The Importance of Cairo

dawna

First Sergeant
Joined
Feb 20, 2005
Location
canada
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The Ohio River at Cairo during the Civil War

Cairo was one of the most important pieces of real estate in the country, during the fall and winter of 1861-62, both the Union and Confederacy realized its strategic importance.

Records show that many people never expected an invasion of Cairo. In fact, Illinois State Senator Lyman Trumbull wrote to a friend, stating he never believed Cairo would be attacked, but that Governor Yates was "omitting no preparation to be ready in case an attempt was to be made." He specified that there were plenty of men and materiel at Cairo, and more nearby ready to be moved at a moment's notice. He reported that on May 10, 1861 Yates had shipped 2,700 men with 15 pieces of field artillery, plus six-pounders and one twelve-pounder to Cairo from Springfield .

Much to his credit, Governor Yates had already ordered a contingent of soldiers and artillery to Cairo, soon after Fort Sumter surrendered. By June of 1861, 12,000 Union soldiers were in and around Cairo, Villa Ridge and Bird's Point, across the Mississippi River. The latter piece of real estate, named after Adam Bird, a founder of Cairo, was important because any artillery placed there would command the Cairo waterfront. Trumbull also pointed out that another 38,000 men were within a 24-hour ride.

In order to further strengthen Cairo as a military camp and as a naval base, the energetic Governor Yates managed to round up 7,000 new guns, 6,000 rifled muskets, 500 rifles and 14 batteries of artillery, in the autumn of 1861, which were shipped to the city and installed in record time. These additions made Cairo a formidable installation indeed. Cairo became an enormous military camp with a huge parade ground and clusters of barracks on all sides. Countless dress parades were witnessed by hordes of reporters from the roof of the St. Charles Hotel. Military protocol became the order of the day for the entire city; it was to become the fabric of its citizens' lives for the next couple of years.

Located at the tip of a peninsula, Cairo was surrounded by water on two sides; therefore a levee, some 15 feet high, was built around the city. Because the land was flat and low, it became extremely muddy during heavy rains or swollen-river stages, in spite of the levee, which made it a virtual mud pond. It must be remembered that during that time, paved roads were a rarity in Illinois, as they were throughout the Midwest.

The only year-around access to Cairo was by the Illinois Central Railroad, which entered over a causeway across a morass of swamp to the north of the city. Once within city limits, the road split and ran in a loop along the levee, around Camp Defiance and up the western shore to rejoin the junction again. Over this railroad came many divisions of soldiers and equipment that were destined to go downriver to split the Confederacy by capturing the fortifications in Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi and finally clear down to the Gulf of Mexico. Also, over these tracks came such luminaries as generals Grant, McLernand, Buell, Halleck, McMillan and, from time to time, top members of Lincoln's cabinet.

General Fremont also established a naval base on the Ohio River side of Cairo. It consisted mainly of the floating wharfboats of Graham & Halliday Company and Given, Haynes & Company. The wharfboats were simply flatboat hulls covered with shed-like structures. (The Western Navy Headquarters was located in the Graham & Halliday craft, within which held forth Captain A.M. Pennock, U.S.N., who was appointed commandant of the station.) It was here the gunboats from Carondelet and Mound City were fitted out with crews and ordnance.

The street parallel to the levee, under which were moored the wharfboats, was called Ohio Street, and along it were the Quartermaster's office and warehouse, Post and District Headquarters and the Ohio Building, in which General Grant had his quarters while in Cairo. Also on Ohio Street was the famed, magnificent, five-storied St. Charles Hotel, the focus for not only reporters and visiting dignitaries, but for many important social functions for Cairo's elite citizens.


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Union Soldiers prepare a cannon at Fort Defiance in Cairo.

West of Ohio Street, along Halliday Street, a throng of saloons and bawdy houses served the military personnel until they were closed down by General John A. McLernand on October 11, 1861. Further west was Commercial Avenue which contained such old and established firms as Koehler's Gunshop, a drug store, the city's post office, the popular Atheneum Theater, plus a blacksmith and a harness shop. A block south of this site was the huge parade grounds.

Cairo quickly gained the attention of the entire country, drawing many reporters to observe the military build-up. The New York Times referred to Cairo as 'the Gibraltar of the West, along with a heavy chain of torpedoes stretched across the Mississippi." However, there is no evidence that such a chain existed and, if it did, it would have been a menace to all navigation and not only to the military.

England's famous novelist Anthony Trollope visited wartime Cairo in 1862, and wrote a dismal report on the city. He complained that "the inhabitants seemed to revel in dirt." "..the sheds of soldiers… bad, comfortless, damp and cold." He also crabbed about the hotel accommodations there, especially the bathroom facilities.

There are few recorded exceptions where incoming troops took a liking to Cairo. Most of these troop had an immediate dislike for their station, and in short time this dislike would grow into revulsion. Cairo's climate was humid, disease carrying mosquitoes and rats were everywhere and the tenderloin operators cheated and even robbed many of the soldiers. What really made things worst for the stationed soldiers were the periodic flooding of the town. Even it's levee defenses could not hold back the rising rivers and massive flooding. These floods decimated the town turning it's unpaved streets and the troop's bivouacs into a sea of mud. As one Wisconsin volunteer wrote, " I have witness hog pens that are palaces compared with our situation here." The only benefit to the abominable living conditions at Cairo was it encouraged Soldiers to train hard for an invasion of the South.

As one private reported, "..nothing would suit them better!" Scattered around Cairo were a variety of installations for the citizenry, as well as the military, including stables, a hospital and a wheelwright shop. A fort was constructed at the apex of the heart-shaped city that consisted of a flat-topped mound upon which were placed three 24-pound cannons and an 8-inch mortar. Contemporary drawings also reveal a command house and a ship's mast for the colors. This facility was first named 'Fort Prentiss , after the Union officer Benjamin Mayberry Prentiss, who had served honorably in the Mexican War. The name was later changed to "Fort Defiance" until the fort was dismantled after the war was over. Today the site is named Fort Defiance State Park.

Life at Camp Defiance was rigid but not intolerable. A regulation poster informed the troops that, after 8:00 PM., there would be no "loud singing, no cheering or firing arms.' Soldiers were urged to attend Sabbath services "in an orderly and Christian-like manner." Apparently food was no problem. There were plenty of G. I. provisions, and locally grown fruit was plentiful. One soldier wrote to his wife that peaches were for sale every day in camp and that he had spent most of his money buying the' fruit. He also wisely predicted a big battle soon to come in Kentucky.

The powerful installations at Cairo appeared to be more than enough to repel any marauding Confederate force from downriver. As an extra precaution against a force coming down the Ohio, two more batteries were placed along the levee to the north. Even more batteries were placed to the north on the Mississippi side, lest any threat come from that direction. With Cairo in strong Union hands, the Mississippi was made secure from its confluence with the Ohio to the north. In 1861, among Kentucky, Tennessee and Missouri, only Kentucky was a declared "neutral' and the truth of its neutrality seemed a variable. When President Lincoln called upon the governors of these states for troops, on April 15, all refused to mobilize men for the Union.

It was as if they were sitting on a political fence, marking time and waiting to see what direction even were taking. Meantime, Kentucky's Governor Magoffin, who later grudgingly declared his state neutral due to popular demand, declined to object when General Johnston established Rebel fortifications on Kentucky soil. These forts would soon be challenged not only by the thousands of troops assembling in Cairo, but by the flotilla of Yankee ironclad gunboats.

With the exception of regiments like the 42nd Wisconsin, whose war time station was at Cairo, and who's job was to keep the peace, regulate the movement of troops and supplies, hunt down deserters, and transfer prisoners north to Chicago, most troops stationed for a short time in Cairo and were en-route to the South to fight in the war. Most of these troops stationed at Cairo were from Illinois and a few were from the neighboring states of Wisconsin, Indiana, Iowa, and Ohio.

"If it is a crime to love the South, its cause and its President, then I am a criminal. I would rather lie down in this prison and die than leave it owing allegiance to a government such as yours." ~Belle Boyd~

42nd Wisconcin Infantry Regiment Site
 
Cairo (care-oh), Dawna, was a major point in US military movements during the WBTS. Today, it is a pass-through-without-stopping point on the Ohio/Mississippi junction. There is a park there, but have a tankful of gas and don't be hungry when you visit. Armpit doesn't begin to describe today's Cairo.
Ole
 
Thanks Dawna (and thank you Ole). I wasn't aware of the service record of the 42nd Wisconsin. Now I know the unit I'd join if I was in that war.
 

Thank you Dawna for the post. A friend of mine Gregg Briggs who is a great historian and a confederate Flag expert as well as the president of the Clarksville, Tn Civil war Roundtable will be open a tour service from Cairo to Clarksville.. Should be a very interesting tour as Gregg knows all area Civil war sites.

Regards, Steven
 
I particularly liked Ole's use of the term 'armpit'. He probably isn't far off on that one. Cairo was an ill-conceived project from the start. Mammals had problems surviving there because of the high water. I believe it was the home of the Singer sewing machine company a few railroads for a time and not too much else. The towns in Kentucky faired much better particulary in high water. None of these were very useful ports. A good central location, but mother nature just wouldn't cooperate. I was there a few months ago. Spectacular view off the highway bridges, but not much if any action.
 

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