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Fort Pemberton Organization Table
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Loring's Division at Fort Pemberton
(Vicksburg Campaign)
March 12-19, 1863
See A Brief History of Fort Pemberton, below.
Major General William
Loring
1st Brigade:
Brigadier General Lloyd Tilghman
54th Alabama Infantry- Colonel A. Baker
8th Kentucky Infantry- Colonel H.B. Lyon
20th Mississippi Infantry- Colonel D.R. Russell
23rd Mississippi Infantry- Colonel J.M. Wells
26th Mississippi Infantry- Colonel A.E. Reynolds
Company C, 14th Mississippi Artillery Battalion- Captain J. Culbertson
2nd Brigade:
Brigadier General Winfield S. Featherston
3nd Mississippi Infantry- Colonel T.A. Mellon
22nd Mississippi Infantry- Lieutenant Colonel
H.J. Reid
31st Mississippi Infantry- Colonel J.A. Orr
33rd Mississippi Infantry- Colonel D.W. Hurst
1st Mississippi Sharpshooter Battalion- Major W.A. Rayburn
Company C 1st Mississippi Light Artillery- Captain L.A. Collier
3rd Brigade:
Brigadier General John C. Moore
37th Alabama Infantry- Colonel J.F. Dowdell
42nd Alabama Infantry- Colonel J.W. Portis
35th Mississippi Infantry- Colonel W.S. Barry
40th Mississippi Infantry- Colonel W.B. Colbert
2nd Texas Infantry- Colonel Ashbel Smith
Bledsoe's Missouri Battery- Captain H.M. Bledsoe
Miscellaneous
Units
37th Mississippi Infantry- Colonel O.S. Holland
7th Tennessee Cavalry- Colonel J.G. Stocks
Waul's Texas Legion- Colonel T.N. Waul
Company B, Pointe Coupee Artillery- Captain W.A. Davidson
Company A, Pointe Coupee Artillery- Lieutenant J.J. Thompson
Tobin's Tennessee Artillery- Captain T.F. Tobin
Detachment of the 21st Louisiana
Company A, 22nd Louisiana Infantry- Lieutenant J.E. Lambert
Naval Detachment- Lieutenant F.E. Shepperd
2nd Missouri Cavalry- Colonel R. McCulloch
2nd Arkansas Cavalry- Colonel W.F. Slemons
Blythe's Battalion, Mississippi State Troops- Major G.L. Blythe
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Source: The Vicksburg Campaign by Edwin Bearss
~~~~~~~~
A Brief History
of Fort Pemberton
Location: Greenwood, MS,
at junction of U.S Hiways 82 and 49E.
In the 1863 Vicksburg
Campaign, General Grant tried several attacks on the city on the bluff.
One plan was to send troops on transports down the Tallahatchie and Yazoo
Rivers into the back door instead of down the heavily defended Mississippi
River. He cut the Mississippi River levee in February which flooded
the several bayous between the Mississippi and Tallahatchie Rivers, making
a navigable connection. Twenty-two transports (with 5000 troops), two ironclads,
two rams and six light draft gunboats made up the first expedition, which
was later reinforced with another brigade and additional vessels. It took
several weeks to make the 200-mile trip as the bayous were narrow and tortuous.
The flooded rivers allowed the gunboats to clear the river bottoms but
it also caused many to loose their smokestacks and upper structure when
they contacted the low-hanging trees.
Appraised of the
Federal plans the Confederate General John C. Pemberton ordered a fort
to be constructed to block the enemy forces. The engineers selected a location
where the Tallahatchie makes an abrupt easterly turn and, after joining
with the Yazoo River, it loops back within a few hundred yards of the Tallahatchie.
This allowed room for only two gunboats at a time to approach the Confederates
works and attack with only their forward guns. The fort was hastily
built of cotton bales covered with earth, and named Fort
Pemberton. It had but a few light guns, and a very accurate 8-inch
rifle. The fort was manned by 1500 men under command of Brig. Gen.
W.W. Loring. The flooded the area limited any infantry movement
by land. To further impede the enemy's advance down the Yazoo River,
the steamship "Star of the West" was
loaded with cotton bales and sunk in the channel. This "Star
of the West" was one of the Federal mechant ships captured at
The Federal Flotilla arrived at Fort Pemberton on March 11th, and the two
ironclads attacked at 1000 yards, but both were damaged after several attempts
to reduce the fort. The Confederate gunners placed one well-aimed shot
through the forward gun port of the first ironclad. The Federal fleet
retired to the Mississippi. Grant's attempt to reach Vicksburg by the Tallahatachie-Yazoo
route had failed.
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