Major General Henry W. Halleck saw merit in the pre-war plans of the then Union general in chief, Winfield Scott. Halleck expected a Southern counter attack on General Grant's army at Pittsburg Landing. As the Union's commander in the Western Theater, he ordered the forces of General Buell to move down the Tennessee River and reinforce Grant. Anxious to control the Mississippi River, Halleck did not concentrate his entire force on the Tennessee River. Halleck kept General John Pope and an army of 25,000 troops west of the Mississippi, working with the Union navy, to capture Confederate strongholds there. He therefore, by his actions, agreed with Scott's idea of using the Mississippi River as a control point to keep as many Confederate forces as possible separated from each other.
The post of General-in-Chief was held by Winfield Scott, George McClellan, Henry Halleck and Ulysses Grant.
When the siege of Vicksburg ended, General in Chief Henry W. Halleck planned on using the control of the Mississippi River as the base for future operations. Halleck was then in the position to exploit his new advantage with interior lines. He planned on using concentrations first in the West of the Mississippi River then east of it.
Under the cover of darkness, Confederate forces evacuated Corinth, Mississippi. As a result Halleck was able to break the Memphis and Charleston railway.
On June 10, 1862, Major General Buell left Corinth Mississippi and marched his army towards Chattanooga, Tennessee. He was following the orders of Major General Halleck.
General Halleck was General US Grants superior officer at the time of the Battle of Shiloh. Grant's failure to entrench his army upon landing at Pittsburg Landing was a major error that could have caused a Federal defeat. Halleck was infuriated and took control of Grant's army and led it to Corinth, Mississippi.
US President Lincoln had faith in the abilities of General Henry W. Halleck. Lincoln created a new Department of the Mississippi. This was a large area and made Halleck the top general in the West.
The post of General-in-Chief of the Union armies was held by: Winfield Scott George McLellan Henry Halleck U.S. Grant
The post of General-in-Chief was held by Winfield Scott, George McClellan, Henry Halleck and Ulysses Grant.
The General-in-Chief at the outbreak of war was Winfield Scott, followed by George McLellan, [short interval, then] Henry Halleck, and finally Ulysses Grant.
The Union General-in-Chief who brought final victory was U.S. Grant. Before that, the job had been held (in this order) by Winfield Scott, George McClellan and Henry Halleck.
When the siege of Vicksburg ended, General in Chief Henry W. Halleck planned on using the control of the Mississippi River as the base for future operations. Halleck was then in the position to exploit his new advantage with interior lines. He planned on using concentrations first in the West of the Mississippi River then east of it.
Under the cover of darkness, Confederate forces evacuated Corinth, Mississippi. As a result Halleck was able to break the Memphis and Charleston railway.
General in Chief George B. McClellan appointed General Henry Wager Halleck to lead the new Department of the West on November 9, 1861. McClellan wanted Halleck to straighten out the mess left behind by General Fremont. He also wanted Halleck to fortify various central parts of Missouri and to create a concentration of troops near the Mississippi River.
Winfield Scott Henry Halleck Ulysses S. Grant
The post of Union General-in-Chief was held successively by Winfield Scott, George McClellan, Henry Halleck and Ulysses S. Grant.
General Halleck was General US Grants superior officer at the time of the Battle of Shiloh. Grant's failure to entrench his army upon landing at Pittsburg Landing was a major error that could have caused a Federal defeat. Halleck was infuriated and took control of Grant's army and led it to Corinth, Mississippi.
On June 10, 1862, Major General Buell left Corinth Mississippi and marched his army towards Chattanooga, Tennessee. He was following the orders of Major General Halleck.