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Authors: Bruce Catton

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Sherman did notify headquarters that there was plenty of contact with Rebels on his front, and on the afternoon of April 5 Grant went to the front to see for himself. Everything seemed to be fairly quiet—undeniably there was a good deal of Confederate activity not far off, but it seemed to be mostly reconnaissance parties—and Grant accepted Sherman's appraisal. When he returned to Savannah, Grant wired to Halleck: “I have scarcely the faintest idea of an attack (general one) being made upon us, but will be prepared should such a thing take place.” After the battle had taken place, Grant admitted that his outposts had been skirmishing freely with Confederate patrols for two days: “I did not believe, however, that they intended to make a determined attack but were simply making reconnaissances in force.”
29

The head of Buell's column reached Savannah around noon on April 5. Colonel Jacob Ammen, an old acquaintance of Grant, commanded a brigade in the leading division, which was under the same General Nelson whom Grant had sent off to Nashville more than a month earlier; and at some time during the afternoon Grant and Nelson stopped at Ammen's tent to discuss plans. Ammen said his men were not tired and could easily march down to Pittsburg Landing that afternoon, if need be. Grant told him to take it easy, and in his diary Ammen recorded Grant's words this way: “You cannot march through the swamps; make the troops comfortable; I will send boats for you Monday or Tuesday, or some time early in the week. There will be no fight at Pittsburg Landing; we will have to go to Corinth, where the Rebels are fortified. If they come to attack us we can whip them, as I have more than twice as many troops as I had at Fort Donelson.” Then Grant rode off, saying he had an engagement that evening.
30

The Union Army's position at Pittsburg seemed strong, even though the five divisions were arrayed rather loosely. The ground was high, the deep creeks protected both flanks, and if the Confederates did attack they would have to come in head-on in a straight frontal assault. Proper field entrenchments would have made the position invulnerable, but no trenches had been dug—partly because everybody was thinking about offense rather than defense, and partly because professional soldiers just then believed that an army which dug itself in would lose its aggressive touch. Buell and the head of his column were supposed to reach Savannah on Sunday, April 6. Once they arrived things could begin to happen.

The soldiers waited in the Tennessee springtime and admired the budding leaves and the peach-tree blossoms, and bathed in the little streams that ran down to the Tennessee. An Iowa soldier, looking at the innumerable tents scattered through “the delightful Tennessee forest,” felt that this vast camp had the appearance of “a gigantic picnic.” There was a noisy, holiday air over the place. Untrained soldiers kept discharging their muskets in the woods, moved by nothing more than a simple desire to see if the things would go
off after a rain, and regimental bands were playing; on the river, a steam calliope on one of the transports brayed out patriotic tunes. That evening, quite unnoticed, Johnston arrayed his men in order of battle, remarking grimly: “I intend to hammer 'em. I think we will hammer them beyond doubt.” His army was so near that his pickets stood at ease in the dark and enjoyed the music of the Union bands.
31

CHAPTER ELEVEN

The Guns on the Bluff

John Rawlins was awakened early on the morning of Sunday, April 6. The mail steamer from Cairo reached Savannah at 3 o'clock, disembarking a passenger who came up the hill from the landing to headquarters—Captain W. S. Hillyer, the onetime St. Louis real estate agent who was now a member of Grant's staff and who had just returned from a trip down-river. Hillyer's arrival aroused Rawlins, who found himself unable thereafter to go back to sleep, and—since a good deal of activity was scheduled for this day—Rawlins got up and dressed with the first light of dawn and went down to Grant's office to look at the mail.

Army headquarters was in a fine mansion overlooking the Tennessee, the home of William Harrell Cherry. Cherry was a man of substance, owner of a store and a ferryboat, several thousand acres of farmland, and a good-sized collection of slaves. He was stoutly Unionist in his sympathies (although Mrs. Cherry was inclined to be on the side of the Confederacy), and he was known as a Unionist to President Lincoln himself; Grant, it was said, had made his headquarters in the Cherry mansion because Washington had told him the owner was a loyalist. The fact that the house was roomy enough to accommodate the General and his staff was doubtless a factor, as well; Grant slept here, and his aides; and in an upstairs bedroom was General C. F. Smith, bedridden now with the infected leg that stubbornly refused to heal.

While Rawlins sorted the mail, Grant himself came into the headquarters office on the first floor. Headquarters today was to be moved from Savannah to Pittsburg Landing, and orders had been issued the evening before to prepare an early breakfast and to have the horses saddled and ready to be put aboard Grant's steamer,
Tigress
, which lay at the landing with steam up. Ordinarily, Grant
would probably have stayed on at Savannah a few days longer; it was the point of contact for Buell's divisions and for reinforcements coming up the Tennessee from Cairo, and Grant hoped to confer with Buell before going on to Pittsburg Landing. (Actually Buell had arrived the night before, but through some lapse in staff work Grant did not yet know about it.) The afternoon before, Grant had received disturbing news. Major generals' commissions, Halleck notified him, had been issued to two of Grant's division commanders, John A. McClernand and Lew Wallace—neither man a professional soldier, each a man with excellent political connections. As a result, these two officers now outranked everybody in Grant's army except Grant himself (and, of course, Smith, who was on the sicklist), and as long as Grant stayed in Savannah one or the other of them would be in effective command around Shiloh. Grant felt that Wallace was too inexperienced and McClernand too erratic to be entrusted with such authority; consequently, he himself must move on upstream, and today was the day for it.

Grant went through his mail in the office and chatted casually with an Illinois officer who had just returned from leave, and at six o'clock, or a little later, breakfast was announced. Grant and his officers had just begun the meal when the quiet of the spring morning was unexpectedly broken by the sound of dull concussions from far upstream—cannon firing, somewhere in the vicinity of Pittsburg Landing.

Grant sat motionless for a moment, an untasted cup of coffee in his hand. A private soldier detailed for headquarters duty came in from outside to confirm what everyone had sensed: judging by the sound, this was a real fight and not just a skirmish. Grant set his cup down, stood up, and said: “Gentlemen, the ball is in motion. Let's be off.” Within fifteen minutes General, staff, clerks, orderlies and horses were aboard the
Tigress
, and the steamer was moving upstream.
1
Before the boat left, Grant wrote two hasty notes. One, to General Nelson, said simply: “An attack having been made on our forces, you will move your entire command to the river opposite Pittsburg. You can obtain a guide easily in the village.” The other, addressed to Buell—who, as Grant supposed, would be reaching Savannah a little later—was slightly more detailed. It read:

Heavy firing is heard up the river, indicating plainly that an attack has been made upon our most advanced positions. I have been looking for this, but did not believe the attack could be made before Monday or Tuesday. This necessitates my joining the forces up the river instead of meeting you today, as I had contemplated. I have directed General Nelson to move up the river with his division. He can march to opposite Pittsburg.
2

The note is interesting for its bearing on the puzzling question: Precisely what had Grant been expecting in the way of enemy action? This morning he was writing, “I have been looking for this”; the afternoon before he had assured Halleck that he anticipated nothing like a general attack on his position. Apparently he did feel that Lew Wallace's force might be attacked, and he may have taken this morning's gunfire for confirmation of that suspicion. He had warned both Sherman and W. H. L. Wallace that an attack at Crump's Landing seemed quite likely and that both men should be prepared to reinforce that spot at a moment's notice. Saturday night he had had Colonel McPherson—who had become one of his most trusted staff members—stay with W. H. L. Wallace at Pittsburg Landing, the significance of this being that this division was the reserve, held ready to reinforce any trouble-spot in case of need. Both Sherman and Prentiss, who had the forward line, sent out patrols very early Sunday morning, to see what might lie in front of them. McPherson wrote that “it was well known that the enemy was approaching our lines,” and on Saturday Grant had notified Halleck that the Confederates in and around Corinth were present in great strength. He believed that Johnston had eighty thousand men with him, and he suspected that some of these were arrayed along the line of the Mobile and Ohio Railroad, which ran from Corinth up to the recently-evacuated Confederate stronghold at Columbus—ideally situated, if his suspicion were correct, to strike the Union flank at Crump's Landing.
3
Clearly enough, Grant had believed that some sort of fight might soon be thrust upon him; the one thing he had not anticipated was what was actually happening this morning—a massive drive on the front of his position by the entire Confederate Army.

The
Tigress
went on up the river, the sound of cannon and musket fire coming in more and more clearly, and somewhere between
seven and 7:30 the steamer closed in by the bank at Crump's Landing, next to Lew Wallace's headquarters boat. Wallace was on deck, waiting, and Grant leaned over the railing of his own boat and called out his orders: Wallace was to hold his division ready to march on receipt of orders, and he was also to send patrols out to the west to see whether the Confederates were moving toward him as well as toward the troops around Shiloh church. Wallace agreed. He was an ambitious man, deeply wanting to win fame as a soldier. What would happen in the next twenty-four hours would put military fame out of his reach, although fame at last would be his:
Ben Hur
would come out of the brain that could not quite create victory in battle. To the end of his days he would try to explain the baffling things that went wrong on this sixth of April. So far, none of them had gone wrong, and Wallace faced the day with confidence.
Tigress
swung away from the bank and went on upstream, and at eight o'clock or a little later nosed into the bank at Pittsburg Landing.
4
Grant got on his horse and went ashore, to ride straight into the middle of the great Battle of Shiloh.

At the moment of going ashore, it was evident that an enormous fight was going on and that it was not going well for the Union Army.

Off to the southwest—not two miles away, and obviously drawing closer—there was a tremendous noise of battle, continuous racket of rifle fire, heavy thud of artillery, the sound of thousands of men shouting. Smoke was drifting up from the woods, and a dismaying crowd of stragglers, weaponless and winded, was knotting up on the hillside that went from the river to the high ground; panicky men, disorganized and unmanned, who had been shoved unready into their first battle and who had gone for the rear in wild desperation, officers of rank among them. There were hordes of stragglers in the rear of every army in every battle in the Civil War, but Shiloh was the one battle that put them on display: a man running from the battle area here was in effect a man running down a funnel, for even the dullest fugitive could see that the only road to safety was the road to the steamboat landing, and men who in any other fight would be drifting across square miles of open country were packed in a solid mass, cowering under the lee of the bluff
above the river. They were beginning to assemble, now, with the day hardly more than begun, and they would continue to assemble all day long, pathetic evidence that troops with inadequate training and no battle experience whatever had been called on to stand up to one of the worst combats of the entire war.

There was a great deal for the Commanding General to do, and Grant promptly set about it. The volume of firing warned that the men up front would need ammunition, and Grant put his staff to work to organize an ammunition train so that there might be a steady supply of cartridges. The job was intricate: the Union Army's weapons had not yet been standardized, and in Sherman's division alone cartridges of six different calibers must be supplied. Another staff officer was sent downstream on the
Tigress
, with orders for Lew Wallace to bring up his division as fast as possible.
5
Something had to be done about the stragglers, and Grant seized two Iowa regiments which, having disembarked a few minutes earlier, were lined up on the bluff awaiting orders; as soon as they had been given ammunition they were to form across the roads a little way from the landing and halt all fugitives, holding themselves ready at the same time to obey further orders. The Colonel of one of these regiments, James T. Reid of the 15th Iowa, looked blank when Grant gave him these instructions, and Grant had to identify himself with the remark: “I am General Grant.” Then, having sent most of his staff off on various tasks, Grant set out for the front to see for himself what was happening.
6

What was happening was both simple and complex, confusing in its innumerable details but appallingly clear in its general drift. This was not one battle but a vast number of intense and bewildering small battles, each one overlapping with its neighbors and yet strangely isolated, the only true pattern coming from the inexorable application of overwhelming force on a loose battle line which had come into being without any central direction but solely in response to immense pressure. Of the five Federal divisional commanders involved, only one had been a professional soldier. The two divisions which had been hit first and hardest and which, on Grant's arrival, had been fighting the longest, contained few regiments that had ever fought before. Reinforcements had gone forward, not in response to any general plan, but simply because officers at the
front were Calling desperately for help. Fugitives from the combat area were coming to the rear almost as fast as the new troops were going forward; as the two tides flowed past and through each other, Grant lost forever the belief that he had held thus far—that the ordinary soldiers of the Confederacy were halfheartedly serving a cause that never fired their inmost loyalties. The one unmistakable fact, now, was that these ordinary soldiers of the Confederacy—no better trained and no more experienced than Grant's own men—were fighting with a sustained fury and were giving his army the worst of it. His immediate and most pressing task was to stave off unredeemed disaster.

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