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First Battle of Memphis

First Battle of Memphis
Part of American Civil War

Battle of the rams.
Ward, A. R., artist
DateJune 6, 1862 (1862-06-06)
Location
Result Union victory
Belligerents
 United States  Confederate States
Commanders and leaders
Charles Henry Davis
Charles Ellet Jr. 
James E. Montgomery
M. Jeff Thompson
Units involved
Benton
Louisville
Carondelet
Cairo
St. Louis
Ram Queen of the West
Ram Monarch
Ram Lancaster
Ram Switzerland
CSS General Beauregard
CSS General Bragg
CSS General Sterling Price
CSS General Earl Van Dorn
CSS General M. Jeff Thompson
CSS Colonel Lovell
CSS General Sumter
CSS Little Rebel
Strength
5 ironclads
4 rams
8 rams
Casualties and losses
1 ram disabled
1 wounded
7 rams destroyed or captured
approx. 100 killed or wounded
approx. 150 captured
Map of Memphis I Battlefield core and study areas by the American Battlefield Protection Program

The First Battle of Memphis was a naval battle fought on the Mississippi River immediately north of the city of Memphis, Tennessee on June 6, 1862, during the American Civil War. The engagement was witnessed by many of the citizens of Memphis. It resulted in a crushing defeat for the Confederate forces, and marked the virtual eradication of a Confederate naval presence on the river. Despite the lopsided outcome, the Union Army failed to grasp its strategic significance. Its primary historical importance is that it was the last time civilians with no prior military experience were permitted to command ships in combat. As such, it is a milestone in the development of professionalism in the United States Navy.[1]

Background edit

The defending Confederates closely matched the advancing federal force in raw numbers, with eight rebel vessels opposing nine Union gunboats and rams, but the fighting qualities of the former were far inferior. Each was armed with only one or two guns, of a light caliber that would be ineffective against the armor of the gunboats. The primary weapon of each was its reinforced prow, which was intended to be used in ramming opponents.[2]

The Confederate rams were distinguished by a unique feature of their defense against enemy shot. Their engines and other interior spaces were protected by a double bulkhead of heavy timbers, covered on the outer surface by a layer of railroad iron. The gap between the bulkheads, a space of 22 in (56 cm), was packed with cotton.[3] Although the cotton was the least important part of the armor, it caught the public's attention, and the boats came to be called "cottonclads". Later in the war, ships' crews were often protected from small-arms fire by bales of cotton placed in exposed positions, and these vessels were also referred to as "cottonclads". They differed, however, from the originals of the category.[2]

The federal force consisted of five gunboats, four of which were known semi-officially as "Eads gunboats", after their builder, James Buchanan Eads, but more commonly as "Pook turtles", after their designer, Samuel M. Pook, and their strange appearance.[4] The fifth gunboat, flagship Benton, was also a product of the Eads shipyards, but was converted from a civilian craft. Each of these vessels carried from 13–16 guns. The other four vessels were naval rams from the United States Ram Fleet. They had no armament whatever, aside from the small arms carried by the officers. All of the rams had been converted from civilian riverboats and had no common design.[2][5]

Organization edit

Both sides entered the battle with faulty command structures. The federal gunboats were members of the Mississippi River Squadron, commanded directly by Flag Officer Charles H. Davis, who reported to Major General Henry W. Halleck. The gunboats were thus a part of the United States Army, although their officers were supplied by the navy.[6] The rams were led by Colonel Charles Ellet, Jr., who reported directly to Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton.[7] Thus the federal "fleet" consisted of two independent organizations, with no common command outside of Washington.

The Confederate arrangement was even worse. The cottonclads were about half of a group of fourteen river steamers that had been seized at New Orleans and converted into rams to defend that city. Known as the "River Defense Fleet", it was split in two when the Confederate holdings on the river became threatened from both the north and the Gulf of Mexico. Six were retained below New Orleans to face the fleet of David G. Farragut, while eight were sent up to Memphis to block the Union descent down the river. Sending them this far north did not violate their original purpose, as Memphis was regarded as a shield for New Orleans. The northern (Memphis) section was commanded overall by James E. Montgomery, a riverboat captain in civilian life. The other boats were also commanded by former civilian riverboat captains, selected by Montgomery, and with no military training. Once under way, Montgomery's command ceased, and the rams operated independently. The futility of this arrangement was recognized immediately by military men, but their protests were disregarded.[8] Furthermore, the captains would neither learn how to handle the guns themselves, nor assign crew members to the task, so gun crews had to be drawn from the Confederate Army. The gunners were not integrated into the crews, but remained subject to the orders of their army officers.[9]

Cottonclad River Defense Fleet edit

Battle edit

 
The Total Annihilation of the Rebel Fleet by the Federal Fleet under Commodore Davis. On the Morning of June 6, 1862, off Memphis, Tenn. CSS General Beauregard (center foreground) is being rammed by the federal ram Monarch. At left are the disabled federal ram Queen of the West and the Confederate ships General Sterling Price and Little Rebel.

As a result of the federal victory at Corinth, the railroads that linked Memphis with the eastern part of the Confederacy had been cut, severely reducing the strategic importance of the city. Therefore, in early June 1862, Memphis and its nearby forts were abandoned by the rebel army. Most of the garrison were sent to join units elsewhere, including Vicksburg and only a small rear guard was left to make a token resistance. The River Defense Fleet was also to have retreated to Vicksburg, but it could not get enough coal in Memphis. Unable to flee when the federal fleet appeared on June 6, Montgomery and his captains had to decide whether to fight, or scuttle their boats. They chose to fight, steaming out in the early morning to meet the advancing flotilla and the rams trailing behind it, with Memphis citizens cheering them on.[10]

The battle started with an exchange of gunfire at long range, the federal gunboats setting up a line of battle across the river and firing their rear guns at the cottonclads coming up to meet them as they entered the battle stern first. Two of the four rams advanced beyond the line of the gunboats and rammed or otherwise disrupted the movements of their opponents; the other rams misinterpreted their orders and did not enter the battle at all. With the federal rams and gunboats not coordinating their movements and the Confederate vessels operating independently, the battle soon was reduced to a melee. It is agreed by all that the ram flagship, Queen of the West, initiated hostilities by slamming into CSS Colonel Lovell. She was then rammed in turn by one or more of the remaining cottonclads. Ellet was at this time wounded by a pistol shot in his knee, thereby becoming the only casualty on the Union side. (In the hospital, he contracted measles, the childhood disease that killed some 5,000 soldiers during the war. The combination of the disease and the debilitation caused by his wound was too great, and he died on June 21.[11]) The remainder of the battle is obscured by more than the fog of war. Several eyewitness accounts are available; however, they are mutually contradictory to a greater degree than usual.[12] All that is certain is that at the end of the battle, all but one of the cottonclads were either destroyed or captured, and one Yankee boat, Queen of the West, was disabled. The sole boat to escape, CSS General Earl Van Dorn, fled to the protection of the Yazoo River, just north of Vicksburg.

Results edit

The battle, which took less than two hours in the early morning hours of June 6, resulted in the immediate surrender of the city of Memphis to federal authority by noon that day.

The Confederate casualties totaled approximately 100 killed or wounded and another 150 taken prisoner. The Union forces captured and repaired CSS General Price, CSS General Bragg, CSS Sumter, and CSS Little Rebel, and added them to the Mississippi River Squadron.[13]

The battle of Memphis was, aside from the later appearance of the ironclad CSS Arkansas, the final challenge to the federal thrust down the Mississippi River against Vicksburg. The river was now open down to that city, which was already besieged by Farragut's ships, but the federal army authorities did not grasp the strategic importance of the fact for nearly another six months. Not until November 1862 would the Union Army under Ulysses S. Grant attempt to complete the opening of the river.[2]

The poor performance of the River Defense Fleet, both at Memphis and at the earlier Battle of New Orleans, was the final demonstration that naval operations had to be commanded by trained professionals subject to military discipline.[2] The Ellet Rams remained in federal service, but they had no other opportunity for combat of the sort for which they were intended. They were soon transformed into an amphibious raiding body, the Mississippi Marine Brigade (with no connection to the United States Marine Corps), led by Ellet's brother, Lieutenant Colonel (later Brigadier General) Alfred W. Ellet. The demand for increased professionalism also resulted in the elimination of privateering,[14] although the River Defense Fleet was not composed of privateers in the usual meaning of the term.

The battle remains a cautionary tale, demonstrating the ill effects of a poor command structure. It is also one of only two purely naval battles of the war,[citation needed] excluding single-ship actions, and took place 500 mi (800 km) from the nearest open water. The other was the Battle of Plum Point Bend, also on the Mississippi.

Another civil war military engagement took place in Memphis, namely the Second Battle of Memphis in April 1864, when Confederate general, Nathan Bedford Forrest led a nighttime cavalry raid on Memphis with the intent of freeing Confederate prisoners and capturing Union generals encamped there. The raid failed in both goals, but forced the Union Army to guard the area more diligently.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Abbreviations used in this article: ORA – War of the Rebellion; a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate Armies, 70 volumes in four series; Washington: US Government Printing Office, 1880–1901. ORN – Official records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion, 30 volumes in two series; Washington: US Government Printing Office, 1894–1922.
  2. ^ a b c d e Groce, W. Todd, Battle of the Rams, North & South – The Official Magazine of the Civil War Society, Issue 4, p. 24.
  3. ^ ORA I, v. 52/1, pp. 37–38.
  4. ^ ORA III, v. 2, p. 815.
  5. ^ ORN I, v. 23, p. 34.
  6. ^ ORN I, v. 22, p. 280.
  7. ^ ORN I, v. 23, p, 75.
  8. ^ ORA I, v. 6, p. 817.
  9. ^ ORA I, v. 10/1, p. 589; ORN I, v. 23, p. 699.
  10. ^ ORA I, v. 52/1, pp. 37–40.
  11. ^ ORA I, v. 17, p. 9.
  12. ^ At least five independent accounts of the battle exist: ORN I, v. 23, pp. 119–121, 125–135, 136–138, 139–140; ORA I, v. 10/1, pp. 912–913, 925–927, with some repetitions.
  13. ^ Bearss, Edwin C. (1966). Hardluck Ironclad: The Sinking and Salvage of the Cairo. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. p. 76. ISBN 978-0-8071-0684-6. Retrieved October 1, 2020.
  14. ^ Robinson, Confederate privateers, p. 1; Luraghi, History of the Confederate Navy, p. 71.

Further reading edit

  • National Park Service battle description
  • CWSAC Report Update
  • Anderson, Bern. By sea and by river: the naval history of the Civil War. New York: Da Capo Press, 1962.
  • Crandall, Warren Daniel, History of the Ram Fleet and the Mississippi Marine Brigade in the War for the Union on the Mississippi and its tributaries: the story of the Ellets and their men, Press of the Buschart Brothers, 1907.
  • Hearn, Chester G. Ellet's Brigade: the strangest outfit of all. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press, 2000.
  • Johnson, Robert Underwood, and Buel, Clarence Clough, eds. Battles and leaders of the Civil War. Secaucus, New Jersey, n.d.; reprint ed., New York: Century, 1887, 1888.
  • Joiner, Gary D., Mr. Lincoln's Brown Water Navy – The Mississippi Squadron, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2007.
  • Luraghi, Raimondo.A history of the Confederate Navy (translated by Paolo E. Coletta). Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1996.
  • Musicant, Ivan. Divided waters: the naval history of the Civil War. New York: HarperCollins, 1995.
  • Robinson, William Morrison Jr. The Confederate privateers. Yale University, 1928. Reprint, Univ. of South Carolina, 1990.
  • Scharf, J. Thomas. History of the Confederate States Navy from its organization to the surrender of its last vessel. New York: Gramercy, 1996; reprint ed., New York: Rogers and Sherwood, 1887.

External links edit

35°07′45″N 90°09′21″W / 35.1291°N 90.1558°W / 35.1291; -90.1558

first, battle, memphis, part, american, civil, warbattle, rams, ward, artistdatejune, 1862, 1862, locationmississippi, river, near, memphis, tennesseeresultunion, victorybelligerents, united, states, confederate, statescommanders, leaderscharles, henry, davis,. First Battle of MemphisPart of American Civil WarBattle of the rams Ward A R artistDateJune 6 1862 1862 06 06 LocationMississippi River near Memphis TennesseeResultUnion victoryBelligerents United States Confederate StatesCommanders and leadersCharles Henry Davis Charles Ellet Jr James E Montgomery M Jeff ThompsonUnits involvedBentonLouisvilleCarondeletCairoSt LouisRam Queen of the WestRam MonarchRam LancasterRam SwitzerlandCSS General Beauregard CSS General Bragg CSS General Sterling Price CSS General Earl Van Dorn CSS General M Jeff Thompson CSS Colonel Lovell CSS General Sumter CSS Little RebelStrength5 ironclads4 rams8 ramsCasualties and losses1 ram disabled1 wounded7 rams destroyed or capturedapprox 100 killed or woundedapprox 150 captured Map of Memphis I Battlefield core and study areas by the American Battlefield Protection ProgramThe First Battle of Memphis was a naval battle fought on the Mississippi River immediately north of the city of Memphis Tennessee on June 6 1862 during the American Civil War The engagement was witnessed by many of the citizens of Memphis It resulted in a crushing defeat for the Confederate forces and marked the virtual eradication of a Confederate naval presence on the river Despite the lopsided outcome the Union Army failed to grasp its strategic significance Its primary historical importance is that it was the last time civilians with no prior military experience were permitted to command ships in combat As such it is a milestone in the development of professionalism in the United States Navy 1 Contents 1 Background 2 Organization 3 Cottonclad River Defense Fleet 4 Battle 5 Results 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground editThe defending Confederates closely matched the advancing federal force in raw numbers with eight rebel vessels opposing nine Union gunboats and rams but the fighting qualities of the former were far inferior Each was armed with only one or two guns of a light caliber that would be ineffective against the armor of the gunboats The primary weapon of each was its reinforced prow which was intended to be used in ramming opponents 2 The Confederate rams were distinguished by a unique feature of their defense against enemy shot Their engines and other interior spaces were protected by a double bulkhead of heavy timbers covered on the outer surface by a layer of railroad iron The gap between the bulkheads a space of 22 in 56 cm was packed with cotton 3 Although the cotton was the least important part of the armor it caught the public s attention and the boats came to be called cottonclads Later in the war ships crews were often protected from small arms fire by bales of cotton placed in exposed positions and these vessels were also referred to as cottonclads They differed however from the originals of the category 2 The federal force consisted of five gunboats four of which were known semi officially as Eads gunboats after their builder James Buchanan Eads but more commonly as Pook turtles after their designer Samuel M Pook and their strange appearance 4 The fifth gunboat flagship Benton was also a product of the Eads shipyards but was converted from a civilian craft Each of these vessels carried from 13 16 guns The other four vessels were naval rams from the United States Ram Fleet They had no armament whatever aside from the small arms carried by the officers All of the rams had been converted from civilian riverboats and had no common design 2 5 Organization editBoth sides entered the battle with faulty command structures The federal gunboats were members of the Mississippi River Squadron commanded directly by Flag Officer Charles H Davis who reported to Major General Henry W Halleck The gunboats were thus a part of the United States Army although their officers were supplied by the navy 6 The rams were led by Colonel Charles Ellet Jr who reported directly to Secretary of War Edwin M Stanton 7 Thus the federal fleet consisted of two independent organizations with no common command outside of Washington The Confederate arrangement was even worse The cottonclads were about half of a group of fourteen river steamers that had been seized at New Orleans and converted into rams to defend that city Known as the River Defense Fleet it was split in two when the Confederate holdings on the river became threatened from both the north and the Gulf of Mexico Six were retained below New Orleans to face the fleet of David G Farragut while eight were sent up to Memphis to block the Union descent down the river Sending them this far north did not violate their original purpose as Memphis was regarded as a shield for New Orleans The northern Memphis section was commanded overall by James E Montgomery a riverboat captain in civilian life The other boats were also commanded by former civilian riverboat captains selected by Montgomery and with no military training Once under way Montgomery s command ceased and the rams operated independently The futility of this arrangement was recognized immediately by military men but their protests were disregarded 8 Furthermore the captains would neither learn how to handle the guns themselves nor assign crew members to the task so gun crews had to be drawn from the Confederate Army The gunners were not integrated into the crews but remained subject to the orders of their army officers 9 Cottonclad River Defense Fleet edit nbsp USS ex CSS Little Rebel nbsp Ex CSS USS General Bragg probably photographed at Cairo or Mound City Illinois circa 1862 63 Battle edit nbsp The Total Annihilation of the Rebel Fleet by the Federal Fleet under Commodore Davis On the Morning of June 6 1862 off Memphis Tenn CSS General Beauregard center foreground is being rammed by the federal ram Monarch At left are the disabled federal ram Queen of the West and the Confederate ships General Sterling Price and Little Rebel As a result of the federal victory at Corinth the railroads that linked Memphis with the eastern part of the Confederacy had been cut severely reducing the strategic importance of the city Therefore in early June 1862 Memphis and its nearby forts were abandoned by the rebel army Most of the garrison were sent to join units elsewhere including Vicksburg and only a small rear guard was left to make a token resistance The River Defense Fleet was also to have retreated to Vicksburg but it could not get enough coal in Memphis Unable to flee when the federal fleet appeared on June 6 Montgomery and his captains had to decide whether to fight or scuttle their boats They chose to fight steaming out in the early morning to meet the advancing flotilla and the rams trailing behind it with Memphis citizens cheering them on 10 The battle started with an exchange of gunfire at long range the federal gunboats setting up a line of battle across the river and firing their rear guns at the cottonclads coming up to meet them as they entered the battle stern first Two of the four rams advanced beyond the line of the gunboats and rammed or otherwise disrupted the movements of their opponents the other rams misinterpreted their orders and did not enter the battle at all With the federal rams and gunboats not coordinating their movements and the Confederate vessels operating independently the battle soon was reduced to a melee It is agreed by all that the ram flagship Queen of the West initiated hostilities by slamming into CSS Colonel Lovell She was then rammed in turn by one or more of the remaining cottonclads Ellet was at this time wounded by a pistol shot in his knee thereby becoming the only casualty on the Union side In the hospital he contracted measles the childhood disease that killed some 5 000 soldiers during the war The combination of the disease and the debilitation caused by his wound was too great and he died on June 21 11 The remainder of the battle is obscured by more than the fog of war Several eyewitness accounts are available however they are mutually contradictory to a greater degree than usual 12 All that is certain is that at the end of the battle all but one of the cottonclads were either destroyed or captured and one Yankee boat Queen of the West was disabled The sole boat to escape CSS General Earl Van Dorn fled to the protection of the Yazoo River just north of Vicksburg Results editThe battle which took less than two hours in the early morning hours of June 6 resulted in the immediate surrender of the city of Memphis to federal authority by noon that day The Confederate casualties totaled approximately 100 killed or wounded and another 150 taken prisoner The Union forces captured and repaired CSS General Price CSS General Bragg CSS Sumter and CSS Little Rebel and added them to the Mississippi River Squadron 13 The battle of Memphis was aside from the later appearance of the ironclad CSS Arkansas the final challenge to the federal thrust down the Mississippi River against Vicksburg The river was now open down to that city which was already besieged by Farragut s ships but the federal army authorities did not grasp the strategic importance of the fact for nearly another six months Not until November 1862 would the Union Army under Ulysses S Grant attempt to complete the opening of the river 2 The poor performance of the River Defense Fleet both at Memphis and at the earlier Battle of New Orleans was the final demonstration that naval operations had to be commanded by trained professionals subject to military discipline 2 The Ellet Rams remained in federal service but they had no other opportunity for combat of the sort for which they were intended They were soon transformed into an amphibious raiding body the Mississippi Marine Brigade with no connection to the United States Marine Corps led by Ellet s brother Lieutenant Colonel later Brigadier General Alfred W Ellet The demand for increased professionalism also resulted in the elimination of privateering 14 although the River Defense Fleet was not composed of privateers in the usual meaning of the term The battle remains a cautionary tale demonstrating the ill effects of a poor command structure It is also one of only two purely naval battles of the war citation needed excluding single ship actions and took place 500 mi 800 km from the nearest open water The other was the Battle of Plum Point Bend also on the Mississippi Another civil war military engagement took place in Memphis namely the Second Battle of Memphis in April 1864 when Confederate general Nathan Bedford Forrest led a nighttime cavalry raid on Memphis with the intent of freeing Confederate prisoners and capturing Union generals encamped there The raid failed in both goals but forced the Union Army to guard the area more diligently See also editMississippi River Squadron United States Ram Fleet Second Battle of MemphisReferences edit Abbreviations used in this article ORA War of the Rebellion a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate Armies 70 volumes in four series Washington US Government Printing Office 1880 1901 ORN Official records of the Union and Confederate Navies in the War of the Rebellion 30 volumes in two series Washington US Government Printing Office 1894 1922 a b c d e Groce W Todd Battle of the Rams North amp South The Official Magazine of the Civil War Society Issue 4 p 24 ORA I v 52 1 pp 37 38 ORA III v 2 p 815 ORN I v 23 p 34 ORN I v 22 p 280 ORN I v 23 p 75 ORA I v 6 p 817 ORA I v 10 1 p 589 ORN I v 23 p 699 ORA I v 52 1 pp 37 40 ORA I v 17 p 9 At least five independent accounts of the battle exist ORN I v 23 pp 119 121 125 135 136 138 139 140 ORA I v 10 1 pp 912 913 925 927 with some repetitions Bearss Edwin C 1966 Hardluck Ironclad The Sinking and Salvage of the Cairo Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press p 76 ISBN 978 0 8071 0684 6 Retrieved October 1 2020 Robinson Confederate privateers p 1 Luraghi History of the Confederate Navy p 71 Further reading editNational Park Service battle description CWSAC Report Update Anderson Bern By sea and by river the naval history of the Civil War New York Da Capo Press 1962 Crandall Warren Daniel History of the Ram Fleet and the Mississippi Marine Brigade in the War for the Union on the Mississippi and its tributaries the story of the Ellets and their men Press of the Buschart Brothers 1907 Hearn Chester G Ellet s Brigade the strangest outfit of all Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press 2000 Johnson Robert Underwood and Buel Clarence Clough eds Battles and leaders of the Civil War Secaucus New Jersey n d reprint ed New York Century 1887 1888 Joiner Gary D Mr Lincoln s Brown Water Navy The Mississippi Squadron Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc 2007 Luraghi Raimondo A history of the Confederate Navy translated by Paolo E Coletta Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1996 Musicant Ivan Divided waters the naval history of the Civil War New York HarperCollins 1995 Robinson William Morrison Jr The Confederate privateers Yale University 1928 Reprint Univ of South Carolina 1990 Scharf J Thomas History of the Confederate States Navy from its organization to the surrender of its last vessel New York Gramercy 1996 reprint ed New York Rogers and Sherwood 1887 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Memphis Memphis Capture of Encyclopedia Americana 1920 Battle of Memphis National Underwater and Marine Agency35 07 45 N 90 09 21 W 35 1291 N 90 1558 W 35 1291 90 1558 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title First Battle of Memphis amp oldid 1158824371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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