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Gettysburg (eBook)

The Turning Point in the Struggle between North and South
eBook Download: EPUB
2013
224 Seiten
Amber Books Ltd (Verlag)
978-1-78274-074-2 (ISBN)

Lese- und Medienproben

Gettysburg - Kevin J Dougherty
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In June 1863, General Robert E. Lee and the 75,000-strong Army of Northern Virginia launched a second invasion of the North, crossing into Maryland and Pennsylvania to try to win a decisive victory over Federal forces. On July 1, Lee's army encountered Major General Meade's 90,000 strong Army of the Potamac at the small town of Gettysburg. After some initial success in dispersing the Federal advance guard, Lee launched attack after attack against the main army, but everywhere the Union line held. On July 3, Lee ordered a final assault of 12,500 Confederates at the center of the Union line on Cemetery Ridge, known as Pickett's Charge. The charge was repulsed with huge loss of life, bringing the battle to an end. Today, Gettysburg is recognized as the turning point in the Civil War and one of the iconic battles of the great struggle between North and South. Lee's gamble didn't pay off, leaving the Army of Northern Virginia fatally weakened and unable to continue its invasion of the North. Gettysburg is divided into five chapters, outlining the campaign, the fighting on July 1, July 2, and July 3, as well as a chapter dealing with the aftermath; an extended appendices provides biographical background of the main Federal and Confederate leaders who fought in the battle. Through letters, journal entries, and official reports, the book includes numerous first-hand accounts from those who survived. Color maps show the battle as it unfolded over three days of fighting in places that have a place in Civil War legend: Seminary Ridge, Little Round Top, Cemetery Hill, Devil's Den, the Wheat Field, Culp's Hill, the Peach Orchard. Including more than 200 archival photographs, illustrations, paintings, and maps, Gettysburg is a colorful, accessible guide to the great battle that marked the turning point in the Civil War.
In June 1863, General Robert E. Lee and the 75,000-strong Army of Northern Virginia launched a second invasion of the North, crossing into Maryland and Pennsylvania to try to win a decisive victory over Federal forces. On July 1, Lee's army encountered Major General Meade's 90,000 strong Army of the Potamac at the small town of Gettysburg. After some initial success in dispersing the Federal advance guard, Lee launched attack after attack against the main army, but everywhere the Union line held. On July 3, Lee ordered a final assault of 12,500 Confederates at the center of the Union line on Cemetery Ridge, known as Pickett's Charge. The charge was repulsed with huge loss of life, bringing the battle to an end. Today, Gettysburg is recognized as the turning point in the Civil War and one of the iconic battles of the great struggle between North and South. Lee's gamble didn't pay off, leaving the Army of Northern Virginia fatally weakened and unable to continue its invasion of the North. Gettysburg is divided into five chapters, outlining the campaign, the fighting on July 1, July 2, and July 3, as well as a chapter dealing with the aftermath; an extended appendices provides biographical background of the main Federal and Confederate leaders who fought in the battle. Through letters, journal entries, and official reports, the book includes numerous first-hand accounts from those who survived. Color maps show the battle as it unfolded over three days of fighting in places that have a place in Civil War legend: Seminary Ridge, Little Round Top, Cemetery Hill, Devil's Den, the Wheat Field, Culp's Hill, the Peach Orchard. Including more than 200 archival photographs, illustrations, paintings, and maps, Gettysburg is a colorful, accessible guide to the great battle that marked the turning point in the Civil War.

The Campaign


The Gettysburg Campaign marked Lee’s second invasion of the North. It was risky in that it stretched the limited offensive capability of the Army of Northern Virginia and the already thinly distributed resources of the Confederacy, but it offered Lee the tantalizing possibility of a decisive victory.

Perhaps the most well-known battle of the Civil War, the Battle of Gettysburg was fought between General Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia and Major General George Meade’s Army of the Potomac. Gettysburg was Lee’s second invasion of the North and another effort to gain the decisive victory that would perhaps lead to European intervention or a negotiated peace. Instead, Meade defeated Lee in a three-day battle that forced Lee back into Virginia and eliminated the Army of Northern Virginia as a future offensive threat.

Joseph Hooker was in command of the Army of the Potomac at the beginning of the Gettysburg Campaign.

The Battle of Gettysburg was part of a larger campaign that began shortly after the Confederate victory at Chancellorsville (April 30-May 6, 1863). Campaigns are “a series of related major operations aimed at achieving strategic and operational objectives within a given time and space.” Battles are “a set of related engagements that lasts longer and involves larger forces than an engagement.” Engagements are “a tactical conflict, usually between opposing, lower echelon maneuver forces.”

The Battle of Chancellorsville left the Federal Army of the Potomac in a command crisis and the momentum with the Army of Northern Virginia.

The Gettysburg Campaign began when Lee initiated his move north on June 3. It ended on July 14 when the Army of Northern Virginia returned to Virginia. Within that campaign, the three days from July 1 to July 3 comprise the Battle of Gettysburg. Within that battle, a host of engagements occurred at places like Culp’s Hill, Devil’s Den, and Little Round Top.

At the same time Lee was contemplating his invasion of Pennsylvania, Confederate forces at Vicksburg were hard pressed. Ultimately John Pemberton (right) surrendered to Ulysses Grant (left) there.

The Campaign Takes Shape


On May 1, 1863 Lee launched an attack on Chancellorsville that dealt a devastating blow to Major General Joseph Hooker and the Army of the Potomac. Although the battle was a great victory for the Confederates, it proved to be a costly one with the loss of Lieutenant General Stonewall Jackson. Previously Lee had had two corps commanders with Jackson leading one corps and Lieutenant General James Longstreet leading the other. Each corps had some 30,000 men, and Lee felt that with Jackson gone there was no one commander who could replace him and manage a unit that large. Instead, Lee reorganized the Army of Northern Virginia into three corps. Longstreet would command one, Lieutenant General Dick Ewell would take Jackson’s old Second Corps, and Lieutenant General A. P. Hill would command the new Third Corps. Ewell and Hill had both served ably as division commanders, but it remained to be seen if they were up to the challenge of corps command.

Chancellorsville had left the Federal army of the Potomac reeling, and Lee proposed a second invasion of Northern territory to build on this momentum. Complicating such a move, however, was the fact that at the beginning of 1863, the Confederacy was faced with two completely different situations in the eastern and western theaters. The Confederate success in the east was reversed in the western theater where Major General Ulysses S. Grant posed a mounting threat to Lieutenant General John Pemberton’s beleaguered command at Vicksburg and the Confederacy’s ability to maintain some control over the strategically important Mississippi River.

On May 19, Secretary of War James Seddon, encouraged by the likes of Longstreet, General Pierre Goustave Toutant Beauregard, and Senator Louis Wigfall, asked Lee for his thoughts on sending one of his divisions west. For Lee, the discussion boiled down to “a question between Virginia and the Mississippi.”

Robert E. Lee’s impressive string of victories, including Fredericksburg as shown here, had brought him much prestige in the Confederacy and created much anxiety in the Union.

EXCERPT FROM “GENERAL JAMES LONGSTREET’S ACCOUNT OF THE CAMPAIGN AND BATTLE”

Passing through Richmond, I called to pay my respects to Mr. Seddon, the Secretary of War. Mr. Seddon was at the time of my visit deeply considering the critical condition of Pemberton’s army at Vicksburg, around which Gen. Grant was then decisively drawing his lines. He informed me that he had in contemplation a plan for concentrating a succoring army at Jackson, Miss., under the command of General Johnston, with a view of driving Grant from before Vicksburg by a direct issue at arms. He suggested that possibly my corps might be needed to make the army strong enough to handle Grant, and asked me my views. I replied that there was a better plan, in my judgment, for relieving Vicksburg than by a direct assault upon Grant. I proposed that the army then concentrating at Jackson, Miss., be moved swiftly to Tullahoma, where General Bragg was then located with a fine army, confronting an army of about equal strength, under General Rosecranz, and that at the same time the two divisions of my corps be hurried forward to the same point. The simultaneous arrival of these reinforcements would give us a grand army at Tullahoma. With this army General Johnston might speedily crush Rosecranz, and that he should then turn his force toward the north, and with his splendid army march through Tennessee and Kentucky, and threaten the invasion of Ohio. My idea was, that in the march through those States the army would meet no organized obstruction; would be supplied with provisions, and even reinforcements, by those friendly to our cause, and would inevitably result in drawing Grant’s army from Vicksburg to look after and protect his own territory. Mr. Seddon adhered to his original views; not so much, I think, from his great confidence in them as from the difficulty of withdrawing the force suggested from General Lee’s army.

Accidentally shot by one of his own men, Stonewall Jackson’s death at Chancellorsville cost Lee the irreplaceable services of his best corps commander and his right-hand man.

Indeed, Lee’s loyalties had always been first and foremost to Virginia. Shortly after resigning from the U.S. Army he said, “I devote myself to the service of my native state, in whose behalf alone, will I ever again draw my sword.” This loyalty had a profound influence on Lee’s strategic thinking and now an invasion into Northern territory would relieve some of the ravages Virginia had suffered as the principal battleground of the war.

There were others who looked to the western theater as being the more important theater. This “western bloc” advocated sending reinforcements from Virginia west to help Pemberton instead of mounting an offensive in the eastern theater. Lee countered these arguments, saying that an invasion of the North would cause such alarm that the Federals would be forced to divert their attention away from Vicksburg. It was a fairly tenuous assertion, but by this point in the war Lee had such enormous prestige that his opinions were hard to ignore. When Lee presented his plan to invade Northern territory to President Davis and his cabinet on May 15, 1863, Davis concurred and the question was settled.

President Jefferson Davis did not rely too heavily on the advice of his secretaries of war, including James Seddon who is shown here.

Plans for a Northern Invasion


The initiation of the Gettysburg Campaign can be traced to June 3, when Lee started moving his 89,000 men north from an assembly point at Culpeper, some 30 miles (50 km) northwest of Fredericksburg. Paying close attention to the security of his army and the secrecy of the move, Lee shifted two-thirds of his force to the northwest and past Hooker’s flank. Lee left Lieutenant General A. P. Hill’s corps entrenched around Fredericksburg, spread out to give the impression the entire army was still there. Lee also used Major General Jeb Stuart’s cavalry to hold the passes in the Blue Ridge and South mountains to screen the army’s advance and protect its supply line. Then Lee quietly began moving westward up the Shenandoah and Cumberland valleys.

EXCERPT FROM LEE’S LETTER TO HIS WIFE NOTING STUART’S REVIEW

CULPEPER
June 9, 1863

... I reviewed the cavalry in this section yesterday. It was a splendid sight. The men and horses looked well. They had recuperated since last fall. Stuart was in all his glory. The country here looks very green and pretty, notwithstanding the ravages of war. What a beautiful world God, in his loving kindness to his creatures, has given us. What a shame that men, endowed with reason and a knowledge of right, should mar his gifts.

Truly & affly yours
R. E. LEE

Hooker was still stinging from his defeat at Chancellorsville, and he proceeded cautiously given his uncertainty of the situation. After taking command of the army, Hooker had initiated several administrative reforms including a reorganization of the Bureau of Military Information under Colonel George Sharpe. The improvements in the Federal intelligence arm had been significant, and as early as May 27, Sharpe was reporting that “the...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 28.6.2013
Reihe/Serie Landscape History
Landscape History
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Sachbuch/Ratgeber Geschichte / Politik Allgemeines / Lexika
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Militärgeschichte
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung
Schlagworte Gettysburg
ISBN-10 1-78274-074-0 / 1782740740
ISBN-13 978-1-78274-074-2 / 9781782740742
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Dateiformat: EPUB (Electronic Publication)
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Systemvoraussetzungen:
PC/Mac: Mit einem PC oder Mac können Sie dieses eBook lesen. Sie benötigen dafür die kostenlose Software Adobe Digital Editions.
eReader: Dieses eBook kann mit (fast) allen eBook-Readern gelesen werden. Mit dem amazon-Kindle ist es aber nicht kompatibel.
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