About midnight on 7 April, Colonel Nathan Bedford Forrest ordered some of his men to dress in captured Union uniforms and reconnoiter the Federal lines. A detachment of scouts under Lieutenant Sheridan set out and discovered Buell's debarking troops. They quickly returned to camp and reported their findings to Colonel Forrest. Understanding the importance of this information, Forrest immediately mounted his horse and set out to find the nearest corps commander. He found Hardee and Breckenridge nearby, who ordered him to take the news directly to General Beauregard. Unfortunately, Beauregard retired without establishing a central headquarters and Forrest never found him. After receiving a like report at 2:00 a.m., Colonel Forrest returned to Hardee and was told to maintain a vigilant watch. Beauregard never received the news.
70
As dawn began to break, the Confederate forces were in a complete disarray. Brigades and regiments were broken up and bivouacked in different parts of the battlefield. When Colonel Preston Pond awoke Monday morning, he found his brigade alone and dangerously exposed nearly one mile in front of the entire Confederate Army. Regiment commanders were searching for higher officers and instructions on how to conduct the affairs of the coming day. Beauregard and Bragg were peacefully asleep in Sherman's captured tent, expecting the day's fighting to end in a complete defeat of Grant's army. Neither one knowing that Buell and Wallace had arrived during the night, bringing nearly twenty-five thousand fresh troops.
71
The Federal lines formed, with Buell on the left. Wallace took the Union right and remnants of Grant's other divisions formed in the center.
72 Bull Nelson's division was the first to engage. About 3:00 a.m., the rain began to subside and Nelson's troops moved slowly through the broken trees, mud and heavy underbrush. At 5:20, Hazen's brigade came in contact with some skirmishers of Forrest's cavalry who offered some light resistance. As Hazen approached Wicker Field, above Bloody Pond, they found three guns of an apparently unsupported Confederate battery. Hazen's skirmishers ran across the clearing towards the cannon and were met by Chalmers brigade and the first heavy fighting of the morning began.
73
Preston Pond was positioned in front of a ravine on the north side of Jones Field. At 6:30 a.m., Lew Wallace's skirmishers and Thompson's 9th Indiana Artillery opened fire on Pond's brigade at four hundred yards. Ketchum's Alabama Battery came forward and the two units exchanged artillery fire until 7:00 a.m. Pond's infantry was forced to withdraw by 9:00 a.m. to the Purdy-Hamburg road, while Ketchum's Battery and the Texas Rangers remained behind to conduct a rear-guard action. Shortly, they too withdrew to a position southeast of Jones Field. About 9:00 o'clock, Gibson's brigade advanced towards Jones Field with S. A. M. Wood's brigade two hundred yards in advance and on his right. 74
At daylight, Colonel Deas sent Captain R. J. Hill to search for General Withers' division and to get information. Captain Hill soon returned with news that the enemy were advancing. Deas assembled his two-regiment brigade and marched over to Jones field. Here General Ruggles was forming a line of mixed regiments and Deas' men were positioned on the extreme left of this line. Ruggles' line of infantry was backed by Ketchum's, Smith's and Girardey's batteries.
75, 76
By 10:00 a.m., Thompson's Battery had pulled back to replenish its caissons and was replaced in the center of Jones Field by Thurber's Battery I, 1st Missouri Light Artillery. Two companies of the Texas Rangers made a cavalry dash against Thurber's battery but were easily repelled by skirmishers of the 8th Missouri. Gibson's brigade made the next charge and were also driven back, but not before the 1st Arkansas captured one gun.
77 From a nearby strip of timber, Wallace's infantry fired on the Arkansas troops, forcing them to retreat before they could move the gun.
78 Wallace then moved Smith's brigade of one Missouri and two Indiana regiments in front of Thurber's guns.
79
70 Wiley Sword, Shiloh: Bloody April, pages 378, 379
71 Wiley Sword, Shiloh: Bloody April, page 386
72 James Arnold, Shiloh 1862, pages 74, 75
73 Wiley Sword, Shiloh: Bloody April, pages 383, 384
74 Larry J. Daniel, Shiloh, The Battle That Changed the Civil War, page 278, 279
75 Official Records, Chapter XXII page
539
76 Larry J. Daniel, Shiloh, The Battle That Changed the Civil War, page 280
77 Larry J. Daniel, Shiloh, The Battle That Changed the Civil War, page 279, 280
78 Wiley Sword, Shiloh: Bloody April, pages 383, 384
79 Larry J. Daniel, Shiloh, The Battle That Changed the Civil War, page 280
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