Showing posts with label USS Baron DeKalb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USS Baron DeKalb. Show all posts

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Rear Admiral David D. Porter to Major-General Ulysses S. Grant, June 22, 1863

[June 22, 1863.]

I have received yours in relation to the movements of the enemy and have been prepared for it for some days. I have three rifled guns right in front of the town under charge of Col' Ellet and fifty sharp-shooters All the rest of the Brigade are stationed on the lower end of the canal and in the woods with six pieces of Artillery. The Gun boats all have their orders if they get coal but I am sorry to say that no attention has been paid to your orders about carts A System of signals has been established all along the levee—and and with the Gun boats which are ordered to rush on regardless of every thing and swamp the boats with their wheels I would recommend that two of your best side wheel steamers transports be got ready with about two hundred soldiers on each to destroy the boats as they try to escape. I know they have many skiffs and every man is making a paddle—so a deserter tells us —The De Kalb and Forrest Rose are at Haines Bluff—I will have three gun boats at Millikens Bend, three at Youngs Point, three from the head of the canal stretching along the River and one covering this point—Look out strong the Rebels dont come up stream in the eddy, and escape by the Bayou where the Cincinatti is—I have sixty (60) bbls tar with which I will illuminate the River— I will look out—only I wish I had coal—it makes me very helpless without it

SOURCE: John Y. Simon, Editor, The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant, Volume 8, p. 399

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Special Dispatch in the Chicago Tribune

Special Dispatch in the Chicago Tribune

Cairo, April 11, 1862

Gov. Yates arrived here this morning from Springfield, en route for Tennessee, to look after the wounded of the Illinois regiments. He was welcomed with a salute from Cairo.

The Ohio Belle came in this morning with an invoice of rebel prisoners from Island No. 10. The Ohio Bell is a secesh boat captured at the Island, and is the craft which, upon the day of the general bombardment, came around the point with rebel officers on board, reconnoitering, and was fired at by the Benton.

Cairo is filled with physician, nurses and civilians from Chicago, Springfield, Indiana and Iowa, all desirous of going up the Tennessee. The civilians will all be disappointed, as Gen. Halleck, before his departure yesterday, issued stringent orders against granting passes. The 17th Wisconsin regiment, a Chicago battery, and Coggswell’s Iowa battery arrived this morning from Benton Barracks, St. Louis.

Affairs are quiet at Island No. 10. The prisoners are rapidly being sent off. The Benton, St. Louis and Mound City are at the Island, and the Carondelet and Pittsburg at Mound City.

A large number of wounded were brought down from Pittsburg this morning to the Mound City Hospital.

– Published in the Daily State Register, Des Moines, Iowa, Thursday, April 17, 1862