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VICKSBURG , a city and the county-seat ofSee also: Warren county, See also: Mississippi, U.S.A., on the Mississippi and Yazoo See also: rivers,' 44 M. by See also: rail W. of See also: Jackson, and 236 M
.
N. by W. of New See also: Orleans
.
Pop
.
(1890) 13.373; (1900) 14,834, of whom 8147 were negroes; (1910 census) 20,814, being the second largest city in Mississippi
.
It is served by the
See also: Alabama & Vicksburg, the Vicksburg, See also: Shreveport & Pacific, and the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley See also: railways, and by steamboat lines
.
It is built among the See also: Walnut Hills, which rise about 26o ft. above the See also: river
.
Among the See also: principal buildings and institutions are the See also: court-See also: house, See also: standing on one of the highest hills, a See also: fine Federal See also: building, the city See also: hall, a
See also: state charity hospital, an
' The channel of the Mississippi has changed greatly: until 1876 the entire city was on the Mississippi, which made a See also: bend forming a See also: tongue of See also: land opposite the city; in 1876 the river cut across this tongue and formed an See also: island, making the See also: northern See also: part of the city front on the shallow " Lake Centennial." The Federal See also: government, by turning the Yazoo through a canal across the upper end of the old channel, gave the city a river front once more.infirmary, a sanatorium, a public library, the medical See also: college of the university of Mississippi, All See also: Saints' Episcopal College (See also: Protestant Episcopal, 1909) for girls, See also: Saint See also: Francis See also: Xavier's See also: Academy, and Saint Aloysius College (See also: Roman Catholic)
.
The See also: Civil War See also: battle-ground has been converted into a beautiful See also: National Military See also: Park, embracing 1283 acres and containing numerous markers, memorials and monuments, including one (1910) to Lieut.-General See also: Stephen Dill See also: Lee, who was
See also: superintendent of the Military Park from 1899 until his See also: death in 1908
.
On the bluffs just beyond the northern limits of the city and ad-joining the Military Park is the Vicksburg National Cemetery, in which are the See also: graves of 16,892 Federal soldiers (12,769 unknown)
.
The principal industry of Vicksburg is the construction and repair of See also: rolling stock for steam railways
.
It has also a dry See also: dock and See also: cotton compresses; and among its manufactures are cottonseed oil and cake, hardwood See also: lumber, furniture, boxes and baskets
.
In 1905 the factory products were valued at $1,887,924
.
The city has a large See also: trade in long-See also: staple cotton grown in the surrounding country
.
It is a See also: port of entry but has practically no See also: foreign trade
.
The French built Fort St See also: Peter near the site of Vicksburg early in the 18th century, and on the 2nd of See also: January 1730 its garrison was murdered by the Yazoo See also: Indians
.
As early as 1783 the See also: Spanish erected Fort Nogales, and in 1798 this was taken by some See also: United States troops and renamed Fort McHenry
.
The first permanent See also: settlement in the vicinity was made about 1811 by Rev
.
Newell (or Newit) Vick (d
.
1819), a Methodist preacher
.
In accordance with his will a See also: town was laid out in 1824; and Vicksburg was incorporated as a town in 1825, and was chartered as a city in 1836
.
The See also: campaigns of which it was the centre in 1862 and 1863 are described below
.
Vicksburg was the home of Seargent See also: Smith Prentiss from 1832 to 1845
.
See H
.
F
.
Simrall, " Vicksburg: the City on the Walnut Hills," in L . P . See also: Powell's Historic Towns of the See also: Southern States (New See also: York, 1900)
.
See also: Campaign of 1862-63.-Vicksburg is historically famous as being the centre of See also: interest of one of the most important campaigns of the Civil War
.
The command of the Mississippi, which would imply the severance of the Confederacy into two halves, and also the reopening of See also: free commercial navigation from St See also: Louis to the
See also: sea, was one of the principal See also: objects of the Western Union armies from the See also: time that they began their southward advance from See also: Illinois, See also: Missouri and See also: Kentucky in See also: February 1862
.
A series of victories in the spring and summer carried them as far as the See also: line See also: Memphis-See also: Corinth, but in the autumn they came to a standstill and were called upon to repulse the See also: counter-advance of the Southern armies
.
These armies were accompanied by a flotilla of thinly armoured but powerful gunboats which had been built on the upper Mississippi in the autumn of 1861, and had co-operated with the army at Fort See also: Donelson, See also: Shiloh and Island No
.
10, besides winning a victory on the See also: water at Memphis
.
At the same time a See also: squadron of sea-going vessels under See also: Flag-officer See also: Farragut had forced the defences of New Orleans (q.v.) and, accompanied by a very small military force, had steamed up the See also: great river
.
On reaching Vicksburg the heavy vessels again forced their way past the batteries, but both at Vicksburg and at Port Hudson they had to See also: deal, no longer with low-sited fortifications, but with inconspicuous See also: earth-See also: works on bluffs far above the river-level, and they failed to make any impression
.
Farragut then returned to New Orleans
.
From See also: Helena to Port Hudson the Confederates maintained See also: complete control of the Mississippi, the improvised fortresses of Vicksburg, Port Hudson and See also: Arkansas See also: Post (near the mouth of Arkansas river) being the framework of the defence
.
It was to be the task of See also: Grant's army around Corinth and the flotilla at Memphis to break up this
See also: system of defences, and, by joining hands with Farragut and clearing the whole course of the Mississippi, to cut the Confederacy in See also: half
.
The long and painful operations by which this was achieved See also: group themselves into four episodes: (a) the See also: Grenada expedition
of Grant's force, (b) the river See also: column under McClemand and Sherman, (c) the operations in the bayoux, and (d) the final " overland " campaign from See also: Grand Gulf
.
The country in which these operations took place divides itself sharply into two zones, the upland See also: east of the river, upon which it looks down from high bluffs, and the levels west of it, which are a See also: maze of bayoux, backwaters and See also: side channels, the intervening land being kept dry near the river itself by artificial See also: banks (levees) but elsewhere swampy
.
At Vicksburg, it is important to observe, the bluffs trend away from the Mississippi to follow the course of the Yazoo, rejoining the great river at Memphis
.
Thus there are two obvious lines of advance for the Northern army, on the upland (Memphis and Grand Junction on Grenada-Jackson), and downstream through the bayou country (Memphis-Helena-Vicksburg)
.
The See also: main army of the defenders, who were commanded by Lieut.-General J
.
C
.
Pemberton, between Vicksburg and Jackson and Grenada, could front either See also: north against an advance by Grenada or west along the bluffs above and below Vicksburg
.
The first advance was made at the end of See also: November 1862 by two columns from Grand Junction and Memphis on Grenada
.
The Confederates in the See also: field, greatly outnumbered,
See also: fell back without fighting
.
But Grant's line of supply was one long single-line, See also: ill-equipped railway through Grand Junction to See also: Columbus, and the opposing cavalry under See also: Van Dorn swept round his flank and, by destroying one of his principal magazines (at See also: Holly Springs), without further effort compelled the abandonment of the advance
.
Meantime one of Grant's subordinates, McClernand, was intriguing to be appointed to command an expedition by the river-line, and Grant meeting half-way an evil which he felt himself unable to prevent, had sent Sherman with the flotilla and some 30,000 men to attack Vicksburg from the water-side, while he himself should deal with the Confederate field army on the high ground
.
But the scheme broke down completely when Van Dorn cut Grant's line of supply, and the Confederate army was free to turn on Sherman . The latter, ignorant of Grant's retreat, attacked the Yazoo bluffs above Vicksburg (battle ofSee also: Chickasaw Bayou) on See also: December 29th; but a large portion of Pemberton's field army had arrived to help the Vicksburg garrison, and the Federals wereeasily repulsed with a loss of 2000 men
.
McClernand now appeared and took the command out of Sherman's hands, informing him at the same time of Grant's retreat
.
Sherman thereupon proposed, before attempting fresh operations against Vicksburg, to clear the country behind them by destroying the Confederate garrison at Arkansas Post
.
This expedition was completely successful: at a cost of about r.000 men the fort and its 5000 defenders were captured on the rithof January 1863
.
McClernand, elated at his victory, would have continued to ascend the Arkansas, but such an eccentric operation would have been profitless if not dangerous, and Grant, authorized by the general-in-chief, Halleck, peremptorily ordered McClernand back to the Mississippi
.
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.
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.
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Retreating from the upland, Grant sailed down the river and joined McClernand and Sherman at Milliken's Bend at the beginning of February, and, superseding the resentful McClernand, assumed command of the three corps (XIII., McClernand; XV., Sherman; XVII., McPherson) available
.
He had already imagined the daring solution of his most difficult problem which he afterwards put into. execution, but for the See also: present he tried a series of less risky expedients to reach the high ground beyond Pemberton's flanks, without indeed much confidence in their success, yet desirous in these unhealthy flats of keeping up the See also: spirits of his army by active See also: work, and of avoiding, at a crisis in the fortunes of the war, any appearance. of discouragement
.
Three such attempts were made in all, with the co-operation of the flotilla under Captain See also: David D
.
See also: Porter
.
First, Grant endeavoured to cut a canal across the bend of the Mississippi at Vicksburg, hoping thus to isolate the fortress, to gain a water connection with the See also: lower river, and to land an army on the bluffs beyond Pemberton's See also: left flank
.
This was unsuccessful
.
Next he tried to make a practicable channel from the Mississippi to the upper Yazoo, and so to turn Pemberton's right, but the Confederates, warned in time, constructed a fort at the point where Grant's advance emerged from the bayoux
.
Lastly, an advance through a maze of creeks (See also: Steele's Bayou expedition), towards the See also: middle Yazoo and Haines's See also: Bluff, encountered the enemy, not on the bluffs, but in the low-lying woods and islands, and these so harassed and delayed the progress of the expedition that, Grant recalled it
.
Shortly afterwards Grant determined on the manoeuvre in See also: rear of Vicksburg which established his reputation
.
The troops marched overland from Milliken's Bend to New See also: Carthage, and on the 16th of See also: April Porter's gunboat flotilla and the transports ran past the Vicksburg batteries
.
All this, which involved careful arrangement and hard 'work, was done by the 24th of April
.
General Banks, with a Union army from New Orleans, was now advancing up the river to invest Port Hudson, and by way of diverting See also: attention from the Mississippi, a cavalry brigade under Benjamin Grierson rode from La See also: Grange to Baton See also: Rouge (boo m. in 16 days), destroying railways and magazines; and cutting the telegraph
wires en route
.
Sherman's XV. corps, too, made vigorous demonstrations at Haines's Bluff, and in the confusion and uncertainty Pemberton was at a loss
.
On the 3oth of April McClernand and the XIII. corps crossed the
.
Mississippi 6 m. below Grand Gulf, followed by McPherson
.
The nearest Confederate brigades, attempting to oppose the advance at Port See also: Gibson, were driven back
.
Grant had now deliberately placed himself in the middle of the enemy, and although his See also: engineers had opened up a water-line for the See also: barges carrying his supplies from Milliken's Bend to New Carthage, his long line of supply curving round the enemy's flank was very exposed
.
But his resolute purpose outweighed all text-See also: book See also: strategy
.
Having crossed the Mississippi, he collected wheeled transport for five days' rations, and on Sherman's arrival cut loose from his See also: base altogether (May 7th)
.
Free to move, he aimed north from the Big Black river, so as to interpose between the Confederate forces at Vicksburg and those at Jackson
.
A fight took place at See also: Raymond on the 12th of May, and Jackson was captured just in time to forestall the arrival of reinforcements for Pemberton under General See also: Joseph E See also: Johnston
.
The latter, being in supreme command of the Confederates, ordered Pemberton to come out of Vicksburg and attack Grant
.
But Pemberton did not do so until it was too See also: late
.
On May 16th Grant, with all his forces well in See also: hand, defeated him in the battle of Champion See also: Hill with a loss of nearly 4000 men, and sharply pursuing him drove him into Vicksburg
.
By the 19th of May Vicksburg and Pemberton's army in it was invested by land and water
.
Grant promptly assaulted his works, but was repulsed with loss (May 19th); the assault was repeated on the 22nd of May with the same result, and Grant found himself compelled to resort to a blockade
.
Reinforcements were hurried up from all quarters, Johnston's force (east of Jackson), was held off by a covering corps under
See also: Blair (afterwards under Sherman), and though another unsuccessful assault was made. on the 25th of See also: June, resistance was almost at an end, On the 4th of See also: July, the See also: day after, far away in Pennsylvania, the great battle of See also: Gettysburg had closed with Lee's defeat, the garrison of Vicksburg, 37,000 strong, surrendered
.
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