A General Who Will Fight by Harry S. Laver
Author:Harry S. Laver [Laver, Harry S.]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9780813141282
Google: BCEzwAEACAAJ
Publisher: University Press of Kentucky
Published: 2012-01-15T16:07:32+00:00
6
The Overland Campaign
There is no fall back with U. S. Grant.
âA New York soldier
By January 1864, the nation had endured two and a half years of a tragic civil war, including some of the most traumatic political, economic, and social convulsions the country had ever witnessed. These disruptions paled in comparison to the loss of life and the physical and emotional wounds inflicted on both soldier and civilian, and no honest person could look ahead and see the nightmareâs end. For those charged with prosecuting the war, there was no respite, and, as far as Ulysses S. Grant was concerned, the quickest, if not the only, way to end the war was to fightâfight today, fight tomorrow, and tomorrow again, until the Confederates had no fight left. Grantâs commitment to the relentless pursuit and destruction of the enemy would reach its zenith in 1864, a year that began with the momentum in the Union camp, thanks to the victory at Chattanooga.
Despite having his plans for an immediate drive on Mobile thwarted by Halleckâs caution, in January Grant informed George Thomas that, âat the earliest possible moment in the Spring,â his Army of the Cumberland would strike out from Chattanooga for Mobile by going through Atlanta, then Montgomery, Alabama. But the first matter of business was taking care of Longstreetâs force, which remained in East Tennessee. âOld Peteâsâ Confederates were more of a nuisance than a real threat, but their presence could disrupt Grantâs campaign plans. Moreover, Halleck wanted Longstreet driven out of Tennessee and into Virginia, so Grant set part of his army moving, sending off Maj. Gen. John Schofieldâs men. âI deem it of the utmost importance to drive Longstreet out immediately,â he telegraphed Schofield, âso as . . . to prepare for a Spring Campaign of our own choosing instead of permitting the enemy to dictate it for us.â To Brig. Gen. Alvin P. Hovey, who was organizing new troops in Indianapolis, Grant shared his expectation that âwe will have some sharp fighting in the spring, and if successful, I believe the war will be ended within the year; if the enemy gain temporary advantage, the war will be protracted.â Implicit in both messages was Grantâs determination to maintain the initiative when the war resumed in earnest that spring.1
Grantâs focus and drive in the West were in sharp contrast to the Federalsâ situation in Washington, where dissatisfaction and impatience were growing with the Army of the Potomac and General-in-Chief Halleck. Brig. Gen. James H. Wilson, an engineering officer and member of Grantâs staff, advised his commander in early February, âNo hope is entertained that the Army of the Potomac can or will do much. It must be regenerated.â President Lincoln expressed similar concerns about Halleckâs lethargic prosecution of the war, recalling that Halleck had demanded full control over all military assets on taking command but that, since the Unionâs drubbing by Lee at Second Bull Run in August 1862, the general-in-chief had âshrunk from responsibility whenever it was possible.
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