
This Week In
Quartermaster History
25-31 March
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When
Union forces under General Ulysses S. Grant failed in their initial attempts to capture
Lees Confederate stronghold at Petersburg, Virginia, 25 miles south of Richmond, in
the spring of 1864, the two sides found themselves locked in a prolonged siege operation. Brigadier General Rufus Ingalls, Chief Quartermaster for the Army of the Potomac, selected nearby City Point -- strategically located at the confluence of the James and Appomattox Rivers -- as the main forward supply depot. Some 200-250 ships began arriving daily. And overnight this obscure, backwater bluff-town was transformed into one of the busiest ports in the world. More than a mile and a half of wharves were built, along with scores of new buildings and warehouses. A railroad terminal with 25 engines and 275 boxcars, and thousands of mule-drawn wagons, stood ready to transport 1,500 tons of supplies off-loaded daily to the siege-lines at Petersburg eight miles away. On 24 March 1865 President Lincoln toured City Point Depot and saw firsthand the endless flood of supplies, food, weapons, arms, and equipment -- the sinews of war that made Grants victory possible. With the end in sight, Appomattox was but a short two weeks away. |
Compiled by the
U.S. Army Quartermaster Corps Historian
Fort Lee, Virginia