
Picture or portrait of soldier |
Official Report of a Commander | Brigadier General Stephen A. Hurlbut (Hyperlink of a commander's name links to their name on the Official Order of Battle)
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Pittsburg Landing - stop #1 on the NPS Map (left)
Click on the map to enlarge it.
Quotes
from Actual Battlefield Participants
| "Before
sunrise [I] left the boat and strolled to the top of the hill, which rises
precipitously, and to a great height from the Landing. It was a most invigorating,
peaceful, quiet Sabbath morning. Not a sound fell upon the ear." --Capt. James G. Day, 15th Iowa |
| "We
were all spoiling for a fight, and there was no little amount of grumbling
done by members of the Regiment on account of the fear that we would not
be there in time to take part in the battle." --Sgt. W. P. L. Muir, 15th Iowa |
In
1862 Pittsburg Landing amounted to nothing more than a log cabin or two
atop a forty to fifty foot high bluff above the Tennessee River. Its
significance to the Union forces was that it offered a potential staging area
for a planned advance against Corinth, Mississippi, twenty miles to the
southwest. The plateau stretching inland from Pittsburg Landing offered dry
ground on which an entire army could camp—near the Tennessee River, which was
its line of supply, yet safely above the flood waters of what had been a very
wet spring.
A small Confederate
detachment occupied the landing in early March, but left after Union gunboats
shelled them. The first Union troops steamed up the river March 14 and
disembarked here. They were two brigades under the command of Brigadier
General Stephen A. Hurlbut
,
sent by Maj. Gen. Charles F. Smith
,
then temporarily commanding the Army of the Tennessee. Smith
sent another division of Union troops—four brigades under Brig.
Gen. William T. Sherman
— steaming past the landing and on up the river to try to reach and break the
strategic Memphis & Charleston Railroad. The ubiquitous floodwaters
stopped Sherman from accomplishing his mission, so he turned back and, on
orders from
Smith joined Hurlbut at Pittsburg Landing on March 15. Smith
recognized the value of Pittsburg Landing as a base and ordered Sherman to
move out into the
countryside and secure an area large enough to encamp the whole army. Over
the weeks that followed, steamers swarmed into Pittsburg Landing carrying
more and more troops.
By early April Ulysses
S. Grant
was back in command of the Army of the Tennessee. Five of the army’s
divisions, totaling about 35,000 men, were encamped in an area stretching two
and a half miles inland from this landing, with another division four miles
down river at Crump’s Landing. On the morning of Sunday, April 6 a number of steamboats lay along the bank here. Some of them had just
tied up that morning about daylight, bringing the brand-new 15th
and 16th
Iowa regiments. Fresh
from their home state, the Iowa soldiers had never yet loaded their government-issued
rifles. On another steamer newly arrived that morning was Anne Wallace, wife
of Brig. Gen. William H.
L. Wallace
.
Her husband, who commanded the Second Division, encamped less than half
a mile away, was unaware of her surprise visit. All witnesses agree that it
was an unusually pleasant, sunny spring morning.
Original photos or artwork from the Civil War:
- Steamers

Engraving after an artwork by J.O. Davidson, published in "Battles and Leaders
of the Civil War", Volume I, page 489. It shows six transports at Pittsburg Landing
shortly after the Battle of Shiloh, in April 1862.
The original caption reads: "Of the six transports, the one farthest up stream, on the right, is the Tycoon, which was dispatched by the Cincinnati Branch of the Sanitary Commission with stores for the wounded. The next steamer is the Tigress, which was General Grant's headquarters boat during the Shiloh campaign. On the opposite side of the river is seen the gun-boat Tyler.
|
Read
about the 15th Iowa BOYD, Cyrus F.
|
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