Duckport Canal
The Duckport Canal was an unsuccessful military venture by Union forces during the Vicksburg campaign of the American Civil War. Ordered built in late March 1863 by Major General Ulysses S. Grant, the canal stretched from the Mississippi River near Duckport, Louisiana, to New Carthage, Louisiana, and utilized a series of swampy bayous for much of its path. It was intended to provide a water-based supply route for a southward movement against the Confederate-held city of Vicksburg, Mississippi, as high water levels made overland travel difficult. Manual digging was provided by 3,500 soldiers from Grant's army and was finished on April 12. The next day, the levee separating the canal cut and the Mississippi River was breached, and water flowed into the canal. Trees that had grown up in the bayous and falling water levels that reached as shallow as at one point hampered the use of the canal, and the project was abandoned on May 4. Grant moved men and supplies through the overland route, which had been made more accessible by the same falling water levels that doomed the canal. After some inland maneuvering and a lengthy siege, Vicksburg surrendered on July 4, marking a significant turning point in the war.
Background
During the opening days of the American Civil War in 1861, the Anaconda Plan to defeat the Confederate States of America was developed by Commanding General of [the United States Army] Winfield Scott. A key component of the Anaconda Plan was controlling the Mississippi River, which would cut the Confederacy in two as well as provide an outlet for American goods to be exported. In early 1862, Union forces captured New Orleans, and Union Navy elements moved upriver to Confederate-held Vicksburg, Mississippi. Vicksburg was the last Confederate position remaining on the Mississippi River at this time. Union vessels bombarded the city beginning in late May, but were unable to force it into submission. A joint army-navy force moved against the city again in June. Union infantry began construction on what became known as Grant's Canal in hopes of creating a waterway that would bypass Vicksburg, but the project was abandoned in late July. In August, Confederate troops occupied and fortified a second point on the Mississippi River at Port Hudson, Louisiana, south of Vicksburg.Beginning in late November, Union forces led by Major General Ulysses S. Grant advanced overland on Vicksburg from the north, but were forced to retreat after their supply lines were wrecked by Confederate cavalry. Another prong led by Major General William T. Sherman traveled down the Mississippi River closer to Vicksburg before attacking, but was repulsed at the Battle of Chickasaw Bayou. Grant again took command of efforts against the city in January 1863, troops having arrived in the area by then. Confederate defenses of the city were too strong for a direct assault, the ground north of Vicksburg would greatly hamper maneuvers, and retreating north to begin another overland campaign would be considered a retreat by the general public. Work on the old Grant's Canal resumed that month, but the project was fraught with difficulties and was abandoned in March as unsuccessful. Work began on another canal at Lake Providence known as the Lake Providence Canal in February. This canal was delayed by flooding after the levee separating the Mississippi River and the lake was breached, and was eventually abandoned in late March, as Grant shifted his focus to other plans; it had also seen difficulties with trees blocking the channel. Two attempts to weave through the waterways around the city, the Yazoo Pass Expedition and the Steele's Bayou Expedition, also failed.
Canal
Grant decided on March 27 to inquire about the potential of another canal. The idea was to cut a canal from the Mississippi River near Duckport, Louisiana, to eventually connect with Walnut Bayou, creating a waterway to New Carthage, Louisiana. The proposed passage was surveyed by United States Army Corps of Engineers officer John W. Cornyn and 300 men. On March 29, Grant ordered troops to march down the west side of the Mississippi River to New Carthage; the Duckport Canal could be used to run a supply line from Milliken's Bend, Louisiana, down to New Carthage as the single road to New Carthage was unreliable due to high water levels. A canal along the path could particularly be used to supply Union troops marching overland to New Carthage.Historian Donald L. Miller describes the path of the canal as going from the Mississippi River into Walnut Bayou and then Roundaway Bayou, re-entering the Mississippi River near New Carthage; historians John D. Winters and Terry L. Jones state that the path would go from the Mississippi River into Big Bayou, then Willow Bayou, then Roundaway Bayou, and then Bayou Vidal before re-entering the Mississippi River at New Carthage. The historian Timothy B. Smith describes the path as going from the Mississippi River to Walnut Bayou, which met Roundaway Bayou at Richmond, Louisiana. Roundaway Bayou then met Bayou Vidal a few miles from New Carthage. Several trees had grown up in these swampy bayous and would need to be cleared out before the waterways could be used. Writer Shelby Foote suggests that Grant had "no great hope that much would come of the enterprise", as only light-draft ships would be able to go through the canal. Union officer Lucius Hubbard also noted that the project was "undertaken with a somewhat subdued enthusiasm".
According to historian Terry Winschel, the cut itself was to be long and then enter Walnut Bayou at Cooper's Plantation. Miller gives the distance of the cut as from the Mississippi to Walnut Bayou. Engineer David F. Bastian states that the length of the cut was, and Winters and Jones give a distance of. A work co-authored by Winschel and historian William L. Shea states that the initial canal was long and was then connected via of obscure streams to Walnut Bayou. Historian Ed Bearss states that the distance between Big Bayou and the Mississippi River was, and that Cornyn, upon his initial inspection, estimated that a total cut of would be required to get from the Mississippi River into Willow Bayou, as Big Bayou was badly obstructed. He also notes that a further would be required to reach Roundaway Bayou. Winters and Jones state that the canal width vertically tapered from to at the bottom depth of ; Bastian, Winschel, and Bearss state that it was deep and wide. The overall distance between the entrance to the canal cut and its ending point was according to Bastian and Winters and "nearly long" according to Jones.
Digging for the canal began on March 31. Colonel George G. Pride led the work party, with Captain F. E. Prime providing assistance. Lieutenant William Le Baron Jenney was in charge of some engineering aspects. The canal work force was initially 1,000 soldiers, but this was increased to 3,500, with others at work further down the bayou system. Some of the workers came from Bissell's Engineer Regiment. The men working on the canal gave it the nickname "Pride's Ditch". The soldiers' daily work routine was to leave for the canal site at 7:30 am and start to return to camp at 6:00 pm. The workers were disturbed by fewer insects than expected and lived well off of the food available in the area. Venomous snakes falling from overhanging branches onto the soldiers' rafts remained an issue. Work on the canal was about halfway completed by April 6, and was mostly done by April 11. Manual digging was completed the next day, and the levee holding back the Mississippi was cut on April 13. At the time the levee was cut, the obstructions had been cleared to within of Richmond, Louisiana. Four dredges were brought in to deepen the channel, having been taken from the work on Grant's Canal. More soldiers worked to clear stumps and trees. Swing saws placed on rafts were used to cut underwater trees.
After the levee was cut, Pride estimated that only four more days of work were needed, although it was noted that the water in the bayous was rising slower than expected. When the transport Silver Wave entered the lower end of Bayou Vidal on April 18 to scout the pathway, she was unable to do so due to low water and trees. Grant inspected the canal that day, which also saw the level of the Mississippi River begin to fall. Four days later, a tugboat entered the bayous via the cut at the upper end of the canal. Tree and stump clearing continued through April 23. The Mississippi River dropped in a matter of days, and there was soon only of water in part of the canal. The project was abandoned on May 4. The tugboat Victor was the only ship to successfully make it all the way to New Carthage through the canal. Two of the dredges and 20 other boats became grounded in the mud, where they were left to rot.