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      eHistory  >  American Civil War  >  Battles  >  Jackson (MS) Search
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Jackson (MS) (1863)
 
War:   American Civil War
 
Date(s):   14 May 1863
 
Location:   Hinds & Jackson Counties, Mississippi, US
 
Outcome:   Union victory
 
Principal   Commanders:   Confederate: Joseph E. Johnston
Union: Ulysses S. Grant
 
Description:   Brig. Gen. John Gregg, CSA

Grant took two Corps against the equivalent of a strong division.

Union losses were a bit below 300, Confederate around 850.

On May 9, 1863, Gen. Joseph E. Johnston received a dispatch from the Confederate Secretary of War directing him to 'proceed at once to Mississippi and take chief command of the forces in the field.' As he arrived in Jackson on the 13th, from Middle Tennessee, he learned that two army corps from the Union Army of the Tennessee, the XV, under Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman, and the XVII, under Maj. Gen. James Birdseye McPherson, were advancing on Jackson, intending to cut the city and the railroads off from Vicksburg.

Johnston consulted with the local commander, Brig. Gen. John Gregg, and learned that only about 6,000 troops were available to defend the town. Johnston ordered the evacuation of Jackson, but Gregg was to defend Jackson until the evacuation was completed. By 10:00 am, both Union army corps were near Jackson and had engaged the enemy. Rain, Confederate resistance, and poor defenses prevented heavy fighting until around 11:00 am, when Union forces attacked in numbers and slowly but surely pushed the enemy back.

In mid-afternoon, Johnston informed Gregg that the evacuation was complete and that he should disengage and follow. Soon after, the Yankees entered Jackson and had a celebration, hosted by Maj. Gen. U.S. Grant who had been traveling with Sherman's corps, in the Bowman House. They then burned part of the town and cut the railroad connections with Vicksburg.

Johnston's evacuation of Jackson was a mistake because he could, by late on the 14th, have had 11,000 troops at his disposal and by the morning of the 15th, another 4,000. The fall of the former Mississippi state capital was a blow to Confederate morale.


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Selected sources:
American Battlefield Protection Program, Heritage Preservation Services, National Park Service.



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