From This Valley They Say You Are Leaving
by
Book Details
About the Book
The bastions of Port Hudson and Vicksburg on the
Mississippi River having fallen to Union forces, and the Confederacy being cut
in half. Congress began to fulminate
for a westward campaign to return Texas to the Union. The Union Admiral Farrigut dreamed up a combined campaign,
up the Red River. with the Army on land and the Navy (in river gunboats)
keeping abrest of the land force.
Having set into motion this scheme it was followed. Though defeated once the Union land force
advanced up river from Alexandria, Louisiana while the Navy steamed abrest but
on the river. Once past the falls at
Alexandria the Federal gunboats upstream of the falls would have to wait until
the river level before there was sufficient depth of water to allow the
gunboats to move downstream. The Union
Navy was trapped in the river.
It was then that President Lincoln ordered the Union
forces to quit the river so that the forces freed from the Red River Campaign
could be Used to fight the Confederates elsewhere. But the order could not be obeyed for there was not enough water
in the river to float the gunboats. An
ingenious civil engineer. Joseph Bailey designed a dam (wing walls protruding
from each bank, but not meeting) which dam had as its purpose to raise the
level of the river. With plenty of
strong hands at his disposal the structures were built and were awaiting an
auspicious moment to move the fleet when one of the wing walls broke. As the water began to rush through the break
the trapped Union gunboats rushed along with the water and safely passed the
falls. Once downstream of the
previous impedance the Union Navy and Army hastily beat a retreat to the
Mississippi. The famed Red River
Campaign had ended with neither side the better nor the worse. But the campaign had made one hero: the
engineer Joseph Bailey, who became a General officer as reward for his
exploits.
About the Author
Benjamin S. Persons is a consulting civil engineer
and geologist in Atlanta, Georgia. An
ROTC student from the Georgia Military Academy and Georgia Institute of
Technology he was commissioned a Second Lieutenant of Infantry at 19. During
World War II he served through activation and training as an anti-tank platoon
leader in the 42nd Infantry (Rainbow) Division. Before the Division departed for France, Persons transferred to
the Division Engineers.
In combat in France, Germany and Austria, he led an
Engineer platoon attached to the 2nd Battalion of the 232nd Infantry. He was awarded the Bronze and the Silver
Stars. After the war, in occupation, he
was the S-3 of an Engineer combat group in Austria.
Returning to the Georgia Institute of Technology,
Persons received his degree in civil engineering and entered the practice with
Dames & Moore in California. He
later worked in Illinois and established the firm's engineering practice in the
Southeast and then managed the firm's offices in Australia and the Pacific. Captain Persons has worked extensively in
North America, Central America, Africa, and the Pacific. As an inactive Reserve Engineer officer in
the United States Public Health Service he has seen engineering duty on the
Navajo, Hopi, Ogalala Sioux, Northern Cheyenne, Blackfeet, Crow, Santo Domingo,
San ildefonso, Gros Vente, and Assinibone Reservations. He has received the Unit Commendation for an
innovative revision of the foundation design for the Crow Reservation Hospital
in Montana. He is a member of the
Geology Board of Georgia.
Persons has written of his boyhood for a weekly
newspaper in Georgia and has written the definitive work
LATERITE,GENESIS,LOCATION,USE,(Plenum 1970) and the historical books RELIEVED
OF COMMAND (Sunflower University Press 1997) and COURT OF INQUIRY (Sunflower
University Press,2001).
He hunts upland game and waterfowl and is a fresh-
and saltwater boater at home and abroad.