11 January 1863 A.D. GEN John McClernand and ADM David Porter
Take Confederate Stronghold on Arkansas River
Editors. “1863 – Union General John McClernand and Admiral David Porter capture Arkansas
Post, a Confederate stronghold on the Arkansas River..” This
Day in U.S. Military History. N.d. http://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/01/11/january-11/. Accessed 10 Jan 2015.
1863 – Union
General John McClernand and Admiral David Porter capture Arkansas Post, a
Confederate stronghold on the Arkansas River. The victory secured central
Arkansas for the Union and lifted northern morale just three weeks after the
disastrous Battle of Fredericksburg. Arkansas Post was a massive fort 25 miles
from the confluence of the Arkansas and Mississippi rivers. It was designed to
insure Confederate control of the White and Arkansas rivers, and to keep
pressure off Vicksburg, the last major Rebel city on the Mississippi River. The
sides of the square fort were each nearly 200 feet long and the structure was
protected by a moat. It sat on a bluff 25 feet above the river. The post was a
major impediment to Yankee commerce on the Arkansas. McClernand gathered his
Army of the Mississippi at Milliken’s Bend, just north of Vicksburg. He had
32,000 men in two corps commanded by Generals George Morgan and William T.
Sherman. McClernand’s main objective was Vicksburg, but he decided to capture
Arkansas Post first to secure Yankee commerce on the rivers north of Vicksburg.
McClernand was accompanied by Porter’s flotilla. The plan was to steam up the
Arkansas River and land the troops below the post, then have Sherman’s men
swing around behind the fort while Morgan approached from downriver. Porter
began bombing the fort on the night of January 10. The bombardment continued
the following afternoon. Through the afternoon, Union infantry moved towards
the fort while the ships passed in front and began firing from the other side
of the fort. The Confederate garrison was surrounded, and offered a white flag
before the day was out. The Yankees lost 134 men and suffered 898 wounded, but
they captured 5,000 Confederates and preserved Union commerce on the Arkansas
and White rivers.
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