Meanwhile Banks' army trailed into Alexandria between April 24 and 26. With Banks' army and most of the river fleet ahead of him at Alexandria, it was imperative for Porter to get his last few vessels to safety. Leaving the wreck of the
Eastport behind them, the
Cricket, the tinclad , the gunboat , and the two pump boats proceeded downstream without incident. However, on April 26 at the confluence of the Red and
Cane Rivers, Porter's gunboats ran into a Confederate ambush consisting of 200 men from
Lieutenant Colonel John H. Caudle's
34th Texas Cavalry Regiment, dismounted as infantry, and
Captain Florian Cornay's
Louisiana Battery (two
12-pounder Napoleons and two
12-pounder howitzers). The
Cricket was hit 38 times by artillery rounds and lost 12 killed and 19 wounded. After the
Cricket lost headway, the Confederate gunners shifted fire to other targets. Porter was able to get the vessel moving again and it managed to limp downstream. The 190 men aboard the
Champion No. 3, mostly African-American refugees, suffered a ghastly fate. A Confederate shot penetrated the boiler, engulfing the vessel in scalding steam; by the next day, all but 3 men died from their injuries. The vessel drifted into the riverbank to be seized by the Confederates. Next, the
Juliet was disabled, but it managed to escape upstream, towed by the
Champion No. 5, while the
Fort Hindman provided covering fire. Taylor reported only 1 wounded and Captain Cornay killed. On April 27, the
Juliet and
Fort Hindman, lashed together, tried to run past the battery. They were both hit repeatedly, disabled, and separated, but by good luck, the current carried them downstream past the battery without grounding. Meanwhile, the
Champion No. 5 was badly damaged and captured. The crew of the
Juliet lost 15 killed and wounded while the
Fort Hindman sustained 7 casualties. Also on April 27, Porter in the
Cricket found the gunboat and the
monitor downstream near Deloach's Bluff. The two vessels had engaged sections of Captain T. D. Nettles'
Val Verde Texas Battery and
Captain Thomas O. Benton's Louisiana Battery. The
Osage escorted the crippled
Juliet and
Fort Hindman while the
Lexington escorted the
Cricket safely to Alexandria. ==Aftermath==