Early during the war, the Confederacy was the necessity for defending against a Union invasion of the south by way of the Mississippi River.. Fort Pillow was one of several fortifications constructed on the river as part of a river defense system. The fort was build on Chickasaw Bluff No. 1 overlooking the river, Batteries of cannon were also constructed facing the river. An extensive system of breast works was dug for the protection of the river batteries in case of land attack. During the war the fort’s river batteries were close to the river, but since the war erosion factors have caused the river to move a mile west.
The Union Navy did launch an invasion on the river. Following the fall of Island No. 10 and other Confederate losses to the north and east of Fort Pillow, the main U.S. Navy flotilla on the Mississippi River proceeded to work its way down river. On May 10, 1862, they met the Confederate River Defense Fleet in the naval battle of Plum Point Bend, within sight of Fort Pillow. The Confederate gunboats were victorious, but the Union gunboats were soon able to proceed down river and attack Memphis a month later.
During the spring and early summer of 1862 the Union Navy bombarded Fort Pillow from its mortar boats. Few casualties resulted, but with the increasing danger of being cut off from the main army, the Confederate Army evacuated Fort Pillow in June of 1862. Union forces immediately occupied the fort and held it for almost two years.
On April 12, 1864, Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest and approximately 1500 Confederate soldiers attacked Fort Pillow. The Union garrison commanded by Major Lionel F. Booth was manned by approximately 550 soldiers; almost half were black troops. Major Booth was killed early in the day and Major William F. Bradford took command. The Confederate Army was able to gain a commanding position on the field of battle. General Forrest asked for surrender, which Major Bradford refused. The Confederate Army then stormed the fort and easily won the battle. After April 12, 1864, neither Union or Confederate forces occupied Fort Pillow. Because of high Union casualties and the presence of black Union troops, controversy surrounding this battle still exists today.
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