| James I., Gilbert is one of Iowa’s best officers. He is
a native of Kentucky, and was born about the year 1824. At the time of
entering the service, in the summer of 1862, he was a resident of Lansing, Iowa,
where he had had lived for about ten years. In Lansing, he has been
commission merchant, dealer in general merchandise, produce dealer, and lumber
merchant. At the time, or just before entering the service, he was a
proprietor of a livery stable, and a dealer in real estate. He was
commissioned colonel of the 27th Iowa on the 10th day of August 1862, and served
without special distinction till he joined General A. J. Smith on the Red River
Campaign, in the spring of 1864. His gallant conduct at Fort De Russy, and
through the whole campaign, and also before Nashville, nearly a year later,
secured his promotion to a general officer.
The 27th Iowa, which was rendezvoused in the city of Dubuque in
the months of August and September 1862, was made up of the “overplus of
companies over the 21st regiment in the northern part of the State.” In
the early part of October, Colonel Gilbert, with six companies of his regiment,
was assigned as an escort to guard a pay-master and train from Fort Snelling to
Mille Lacs. The balance of the regiment, under Major Howard, remained at
the fort. Early in November, Colonel Gilbert returned to Fort Snelling,
Minnesota, and soon proceeded to Memphis, via Cairo, Illinois. Major
George W. Howard with the balance of the regiment had already proceeded to that
point. He reached Memphis on the 20th of November, and one week later
joined Sherman in his march from that place to the Tallahatchie, below
Waterford. It will be remembered that this movement was made in
conjunction with that of General Grant through Central Mississippi, against
Vicksburg. The 27th Iowa marched only as far south as College Hill, near
Oxford. “The regiment was then ordered to Waterford, Mississippi, and
thence to the Tallahatchie River, where it first commenced to work as railroad
guards.”
When Van Dorn attacked and captured Holly Springs, the 27th
Iowa, with other troops was hurried to that vicinity; but the wily rebel having
destroyed the immense Federal supplies, made his escape. The march was
then continued northward, for the purpose of meeting and, if possible, of
capturing Forest, who was at the same time making his raid on the Jackson and
Columbus Railroad. The 27th arrived at Jackson on the 30th of December,
and the next day or night, Forest’s defeat at Parker’s Cross Roads and
subsequent flight have been learned, was marched by a circuitous route to
Clifton. The raiders however escaped. It was this raid of Forest, it
will be remembered, that so frightened General Davies at Columbus, and caused
him to order the destruction of government property at Island No. 10. The
march from Jackson to Clifton was the first fatiguing one the 27th Iowa had yet
made. More than one man of the regiment wished that night that he had
never entered the army.
From December, 1862, until the following August, the regiment
served in Southern Tennessee. It was stationed a principal portion of the
time on the Jackson and Columbus Railroad, with head-quarters at Jackson.
On the abandonment of Jackson and the railroad through to
Columbus, in the fore part of June, 1863, Colonel Gilbert was ordered down to
Moscow, where he remained with his regiment till the 20th of the following
August, guarding the railroad. But after the fall of Vicksburg, and the
defeat of General Johnson’s army at Jackson, Mississippi, the 27th with its
brigade was ordered to report to General Steele, who was then about starting on
the Little Rock Campaign. The brigade, composed of the 49th and 62nd
Illinois, the 27th Iowa and 50th Indiana, and commanded by Colonel J. M. True
succeeded in uniting with Steele in time to enter Little Rock with the main
army. With the routine of camp-life and picket-duty, the months of
September and October were passed at Little Rock, when, under orders from
General Steele, Colonel Gilbert reported back to Memphis in command of his own
regiment and the 49th Illinois. At Memphis a portion of the 27th was
assigned to duty at the Navy Yard, and the balance put on picket-duty in rear of
the city.
Up to this time, the 27th Iowa, as a regiment, had never met
the enemy in battle; but the time was now near at hand when it would afford new
proof of the intrepidity of Iowa soldiers. The regiment left Memphis for
Vicksburg on the 28th of July, 1864, whence, a week later, it left with General
Sherman on the celebrated March to Meridian.
At Memphis and just before leaving for Vicksburg, the 27th Iowa
was brigaded with the 14th and 32d Iowa and the 24th Missouri. These
troops constituted the 2d Brigade of the 3d Division, 16th Army Corps, which
afterward, under command of Colonel William T. Shaw of the 14th, so
distinguished itself in the Red River Expedition of General Banks. In the
Meridian march, it should be stated that the 27th Iowa went some six miles
further east than any other troops of Sherman’s command and in this advanced
position captured several prisoners.
The plan for the Red River Campaign had already been matured,
on the return of General Sherman to Vicksburg; and on the evening of the 10th of
April 1864, General A. J. Smith left with his expeditionary army for the mouth
of Red River, where he arrived in the evening following. The fleet of
Admiral Porter arriving that same evening, the expedition, on the morning of the
12th instant, sailed up the river, and in the afternoon arrived at Simmsport,
where the infantry forces disembarked. From this point, General Smith
marched with his command across the country to the rear of Fort DeRussy, while
Porter, with his gun-boat fleet, proceeded up the river. Near Simmsport a
small body of the enemy’s cavalry made their appearance; but they offered no
resistance to the advance; and on the evening of the second day the fort was
invested. Porter in the meantime had come up with his fleets, but for some
reason took no part in the engagement which followed. I have been told
that it was the crookedness of the river at this point, together with certain
obstructions, that prevented him from operating with the land forces.
Fort DeRussey, a formidable earth-work of the enemy on the
south-west side of the Red River and some four miles above the town of
Marksville, was built on a high point of land, about one hundred paces back from
the river, but connected with it by rifle-pits. On the south-west bank of
the river, was a six-gun water battery. The fort proper mounted but four
guns; two six-pounders commanded the open country south-west of the Fort; and
two thirty-two pounders covered the Marksville road and the approaches to the
south-east. On the north-west side of the fort was dense timber and
impassable swamps.
On the 14th day of March, the day of the capture of Fort
DeRussy, the 27th Iowa led the advance. Marksville, which is some thirty
miles distant from Simmsport, was reached at four o’clock in the afternoon; and
at this point Colonel Gilbert was ordered to halt his regiment to prevent
straggling in the town. He was kept in this position till all the troops
had passed, and until the dispositions for the attack had been nearly completed.
The 27th as a regiment had not yet been under fire, and, jealous of his own
reputation and that of his command, Colonel Gilbert dispatched his adjutant to
Colonel Shaw, with this request: “If there is to be any fighting, we want
to have a hand in it.” An order was finally returned for him to bring his
regiment forward; and he moved up and took position on the extreme right of the
assaulting forces. Two entire brigades charged on the fort, and Colonel
Shaw’s held the right. The line of battle was semi-circular, and, on the
right, was formed in the edge of timber and some two hundred and fifty yards
distant from the fort.
In front of the 2d Brigade (Colonel Shaw’s) was a ravine,
running nearly parallel with the enemy’s defenses; but, before this could be
reached, the entire line must pass under a severe musketry-fire from the fort
and the adjacent rifle-pits. After the reconnaissance had been completed,
during which time the fire from the fort had been responded to by the 3d Indiana
Battery, a general charge was ordered, when Colonel Gilbert, drawing his sword
and stepping to the front of his regiment said: “Boys, come on.”
“From that moment,” said a member of his regiment to me, “we knew he had the
true grit.” He was one of the first officers, if not the very first, to
enter the enemy’s works. If this was not a sanguinary affair, it was a
brilliant one, and augured well for the success of the future expedition.
The number of casualties of the 27th Iowa, in this engagement, I have failed to
learn.
It should be borne in mind that General Banks had not yet come
up from Franklin, Louisiana; nor did he come up till a week after the capture of
Alexandria; so that the credit incident to the capture of Fort DeRussey belongs
solely to General Smith and the troops of his command. On the morning of
the 15th instant, the 3d Division, have re-embarked on the fleet, moved up to
Alexandria, and that same evening the place was entered without opposition.
Here General Smith remained till the arrival of General Banks with his command,
consisting of portions of the 13th and 19th Army Corps.
From this point, General Banks marched through the country via
Natchitoches to Grand Ecore; but Smith, moving up to the head of the rapids,
above Alexandria, re-embarked and sailed up the river, arriving at Grand Ecore
at about the same time as did General Banks. On the 5th of April General
Banks marched for Shreveport by way of Mansfield road, and two days later was
followed by the command of General Smith; but the advance was soon to be turned
into a retreat; and neither the forces of Banks nor Smith was destined to see
even Mansfield. No considerable resistance was made to the advance till
near Natchitoches, and, to beat this back, no troops were required but the
cavalry; but beyond Pleasant Hill, and about thirty miles distant from
Natchitoches, the enemy showed so much resistance that it became necessary to
send forward a brigade of infantry.
The battle of Mansfield, or Sabine Cross Roads was fought on
the afternoon of the 8th of April, 1864, and that of Pleasant Hill on the
morning and evening of the 9th. The last was the one in which the 14th,
27th and 32nd Iowa Regiments so distinguished themselves. These troops,
together with the 24th Missouri, I believe impartial history will say, saved the
army of General Banks from disorganization and capture; for they were the only
troops that maintained their position throughout that terrible day—I mean, of
course, of those whose position was in the front. If this be not so, how
was it that their losses, in killed, wounded and missing, numbered nearly, if
not quite two-thirds of the casualties in Banks’ entire army. The position
held by the 27th in this engagement was the left centre of its brigade. On
its right was the 14th Iowa and on its left the 32d. Its right rested near
the Pleasant Hill and Mansfield road.
The conduct of Colonel Gilbert in this engagement, as at Fort
DeRussey, was gallant in the extreme. Through the anxious hours that
intervened between the first attack in the morning and the final fierce assaults
of the enemy in the afternoon, he was never idle, but talked with and cheered
his men. Skirmishing all this time was going on; and every moment closed
with the assurance that the next would open the fierce encounter. When the
conflict finally did open, he stood firm and confidant, using, when occasion
offered and his duties would permit, a musket against the advancing enemy.
Indeed, the colonel was wounded in this engagement, while in the act of shooting
a rebel officer. Many brave officers and men of the 27th Iowa were left
among the killed and wounded; their names I have failed to learn. One I
know—Sergeant George W. Griswold, a brave and faithful soldier. He was
wounded severely in the face, and left in hospital within the enemy’s lines.
A history of Banks Expedition after his unplucked victory at
Pleasant Hill will be found elsewhere. In the fatiguing and harassing
retreat to Simmsport, Smith’s Division covered the rear of Banks’ army.
Subsequently to the Red River Campaign, there has been little
rest for the 27th Iowa Infantry. It joined its division in driving Price
from Missouri; was with A. J. Smith at Nashville, and fought in those terrible
battles that closed only with the destruction of General Hood’s army; and
lastly, was with its old white-headed general before Blakely, where it led a
portion of the charging column that carried so brilliantly the strong-hold.
Now it has marched with its division into the interior of Alabama; but it will
probably see no more fighting.
After the battle of Nashville, Colonel Gilbert was made a
brigadier-general. Since that time, he has been in command of a brigade.
He is one of the most popular officers in his division.
Colonel Gilbert is six feet and one inch in height, and has a
broad chest, and an erect and tapering form. His hair, eyes, and
complexion are dark. He has a heavy voice, and is an energetic talker.
At home and among his acquaintances, he is “noted for his love of a fine
horse and riding out-fit. He thinks much of style in appearance.”
He is quick and active in his motions, and, in civil life, was
accustomed to decide the most important business transactions in a moment.
His opinions, of which he is very positive, he is always ready to back with a
bet; and his losses, of which he rarely has any, he pays promptly. As a
business man, he was not considered very fortunate, though he was never placed
in a position which prevented him from paying all legal demands against him.
Like several other Iowa officers, he is better adapted to the profession of arms
than to any other calling. I should not omit to state that, of the Iowa
generals, General Gilbert is the finest equestrian the State can boast, not even
excepting General Frederick Steele.
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