tony_gunter
2nd Lieutenant
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2011
- Location
- Mississippi
I recall reading one author, don't remember who, asserted that a Confederate depot was at Raymond and that was one of the tasks McPherson was ordered to accomplish on 5/12. But I think that author was inferring too much from Grant's order to vacuum up the supplies "there and in the vicinity" (or words to that effect). Otherwise, I've seen no other reference to a depot in Raymond. So if you have one that would explain much of it.
I've never seen any evidence that Pemberton had a supply depot established at Raymond. The OR lists rations shipped to depots nearby (corn at Bolton, corn and bacon at Edwards) And Pemberton's belated realization that Raymond was a critical defensive position belies any such foresight. Remember, Gregg's brigade wasn't the first brigade of reinforcements to arrive from elsewhere.
It's hard to place Adams riding all the way to Jackson to refit on the timeline. Pemberton sent word for Adams and Richardson to move to Raymond on May 3rd.As Tony pointed out Pemberton ordered Gregg, while at Osyka, to bring his wagons, but the next day Gardner stated he couldn't move until the wagons returned. Its not a fact, but a strong inference, that Gardner was referring to the wagons used to move Gregg from PH to Osyka. Is that how you would interpret it?
W Adams did go offline a few days after his Port Gibson dash. He next appeared as the recipient of a telegram from Pemberton that places him in Jackson. It seems logical to presume he went there for refit/remount after two weeks of sustained operations. It had always been my presumption that Adams had been in the field without a break until I finally realized the telegrams were addressed to Jackson.
Do you think Adams was in Jackson when he received his movement order from Pemberton?
If I recall correctly, Wright began operating south of Port Gibson against Wirt Adams on May 6th in reprisal for Adams' capture of a hospital train, and the two forces skirmished for two days. Before hearing from Adams, Pemberton sends additional contradictory orders:
If I remember the timeline correctly, Wright skirmished with Adams on the 6th and fell back to Port Gibson. Then they skirmished in Port Gibson on the 7th. Then Wright detected that Adams was attempting to move north to cut him off and repositioned, leaving Port Gibson to be occupied by the enemy (unspecified) on the 8th. We don't know which if any of these messages Adams received, but if Adams is in Jackson on the 10th, that's only a two or three-day window to ride to Jackson by an indirect route (~70 miles) and refit, and it doesn't satisfy any of the orders issued.