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"Our Little Sergeant Willie-from the First Battalion, Thirteenth United States Infantry.'

"William Tecumseh Sherman, son of William T. and Ellen E. Sherman. Born in San Francisco, California, June 8, 1854; died in Memphis, Tennessee, October 3, 1863.'

666 In his spirit there was no guile.'

"Blessed are they undefiled in the way, who walk in the way of the Lord. Psalms cxviii.'"

CHAPTER XVI.

The Grand Advance from Memphis-The Enemy prepare to Meet 1t-General Sherman's Genius equal to any Emergency-Rapid Marches-The Foe driven from the Path-New Command-The Swollen River-Into ChattanoogaThe Tireless Chief and his Gallant Troops push forward to Missionary Ridge.

D

PEN the map, my reader, and spend a few moments, tracing the long way before the Union troops, and you will understand the greatness of

the success of the march from Memphis to Chatta

nooga, which are three hundred and nine miles apart. The Memphis and Charleston Railway connect them. The Tennessee and Elk Rivers cross the country, many of whose bridges were gone, and the foe lurked along the lines of travel.

But when General Sherman received orders from General Halleck to transport his troops to Athens, Alabama, repairing the railroad and getting his supplies as best he could, he was off with the haste of a prepared and fearless leader, whose heart was in the cause, for whose triumph he fought. But instead of using boats, "his

quick eye saw that he could move his trains faster by road under escort." He therefore did so, and conveyed into the enemy's country the entire Fourth Division over the iron track.

"Alarmed by this very dangerous move eastward, the enemy quickly assembled at Salem and Tuscumbia, with intent to thwart it and to foil the junction with Rosecrans. At the former point Chalmers collected three thousand cavalry and eight pieces of artillery, and planted himself in our path. Hearing of this, General Sherman, on October 11th, put his whole force in motion toward Corinth, and himself started thither in a special train with a battalion of the Thirteenth Infantry (his own regiment) as escort. On approaching Colliersville, which was defended by a few troops in a stockade, the train was fired upon, and it was discovered that Chalmers was investing the place. Instantly the General ordered his regulars to charge, and under his eye they scattered the rebels in all directions, and reached the stockade. Before General Sherman's arrival, the little garrison had been sorely pressed in a severe contest. The General soon changed the aspect of affairs, and beat off the superior force. Corinth being reached next night, he sent General Blair to Iuka with the First Division, and pushed troops toward Bear Creek, five miles east of Iuka, as fast as they came up.

"Foreseeing difficulties in crossing the Tennessee, he

had written to Admiral Porter at Cairo to watch the river and send up gunboats as soon as the water would permit, and to General Allen at St. Louis to despatch a ferry-boat to Eastport. The requests were promptly fulfilled. It now only remained to work away at the railroad, in accordance with orders, covering his workingparties from the enemy's attacks. At the same time he despatched Blair with two divisions to drive the enemy from Tuscumbia, where, under Stephen Lee, they were five thousand strong. It was accomplished after a severe fight at Cane Creek; and Tuscumbia was occupied on the 27th of October."

Pause here, to get a glimpse of the general movements in the programme of war, of which this was no inferior part. General Grant had been put in command of the "Departments of the Ohio, of the Cumberland, and of the Tennessee, constituting the military division of the Mississippi." In the latter General Sherman was appointed to the command, while General Thomas succeeded General Rosecrans in the department of the Cumberland. October 23d, General Grant, modestly wearing his new laurels, reached Chattanooga. The enemy occupying Lookout Mountain, with their terraces of cannon cut off supplies from Chattanooga by the ordinary route, compelling our troops to get their scanty supplies by the most difficult mountain routes. Wrote a Union soldier of the sad condition of things there :

"I confess I do not see any very brilliant prospects for continuing alive in it all this winter, unless something desperate be done. While the army sits here, hungry, chilly, watching the key to Tennessee,' the 'good dog' Bragg lies over against us, licking his Chickamauga sores without whine or growl. He will not reply to our occasional shots from Star Fort, Fort Crittenden, or the Moccasin Point batteries across the river; has forbidden the exchange of newspapers and the compliments of the day between pickets; has returned surly answers to flag-oftruce messengers; in fact, has cut us dead.

and

"The mortality among the horses and mules is frightful to contemplate. Their corpses line the road, taint the air, all along the Bridgeport route. In these days, hereabouts, it is within the scope of the most obtuse to distinguish á quartermaster or a staff officer by a casual glance at the animal he strides. 'He has the fatness of twenty horses upon his ribs,' as Squeers remarked of little Wackford; and so he has. God help the others.

“I am assured that this state of things will not last long; that hordes of men are energetically at work improving our communication, and that we soon shall be benefited by the overflowing plenty of the North. The vigor and good spirits of the army all this time are developed in a most astonishing manner."

Relief was nearer than the writer deemed at the

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