Forces Union advance President Abraham Lincoln and Major General
Henry Halleck wanted a military campaign to plant the United States flag in Texas to counter the threat of the French-installed
Maximilian regime in Mexico. Over the objections of Major Generals Banks,
Ulysses S. Grant, and
William T. Sherman, the venture up the Red River was ordered and assigned to Banks. In mid-March, one 17,000-man column under Banks moved north on
Bayou Teche to meet a 10,000-strong column under Major General
Andrew Jackson Smith at Alexandria. A. J. Smith's troops were accompanied by Porter's gunboats and river transports in the Red River. Slowed by low water in the Red River, the Banks-Porter expedition finally reached
Natchitoches on April 2–3. On April 8, Banks' troops were routed by Taylor at the
Battle of Mansfield (Sabine Cross Roads) and compelled to retreat. Both armies were reinforced and on April 9, Taylor's attacks were repelled by Banks' army at the
Battle of Pleasant Hill. Taylor's superior, General
Edmund Kirby Smith reached the scene and decided to take Major General
John George Walker's and Brigadier General
Thomas James Churchill's divisions north to oppose a 15,000-man Union column coming from
Little Rock, Arkansas, under Major General
Frederick Steele. Kirby Smith left Taylor with only 5,200 troops to harass Banks' much larger army. Realizing that he could expect no help from Steele and required to return A. J. Smith's troops to Sherman, Banks decided to end the campaign and retreat.
Union retreat . On April 23, the Union army overcame a Confederate attempt to block its retreat at the
Battle of Monett's Ferry and reached Alexandria safely. Porter's fleet suffered some losses to Confederate artillery in the
action of 26–27 April 1864 and reached Alexandria, but his vessels proved unable to pass its rapids because of low water in the Red River. From May 4 to 13, Taylor's inferior force completely isolated the Banks-Porter expedition in
actions near Alexandria. Finally, a Union army engineer, Colonel
Joseph Bailey designed
Bailey's Dam which raised the water level enough to allow Porter's fleet to pass the rapids on May 13. On that day, Banks' army evacuated Alexandria and continued its retreat. On May 14–15, there were skirmishes at Wilson's Landing and
Marksville. Taylor tried unsuccessfully to block the Federal retreat at the
Battle of Mansura on May 16. On May 17, Banks' army crossed Bayou De Glaise and broke down the bridge spanning that stream. At
Moreauville, Wharton pressed back the Union cavalry
rearguard. When A. J. Smith's troops advanced to meet this threat, two cavalry regiments and an artillery battery led by Colonel
Xavier Debray ambushed the Federals. Opening enfilading fire from a concealed position in the woods, the Confederates killed some of Smith's men and took others prisoner. Simultaneously, Colonel
William O. Yager, leading his own regiment, the
1st Texas Cavalry, and the
2nd Louisiana Cavalry attacked the Union wagon train near Yellow Bayou. The wagon guard, Company E of the
92nd U.S. Colored Infantry, put up a spirited fight and the Confederates eventually fell back to Norwood's Plantation. Yager's men destroyed some wagons but were unable to remove any captured wagons because A. J. Smith's troops blocked the only road. ==Battle==