Plan Worried about
Maximilian's
Second French intervention in Mexico, President
Abraham Lincoln desired military operations to establish United States control over some part of
Texas. Over the opposition of
Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant, and
Major Generals
William T. Sherman and
Nathaniel P. Banks, Lincoln and Major General
Henry Halleck drew up a plan to use the
Red River as an invasion corridor. As commander of the
Department of the Gulf, Banks was instructed to coordinate operations with Major General
Frederick Steele in
Arkansas and Sherman. The plan that emerged was for Banks with 17,000 troops to move up
Bayou Teche and link up at
Alexandria, Louisiana, on March 17, with 10,000 troops borrowed from Sherman's
Military Division of the Mississippi. From there, the combined force would ascend the Red River toward Shreveport. Meanwhile, Steele with 15,000 was supposed to move south from
Little Rock, Arkansas, and rendezvous with Banks at either Shreveport, Alexandria, or
Natchitoches, Louisiana. Steele's column got underway so late that it fought a separate series of actions.
Forces General
Edmund Kirby Smith's
Trans-Mississippi Department had 30,000 Confederate soldiers evenly distributed in three bodies. These were led by Richard Taylor in Louisiana, Major General
John B. Magruder on the Texas coast, and Lieutenant General
Theophilus H. Holmes near
Camden, Arkansas. Taylor had Major General
John George Walker's infantry division (3 brigades) at
Marksville, Louisiana and Brigadier General
Alfred Mouton's infantry division (2 brigades) on the Red River below Alexandria. Vincent's
2nd Louisiana Cavalry Regiment was posted at
Vermilionville on Bayou Teche, except for three companies with Walker. Brigadier General
Thomas Green's cavalry was coming from Texas and would not reinforce Taylor until the first week of April. On March 10, 1864, the 10,000-man force contributed by Sherman departed from
Vicksburg, Mississippi in river transports. It was led by Brigadier General
A. J. Smith and accompanied by 13 ironclads and 7 light-draft gunboats commanded by
Rear Admiral David Dixon Porter. There were Mower's two divisions from the
XVI Corps and one 1,700-man division from the
XVII Corps under Brigadier General
T. Kilby Smith. Banks' force included Brigadier General
Thomas E. G. Ransom's two divisions from the
XIII Corps (4,800 men), Major General
William B. Franklin's two divisions from the
XIX Corps (10,500 men), and a cavalry division led by Brigadier General
Albert Lindley Lee (4,600 men). Banks also had a 1,500-strong brigade of African-American soldiers led by Colonel W. H. Dickey that was made up of the
73rd US, 75th US, 84th US, and 92nd US Colored Infantry Regiments.
Operations Porter's gunboat fleet entered the mouth of the Red River on March 12, 1864, and landed A. J. Smith's corps at
Simmesport, Louisiana, the following day.
Walker's division, which was covering the area between Simmesport and
Opelousas, immediately withdrew behind Bayou Boeuf where it could defend Alexandria. On March 14, in the
Battle of Fort DeRussy, A. J. Smith's troops assaulted and captured the fort. For a cost of 34 Union casualties, 260 Confederate prisoners, 8 heavy cannon, and 2 field guns fell into Federal hands. At the same time, Porter's fleet broke through obstructions in the river and steamed upstream, reaching Alexandria on March 15. The next day, Alexandria was occupied by Kilby Smith's division which disembarked from river transports. Taylor withdrew Walker's division and recalled Mouton's division from north of the Red River. A. J. Smith followed and his forces were established in Alexandria by March 18. On March 18, Taylor concentrated the divisions of Walker and Mouton at Carroll Jones' plantation which was located northwest of Alexandria. Taylor's force numbered 5,300 infantry, 500 cavalry, and 300 artillery. Meanwhile, Banks missed the March 17 date for the rendezvous with A. J. Smith. Banks' tardy column, which was commanded by Franklin, moved north along Bayou Teche via Opelousas, and was delayed by bad weather. Lee's cavalry division reached Alexandria on March 19, but Franklin's infantry and artillery did not arrive until March 25–26. However, the water level in the Red River was still too low, and it would not be until April 3 that Porter's 13 gunboats and 30 river transports were able to get upstream past the rapids at Alexandria. == Battle ==