Battle of Plum Point Bend
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The Battle of Plum Point Bend took place in Tennessee during the American Civil War on May 10, 1862, on the Mississippi River, between ships of the Confederate River Defense Fleet and the Union Western Flotilla. Fighting for control of the Mississippi had been ongoing since the prior year as Union forces pushed downriver to Fort Pillow, about Template:Convert north of Memphis. The Union had been using mortar boats to bombard Fort Pillow, and had settled into a regular routine. The Union's daily tactic was to send a single mortar boat guarded by an ironclad warship to a position further downriver to shell the fort, while the rest of the fleet remained upriver. On the morning of May 10, the Confederates attacked in the hope of capturing the guard ironclad and then surprising the rest of the Union fleet.
When the attack came, most of the Union ironclads did not have steam pressure built up and so were unprepared to move. Three of the eight Confederate vessels, CSS General Bragg, CSS General Sterling Price, and CSS General Sumter, rammed the guard ironclad, USS Cincinnati; the Union vessel later sank from her damage. Two further ironclads were able to steam from the main group upriver and join the action: USS Carondelet and USS Mound City. In turn, CSS General Earl Van Dorn rammed Mound City; the Union vessel was damaged so severely that she was later run aground on a shoal, where she sank.
A third Union ironclad, USS Benton, arrived later in the fighting. The Union ironclads had lighter draftsTemplate:Efn than the Confederate vessels and maneuvered into shallower water where they were safe from Confederate ramming attempts. As the Confederate ships' guns were inferior to those of the Union ships, the Confederates withdrew, pursued by Benton and Carondelet. Several of the Confederate ships were damaged during the battle. The loss of Cincinnati and Mound City prompted the Union to strengthen the waterline of their ships. The two ironclads were refloated and returned to service. The battle was a Confederate victory, but with little long-term benefit. The bombardment of Fort Pillow resumed after the battle with altered procedures, and on June 4, the fort was abandoned as the Confederates withdrew from Corinth, Mississippi. On June 6, the River Defense Fleet was destroyed in the First Battle of Memphis, and the Union gained control of the Mississippi River in July 1863. Plum Point Bend was among the few fleet actions of the war.
Background
When the American Civil War began in April 1861, both the United States and Confederate governments viewed control of the Mississippi River as vital.Template:Sfn In September, Confederate forces moved north and captured the town of Columbus, Kentucky, which was on the Mississippi.Template:Sfn In February 1862, Union forces commanded by Major General Ulysses S. Grant captured Confederate positions at Fort Henry and Fort Donelson, which had commanded the Tennessee River and the Cumberland River.Template:Sfn This compelled the Confederates to abandon western Kentucky including Columbus; the next Confederate stronghold was at Island No. 10 further downriver.Template:Sfn The naval component of the Union effort, known as the Western Flotilla, was commanded by Flag Officer Andrew H. Foote.Template:Sfn
Union land forces captured abandoned Confederate defensive works at New Madrid, Missouri on March 14.Template:Sfn A few Union ships ran past the Island No. 10 defenses on the nights of April 4/5 and April 6/7 and the position was captured on April 8.Template:Sfn The campaign then moved south to Fort Pillow, about Template:Convert north of Memphis, Tennessee. Foote's Union vessels pursued the retreating Confederates.Template:Sfn On April 12, Union ships moved to within a few miles of the fort and bombarded the position with a mortar boat.Template:Sfn The core of this flotilla was a group of seven ironclad warshipsTemplate:SfnTemplate:SndUSS Benton, USS Carondelet, USS Pittsburgh, USS Cincinnati, USS Mound City, USS Cairo, and USS St. Louis[1]Template:Sndin addition to a collection of lesser vessels, including the mortar boats.Template:Sfn Cairo, St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Mound City, Carondelet, and Cincinnati were City-class ironclads,Template:Sfn which were designed to have a shallow draft, iron armor, and an armament of thirteen cannons.Template:Sfn Benton had been converted from a civilian snagboat and was armed with sixteen cannons.Template:Sfn
The Union routine was to send a single mortar boat guarded by an ironclad in a position closer to the fort, with the rest of the fleet upriver; the boats would rotate on or off bombardment duty every day.Template:Sfn Foote issued orders for the boats to be in a state of combat readiness at all times.Template:Sfn Captain Charles Henry Davis took command of the Union squadron on May 9,Template:Sfn as Foote was struggling to recover from a wound.Template:Sfn Bends in the river allowed the Union to take up bombardment positions not directly exposed to Confederate fire from the fort. At Plum Point Bend, the channel of the Mississippi River diverged in two; the channels rejoined and then rounded Craighead Point to pass Fort Pillow; the Union vessels took positions between Plume Point Bend and Craighead Point.Template:Sfn
While several Confederate vessels were sent to other threatened locations, Captain James Montgomery and eight cottonclad rams known as the River Defense Fleet, were located off Fort Pillow.Template:Sfn[1] The cottonclads were converted civilian vessels with strengthened bows and were lightly protected with cotton as a form of armor.Template:Sfn They were faster and more maneuverable than the ironclads,Template:Sfn but most were only armed with one or two cannons each.Template:Sfn Montgomery and the commanders of his ships held a council of war on May 9, and decided to attack. The plan was to overwhelm the isolated mortar boat and ironclad. After capturing the ironclad, they expected that the larger Union fleet could be surprised and defeated and that the attack could drive as far upriver as Cairo, Illinois and St. Louis, Missouri.Template:Sfn The crews of the cottonclads were strengthened by men from M. Jeff Thompson's (a Brigadier General in the Missouri State Guard) land force from the Missouri State Guard.Template:Sfn[1] Thompson was present on the cottonclad CSS General Bragg.Template:Sfn The various ships were issued written orders, as Montgomery did not believe that his sailors were capable of accurately using signalling methods during battle. The Confederate vessels were arranged with the fastest at the front and the slowest to the rear in order to provide the Union with the minimum amount of reaction time after the ships were spotted.Template:Sfn
Order of battle
| Fleet | Engaged Ships |
|---|---|
|
Western Flotilla - Union Navy |
|
| Fleet | Engaged Ships |
|---|---|
|
River Defense Fleet - Confederate |
Battle
On the morning of May 10, the two Union ships on bombardment duty were Mortar Boat No. 16Template:Efn and Cincinnati.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Naval historian Neil P. Chatelain states that the Confederate vessels passed through Plum Point Bend and approached the two Union ships at around 6:30Template:Nbspam,Template:Sfn while historian Ed Bearss states that the Confederate advance began at 6:00Template:Nbspam, before rounding Plum Point Bend at 7:25Template:Nbspam. The Union ironclads did not have sufficient steam pressure built up to operate effectively, and the rest of Davis's fleet was Template:Convert upstream.Template:Sfn Cincinnati, in particular, was caught by surprise: her crew was performing routine tasks such as holystoning the decks.Template:Sfn The vessel cast off her moorings, but steam pressure for her engines had not been maintained, and she was not able to maneuver effectively.Template:Sfn General Bragg was the forward Confederate ship, and her commander, Captain W. H. H. Leonard, ordered the ship to be accelerated to ram Cincinnati. The ironclad opened fire on the Confederate vessel.Template:Sfn The mortar boat also fired her mortars at the Confederates, although there were no direct hits.Template:Sfn General Bragg was still able to ram Cincinnati on the starboard quarter.[1]Template:Sfn
The blow left a hole in the side of Cincinnati.Template:Sfn However, the ram had struck a glancing blow, and the hole was insufficient to sink the vessel. General BraggTemplate:'s ram was briefly stuck in the hull of the Union vessel, and Cincinnati was able to fire another volley into the Confederate ship.Template:Sfn The collision spun the two ships 180 degrees.Template:Sfn More Union fire struck General Bragg while the Confederate vessel was maneuvering back from Cincinnati, and a shot struck the tiller rope of General Bragg. The damage forced the vessel out of the actionTemplate:Sfn as she could not be maneuvered.Template:Sfn The main Union force had become aware of the attack when Union lookouts spotted the smoke clouds from the Confederate vessels at about 6:00Template:NbspamTemplate:Sfn or 6:30Template:Nbspam.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Carondelet had steam pressure built up in preparation for movement, and Mound City was quickly able to move as well, but Pittsburgh, Benton, Cairo, and St. Louis were unprepared, despite prior orders to keep their steam up.Template:Sfn
Before Cincinnati could recover from the blow struck by General Bragg, CSS General Sterling Price rammed the ironclad. Cincinnati had her sternpost and rudder destroyed by the blow. The ironclad then swung out of control into an angle that allowed a third Confederate ship, CSS General Sumter, to ram her.Template:Sfn The blow struck Cincinnati in the fantail. The commander of General Sumter offered Cincinnati terms of surrender, but was rejected.Template:Sfn Water rushed into Cincinnati, putting out the fires for her engines and flooding her magazine.Template:Sfn The crew of Cincinnati was sent to the decks, ready to defend against a boarding attempt.Template:Sfn Sharpshooters on General Sumter fired on the ironclad, severely wounding her commander, Commander R. N. Stembel.Template:Sfn Mound City and Carondelet had arrived at close range after about 10 or 15 minutes,Template:Sfn but had been unable to fire for fear of hitting Cincinnati. The situation on Cincinnati had become one of attempting to get her into shallow water before the ship sank. General Sterling Price and General Sumter pulled back from Cincinnati enough that Mound City and Carondelet were able to open fire, and Benton had entered range for supporting fire.Template:Sfn
A shot from Carondelet struck General Sterling Price, damaging the supply pipes for her boiler, knocking the Confederate ship out of the fight.Template:Sfn General Sumter was also damaged by a Carondelet shot and forced to withdraw from the battle.Template:Sfn CSS General Earl Van Dorn advanced towards Mound City, intending to ram her, all the while firing at the mortar boat, which was hit by two shots.Template:Sfn No one aboard the mortar boat was injured. Mound City fired on General Earl Van Dorn, but did little damage.Template:Sfn Mound City unsuccessfully moved to avoid getting rammed, but General Earl Van Dorn struck the Union ship. The blow badly damaged the ironclad's bow, almost tearing it off. As a result of the collision, Mound City was pushed aside while General Earl Van Dorn kept going forward; the Confederate vessel briefly ran aground.Template:Sfn Mound City was ordered to the west bank of the Mississippi River by her commanding officer, Commander Augustus Kilty.Template:Sfn The commander of General Earl Van Dorn, Captain Isaac Fulkerson,Template:Sfn was wounded during the action.Template:Sfn Fulkerson noticed that his vessel was further upriver than the other Confederate ships and was isolated, so he ordered his vessel to withdraw. Bearss reports CSS Little Rebel attempted to ram Mound City, but was damaged by a shot from Benton and withdrew,Template:Sfn but historian Edward B. McCaul argues that no second Confederate ship attempted to ram Mound City and that BentonTemplate:'s commander's account of the incident was not accurate.Template:Sfn
At this point, the fighting was largely down to Carondelet and Benton facing off against CSS General M. Jeff Thompson, CSS Colonel Lovell, and CSS General Beauregard.Template:Sfn The battle was almost over by the time the three trailing Confederate vessels arrived.Template:Sfn The Union vessels had lighter drafts than the Confederate ones, and they entered shallower water where the Confederates could not ram them. Montgomery was aware that the quantity and quality of his ships' cannons were inferior to the Union ironclads, and ordered a withdrawal.Template:Sfn Carondelet was forward of the other still-functioning Union ships, and came under fire from the Confederate vessels and accidental undershots from Pittsburgh to the rear.Template:Sfn
Benton and Carondelet pursued the retreating Confederate vessels, but broke off before reaching the batteries at Fort Pillow. St. Louis and Pittsburgh arrived on the scene. The former and Cairo attempted to save Mound City, but the latter vessel was intentionally run aground onto a shoal, where she sank. Pittsburgh was aiding Cincinnati in reaching the eastern shore, but before she could do so Cincinnati sank in Template:Convert of water. By the time St. Louis reached the site of the battle, the Confederates had withdrawn.Template:Sfn According to Bearss, the fighting lasted about 70 minutes,Template:Sfn while McCaul argues for a time frame of 30 to 60 minutes.Template:Sfn Of the Union ironclads, only Cincinnati, Mound City, and Carondelet had been involved in close-range fighting, and sailors in the Union fleet criticized Cairo, Pittsburgh, and St. Louis for their minimal roles in the action.Template:Sfn
Aftermath
On the Union side, one sailor was killed and three suffered significant injuries, in addition to some less badly injured men.Template:Sfn The Confederates had about a dozen casualties, of whom three were killed.Template:Sfn McCaul notes that these losses were very light given the amount of expended ordnance, and suggests that inaccurate smoothbore cannons and projectiles passing through the Confederate ships, instead of exploding within them, caused the low casualty rate.Template:Sfn The Union incorrectly believed they had inflicted heavy losses on the Confederates,Template:Sfn and their claims about the damage inflicted on opposing ships were greatly overstated.Template:Sfn Davis's reporting to the United States Navy Department mentioned these inaccurate claims, although the naval historian Stephen R. Taaffe concludes that Davis was presenting events "in the most positive light" rather than intentionally lying.Template:Sfn The Confederate ships were repaired at Fort Pillow after the battle; Thompson compared the appearance of the River Defense Fleet's smokestacks after the battle to nutmeg graters due to the damage they had received. While the superstructures and smokestacks of the Confederate vessels had been damaged, the cotton cladding had protected the ships' machinery.Template:Sfn Mound City and Cincinnati were later refloated and repaired, with the former returning to service less than two weeks later, and the latter returning in June.[1]
The loss of two ships led to the Union ironclads being strengthened at the waterline,Template:Sfn and Davis changed the operation procedures for the bombardment to increase security.Template:Sfn The failure of several of the Union captains to keep their ships at combat readiness was not mentioned in any official reports of the action to avoid impinging any officer's honor.Template:Sfn Both sides claimed victory; Bearss describes the action as "sharp but not decisive".Template:Sfn Historian James M. McPherson states that the battle was "a definite Confederate victory",Template:Sfn historian Mark K. Christ considers the action a Confederate victory,[1] and Chatelain notes that the action was a Confederate tactical victory without long-range strategic benefits.Template:Sfn Bearss notes that the battle was one of very few fleet actions during the war, and states that "it was the only one in which the Confederates felt that they were sufficiently prepared to take the offensive".Template:Sfn Historians Paul Calore and Myron J. Smith refer to the battle as the first fleet action of the war.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The fighting at Plum Point Bend did not stop the bombardment of Fort Pillow, although no Union land forces were available to assist in the campaign against the fort. On May 30, Confederate forces abandoned Corinth, Mississippi, in the face of a Union army, making the position at Fort Pillow untenable as it was supplied through Corinth. Fort Pillow was abandoned on June 4, with the land garrison withdrawing to Vicksburg, Mississippi, and Grenada, Mississippi. The River Defense Fleet fell back to Memphis.Template:Sfn Reinforced by the United States Ram Fleet, Davis moved his fleet towards Memphis in pursuit.Template:Sfn With his ships low on fuel, Montgomery held a council of war that decided to fight the Union fleet.Template:Sfn In the following First Battle of Memphis, all of the ships of the River Defense Fleet except General Earl Van Dorn were sunk or captured.Template:Sfn Union forces took control of the entire course of the river in July 1863, after the ends of the Siege of Vicksburg and Siege of Port Hudson.Template:Sfn The course of the Mississippi River has changed since the battle, and the old river channel where the battle took place is now a lake near Fort Pillow State Historic Park.[2] It is near the site of modern Osceola, Arkansas.[1]
Notes
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