sought, in the midst of all his cares, to cheer his daughter-in-law
+ who was herself becoming ill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can see no harm that can result from Fitzhugh's capture except his
+ detention.... He will be in the hands of old army officers and surgeons,
+ most of whom are men of principle and humanity. His wound, I understand,
+ has not been injured by his removal, but is doing well. Nothing would do
+ him more harm than for him to learn that you were sick and sad. How could
+ he get well? So cheer up and prove your fortitude.... You may think of
+ Fitzhugh and love him as much as you please, but do not grieve over him or
+ grow sad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the young wife grew steadily worse and, when her life was despaired
+ of, Custis Lee offered to take his brother's place in prison, if the
+ authorities would allow him to visit his dying wife. But, when this was
+ refused and news of her death reached Lee, he refrained from all
+ bitterness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...I grieve," he wrote his wife, "...as a father only can grieve for a
+ daughter, and my sorrow is heightened by the thought of the anguish her
+ death will cause our dear son, and the poignancy it will give to the bars
+ of his prison. May God in His mercy enable him to bear the blow...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the midst of such severe afflictions that Lee conducted some of
+ the most important moves of his campaign, and while family anxieties were
+ beginning to crowd on him, the condition of his army and the political
+ situation were already demanding another invasion of the North. As far as
+ spirit and discipline were concerned, his troops were never more ready for
+ active service and their numbers had been so considerably increased during
+ the weeks that followed the battle of Chancellorsville that by the 1st of
+ June, 1863, he could count on almost 70,000 fairly well-armed men,
+ supported by over two hundred cannon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the question of supplying food for this great array was every day
+ becoming more urgent, and the remark of the Commissary-General that his
+ Chief would soon have to seek his provisions in Pennsylvania was
+ significant of the situation. Lee thoroughly realized that the strength of
+ the Confederacy was waning and that unless some great success in the field
+ should soon force the Union to make terms, the end of the struggle was in
+ sight. Great victories had already been won, but always on Southern soil,
+ and the news that Grant was closing in on Vicksburg demanded that a
+ supreme effort be made to offset that impending disaster in the West.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the Southern army could force its way into the North and there repeat
+ its triumphs, England and France would probably recognize the Confederacy
+ and the half-hearted supporters of the Union, already murmuring against
+ the war, would clamor for peace. With this idea Lee devoted the month
+ following the battle of Chancellorsville to recruiting his strength and
+ watching for some move on Hooker's part. But Hooker remained quietly
+ within his lines, so on June 3, 1863, his opponent, concealing his
+ purpose, moved rapidly and secretly toward Pennsylvania.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXI. &mdash; Grant at Vicksburg
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While Lee had been disposing of McClellan, Pope and Burnside, Grant had
+ remained in comparative idleness near Corinth, Mississippi. He had, it is
+ true, been assigned to high command in the West when Halleck was ordered
+ to Washington, but the battle of Shiloh had prejudiced the authorities
+ against him and his troops were gradually transferred to other commanders,
+ leaving him with an army barely sufficient to guard the territory it
+ already held. This treatment seriously depressed him and with plenty of
+ time to brood over his troubles, he was in some danger of lapsing into the
+ bad habits which had once had such a fatal hold upon him. But at this
+ crisis his wife was by his side to steady and encourage him, and the
+ Confederates soon diverted his thoughts from his own grievances by giving
+ him plenty of work to keep them at arm's length. Meanwhile, however,
+ something much more disturbing occurred, for he suddenly discovered that
+ preparations were being made to place his long-cherished campaign for the
+ opening of the Mississippi River in the hands of McClernand, the political
+ General whose conduct at Fort Donelson had demonstrated his ignorance of
+ military affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That aroused Grant to action and hastily summoning Admiral Porter and
+ General Sherman to his aid, he started towards Vicksburg, Mississippi, on
+ November 2, 1862, determined to be the first in the field and thus head
+ off any attempt to displace him from the command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ McClernand's project was accordingly nipped in the bud, for, of course, he
+ could not be authorized to conduct a campaign already undertaken by a
+ superior officer, and the troops which had been intended for him were
+ immediately forwarded to Grant. Doubtless, the President was not
+ displeased at this turn of affairs, for although McClernand was a highly
+ important person in the political world and had rendered valuable services
+ in raising troops, his defects as a general were widely recognized, and
+ there had been grave doubts as to the wisdom of permitting him to attempt
+ so difficult an undertaking as the capture of Vicksburg. Within a few
+ months, however, there were even graver doubts as to the wisdom of having
+ entrusted the enterprise to Grant, for by the end of March, 1863, the
+ general opinion was that no one could have made a worse mess of it than he
+ was making, and that it was hopeless to expect anything as long as he was
+ in authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a matter of fact, the immense difficulty of capturing a city such as
+ Vicksburg had not been realized until the work was actually undertaken. It
+ was practically a fortress commanding the Mississippi, and whoever held it
+ ruled the river. The Confederate leaders understood this very thoroughly
+ and they had accordingly fortified the place, which was admirably adapted
+ for defense, with great care and skill. In front of it flowed the
+ Mississippi, twisting and turning in such snake-like conditions that it
+ could be navigated only by boats of a certain length and build, and on
+ either side of the city stretched wide swamp lands and bayous completely
+ commanded by batteries well posted on the high ground occupied by the
+ town. All this was formidable enough in itself, but shortly after Grant
+ began his campaign, the river overflowed its banks and the whole country
+ for miles was under water which, while not deep enough for steamers, was
+ an absolute barrier to the approach of an army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, the capture of the city seemed hopeless from a military
+ standpoint, but Grant would not abandon the task. Finding traces of an
+ abandoned canal, he attempted to complete it in the hope of changing the
+ course of the river, or at least of diverting some of the water from the
+ overflowed land, but the effort was a stupendous failure almost from the
+ start. Then he ordered the levees of the Mississippi protecting two great
+ lakes to be cut, with the idea of flooding the adjacent streams and
+ providing a waterway for his ships. This gigantic enterprise was actually
+ put into operation, the dams were removed, and gun-boats were forced on
+ the swollen watercourses far into the interior until some of them became
+ hopelessly tangled in the submerged forests and their crews, attacked by
+ the Confederate sharpshooters, were glad to make their escape. Week after
+ week and month after month this exhausting work continued, but, at the end
+ of it all, Vicksburg was no nearer capture than before. Indeed, the only
+ result of the campaign was the loss of thousands of men who died of
+ malaria, yellow fever, smallpox, and all the diseases which swamp lands
+ breed. For this, of course, Grant was severely criticized and the
+ denunciations at last became so bitter that an order removing him from the
+ command was entrusted to an official who was directed to deliver it, if,
+ on investigation, the facts seemed to warrant it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the visiting official, after arriving at the front, soon learned that
+ the army had complete confidence in its commander and that it would be a
+ mistake to interfere with him. Indeed, by this time "the silent General,"
+ who had neither answered the numerous complaints against him nor paid the
+ least attention to the storm of public indignation raging beyond his camp,
+ had abandoned his efforts to reach Vicksburg from the front and was busily
+ engaged in swinging his army behind it by a long overland route in the
+ face of appalling difficulties, but with a grim resolution which forced
+ all obstructions from his path. Meanwhile, the gun-boats under Admiral
+ Porter were ordered to attempt to run the land batteries, and April 16,
+ 1863, was selected as the date for their perilous mission. Each vessel had
+ been carefully protected by cotton bales, and the crews stood ready with
+ great wads of cotton to stop leaks, while all lights were extinguished
+ except one in the stern of each ship to guide the one that followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a black night when the Admiral started down the river in his
+ flagship, and for a while it was hoped that the fleet would slip by the
+ batteries under cover of darkness. The leading vessels did, indeed, escape
+ the lookouts of the first forts, but before long a warning rocket shot
+ into the sky and the river was instantly lit by immense bonfires which had
+ been prepared for just this emergency, and by the glare of their flames
+ the gunners poured shot and shell at the black hulls as they sped swiftly
+ by. Shot after shot found its mark, but still the fleet continued on its
+ course. Then, after the bonfires died down, houses were set on fire to
+ enable the artillerists to see their targets, but before daylight the
+ whole fleet had run the gauntlet and lay almost uninjured below Vicksburg,
+ ready to coöperate with Grant's advancing army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the Confederates must have realized that they were facing
+ defeat. Nevertheless, for fully a month they stubbornly contested every
+ foot of ground. But Grant, approaching the rear by his long, roundabout
+ marches, handled his veteran troops with rare good judgment, moving
+ swiftly and allowing his adversaries no rest, so that by the 17th of May,
+ 1863, General Pemberton, commanding the defenses of Vicksburg, was forced
+ to take refuge in the town. Grant immediately swung his army into
+ position, blocking every avenue of escape and began a close siege. The
+ prize for which he had been struggling for more than half a year was now
+ fairly within his grasp, but there was still a chance that it might slip
+ through his fingers, for close on his heels came General Joseph Johnston
+ with a powerful army intent upon rescuing General Pemberton and his
+ gallant garrison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If Johnston could come to Pemberton's relief or if Pemberton could break
+ through and unite with Johnston, they could together save Vicksburg. But
+ Grant had resolved that they should not join forces, and to the problem
+ confronting him he devoted himself body and mind. Constantly in the
+ saddle, watching every detail of the work as the attacking army slowly dug
+ its way toward the city and personally posting the troops holding Johnston
+ at bay, his quiet, determined face and mud-splashed uniform became
+ familiar sights to the soldiers, and his appearance on the lines was
+ invariably greeted with inspiring cheers. By July, the trenches of the
+ besieged and the besiegers were so close together that the opposing
+ pickets could take to each other, and the gun-boats threw shells night and
+ day into the town. Still Pemberton would not surrender and many of the
+ inhabitants of Vicksburg were forced to leave their houses and dig caves
+ in the cliffs upon which the city was built to protect themselves and
+ their families from the iron hail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only when food of every kind had been practically exhausted and his
+ garrison was threatened with starvation that Pemberton yielded. On July 3,
+ 1863, however, he realized that the end had come and raised the white
+ flag. Nearly twenty-four hours passed before the terms of surrender were
+ agreed upon, but Grant, who had served in the same division with Pemberton
+ in the Mexican War, was not inclined to exact humiliating conditions upon
+ his old acquaintance whose men had made such a long and gallant fight. He,
+ accordingly, offered to free all the prisoners upon their signing a
+ written promise not to take arms again unless properly exchanged, and to
+ allow all the officers to retain their side arms and horses. These
+ generous terms were finally accepted, and on July 4, 1863, the Confederate
+ army, numbering about 30,000, marched out in the presence of their
+ opponents and stacked their arms, receiving the tribute of absolute
+ silence from the 75,000 men who watched them from the Union ranks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Four months before this event, Halleck, the Commander-in-Chief, had
+ advised Grant and other officers of his rank that there was a major
+ generalship in the Regular Army for the man who should first win a
+ decisive victory in the field. The captor of Vicksburg had certainly
+ earned this promotion, for with its fall the Mississippi River was
+ controlled by the Union and, in the words of Lincoln, "The Father of
+ Waters again ran unvexed to the sea."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXII. &mdash; The Battle of Gettysburg
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The news that Grant was slowly, but surely, tightening his grip upon
+ Vicksburg, and that nothing but an accident could prevent its capture, was
+ known to the whole country for fully a week before the surrender occurred,
+ but it neither encouraged the North nor discouraged the South. To the
+ minds of many people no victory in the West could save the Union, for Lee
+ was already in Pennsylvania, sweeping northward toward Harrisburg and
+ Philadelphia, and even threatening New York. Hooker, in the field, and
+ Halleck, in Washington, were squabbling as to what should be done, and the
+ Union army was groping blindly after the invaders without any leadership
+ worthy of the name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was certainly a critical moment demanding absolute harmony on the part
+ of the Union leaders; but while the fate of the Union trembled in the
+ balance, Hooker and Halleck wrangled and contradicted each other,
+ apparently regardless of consequences, and the climax of this disgraceful
+ exhibition was a petulant telegram from Hooker (June 27, 1863) resigning
+ his command. Had "Fighting Joe" been the greatest general in the world
+ this resignation, in the presence of the enemy, would have ruined his
+ reputation, and the moment President Lincoln accepted it Hooker was a
+ discredited man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To change commanders at such a crisis was a desperately perilous move, but
+ the President knew that the army had lost confidence in its leader since
+ the battle of Chancellorsville and the fact that he could even think of
+ resigning on the eve of a battle demonstrated his utter unfitness for the
+ task at hand. It was, therefore, with something of relief that Lincoln
+ ordered General Meade to take immediate charge of all the troops in the
+ field, and the new commander assumed the responsibility in these words,
+ "As a soldier I obey the order placing me in command of this army and to
+ the utmost of my ability will execute it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the moment he dispatched this manly and modest response to the
+ unexpected call to duty, Meade knew little of Hooker's plans and had only
+ a vague idea of where his troops were posted. Under such conditions
+ success in the coming battle was almost impossible, but he wasted no time
+ in complaints or excuses, but instantly began to move his forces northward
+ to incept the line of Lee's advance. Even up to this time, however, the
+ exact position of the Confederate army had not been ascertained, for Lee
+ had concealed his infantry behind his cavalry, which effectually prevented
+ his adversaries from getting near enough to discover the direction of his
+ march.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another "cavalry screen," however, covered the Union forces and though Lee
+ dispatched Stuart to break through and discover what lay behind it, the
+ daring officer for once failed to accomplish his purpose and Lee had to
+ proceed without the information he usually possessed. This was highly
+ advantageous to Meade, for his forces were badly scattered and had Lee
+ known that fact he might have crushed the various parts of the army before
+ they united, or at least have prevented some of them from reaching the
+ field in time. He soon learned, of course, that Meade had taken Hooker's
+ place, but if he had not heard the news directly, he would have guessed
+ that some great change had occurred in the generalship of his opponents,
+ for within twenty-four hours of his appointment Meade had his army well in
+ hand, and two days later the rapid and skillful concentration of his force
+ was clear to Lee's experienced eyes. By this time both armies had passed
+ beyond their cavalry screens, and on the 30th of June, 1863, the advance
+ of the Confederate troops neared the little town of Gettysburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lee was not yet ready to fight, for, although he was better prepared
+ than his adversary, he wanted to select the best possible ground before
+ joining battle. By a strange chance, however, it was not Lee but his
+ bare-footed followers who decided where the battle should be fought, for
+ as his advance-guard approached Gettysburg one of the brigade commanders
+ asked and received permission from his superior to enter the town and
+ procure shoes for his men. But Gettysburg was found to be occupied by
+ Union cavalry and the next day (July 1st) a larger force was ordered
+ forward to drive them away and "get the shoes." Meanwhile, the Union
+ cavalry had been reënforced and, to offset this, more Confederates were
+ ordered to the support of their comrades. Once more Union reënforcements
+ were hurried to the front, and again the Confederates responded to the
+ challenge, until over 50,000 men were engaged in a savage conflict, and
+ before noon the battle of Gettysburg, one of the greatest battles of
+ history, had begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men in gray, who thus unwittingly forced the fighting, were veterans
+ of many campaigns and they attacked with a fury that carried all before
+ them. The Union troops fought with courage, but General Reynolds, their
+ commander, one of the ablest officers in the army, was soon shot through
+ the head and instantly killed, and from that moment the Confederates
+ crowded them to the point of panic. Indeed, two of Meade's most effective
+ fighting corps were practically annihilated and the shattered remnants of
+ the defenders of Gettysburg were hurled through the town in headlong
+ flight toward what was known as Cemetery Hill, where their new commander,
+ General Hancock, found them huddled in confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meade had displayed good judgment in selecting Hancock to take Reynolds'
+ place, for he was just the man to inspire confidence in the disheartened
+ soldiers and rise to the emergency that confronted him. But, though he
+ performed wonders in the way of restoring order and encouraging his men to
+ make a desperate resistance, it is more than probable that the
+ Confederates would have swept the field and gained the important position
+ of Cemetery Hill had they followed up their victory. Fortunately for the
+ Union cause, however, the pursuit was not continued much beyond the limits
+ of Gettysburg and, as though well satisfied to have got the shoes they
+ came for, the victors contented themselves with the undisputed possession
+ of the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither Lee nor Meade took any part in this unexpected battle, but Lee
+ arrived during the afternoon while the Union troops were in full flight
+ for the hills and, seeing the opportunity of delivering a crushing blow,
+ advised Ewell, the commanding General, to pursue. His suggestion, however,
+ was disregarded, and being unwilling to interfere with another officer in
+ the midst of an engagement, he did not give a positive order, with the
+ result that Cemetery Hill was left in possession of the Federal troops.
+ Meanwhile Meade, having learned of the situation, was hurrying to the
+ scene of action, where he arrived late at night, half dead with exhaustion
+ and on the verge of nervous collapse from the fearful responsibilities
+ which had been heaped upon him during the previous days. But the spirit of
+ the man rose superior to his physical weakness and, keeping his head in
+ the whirlwind of hurry and confusion, he issued orders rushing every
+ available man to the front, made a careful examination of the ground and
+ chose an admirable position for defense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this inspiring example the whole army made a magnificent response, and
+ before the 2nd of July dawned the widely scattered troops began pouring in
+ and silently moving into position for the desperate work confronting them.
+ Meade had determined to await an attack from Lee and he had accordingly
+ selected Cemetery Ridge as the position best adapted for defense. This
+ line of hills not only provided a natural breastwork, but at the left and
+ a little in front lay two hillocks knows as Round Top and Little Round
+ Top, which, when crowned by artillery, were perfect fortresses of
+ strength. Strange as it may seem, however, Round Top was not immediately
+ occupied by the Union troops and had it not been for the quick eye and
+ prompt action of General Warren, Little Round Top, the key to the entire
+ Union position, would have been similarly neglected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lee was reasonably assured, at the end of the first day's fighting, that
+ his adversary had not succeeded in getting all his troops upon the field
+ and, realizing what an advantage this gave him, he determined to begin the
+ battle at daylight, before the Union reënforcements could arrive. But for
+ once, at least, the great commander received more objections than
+ obedience from his subordinates, General Longstreet, one of his most
+ trusted lieutenants, being the principal offender. Longstreet had, up to
+ this moment, made a splendid record in the campaigns and Lee had such
+ confidence in his skill that he seldom gave him a peremptory order,
+ finding that a suggestion carried all the weight of a command. But, on
+ this occasion, Longstreet did not agree with the Chief's plan of battle
+ and he accordingly took advantage of the discretion reposed in him to
+ postpone making an attack until he received a sharp and positive order to
+ put his force in action. By this time, the whole morning had passed and
+ every hour had brought more and more Union troops into the field, so that
+ by the afternoon Meade had over 90,000 men opposing Lee's 70,000 veterans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was nothing half-hearted about Longstreet once he was in motion and
+ the struggle for the possession of Little Round Top was as desperate a
+ conflict as was ever waged on any field. Again and again the gray
+ regiments hurled themselves into the very jaws of death to gain the
+ coveted vantage ground, and again and again the blue lines, torn, battered
+ and well-nigh crushed to earth, re-formed and hurled back the assault.
+ Dash and daring were met by courage and firmness, and at nightfall, though
+ the Confederates had gained some ground, their opponents still held their
+ original position. Both sides had paid dearly, however, for whatever
+ successes they had gained, the Union army alone having lost at least
+ 20,000 men [Note from Brett: While this is possible, it is highly unlikely
+ as the total casualties for the three day battle from the Unionist side
+ were 23,053 according to official records. Current (circa 2000) estimates
+ are that both sides lost about 9,000 soldiers on this day.]. Indeed, the
+ Confederate attack had been so formidable that Meade called a council of
+ war at night to determine whether the army should remain where it was for
+ another day or retreat to a still stronger position. The council, however,
+ voted unanimously to "stay and fight it out," and the next morning (July
+ 3rd) saw the two armies facing each other in much the same positions as
+ they had occupied the day before, the Unionists crowding the heights of
+ Cemetery Ridge and the Confederates holding the hills known as Seminary
+ Ridge and clinging to the bases of Round Top and Little Round Top, to
+ which point the tide of valor had carried them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A mile of valley and undulating slopes separated Cemetery Hill from
+ Seminary Ridge, and their crests were crowded with artillery when the sun
+ rose on July 3, 1863. But for a time the battle was confined to the
+ infantry, the Confederates continuing fierce assaults of the previous
+ evening. Then, suddenly, all their troops were withdrawn, firing ceased
+ and absolute silence ensued along their whole lines. At an utter loss to
+ understand this complete disappearance of the foe, the Union commanders
+ peered through their glasses at the silent and apparently deserted heights
+ of Seminary Ridge, growing more and more nervous as time wore on. What was
+ the explanation of this ominous silence? Was it possible that Lee had
+ retreated? Was he trying to lure them out of their position and catch them
+ in some giant ambuscade? Was he engaged in a flanking movement such as had
+ crumpled them to pieces at Chancellorsville? Doubtless, more than one
+ soldier shot an apprehensive glance toward the rear during the strange
+ hush as he remembered the terrifying appearance of Jackson on that fearful
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no Jackson stood at Lee's right hand, and suddenly two sharp reports
+ rang out from the opposing height. Then, in answer to this signal, came
+ the crash of a hundred and thirty cannon and instantly eighty Union guns
+ responded to the challenge with a roar which shook the earth, while the
+ air was filled with exploding shells and the ground was literally ploughed
+ with shot. For an hour and a half this terrific duel continued; and then
+ the Union chief of artillery, seeing that his supply of ammunition was
+ sinking, ordered the guns to cease firing and the Confederates, believing
+ that they had completely demolished the opposing batteries, soon followed
+ their example. Another awful silence ensued and when the Union troops
+ peered cautiously from behind the stone walls and slopes which had
+ completely protected them from the wild storm of shot and shell, they saw
+ a sight which filled them with admiration and awe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the woods fringing the opposing heights 15,000 men [Note from Brett:
+ (circa 2000) just under 12,000 men] were sweeping in perfect order with
+ battle flags flying, bayonets glistening and guidons fluttering as though
+ on dress parade. Well to the front rode a gallant officer with a cap
+ perched jauntily over his right ear and his long auburn hair hanging
+ almost to his shoulders flying in the wind. This was General Pickett, and
+ he and the men behind him had almost a mile of open ground to cross in the
+ charge which was to bring them immortal fame. For half the distance they
+ moved triumphantly forward, unscathed by the already thundering artillery,
+ and then the Union cannon which had apparently been silenced by the
+ Confederate fire began to pour death and destruction into their ranks.
+ Whole rows of men were mowed down by the awful cannonade, but their
+ comrades pressed forward undismayed, halting for a moment under cover of a
+ ravine to re-form their ranks and then springing on again with a heroism
+ unsurpassed in the history of war. A hail of bullets from the Union
+ trenches fairly staggered them, yet on and on they charged. Once they
+ actually halted in the face of the blazing breastworks, deliberately fired
+ a volley and came on again with a rush, seized some of the still smoking
+ guns that had sought to annihilate them and, beating back the gunners in a
+ hand-to-hand conflict, actually planted their battle flags on the crest of
+ Cemetery Ridge. Then the whole Union army seemed to leap from the ground
+ and hurl itself upon them. They reeled, turned, broke into fragments and
+ fled, leaving 5,000 dead and wounded in their trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was Pickett's charge&mdash;a wave of human courage which recorded
+ "the high-water mark of the Rebellion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXIII. &mdash; In the Face of Disaster
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As the survivors of Pickett's heroic legion came streaming back toward the
+ Confederate lines Lee stood face to face with defeat for the first time in
+ his career. His long series of victories had not spoiled him and the hour
+ of triumph had always found him calm and thankful, rather than elated and
+ arrogant. But many a modest and generous winner has proved himself a poor
+ loser. It is the moment of adversity that tries men's souls and revels the
+ greatness or smallness of character, and subjected to this test more than
+ one commander in the war had been found wanting. McClellan, staggering
+ from his campaign against Richmond, blamed almost everyone but himself for
+ the result; Pope, scurrying toward the fortifications of Washington, was
+ as ready with excuses as he had been with boasts; Burnside, reeling from
+ the slaughter-pen of Fredericksburg, had demanded the dismissal of his
+ principal officers, and Hooker hurled accusations right and left in
+ explaining the Chancellorsville surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lee resorted neither to accusation nor excuse for the battle of
+ Gettysburg. With the tide of disaster sweeping relentlessly down upon him,
+ he hastened to assume entire responsibility for the result. "It is all my
+ fault," he exclaimed, as the exhausted and shattered troops were seeking
+ shelter from the iron hail, and then as calmly and firmly as though no
+ peril threatened, he strove to rally the disorganized fugitives and
+ present a bold front to the foe. It was no easy task, even with a veteran
+ army, to prevent a panic and restore order and confidence in the midst of
+ the uproar and confusion of defeat, but the quiet dignity and perfect
+ control of their commander steadied the men, and at sight of him even the
+ wounded raised themselves from the ground and cheered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All this will come right in the end," he assured the wavering troops, as
+ he passed among them. "We'll talk it over afterwards, but in the meantime
+ all good men must rally."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not a sign of excitement or alarm was to be detected in his face, as he
+ issued his orders and moved along the lines. "All this has been my fault,"
+ he repeated soothingly to a discouraged officer. "It is I that have lost
+ this fight and you must help me out of it the best way you can.... Don't
+ whip your horse, Captain," he quietly remarked, as he noted another
+ officer belaboring his mount for shying at an exploding shell.... "I've
+ got just another foolish horse myself, and whipping does no good."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing escaped his watchful eyes, nothing irritated him, and nothing
+ provoked him to hasty words or actions. Completely master of himself, he
+ rose superior to the whirling storm about him and, commanding order out of
+ chaos, held his shattered army under such perfect control that had Meade
+ rushed forward in pursuit he might have met with a decisive check.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Meade did not attempt to leave his intrenchments and the Confederate
+ army slowly and defiantly moved toward the South. The situation was
+ perilous&mdash;desperately perilous for Lee. His troops were in no
+ condition to fight after battling for three days, their ammunition was
+ almost exhausted, their food supply was low and they were retreating
+ through a hostile country with a victorious army behind them and a broad
+ river in their path. But not a man in the gray ranks detected even a
+ shadow of anxiety on his commander's face, and when the Potomac was
+ reached and it was discovered that the river was impassable owing to an
+ unexpected flood, the army faced about and awaited attack with sublime
+ confidence in the powers of its chief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Meade, who had been cautiously following his adversary, began to
+ receive telegrams and dispatches urging him to throw himself upon the
+ Confederates before they could recross the Potomac and thus end the war.
+ But this, in the opinion of the Union commander, was easier said than
+ done, and he continued to advance with the utmost deliberation while Lee,
+ momentarily expecting attack, ferried his sick and wounded across the
+ river and prepared for a desperate resistance. Absolute ruin now stared
+ him in the face, for no reënforcements of any kind could reach him and a
+ severe engagement would soon place him completely at his opponent's mercy.
+ Nevertheless, he presented a front so menacing and unafraid that when
+ Meade called his officers to a council of war all but two voted against
+ risking an attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime the river began to fall, and without the loss of a moment
+ Lee commenced building a bridge across which his troops started to safety
+ on the night of July 13th, ten days after the battle. Even then the
+ situation was perilous in the extreme, for had Meade discovered the
+ movement in time he could undoubtedly have destroyed a large part of the
+ retreating forces, but when he appeared on the scene practically the whole
+ army was on the other side of the river and only a few stragglers fell
+ into his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great as Lee's success had been he never appeared to better advantage than
+ during this masterly retreat, when, surrounded by difficulties and
+ confronted by overwhelming numbers, he held his army together and led it
+ to safety. Through the dust of defeat he loomed up greater as a man and
+ greater as a soldier than at any other moment of his career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the decisive victories at Gettysburg and Vicksburg failed to offset
+ President Lincoln's bitter disappointment at Lee's miraculous escape, and
+ had it not been for his success on the field of battle, Meade would
+ undoubtedly have been removed from the chief command. As it was, however,
+ he retained his position and for months he lay comparatively idle,
+ watching his opponent who busied himself with filling the broken ranks of
+ his army for a renewal of the struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the Confederate newspapers began a bitter criticism of Lee,
+ charging that he had displayed bad judgment and worse generalship in
+ attempting to invade the North. A man of different caliber would,
+ doubtless, have answered these attacks by exposing some of the officers
+ whose conduct was largely responsible for the failure of the campaign.
+ Indeed, the facts would have justified him in dismissing more than one of
+ his subordinates from the army in disgrace, and had he chosen to speak the
+ word he might easily have ruined the reputation of at least one
+ distinguished general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no such selfish or vindictive thought ever crossed Lee's mind. Keenly
+ as he suffered from the abuse which was heaped upon him, he endured it
+ without a murmur and, when at last he felt obliged to notice it, his reply
+ took the form of a letter to the Confederate President requesting his
+ permission to resign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The general remedy for the want of success in a military commander is his
+ removal," he wrote a month after the battle of Gettysburg. "I do not know
+ how far the expressions of discontent in the public journals extend in the
+ army. My brother officers have been too kind to report it and, so far, the
+ troops have been too generous to exhibit it. I, therefore, beg you to take
+ measures to supply my place, because if I cannot accomplish what I myself
+ desire, how can I fulfill the expectations of others? I must confess, too
+ that my eyesight is not good and that I am so dull that in making use of
+ the eyes of others I am frequently misled. Everything, therefore, points
+ to the advantages to be derived from a new commander. A younger and abler
+ man can readily be obtained&mdash;one that would accomplish more than I
+ can perform and all that I have wished. I have no complaints to make of
+ anyone but myself. I have received nothing but kindness from those above
+ me and the most considerate attention from my comrades and companions in
+ arms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This generous, dignified statement, modest to the point of
+ self-effacement, instantly hushed all discontent and, before it, even the
+ newspaper editors stood abashed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where am I to find the new commander who is to possess that greater
+ ability which you believe to be required?" wrote Jefferson Davis in reply.
+ "If Providence should kindly offer such a person I would not hesitate to
+ avail myself of his services. But my sight is not sufficiently penetrating
+ to discover such hidden merit, if it exists. To ask me to substitute you
+ by someone more fit to command is to demand an impossibility."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the face of this graceful response Lee could no longer urge his
+ resignation, and after waiting for more than three months for Meade to
+ attack, he suddenly assumed the offensive and during the next five months
+ he and Meade maneuvered their armies as two chess experts handle the
+ pieces on the board. Again and again, Meade swung his powerful army into a
+ favorable position and, again and again, Lee responded with a move which
+ placed his opponent on the defensive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while this game of check and countercheck was being played, the North
+ was becoming more and more impatient and events were rapidly bringing
+ another player to the fore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXIV. &mdash; The Rescue of Two Armies
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The defeats and disappointments of the various campaigns in Virginia had
+ gradually convinced the authorities at Washington that too many people
+ were trying to direct the Union forces. With Lee there was practically no
+ interference; but the commanders who opposed him were subject to the
+ orders of the General-in-Chief at Washington, who was, to some extent,
+ controlled by the Secretary of War, whose superior was the President, and
+ after almost every engagement a Congressional Committee, known as the
+ "committee on the conduct of the war," held a solemn investigation in
+ which praise and blame were distributed with the best intentions and worst
+ possible results. All these offices and officials were accordingly more or
+ less responsible for everything that occurred, but not one of them was
+ ever wholly to blame. This mistake, however, was at last fully realized
+ and a careful search began for some one man to whom the supreme command
+ could be entrusted. But for a long time no one apparently thought that the
+ Western army contained any very promising material. Nevertheless, Grant,
+ Sheridan, Sherman and Rosecrans were then in that army and, of these four;
+ Rosecrans was regarded by many as the only real possibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, at the moment when Grant was closing in upon Vicksburg, and Lee
+ and Meade were struggling at Gettysburg, Rosecrans, who had been entrusted
+ with the important duty of conducting a campaign to drive the Confederates
+ out of Tennessee, was fully justifying the high opinions of his admirers.
+ Between June 24, 1863, and September 9th of that year he certainly
+ outmaneuvered his opponents, occupying the all-important position of
+ Chattanooga, and forcing the able Confederate General Bragg to fall back
+ with more speed than order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During all this time the North had been insisting that the army should be
+ placed in charge of some commander who could master Lee, and this demand
+ had found expression in a popular poem bearing the refrain "Abraham
+ Lincoln! Give us a Man!" To the minds of many people Rosecrans had clearly
+ demonstrated that he was "the Man," and it is possible that his subsequent
+ acts were prompted by over-eagerness to end his already successful
+ campaign with a startlingly brilliant feat of arms. At all events, he
+ determined not to rest satisfied with having driven the Confederates from
+ the field, but to capture or destroy their entire force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this idea he divided his army and rushed it by different routes over
+ the mountains in hot pursuit of the foe. But the trouble with this program
+ was that Bragg had not really retreated at all, having merely moved his
+ army aside waiting for an opportunity to strike. Indeed, Rosecrans had
+ barely plunged his troops into the various mountain passes on their
+ fruitless errand before the whole Confederate force loomed up, threatening
+ to destroy his widely-separated, pursuing columns, one by one, before they
+ could be united.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This unexpected turn of affairs utterly unnerved the Union General, and
+ although he did manage by desperate exertions to collect his scattered
+ army, he completely lost his head when Bragg attacked him at Chickamauga,
+ Georgia, on the 19th of September, 1863, and before the savage battle of
+ that name had ended he retired from the field, believing that his army had
+ been totally destroyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, undoubtedly, would have been its fate had not General Thomas and his
+ brave troops covered the retreat, by holding the whole Confederate army in
+ check for hours and even forcing it to yield portions of the bloody field.
+ From that day forward Thomas was known as "The Rock of Chickamauga," but
+ the heroic stand of his gallant men barely sufficed to save the Union
+ army, which reached the intrenchments of Chattanooga only just in time,
+ with the Confederates hot upon its trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had Bragg overtaken his flying opponent, he would doubtless have made an
+ end of him then and there, but it was not altogether with regret that he
+ saw him enter Chattanooga, for with the roads properly blocked he knew the
+ place would prove a perfect trap. He, accordingly, began a close siege
+ which instantly cut off all Rosecrans' communication with the outside
+ world, except by one road which was in such a wretched condition as to be
+ impossible for a retreating army. Indeed, the heavy autumn rains soon
+ rendered it impracticable even for provision wagons, and as no supplies
+ could reach the army by any other route, it was not long before starvation
+ began to stare the besieged garrison in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Rosecrans, almost wild with anxiety and mortification, sent
+ dispatch after dispatch to Washington describing his condition and
+ imploring aid, but though he still had an effective army under his command
+ and plenty of ammunition, he made no attempt whatever to save himself from
+ his impending doom. Day by day the situation grew more and more perilous;
+ thousands upon thousands of horses and mules died for lack of food and the
+ men were so nearly reduced to starvation that they greedily devoured the
+ dry corn intended for the animals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this time the authorities in Washington were straining every nerve to
+ rescue the beleaguered army. Sixteen thousand men under General Hooker
+ were rushed to its relief, provisions were forwarded within a day's march
+ of the town, awaiting the opening of new roads, and finally, when the
+ stream of frantic telegrams from the front showed that the army had
+ practically no leadership, hurried orders were forwarded to Grant,
+ authorizing him to remove Rosecrans, place Thomas temporarily in control
+ and take the field himself at the earliest possible moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This unexpected summons found Grant in a serious condition, for some weeks
+ earlier his horse had fallen under him, crushing his leg so severely that
+ for a time it was feared he might be crippled for life, and he was still
+ on crutches suffering intense pain when the exciting orders were placed in
+ his hands. Nevertheless, he promptly started on his desperate errand,
+ traveling at first by rail and steamer and then in an ambulance, until its
+ jolting motion became unbearable when he had himself lifted into the
+ saddle with the grim determination of riding the remainder of the way.
+ Even for a man in perfect physical condition the journey would have been
+ distressing, for the roads, poor at their best, were knee deep in mud and
+ a wild storm of wind and rain was raging. Time and again his escort had to
+ lift the General from his horse and carry him across dangerous washouts
+ and unaffordable streams, but at the earliest possible moment they were
+ always ordered to swing him into the saddle again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, mile after mile and hour after hour, the little cavalcade crept
+ toward Chattanooga, Grant's face becoming more haggard and furrowed with
+ pain at every step, but showing a fixed determination to reach his goal at
+ any cost. On every side signs of the desperate plight of the besieged
+ garrison were only too apparent. Thousands of carcasses of starved horses
+ and mules lay beside the road amid broken-down wagons, abandoned
+ provisions and all the wreckage of a disorganized and demoralized army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if the suffering officer noted these ominous evidences of disaster,
+ his face afforded no expression of his thought. Plastered with mud and
+ drenched to the skin, he rode steadily forward, speaking no word and
+ scarcely glancing to the right or left, and when at last the excruciating
+ journey came to an end, he hastened to interview Thomas and hear his
+ report, without even waiting to change his clothes or obtain refreshment
+ of any kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not a very cheerful story which Thomas confided to his Chief before
+ the blazing headquarters' fire, but the dripping and exhausted General
+ listened to it with no indication of discouragement or dismay. "What
+ efforts have been made to open up other roads for provisioning the army?"
+ was the first question, and Thomas showed him a plan which he and
+ Rosecrans had worked out. Grant considered it in silence for a moment and
+ then nodded his approval. The only thing wrong with the plan was that it
+ had not been carried out, was his comment, and after a personal inspection
+ of the lines he gave the necessary authority for putting it into immediate
+ operation. Orders accordingly began flying right and left, and within
+ twenty-four hours the army was busily engaged in gnawing a way out of the
+ trap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Additional roads were essential for safety but to gain them the
+ Confederates had to be attacked and a heavy force was therefore ordered to
+ seize and hold a point known as Brown's Ferry. This relieved the situation
+ at once and meanwhile the new commander had hurried a special messenger to
+ Sherman, ordering him to drop everything else and march his Vicksburg
+ veterans toward Chattanooga without an instant's delay. The advance of
+ this strong reënforcement was promptly reported to Bragg, who saw at a
+ glance that unless it could be stopped there was every prospect that his
+ Chattanooga victims would escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He accordingly determined upon a very bold but very dangerous move. Not
+ far away lay General Burnside and a small Union army, guarding the
+ important city of Knoxville, Tennessee, and against this the Confederate
+ commander dispatched a heavy force, in the hope that Grant would be
+ compelled to send Sherman to the rescue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the effect of this news upon Grant was very different from Bragg's
+ expectations, for realizing that his adversary must have seriously
+ weakened himself in sending the expedition against Burnside, he ordered
+ Hooker, whose 16,000 men were already on hand, to make an immediate attack
+ with a force drawn from various parts of the army, and on November 24,
+ 1863, after a fierce engagement known as the battle of Lookout Mountain,
+ the Union troops drove their opponents from one of the two important
+ heights commanding Chattanooga.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this success Sherman had effectively cooperated by attacking and
+ holding the northern end of Missionary Ridge and Grant determined to
+ follow up his advantage by moving the very next morning against this
+ second and more formidable range of hills. Therefore, ordering Hooker to
+ attack the Confederate right on Missionary Ridge and get in their rear at
+ that point while Sherman assaulted their left, he held Thomas's troops
+ lying in their trenches at the front awaiting a favorable opportunity to
+ send them crashing through the center.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The main field of battle was plainly visible to the silent commander as he
+ looked down upon it from a hill known as Orchard Knob, and he watched the
+ effect of the attacks on both wings of the Confederate line with intense
+ interest. Reënforcements were evidently being hurried to the Confederate
+ right and left and Hooker, delayed by the destruction of a bridge, did not
+ appear at the critical moment. Nevertheless, for some time Sherman
+ continued to advance, but as Grant saw him making slower progress and
+ noted the heavy massing of troops in his path, he ordered Thomas's waiting
+ columns to attack the center and carry the breastworks at the foot of
+ Missionary Ridge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a blare of bugles, 20,000 blue-coated men seemed to leap from the
+ ground and 20,000 bayonets pointed at Missionary Ridge whose summits began
+ to blaze forth shot and shell. Death met them at every stride but the
+ charging troops covered the ground between them and the rifle pits they
+ had been ordered to take in one wild rush and tore over them like an angry
+ sea. Then, to the utter astonishment of all beholders, instead of halting,
+ they continued charging up the face of Missionary Ridge, straight into the
+ mouths of the murderous cannon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By whose order is this?" Grant demanded sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By their own, I fancy," answered Thomas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Incredible as this suggestion seemed, it offered the only possible
+ explanation of the scene. No officer would have dared to order troops to
+ such certain destruction as apparently awaited them on the fire-crowned
+ slopes of Missionary Ridge. Spellbound Grant followed the men as they
+ crept further and further up the height, expecting every instant to see
+ them hurled back as Pickett's heroes were at Gettysburg, when suddenly
+ wave upon wave of blue broke over the crest, the Union flags fluttered all
+ along the line and before this extraordinary charge the Confederates broke
+ and fled in disorder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Setting spur to his horse, Grant dashed across the hard-fought field and
+ up the formidable ridge, issuing orders for securing all that had been
+ gained. An opening wedge had now been inserted in Chattanooga's prison
+ doors, and by midnight the silent captain had thrown his whole weight
+ against them and they fell. Then calmly turning his attention to Burnside,
+ he ordered him to hold his position at every hazard until he could come to
+ the rescue and, setting part of his victorious veterans in motion toward
+ Knoxville, soon relieved its garrison from all danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the rescue of two Union armies to his credit Grant was generally
+ regarded as the most fitting candidate for the chief command of the army,
+ but by this time it was fully realized that the man who held that position
+ would have to be invested with far greater powers than any Union general
+ had thus far possessed. Halleck expressed himself as only too anxious to
+ resign; Congress passed a law reviving the grade of lieutenant-general
+ with powers which, up to that time, had never been entrusted to anyone
+ save Washington, and responded to the cry, "Abraham Lincoln! Give us a
+ MAN!" the President, on March 1st, 1864, nominated Ulysses Grant as
+ Commander-in-Chief of all the armies of the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXV. &mdash; Lieutenant-General Grant
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Until he arrived in Washington Lincoln had never met the man to whom he
+ had entrusted the supreme command of the army, and the new General was a
+ very different individual from those who had been previously appointed to
+ high rank. Some of his predecessors had possessed undoubted ability, but
+ most of them had soon acquired an exaggerated idea of their own
+ importance, surrounding themselves with showy staffs in gorgeous attire,
+ delighting in military pomp and etiquette of every kind, and generally
+ displaying a great weakness for popular admiration and applause. Moreover,
+ all of them, with the exception of Meade, had talked too much for their
+ own good and that of the army, so that many of their plans had become
+ known in Richmond almost as soon as they had been formed. Indeed, they not
+ only talked, but wrote too much, and in discussions with their superiors
+ and wrangling with their fellow officers more than one proved far mightier
+ with the pen than with the sword. All this, to a very large extent, was
+ the fault of the public, for it had made an idol of each new General,
+ deluging him with praise, flattering his vanity and fawning on him until
+ he came to regard the war as a sort of background for his own greatness.
+ Thus, for almost three years, the war was conducted more like a great game
+ than a grim business, and not until it began visibly to sap the life blood
+ and resources of the nation did the people, as a whole, realize the awful
+ task confronting them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both sides had begun the conflict in much the same careless fashion, but
+ the South had immediately become the battle ground, and the horrors of war
+ actually seen and felt by its people quickly sobered even the most
+ irresponsible. But from the very first Lee had taken a serious view of the
+ whole situation. Every word he spoke or wrote concerning it was distinctly
+ tinged with solemnity, if not sadness, and his sense of responsibility had
+ a marked influence upon the whole Confederacy. It had taken the North
+ almost three years to respond in a similar spirit, but by that time it was
+ ready for a leader who knew what war really meant and for whom it had no
+ glory, and such a leader had undoubtedly been found in Grant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening of March 8, 1864, the new commander arrived in Washington
+ and made his way, without attracting any attention, to one of the hotels.
+ There was nothing in his presence or manner to indicate that he was a
+ person of any importance. Indeed, he presented a decidedly commonplace
+ appearance, for he walked with an awkward lurch and bore himself in a
+ slouchy fashion which made him even shorter than he was. Moreover, his
+ uniform was faded and travel-stained, his close-cropped beard and hair
+ were unkempt, and his attire was careless to the point of slovenliness.
+ There was, however, something in the man's clear-cut features, firm mouth
+ and chin and resolute blue eyes which suggested strength, and while his
+ face, as a whole, would not have attracted any particular notice in a
+ crowd, no one in glancing at it would have been inclined to take any
+ liberties with its owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though Grant had arrived unheralded and unrecognized at the national
+ capital, he had barely given his name to the hotel clerk before the whole
+ city was surging about him eager to catch a glimpse of the new hero and
+ cheer him to the echo. But however much notoriety of this sort had pleased
+ some of his predecessors, Grant soon showed that he wanted no applauding
+ mob to greet him in the streets, for he quickly escaped to the seclusion
+ of his own room. But the same public that had cheered itself hoarse for
+ McClellan, Pope and Hooker, and then hissed them all in turn, had found
+ another hero and was not to be cheated of its prey. Indeed, the newcomer
+ was not even allowed to eat his dinner in peace, for a crowd of gaping and
+ congratulating enthusiasts descended upon him the moment he reappeared and
+ soon drove him from the dining room in sheer disgust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Possibly the fate of the fallen idols had warned Grant against making a
+ public exhibition of himself or encouraging the hysterical acclamations of
+ the crowd, but he was naturally a man of sound, common sense, entirely
+ free from conceit, and he had no idea of allowing the idle or curious mob
+ to amuse itself at his expense. He, therefore, quickly made it plain that
+ he had serious work to do and that he intended to do it without nonsense
+ of any kind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ceremonies and forms with such a man would have been impossible, and on
+ March 9, 1864, President Lincoln handed him his commission as a
+ Lieutenant-General, with a few earnest words to which he made a modest
+ reply, and then, with the same calmness he had displayed in assuming the
+ colonelcy of the 21st Illinois, he turned to the duties involved in the
+ command of half a million men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that time forward no more councils of war were held at the White
+ House and no more military secrets were disclosed to the Confederate
+ chiefs. "I do not know General Grant's plans, and I do not want to know
+ them!" exclaimed Lincoln with relief. But other people did want to know
+ them and the newspaper reporters and busybodies of all sorts incessantly
+ buzzed about him, employing every device from subtle flattery to masked
+ threats to discover his designs. But Grant knew "how to keep silent in
+ seven different languages" and no one could beguile him into opening his
+ lips. Neither had he time nor inclination to listen to other people talk.
+ His troops were spread over a thousand miles of territory, and never
+ before had they been under the absolute control of any one man. With the
+ Army of the Potomac he had had but little practical experience; of the
+ country in which its campaigns had been conducted he knew nothing at first
+ hand; with a few exceptions he had no personal acquaintance with the
+ officers under his immediate command, and there were countless other
+ difficulties which had to be overcome. He, therefore, had no leisure for
+ trifling and quickly sent all intruders about their business while he
+ attended to his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The problem involved in a grand campaign was in many respects new to him,
+ but doing his own thinking in silence, instead of puzzling himself with
+ the contradictory opinions of other men, Grant reached a more accurate
+ conclusion in regard to the war than any of his predecessors. In the first
+ place, he saw that the various campaigns which had been conducted in
+ different parts of the country would have been far more effective had they
+ all formed part of one plan enabling the different armies to coöperate
+ with each other. He, accordingly, determined to conduct the war on a
+ gigantic scale, keeping the Confederates in the West so busy that they
+ would not be able to reënforce Lee and giving Lee no chance to help them.
+ In a word, he intended to substitute team play for individual effort all
+ along the line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, he saw the capture of Richmond, upon which the Army of the Potomac
+ had expended all its efforts, would be futile if Lee's army remained
+ undefeated in the field, and he resolved that Lee and not Richmond should
+ thereafter be the main object of the campaign. "Where Lee's army goes,
+ there you will go also," was the substance of his first order to Meade who
+ virtually became his Chief of Staff, and those who were straining every
+ nerve to discover his plan and expecting something very brilliant or
+ subtle never guessed that those nine words contained the open secret of
+ his whole campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, however, was the fact. "I never maneuver," he remarked to his Chief
+ of Staff; and Meade, who had spent the best part of a year in a great
+ series of maneuvers with Lee, listened to this confession with
+ astonishment and dismay, scarcely believing that his superior really meant
+ what he said. But Grant did mean it. No elaborate moves or delicate
+ strategy had been employed in any of his campaigns and he had yet to meet
+ with a serious defeat. To make his first experiment in maneuvering against
+ such an expert in the science of war as Lee, would have been to foredoom
+ himself to defeat. With a far smaller force then either McClellan, Pope,
+ Burnside, Hooker or Meade had possessed, the Confederate leader had
+ practically fought a drawn battle with them for three years. His science
+ had not, it is true, been able to overcome their numbers, but their
+ numbers had not overpowered him. This, as far as anyone could see, might
+ go on forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Grant knew that the North had long been tiring of the war and that
+ unless it were speedily closed the Union might be sacrificed in order to
+ obtain peace. Moreover, he saw that every day the war lasted cost an
+ enormous sum of money, and that the loss of life on the battle field was
+ nothing compared to that in the hospitals and prisons, where disease and
+ starvation were claiming scores of victims every hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He, therefore, determined to fight and continue fighting until he pounded
+ his opponent to pieces, well knowing that almost every able-bodied man in
+ the South was already in the army and that there was practically no one
+ left to take the place of those who fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This policy, in the minds of many people, proves that Grant was no
+ general, but merely a brute and a butcher. But history has never yet
+ revealed a military leader who, having the advantage of numbers, did not
+ make the most of it. Had Grant been waging war for war's sake, or been so
+ enamored with his profession as to care more for its fine points than for
+ the success of his cause, he might have evolved some more subtle and less
+ brutal plan. But he had no love for soldiering and no sentimental ideas
+ whatever about the war. Common sense, with which he was liberally
+ supplied, told him that the only excuse for fighting was to uphold
+ principles which were vital to the national life and the only way to have
+ those principles upheld was to defeat those who opposed them and to do
+ this he determined to use all the resources at his command.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men whom Fate or Chance had been drawing together for over two
+ hundred years were utterly different in appearance and manner, but in
+ other respects they were singularly alike. Lee was, at the time of their
+ meeting, already in his 58th year, his hair and beard were almost white,
+ but his calm, handsome face, clear eyes and ruddy complexion, made him
+ appear younger than he was. His bearing also was that of a young man, for
+ his erect, soldierly carriage showed his height to full advantage; his
+ well-knit figure was almost slight for a man standing over six feet, and,
+ mounted on his favorite horse "Traveller," he was the ideal soldier. Grant
+ was barely forty-two years of age, short of stature, careless in dress and
+ generally indifferent to appearances. His face, though strong, was
+ somewhat coarse, his manners were not polished and he had nothing of the
+ cultivation or charm which Lee so unmistakably possessed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though Grant thus reflected his Roundhead ancestors and Lee his
+ Cavalier descent, the contrast between them was mainly external. Both were
+ modest and courageous; both were self-contained; each had his tongue and
+ temper under complete control; each was essentially an American in his
+ ideas and ideals; each fought for a principle in which he sincerely
+ believed, and neither took the least delight in war. Had they met in times
+ of peace, it is not probable that they would have become intimate friends,
+ but it is certain that each would have respected, if not admired the other
+ for his fine qualities, and this was undoubtedly their attitude toward
+ each other from the beginning of the struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXVI. &mdash; A Duel to the Death
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ For nearly two months after Grant assumed command no important move was
+ attempted by either the Union or the Confederate forces except in
+ Mississippi. Both sides realized that a desperate struggle was impending
+ and each needed all the time it could gain to prepare for the coming fray.
+ Heavy reënforcements were hurried to Grant, until the Army of the Potomac
+ under his immediate command included over 120,000 men; a hundred thousand
+ more were assembled at Chattanooga in charge of Sherman; and two other
+ forces of considerable size were formed to coöperate with Grant&mdash;one
+ being entrusted to General Benjamin Butler and the other to General Franz
+ Sigel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To oppose this vast army Lee had less than 65,000 men in the Army of
+ Northern Virginia and the only other formidable Confederate force in the
+ field was that commanded by General Joseph Johnston, who, with some 53,000
+ men, was stationed in Georgia guarding the cotton states and the far
+ South. If these two armies could be captured or destroyed, all organized
+ resistance to the Union would be at an end, and Grant, accordingly,
+ determined to throw his entire weight upon them, sending Sherman against
+ Johnston, Butler against the City of Richmond and Sigel against the rich
+ Shenandoah Valley which supplied the Confederate armies with food, while
+ he himself attacked Lee with an overwhelming force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never before had a Union general undertaken a campaign covering such a
+ vast extent of country and never before had such a united effort been made
+ to exhaust the armies and the resources of the South. With his own forces
+ threatened by superior numbers Lee would not be able to reënforce Johnston
+ with safety and, confronted by Sherman, Johnston would find it impossible
+ to send assistance to Lee. This promised to bring the war to a speedy
+ close, and the supporters of the Union redoubled their praises of the
+ Lieutenant-General as they began to understand his plan. Indeed, the more
+ he avoided publicity and applause and the more indifference he showed for
+ popular opinion, the more the newspapers and the general public fawned
+ upon him, and when, on May 3, 1864, he ordered his armies to advance, the
+ whole North was fairly aflame with enthusiasm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was certainly a momentous occasion. Three years earlier Grant had been
+ utterly unknown to the country at large and the small group who
+ acknowledged his acquaintance had regarded him as a rather pitiful
+ failure, while the Government to whom he had offered his services had
+ ignored him altogether. Now, at his nod, hundreds of thousands of men
+ instantly sprang to arms and the most powerful armies that America had
+ ever seen moved forward in obedience to his will, Sherman marching
+ southward, Butler creeping toward Richmond, Sigel advancing into the
+ fertile Shenandoah Valley, and the Army of the Potomac crossing the
+ Rapidan River to renew its struggle with Lee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lee had watched the elaborate preparations of his new antagonist with keen
+ interest and no little apprehension, for Grant's record as a fighting man
+ promised a duel to the death and the South had no more men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was certainly serious but, anxious as he was, the
+ Confederate commander did not by any means despair. He was familiar with
+ every inch of the country through which Grant would have to advance and
+ the chances were that this would, sooner or later, give him not only the
+ advantage of position, but possibly the choice of weapons. With this idea
+ he allowed the Union forces to cross the Rapidan unopposed, hoping that he
+ would soon be able to drive them back and that the river would then be as
+ valuable as cavalry in hampering their retreat. Just beyond the Rapidan
+ lay the dense thickets and waste lands of scrub oak and undergrowth known
+ as the Wilderness, which had witnessed the Chancellorsville surprise and
+ virtually sealed the fate of Hooker's army. If the Union forces advanced
+ directly through this jungle, there was more than a possibility that they
+ might outflank their opponents and gain the road to Richmond, but Lee
+ scarcely dared hope that his adversary would attempt so dangerous a route.
+ Nevertheless, he maneuvered to leave the trap undisturbed, and when he saw
+ the Union columns entering the forests he felt that they were actually
+ being delivered into his hands. Once in those tangled thickets he knew
+ that Grant's artillery and cavalry would be practically useless and
+ without them his superiority in numbers disappeared. Of course, it would
+ be impossible to conduct a scientific battle in such a region, for it
+ would virtually be fighting in the dark, but knowing that his men were
+ thoroughly familiar with the ground, Lee determined to hurl them upon the
+ advancing bluecoats, trusting to the gloom and the terrors of the unknown
+ to create confusion and panic in their ranks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the men whom Grant commanded were no longer the inexperienced
+ volunteers who had been stampeded at Bull Run. They were veterans of many
+ campaigns and, though they staggered for a moment under the shock of
+ battle, they speedily rallied and fought with stubborn courage. The
+ conflict that followed was one of the most brutal recorded in the annals
+ of modern war. Whole regiments sprang at each other's throats, the men
+ fighting each other like animals; trees were cut down by the bullets which
+ tore through them from every direction; bursting shells set fire to the
+ woods, suffocating the wounded or burning them to death; wild charges were
+ made, ending in wilder stampedes or bloody repulses; the crackle of flames
+ rose high above the pandemonium of battle and dense smoke-clouds drifted
+ chokingly above this hideous carnival of death. Thus for two days the
+ armies staggered backward and forward with no result save a horrible loss
+ of life. Once the Union forces almost succeeded in gaining a position
+ which would have disposed of their adversaries, but Lee saw the danger
+ just in the nick of time and, rushing a Texas brigade to the rescue, led
+ the charge in person until his troops recognized him and forced him to
+ retire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was May 7, 1864, when this blind slaughter known as the Battle of the
+ Wilderness ceased, but by that time nearly 18,000 Union soldiers and
+ 12,000 Confederates lay upon the field. Lee could not claim a victory but
+ he still held his ground and he felt confident that Grant would fall back
+ behind the Rapidan River to recuperate his shattered forces. No Union
+ commander, thus far, had tarried long on Virginian soil after such a
+ baptism of blood, and when the news that Grant's columns were retreating
+ reached the Confederate commander he breathed a sigh of thanksgiving and
+ relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the veterans who had served under McClellan, Pope, Burnside and Hooker,
+ retreats were a wretchedly familiar experience, but they had not been long
+ on the road before they realized that they were not retreating but were
+ marching southward. As the truth of this dawned upon the disheartened
+ columns they burst into frantic cheers for Grant and pressed forward with
+ springy steps, shouting and singing for joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A less able commander would have been fatally misled by Grant's apparent
+ retreat, but Lee knew that he might again attempt to swing around his
+ right flank and edge toward Richmond by way of Spotsylvania, and to guard
+ against this a body of troops had been ordered to block that road.
+ Therefore, by the time Grant began his great turning movement, Lee was
+ planted squarely across his path and another series of battles followed.
+ Here the Union commander was able to make some use of his cavalry and
+ artillery, but the Confederates offset this by fighting behind
+ intrenchments and they repulsed charge after charge with fearful
+ slaughter. Again, as at the Battle of the Wilderness, the gray line was
+ pierced, this time at a point known as the "Bloody Angle" or "Hell's Half
+ Acre," and twice Lee sprang forward to lead a desperate charge to recover
+ the lost ground. But each time the troops refused to advance until their
+ beloved leader retired to a point of safety, and when he yielded they
+ whirled forward, sweeping everything before them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These charges saved the battle of Spotsylvania for the Confederates. But
+ though Lee had again blocked his opponent, the fact that he had thrice had
+ to rally his troops at the peril of his life showed that he had been
+ harder pressed than in any of his other Virginia campaigns. Nevertheless,
+ when the last furious attack had been repulsed and Grant began moving
+ sullenly away, it seemed as though he had at last been compelled to
+ abandon the campaign. But the wearied Confederates had yet to learn that
+ their terrible opponent was a man who did not know when he was beaten, for
+ in spite of his awful losses he had written his government May 11, 1864,
+ "I propose to fight it out on this line if it takes all summer," and his
+ army, instead of retreating, continued to move southward, crossing the
+ North Anna River and circling once more toward the left flank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again Grant was on the road to Richmond, but in crossing the North Anna
+ River he left an opening between the two wings of his army and before he
+ could close it Lee threw his whole force into the breach and, completely
+ cutting off one part of the Union army from the other, held both firmly in
+ check. This masterly move might have brought Grant's campaign to a
+ disastrous end, but just as he was planning to take full advantage of it,
+ Lee fell ill and during his absence from the field Grant made his first
+ backward move, recrossing the North Anna River and, bringing the two wings
+ of his army together, rescued it from its perilous position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moment he reached a point of safety, however, the persistent commander
+ recommenced his march by the left flank, sidling once more toward Richmond
+ until he reached Cold Harbor, only eight miles from the Confederate
+ capital. Here Lee once more interposed his battered forces, strongly
+ intrenching them in a position that fairly defied attack. With any other
+ adversary against him he would have concluded that the game was won, for
+ by all the rules of war the Union army was completely balked and could not
+ avoid a retreat. But Grant was a man of a different caliber from any he
+ had encountered heretofore. In spite of checks and disasters and
+ unheard-of slaughter he had pushed inexorably forward; foiled in front he
+ had merely turned aside to hew another bloody path. To him defeat only
+ seemed to mean delay, and apparently he could not be shaken from his
+ dogged purpose, no matter what the cost. At Cold Harbor, however, the
+ Confederate position was so strong that to assault it was madness, and Lee
+ could not believe that even his grim opponent would resort to such a
+ suicidal attempt. But retreat or attack offered no choice to Grant's mind,
+ and on June 2, 1864, the troops were fiercely hurled against the
+ Confederate works, only to be repulsed with fearful slaughter. A few hours
+ later orders were issued to renew the assault, and then postponed for a
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That delay gave the soldiers an opportunity to understand the desperate
+ nature of the work that lay before them and, realizing that charging
+ against murderous batteries and trenches meant rushing into the jaws of
+ death, they offered a silent protest. Not a man refused to obey orders,
+ not one fell from his place in the line, but to their coats they sewed
+ strips of cloth bearing their names and addresses so that their bodies
+ might be identified upon the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This dramatic spectacle might well have warned their commander of the
+ hopelessness of his attempt, but fixed in his resolve to thrust his
+ opponent from his path, he gave the fatal order to charge, and twenty
+ minutes later 3,000 of his best troops fell before the smoking trenches
+ and the balance reeled back aghast at the useless sacrifice. This
+ horrifying slaughter, which Grant himself confessed was a grievous
+ blunder, brought the first stage of his campaign to a close. In but little
+ over a month he had lost nearly 55,000 men&mdash;almost as many as Lee had
+ had in his entire army, and almost in sight of the spires of Richmond his
+ adversary held him securely at arm's length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wave of horror, indignation and disappointment, swept over the North.
+ Another campaign had proved a failure. There were, however, two men who
+ did not agree with this conclusion. One was Grant, pouring over the maps
+ showing the movements of all his armies. The other was Lee, looking in
+ vain for reënforcements to fill the gaps in his fast thinning lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXVII. &mdash; Check and Countercheck
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The six-weeks' campaign in Virginia had been quite sufficient to check all
+ enthusiasm for Grant, but the fact that he was no longer a popular hero
+ did not trouble him at all. Indeed, he displayed the same indifference to
+ the storm of angry criticism that he had shown for the salvos of applause.
+ He had made no claims or boasts before he took the field and he returned
+ no answers to the accusations and complaints after his apparent failures.
+ Had he posed before the public as a hero or been tempted to prophesy a
+ speedy triumph for his army, the humiliation and disappointment might have
+ driven him to resign from the command. But he had recognized the
+ difficulty of his task from the outset, modestly accepting it with no
+ promise save that he would do his best, and he silently resolved to pursue
+ the campaign he had originally mapped out in spite of all reverses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly, he required all his calmness and steadfastness to overcome his
+ discouragement and disgust at the manner in which the coöperating armies
+ had been handled. In the Shenandoah Valley Sigel had proved utterly
+ incompetent and the Confederates, instead of having been driven from that
+ important storehouse, had tightened their hold upon it. Moreover, Butler,
+ who was supposed to threaten Richmond while Grant fought Lee, had made a
+ sorry mess of that part of the program. In fact he had maneuvered in such
+ a ridiculous fashion that he and about 35,000 troops were soon cooped up
+ by a far smaller force of Confederates who held them as a cork holds the
+ contents of a bottle; and last, but not least, the Army of Potomac lay
+ badly mutilated before the impassable intrenchments of Lee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one particular, however, Grant's expectations bade fair to be realized,
+ for Sherman was steadily pushing his way through Georgia, driving Johnston
+ before him, and inflicting terrible damage upon the country through which
+ he passed. As Grant watched this triumphant advance he silently resolved
+ upon another move. The north or front door of Richmond was closed and
+ firmly barred. There was nothing to be gained by further battering at that
+ portal. But the southern or rear door had not yet been thoroughly tried
+ and upon that he concluded to make a determined assault. To do this it
+ would be necessary to renew his movement around his opponent's right flank
+ by crossing the formidable James River&mdash;a difficult feat at any time,
+ but double difficult at that moment, owing to the fact that Butler's
+ "bottled" force might be crushed by a Confederate attack while the
+ hazardous passage of the river was being effected. Nevertheless, he
+ decided to risk this bold stroke, and during the night of June 12, 1864,
+ about ten days after the repulse at Cold Harbor, the great movement was
+ begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Lee, confident that he had completely checked his opponent, but
+ disappointed that he had not forced him to retreat, determined to drive
+ him away by carrying the war into the North and threatening the Federal
+ capital. That he should have been able to attempt this in the midst of a
+ campaign deliberately planned to destroy him, affords some of the
+ indication of the brilliant generalship he had displayed. But it does not
+ fully reflect his masterful daring. At the outset of the campaign the
+ Union forces had outnumbered him two to one and its losses had been offset
+ by reënforcements, while every man that had fallen in the Confederate
+ ranks had left an empty space. It is highly probable, therefore, that at
+ the moment he resolved to turn the tables on his adversary and transform
+ the campaign against Richmond into a campaign against Washington, he had
+ not much more than one man to his opponent's three. Nevertheless, in the
+ face of these overwhelming numbers, he maintained a bold front towards
+ Grant and detached General Jubal Early with 20,000 men to the Shenandoah
+ Valley, with orders to clear that region of Union troops, cross the
+ Potomac River and then march straight on Washington.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at this moment that Grant began creeping cautiously away toward the
+ rear door of Richmond. To keep a vigilant enemy in entire ignorance of
+ such a tremendous move was, of course, impossible, but the system and
+ discipline which he had instilled into his army almost accomplished the
+ feat. Indeed, so rapidly and silently did the troops move, so perfect were
+ the arrangements for transporting their baggage and supplies, so
+ completely were the details of the whole undertaking ordered and
+ systematized, that over a hundred thousand men, infantry, cavalry, and
+ artillery, with their horses, hospital and wagon trains, and all the
+ paraphernalia of a vast army virtually faded away, and when Lee gazed from
+ his intrenchments on June 13, 1864, there was no sign of his opponent and
+ he did not discover where he had gone for fully four days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime, Grant had thrown his entire army across the James River
+ and was advancing, horse and foot, on Petersburg, the key to the approach
+ to Richmond from the south, and Butler, whose troops had been extricated
+ from their difficulties, was ordered to seize it. Petersburg was at that
+ moment wholly unprepared to resist a strong attack. Indeed, there were
+ only a handful of men guarding the fortification, the capture of which
+ would case the fall of Richmond, but Butler was not the man to take
+ advantage of this great opportunity. On the contrary, he delayed his
+ advance and otherwise displayed such wretched judgment that the
+ Confederates had time to rush reënforcements to the rescue, and when Grant
+ arrived on the scene the intrenchments were strongly occupied.
+ Notwithstanding this the Union commander ordered a vigorous assault, and
+ for three days the troops were hurled against the breastworks without
+ result. The last attack was made on June 18, 1864, but by this time 10,000
+ Union soldiers had been sacrificed and Lee had arrived in person with
+ strong support. Grant accordingly, abandoning his efforts to carry the
+ place by storm, began to close in upon it for a grimly sullen siege.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, General Early, to whom Lee had entrusted his counter-move, was
+ sweeping away the Federal forces in the Shenandoah Valley with resistless
+ fury, and suddenly, to the intense surprise and mortification of the whole
+ North, advanced upon Washington, threatening it with capture. Washington
+ was almost as completely unprepared for resistance as Petersburg had been,
+ its defenses being manned by only a small force mainly composed of raw
+ recruits and invalid soldiers, while outside the city there was but one
+ body of troops near enough to oppose the Confederate advance. That little
+ army, however, was commanded by General Lew Wallace, later the famous
+ author of "Ben Hur," and he had the intelligence to see that he might at
+ least delay Early by offering battle and that gaining time might prove as
+ valuable as gaining a victory. Accordingly, he threw himself across the
+ Confederate's path and, though roughly handled and at last driven from the
+ field, he hung on long enough to accomplish his purpose and although his
+ adversary attempted to make up for lost time by rapid marching he did not
+ succeed. This undoubtedly saved Washington from capture, for shortly after
+ Early appeared on the 7th Street Road leading to the capital, the
+ reënforcements which Grant had rushed forward reached the city, and before
+ any attack on the intrenchments was attempted they were fully defended and
+ practically unassailable. Seeing this, Early retreated with the Union
+ troops following in half-hearted pursuit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the 12th of July, 1864, when, with a sigh of intense relief,
+ Washington saw the backs of the retreating Confederates, but its
+ satisfaction at its escape was mingled with indignation against Grant for
+ having left it open to attack. Indeed, he was regarded by many people as
+ the greatest failure of all the Union commanders, for he had lost more men
+ in sixty days than McClellan had lost in all his campaigns without getting
+ any nearer to Richmond, and by the end of July another lamentable failure
+ was recorded against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the intrenchments facing Petersburg lay the 48th Pennsylvania
+ Volunteers, largely composed of miners from the coal regions of that
+ state. Late in June Colonel Pleasants of this regiment had submitted a
+ plan whereby his men were to dig a tunnel to a point directly under one of
+ the Confederate forts, plant a gunpowder mine there and blow a breach in
+ the defenses through which troops could be poured and the town carried by
+ assault. The scheme was plausible, provided the tunnel could be bored and
+ Grant gave his consent, with the result that within a month an underground
+ passage over 500 feet long was completed, a mine was planted with four
+ tons of powder and elaborate preparations made for storming the
+ Confederate works. Grant's orders were that all obstructions in front of
+ the Union lines should be removed to enable the troops to charge the
+ moment the explosion occurred, and that they should be rushed forward
+ without delay until they were all within the Confederate lines.
+ Accordingly, in the dead of night on July 29th, the assaulting columns
+ were moved into position and when everything was in apparent readiness the
+ signal was given to explode the mine. But though the match was applied no
+ explosion occurred, and in the awful hush that followed Lieut. Jacob Douty
+ and Sergeant Henry Rees volunteered to crawl into the tunnel and see what
+ was wrong. To enter the passage at that moment was almost defying death,
+ but the two men took their lives in their hands and, creeping in,
+ discovered that the fuse had smoldered and gone out. They then relit it
+ and made their escape just as a fearful explosion rent the air and great
+ masses of earth, stones and timbers, intermingled with human bodies,
+ leaped toward the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment the waiting troops watched this terrifying spectacle and
+ then, as the cloud of wreckage apparently swerved toward them threatening
+ to descend and bury them beneath it, they fell back in great confusion and
+ some time elapsed before order was restored and the charge begun. But
+ Grant's orders to clear their path had not been obeyed, and the charging
+ troops had to climb over their own breastworks, causing more delay and
+ confusion. Finally, however, the leading brigades reached the great
+ excavation torn by the mine, and there they halted awaiting further
+ orders. But no orders came, for their terror-stricken commander had sought
+ safety in a bomb-proof and when his hiding place was discovered the
+ miserable cur merely mumbled something about "moving forward" and remained
+ cowering in his refuge. Meanwhile, other regiments rushed forward,
+ tumbling in upon one another, until the chasm was choked with men upon
+ whom the Confederates began to pour shot, shell and canister. From that
+ moment everything was lost and at last orders came from Grant to rescue
+ the struggling mass of men from the awful death trap into which they had
+ been plunged, but despite all exertions fully 4,000 were killed, wounded
+ or captured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again his subordinates had blundered terribly but Grant accepted the
+ responsibility and assumed the blame, waiting patiently for the hour, then
+ near at hand, when he would find commanders he could trust to carry out
+ his plans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXVIII. &mdash; The Beginning of the End
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The right man to conduct the Shenandoah campaign was already in the Army
+ of the Potomac, but it was not until about a week after the failure of the
+ Petersburg mine that circumstances enabled Grant to place General Philip
+ Sheridan in charge of that important task.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheridan, like Sherman, had served with Grant in the West and had
+ developed into a brilliant cavalry leader. Indeed, he was the only man in
+ the Northern armies whose record could be compared with that of Jeb Stuart
+ and many other great cavalry commanders in the South. But Grant felt that
+ Sheridan could handle an entire army as well as he had handled the cavalry
+ alone and he soon showed himself fully worthy of this confidence, for from
+ the moment he took over the command of the Union forces in the Shenandoah
+ Valley, the Confederates were compelled to fight for it as they had never
+ fought before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up to this time, the war had been conducted with comparatively little
+ destruction of private property on either side. But the moment had now
+ arrived for harsher measures, for Sherman had occupied Atlanta on
+ September 2, 1864, and was preparing to march to the sea coast and cut the
+ Confederacy in two. If Grant's plan of depriving Lee of the fertile valley
+ to the north was to be put in operation, there was no time to lose.
+ Sheridan, accordingly, at once proceeded to attack the Confederates with
+ the utmost vigor, defeating them in two engagements at Winchester and
+ Fisher's Hill, and following up this success by laying waste the fields
+ and ruthlessly destroying all the stores of grain and provisions which
+ might prove useful to Lee's army. For a month or more he continued to
+ sweep through the country practically unchecked. But on October 19.1864,
+ during his absence, his army was surprised and furiously attacked by
+ General Early's men at Cedar Creek, and before long they had the Union
+ troops in a perilous position which threatened to end in their destruction
+ and the recapture of the entire valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sheridan was at Winchester on his way to the front from Washington when
+ the news of this impending disaster reached him and, mounting his horse,
+ he dashed straight across country for the scene of action. He was then,
+ however, fully twenty miles from the field and there seemed but little
+ chance of his reaching it any time to be of any service. Nevertheless, he
+ spurred forward at a breakneck pace and his splendid horse, responding
+ gamely, fairly flew over the ground, racing along mile after mile at
+ killing speed in a lather of foam and sweat, until the battle field was
+ reached just as the Union troops came reeling back, panic-stricken, under
+ cover of a thin line of troops who had at last succeeded in making a
+ stand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly, the General was among the fugitives ordering them to turn and
+ follow him and inspired by his presence, they wheeled as he dashed down
+ their broken lines and, madly cheering, hurled themselves upon their
+ pursuers. Completely surprised by this unexpected recovery, the
+ Confederates faltered and the Union troops, gathering force as they
+ charged, rolled them back with irresistible fury and finally swept them
+ completely from the field. Indeed, Early's force was so badly shattered
+ and scattered by this overwhelming defeat that it virtually abandoned the
+ Valley and Sheridan continued his work of destruction almost unopposed,
+ until the whole region was so barren that, as he reported, a crow flying
+ across it would have to carry his own provisions or starve to death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Sherman had begun to march from Atlanta to Savannah, Georgia,
+ where he intended to get in touch with the navy guarding the coast and
+ then sweep northward to Grant. Behind him lay the Confederate army,
+ formerly commanded by General Joseph Johnston but now led by General Hood,
+ a daring officer who was expected to retrieve Johnston's failure by some
+ brilliant feat of arms. Whether he would attempt this by following Sherman
+ and attacking him at the first favorable moment or take advantage of his
+ departure to turn north and play havoc with Tennessee and the region thus
+ exposed to attack, was uncertain. To meet either of these moves Sherman
+ sent a substantial part of his army to General Thomas at Nashville,
+ Tennessee, and swung off with the rest of his troops toward the sea. Hood
+ instantly advanced against Thomas, and Grant at Petersburg, closely
+ watching the movement saw a great opportunity to dispose of one of the
+ Confederate armies. He, accordingly, ordered Thomas to attack with his
+ whole strength as soon as Hood reached Nashville, but although the
+ Confederates reached that point considerably weakened by a partial defeat
+ inflicted on them by a retreating Union column, Thomas delayed his
+ assault. Days of anxious waiting followed and then Grant hurried General
+ Logan, one of his most trusted officers, to the scene of action with
+ orders to take over the command, unless Thomas immediately obeyed his
+ instructions. In the meantime, however, Thomas, slow but sure, had
+ completed his preparations and, hurling himself upon Hood with a vastly
+ superior force, pursued his retreating columns (Dec. 16, 1864) until they
+ were split into fragments, never again to be reunited as a fighting force.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until this practical annihilation of Hood that the North began
+ to realize how far reaching and complete Grant's plans were. But that
+ event and the Shenandoah campaign made it clear that he had determined
+ that no army worthy of the name should be left to the Confederacy when he
+ finally closed in upon Lee, so that with his destruction or surrender
+ there should be no excuse for prolonging the war. It was in furtherance of
+ this plan that Sherman left ruin and desolation behind him as he blazed
+ his way up from the South. The inhabitants of the region through which he
+ was marching had, up to this time, been living in perfect security and
+ Sherman intended to make war so hideous that they would have no desire to
+ prolong the contest. He, accordingly, tore up the railroads, heating the
+ rails and then twisting them about trees so that they could never be used
+ again, burned public buildings and private dwellings, allowed his army to
+ live on whatever food they could find in the houses, stores or barns, and
+ generally made it a terror to all who lay in the broad path he was
+ sweeping towards Petersburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant then had Lee fairly caught. His only possible chances of prolonging
+ the contest lay in taking refuge in the mountains or joining his forces
+ with the remnants of Hood's army which had been gathered together and
+ again entrusted with other troops to the command of General Joseph
+ Johnston. Had it been possible to do this, nothing practical would have
+ been achieved, for he had less than 30,000 effective men and Johnston's
+ whole force did not amount to much more than 30,000, while Grant, Sherman
+ and Sheridan together had a quarter of a million men under arms. From a
+ military standpoint Lee knew that the situation was hopeless, but until
+ the authorities who had placed him in the field gave up the cause he felt
+ in duty bound to continue the fight to the bitter end. Had the Union army
+ been his only opponent, it is possible that he might have succeeded in
+ escaping the rings of steel which Grant was daily riveting around him. But
+ he had to fight hunger, and from the day that Sheridan mastered the
+ Shenandoah Valley and Sherman cut off all supplies from the South
+ starvation stared him in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, his troops, though almost reduced to skeletons and clothed in
+ rags, confidently believed that in spite of everything he would find some
+ way of leading them out of Grant's clutches and, inspired by this implicit
+ faith, they hurled themselves again and again upon the masses of troops
+ which were steadily closing around them. But though they frequently
+ checked the advancing columns and sometimes even threw them back,
+ inflicting heavy losses and taking many prisoners, the blue lines soon
+ crept forward again, closing up gap after gap with a resistless tide of
+ men. At last the road to the west leading toward the mountains beyond
+ Lynchburg alone remained open. But to avail himself of this Lee knew that
+ he would have to abandon Petersburg and Richmond and he hesitated to take
+ this step; while Grant, seeing the opening and fearing that his opponent
+ would take advantage of it, strained every nerve to get his troops into a
+ position where they could block the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the condition of affairs at the end of March, 1865, but neither
+ the starving soldiers in the Confederate trenches nor the people of
+ Richmond or Petersburg imagined that the end was desperately near. While
+ "Marse Robert," as Lee's men affectionately called him, was in command
+ they felt that no real danger could come nigh them, and their idol was
+ outwardly as calm as in the hour of his greatest triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0030" id="link2HCH0030"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXIX. &mdash; At Bay
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It would be impossible to imagine a more hopeless situation than that
+ which had confronted Lee for many months. To guard the line of
+ intrenchments stretching around Petersburg and Richmond for more than
+ thirty-five miles, he had less than 30,000 effective men, and starvation
+ and disease were daily thinning their impoverished ranks; the soldiers
+ were resorting to the corn intended for the horses, and the cavalry were
+ obliged to disperse through the country seeking fodder for their animals
+ in the wasted fields; the defenders of the trenches, barefooted and in
+ rags, lay exposed to the cold and wet, day and night; there were no
+ medicines for the sick and no great supply of ammunition for the guns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps no one but Lee fully realized to what desperate straits his army
+ had been reduced. Certainly his opponents were ignorant of the real
+ condition of affairs or they would have smashed his feeble defenses at a
+ blow, and the fact that he held over a hundred thousand troops at bay for
+ months with a skeleton army shows how skillfully he placed his men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though his brilliant career threatened to end in defeat and disaster,
+ no thought of himself ever crossed Lee's mind. Regardless of his own
+ comfort and convenience, he devoted himself day and night to relieving the
+ suffering of his men, who jestingly called themselves "Lee's Miserables,"
+ but grimly stuck to their posts with unshaken faith in their beloved chief
+ who, in the midst of confusion and helplessness, remained calm and
+ resourceful, never displaying irritation, never blaming anyone for
+ mistakes, but courageously attempting to make the best of everything and
+ finding time, in spite of all distractions, for the courtesy and the
+ thoughtfulness of a gentleman unafraid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His letters to his wife and children during these perilous days reveal no
+ anxiety save for the comfort of his men, and no haste except to provide
+ for their wants. At home his wife&mdash;confined to an invalid's chair&mdash;was
+ busily knitting socks for the soldiers, and to her he wrote in the face of
+ impending disaster:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ..."After sending my note this morning I received from the express office
+ a bag of socks. You will have to send down your offerings as soon as you
+ can, and bring your work to a close, for I think General Grant will move
+ against us soon&mdash;within a week if nothing prevents&mdash;and no man
+ can tell what will be the result; but trusting to a merciful God, who does
+ not always give the battle to the strong, I pray we may not be
+ overwhelmed. I shall, however, endeavor to do my duty and fight to the
+ last. Should it be necessary to abandon our position to prevent being
+ surrounded, what will you do? You must consider the question and make up
+ your mind. It is a fearful condition and we must rely for guidance and
+ protection upon a kind Providence...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after this letter was written Lee made a desperate effort to force
+ his adversary to loosen his grip but though the exhausted and starved
+ troops attacked with splendid courage, they could not pierce the solid
+ walls of infantry and fell back with heavy losses. Then Sheridan, who had
+ been steadily closing in from the Shenandoah, swung 10,000 sabres into
+ position and the fate of Petersburg was practically sealed. But, face to
+ face with this calamity, Lee calmly wrote his wife:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have received your note with a bag of socks. I return the bag and
+ receipt. I have put in the bag General Scott's autobiography which I
+ thought you might like to read. The General, of course, stands out
+ prominently and does not hide his light under a bushel, but he appears the
+ bold, sagacious, truthful man that he is. I enclose a note from little
+ Agnes. I shall be very glad to see her to-morrow but cannot recommend
+ pleasure trips now...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At every point Grant was tightening his hold upon the imprisoned garrison
+ and difficulties were crowding fast upon their commander, but he exhibited
+ neither excitement nor alarm. Bending all his energies upon preparations
+ for a retreat, he carefully considered the best plan for moving his troops
+ and supplying their needs on the march, quietly giving his orders to meet
+ emergencies, but allowing no one to see even a shadow of despair on his
+ face. Concerning the gravity of the situation he neither deceived himself
+ nor attempted to deceive others who were entitled to know it, and with
+ absolute accuracy he prophesied the movements of his adversary long before
+ they were made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ..."You may expect Sheridan to move up the Valley," he wrote the
+ Confederate Secretary of War.... "Grant, I think, is now preparing to draw
+ out by his left with the intent of enveloping me. He may wait till his
+ other columns approach nearer, or he may be preparing to anticipate my
+ withdrawal. I cannot tell yet.... Everything of value should be removed
+ from Richmond. It is of the first importance to save all the powder. The
+ cavalry and artillery of the army are still scattered for want of
+ provender and our supply and ammunition trains, which ought to be with the
+ army in case of a sudden movement, are absent collecting provisions and
+ forage. You will see to what straits we are reduced; but I trust to work
+ out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, on March 29th, 1865, Grant pushed forward 50,000 cavalry and
+ infantry to execute the very move which Lee had outlined and for which he
+ was as thoroughly prepared as it was possible to be with the men he had on
+ hand. But to check this advance which threatened to surround his army and
+ cut off his retreat, he had to withdraw the troops guarding the defenses
+ of Petersburg, abandoning some of the intrenchments altogether and leaving
+ nothing much more formidable than a skirmish line anywhere along his
+ front. Even then he could not stop the onrush of the Union troops, which,
+ under Sheridan, circled his right on April 1st and drove back his men in
+ the fierce engagement known as the battle of Five Forks. With the news of
+ this success Grant promptly ordered an assault against the intrenchments
+ and his troops tore through the almost defenseless lines in several
+ places, encountering little or no resistance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Petersburg was not yet taken, but Lee immediately saw that to protect it
+ further would be to sacrifice his entire army. He, therefore, sent a
+ dispatch to Richmond, advising the immediate evacuation of the city. "I
+ see no prospect of doing more than hold our position here till night. I am
+ not certain that I can do that," he wrote. But he did hold on till the
+ Confederate authorities had made their escape, and then on the night of
+ April 2nd he abandoned the capital which he had successfully defended for
+ four years and started on a hazardous retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The one chance of saving his army lay in reaching the mountains to the
+ west, before Grant could bar the road, but his men were in no condition
+ for swift marching and the provision train which he had ordered to meet
+ him at Amelia Court House failed to put in an appearance, necessitating a
+ halt. Every moment was precious and the delay was exasperating, but he did
+ his best to provide some sort of food for his famished men and again sent
+ them on their way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time, however, the Union troops were hot upon their trail and soon
+ their rear-guard was fighting desperately to hold the pursuit in check.
+ Now and again they shook themselves free, but the moment they paused for
+ food or rest they were overtaken and the running fight went on. Then,
+ little by little, the pursuing columns began to creep past the crumbling
+ rear-guard; cavalry pounced on the foragers searching the countryside for
+ food and captured the lumbering provision-wagons and the railroad supply
+ trains which had been ordered to meet the fleeting army, while hundreds
+ upon hundreds of starving men dropped from the ranks as they neared the
+ bypaths leading to their homes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still some thousands held together, many begging piteously for food at
+ every house they passed and growing weaker with each step, but turning
+ again and again with a burst of their old spirit to beat back the
+ advance-guard of the forces that were slowly enfolding them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There was as much gallantry displayed by some of the Confederates in
+ these little engagements as was displayed at any time during the war,
+ notwithstanding the sad defeats of the past week," wrote Grant many years
+ later, and it was this splendid courage in the face of hardship and
+ disaster that enabled the remnants of the once invincible army to keep up
+ their exhausting flight. As they neared Appomattox Court House, however,
+ the blue battalions were closing in on them from every side like a pack of
+ hounds in full cry of a long-hunted quarry and escape was practically cut
+ off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For five days Grant had been in the saddle personally conducting the
+ pursuit with restless energy, and he knew that he was now in a position to
+ strike a crushing blow, but instead of ordering a merciless attack, he
+ sent the following letter to Lee:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Headquarters Armies of the U.S. "5 P.M. Apr. 7, 1865.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "General R. E. Lee,&mdash;Commanding Confederate States Armies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The results of the last week must convince you of the hopelessness of
+ further resistance on the part of the Army of Northern Virginia in this
+ struggle. I feel that it is so and regard it as my duty to shift from
+ myself the responsibility of any further effusion of blood by asking of
+ you the surrender of that portion of the Confederate States Army known as
+ the Army of Northern Virginia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "U. S. Grant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lieut. General."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the retreating columns staggered along, their pace growing
+ slower and slower with every mile, and at last a courier arrived bearing
+ Lee's reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "General:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have received your note of this day. Though not entertaining the
+ opinion you express on the hopelessness of further resistance on the part
+ of the Army of Northern Virginia I reciprocate your desire to avoid
+ useless effusion of blood and therefore, before considering your
+ proposition, ask the terms you will offer on condition of its surrender.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "R. E. Lee,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "General."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant promptly responded that peace being his great desire, there was only
+ one condition he would insist upon and that was that the surrendered men
+ and officers should not again take up arms against the United States until
+ properly exchanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Lee was not yet ready to yield and continuing to move forward with his
+ faithful veterans, he sent a dignified reply, declining to surrender but
+ suggesting a meeting between himself and Grant, with the idea of seeing if
+ some agreement could not be reached for making peace between the two
+ sections of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not the answer that Grant had hoped for, but he had too much
+ admiration for his gallant adversary to ride rough shod over him when he
+ held him completely in his power, and while he gave the necessary orders
+ to prepare for closing in, he sent another courteous note to Lee dated
+ April 9, 1865:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "General.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your note of yesterday is received. I have no authority to treat on the
+ subject of peace; the meeting proposed for 10 A.M. today could lead to no
+ good. I will state, however, General, that I am equally anxious for peace
+ with yourself and the whole North entertains the same feeling. The terms
+ upon which peace can be had are well understood.... Seriously hoping that
+ all our difficulties may be settled without the loss of another life, I
+ subscribe myself, etc.,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "U. S. Grant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lt. General."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The courier bearing this message dashed off and disappeared and the chase
+ continued, masses of blue infantry pressing forward under cover of
+ darkness and overlapping the weary columns of gray that stumbled on with
+ lagging steps. Meanwhile, the morning of April 9th dawned and Lee
+ determined to make one more desperate effort at escape. Behind him an
+ overwhelming force was crowding and threatening to crush his rear-guard;
+ on either flank the blue-coated lines were edging closer and closer; but
+ in front there appeared to be only a thin screen of cavalry which might be
+ pierced; and beyond lay the mountains and safety. At this cavalry then he
+ hurled his horsemen with orders to cut their way through and force an
+ opening for the rest of the army, who vigorously supported the attack. It
+ was, indeed, a forlorn hope that was thus entrusted to the faithful
+ squadrons, but they responded with matchless dash and spirit, tearing a
+ wide gap through the opposing cavalry and capturing guns and prisoners.
+ Then they suddenly halted and surveyed the field with dumb despair. Behind
+ the parted screen of horsemen lay a solid wall of blue infantry arrayed in
+ line of battle and hopelessly blocking the road. One glance was enough to
+ show them what Grant's night march had accomplished, and the baffled
+ riders wheeled and reported the situation to their chief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lee listened calmly to the news which was not wholly unexpected. There was
+ still a chance that a portion of his force might escape, if he was willing
+ to let them attempt to fight their way out against awful odds, but no
+ thought of permitting such a sacrifice crossed his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then there is nothing left for me but to go and see Gen. Grant," he
+ observed to those around him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But desperate as their plight had been for days, his officers were
+ unprepared for this announcement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, General!" one of them protested, "What will history say of the
+ surrender of the army in the field?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," he replied. "I know they will say hard things of us; they will not
+ understand how we were overwhelmed by numbers. But that is not the
+ question, Colonel. The question is, is it right to surrender this army? If
+ it is right, then I will take all the responsibility."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No response was offered by the little group and turning to one of his
+ staff, Lee quietly gave an order. A few moments later white flags were
+ fluttering at the head of the halted columns and an officer rode out
+ slowly from the lines bearing a note to Grant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0031" id="link2HCH0031"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXX. &mdash; The Surrender
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While Lee's messenger was making his way toward the Union lines, Grant was
+ riding rapidly to the front where his forces had foiled the Confederate
+ cavalry. For more than a week he had been constantly in the saddle, moving
+ from one point on his lines to another and begrudging even the time for
+ food and sleep in his efforts to hasten the pursuit. But the tremendous
+ physical and mental strain to which he had subjected himself had already
+ begun to tell upon him, and he had passed the previous night under a
+ surgeon's care endeavoring to put himself in fit condition for the final
+ struggle which Lee's refusal to surrender led him to expect. The dawn of
+ April 9th, however, found him suffering with a raging headache, and
+ well-nigh exhausted after his sleepless night he rode forward feeling more
+ like going to the hospital than taking active command in the field. He had
+ already advanced some distance and was within two or three miles of
+ Appomattox Court House, when an officer overtook him and handed him these
+ lines from Lee:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Apr. 9, 1865.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "General:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I received your note of this morning on the picket line whither I had
+ come to meet you and ascertain definitely what terms were embraced in your
+ proposal of yesterday with reference to the surrender of this army. I now
+ ask an interview in accordance with the offer contained in your letter of
+ yesterday for that purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "R. E. Lee,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "General."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The moment Grant's eyes rested on these words his headache disappeared,
+ and instantly writing the following reply, he put spurs to his horse and
+ galloped on:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Apr. 9, 1865.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your note of this date is but this moment (11:50 A. M.) received in
+ consequence of my having passed from the Richmond and Lynchburg Road to
+ the Farmville and Lynchburg Road. I am at this writing about four miles
+ west of Walker's Church and will push forward to the front for the purpose
+ of meeting you. Notice sent to me on this road where you wish the
+ interview to take place will meet me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "U. S. Grant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lt. General."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The troops under Sheridan were drawn up in line of battle when Grant
+ arrived on the scene and his officers, highly excited at the favorable
+ opportunity for attacking the Confederates, urged him to allow no
+ cessation of hostilities until the surrender was actually made. But Grant
+ would not listen to anything of this sort, and directing that he be at
+ once conducted to General Lee, followed an orderly who led him toward a
+ comfortable two-story, brick dwelling in Appomattox village owned by a Mr.
+ McLean who had placed it at the disposal of the Confederate commander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mounting the broad piazza steps, Grant entered the house, followed by his
+ principal generals and the members of his staff, and was ushered into a
+ room at the left of the hall, where Lee, accompanied by only one officer,
+ awaited him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the two commanders shook hands the Union officers passed toward the
+ rear of the room and remained standing apart. Then Lee motioned Grant to a
+ chair placed beside a small marble-topped table, at the same time seating
+ himself near another table close at hand. Neither man exhibited the
+ slightest embarrassment and Grant, recalling that they had served together
+ during the Mexican War, reminded Lee of this fact, saying that he
+ remembered him very distinctly as General Scott's Chief of Staff but did
+ not suppose that an older and superior officer would remember him. But Lee
+ did remember him and in a few minutes he was chatting quietly with his
+ former comrade about the Mexican campaign and old army days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be impossible to imagine a greater contrast than that afforded by
+ the two men as they thus sat conversing. Lee wore a spotless gray uniform,
+ long cavalry boots, spurs and gauntlets, and carried the beautiful sword
+ given to him by Virginia, presenting altogether a most impressive
+ appearance; and his tall, splendidly proportioned figure and grave
+ dignified bearing heightened the effect. His well-trimmed hair and beard
+ were almost snow white, adding distinction to his calm, handsome face
+ without suggesting age, and his clear eyes and complexion and erect
+ carriage were remarkable for a man of fifty-eight. Grant was barely
+ forty-three, and his hair and beard were brown with a touch of gray, but
+ his face was worn and haggard from recent illness, and his thickset figure
+ and drooping shoulders were those of a man well advanced in years. For
+ uniform he wore the blouse of a private, to which the shoulder straps of a
+ lieutenant-general had been stitched; his trousers were tucked into top
+ boots worn without spurs; he carried no sword and from head to foot he was
+ splashed with mud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He, himself, was conscious of the strange contrast between his appearance
+ and that of his faultlessly attired opponent, for he apologized for his
+ unkempt condition, explaining that he had come straight from active duty
+ in the field, and then as the conversation regarding Mexico continued he
+ grew so pleasantly interested that the object of the meeting almost passed
+ from his mind, and it was Lee who first recalled it to his attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then called for pencil and paper, and without having previously mapped
+ out any phrases in his mind, he began to draft an informal letter to Lee,
+ outlining the terms of surrender. Nothing could have been more clear and
+ simple than the agreement which he drafted, nor could the document have
+ been more free from anything tending to humiliate or offend his adversary.
+ It provided merely for the stacking of guns, the parking of cannon and the
+ proper enrollment of the Confederate troops, all of whom were to remain
+ unmolested as long as they obeyed the laws and did not again take up arms
+ against the Government, and it concluded with the statement that the side
+ arms of the officers were not to be surrendered and that all such officers
+ who owned their own horses should be permitted to retain them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lee watched the writing of this letter in silence, and when Grant handed
+ it to him he read it slowly, merely remarking as he returned it that the
+ provision allowing the officers to keep their horses would have a happy
+ effect, but that in the Confederate army the cavalry and artillerymen
+ likewise owned their own horses. That hint was quite sufficient for Grant,
+ who immediately agreed to make the concession apply to all the soldiers,
+ whether officers or privates, observing as he again handed the paper to
+ Lee that his men would probably find their horses useful in the spring
+ ploughing when they returned to their farms. Lee responded that the
+ concession would prove most gratifying to his soldiers, and, turning to
+ his secretary, dictated a short, simple reply to his opponent, accepting
+ his conditions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While these letters were being copied in ink, Grant introduced his
+ officers to Lee and strove to make the situation as easy as possible for
+ him. Indeed, throughout the whole interview he displayed the most
+ admirable spirit, tactfully conceding all that his adversary might
+ reasonably have asked, thus saving him from the embarrassment of making
+ any request and generally exhibiting a delicate courtesy and generosity
+ which astonished those who judged him merely by his rough exterior. But
+ Grant, though uncouth in appearance and unpolished in manners, was a
+ gentleman in the best sense of the word, and he rose to the occasion with
+ an ease and grace that left nothing to be desired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the letters were signed the Confederate commander shook his
+ late opponent's hand and turned to leave the room. The Union officers
+ followed him to the door as he departed but tactfully refrained from
+ accompanying him further and attended only by his secretary, he passed
+ down the broad steps of the piazza, gravely saluted the group of officers
+ gathered there who respectfully rose at his approach, mounted his old
+ favorite "Traveller" and rode slowly toward his own lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the news of the surrender had reached the Union army and
+ cannon began booming a salute in honor of the joyful tidings. But Grant
+ instantly stopped this and ordered that there should be no demonstrations
+ or exultation of any kind which would offend Lee's men. In the same
+ generous spirit he kept his men strictly within their own lines when the
+ Confederates stacked their guns and no one, except the officers assigned
+ to receive the arms, was permitted to witness this final act of surrender [1].
+ He likewise declined to visit Richmond lest his presence should be
+ regarded as the triumphal entry of a conqueror or smack of exulting over
+ his fallen foes, and with fully a million bayonets behind him ready to win
+ him further glory, his foremost thought was to end the war without the
+ loss of another life. With this idea, on the morning after the surrender,
+ he sought another interview with Lee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [1]Since
+ the first edition of this volume was published the writer has been
+ furnished, through the courtesy of Mr. Jefferson K. Cole of Massachusetts,
+ with documentary proof that the formal surrender of what remained of Lee's
+ infantry was made in the presence of the First Division of the 5th Corps
+ of the Army of the Potomac, General Joshua L. Chamberlain commanding.
+ Therefore, although it is true that Grant avoided all humiliation of the
+ Confederates, it is evident that a small portion of his troops did witness
+ the final act of surrender, and the statement in the text should be
+ accordingly amended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0032" id="link2HCH0032"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXXI. &mdash; Lee's Years of Peace
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Desperate as their plight had been for many days, Lee's men had not wholly
+ abandoned the hope of escape, but when their beloved commander returned
+ from the Federal lines they saw by his face that the end had come, and
+ crowding around him, they pressed his hands, even the strongest among them
+ shedding bitter tears. For a time he was unable to respond in words to
+ this touching demonstration, but finally, with a great effort, he mastered
+ his emotion and bravely faced his comrades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Men," he said, "we have fought through the war together; I have done my
+ best for you; my heart is too full to say more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brief as these words were, all who heard them realized that Lee saw no
+ prospect of continuing the struggle and meant to say so. He was, of
+ course, well aware that the Confederates had many thousand men still in
+ the field, and that by separating into armed bands they could postpone the
+ end for a considerable period. But this to his mind was not war and he had
+ no sympathy with such methods and no belief that they could result in
+ anything but more bloodshed and harsher terms for the South. A word from
+ him would have been quite sufficient to encourage the other commanders to
+ hold out and prolong the cruelly hopeless contest, but he had determined
+ not to utter it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant was firmly convinced that this would be his attitude, but whether he
+ would actually advise the abandonment of the cause was another question,
+ and it was to suggest this course that the Union commander sought him out
+ on the morning after the surrender. This second interview occurred between
+ the lines of the respective armies and as the former adversaries sat
+ conversing on horseback, Grant tactfully introduced the subject of ending
+ the war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He knew, he told Lee, that no man possessed more influence with the
+ soldiers and the South in general than he did, and that if he felt
+ justified in advising submission his word would doubtless have all the
+ effect of law. But to this suggestion Lee gravely shook his head. He
+ frankly admitted that further resistance was useless, but he was unwilling
+ to pledge himself to give the proposed advice until he had consulted with
+ the Confederate President, and Grant did not urge him, feeling certain
+ that he would do what he thought right. Nor was this confidence misplaced,
+ for though Lee never positively advised a general surrender, his opinions
+ soon came to be known and in a short time all the Confederate forces in
+ the field yielded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though peace was thus restored, the war had left two countries where
+ it had found one, and to the minds of many people they could never be
+ united again. It was then that Lee showed his true greatness, for from the
+ moment of his surrender he diligently strove by voice and pen and example
+ to create harmony between the North and South and to help in the
+ rebuilding of the nation. To those who asked his opinion as to whether
+ they should submit to the Federal authorities and take the required oath
+ of allegiance, he unhesitatingly replied, "If you intend to reside in this
+ country and wish to do your part in the restoration of your state and in
+ the government of the country, which I think is the duty of every citizen,
+ I know of no objection to your taking the oath."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He denounced the assassination of Lincoln as a crime to be abhorred by
+ every American, discountenanced the idea of Southerners seeking refuge in
+ foreign lands, scrupulously obeyed every regulation of the military
+ authorities regarding paroled prisoners and exerted all the influence at
+ his command to induce his friends to work with him for the reconciliation
+ of the country. Even when it was proposed to indict and try him for
+ treason he displayed no resentment or bitterness. "I have no wish to avoid
+ any trial that the Government may order. I hope others may go unmolested,"
+ was his only comment. But no such persecution was to be permitted, for
+ Grant interfered the moment he heard of it, insisting that his honor and
+ that of the nation forbade that Lee should be disturbed in any way, and
+ his indignant protest straightway brought the authorities to their senses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meanwhile, innumerable propositions reached Lee, offering him great
+ monetary inducements to lend his name and fame to business enterprises of
+ various kinds, but although he had lost all his property and was
+ practically penniless, he would not consent to undertake work that he did
+ not feel competent to perform and would listen to no suggestion of
+ receiving compensation merely for the use of his name. His desire was to
+ identify himself with an institution of learning where he could be of some
+ public service, and at the same time gain the peaceful home life of which
+ he had dreamed for so many years. As soon as this was understood offers
+ came to him from the University of Virginia and the University of the
+ South at Suwannee, Tennessee, but he feared that his association with a
+ State institution like the University of Virginia might create a feeling
+ of hostility against it on the part of the Federal Government, and the
+ Vice-Chancellorship of the Tennessee university would have required him to
+ leave his native state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, the Trustees of Washington College offered him the Presidency of
+ that institution and the fact that it bore the name of the first President
+ and had been endowed by him straightway appealed to his imagination. At
+ one time the college had been in a flourishing condition but it had
+ suffered severely from the war, much of its property having been destroyed
+ and only a handful of students remained when he was invited to take charge
+ of its tottering fortunes. Indeed, the Trustees themselves were so
+ impoverished that none of them possessed even a decent suit of clothes in
+ which to appear before Lee and submit their proposition. Nevertheless, one
+ of them borrowed a respectable outfit for the occasion and presented the
+ offer with much dignity and effect and Lee, after modestly expressing some
+ doubts as to whether he could "discharge the duties to the satisfaction of
+ the Trustees or to the benefit of the country," accepted the office at a
+ merely nominal salary, closing his formal acceptance of Aug. 11, 1865,
+ with these words: "I think it the duty of every citizen in the present
+ condition of the country to do all in his power to aid in the restoration
+ of peace and harmony and in no way to oppose the policy of the state or
+ general Government directed to that object."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the key-note of his thought from this time forward. "Life is
+ indeed gliding away and I have nothing of good to show for mine that is
+ past," he wrote shortly after assuming his new duties. "I pray I may be
+ spared to accomplish something for the benefit of mankind and the honor of
+ God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was no easy task to reëstablish an institution practically destitute of
+ resources in a poverty-stricken community struggling for a bare
+ subsistence after the ravages of war. But Lee devoted himself body and
+ soul to the work, living in the simplest possible fashion. Indeed, he
+ refused to accept an increase in his meager salary, which would have
+ provided him with some of the ordinary comforts of life, on the ground
+ that the institution needed every penny of its funds for its development.
+ But though the work was hard he took keen pleasure in seeing it grow under
+ his hands, and, little by little, the college regained its prestige, while
+ with the help of his daughters he made his new home a place of beauty,
+ planting flowers about the little house and doing all in his power to make
+ it attractive for his invalid wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, for five years he lived far removed from the turmoil of public life,
+ performing a constant public service by exerting a direct personal
+ influence upon the students who came under his charge, and by doing
+ everything in his power to reunite the nation. Suggestions were constantly
+ made to him to enter politics and had he cared to do so, he could
+ undoubtedly have been elected to the Governorship of Virginia. But he
+ steadily declined to consider this, declaring that it might injure the
+ state to have a man so closely identified with the war at its head and
+ that he could best help in restoring harmony to the country in the
+ capacity of a private citizen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During all this time he took an active interest in his sons, encouraging
+ them in their efforts to establish themselves and earn their own living,
+ visiting their farms and advising them in the comradely spirit which had
+ always characterized his relations with them. Indeed, every moment he
+ could spare from his collegiate duties was devoted to his family, and his
+ letters to his children, always cheerful and affectionate and sometimes
+ even humorously gay, expressed contentment and unselfishness in every
+ line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At times it required great self-restraint to avoid bitterness toward the
+ Government, but even when Congress refused his wife's petition for the
+ restoration of the mementos of Washington, taken from her home in
+ Arlington during the war, he refrained from making any public protest and
+ his private comment showed how completely he subordinated his personal
+ wishes to the good of the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In reference to certain articles which were taken from Arlington..." he
+ wrote, "Mrs. Lee is indebted...for the order from the present
+ Administration for their restoration to her. Congress, however, passed a
+ resolution forbidding their return. They were valuable to her as having
+ belonged to her great grandmother (Mrs. General Washington) and having
+ been bequeathed to her by her father. But as the country desires them she
+ must give them up. I hope their presence at the capital will keep in the
+ remembrance of all Americans the principles and virtues of Washington."
+ [These articles were restored to Lee's family by the order of President
+ McKinley in 1903.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toward the individuals, however, who had looted his house and appropriated
+ its treasures to their own use, he felt rather differently. But his rebuke
+ to them was written rather more in sorrow than in anger and it likewise
+ reflects the regard for his country which was ever the uppermost thought
+ in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "...A great many things formerly belonging to General Washington,
+ bequeathed to Mrs. Lee by her father, in the shape of books, furniture,
+ camp equipage, etc., were carried away by individuals and are now
+ scattered over the land," he wrote. "I hope the possessors appreciate them
+ and may imitate the example of their original owners whose conduct must at
+ times be brought to their recollection by these silent monitors. In this
+ way they will accomplish good to the country...."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For his first four years at Washington College Lee accomplished his
+ arduous duties with scarcely a sign of fatigue, but from that time forward
+ his health began to fail and though he kept at his work, it told so
+ heavily upon him that his friends at last persuaded him to take a
+ vacation. He, accordingly, started south with his daughter in March, 1870.
+ Had he permitted it, his journey would have been one continual ovation,
+ for this was the first time he had traveled any considerable distance from
+ his home since the war and people flocked to greet him from all sides with
+ bands and speeches and cart-loads of flowers and fruits. Indeed, it was
+ extremely difficult to escape the public receptions, serenades and other
+ honors thrust upon him, and though he returned to his duties in somewhat
+ better condition, he was soon obliged to retire to Hot Springs, Virginia,
+ for another rest, from which he returned toward the end of the summer
+ vacation apparently restored to health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile he had undertaken various other duties in addition to his
+ collegiate work and some two weeks after the reopening of the college he
+ attended a vestry meeting of the Episcopal Church. At this meeting the
+ subject of rebuilding the church and increasing the rector's salary was
+ under discussion and the session lasted for three hours, at the close of
+ which he volunteered to subscribe from his own meager funds the sum needed
+ to complete the proposed increase of the clergyman's salary. By this time
+ it was seven in the evening and he at once returned to his own house, and
+ finding his family ready for tea, stood at the head of the table as he
+ usually did to say grace. But no words came from his lips, and with an
+ expression of resignation on his face he quietly slipped into his chair
+ and sat there upright as though he had heard an order to which he was
+ endeavoring to respond by remaining at "attention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Physicians were immediately called who diagnosed the trouble as hardening
+ of the arteries combined with rheumatism of the heart, and though their
+ patient never quite lost consciousness, he gradually fell asleep, and on
+ October 12, 1870, passed quietly away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three days later "Traveller," led by two old soldiers and followed by a
+ small but distinguished assemblage, accompanied his master to the grave
+ outside the little chapel which Lee had helped to build for the college
+ which soon thereafter changed its name to Washington and Lee University.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing could have been more grateful to Lee then to have his name thus
+ associated with that of the man whom he revered above all other men and
+ upon whom he had patterned his whole life, and in this graceful tribute he
+ had his heart's desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0033" id="link2HCH0033"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Chapter XXXII. &mdash; The Head of the Nation
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While Lee was passing the closing years of his life in tranquility, Grant
+ was entering upon a stormy career in politics. But before he had any
+ thought of the honors that lay before him he proved himself a good friend
+ to the South and a really great American. Toward his late adversaries he
+ maintained that the true policy was "to make friends of enemies," and by
+ word and deed he earnestly strove to accomplish that result, never losing
+ an opportunity to protect the people of the South from humiliation and
+ injustice. Indeed, if he and some of the other Union commanders had been
+ given complete authority directly after the war, the South would have been
+ spared much suffering and the nation would have escaped some of the evils
+ which inflict it to this day. But Grant's service to the country, as a
+ whole, was far greater than that which he undertook on behalf of any
+ particular section, for at a critical moment he held the destiny of the
+ nation in the hollow of his hand and a word from him would have subjected
+ the people to a military control from which they might never have
+ recovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the time of Lee's surrender the United States had probably the most
+ powerful and the most perfectly equipped army in the world. It was
+ absolutely at Grant's disposal and there were plenty of excuses for
+ employing it in the field, had he been ambitious for military glory. An
+ attack on the French in Mexico or the English in Canada would have been
+ regarded by many people as perfectly justified by their treatment of the
+ United States during the Civil War. But no idea of perpetuating his own
+ power or of making his country a military nation entered Grant's mind. On
+ the contrary, his first thought was to hasten by every possible means the
+ disbanding of the mighty army which hailed him as its chief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the close of the war that army numbered over a million men. Six months
+ later only 183,000 remained in the service, and in eight months more the
+ whole force of volunteers had disappeared. No other great commander in the
+ history of the world ever strove thus to deprive himself of power, or with
+ a gigantic instrument of war under his control thought only of peace.
+ Grant was not the greatest military genius of the ages, or even of his own
+ time, but when, with a million bayonets responsive to his nod, he uttered
+ the benediction, "Let us have peace," he took a place apart among those
+ Americans whose fame will never die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One great triumphant pageant marked the success of the Union cause when
+ the returning armies were reviewed by the President in Washington,
+ cavalry, infantry and artillery by the tens of thousands passing down
+ Pennsylvania Avenue for two whole days, presenting a magnificent spectacle
+ never surpassed in the military annals of any land. But the same spirit
+ which had actuated Grant in refusing to visit Richmond caused him to shun
+ any part of this historic parade, and those who expected to see him on a
+ prancing horse at the head of his veteran troops had little knowledge of
+ his character. He had never made an exhibition of himself at any time
+ during the war, and though he was present on this occasion, he kept in the
+ background and few people caught even a glimpse of him as the well-nigh
+ endless ranks of blue swept by in proud array.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time the work of disbanding the army obliged him to remain at
+ Washington, but at the first opportunity he started west to revisit
+ Galena, Georgetown and the scenes of his boyhood days. But, if he hoped to
+ renew his acquaintance with old friends without public recognition and
+ acclaim he was speedily disillusioned, for the whole countryside turned
+ out to welcome him with processions, banners and triumphal arches, hailing
+ as a hero the man who had lived among them almost unnoticed and somewhat
+ despised. Many people had already declared that he would be the next
+ President of the United States, but when some prophecy of this kind had
+ been repeated to him, he had laughingly replied that he did not want any
+ political office, though he would like to be Mayor of Galena long enough
+ to have a sidewalk laid near his home, and this rumor had reached the
+ town. The first sight that greeted his eyes, therefore, as he entered
+ Galena was an arch bearing the words "General, the sidewalk is laid!" and
+ his fellow townsmen straightway carried him off to inspect this
+ improvement, at the same time showing him a new house built and furnished
+ by his neighbors for his use and in which they begged that he would make
+ himself at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a proud moment for his father and mother when they saw the son who
+ had once disappointed them so deeply received with such marks of affection
+ and honored as the greatest man of his day, and their joy was the most
+ satisfying reward he was ever destined to obtain. But gratifying as all
+ these kindly attentions were the returning hero was somewhat relieved to
+ find that Georgetown, which had largely sympathized with the Confederacy,
+ offered him a less demonstrative welcome. Nevertheless, even there
+ curiosity and admiration combined to rob him of all privacy, and he at
+ last decided to avoid the public gaze by slipping away for one of those
+ long solitary drives which had been his delight in boyhood days. But the
+ residents of the village toward which he turned received word of his
+ coming and started a delegation out to meet him half way. After journeying
+ many miles, however, without seeing any signs of the cavalcade they were
+ expecting, the procession encountered a dusty traveler driving a team in a
+ light road wagon, and halting him asked if he had heard anything of
+ General Grant. "Yes," he reported, "he's on the way," and clicking to his
+ horses quickly disappeared from view. Then someone suggested that perhaps
+ the General might not be traveling on horseback surrounded by his staff
+ and that the dusty traveler who had reported Grant as on the way looked
+ somewhat like the man himself. But the solitary stranger "who looked like
+ Grant" was miles away before this was realized, and when the procession
+ started on his track he was safely out of reach. Doubtless, the sight of
+ this unpretentious man in citizen attire was disappointing to many who
+ expected to see a dashing hero in a gorgeous uniform, but his dislike of
+ all military parade soon came to be widely known. His hosts at one
+ village, however, were not well informed of this, for they urged him to
+ prolong his stay with them in order that he might see and review the local
+ troops which were to assemble in his honor, but he quickly begged to be
+ excused, remarking that he wished he might never see a uniform again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certainly there was nothing of the conquering hero or even of the soldier
+ about him when a little later in the course of his duty, he made a tour of
+ the South in order to report on its general condition, and in many places
+ he came and went entirely unnoticed. But though the mass of the people did
+ not know of his presence, he formed an unusually accurate estimate of
+ their views on public questions. "The citizens of the Southern States,..."
+ he reported, "are in earnest in wishing to do what is required by the
+ Government, not humiliating them as citizens, and if such a course was
+ pointed out they would pursue it in good faith." Happy would it have been
+ for the South and for the whole country if this advice had been followed,
+ but the President and Congress were soon engaged in a violent struggle
+ over the reconstruction of the seceded states, and anger, rather than
+ wisdom, ruled the day. In the course of this quarrel Stanton, the
+ Secretary of War, was removed and Grant, temporarily appointed in his
+ place (Aug. 12, 1867), held the office for about five months, thus taking
+ the first step in the long political career which lay before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ten months later he was elected President of the United States and at the
+ end of his term (1872) he was reëlected by an overwhelming vote. Those
+ eight years were years of stress and strain, and his judgment in
+ surrounding himself with men unworthy of his confidence made bitter
+ enemies of many of those who had once supported him. He was, however,
+ intensely loyal by nature and having once made a friend he stuck to him
+ through thick and thin, making his cause his own and defending him, even
+ in the face of the facts, against any and all attack. He, accordingly,
+ assumed a heavy burden of blame that did not rightly rest upon his
+ shoulders, but in spite of this many people desired to see him again
+ elected to the presidency and they were sorely disappointed when he
+ refused to become a candidate. On the whole, he had deserved well of the
+ country and the people recognized that he had done much to uphold their
+ honor and dignity, even though he had been too often imposed upon by
+ unreliable and even dangerous friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A long tour around the world followed his retirement from the Presidency
+ and his reception in the various countries was a magnificent tribute to
+ his record as a general and a ruler. Meanwhile, an effort was being made
+ by his friends to secure his nomination for a third Presidential term, and
+ shortly after he returned home (1880) he was persuaded to enter the field
+ again. At first he regarded the result with indifference, but as time wore
+ on he warmed with the enthusiasm of his friends and keenly desired to
+ secure the honor. But no man had ever been elected three times to the
+ Presidency and there was a deep-centered prejudice against breaking this
+ tradition. Grant's candidacy therefore encountered bitter opposition, and
+ though a large number of his friends held out for him to the last and
+ almost forced his nomination, General Garfield was finally selected in his
+ place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This virtually retired him from politics, and to occupy himself and make a
+ living he went into business with one of his sons who had associated
+ himself with certain bankers in Wall Street. Here, however, his
+ notoriously bad judgment of men and his utter ignorance of the business
+ world soon brought him to grief, for he and his son left the management of
+ their firm to the other partners who outrageously imposed upon them for a
+ time and then left them face to face with ruin and disgrace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shock of this disaster fairly staggered Grant, but he bravely met the
+ situation and stripping himself of every vestige of his property,
+ including the swords that had been presented him and the gifts bestowed by
+ foreign nations, strove to pay his debts. But, though reduced to penury,
+ he was able to prove his entire innocence of the rascality of his partners
+ and the general verdict of the country acquitted him of any dishonorable
+ act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To earn sufficient money for his family in their dire necessity he then
+ began to write the story of his military life and campaigns, but in the
+ midst of this employment he was stricken with a most painful disease which
+ incapacitated him for work and left him well-nigh helpless. At this crisis
+ Congress came to his rescue by restoring him to his former rank in the
+ army, with sufficient pay to meet his immediate needs. Then, to the
+ amazement of his physicians, he rallied, and, though still suffering
+ intensely and greatly enfeebled, he at once recommenced work upon his
+ book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that time forward his one thought was to live long enough to complete
+ this task, and to it he devoted himself with almost superhuman courage and
+ persistence, in the hope of being able to provide for his wife and family
+ after he had gone. Indeed, in this daily struggle against disease and
+ death he showed, not only all the qualities that had made him invincible
+ in the field, but also the higher qualities of patience and unselfishness
+ with which he had not been fully credited. Uncomplaining and considerate
+ of everyone but himself, he looked death steadily in the face and wrote on
+ day after day while the whole nation, lost in admiration of his dauntless
+ courage, watched at his bedside with tender solicitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, on July 23, 1885, the pencil slipped from his fingers. But his
+ heroic task was done and no monument which has been or ever will be
+ erected to his memory will serve as will those pages to insure him
+ immortality, for "Grant's Memoirs," modest as the man himself, have become
+ a part of the literature of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Authorities
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The following is a partial list of the authorities relied upon in the
+ text:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Grant's Personal Memoirs; Recollections and Letters of General Robert E.
+ Lee (Captain R. E. Lee); Life of Robert E. Lee (Fitzhugh Lee); Robert E.
+ Lee&mdash;Memoirs of His Military and Personal History (Long); Military
+ History of U. S. Grant (Badeau); Grant in Peace (Badeau); R. E. Lee&mdash;The
+ Southerner (Page); Robert E. Lee (Trent); Robert E. Lee and the Southern
+ Confederacy (White); McClelland's Own Story; Stonewall Jackson and the
+ American Civil War (Henderson); The Story of the Civil War (Ropes); The
+ Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government (Davis); History of the United
+ States (1850-1877 Rhodes); The Campaign of Chancellorsville (Bigelow);
+ Personal Memoirs (Sheridan); Memoirs of General Sherman; Reminiscences of
+ Carl Shurz; From Manassas to Appomattox (Longstreet); Abraham Lincoln&mdash;A
+ History (Nicolay and Hay); The Army Under Pope (Ropes); The Antietam and
+ Fredericksburg (Palfrey); The Virginia Campaign of 1864 and 1865
+ (Humphreys); Chncellorsville (Doubleday); Life and Letters of Robert E.
+ Lee (Jones); Ulysses S. Grant (Wister); Ulysses S. Grant (Garland);
+ Campaigning with Grant (Porter); Autobiography of O. O. Howard.
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of On the Trail of Grant and Lee, by
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