Less than a year into the war, before Scott’s failing health forced him to step down, Major General George B. McClellan proposed a plan to Scott, who passed the idea along to Lincoln. It involved a direct assault on Richmond, Virginia, the Confederate capital. Many in the North supported such a plan, feeling that it would bring a swift end to the war.
But they were wrong. By attacking Richmond and moving on from there, the Union would be taking the South piecemeal. It gave Confederate forces opportunity to regroup, reinforce and resupply. The plan was also complicated by the Union sympathies in the western portion of Virginia that would later become West Virginia. The area was primarily pro-Union, with a ratio of seven Union supporters to one Secessionist. There was also the State of Kentucky which had declared itself neutral. McClellan’s march on Richmond would take him through these two areas and endanger the North’s good relations with states Lincoln was counting on to remain within the Union.
McClellan had begun to neglect the Mississippi River, leaving it as a back door of sorts for entering the South. But the navy hadn’t. On 24 April 1862, Captain (later Admiral) David Glasgow Farragut led his fleet up the mouth of the Mississippi River and took the city of New Orleans, Louisiana. He stopped only long enough to make repairs before steaming north and taking Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Natchez, Mississippi.
A Union flotilla moving down the Mississippi River from the North had taken Memphis, Tennessee just before Farragut’s assault on New Orleans. That left only the city of Vicksburg, Mississippi, and a small fort at Port Hudson to hinder movement of Union ships. If they fell to Union occupation, the Mississippi River would be open from its source right the way to the Gulf of Mexico. It proved a much more difficult target than Farragut had anticipated. The town’s location atop high bluffs made bombardment futile. The city would stubbornly hold its position for more than a year until 4 July 1863, when it finally fell to Ulysses S. Grant, then commander of the Union forces in the west.
The Soldiers
While the leaders of the two armies were plotting and planning, the soldiers in the camps were waiting for their orders. The required age to join the military was eighteen, but recruiters were under pressure to fill the rolls, and there were plenty of underage men who saw the war as a great adventure in which they could participate and return home as heroes after banishing the enemy. Some boys would write the number ‘18’ on a slip of paper and tuck in under their heel inside their shoe so that when a recruiter asked if they were over eighteen, they could honestly reply yes.
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