Julius
F. Robertson![]()
Julius F. Robertson was born in 1812 in Georgia. He is the first child of six for John J. Robertson and Sarah Bates Robertson. He was a Private in Company K, 39th Georgia Infantry. Julius enlisted March 4, 1862 into the Confederate Service. He was captured at the Battle of Vicksburg on July 4, 1863 and paroled on July 8, 1863.
During the Battle of
Gettysburg, other important action was taking place in the western states. The
battle occurred between Pemberton and Grant. The two generals would continue to
clash in different spots for more than a half a year. Eventually, Grant reach
his goal, Vicksburg, and took what he originally started out to take.
Grant had an army nearly twice the size of Pemberton's 22,000. Before Grant
decided to act on the siege of Vicksburg, a powerful politician by the name of
John A. McClernand brought the whole idea around. He wanted to raise an army
from the Midwest and race down to Vicksburg and capture it, and went to Lincoln
with his idea. In fearing that he might lose a valuable politician, Lincoln
agreed with command, although Grant never new until the December of 1862. When
he finally did, Lincoln told him that he had total control over all of the
Western Theater, and could move McClernand's troops how he wanted.
The first thing that Grant did was decide that he should take Vicksburg instead,
and not let McClernand get in the way. So, in the December of '62, Grant set out
southward, but did not go far before he encountered trouble. As Grant was moving
south, Davis called in Bragg to help out Pemberton. For once, Bragg made himself
useful. He sent one division of soldiers, under the command of Early Van Dorn,
to attack Grant's supply outpost at Holly Springs. The cavalry, nearly 3,500,
went in riding, quickly defeating the 1,500 man garrison, and then looted and
burned the post. To the north Nathan Forrest did the same to Jackson Tennessee,
destroying sixty miles of rail, and smashing telegraph wires. The result was
devastating, costing the Federals millions in dollars in damage and supplies,
while at the same time causing Lee to back track to Grand Junction, Tennessee.
While Van Dorn and Forrest were raiding Jackson and Grand Junction, Major
General William T. Sherman took off down the Mississippi River with an army of
32,000 on December 20. By December 26, he was on the outskirts of Vicksburg and
launched an attack on the Chickasaw Bluffs to the north. The result was a total
waste of Union ammunition and lives. The Federals lost 1,800 while the
Confederates lost 187. When Sherman launched the attack he did not know that
Grant had been forced to retreat due to the attack on Holly Springs. At this
point, although badly beaten, Sherman was ready to launch another attack but
McClelernand showed up and superseded him in command. Soon, Sherman and Navy
officer David Porter were both fed up with the new general and begged for
Grant's assistance at Vicksburg and command. From then on Grant took the matter
into his own hands.
Although Grant felt that the only way to attack Vicksburg was from the east, the
movements of Sherman and McClernand forced him to the west bank of the River.
Grant sent detachments of troops up and down the Mississippi looking for a good
place to attack but after several weeks of searching nothing lay in site. Grant
then decided to go with his original plan. Through the use of diversions Grant
would move his army across the Mississippi. Sherman was to attack Haynes' Bluff
north of Vicksburg while Porter ferried his ships down the Mississippi at night,
drawing the fire from Vicksburg. Porter's troops would then head farther south
and attack the battery at Grand Gulf. Meanwhile, McPherson and McClernand would
move south to Hard Times to cross the Mississippi, where they would meet
Porter's ships who would ferry them across. Once the Union troops reached the
town of Hard Times they found the battery was still fully intact and almost
impossible for Porter's boats to penetrate. Grant then moved McPherson and
McClernand ten miles south and crossed them there. There was a brief skirmish
near Port Gibson but the Union brushed aside the small Confederate force.
Second, the corps marched up behind the battery and Grand Gulf and quickly
seized control of the guns. Now the army headed east to Jackson were it turned
west again and headed back for Vicksburg. Grant's 41,000 men met some resistance
from Pemberton's 32,000, but making no mistakes, continued to march on. When
Grant moved within shelling range of Vicksburg, Pemberton moved into the
fortifications. Here is where the real siege began for nearly forty-eight days.
Most of the men inside were starving, and on July 3rd Pemberton asked for terms
on surrender. The following day as Pemberton's men walked out of the city, Lee's
men in the east walked away defeated at Gettysburg.