Vicksburg Campaign | History, Significance, & Facts (2024)

American Civil War

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Article History

Vicksburg, Mississippi

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Date:
1862 - 1863
Location:
Mississippi
United States
Participants:
Confederate States of America
United States
Context:
American Civil War
Major Events:
Battle of Big Black River

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Vicksburg Campaign, (1862–63), in the American Civil War, the campaign by Union forces to take the Confederate stronghold of Vicksburg, Mississippi, which lay on the east bank of the Mississippi River, halfway between Memphis (north) and New Orleans (south). The capture of Vicksburg divided the Confederacy and proved the military genius of Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant.

After the spring of 1862, when the Confederates lost Fort Henry, Fort Donelson, and Memphis in Tennessee and New Orleans in Louisiana, Vicksburg became the key remaining point of their defense of the Mississippi River. The capture of Vicksburg would yield the North control of the entire course of the river and thus enable it to isolate those Confederate states that lay west of the river from those in the east. Vicksburg was ideally suited for defensive purposes, however: it was situated on high bluffs along the river and was protected on the north by a maze of swampy bayous. The Confederates’ batteries on the bluffs could outgun any Union ships on the river.

American Civil War Events

Battle of Fort SumterApril 12, 1861 - April 14, 1861 Shenandoah Valley campaignsJuly 1861 - March 1865 First Battle of Bull RunJuly 21, 1861 Vicksburg Campaign1862 - 1863 Mississippi Valley CampaignFebruary 1862 - July 1863 Battle of Fort DonelsonFebruary 13, 1862 - February 16, 1862 Battle of the Monitor and MerrimackMarch 9, 1862 Battle of ShilohApril 6, 1862 - April 7, 1862 Seven Days’ BattlesJune 25, 1862 - July 1, 1862 Second Battle of Bull RunAugust 29, 1862 - August 30, 1862 Battle of AntietamSeptember 17, 1862 Battle of FredericksburgDecember 13, 1862 Battle of ChancellorsvilleApril 30, 1863 - May 5, 1863 Battle of GettysburgJuly 1, 1863 - July 3, 1863 Second Battle of Fort WagnerJuly 18, 1863 Fort Pillow MassacreApril 12, 1864 Atlanta CampaignMay 1864 - September 1864 Battle of the WildernessMay 5, 1864 - May 7, 1864 Battle of Spotsylvania Court HouseMay 8, 1864 - May 19, 1864 Battle of Cold HarborMay 31, 1864 - June 12, 1864 Petersburg CampaignJune 1864 - April 9, 1865 Battle of MonocacyJuly 9, 1864 Battle of AtlantaJuly 22, 1864 Battle of the CraterJuly 30, 1864 Battle of Mobile BayAugust 5, 1864 - August 23, 1864 Battle of NashvilleDecember 15, 1864 - December 16, 1864 Battle of Five ForksApril 1, 1865 Battle of Appomattox Court HouseApril 9, 1865

A Union naval expedition using ironclads (May–June 1862) to subdue the Confederate batteries failed, as did an attempt to take the city by land from the north by Gen. William Tec*mseh Sherman (December 1862) and an attempt by Grant to cut a canal around Vicksburg that would divert the river (February–March 1863). After this string of frustrating failures, Grant conceived a bold move that would enable him to take the city using the high-ground approaches from the east, well behind Confederate lines. Moving his army of 40,000 troops to the west bank of the Mississippi, he marched south along it for a considerable distance until he could recross the river at Bruinsburg, which lay about 30 miles (48 km) south of Vicksburg. His army recrossed to the east bank of the river by means of a Union fleet, which, under the command of Adm. David D. Porter, had run south past the batteries at Vicksburg. Once across the river, Grant quickly began moving northeast, though this meant abandoning his already tenuous supply lines and feeding his troops off the surrounding enemy countryside. His forces took Port Gibson on May 2, reached Grand Gulf on May 3, and prevented the small Confederate army of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston near Jackson from linking up with the Vicksburg forces.

Vicksburg’s commander, Gen. John C. Pemberton, led his forces out in an effort to link up with Johnston but met Grant moving westward and was forced to return to the city. On May 18 Grant arrived in the rear of Vicksburg, within which Pemberton’s 30,000 troops were isolated. After two assaults in mid-May failed, Grant settled down to methodical siege tactics while augmenting his forces. He controlled all the approaches to the city, and by early June the Confederate garrison was desperately short of ammunition and on the brink of starvation. Pemberton surrendered the city on July 4.

The surrender of Vicksburg, with the victory at the Battle of Gettysburg the previous day (July 3), greatly heartened the North and in fact marked the turning point of the war.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Jeff Wallenfeldt.

Vicksburg Campaign | History, Significance, & Facts (2024)
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