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-Project Gutenberg's The Battle of Gettysburg, by William C. Storrick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: The Battle of Gettysburg
- The Country, The Contestants, The Results
-
-Author: William C. Storrick
-
-Release Date: November 20, 2015 [EBook #50504]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- Foreword 3
- Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address 4
- The Battle of Gettysburg 5-10
- Location of the Armies. General Lee’s Plan. Lee’s First Movement.
- Hooker’s Plan. The Appointment of Meade. Advance of Lee.
- Meade’s Movement. Stuart’s Movement. Situation of
- Confederate Forces on June 30th. Situation of Union Forces
- on June 30th. The Approach.
- The First Day 11-17
- Arrival of Reynolds. Death of Reynolds. A Morning Lull. Arrival of
- Rodes and Early. The Opposing Lines. Arrival of Howard.
- Howard’s Position. The Confederate General Early’s
- Position. The Union Retreat. Arrival of Lee. Formation of
- Union Line. General Lee’s Report.
- First Day Highlights 17-22
- Death of Major-General Reynolds. The 26th Emergency Regiment. The
- First Soldier Killed at Gettysburg. A Mysterious Letter.
- The Flag of the 16th Maine. The Barlow-Gordon Incident.
- General Ewell Is Hit by a Bullet. The School Teachers’
- Regiment. An Incident of the First Day.
- The Second Day 23-31
- The Union Line of Battle. Confederate Line of Battle. Sickles’
- Change of Line. General Lee’s Plan. Little Round Top. The
- Peach Orchard and the Wheatfield. Ewell’s Attack on
- Meade’s Right. Situation at End of the Second Day.
- Incidents of the Second Day 32-36
- The Roger House. Spangler’s Spring. Colonel Avery’s Lost Grave.
- The Leister House. The Louisiana Tigers. General Meade’s
- “Baldy.” General Lee’s “Traveller.”
- The Third Day 37-51
- Second Battle at Culp’s Hill. Meade’s Line of the Third Day. Lee’s
- Line of the Third Day. The Bliss Buildings. The Artillery
- Duel. Pickett’s Charge. The Advance. Engagements on the
- Union Left. The Cavalry Fight on the Right Flank. The
- Location. General Stuart’s Plan. General Gregg’s Report.
- Lee’s Retreat. No Pursuit by Meade. The Gettysburg
- Carriage.
- Happenings on the Third Day 51-58
- A Medal for Disobedience. The Wentz House. Fought with a Hatchet.
- After the Battle. An Honest Man. Extracts from the Diary
- of Colonel Fremantle.
- Gettysburg and Its Military Park 59-70
- The Soldiers’ National Cemetery 70-71
- Lincoln at Gettysburg 72-75
- Bibliography 76
- Organization of the Army of the Potomac 77-79
- Organization of the Army of Northern Virginia 79-80
-
- Copyright, 1935, by J. Horace McFarland Company
-
-
-
-
- THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG
- _The Country
- The Contestants
- The Results_
-
-
- BY
- W. C. STORRICK, Litt.D.
- Retired Superintendent of Guides. For Twenty Years Connected with the
- Gettysburg National Park Commission
-
- _First edition, 1931_
- _Second edition, 1935_
- _Third edition, 1938_
- _Fourth edition, 1944_
- _Fifth edition, 1945_
- _Sixth edition, 1946_
- _Seventh edition, 1946_
- _Eighth edition, 1947_
- _Ninth edition, 1949_
- _Tenth edition, 1949_
- _Eleventh edition, 1951_
- _Twelfth edition, 1951_
- _Thirteenth edition, 1953_
- _Fourteenth edition, 1954_
- _Fifteenth edition, 1955_
- _Sixteenth edition, 1956_
- _Seventeenth edition, 1957_
- _Eighteenth edition, 1959_
- _Nineteenth edition, 1959_
- _Twentieth edition, 1961_
- _Twenty-first edition, 1962_
- _Twenty-second edition, 1965_
- _Twenty-third edition, 1966_
- _Twenty-fourth edition, 1969_
-
- HARRISBURG, PA.
- THE McFARLAND COMPANY
- 1969
-
- [Illustration: Map of the
- GETTYSBURG CAMPAIGN
- Map showing country through which the armies approached Gettysburg]
-
-
-
-
- FOREWORD
-
-
-No one is better fitted to describe the Battle of Gettysburg and the
-National Park established on its site than Mr. William C. Storrick. Born
-a short distance from the field, he was seven years old at the time of
-the battle. He remembers the flight from home as the army drew near; he
-remembers also the return to a house which had been occupied by troops.
-Still more distinctly he recalls going to Gettysburg on November 19,
-standing with his hand clasped in his father’s, watching a doorway from
-which the President of the United States was shortly to appear. He shook
-hands with Lincoln, was awed by his great height, and listened eagerly
-to his plain and simple address.
-
-For more than twenty years Mr. Storrick was connected with the
-Battlefield Commission, first in charge of the farms, then of the guide
-service as well. The history of the campaign which forms a part of this
-volume was prepared at the request of the War Department.
-
-There is no corner of the field which Mr. Storrick does not know; there
-is no detail of its history which he has not studied; there is no
-disputed question of which he cannot give both sides. His clear and
-uncontroversial account of the battle is but an outline of his store of
-information upon which he plans to draw more largely in a volume of
-greater scope.
-
- ELSIE SINGMASTER LEWARS.
-
-
-
-
- THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS
- ·XIX NOVEMBER·MDCCCLXIII·
- ★
-
-
-FOURSCORE & SEVEN YEARS AGO OUR FATHERS BROUGHT FORTH ON THIS CONTINENT
-A NEW NATION·CONCEIVED IN LIBERTY·AND DEDICATED TO THE PROPOSITION THAT
-ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL·
-
-NOW WE ARE ENGAGED IN A GREAT CIVIL WAR·TESTING WHETHER THAT NATION·OR
-ANY NATION SO CONCEIVED AND SO DEDICATED·CAN LONG ENDURE·WE ARE MET ON A
-GREAT BATTLE-FIELD OF THAT WAR·WE HAVE COME TO DEDICATE A PORTION OF
-THAT FIELD AS A FINAL RESTING PLACE FOR THOSE WHO HERE GAVE THEIR LIVES
-THAT THAT NATION MIGHT LIVE·IT IS ALTOGETHER FITTING & PROPER THAT WE
-SHOULD DO THIS·
-
-BUT·IN LARGER SENSE·WE CANNOT DEDICATE—WE CANNOT CONSECRATE—WE CANNOT
-HALLOW—THIS GROUND· THE BRAVE MEN·LIVING AND DEAD·WHO STRUGGLED HERE
-HAVE CONSECRATED IT FAR ABOVE OUR POOR POWER TO ADD OR DETRACT·THE WORLD
-WILL LITTLE NOTE NOR LONG REMEMBER WHAT WE SAY HERE·BUT IT CAN NEVER
-FORGET WHAT THEY DID HERE·IT IS FOR US·THE LIVING·RATHER· TO BE
-DEDICATED HERE TO THE UNFINISHED WORK WHICH THEY WHO FOUGHT HERE HAVE
-THUS FAR SO NOBLY ADVANCED· IT IS RATHER FOR US TO BE HERE DEDICATED TO
-THE GREAT TASK REMAINING BEFORE US—THAT FROM THESE HONORED DEAD WE TAKE
-INCREASED DEVOTION TO THAT CAUSE FOR WHICH THEY GAVE THE LAST FULL
-MEASURE OF DEVOTION·THAT WE HERE HIGHLY RESOLVE THAT THESE DEAD SHALL
-NOT HAVE DIED IN VAIN·THAT THIS NATION· UNDER GOD·SHALL HAVE A NEW BIRTH
-OF FREEDOM·AND THAT GOVERNMENT OF THE PEOPLE·BY THE PEOPLE·FOR THE
-PEOPLE·SHALL NOT PERISH FROM THE EARTH·
-
- ·ABRAHAM LINCOLN·
-
-
-
-
- THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG
-
-
- [Illustration: Decorative Initial I]
-
-It is difficult to present a great battle with sufficient detail to
-please both the student of tactics and the average reader. If the
-visitor is not satisfied with the brief outline here presented, he is
-recommended to read further in the books listed, and especially to
-employ a guide, without whose trained and supervised services the best
-manual is inadequate. The reader in search of romance is recommended to
-the successive Incidents of the Battle as herein presented.
-
-According to official records, the Gettysburg campaign of 1863 began on
-June 3rd and ended on August 1st. No effort will be made to describe the
-movements, counter-movements, and fifty minor engagements that occurred
-before the armies crossed the Mason and Dixon’s line and finally
-concentrated at Gettysburg, where they engaged in battle on July 1st,
-2nd, and 3rd. It is necessary, however, that the visitor should
-understand the approach to the field.
-
-
- Location of the Armies.
-
-On June 3rd the Union Army, called the Army of the Potomac, lay at
-Falmouth, Va., on the north side of the Rappahannock River,
-Major-General Joseph Hooker in command.
-
-The Confederate Army, called the Army of Northern Virginia, occupied the
-south bank, with headquarters at Fredericksburg, General Robert E. Lee
-in command.
-
-Both armies were resting after the major engagement at Chancellorsville,
-in which the Confederates were victorious.
-
-The Army of the Potomac was made up of seven infantry and one cavalry
-corps. It numbered at the time of the battle approximately 84,000.
-
-The Army of Northern Virginia was made up of three infantry corps and
-one division of cavalry. It numbered at the time of the battle about
-75,000.
-
-Following the text is a roster of officers, which should be consulted,
-both for an understanding of the battle and because of the obligation to
-honor brave men.
-
-
- General Lee’s Plan.
-
-During the month of May, General Lee visited Richmond to discuss with
-the Confederate government various plans involving political and
-military considerations. Up to this time, the South had won the major
-victories, but her resources, both in men and sinews of war, were
-diminishing, and a prolonged conflict would be disastrous. It was
-decided that the army should invade the North via the Shenandoah and
-Cumberland valleys, with Harrisburg as an objective. This route not only
-afforded a continuous highway but put the army in a position to threaten
-Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Washington from the north. The Blue Ridge
-Mountains to the east would screen the advance, and the rich
-agricultural section would furnish supplies of food and forage.
-
-The time was propitious. General Lee’s army was in the prime of
-condition. The North was discouraged by losses, distrustful of Lincoln,
-weary of war. The South believed that one great victory would assure her
-the friendliness of the leading powers of Europe. Her independence once
-acknowledged, she could import the materials of war and the necessities
-of life which she lacked. It was thought certain that at the prospect of
-invasion the North would withdraw troops from the siege of Vicksburg
-then being conducted by General Grant. With high hopes the march was
-begun.
-
-
- Lee’s First Movement.
-
-On June 3rd Lee put his army in motion northward, with Ewell’s Corps,
-preceded by Jenkins’ and Imboden’s Cavalry, in the advance, followed by
-Longstreet and lastly by Hill. Longstreet moved on the east side of the
-Blue Ridge in order to lead Hooker to believe that Washington would be
-threatened. On reaching Snicker’s Gap, he crossed the Ridge into the
-Shenandoah Valley and followed Hill, who was now in advance. The great
-army was strung out from Fredericksburg, Va., on the south to
-Martinsburg, W. Va., on the north, with the cavalry division under
-Stuart guarding the gaps along the Blue Ridge.
-
- [Illustration: Since 1863 the population of Gettysburg has increased
- from 2,000 to 5,500]
-
-After driving out Union forces stationed at Winchester under Milroy,
-Lee’s Army crossed the Potomac at Williamsport and Shepherdstown on June
-23rd, 24th, and 25th, and advanced northward, unopposed, through the
-Cumberland Valley, toward Harrisburg.
-
-
- Hooker’s Plan.
-
-On June 10th, Hooker proposed to President Lincoln that he cross the
-Rappahannock and attack Hill, who still remained, and then move south,
-threatening Richmond. He thought this might divert Lee from his invasion
-of the North. In reply Lincoln said:
-
- “_I think Lee’s Army and not Richmond is your sure objective point._”
-
-
- The Appointment of Meade.
-
-Thereupon Hooker started in pursuit of Lee on June 13th, moving east of
-the Blue Ridge on a line parallel with Lee on the west, with the cavalry
-guarding his left. He thus protected Baltimore and Washington. He
-crossed the Potomac at Edward’s Ferry on the 25th and 26th and reached
-Frederick on the 27th, where he halted. Believing himself handicapped by
-orders from General Halleck, Chief in Command at Washington, who refused
-the use of the Union forces at Harper’s Ferry, he asked to be relieved
-of the command of the Army of the Potomac. The request was granted, and,
-on June 28th, Major-General George G. Meade, in command of the 5th
-Corps, was appointed his successor, Sykes taking command of General
-Meade’s Corps.
-
-
- Advance of Lee.
-
-Lee’s Army had been steadily moving northward in the Cumberland Valley.
-Ewell, in the advance, detached Early’s Division on reaching
-Chambersburg, directing him to move through Gettysburg on June 26th and
-thence to York and Wrightsville, there to cross the Susquehanna to
-Columbia and move up to Harrisburg to meet the divisions of Rodes and
-Johnson. Rodes reached Carlisle on June 28th, accompanied by Ewell;
-Johnson was at Greenvillage, between Chambersburg and Carlisle. Hill
-moved from Chambersburg to Cashtown, and Longstreet was in the rear at
-Chambersburg. Lee’s headquarters were in Messersmith’s Woods near
-Chambersburg.
-
- [Illustration: General Reynolds’ position shortly before his
- death.—Near General Buford’s statue, pointing toward the spectator,
- is the first gun fired by the Union forces]
-
-In his advance into Gettysburg, Early was opposed by the 26th Emergency
-Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers, Company A, consisting of students
-of Pennsylvania (now Gettysburg) College, citizens of the town, and some
-volunteers from Harrisburg. After skirmishing on the Chambersburg Pike
-about 3 miles from the town, this regiment was obliged to retreat,
-finally reaching Harrisburg. About 175 were captured, but were afterward
-paroled. On the same day, George Sandoe, a Union scout, was shot by one
-of Early’s pickets on the Baltimore Pike. He was the first Union soldier
-killed in the vicinity of Gettysburg prior to the battle.
-
-On account of the absence of his cavalry under Stuart, who had been left
-with five brigades to guard the rear and hold the gaps of the Blue
-Ridge, Lee did not know until June 28th that the Union Army had crossed
-the Potomac and was threatening his line of communication with the
-South. Learning this, he ordered a concentration of his forces at
-Cashtown.
-
-
- Meade’s Movement.
-
-On assuming command, General Meade moved his army northward from the
-vicinity of Frederick and established a tentative line along Pipe Creek,
-between Manchester on his right and Emmitsburg on his left, with
-headquarters near Taneytown.
-
-
- Stuart’s Movement.
-
-After the Union Army crossed the Potomac, Stuart left the line of the
-Blue Ridge with three brigades of cavalry and made a raid around the
-Union Army, crossing the Potomac at Seneca Creek and moving thence to
-Hanover, where he engaged Kilpatrick’s Division of Union cavalry on June
-30th. Passing through Jefferson, Dover, and Dillsburg to Carlisle, he
-reached Carlisle on the afternoon of July 1st, getting into
-communication with Lee, after an interval of a week.
-
-
- Situation of Confederate Forces on June 30th.
-
-On June 30th, Pender’s Division, Hill’s Corps, moved from Fayetteville
-to Cashtown; Anderson’s Division to Fayetteville; Rodes’ Division,
-Ewell’s Corps, from Carlisle via Petersburg to Heidlersburg. Early’s
-Division advanced from York through Weiglestown and East Berlin, and
-encamped 3 miles from Heidlersburg. Johnson’s Division marched from
-Greenvillage to Scotland. Hood’s and McLaws’ Divisions, Longstreet’s
-Corps, moved from Chambersburg to Fayetteville; Pickett’s Division
-remained at Chambersburg. Lee’s headquarters were at Greenwood.
-
-
- Situation of Union Forces on June 30th.
-
-On June 30th the 11th Corps was at Emmitsburg, the 1st at Marsh Creek,
-the 3rd at Bridgeport, the 5th at Union Mills, the 6th at Manchester,
-the 12th at Littlestown, the 2nd at Taneytown. Two brigades of Buford’s
-Cavalry Division were at Gettysburg; Gregg’s Cavalry Division was at
-Manchester; Kilpatrick’s at Hanover. Meade’s headquarters were at
-Taneytown.
-
-
- The Approach.
-
-Neither commander yet foresaw Gettysburg as a field of battle. Each had
-expected to take a strong position and force his adversary to attack.
-But in the hot summer weather fate was moving the mighty hosts closer
-and closer. The sky was cloudless, and the summer moon was at its
-brightest. The wheat was ripe, and the armies marched between partly
-reaped fields.
-
- [Illustration: The Pennsylvania Monument, with bronze figures of
- distinguished officers and a roster of all Pennsylvanians in
- battle.]
-
-On the 30th, Hill, in the front at Cashtown, sent Pettigrew’s Brigade to
-Gettysburg for supplies, shoes especially being badly needed. In the
-meantime, Meade ordered Buford, with two brigades of cavalry at
-Emmitsburg, to make a reconnaissance to Gettysburg. Buford reported:
-
- “_I entered this place today at 11_ A.M. _Found everybody in a
- terrible state of excitement on account of the enemy’s advance._”
-
-On reaching Seminary Ridge, Pettigrew saw the approach of Buford. Not
-wishing to bring on an engagement, he withdrew to the vicinity of
-Cashtown.
-
-Buford moved through the town and bivouacked for the night west of the
-Seminary, along McPherson Ridge. He assigned to Gamble’s Brigade the
-task of watching the Fairfield and Cashtown roads and to Devin the
-Mummasburg, Middletown (now Biglerville), and Harrisburg roads. Early on
-the morning of the 1st, he picketed all the roads leading north and
-northeast.
-
-
-
-
- THE FIRST DAY
-
-
-Informed by Pettigrew that Union forces had reached Gettysburg, and
-anxious to know their strength, Hill sent Heth’s and Pender’s Divisions
-with Pegram’s battalion of artillery forward on a reconnaissance in
-force. This movement, made at 5.30 A.M. on July 1, precipitated the
-battle.
-
-The advance was soon interrupted by Buford’s skirmishers. On reaching
-Herr Ridge, which crosses the Cashtown Road at right angles, Hill
-deployed his line of battle—Heth on both sides of the road with Pender
-in reserve. Pegram posted his artillery on Herr Ridge, and at 8 o’clock
-fired his first shot. Buford’s artillery, under Calef, posted on the
-opposite ridge, fired in reply. The battle was on, and the gravity of
-the situation was clear to Buford, who at 10.10 A.M. sent this message
-to Meade:
-
- “_The enemy’s force are advancing on me at this point and driving my
- pickets and skirmishers very rapidly. There is a large force at
- Heidlersburg that is driving my pickets at that point from that
- direction. I am sure that the whole of A. P. Hill’s force is
- advancing._”
-
-
- Arrival of Reynolds.
-
-Union reinforcements were at hand. General Reynolds, in advance of the
-1st Corps, arrived from Marsh Creek, via the Emmitsburg Road. After a
-short conference with Buford at the Seminary buildings, he sent an
-orderly urging Wadsworth, whose division was advancing across the
-fields, to hasten. On its arrival, Reynolds posted Cutler to the right,
-across the railroad cut which lies parallel to the Chambersburg Pike,
-and Meredith on the left. (Reynolds Avenue now marks this line.)
-
-
- Death of Reynolds.
-
-After posting Hall’s battery in place of Calef’s, Reynolds rode to the
-McPherson Woods, and while directing the advance of Meredith at 10.15
-A.M. was instantly killed by a Confederate sharpshooter. Doubleday
-consequently assumed command of the 1st Corps, and Rowley succeeded
-Doubleday in command of the Division. Compelled to fall back into the
-grove, Buford moved his cavalry to the left near the Fairfield Road, and
-Meredith advanced into the woods, drove Hill’s right across Willoughby
-Run, and captured General Archer and part of his men.
-
-On the Union right, Cutler was attacked in flank by Davis’s Brigade, of
-the left of Hill’s line, and was compelled to withdraw. Davis advanced
-into the railroad cut where part of his force was captured. He then
-withdrew to his original line.
-
-
- A Morning Lull.
-
-At 11 A.M. there was a lull. Doubleday withdrew his forces from across
-Willoughby Run and established a new line through the McPherson Woods
-from north to south. Robinson’s Division reached the field and was held
-in reserve at the Seminary buildings. Rowley’s Division (formerly
-Doubleday’s) arrived a little later; Stone’s Brigade of this Division
-was deployed in the front line on what is now Stone Avenue, and Biddle’s
-Brigade was placed on the left of Meredith, along what is now South
-Reynolds Avenue. In the afternoon, Robinson’s Division was moved to the
-right, prolonging the Union line to the Mummasburg Road in order to meet
-the advance of Rodes’ Division, coming forward via the Carlisle Road.
-Devin’s cavalry was moved from Buford’s right to the vicinity of the
-York Pike and the Hanover Road.
-
- [Illustration: Gettysburg Seminary Doorway.—The Lutheran Theological
- Seminary was used as an observation point and hospital. The portico
- was erected in 1913 to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the
- battle.]
-
-In this preliminary action of the forenoon the advantage was in favor of
-the Union forces. The Confederate General Heth reported:
-
- “_The enemy had now been felt, and found in heavy force in and around
- Gettysburg. The division was now formed in line of battle on the right
- of the road; Archer’s brigade on the right, Pettigrew’s in the center,
- and Brockenbrough’s on the left. Davis’s brigade was kept on the left
- of the road that it might collect its stragglers, and from its
- shattered condition it was not deemed advisable to bring it again into
- action that day._”
-
-The Union General Buford reported:
-
- “_On July 1, between 8 and 9_ A.M. _reports came in from the 1st
- Brigade (Colonel Gamble’s) that the enemy was coming down from toward
- Cashtown in force. Colonel Gamble made an admirable line of battle,
- and moved off proudly to meet him. The two lines soon became hotly
- engaged, we having the advantage of position, he of numbers. The 1st
- Brigade held its own for more than two hours, and had to be literally
- dragged back a few hundred yards to a more secure and sheltered
- position._”
-
-
- Arrival of Rodes and Early.
-
-On learning at Middletown (now Biglerville) that Hill was engaged with
-the Union forces at Gettysburg, Rodes marched thither directly via the
-Carlisle Road. Early approached via the Harrisburg or Heidlersburg Road.
-The advance of both was quickened by the sound of cannonading. Arriving
-a little past noon, Rodes deployed his Division of five brigades on both
-sides of Oak Ridge, his right on the left of Heth’s Division and his
-left with Early’s right, extending across the plain north of the town.
-Carter’s artillery was posted on Oak Hill.
-
-
- The Opposing Lines.
-
-Robinson’s Division of the 1st Union Corps was moved from its position
-in reserve at the Seminary buildings to the right of Cutler, to oppose
-Rodes’s Confederate line.
-
-Hill prolonged his right by bringing up Pender’s Division that had been
-held in reserve. The artillery of McIntosh’s battalion was brought into
-action in support. These guns, with Carter’s and Pegram’s, together
-numbering 60, and 11 brigades of infantry now opposed the 1st Union
-Corps of 36 guns and 6 brigades.
-
-
- Arrival of Howard.
-
-General Howard, in command of the 11th Union Corps, reached Gettysburg
-from Emmitsburg between 10 and 11 A.M., in advance of his Corps, and
-took command of the Union forces. Schurz succeeded Howard in command of
-the Corps, and Doubleday resumed command of his Division.
-
-On reaching Gettysburg, Howard went to the top of the Fahnestock
-building at the corner of Baltimore and Middle streets to observe the
-lines of battle. He reported:
-
- “_I had studied the position a few moments, when a report reached me
- that General Reynolds was wounded. At first I hoped his wound might be
- slight and that he would continue to command, but in a short time I
- was undeceived. His aid-de-camp, Major William Riddle, brought the sad
- tidings of his death. This was about 11.30_ A.M. _Prior to this the
- General had sent me orders to move up at a double quick, for he was
- severely engaged. On hearing of the death of Reynolds, I assumed
- command of the left wing, instructing General Schurz to take command
- of the 11th Corps. After an examination of the general features of the
- country, I came to the conclusion that the only tenable position for
- my limited force was the ridge to the southeast of Gettysburg (now
- well known as Cemetery Ridge). I at once established my headquarters
- near the cemetery, and on the highest point north of the Baltimore
- Pike._”
-
-
- Howard’s Position.
-
-On the arrival of the 11th Corps, Howard ordered Schurz to move the 3rd
-and 1st Divisions to positions north of the town, while the 2nd Division
-was held on Cemetery Hill in reserve. On account of the prior arrival of
-the Confederates under Rodes, who covered the plain north of the town,
-Schurz was unable to connect with the right of the Union line on Oak
-Hill, and a gap remained between the two lines. The position of the 11th
-Corps coincides with what is now Howard Avenue.
-
-
- The Confederate General Early’s Position.
-
-Shortly after the 11th Corps moved to the front, Early’s Division of
-Ewell’s Corps arrived from Heidlersburg and went into line to the right
-of Howard, connecting with Rodes’s left across the plain. Early posted
-his artillery, Jones’s battalion, in position to enfilade the right of
-Howard, while Carter’s batteries on Oak Hill enfiladed the left. The
-Confederate forces largely exceeded the Union forces, the former being
-about 28,000 and the latter about 18,000. The whole Confederate line
-advanced and attacked the Union forces in front and on both flanks. On
-Oak Hill part of Rodes’ forces, O’Neal’s and Iverson’s brigades, were
-repulsed, a large part of the latter being captured.
-
-
- The Union Retreat.
-
-After a strenuous resistance the whole Union line was compelled to
-withdraw to Cemetery Hill. The 11th Corps retreated through the center
-of town where many were captured. The 1st Corps fell back through the
-western part of the town. By 4.30 P.M. all the territory held by the
-Union forces was occupied by the Confederates.
-
-
- Arrival of Lee.
-
-General Lee reached the field from Cashtown about 3 P.M., witnessed the
-retreat of the Union forces, and established his headquarters in tents
-in an apple orchard back of the Seminary. He ordered Ewell to follow up
-the repulse if he thought it practicable. In this connection Ewell
-reported:
-
- “_The enemy had fallen back to a commanding position known as Cemetery
- Hill, south of Gettysburg, and quickly showed a formidable front
- there. On entering the town, I received a message from the Commanding
- General to attack this hill, if I could do so to advantage. I could
- not bring artillery to bear on it, and all the troops with me were
- jaded by twelve hours’ marching and fighting, and I was notified that
- General Johnson’s division (the only one of my corps that had not been
- engaged) was close to town. Cemetery Hill was not assailable from the
- town.... Before Johnson could be placed in position the night was far
- advanced._”
-
- [Illustration: John Burns, Gettysburg constable and Mexican War
- veteran, shouldered his musket and went out to meet the
- Confederates.]
-
-General Hill reported:
-
- “_Under the impression that the enemy was entirely routed, my own two
- divisions exhausted by some six hours’ hard fighting, prudence led me
- to be content with what had been gained._”
-
-The failure of Ewell to follow up the repulse and capture Cemetery Hill
-and Culp’s Hill, defended by a weak line of the Union forces, enabled
-the Union commanders to establish during the night a line of defence
-that was secure against attack. By many military critics, this is
-generally considered Lee’s lost opportunity.
-
-
- Formation of Union Line.
-
-The retreating Union soldiers were met at East Cemetery Hill by Generals
-Hancock and Howard, who directed them to positions, the 1st Corps on
-Cemetery Ridge and Culp’s Hill, and the 11th on East Cemetery Hill. The
-12th Corps arrived on the Baltimore Pike, and soon after Sickles’ 3rd
-Corps came up from Emmitsburg.
-
-Hancock had been instructed by Meade to take command and report if he
-thought the ground a suitable place to continue the battle. A
-battle-line was at once established on Cemetery Ridge. Geary’s Division
-of the 12th Corps was ordered to the extreme left to occupy Little Round
-Top. Hancock sent word to General Meade that the position was strong,
-but that it might be easily turned. He then turned over the command to
-Slocum, his senior, and returned to Taneytown to report in person. Meade
-had already ordered a rapid concentration of all his forces at
-Gettysburg.
-
- [Illustration: Barlow’s Knoll.—The extreme right of the Union line
- on the first day]
-
-
- General Lee’s Report.
-
-For the day, the Confederate commander reported:
-
- “_The leading division of Hill met the enemy in advance of Gettysburg
- on the morning of July 1. Driving back these troops to within a short
- distance of the town, he there encountered a larger force, with which
- two of his divisions became engaged. Ewell coming up with two of his
- divisions by the Heidlersburg road, joined in the engagement. The
- enemy was driven through Gettysburg with heavy loss, including about
- 5,000 prisoners and several pieces of artillery. He retired to a high
- range of hills south and east of the town. The attack was not pressed
- that afternoon, the enemy’s force being unknown, and it being
- considered advisable to await the arrival of the rest of our troops.
- Orders were sent back to hasten their march, and, in the meantime,
- every effort was made to ascertain the numbers and position of the
- enemy, and find the most favorable point of attack. It had not been
- intended to fight a general battle at such a distance from our base,
- unless attacked by the enemy, but, finding ourselves unexpectedly
- confronted by the Federal Army, it became a matter of difficulty to
- withdraw through the mountains with our large trains.... Encouraged by
- the successful issue of the engagement of the first day, and in view
- of the valuable results that would ensue from the defeat of the army
- of General Meade, it was thought advisable to renew the attack._”
-
-
-
-
- FIRST DAY HIGHLIGHTS
-
-
- Death of Major-General Reynolds
-
-Major-General John Fulton Reynolds, killed at Gettysburg while
-commanding the 1st Corps, was born in Lancaster, Pa., on the 21st day of
-September, 1820. His father, John Reynolds, also a native of Lancaster
-County, was the son of William Reynolds, who came to America in 1760
-from Ireland. His mother’s maiden name was Lydia Moore, daughter of
-Samuel Moore, who held a commission in the Revolutionary Army. He had an
-elder brother, William, who served as Admiral in our Navy with great
-distinction, and also two other brothers who served in the war, one as
-paymaster, and the other, the youngest of the four, as
-Quartermaster-General of Pennsylvania.
-
-William and John went first to an excellent school at Lititz, in
-Lancaster County, going thence to Long Green, Md., and from there they
-returned to the Lancaster Academy. Through the influence of James
-Buchanan, they received appointments, one as midshipman in the Navy, and
-the other as cadet at West Point. John was graduated from West Point on
-June 22nd, 1841, at the age of twenty-one. He served with distinction
-during the Mexican War, and at the outbreak of the Civil War entered the
-Union Army. At the battle of Gaines’ Mill, on June 28th, 1862, he was
-captured, and after a confinement of six weeks in Libby Prison, he was
-exchanged for General Barksdale.
-
-General Reynolds was six feet tall, with dark hair and eyes. He was
-erect in carriage and a superb horseman, so much at ease in the saddle
-as to be able to pick a dime from the ground while riding at full speed.
-He was killed in the grove now known as Reynolds’ Grove on the morning
-of July 1st, between 10 and 11 o’clock, while directing the attack of
-Meredith’s brigade against Archer’s Confederate brigade. His body was
-first taken to the Seminary, and later to Lancaster, where it was
-interred in the family graveyard.
-
-
- The 26th Emergency Regiment
-
-The 26th Emergency Regiment met the advance of Gordon’s brigade of
-Early’s Division of Ewell’s Corps in their advance into Gettysburg.
-Company A consisted of students of the Lutheran Theological Seminary,
-Pennsylvania (now Gettysburg) College, and citizens of the town. H. M.
-M. Richards, of Company A gives the following sketch of the services of
-the regiment:
-
-“Upon the first indication of an invasion of Pennsylvania, the 26th
-Regiment, P. V. M., was organized and mustered into the United States
-service at Harrisburg, under the command of Colonel W. W. Jennings of
-that city. Company A of this regiment, to which I belonged, was composed
-of students from the Lutheran Theological Seminary and the Pennsylvania
-College at Gettysburg, and of citizens of the town; one other company
-came from Hanover, but a few miles distant.
-
-“On June 23rd we left Harrisburg for Gettysburg, to be used, I believe,
-as riflemen among the hills at or near Cashtown. A railroad accident
-prevented this plan from being carried out, and kept us from reaching
-Gettysburg until the 26th, by which time General Early had reached
-Cashtown. In accordance with orders received from Major Granville O.
-Haller, acting aide-de-camp to General Couch, commanding the Department
-of the Susquehanna, we were marched out on the Chambersburg Pike at 10
-A.M., June 26th, for a distance of about three and a half miles,
-accompanied by Major Robert Bell, who commanded a troop of horse, also
-raised, I understand, in Gettysburg. Having halted, our colonel,
-accompanied by Major Bell, rode to the brow of an elevation and there
-saw General Early’s troops a few miles distant.
-
-“We, a few hundred men at most, were in the toils; what should be done?
-We would gladly have marched to join the Army of the Potomac, under
-Meade, but where was it? Our colonel, left to his own resources, wisely
-decided to make an effort to return to Harrisburg, and immediately
-struck off from the pike, the Confederates capturing many of our
-rear-guard after a sharp skirmish, and sending their cavalry in pursuit
-of us. These later overtook us in the afternoon at Witmer’s house, about
-four and a half miles from Gettysburg on the Carlisle Road, where, after
-an engagement, they were repulsed with some loss. After many
-vicissitudes, we finally reached Harrisburg, having marched 54 out of 60
-consecutive hours, with a loss of some 200 men.
-
-“It should be added that Gettysburg, small town as it was, had already
-furnished its quota to the army. Moreover, on the first day of the
-battle, hundreds of the unfortunate men of Reynolds’s gallant corps were
-secreted, sheltered, fed, and aided in every way by the men and women of
-the town.”
-
-
- The First Soldier Killed at Gettysburg
-
-George W. Sandoe, the first Union soldier killed at Gettysburg, was a
-member of Company B Independent 21st Pennsylvania Cavalry. Upon arriving
-at Gettysburg, June 26th, 1863, General Gordon sent out a picket line on
-the Baltimore Pike. As these pickets reached the Nathaniel Lightner
-property, George W. Sandoe and William Lightner, also a member of
-Company B, approached the pike, coming across the McAllister field from
-the direction of Rock Creek. Owing to a growth of bushes and trees along
-the fence, they did not discover the Confederate pickets until they were
-ordered to halt. Lightner at once jumped his horse across the fence and
-escaped by riding rapidly down the pike. Sandoe’s horse fell in making
-the leap, and in attempting to escape by riding back in the direction
-from which he came, Sandoe was shot. He lies buried at Mount Joy Church,
-in Mount Joy, Adams County.
-
-
- A Mysterious Letter
-
-Having passed through Gettysburg on June 28th, General John B. Gordon,
-of Lee’s army, went on to York and Wrightsville before returning on July
-1st. In his “Reminiscences of the Gettysburg Campaign” he tells the
-following story:
-
-“We entered the city of York on Sunday morning. Halting on the main
-street, where the sidewalks were densely packed, I rode a few rods in
-advance of my troops, in order to speak to the people from my horse. As
-I checked him and turned my full dust-begrimed face upon a bevy of
-ladies very near me, a cry of alarm came from their midst; but after a
-few words of assurance from me, quiet and apparent confidence were
-restored. I assured these ladies that the troops behind me, though
-ill-clad and travel-stained, were good men and brave; that beneath their
-rough exteriors were hearts as loyal to women as ever beat in the
-breasts of honorable men; that their own experience and the experience
-of their mothers, wives, and sisters at home had taught them how painful
-must be the sight of a hostile army in their town; that under the orders
-of the Confederate commander-in-chief both private property and
-non-combatants were safe; that the spirit of vengeance and of rapine had
-no place in the bosoms of these dust-covered but knightly men; and I
-closed by pledging to York the head of any soldier under my command who
-destroyed private property, disturbed the repose of a single home, or
-insulted a woman.
-
-“As we moved along the street after this episode, a little girl,
-probably twelve years of age, ran up to my horse and handed me a large
-bouquet of flowers in the center of which was a note in delicate
-handwriting, purporting to give the numbers and describe the position of
-the Union forces of Wrightsville, toward which I was advancing. I
-carefully read and reread this strange note. It bore no signature and
-contained no assurance of sympathy for the Southern cause, but it was so
-terse and explicit in its terms as to compel my confidence. The second
-day we were in front of Wrightsville, and from the high ridge on which
-this note suggested that I halt and examine the position of the Union
-troops, I eagerly scanned the prospect with my field-glasses, in order
-to verify the truth of the mysterious communication or detect its
-misrepresentations.
-
-“There, in full view of us, was the town, just as described, nestling on
-the banks of the Susquehanna. There was the blue line of soldiers
-guarding the approach, drawn up, as indicated, along an intervening
-ridge and across the pike. There was the long bridge spanning the
-Susquehanna and connecting the town with Columbia on the other bank.
-Most important of all, there was the deep gorge or ravine running off to
-the right and extending around the left bank of the Federal line and to
-the river below the bridge. Not an inaccurate detail in that note could
-be discovered. I did not hesitate, therefore, to adopt its suggestion of
-moving down the gorge in order to throw my command on the flank, or
-possibly in the rear of the Union troops, and force them to a rapid
-retreat or surrender. The result of this movement vindicated the
-strategic wisdom of my unknown and—judging by the handwriting—woman
-correspondent, whose note was none the less martial because embedded in
-roses, and whose evident genius for war, had occasion offered, might
-have made her a captain equal to Catherine.”
-
-
- The Flag of the 16th Maine
-
-A marker showing the position of the 16th Maine Infantry Regiment on the
-afternoon of the first day’s battle stands at the intersection of
-Doubleday Avenue and the Mummasburg Road, and contains the following
-inscription:
-
- Position Held July 1, 1863, at 4 o’Clock P.M.
- by the 16th Maine Infantry
- 1st Brig., 2nd Div., 1st Corps
-
-WHILE THE REST OF THE DIVISION WAS RETIRING, THE REGIMENT HAVING MOVED
-FROM THE POSITION AT THE LEFT WHERE ITS MONUMENT STANDS, UNDER ORDERS TO
-HOLD THIS POSITION AT ANY COST.
-
- It Lost on This Field
- Killed 11, Wounded 62, Captured 159
- Out of 275 Engaged.
-
-When almost surrounded, the regiment withdrew to the left of the
-railroad cut to help cover the withdrawal of Stewart’s battery, which
-was also almost surrounded. The regiment had two flags, the Stars and
-Stripes and the flag of Maine.
-
-Finally, assaulted by the flank and rear, they determined not to
-surrender their colors, but tore them from their staffs and into small
-bits, each man taking a star or a bit of silk which he placed in his
-pocket. Some of these fragments were carried through the southern
-prisons and finally home to Maine, where they are still treasured as
-precious relics by the relatives and friends of the brave men of the
-regiment.
-
-
- The Barlow-Gordon Incident
-
-Barlow’s Knoll, a short distance northeast of Gettysburg, is named in
-honor of Brigadier-General Francis C. Barlow, in command of the 1st
-Division of the 11th Corps. In his “Reminiscences of the Civil War,”
-General Gordon describes his meeting with Barlow:
-
-“Returning from the banks of the Susquehanna, and meeting at Gettysburg,
-July 1, 1863, the advance of Lee’s forces, my command was thrown quickly
-and squarely on the right flank of the Union Army. A more timely arrival
-never occurred. The battle had been raging for four or five hours. The
-Confederate General Archer, with a large part of his brigade, had been
-captured. Heth and Scales, Confederate generals, had been wounded. The
-ranking Union officer on the field, General Reynolds, had been killed,
-and General Hancock was assigned to command. The battle, upon the issue
-of which hung, perhaps, the fate of the Confederacy, was in full blast.
-The Union forces, at first driven back, now reënforced, were again
-advancing and pressing back Lee’s left and threatening to envelop it.
-The Confederates were stubbornly contesting every foot of ground, but
-the Southern left was slowly yielding. A few moments more and the day’s
-battle might have been ended by a complete turning of Lee’s flank. I was
-ordered to move at once to the aid of the heavily pressed Confederates.
-With a ringing yell, my command rushed upon the line posted to protect
-the Union right. Here occurred a hand-to-hand struggle. That protecting
-Union line, once broken, left my command not only on the right flank,
-but obliquely in rear of it.
-
-“Any troops that were ever marshalled would, under like conditions, have
-been as surely and swiftly shattered. Under the concentrated fire from
-front and flank, the marvel is that they escaped. In the midst of the
-wild disorder in his ranks, and through a storm of bullets, a Union
-officer was seeking to rally his men for a final stand. He, too, went
-down pierced by a minie ball. Riding forward with my rapidly advancing
-lines, I discovered that brave officer lying upon his back, with the
-July sun pouring its rays into his pale face. He was surrounded by the
-Union dead, and his own life seemed to be rapidly ebbing out. Quickly I
-dismounted and lifted his head. I gave him water from my canteen, and
-asked his name and the character of his wounds. He was Major-General
-Francis C. Barlow, of New York, and of Howard’s Corps. The ball had
-entered his body in front and passed out near the spinal cord,
-paralyzing him in legs and arms. Neither of us had the remotest thought
-that he could survive many hours. I summoned several soldiers who were
-looking after the wounded, and directed them to place him upon a litter
-and carry him to the shade in the rear. Before parting, he asked me to
-take from his pocket a package of letters and destroy them. They were
-from his wife. He had one request to make of me. That request was that,
-if I lived to the end of the war and ever met Mrs. Barlow, I would tell
-her of our meeting on the field of Gettysburg and his thoughts of her in
-his last moments. He wished to assure me that he died doing his duty at
-the front, that he was willing to give his life for his country, and
-that his deepest regret was that he must die without looking upon her
-face again. I learned that Mrs. Barlow was with the Union Army, and near
-the battlefield. When it is remembered how closely Mrs. Gordon followed
-me, it will not be difficult to realize that my sympathies were
-especially stirred by the announcement that his wife was so near to him.
-Passing through the day’s battle unhurt, I despatched, at its close,
-under a flag of truce, the promised message to Mrs. Barlow. I assured
-her that she should have safe escort to her husband’s side.
-
-“In the desperate encounters of the two succeeding days, and the retreat
-of Lee’s army, I thought no more of Barlow, except to number him with
-the noble dead of the two armies who have so gloriously met their fate.
-The ball, however, had struck no vital point, and Barlow slowly
-recovered, though his fate was unknown to me. The following summer, in
-battles near Richmond, my kinsman with the same initials, General J. B.
-Gordon of North Carolina, was killed. Barlow, who had recovered, saw the
-announcement of his death, and entertained no doubt that he was the
-Gordon whom he had met on the field of Gettysburg. To me, therefore,
-Barlow was dead; to Barlow I was dead. Nearly fifteen years passed
-before either of us was undeceived. During my second term in the United
-States Senate, the Hon. Clarkson Potter of New York was the member of
-the House of Representatives. He invited me to dinner in Washington to
-meet a General Barlow who had served in the Union Army. Potter knew
-nothing of the Gettysburg incident. I had heard that there was another
-Barlow in the Union Army, and supposed of course, that it was this
-Barlow with whom I was to dine. Barlow had a similar reflection as to
-the Gordon he was to meet. Seated at Clarkson Potter’s table, I asked
-Barlow: ‘General, are you related to the Barlow who was killed at
-Gettysburg?’ He replied: ‘Why, I am the man, sir. Are you related to the
-Gordon who killed me?’ ‘I am the man, sir,’ I responded. No words of
-mine can convey any conception of the emotions awakened by these
-startling announcements. Nothing short of an actual resurrection of the
-dead could have amazed either of us more. Thenceforward, until his
-untimely death in 1896, the friendship between us which was born amidst
-the thunders of Gettysburg was cherished by both.”
-
-
- General Ewell Is Hit by a Bullet
-
-General Gordon gives an account of an amusing incident of the first day:
-
-“Late in the afternoon of this first day’s battle, when the firing had
-greatly decreased along most of the lines, General Ewell and I were
-riding through the streets of Gettysburg. In a previous battle he had
-lost one of his legs, but prided himself on the efficiency of the wooden
-one which he used in its place. As we rode together, a body of Union
-soldiers, posted behind some dwellings and fences on the outskirts of
-the town, suddenly opened a brisk fire. A number of Confederates were
-killed or wounded, and I heard the ominous thud of a minie ball as it
-struck General Ewell at my side. I quickly asked: ‘Are you hurt, sir?’
-‘No, no,’ he replied; ‘I’m not hurt. But suppose that ball had struck
-you: we would have had the trouble of carrying you off the field, sir.
-You see how much better fixed I am for a fight than you are. It don’t
-hurt a bit to be shot in a wooden leg.’
-
-“Ewell was a most interesting and eccentric character. It is said that
-in his early manhood he had been disappointed in a love affair, and had
-never fully recovered from its effects. The fair maiden to whom he had
-given his affections had married another man; but Ewell, like the truest
-of knights, carried her image in his heart through long years. When he
-was promoted to the rank of brigadier or major-general, he evidenced the
-constancy of his affections by placing upon his staff the son of the
-woman whom he had loved in his youth. The meddlesome Fates, who seem to
-revel in the romances of lovers, had decreed that Ewell should be shot
-in battle and become the object of solicitude and tender nursing by this
-lady, Mrs. Brown, who had been for many years a widow. Her gentle
-ministrations soothed his weary weeks of suffering, a marriage ensued,
-and with it came the realization of Ewell’s long-deferred hope. He was a
-most devoted husband. He never seemed to realize, however, that marriage
-had changed her name, for he proudly presented her to his friends as ‘My
-wife, Mrs. Brown, sir.’”
-
-
- The School Teachers’ Regiment
-
-The 151st Pennsylvania Infantry, commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel George
-F. McFarland, included Company D, made up mainly of the instructors and
-students of the Lost Creek Academy, of McAlisterville, Juniata County,
-of which Colonel McFarland was principal. For this reason it was called
-the “Schoolteachers’ Regiment.” The material throughout was excellent,
-many of the men being experienced marksmen. The regiment went into
-battle with 21 officers and 446 men, and sustained a loss in killed,
-wounded, and missing of 337, or over 75 per cent.
-
-The casualties of the 26th North Carolina Regiment, against which they
-were engaged, were 588 out of 800, just about the same percentage.
-
-Colonel McFarland lost his right leg and had the left permanently
-disabled, but survived until 1891. On the twenty-fifth anniversary of
-the battle, he delivered the dedicatory address at the unveiling of the
-regimental monument, exactly twenty-five years to the hour after his
-engagement in battle.
-
-
- An Incident of the First Day
-
-An incident, similar to that described by Browning in his poem “An
-Incident of the French Camp,” occurred at the railroad cut early on the
-first day.
-
-An officer of the 6th Wisconsin Regiment, active in the capture of the
-Mississippians belonging to the 2nd and 42nd Regiments, who had taken
-shelter in the railroad cut after turning the right of Cutler’s line,
-approached Colonel Rufus R. Dawes after the engagement was over. Colonel
-Dawes supposed, from the erect appearance of the man, that he had come
-for further orders, but his compressed lips told a different story. With
-great effort the officer said: “Tell them at home I died like a man and
-a soldier.” He then opened his coat, showed a ghastly wound on his
-breast, and dropped dead.
-
- [Illustration: Dormitory of Gettysburg College.—The dormitory of
- Gettysburg (then Pennsylvania) College sheltered many Union and
- Confederate wounded]
-
-
-
-
- THE SECOND DAY
-
-
-The scene of the engagements of the second and third days shifted to the
-south and southeast of Gettysburg. General Meade arrived on the field
-from his headquarters at Taneytown, Md., at 1 A.M., July 2nd, and
-established his headquarters at the Leister House, on the Taneytown
-Road, in rear of the line of the 2nd Corps. As soon as it was light he
-inspected the position already occupied and made arrangements for
-posting the several corps as they should reach the ground.
-
-
- The Union Line of Battle.
-
-Starting on the right with Slocum’s 12th Corps, Williams’ Division
-extended from Rock Creek by way of Spangler’s Spring to Culp’s Hill,
-with Geary’s Division on the hill. The line between Culp’s Hill and
-Cemetery Hill was held by Wadsworth’s Division of the 1st Corps.
-Barlow’s Division of the 11th Corps under Ames was located at the foot
-of East Cemetery Hill. Carman, Colgrove, Slocum, Geary, and Wainwright
-avenues follow these lines of battle.
-
-On Cemetery Hill, across the Baltimore Pike, the line was held by Schurz
-and on his left Steinwehr, both of the 11th Corps. Robinson’s Division
-of the 1st Corps extended across the Taneytown Road to Ziegler’s Grove.
-Beyond lay Hancock’s 2nd Corps, with the Divisions of Hays, Gibbon, and
-Caldwell from right to left. To the left of Hancock, Sickles’ 3rd Corps,
-consisting of the Divisions of Humphreys and Birney, prolonged the line
-to the vicinity of Little Round Top. Beginning at the Taneytown Road,
-Hancock and Sedgwick avenues follow these lines of battle.
-
-Arriving later in the day, the 5th Corps, under General Sykes, was
-posted on the Baltimore Pike, at the Rock Creek crossing. Later it
-occupied the ground about Round Top to the left of the 3rd Corps. The
-6th Corps, under General Sedgwick, reaching the field still later after
-a march of over 30 miles, was posted in reserve back of Round Top, from
-which position portions were moved as circumstances demanded. The lines
-held by the 5th and 6th Corps coincide with Sykes, Ayres, Wright, and
-Howe Avenues.
-
- [Illustration: Stevens’ Knoll.—Arriving on Stevens’ Knoll at the end
- of the first day, General Slocum brought supporting troops. The
- lunettes protecting the cannon remain intact.]
-
-Gamble’s and Devin’s brigades of Buford’s Cavalry, which had had an
-active part in the battle of the first day, were on the left between
-Cemetery and Seminary Ridges until 10 A.M. when they were ordered, by
-some mistake, to move to Westminster, Md., before the arrival of Gregg’s
-Division on its way from Hanover, and Merritt’s brigade of Buford’s
-Division from Mechanicsburg (now Thurmont), Md.
-
-General Meade’s line, shaped like a fishhook, was about 3 miles long.
-The right faced east, the center over Cemetery Hill, north, and the left
-from Cemetery Hill to Round Top nearly west. The whole line was
-supported by artillery brigades belonging to the different corps.
-
-
- Confederate Line of Battle.
-
-General Lee’s line was nearly the same shape as General Meade’s but,
-being the outer line, was about 6 miles long. On the right, facing the
-two Round Tops, were Hood’s and McLaws’ Divisions of Longstreet’s Corps.
-On the left of McLaws, extending along the line of Seminary Ridge, were
-the Divisions of Anderson and Pender of Hill’s Corps, with Heth’s
-Division in the rear in reserve. On the left of Pender, extending
-through the town along the line of West Middle Street, was Rodes’
-Division of Ewell’s Corps, then Early’s and Johnson’s Divisions, the
-latter reaching to Benner’s Hill, east of Rock Creek. Pickett’s Division
-of Longstreet’s Corps was at Chambersburg, guarding trains, and Law’s
-Brigade of Hood’s Division of Longstreet’s Corps at New Guilford,
-guarding the rear. The latter arrived at noon on the 2nd in time to
-participate in the day’s engagement. Pickett’s Division arrived later
-and was not engaged until the afternoon of the 3rd. The artillery was
-posted according to the different corps to which it was attached.
-
-General Lee’s line coincides with the present West Confederate Avenue
-along Seminary and Warfield or Snyder Ridges, west of the town, then
-runs through the town to coincide with East Confederate Avenue. The
-distance between the Union and Confederate lines is three-fourths of a
-mile to a mile.
-
-Military critics agree that General Meade held the stronger position.
-Both flanks presented precipitous and rocky fronts, difficult to attack,
-and it was possible to send reinforcements by short distances from point
-to point.
-
-
- Sickles’ Change of Line.
-
-As already stated, General Sickles’ 3rd Corps was on the left of General
-Hancock’s 2nd Corps on Cemetery Ridge, and Birney’s Division was near
-the base of Little Round Top, replacing Geary’s Division after its
-withdrawal to be posted on Culp’s Hill. Humphreys’ Division was on low
-ground to the right between Cemetery Ridge and the Emmitsburg Road.
-
-Anxious to know what was in his front, Sickles sent the Berdan
-Sharpshooters and the 3rd Maine Infantry forward on a reconnaissance. On
-reaching the Pitzer Woods, beyond the Emmitsburg Road, they found the
-Confederates there in force, and after a sharp engagement with Wilcox’s
-Brigade, withdrew and reported.
-
-Believing that Lee planned a flank movement on his line, and that the
-Emmitsburg Road afforded better positions for the artillery, Sickles
-moved his Corps forward and posted Humphreys’ Division on the right
-along the Emmitsburg Road and his left extending to the Peach Orchard.
-Birney’s Division prolonged the line from the Peach Orchard across the
-Wheatfield to Devil’s Den. This new line formed a salient at the Peach
-Orchard and therefore presented two fronts, one to the west, the other
-to the south.
-
-About 3 P.M. Sickles was called to General Meade’s headquarters to a
-conference of corps commanders. Upon the sound of artillery, the
-conference adjourned, and Meade, Sickles, and Warren, Meade’s Chief
-Engineer, rode to inspect Sickles’ change of line. The artillery was
-already engaged, and believing it too late to make any changes since the
-enemy was present, Meade decided to attempt to hold the new position by
-sending in supports. After reviewing the new line, General Warren left
-the other members of the party and rode up Little Round Top. He found
-the height unoccupied except by the personnel of a signal station.
-
- [Illustration: General Meade’s Statue.—General Meade viewed
- Pickett’s Charge from the center of the Union line. This statue,
- like those of Reynolds and Sedgwick, is the work of Henry K.
- Bush-Brown.]
-
-
- General Lee’s Plan.
-
-Lee as well as Meade occupied the forenoon in the arrangement of his
-line of battle. After a conference with Ewell, he decided to attack
-Meade’s left. In his report, Lee says:
-
- “_It was determined to make the principal attack upon the enemy’s
- left, and endeavor to gain a position from which it was thought that
- our artillery could be brought to bear with effect. Longstreet was
- directed to place the division of McLaws and Hood on the right of
- Hill, partially enveloping the enemy’s left, which he was to drive
- in._
-
- “_General Hill was ordered to threaten the enemy’s center to prevent
- reinforcements being drawn to either wing, and coöperate with his
- right division in Longstreet’s attack._
-
- “_General Ewell was instructed to make a simultaneous demonstration
- upon the enemy’s right, to be converted into a real attack should
- opportunity offer._”
-
-When General Lee arranged this plan of attack he believed Meade’s left
-terminated at the Peach Orchard; he did not know that Sickles’ advance
-line extended to the left from the salient at the Peach Orchard to
-Devil’s Den. In plain view of the Union signal station on Little Round
-Top, some of his forces were compelled to make a wide detour via the
-Black Horse Tavern on the Fairfield Road in order to avoid observation.
-
-
- Little Round Top.
-
-Meanwhile, General Warren on Little Round Top saw the importance of the
-hill as a tactical position on Meade’s left. The signal officers were
-preparing to leave; he ordered them to remain and to keep waving their
-flags so as to lead the Confederates to believe that the hill was
-occupied. He dispatched a messenger to Devil’s Den, where a Union
-battery was posted, with an order that a shot be fired to produce
-confusion in the woods in front, through which Hood’s forces were
-supposed to be advancing. Seeing the reflection of the sunlight from
-Confederate muskets, he realized that if this important position were to
-be held, it would be necessary to get troops there without delay.
-
-Quickly he sent a member of his staff to Sickles for troops. Sickles
-said none could be spared. Warren sent another staff officer to Meade,
-who immediately ordered Sykes to move his Corps to Little Round Top.
-Barnes’ Division of this Corps had already been called for by Sickles to
-defend his line, and three brigades, Vincent’s, Tilton’s, and
-Sweitzer’s, were moving toward the Wheatfield. Learning of the need of
-troops on Little Round Top, Vincent moved back, skirted the east side of
-Little Round Top, and went into position between Little and Big Round
-Top, arriving just before the Confederates from Hood’s right advanced
-over Big Round Top.
-
-Having watched these movements, Warren rode down to the crossing of what
-is now Sykes Avenue and the Wheatfield Road. There he met Colonel
-O’Rorke, in command of the 140th New York, and ordered his regiment,
-together with Hazlett’s battery, to the crest of the hill. With the
-addition of Weed’s Brigade, the combined forces held the Round Tops.
-There was a desperate engagement in which both contestants displayed
-courage of a very high order. The Union soldiers were victorious, and
-Meade’s left was secured against further attack.
-
-
- The Peach Orchard and the Wheatfield.
-
-After the struggle for the possession of Little Round Top, the other
-Confederate brigades of Hood and McLaws advanced rapidly. A lack of
-coordination in their movement allowed Meade to bring up supports. Three
-brigades of Anderson’s Division of Hill’s Corps advanced against
-Humphreys’ line, in the following order: Wilcox, Perry, Wright. Wounded,
-General Pender was unable to direct Posey and Mahone in support of
-Wright, and Wright was obliged to withdraw. Humphreys was compelled to
-change front in order to meet the assault on his flanks. This maneuver
-served to stay the Confederate attack for a brief time. The Valley of
-Death between the Round Tops and the opposite height was now a seething
-mass of opposing forces, enshrouded in clouds of smoke.
-
-Meade had already depleted his right to support his left by withdrawing
-all of Slocum’s 12th Corps except Greene’s Brigade. He now sent all of
-the 5th Corps to the left and ordered Caldwell’s Division from the left
-of Hancock’s 2nd Corps south of the Angle to the Wheatfield. Willard’s
-Brigade on Hays’ line of the 2nd Corps was ordered to advance and oppose
-the Confederate, Barksdale, who, after crossing the Emmitsburg Road
-north of the Peach Orchard and the field beyond, reached Watson’s Union
-battery posted on the Trostle farm. General Sickles was severely and
-Barksdale mortally wounded.
-
- [Illustration: Wheatfield.—Scene of carnage on the second day]
-
-Wofford’s Brigade of McLaws’ Division broke through the salient at the
-Peach Orchard and reached the valley between Devil’s Den and Little
-Round Top, where they were met by a charge of the Pennsylvania Reserves
-of Crawford’s Division, led by McCandless, some of whose men fought in
-sight of their own homes. Wofford was obliged to withdraw to and beyond
-the Wheatfield; the Reserves advanced across the valley from their
-position on the north of Little Round Top and reached the stone wall on
-the east side of the Wheatfield. Here they remained until after
-Pickett’s charge on the 3rd, when they advanced against the Confederates
-who had succeeded in regaining control of that part of the field.
-
-About the time when Sickles was wounded, Meade directed Hancock to
-assume command of Sickles’ Corps in addition to his own. Meade in person
-led Lockwood’s brigade, brought from the extreme right, against the
-Confederate advance. Newton, now in command of the 1st Corps, sent in
-Doubleday’s Division. With these troops Hancock checked the advance of
-the Confederate brigades of Barksdale, Wilcox, Perry, and Wright, while
-Sykes checked the advance of Hood and McLaws. Brigades of the 6th Corps
-reached the field toward the close of the engagement. Withdrawing from
-the Wheatfield Road, Bigelow’s battery made a determined stand at the
-Trostle buildings and succeeded in checking the Confederate advance
-until the gap on Sickles’ first line was protected by a line of guns.
-Most of the Confederate brigades got no farther than Plum Run, except
-Wright’s, which actually reached the line of guns on Hancock’s front
-before it was obliged to withdraw.
-
-During the repulse of the Confederate advance, the 1st Minnesota
-regiment of Harrow’s Brigade of Gibbon’s Division of Hancock’s Corps was
-ordered by Hancock to oppose Wilcox’s and Perry’s Brigades, rapidly
-advancing against Hancock’s left. The Minnesota regiment moved up at
-once and succeeded in repelling the attack, but only after losing 82 per
-cent of its men.
-
-Though seriously threatened, Meade’s line held, and after the repulse of
-Wright, the attack ended. During the night the line was prolonged to the
-top of Big Round Top. The Confederates remained west of Plum Run, except
-at Big Round Top, where they intrenched along the western slope.
-
-
- Ewell’s Attack on Meade’s Right.
-
-Ordered by Lee to begin his attack on Meade’s right at the same time as
-Longstreet’s attack on Meade’s left, Ewell’s artillery on Benner’s Hill
-opened fire on Culp’s Hill and Cemetery Hill where the Union forces were
-posted and well protected with earthworks. On account of the destructive
-fire from the Union batteries on East Cemetery Hill, Ewell lost most of
-his guns, and no infantry advance was made until Longstreet’s assault
-had ended. At sundown General Johnson’s infantry advanced against Culp’s
-Hill, General Early against East Cemetery Hill. Rodes, who was directed
-to move against West Cemetery Hill, was unable to obey instructions.
-General Walker, who had been sent east to Brinkerhoff Ridge in the
-forenoon, to guard Ewell’s flank, and who was expected to assist in this
-attack, was prevented by meeting part of the Union cavalry of Gregg’s
-Division that had arrived via Hanover on the forenoon of the 2nd. After
-an engagement with Gregg, Walker moved up to assist Johnson, but too
-late to be of service, as the attack on Culp’s Hill had ended.
-
-The attack was conducted with the greatest dash and daring, in part up
-rough slopes of woodland over heaped boulders. On East Cemetery Hill the
-fight among the Union guns was hand to hand, and clubbed muskets,
-stones, and rammers were used to drive back the assailants. After sunset
-a bright moon illuminated the field. The Union troops stood firm, and at
-10 o’clock the Confederates desisted, having captured only a few Union
-entrenchments.
-
- [Illustration: Monument of the Irish Brigade.—At the foot of the
- Celtic Cross is the Irish wolfhound, symbolic of devotion.]
-
-
- Situation at End of the Second Day.
-
-Lee’s assaults on Meade’s left had failed to accomplish anything
-decisive. While Sickles’ advance-line was driven back and most of the
-field, including the Peach Orchard, the Wheatfield, Devil’s Den, and the
-base of Big Round Top, was occupied by the Confederates, Meade’s line
-was practically intact from the crest of Big Round Top on the left to
-near Spangler’s Spring on the right. On the slopes of Round Top, on
-Cemetery Hill and Culp’s Hill, the advantage of the defensive positions
-multiplied the forces of the defenders in comparison with the attackers
-at least three to one. Prodigious deeds of valor were performed by both
-armies, and courage of the highest order was displayed in attack and in
-the defense. Casualties were very heavy on both sides. Meade estimated
-that his losses were 65 per cent of the total for the three days. At the
-end of the day he made the following report:
-
- “_July 2, 1863, 8_ P.M. _The enemy attacked me about 4_ P.M. _this
- day, and, after one of the severest contests of the war, was repulsed
- at all points. We have suffered considerably in killed and wounded.
- Among the former are Brigadier Generals Paul and Zook, and among the
- wounded are Generals Sickles, Barlow, Graham, and Warren slightly. We
- have taken a large number of prisoners. I shall remain in my present
- position tomorrow, but am not prepared to say, until better advised of
- the condition of the army, whether my operations will be of an
- offensive or defensive character._”
-
-Later in the night, at a council of war held by Meade with his corps
-commanders—Gibbon, Williams, Sykes, Newton, Howard, Hancock, Sedgwick
-and Slocum—sentiment favored remaining and fighting a defensive battle.
-As Lee attacked both wings of Meade’s line on the 2nd it was expected
-that if another attack were made it would be on the center. This
-expectation was correct—Wright’s attack on the 2nd, when he succeeded in
-reaching Meade’s line south of the Angle, led Lee to believe that this
-was the most vulnerable point.
-
-General Lee had more definite plans:
-
- “_The result of this day’s operations induced the belief that, with
- proper concert of action, and with the increased support that the
- positions gained on the right would enable the artillery to render the
- assaulting column, we should ultimately succeed, and it was
- accordingly determined to continue the attack._”
-
-The general plan was unchanged. Longstreet, re-enforced by Pickett’s
-three brigades, which arrived near the battlefield during the afternoon
-of the 2nd, was ordered to attack the next morning, and General Ewell
-was directed to assail the enemy’s right at the same time. The latter,
-during the night, re-enforced General Johnson with three brigades from
-Rodes’ and Early’s Divisions.
-
-
-
-
- INCIDENTS OF THE SECOND DAY
-
-
- The Roger House
-
-The Roger House is located on the west side of the Emmitsburg Road,
-about a mile south of Gettysburg, midway between Meade’s line of battle
-on Cemetery Ridge and Lee’s line on Seminary Ridge. On the afternoon of
-July 2nd, after Sickles advanced his corps from its first position to
-the Emmitsburg Road, it was surrounded by the right of the new line. The
-1st Massachusetts Regiment, whose monument stands adjacent to the house,
-held this part of the line, and was hotly engaged when the brigades of
-Wilcox and Wright advanced during the assault of Longstreet on the Union
-left on the afternoon of the 2nd. During Pickett’s Charge, on the
-afternoon of the 3rd, the house was again surrounded by fighting men.
-
-While the battle raged on all sides, a granddaughter of the owner, Miss
-Josephine Miller, remained, and, notwithstanding the great danger, baked
-bread and biscuits for the hungry soldiers. In 1896, Miss Miller, then
-Mrs. Slyder, paid a visit to her old home, and related the following
-story of her experience to Mr. Wilfred Pearse, of Boston, Mass., a
-visitor to Gettysburg at the same time. After his return he published
-the following article.
-
-“The veterans of the 1st Massachusetts Infantry Regiment will be glad to
-learn that the only woman member of the 3rd Army Corps ‘Veterans’
-Association,’ Mrs. Slyder, née Miss Josephine Miller, granddaughter of
-farmer Roger, owner of the farm near which the 1st Massachusetts
-monument stands, is visiting her old home on the battleground where she
-stood from sunrise to sunset for two days of the battle making hot
-biscuits for the Boys in Blue. She refused to take money for the bread,
-and refused to stop her work even when Confederate shells were bursting
-around the house. She told me the other day that when her stock of flour
-was almost exhausted six members of the 1st Massachusetts kindly
-volunteered to go out and steal three sacks of flour from General
-Sickles’ commissary stores. In an hour’s time they returned with flour,
-raisins, currants, and a whole sheep, with which a rattling good meal
-was made.
-
-“The old range still stands in the kitchen, and in it, at the last
-reunion of the 3rd Corps, Mrs. Slyder cooked a dinner for General
-Sickles.”
-
-
- Spangler’s Spring
-
-This spring, which takes its name from Abraham Spangler, its owner at
-the time of the battle, is located at the southeast corner of Culp’s
-Hill. Inasmuch as it was used by soldiers of both armies during the
-battle, and since then by thousands of tourists, it is an interesting
-feature of the field. Only during the drought of 1930 has it failed to
-give forth a copious flow of cool, pure water. At the time of the battle
-it was surrounded by a wall of flat stones with a flagstone cover over
-the top. These were removed and a canopy top erected.
-
-The 12th Corps of the Army of the Potomac occupied this part of Meade’s
-line on the night of the first day and until the afternoon of the 2nd,
-when the troops were ordered to the left to help repel Longstreet’s
-assault. Until this time the spring was used only by the Union troops.
-During their absence, the Confederates under Johnson moved up and took
-possession of part of the vacated line. In the early morning of the
-third day, the Union forces, who had returned from the left during the
-night of the 2nd, attacked Johnson, drove him out and succeeded in
-regaining possession of the line that had been vacated by them on the
-afternoon of the 2nd, including the spring.
-
-The story that a truce was entered into between the opposing forces on
-the night of the 2nd and that they met in large numbers at the spring to
-get water is a mistake. The captured and wounded of the Union forces
-were allowed access to it along with the Confederates who were there at
-the time, but there was no truce. When armies were encamped, pickets
-from the opposing lines would sometimes get together, usually to trade
-coffee and tobacco, but this was never done when a battle was in
-progress.
-
- [Illustration: Spangler’s Spring.—Spangler’s Spring was used first
- by the Union, then by the Confederate troops, and since by thousands
- of tourists]
-
-The following extract from the address of Captain Joseph Matchett at the
-dedication of the monument erected by the 46th Pennsylvania Infantry
-Regiment, shows that there was no truce:
-
-“Some time in the night (2nd), we were ordered to return to our works on
-Culp’s Hill. It seems Captain Selfridge of Company H had taken some of
-his men’s canteens and gone ahead to Spangler’s Spring to fill them,
-when he discovered ‘Johnnies’ also filling their canteens. He backed out
-with the best grace he could command, and reported it to the colonel.
-Colonel McDougall, the brigade commander, did not believe it and got
-very angry, but the colonel of the regiment insisted on deploying his
-men, and sent a skirmish line, who found the enemy as stated and saved
-many lives.”
-
-
- Colonel Avery’s Lost Grave
-
-Among those who faced death in the desperate charge on the Union right
-on East Cemetery Hill, July 2nd, Colonel I. E. Avery, of North Carolina,
-in command of Hoke’s brigade, bore a gallant part. At the head of the
-column he led his men up the slope of Cemetery Hill and, a conspicuous
-mark, fell mortally wounded.
-
-Unable to speak, he drew a card from his pocket and wrote the following:
-“Tell father that I died with my face toward the enemy.” In the retreat
-from Gettysburg, his body was taken along to be delivered to his family,
-but when the army reached Williamsport the Potomac was too high to
-cross. There, in the cemetery overlooking the river, the remains were
-interred in an oak coffin under a pine tree. He was buried in his
-uniform by the men who saw him fall.
-
-Thirty years after, Judge A. C. Avery, of the Supreme Court of North
-Carolina, a resident of Morgantown, and Captain J. A. McPherson of
-Fayette, N. C., both veterans of the Confederacy, came to Williamsport
-with the object of locating Colonel Avery’s grave. Their search was
-fruitless.
-
-
- The Leister House
-
-On his arrival, General Meade established his headquarters at the
-Leister House, one of the oldest houses in the community, located at the
-intersection of Meade Avenue and the Taneytown Road. At the time of the
-battle it was the property of a widow, Mrs. Leister. It now belongs to
-the Government, and a bronze plate marks it as Meade’s Headquarters. It
-is built of logs, chinked and weatherboarded with rough pine boards,
-pierced by bullet-holes and scarred by shells.
-
-Inside there are two rooms, a small kitchen at the west, and a larger
-room at the east. In the latter, Meade held a council of war after the
-battle of the 2nd had ended, summoning his Corps commanders between 9
-and 10 o’clock to consult them as to what action, if any, should be
-taken on the 3rd. Generals Sedgwick, Slocum, Hancock, Howard, Sykes,
-Newton, Birney, Williams, and Gibbon were present. The following
-questions were asked:
-
-(1) Under existing circumstances is it advisable for this army to remain
-in its present position, or to retire to another nearer its base of
-supplies?
-
-(2) It being determined to remain in present position, shall the army
-attack or wait the attack of the enemy?
-
-(3) If we wait attack, how long?
-
-_Replies_:
-
-Gibbon: (1) Correct position of the army, but would not retreat. (2) In
-no condition to attack, in his opinion. (3) Until he moves.
-
-Williams: (1) Stay. (2) Wait attack. (3) One day.
-
-Birney and Sykes: Same as General Williams.
-
-Newton: (1) Correct position of the army, but would not retreat. (2) By
-all means not attack. (3) If we wait it will give them a chance to cut
-our line.
-
-Howard: (1) Remain. (2) Wait attack until 4 P.M. tomorrow. (3) If don’t
-attack, attack them.
-
-Hancock: (1) Rectify position without moving so as to give up field. (2)
-Not attack unless our communications are cut. (3) Can’t wait long; can’t
-be idle.
-
-Sedgwick: (1) Remain. (2) Wait attack. (3) At least one day.
-
-Slocum: (1) Stay and fight it out.
-
-The unanimous opinion of the council was to stay and await attack. Just
-as the council broke up, General Meade said to Gibbon, “If Lee attacks
-tomorrow, it will be on your front. He has made attacks on both our
-flanks and failed, and if he concludes to try it again it will be on our
-center.” The attack of Lee on the 3rd was made where Meade expected.
-
-During the forenoon of the third day, conditions at headquarters were
-generally quiet. In the afternoon, when the Confederate artillery on
-Seminary Ridge opened fire as a prelude to Pickett’s Charge, it was
-directed mainly against the left center of the Union line on Cemetery
-Ridge. As the location of Meade’s headquarters was in the immediate
-rear, just under the crest of the ridge, much damage was done by the
-hail of shot and shell that crossed the ridge. A shell exploded in the
-yard among the staff officers’ horses tied to the fence, and a number of
-them were killed, while still other horses were killed in the rear of
-the building. Several members of the headquarters’ guard were slightly
-wounded.
-
-George G. Meade, a grandson of General Meade, in his interesting
-narrative “With Meade at Gettysburg,” tells the following story:
-
-“During this rain of Confederate shell, and while Meade, deep in
-thought, was walking up and down this little back yard between the house
-and the Taneytown Road, he chanced to notice that some of his staff,
-during the enforced inactivity while waiting the pleasure of their
-general, were gradually and probably unconsciously edging around the
-side of the house.
-
-“‘Gentlemen,’ he said, stopping and smiling pleasantly, ‘Are you trying
-to find a safer place? You remind me of the man who was driving the
-ox-cart which took ammunition for the heavy guns on the field of Palo
-Alto. Finding himself within range, he tilted up his cart and got behind
-it. Just then General Taylor came along, and seeing the attempt at
-shelter, shouted, “You damned fool; don’t you know you are no safer
-there than anywhere else?” The driver replied, “I don’t suppose I am,
-General, but it kind o’ feels so.”’”
-
-As the firing still continued it was decided to move the headquarters
-several hundred yards south on the Taneytown Road, to a barn on the
-Cassatt property. There a Confederate shell exploded and wounded General
-Butterfield, the chief of staff, who was obliged to leave the field and
-was unable to return that day. After remaining a short time, General
-Meade and staff removed to General Slocum’s headquarters at Powers’
-Hill, along the Baltimore Pike, moving there by way of Granite Lane.
-
-
- The Louisiana Tigers
-
-Major Chatham R. Wheat’s battalion of Louisiana Infantry was organized
-in New Orleans in May, 1861. Their first engagement was in the first
-battle of Bull Run, where Major Wheat was shot through both lungs. After
-his recovery, he re-entered the service and took an active part in
-command of the battalion in the defense of Richmond in 1863 against the
-advance of the Union forces under McClellan. During this campaign the
-battalion became known as “The Louisiana Tigers” on account of their
-desperate fighting qualities. At the battle of Gaines Mill, Major Wheat
-and several other leading officers of the battalion were killed, and the
-loss of the organization was very heavy. It was then broken up and the
-survivors distributed among the other Louisiana regiments, of Hays’
-brigade of Early’s Division, and Nicholls’ brigade of Johnson’s Division
-of Ewell’s Corps. A number of them were in the battle of Gettysburg with
-these brigades, but not as the separate organization originally known as
-“The Louisiana Tigers.” This designation was given to all the Louisiana
-troops after the original battalion was discontinued. The story
-sometimes told, that 1,700 Louisiana Tigers attacked East Cemetery Hill
-on July 2nd, that all but 300 were killed or captured, and that the
-organization was unknown afterward, is not correct.
-
-
- General Meade’s “Baldy”
-
-In the first great battle of the Civil War, at Bull Run, there was a
-bright bay horse with white face and feet. He, as well as his rider, was
-seriously wounded and the horse was turned back to the quartermaster to
-recover. In September General Meade bought him and named him “Baldy.”
-Meade became deeply attached to the horse but his staff officers soon
-began to complain of his peculiar racking gait which was hard to follow.
-Faster than a walk and slow for a trot, it compelled the staff
-alternately to trot and walk.
-
-“Baldy” was wounded twice at the first battle of Bull Run; he was at the
-battle of Drainsville; he took part in two of the seven days’ fighting
-around Richmond in the summer of 1862; he carried his master at
-Groveton, August 29th; at the second battle of Bull Run; at South
-Mountain and at Antietam. In the last battle he was left on the field
-for dead, but in the next Federal advance he was discovered quietly
-grazing on the battleground with a deep wound in his neck. He was
-tenderly cared for and soon was fit for duty. He bore the general at the
-battles of Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville. For two days he was
-present at Gettysburg, where he received his most grievous wound from a
-bullet entering his body between the ribs and lodging there. Meade would
-not part with him and kept him with the army until the following spring.
-
-In the preparations of the Army of the Potomac for the last campaign,
-“Baldy” was sent to pasture at Downingtown, Pa. After the surrender of
-Lee at Appomattox, Meade hurried to Philadelphia where he again met his
-faithful charger, fully recovered. For many years the horse and the
-general were inseparable companions, and when Meade died in 1872,
-“Baldy” followed the hearse. Ten years later he died, and his head and
-two fore-hoofs were mounted and are now cherished relics of the George
-G. Meade Post, Grand Army of the Republic, in Philadelphia.
-
-
- General Lee’s “Traveller”
-
-The most famous of the steeds in the stables of General Lee, was
-“Traveller,” an iron-gray horse. He was raised in Greenbriar County,
-Virginia, near Blue Sulphur Springs, and as a colt won first prize at a
-fair in Lewisburg. When hostilities commenced, Traveller, then called
-“Jeff Davis,” was owned by Major Thomas L. Broun, who had paid $175 in
-gold for him. In the spring of 1862, Lee bought him for $200 and changed
-his name to “Traveller.”
-
-“Traveller” was the especial companion of the general. His fine
-proportions attracted immediate attention. He was gray in color, with
-black points, a long mane, and flowing tail. He stood sixteen hands
-high, and was five years old in the spring of 1862. His figure was
-muscular, with deep chest and short back, strong haunches, flat legs,
-small head, quick eyes, broad forehead, and small feet. His rapid,
-springy step and bold carriage made him conspicuous. On a long and
-tedious march he easily carried Lee’s weight at five or six miles an
-hour without faltering and at the end of the day’s march seemed to be as
-fresh as at the beginning. The other horses broke down under the strain
-and each in turn proved unequal to the rigors of war, but “Traveller”
-sturdily withstood the hardships of the campaigns in Virginia, Maryland,
-and Pennsylvania. When, in April, 1865, the last battle of the Army of
-Northern Virginia had been fought and Lee rode to the McLean House at
-Appomattox Court House, he was astride “Traveller” who carried him back
-to his waiting army, and then to Richmond. When Lee became a private
-citizen and retired to Washington and Lee University as its president,
-the veteran war-horse was still with him, and as the years passed and
-both master and servant neared life’s ending, they became more closely
-attached. As the funeral cortege accompanied Lee to his last
-resting-place, “Traveller” marched behind the hearse. After
-“Traveller’s” death, his skeleton was mounted and is on exhibition in
-the museum in the chapel on the campus of Washington and Lee University.
-
- [Illustration: A Union Battery, in action on the afternoon of the
- second day]
-
-
-
-
- THE THIRD DAY
-
-
-The first engagement on the third day was a continuation and conclusion
-of the attack and defense of Meade’s right. His forces, returning from
-the left, where they had been sent on the afternoon of the 2nd, found
-part of their earthworks in possession of the enemy. At daybreak
-preparations were made to recapture the lost entrenchments. By 10.30 the
-effort was successful, and Meade’s line was once more intact from end to
-end.
-
-
- Second Battle at Culp’s Hill.
-
-This action on the morning of the 3rd was one of the most hotly
-contested of the battle. The Confederate losses in killed were almost
-the same as those of Pickett’s Division in the attack on Meade’s left
-center in the afternoon. Meade’s losses were comparatively light, as his
-line was well protected by the line of earthworks. So intense was the
-artillery and musketry fire that hundreds of trees were shattered. After
-the repulse, Johnson’s forces were withdrawn, and this ended their
-participation in the battle.
-
-
- Meade’s Line of the Third Day.
-
-After the engagement on the morning of the 2nd, the 12th Corps
-reoccupied its original line, beginning on the right at Spangler’s Hill
-and extending to and over Culp’s Hill. Wadsworth’s Division of the 1st
-Corps retained its position of the 2nd, between Culp’s Hill and Barlow’s
-Division under Ames of the 11th Corps, at the foot of East Cemetery
-Hill. Barlow’s Division was strengthened by a brigade of the 2nd Corps.
-Doubleday’s Division of the 1st Corps, which had taken the position of
-Caldwell’s Division on the left of the 2nd Corps, remained. Caldwell was
-posted so as to support the artillery reserve to the left of Doubleday.
-
-The other divisions of the 1st and 2nd Corps remained in the positions
-they occupied on the morning of the 2nd. The 5th Corps extended the line
-from the left of the artillery reserve to Big Round Top. Some of the
-brigades of the 6th Corps were put in position as local reserves and
-others to protect the flanks of the line. The 3rd Corps was posted in
-rear of the center as a general reserve. A detachment of cavalry was in
-reserve in rear of the 2nd Corps at the Angle. Few changes were made in
-the artillery positions. Beginning at Cemetery Hill and extending to
-Little Round Top, about ninety guns, under General Hunt, were in
-position to operate.
-
- [Illustration: Meade’s Headquarters.—The Leister House, General
- Meade’s headquarters until the artillery fire on the third day
- compelled him to move]
-
-
- Lee’s Line of the Third Day.
-
-Beginning on the right, Longstreet’s Corps held the ground west of Plum
-Run, including the base of Big Round Top, Devil’s Den, and the Peach
-Orchard. Pickett’s Division, after its arrival on the field on the
-morning of the 3rd, took the place of Anderson in reserve. Heth’s and
-Pender’s Divisions extended the line to the left on Seminary Ridge,
-connecting with part of Rodes’ Division in the western part of the town.
-Early’s and Johnson’s Divisions, after the engagement on the morning of
-the 3rd, held their positions of the 2nd. Changes in the positions of
-the batteries of artillery were made on the morning of the 3rd. A total
-of 138 guns were in position to operate. Those on the right were in
-charge of Colonel E. P. Alexander; those on the left under Colonel R. L.
-Walker.
-
-
- The Bliss Buildings.
-
-After the end of the engagement at Culp’s Hill at 10.30 A.M. there was a
-short battle for the capture of the Bliss house and barn, midway between
-the lines in front of Ziegler’s Grove. These buildings were occupied by
-Confederate sharpshooters, who were causing considerable loss in Hays’
-line of the 2nd Corps at the grove. Two regiments were sent forward, the
-12th New Jersey and the 14th Connecticut, and the buildings were
-captured and burned.
-
-
- The Artillery Duel.
-
-Until 1 o’clock there was comparative quiet. It was ended on the stroke
-of the hour by two guns of Miller’s battery belonging to the Washington
-artillery of New Orleans, posted near the Peach Orchard, and fired in
-rapid succession as a signal to the Confederate artillery.
-
-The Confederate Colonel Alexander says:
-
- “_At exactly 1 o’clock by my watch the two signal guns were heard in
- quick succession. In another minute every gun was at work. The enemy
- was not slow in coming back at us, and the grand roar of nearly the
- whole of both armies burst in on the silence._
-
- “_The enemy’s position seemed to have broken out with guns everywhere,
- and from Round Top to Cemetery Hill was blazing like a volcano._”
-
-The artillery duel was but a preface, intended to clear the ground for
-the infantry action to follow. The order had already been given by
-Longstreet to Alexander:
-
- “_Colonel: The intention is to advance the infantry if the artillery
- has the desired effect of driving the enemy off, or having other
- effect such as to warrant us in making the attack. When the moment
- arrives advise General Pickett, and of course advance such artillery
- as you can use in making the attack._”
-
-General Wright, who was present when this order was received, expressed
-doubt as to whether the attack could be successfully made. He said:
-
- “_It is not so hard to go there as it looks; I was nearly there with
- my brigade yesterday. The trouble is to stay there. The whole Yankee
- army is there in a bunch._”
-
-For one and a half hours the air was filled with screaming, whistling
-shot and shell. An occasional Whitworth missile, from Oak Hill on the
-north, made, on account of its peculiar form, a noise that could be
-heard above the din of all others. The headquarters of General Meade at
-the Leister House formed a concentric point continually swept with a
-storm of shot and shell. Headquarters were therefore moved to Slocum’s
-headquarters at Powers’ Hill, along the Baltimore Pike.
-
- [Illustration: Locations, Buildings and Avenues as referred to in “The
- Battle of Gettysburg”
- High-resolution Map]
-
-Batteries on the Union line, especially at the Angle, were badly
-damaged, and General Hunt had others brought forward with additional
-supplies of ammunition. On the whole the losses inflicted upon the Union
-infantry were comparatively light. The stone wall and the undulations of
-the ground afforded protection, as most of the men were lying down.
-
-After the artillery had operated for about an hour and a half, Meade and
-Hunt deemed it prudent to stop the fire, in order to cool the guns, save
-ammunition, and allow the atmosphere between the lines to clear of the
-dense cloud of smoke before the expected attack was made. This pause in
-the fire led the Confederates to believe that the Union line was
-demoralized, and that the opportune time had arrived for the onset of
-the infantry. Accordingly, they moved forward and Pickett’s Charge was
-on.
-
-At the signal station on Little Round Top, General Warren and others saw
-gray infantry moving out across the plain in front of the Spangler
-Woods. Warren at once wig-wagged to General Hunt:
-
- “_They are moving out to attack._”
-
-This message was passed from man to man along the entire Union line.
-
- [Illustration: Devil’s Den.—Hid among the rocks of Devil’s Den,
- Confederate sharpshooters picked off officers and men occupying
- Little Round Top]
-
-
- Pickett’s Charge.
-
-Pickett’s Division of Longstreet’s Corps was moved from the rear to the
-ravine in front of the Spangler Woods and placed in line as follows:
-Kemper on the right; Garnett on the left in the front line; Armistead in
-the rear, overlapping Kemper’s left and Garnett’s right, in the second
-line. On the left of Garnett was ranged Archer’s Brigade of Hill’s Corps
-under Frye, then Pettigrew’s Brigade under Marshall. Next to Marshall
-came Davis’ Brigade of Hill’s Corps, and on the extreme left
-Brockenbrough’s Brigade, also of Hill’s Corps. In the rear of the right
-of Pickett were the brigades of Wilcox and Perry of Hill’s Corps and in
-the rear of Pettigrew were the brigades of Scales and Lane of Hill’s
-Corps, in command of Trimble.
-
-The column of assault consisted of 42 regiments—19 Virginia, 15 North
-Carolina, 2 Alabama, 3 Tennessee, and 3 Mississippi—a total of about
-15,000 men.
-
-In addition to the artillery fire, they encountered 27 regiments—9 of
-New York, 5 of Pennsylvania, 3 of Massachusetts, 3 of Vermont, 1 of
-Michigan, 1 of Maine, 1 of Minnesota, 1 of New Jersey, 1 of Connecticut,
-1 of Ohio, and 1 of Delaware—a total of 9,000 to 10,000 men.
-
-In advance of the assaulting column a strong skirmish line was deployed.
-A skirmish line was also deployed in front of Meade’s line, which fell
-back as the assaulting column drew near.
-
-
- The Advance.
-
-General Longstreet ordered General Alexander, Chief of Artillery, to
-watch the havoc wrought in the Union line and signify the moment for
-advance.
-
-General Alexander says:
-
- “_Before the cannonade opened I made up my mind to give the order to
- advance within fifteen or twenty minutes after it began. But when I
- looked at the full development of the enemy’s batteries and knew that
- his infantry was generally protected from fire by stone walls and
- swells of the ground, I could not bring myself to give the word._
-
- “_I let the 15 minutes pass, and 20, and 25, hoping vainly for
- something to turn up. Then I wrote to Pickett: ‘If you are coming at
- all, come at once, or I cannot give you proper support; but the
- enemy’s fire has not slackened at all; at least eighteen guns are
- still firing from the cemetery itself.’_
-
- “_Five minutes after sending that message, the enemy’s fire suddenly
- began to slacken, and the guns in the cemetery limbered up and vacated
- the position._
-
- “_Then I wrote to Pickett: ‘Come quick; eighteen guns are gone; unless
- you advance quick, my ammunition won’t let me support you properly.’_
-
- “_Pickett then rode forward, and on meeting Longstreet said: ‘General,
- shall I advance?’ Longstreet nodded his assent and the column moved
- forward._”
-
-The column passed through the line of guns, fifteen or eighteen of which
-had been ordered to follow. Meanwhile the eighteen Union guns that were
-withdrawn were replaced by others. The Union line was once more intact,
-and it opened a terrific fire against the rapidly moving columns of
-assault. As the Confederates continued to advance, their courage
-unaffected in face of the tremendous fire of both artillery and
-infantry, their enemies were filled with admiration.
-
-At the Emmitsburg Road, where post-and-rail fences had to be crossed,
-the line was broken, but only for a moment. The musketry fire from the
-Union line was so heavy that the attacking column was unable to maintain
-a regular alignment, and when the Angle was reached the identity of the
-different brigades was lost.
-
-Armistead’s Brigade forged to the front at the Angle, and, reaching the
-wall, Armistead raised his hat on his sword and said:
-
- “_Give them the cold steel, boys!_”
-
-With a few men he advanced to Cushing’s guns, where he fell, mortally
-wounded. Cushing also was mortally wounded. Garnett, who was mounted,
-was killed a short distance from the wall. Kemper was badly wounded.
-Pickett lost all of his field officers but one. The Union Generals
-Hancock and Gibbon were wounded at the same time. For a short time the
-struggle was hand to hand.
-
-To the right of the Angle most of the brigades on Pickett’s left reached
-the stone wall on Hays’ front at Ziegler’s Grove, but were obliged to
-retreat after meeting a withering fire both in front and on flank.
-
-The brigades of Wilcox and Perry, in the rear of Pickett’s right, did
-not move until after the advance lines were part way across. Because of
-a misunderstanding, a gap was opened between Pickett’s right and
-Wilcox’s left. At once Stannard’s Vermont Brigade of the 1st Corps
-attacked both Pickett’s right and Wilcox’s left.
-
-General Pickett, who had reached the Codori buildings, saw that the
-assaulting forces were unable to accomplish the object of the charge,
-and ordered a retreat. It was accomplished, but with heavy losses.
-
-Both commanding officers witnessed the retreat: General Meade from where
-his statue stands east of the Angle, and General Lee from the position
-of his statue north of the Spangler Woods.
-
- [Illustration: Whitworth Guns.—These two Whitworths, imported from
- England by the Confederates, were the only breech-loading guns used
- in the battle]
-
-
- Engagements on the Union Left.
-
-While Pickett’s Charge was under way, the Pennsylvania Reserves, under
-McCandless, charged from the stone wall on the east side of the
-Wheatfield and regained possession of Devil’s Den and adjacent territory
-held by Longstreet’s forces since the engagement of the afternoon of the
-2nd. Farther south, between Big Round Top and the line held by
-Longstreet’s right, a cavalry charge was made by Farnsworth’s Brigade of
-Kilpatrick’s Division. Farnsworth was killed. Merritt’s Brigade of
-Buford’s Division, which reached the field on the 3rd, engaged some of
-Longstreet’s troops along the Emmitsburg Road. The accomplished object
-of these movements was to prevent Longstreet from giving assistance to
-the charge of Pickett on Meade’s center.
-
-
- The Cavalry Fight on the Right Flank.
-
-As already noted, General Stuart in his movement in rear of the Army of
-the Potomac with three brigades of cavalry—Fitzhugh Lee’s, Wade
-Hampton’s, and Chambliss’—reached Hanover on June 30th, fought a battle
-in the streets, and moved on to Carlisle on the afternoon of July 1st.
-There he got in touch with the main Confederate Army, with which he had
-been out of communication for seven days.
-
-After an encounter with a portion of Kilpatrick’s forces at Hunterstown
-on the afternoon of July 2nd, he moved up to a position between the
-Hunterstown and Harrisburg roads on Ewell’s left, expecting to reach
-Meade’s rear about the time of Pickett’s Charge on Meade’s front. He was
-joined by Jenkins’ Confederate Brigade of mounted infantry armed with
-Enfield rifles. Jenkins was wounded at Hunterstown, and the brigade and
-the command fell to Colonel Ferguson.
-
-General Gregg, in command of the 2nd Cavalry Division of the Union Army,
-reached the field east of Gettysburg at the intersection of the Hanover
-and Low Dutch roads at 11 A.M. on July 2nd. In the afternoon he halted a
-movement of Walker’s brigade of Johnson’s Division, Ewell’s Corps, in
-their movement from Brinkerhoff Ridge to assist in the attack on Meade’s
-right at Culp’s Hill. He bivouacked for the night near the bridge across
-White Run. On the morning of the 3rd he returned to the position of the
-2nd, and took an active part in the cavalry fight on the right flank at
-the time of Pickett’s Charge. In the afternoon, in the important
-engagement on East Cavalry Field he successfully opposed General Stuart
-in his efforts to get behind the Union line.
-
-
- The Location.
-
-East Cavalry Field is 3 miles east of Gettysburg and includes the
-territory lying between the York Pike on the north and the Hanover Road
-on the south. On the east it is bounded by the Low Dutch Road which
-intersects the Baltimore Pike at its southern end, and the York Pike at
-its northern end. Brinkerhoff Ridge, which crosses the Hanover Road at
-right angles about 1½ miles east of the town, forms its boundary on the
-west. Cress Ridge is formed by the elevation between Cress’s Run on the
-west and Little’s Run on the east. Both ridges right angle across the
-Hanover Road.
-
-All the positions held by troops have been marked and the entire field
-is readily accessible over well-built roads and avenues. Because of its
-partial isolation from the principal fields, this important area is not
-visited as frequently as it should be.
-
-
- General Stuart’s Plan.
-
-General Stuart did not wish to bring on a general engagement. He
-expected his skirmishers to keep the Union Cavalry engaged while his
-other forces were moving undiscovered toward the rear of Meade’s line.
-He says in his report:
-
- “_On the morning of July 3, pursuant to instructions from the
- commanding general, I moved forward to a position to the left of Gen.
- Ewell’s left, and in advance of it, where a commanding ridge (Cress
- Ridge) completely controlled a wide plain of cultivated fields
- stretching toward Hanover, on the left, and reaching to the base of
- the mountain spurs, among which the enemy held position. My command
- was increased by the addition of Jenkins’ Brigade, who here in the
- presence of the enemy allowed themselves to be supplied with but 10
- rounds of ammunition, although armed with approved Enfield muskets._
-
- “_I moved this command and W. H. F. Lee’s secretly through the woods
- to a position, and hoped to effect a surprise upon the enemy’s rear,
- but Hampton’s and Fitz Lee’s Brigades, which had been ordered to
- follow me, unfortunately debouched into the open ground, disclosing
- the movement, and causing a corresponding movement of a large force of
- the enemy’s cavalry._”
-
-It was the advance of Hampton and Fitzhugh Lee which caused Stuart’s
-plans to miscarry.
-
- [Illustration: Reaching East Cemetery Hill on the afternoon of the
- first day, General Hancock took command of the Union troops. On the
- second day the guns pointed downward to meet the onslaught of the
- Confederates]
-
- [Illustration: Little Round Top.—Its strategic importance was seen
- by General Warren who commanded it to be fortified and held]
-
-
- General Gregg’s Report.
-
-On the Union side, General D. McM. Gregg had under his command three
-brigades of cavalry—one in command of General George A. Custer, who
-later was responsible for “Custer’s Last Charge” in Indian warfare.
-General Gregg’s report gives a brief description of the many charges and
-countercharges:
-
- “_A strong line of skirmishers displayed by the enemy was evidence
- that the enemy’s cavalry had gained our right, and were about to
- attack, with the view of gaining the rear of our line of battle. The
- importance of successfully resisting an attack at this point, which,
- if succeeded in by the enemy, would have been productive of the most
- serious consequences, determined me to retain the brigade of the Third
- Division until the enemy were driven back. General Custer, commanding
- the brigade, fully satisfied of the intended attack, was well pleased
- to remain with his brigade. The First New Jersey Cavalry was posted as
- mounted skirmishers to the right and front in a wood. The Third
- Pennsylvania Cavalry deployed as dismounted skirmishers to the left
- and front in open fields, and the First Maryland on the Hanover
- turnpike, in position to protect the right of my line._
-
- “_The very superior force of dismounted skirmishers of the enemy
- advanced on our left and front required the line to be re-enforced by
- one of General Custer’s regiments. At this time the skirmishing became
- very brisk on both sides, and the artillery fire was begun by the
- enemy and ourselves. During the skirmish of the dismounted men, the
- enemy brought upon the field a column for a charge. The charge of this
- column was met by the Seventh Michigan Cavalry, of the First (Second)
- Brigade, Third Division, but not successfully. The advantage gained in
- this charge was soon wrested from the enemy by the gallant charge of
- the First Michigan, of the same brigade. This regiment drove the enemy
- back to his starting point, the enemy withdrew to his left, and on
- passing the wood in which the First New Jersey Cavalry was posted,
- that regiment gallantly and successfully charged the flank of his
- column. Heavy skirmishing was still maintained by the Third
- Pennsylvania Cavalry with the enemy, and was continued until
- nightfall. During the engagement, a portion of this regiment made a
- very handsome and successful charge upon one of the enemy’s regiments.
- The enemy retired his column behind his artillery, and at dark
- withdrew from his former position. The fire of the artillery during
- this engagement was the most accurate that I have ever seen._”
-
-Stuart’s forces numbered about 7,000, and Gregg and Custer’s about
-5,000.
-
-
- Lee’s Retreat.
-
-On the night of the 3rd, Lee withdrew all his forces to Seminary and
-Snyder ridges. Orders were issued and instructions given for the retreat
-to the Potomac River at Williamsport and Falling Waters. The effectives
-moved to Fairfield over the Hagerstown or Fairfield Road. The
-wagon-train, 17 miles long, with the wounded, was moved by way of the
-Cashtown Road (Chambersburg Pike), under the command of
-Brigadier-General John D. Imboden, who has described his interview with
-General Lee at his headquarters, which were still located in an orchard
-in the rear of the Seminary buildings, as follows:
-
- “_He invited me into his tent, and as soon as we were seated he
- remarked: ‘We must now return to Virginia. As many of our poor wounded
- as possible must be taken home. I have sent for you because your men
- and horses are fresh and in good condition, to guard and conduct our
- train back to Virginia. The duty will be arduous, responsible, and
- dangerous, for I am afraid you will be harassed by the enemy’s
- cavalry. I can spare you as much artillery as you may require but no
- other troops, as I shall need all I have to return safely by a
- different and shorter route than yours. The batteries are generally
- short of ammunition, but you will probably meet a supply I have
- ordered from Winchester to Williamsport._”
-
-On account of a terrific rainstorm shortly after noon on the 4th there
-was considerable delay in getting the Confederate train started. Well
-guarded in front and rear, the head of the column near Cashtown was put
-in motion and began the ascent of the mountain. The wounded suffered
-indescribable hardships. Many had been without food for thirty-six
-hours, and had received no medical attention since the battle. Among the
-wounded officers were General Pender and General Scales. The trip cost
-Pender his life. General Imboden said:
-
- “_During this retreat I witnessed the most heartrending scenes of the
- War._”
-
-As a military movement the retreat was a success. Though harassed by
-pursuing forces, the train reached the Potomac with comparatively little
-loss.
-
-The main Confederate Army crossed the mountain, principally at the
-Fairfield gap. On account of the heavy rain, Ewell’s Corps, which
-brought up the rear did not leave Gettysburg until the forenoon of the
-5th. Somewhat delayed, but not seriously impeded, Lee arrived at the
-Potomac on July 12, finding it too high to cross. There he entrenched
-his army. The next day, the waters having fallen, he got safely away.
-
-
- No Pursuit by Meade.
-
-Because of Lee’s strong position, Meade made no countercharge. He had
-won a notable victory, and believed it unwise to risk undoing his work.
-His army had suffered heavily. Both armies moved south. The Confederate
-cause had received a severe blow. The defeat at Gettysburg and the
-surrender of Vicksburg on July 4th to Grant ended all hope of foreign
-recognition. Yet, for almost two years the desperate struggle was to
-continue!
-
- [Illustration: The boulder-strewn face of Little Round Top,
- assaulted by brave Confederates and held by brave Unionists]
-
-
- The Gettysburg Carnage.
-
-The War records estimate the Union casualties, killed, wounded, and
-missing, at 23,000 of the 84,000 engaged. The Confederate casualties are
-estimated at over 20,000 of the 75,000 engaged. Approximately 10,000
-bodies were left at Gettysburg for burial, and 21,000 living men to be
-healed of their wounds.
-
-No words can picture the desolation of the little town. As the soldiers
-marched away, their places were taken by physicians and surgeons, nurses
-and orderlies, civilian as well as military, and the ministrations of
-mercy began. In these the citizens of Gettysburg, especially the women,
-took an important part. Hither came also a new army of parents and wives
-and brothers and sisters, seeking, sometimes with success, sometimes
-with grievous disappointment, for their beloved.
-
-
-
-
- HAPPENINGS ON THE THIRD DAY
-
-
- A Medal for Disobedience
-
-On the afternoon of July 3rd, Captain William E. Miller, of Company H,
-2nd Brigade, of Gregg’s Division of Union Cavalry, made a charge against
-the Confederate Cavalry, in command of Major-General J. E. B. Stuart, in
-their movement from Cress Ridge, East Cavalry Field, to reach the rear
-of Meade’s line at the time of Pickett’s Charge.
-
-The incident is described by Captain William Brooke Rawle, a participant
-in the charge, in his “History of the Third Pennsylvania Cavalry.”
-
-“When the cavalry fighting began, Captain Miller’s squadron was
-stationed in Lott’s woods to the west of the Low Dutch Road, beyond the
-Hanover Road, and was deployed, mounted as skirmishers, along the
-western edge of the woods. There was considerable long-range firing
-before the climax of the fighting came. About 3 o’clock in the afternoon
-... a large body of cavalry, which proved to be Hampton’s and Fitzhugh
-Lee’s brigades, was seen approaching in magnificent order, mounted, from
-the northern side of the field. Captain Miller and I rode out a few
-yards in front of our position to a slight rise in the ground to get a
-good view. The enemy quickened his pace, first to a trot, then to a
-gallop, and then the charge was sounded. The nearest available compact
-body of Union Cavalry at hand to meet the enemy was the 1st Michigan
-Cavalry of General Custer’s brigade, which was serving temporarily under
-General Gregg. It was ordered to meet the enemy’s charge by a
-counter-charge, although the Confederate brigade greatly outnumbered the
-Michigan regiment. Captain Miller and I saw at once that unless more men
-were sent against the enemy the Michigan regiment would be swept from
-the field. He said to me, ‘I have been ordered to hold this position at
-all hazards, but if you will back me up if I get into trouble for
-exceeding my orders, I will make a charge with the squadron.’ This was
-in order to make a diversion in favor of our troops, and help the
-Michigan men. I assured him in an emphatic manner that I would stand by
-him through thick and thin. He then ordered me to rally the left wing of
-the squadron while he did the same with the right. When this was done
-the squadron fired a volley into the Confederate column, which was
-within easy range. The men were very impatient to begin their charge,
-and the right wing, headed by Captain Miller, started off at a gallop.
-
-“A stone and rail fence divided the line of the squadron front, running
-at right angles to it, and I had to make a slight detour to get around
-it with the left wing of the squadron. This, and the fact that the head
-of the squadron was headed to the right oblique, caused a gap of some
-thirty yards or so between the rear of the portion of the squadron under
-Captain Miller and myself with the left of the left portion. Meanwhile
-the two opposing columns had met, and the head of the Confederate column
-was fast becoming jammed, and the men on the flanks were beginning to
-turn back. Captain Miller, with his men struck the left flank of the
-enemy’s column pretty well towards the rear, about two-thirds or
-three-fourths of the way down, and as the impetus of the latter had
-stopped while his men had full headway on, he drove well into the column
-and cut off its rear and forced it back in the direction whence it came,
-and the captain and some of his men got as far as the Rummel house. As
-to this last, I learned from the men engaged. Captain Miller was wounded
-in the arm during the fight.
-
-“I myself with the rear portion of Captain Miller’s squadron did not
-succeed in getting all the way through. Just as I and my men reached the
-flank of the enemy many of the latter were getting to the rear and we
-were swept along with the current and scattered, some of us, including
-myself, though narrowly escaping capture, succeeding in working our way
-in one’s and two’s to the right, where we got back into our lines again.
-
-“The gallant conduct and dashing charge made by Captain Miller and his
-men were commented upon by all who saw it. A fact that made it all the
-more commendable was that it was done upon his own responsibility,
-without orders from a superior officer.”
-
-In July, 1897, a Congressional Medal of Honor was bestowed upon Captain
-Miller by direction of President McKinley, through the Secretary of War,
-General Russell A. Alger. The conferring of this tribute was especially
-appropriate, inasmuch as General Alger himself had participated on the
-right flank as the Colonel of the 5th Michigan, and was therefore
-eminently competent to decide.
-
-
- The Wentz House
-
-The Wentz house, which stands at the intersection of the Emmitsburg and
-Wheatfield roads, is now a Government-owned property, and is marked with
-an iron tablet with the inscription “Wentz House.” It is not the house
-that was there at the time of the battle; the original building was
-dismantled and the present building erected on the same site.
-
-At the time of the battle the house was owned and occupied by John
-Wentz, who cultivated the small tract of land belonging to it. He was
-twice married, and at this time was living with his second wife, who was
-the mother of Henry Wentz, the principal actor in an interesting
-incident of the battle of Gettysburg.
-
-For many years before the beginning of the Civil War, carriage and
-coach-building was one of the leading industries of Gettysburg. Henry
-Wentz served an apprenticeship with the Ziegler firm of Gettysburg. He
-was frequently sent to deliver the products of the firm, and thereby
-became well acquainted with the different sections where sales were
-made.
-
-In the early ’50’s he decided to move to Martinsburg, Va. (now W. Va.),
-and establish a carriage-building shop of his own. When a local military
-organization was formed and designated the “Martinsburg Blues,” Henry
-became a member. Equipped with uniforms and arms, the members were
-drilled from time to time. Similar organizations were formed throughout
-the North as well as the South. Most of the members of the Martinsburg
-Blues, including Henry Wentz, decided to cast their lot with the
-Southern cause, and were assigned to places in the armies of the South.
-But, by the irony of fate, he was destined to get back to his old home
-and command a battery posted back of the house on his father’s land.
-
-During the first day the Wentz property was not in danger, but when
-General Lee extended his line of battle south along the line of Seminary
-Ridge, and General Meade prolonged his line opposite on Cemetery Ridge
-in preparation for the battle of the second day, the Wentz family, with
-the exception of the father, decided to seek a safer location. On the
-night of the second day, after Sickles’ advanced line at the Wentz house
-had been repulsed and occupied by the forces under General Lee, Henry
-Wentz visited his old home and was greatly surprised to find his father
-still there.
-
-Early in the morning of the third day, 75 guns, in command of Colonel E.
-P. Alexander, were moved forward from Lee’s first line to the line held
-by Sickles’ advanced line on the second day. The battery in charge of
-Henry Wentz, who held the rank of lieutenant, was posted back of his old
-home, and he took an active part in the terrific artillery engagement
-prior to Pickett’s Charge that ended on that part of the field. Henry’s
-father kept to the cellar and, singularly, passed through it all
-unharmed and unhurt.
-
-After the repulse of Pickett’s Charge, the guns were withdrawn to their
-first line. During the night of the third day, Henry was anxious to know
-whether or not his father was still safe. He therefore went over to the
-house and found him fast asleep and unhurt in a corner of the cellar.
-Not wishing to disturb his much-needed rest, he found the stump of a
-candle, lit it, and wrote, “Good-bye and God bless you!” This message he
-pinned on the lapel of his father’s coat and returned to his command
-preparatory to the retreat to Virginia.
-
-Early on the morning of the 4th, the father awoke from his much-needed
-sleep and found that all the soldiers had departed. He then walked back
-to the ridge and saw Lee’s army making hurried preparations for the
-retreat.
-
-
- Fought with a Hatchet
-
-At the battle of Gettysburg the 13th Vermont was a part of General
-Stannard’s Vermont command. The 2nd Vermont brigade had been left on
-outpost duty in Virginia until the third day after the Army of the
-Potomac had passed in pursuit of Lee’s troops into Maryland and
-Pennsylvania. Then the brigade got orders to proceed by forced marches
-to join the Army of the Potomac. The latter was also on a forced march,
-but in six days’ time the Vermonters had overtaken the main body. Just
-before the first day’s battle, Captain Brown’s command came up to a
-well, at which was an armed guard. “You can’t get water here,” said the
-guard. “’Gainst orders.” “Damn your orders!” said Captain Brown, and
-then with all the canteens of the men, and with only one man to help
-him, he thrust the guard aside and filled the canteens. His arrest
-followed, and he was deprived of his sword.
-
-When the battle began, Captain Brown was a prisoner. He begged for a
-chance to rejoin his company, and was allowed to go. His men were far
-away at the front, and he had no weapons. He picked up a camp hatchet
-and ran all the way to the firing-line, reached it, rushed into the
-fray, and singling out a Rebel officer 50 yards away, penetrated the
-Rebel ranks, collared the officer, wresting from him his sword and
-pistol, after which he dropped the hatchet, while his men cheered him
-amid the storm of bullets and smoke.
-
-When the design for the 13th Vermont monument was made, it was the
-desire of the committee to have the statue represent Captain Brown,
-hatchet in hand. Accordingly, a model was prepared, but the Federal
-Government would not permit its erection. A second model was approved,
-showing Captain Brown holding a sabre and belt in his hand, the hatchet
-lying at his feet as though just dropped. The sabre depicted in the
-statue is an exact reproduction of the one captured.
-
-This monument is on the east side of Hancock Avenue, near the large
-Stannard monument.
-
-
- After the Battle
-
-This is an extract from “Four Years with the Army of the Potomac,” by
-Brigadier-General Regis de Trobriand, who commanded a brigade of
-Birney’s Division of the 3rd Corps during the battle of Gettysburg:
-
-“Between eight and nine o’clock in the evening of the 3rd, as the last
-glimmers of daylight disappeared behind us, I received an order to go
-down into the flat, and occupy the field of battle with two brigades in
-line. That of Colonel Madill was added to mine for that purpose. General
-Ward, who temporarily commanded the Division, remained in reserve with
-the 3rd.
-
-“The most profound calm reigned now, where a few hours before so furious
-a tempest had raged. The moon, with her smiling face, mounted up in the
-starry heavens as at Chancellorsville. Her pale light shone equally upon
-the living and the dead, the little flowers blooming in the grass as
-well as upon the torn bodies lying in the pools of clotted blood. Dead
-bodies were everywhere. On no field of battle have I ever seen them in
-such numbers. The greater part of my line was strewn with them, and,
-when the arms were stacked and the men asleep, one was unable to say, in
-that mingling of living and dead, which would awake the next morning and
-which would not.
-
-“Beyond the line of advanced sentinels, the wounded still lay where they
-had fallen, calling for assistance or asking for water. Their cries died
-away without any reply in the silence of the night, for the enemy was
-close by, and it was a dangerous undertaking to risk advancing into the
-space which separated us. In making an attempt, an officer of my staff
-drew three shots, which whistled unpleasantly near his ears. All labors
-of charity were necessarily put off till the next morning. It is sad to
-think that this was a sentence of death to numbers of the unfortunate.
-Mournful thoughts did not hinder the tired soldiers from sleeping.
-Everything was soon forgotten in a dreamless slumber.
-
-“At dawn of day, when I awakened, the first object which struck my eyes
-was a young sergeant stretched out on his back, his head resting on a
-flat stone, serving for a pillow. His position was natural, even
-graceful. One knee slightly raised, his hands crossed on his breast, a
-smile on his lips, caused by a dream, perhaps, of her who awaited his
-return in the distant Green Mountains. He was dead. Wounded, he had
-sought out this spot in which to die. His haversack was near him. He had
-taken out of it a little book on which his last looks had been cast, for
-the book was still open in his stiffened fingers. It was the New
-Testament; on the first leaf a light hand had traced in pencil, some
-letters, rubbed out, which one might think were a name. I have kept the
-volume, and on the white space, to the unknown name I have added, ‘Died
-at Gettysburg, July 3, 1863.’
-
-“During the night, the enemy had drawn back his pickets to the other
-side of the Emmitsburg Road, and left us free access to assist the
-wounded. The appearance of litters and ambulance wagons strengthened
-them, by giving them hope. They related their engagements of the evening
-before, and their sufferings during the night. One of them, pointing out
-the dead lying around him, said: ‘This one lived only till sundown; that
-one lasted until about midnight. There is one who was still groaning but
-an hour ago.’
-
-“Continuing my walk, I came near a large isolated rock. It might have
-been eight or ten feet high, and fifteen or twenty feet broad. Rounding
-on the side towards the enemy, but flat as a wall on the opposite side,
-it had served as an advanced post for one of our companies, probably
-belonging to Stannard’s brigade. What had happened there? Had they been
-surprised by the rapid advance of the enemy? Had they tried to shelter
-themselves behind that stone during the fight? Had the firing of
-canister by our guns rendered retreat impossible? Had they refused to
-surrender? No one, to my knowledge, escaped to tell. Whatever was the
-cause, there were twenty lying there cut down by lead and steel, and
-amongst the pile I recognized the uniform of an officer and the chevrons
-of a sergeant.
-
-“When I returned to the center of my line, the ambulances were at work,
-and squads detailed from each regiment picked up the arms which were
-scattered by thousands over the field. A little later my command was
-relieved, and again took its position of the evening before.
-
-“Some reconnaissances sent out to look for the enemy had not far to go
-to find him. His pickets were still on the edge of the woods in front of
-the Seminary Heights. We afterwards learned that he expected, during the
-whole day, that we would attack, hoping to get revenge. But General
-Meade, content with his victory, would not take the risk of compromising
-it by leaving his position before Lee had abandoned his, in which he
-acted wisely, whatever may have been said to the contrary.
-
-“The afternoon was thus spent in first picking up our wounded and
-afterwards those of the enemy. The ambulance wagons were hardly enough
-for the work. The litter-bearers placed the wounded along our lines,
-where they had to await their turn to be taken to the rear. We did what
-we could to make the delay as short as possible, for many of them were
-brave Southern boys, some having enlisted because they honestly believed
-it was their duty, others torn by force from their families, to be
-embodied in the Rebel army by the inexorable conscription. After the
-defeat, they were resigned, without boasting, and expressed but one
-wish: that the war would terminate as soon as possible, since the
-triumph of the North appeared to be but a question of time.
-
-“I recall to mind a young man from Florida who told me his history. His
-name was Perkins, and he was scarcely twenty years old. The only son of
-aged parents, he had in vain endeavored to escape service. Tracked
-everywhere by the agents of the Richmond government, he had been forced
-to take up the musket, and had done his duty so well that he had been
-rapidly promoted to sergeant. In the last charge of the day before, he
-had had his left heel carried away by a piece of shell, and his right
-hand shattered by a canister shot. One amputation, at least, probably
-two, was what he had to expect; and yet he did not complain. But when he
-spoke of his aged parents awaiting his return, and of the sad condition
-in which he would re-enter the paternal home, his smile was more
-heart-breaking than any complaint. In order that his wounds might be
-sooner dressed, one of my aids, Lieutenant Houghton, let him have his
-horse, at the risk of marching on foot if we moved before he was
-returned.
-
-“The next night we passed in the rain. It always rains on the day after
-a great battle. On the morning following we discovered the enemy to be
-in full retreat. Seeing that the attack he expected did not come off,
-and fearing for the safety of his communications with the Potomac,
-General Lee could do nothing else but retire through the mountains,
-which he did during the night of the 4th and 5th of July. Then only
-began that disorder in his columns, and that confusion, the picture of
-which has been somewhat exaggerated; an almost inevitable consequence,
-besides, to that kind of a movement. Our cavalry began to harass him on
-the flanks, while the 6th Corps, having remained intact, pressed on his
-rear-guard.
-
-“The difficulties that General Sedgwick met in the Fairfield pass, where
-the enemy had intrenched, probably made General Meade fear that a direct
-pursuit would entail too great loss of time in the mountains. So,
-instead of following Lee in the valley of the Cumberland, he decided to
-march on a parallel line, to the east of the South Mountains.”
-
-
- An Honest Man
-
-General E. P. Alexander, Chief of Artillery of Longstreet’s Corps, tells
-of a trade that occurred during the retreat from Gettysburg:
-
-“Near Hagerstown I had an experience with an old Dunkard which gave me a
-high and lasting respect for the people of that faith. My scouts had had
-a horse transaction with this old gentleman, and he came to see me about
-it. He made no complaint, but said it was his only horse, and as the
-scouts had told him we had some hoof-sore horses we should have to leave
-behind, he came to ask if I would trade him one of those for his horse,
-as without one his crop would be lost.
-
-“I recognized the old man at once as a born gentleman in his delicate
-characterization of the transaction as a trade. I was anxious to make
-the trade as square as circumstances would permit. So I assented to his
-taking a foot-sore horse, and offered him besides payment in Confederate
-money. This he respectfully declined. Considering how the recent battle
-had gone, I waived argument on the point of its value but tried another
-suggestion. I told him that we were in Maryland as the guests of the
-United States; that after our departure the Government would pay all
-bills left behind; and that I would give him an order on the United
-States for the value of his horse and have it approved by General
-Longstreet. To my surprise he declined this also. I supposed then that
-he was simply ignorant of the bonanza in a claim against the Government,
-and I explained that; and, telling him that money was no object to us
-under the circumstances, I offered to include the value of his whole
-farm. He again said he wanted nothing but the foot-sore horse. Still
-anxious that the war should not grind this poor old fellow in his
-poverty, I suggested that he take two or three foot-sore horses which we
-would have to leave anyhow, when we marched. Then he said, ‘Well, sir, I
-am a Dunkard, and the rule of our church is an eye for an eye, and a
-tooth for a tooth, and a horse for a horse, and I can’t break the rule.’
-
-“I replied that the Lord, who made all horses, knew that a good horse
-was worth a dozen old battery scrubs; and after some time prevailed on
-him to take two, by calling one of them a gift. But that night we were
-awakened about midnight by approaching hoofs, and turned out expecting
-to receive some order. It was my old Dunkard leading one of his
-foot-sores. ‘Well, sir,’ he said, ‘you made it look all right to me
-today when you were talking; but after I went to bed tonight I got to
-thinking it all over, and I don’t think I can explain it to the church,
-and I would rather not try.’ With that he tied old foot-sore to a fence
-and rode off abruptly. Even at this late day it is a relief to my
-conscience to tender to his sect this recognition of their integrity and
-honesty, in lieu of the extra horse which I vainly endeavored to throw
-into the trade. Their virtues should commend them to all financial
-institutions in search of incorruptible employees.”
-
-
- Extracts from the Diary of Colonel Fremantle
-
-Colonel Fremantle, a member of the Cold Stream Guards, was a guest of
-the Army of Northern Virginia during the Gettysburg campaign. After the
-battle of Gettysburg, he returned to England and published “Three Months
-in the Southern States.” The following is a vivid extract, describing a
-part of the battle from the Confederate lines.
-
-“_July 1st (Wednesday)._ At 4.30 P.M. we came in sight of Gettysburg,
-and joined General Lee and General Hill, who were on the top of one of
-the ridges which form a peculiar feature of the country round
-Gettysburg. We could see the enemy retreating up one of the opposite
-ridges, pursued by the Confederates with loud yells. The position into
-which the enemy had been driven was evidently a strong one. His right
-appeared to rest on a cemetery, on the top of a high ridge to the right
-of Gettysburg, as we looked at it.
-
-“General Hill now came up and told me he had been very unwell all day,
-and in fact he looks very delicate. He said he had two divisions
-engaged, and had driven the enemy four miles into the present position,
-capturing a great many prisoners, some cannon, and some colors. He said,
-however, that the Yankees had fought with a determination unusual to
-them.
-
-“_July 2nd (Thursday)._ At 2 P.M. General Longstreet advised me, if I
-wished to have a good view of the battle, to return to my tree of
-yesterday. I did so and remained there with Lawley and Captain
-Schreibert during the rest of the afternoon. But until 4.45 P.M. all was
-profoundly quiet, and we began to doubt whether a fight was coming off
-today at all. At that time, however, Longstreet suddenly commenced a
-heavy cannonade on the right. Ewell immediately took it up on the left.
-The enemy replied with equal fury, and in a few moments the firing along
-the whole line was as heavy as it is possible to conceive. A dense smoke
-arose for six miles; there was little wind to drive it away, and the air
-seemed full of shells—each of which appeared to have a different style
-of going, and made a different noise from the others. The ordnance on
-both sides is of a very varied description. Every now and then a caisson
-would blow up—if a Federal one, a Confederate yell would immediately
-follow. The Southern troops, when charging, or to express their delight,
-always yell in a manner peculiar to themselves. The Yankee cheer is much
-like ours, but the Confederate officers declare that the Rebel yell has
-a particular merit, and always produces a salutary effect upon their
-adversaries. A corps is sometimes spoken of as ‘a good yelling
-regiment.’
-
-“As soon as the firing began, General Lee joined Hill just below our
-tree, and he remained there nearly all the time, looking through his
-field-glasses, sometimes talking to Hill and sometimes to Colonel Long
-of his staff. But generally he sat quite alone on the stump of a tree.
-What I remarked especially was, that during the whole time the firing
-continued, he sent only one message, and received only one report. It
-evidently is his system to arrange the plan thoroughly with the three
-commanders, and then leave to them the duty of modifying and carrying it
-out to the best of their abilities.
-
-“When the cannonade was at its height, a Confederate band of music,
-between the cemetery and ourselves, began to play polkas and waltzes,
-which sounded very curious, accompanied by the hissing and bursting of
-the shells.
-
-“At 5.45 all became comparatively quiet on our left and in the cemetery;
-but volleys of musketry on the right told us that Longstreet’s infantry
-were advancing, and the onward progress of the smoke showed that he was
-progressing favorably; but about 6.30 there seemed to be a check, and
-even a slight retrograde movement.... A little before dark the firing
-dropped off in every direction, and soon ceased altogether. We then
-received intelligence that Longstreet had carried everything before him
-for some time, capturing several batteries and driving the enemy from
-his positions; but when Hill’s Florida brigade and some other troops
-gave way, he was forced to abandon a small portion of the ground he had
-won, together with all the captured guns, except three. His troops,
-however, bivouacked during the night on ground occupied by the enemy in
-the morning.
-
-“_July 3rd (Friday)._ At 2.30 P.M., after passing General Lee and his
-staff, I rode on through the woods in the direction in which I had left
-Longstreet. I soon began to meet many wounded men returning from the
-front; many of them asked in piteous tones the way to a doctor or an
-ambulance. The further I got, the greater became the number of the
-wounded. At last I came to a perfect stream of them flocking through the
-woods in numbers as great as the crowd in Oxford Street in the middle of
-the day. Some were walking alone on crutches composed of two rifles,
-others were supported by men less badly wounded than themselves, and
-others carried on stretchers by the ambulance corps, but in no case did
-I see a sound man helping the wounded to the rear unless he carried the
-red badge of the ambulance corps. They were still under heavy fire, the
-shells bringing down great limbs of trees, and carrying further
-destruction amongst this melancholy procession. I saw all this in much
-less time than it takes to write it, and although astonished to meet
-such vast numbers of wounded, I had not seen enough to give me any idea
-of the real extent of the mischief.
-
-“When I got close up to General Longstreet, I saw one of his regiments
-advancing through the woods in good order; so, thinking I was just in
-time to see the attack, I remarked to the General that ‘I wouldn’t have
-missed this for anything.’ Longstreet was seated at the top of a snake
-fence at the edge of the woods (Spangler Woods), and looking perfectly
-calm and unperturbed. He replied, laughing, ‘The devil you wouldn’t! I
-would like to have missed it very much; we’ve attacked and been
-repulsed: look there!’
-
-“For the first time I then had a view of the open space between the two
-positions, and saw it covered with Confederates slowly and sulkily
-returning towards us in small broken parties, under a heavy fire of
-artillery. But the fire where we were was not so bad as further to the
-rear; for although the air seemed alive with shells, yet the greater
-number burst behind us. The General told me that Pickett’s Division had
-succeeded in carrying the enemy’s position and captured his guns, but
-after remaining there twenty minutes, it had been forced to retire on
-the retreat of Heth and Pettigrew on his left....
-
-“Major Walton was the only officer with him (Longstreet) when I came
-up—all the rest had been put in the charge. In a few minutes Major
-Latrobe arrived on foot, carrying his saddle, having just had his horse
-killed. Colonel Sorrell was also in the same predicament, and Captain
-Goree’s horse was wounded in the mouth....
-
-“Soon after I joined General Lee, who had in the meanwhile come to that
-part of the field on becoming aware of the disaster. If Longstreet’s
-conduct was admirable, that of General Lee was perfectly sublime. He was
-engaged in rallying and in encouraging the broken troops, and was riding
-about a little in front of the woods, quite alone—the whole of his staff
-being engaged in a similar manner further to the rear. His face, which
-is always placid and cheerful, did not show signs of the slightest
-disappointment, or annoyance; and he was addressing to every soldier he
-met a few words of encouragement, such as, ‘All this will come right in
-the end: we’ll talk it over afterwards; but, in the meantime, all good
-men must rally. We want all good and true men just now.’ He spoke to all
-the wounded men that passed him, and the slightly wounded he exhorted
-‘to bind up their hurts and take up a musket’ in this emergency. Very
-few failed to answer his appeal, and I saw many badly wounded men take
-off their hats and cheer him. He said to me, ‘This has been a sad day
-for us, Colonel—a sad day; but we can’t expect always to gain
-victories.’ He was also kind enough to advise me to get into some more
-sheltered position as the shells were bursting round us with
-considerable frequency....
-
-“I saw General Wilcox come up to him, and explain, almost crying, the
-state of his brigade. General Lee immediately shook hands with him and
-said cheerfully, ‘Never mind, General, all this has been _my_ fault—it
-is I that have lost this fight, and you must help me out of it in the
-best way you can.’ In this manner I saw General Lee encourage and
-reanimate his somewhat dispirited troops, and magnanimously take upon
-his own shoulders the whole weight of the repulse.”
-
-
-
-
- GETTYSBURG AND ITS MILITARY PARK
-
-
-The Gettysburg National Military Park lies entirely within the limits of
-Adams County, Pennsylvania. Gettysburg, the county-seat, is situated
-about 8 miles from the Mason and Dixon’s line, the southern boundary of
-the State. It was founded in 1780, and named for its founder, James
-Gettys.
-
-At the time of the battle the town had a population of about 2,000.
-Little did the quiet inhabitants expect that its peaceful environs—Oak
-Hill, Seminary Ridge, Culp’s Hill, Cemetery Hill, the Round Tops, and
-Devil’s Den—would witness the most sanguinary struggle of the Civil War,
-and that Gettysburg would gain a lasting fame, unequaled by the most
-noted battlefields of the Old World. Not even the commanders, Meade and
-Lee, knew where they would meet in battle array. Like two giant
-stormclouds, the two armies neared each other for days, neither
-foreseeing where they would mingle their lightnings in the storm of
-battle. Advance forces met and clashed while making reconnaissances—and
-Gettysburg and its vicinity was selected by accident rather than by
-design.
-
-What fame Gettysburg enjoyed was due chiefly to its College, then called
-Pennsylvania, now Gettysburg, and to its Lutheran Theological Seminary.
-The town had been the home for some years of Thaddeus Stevens, the
-“Great Commoner,” life-long champion of human rights, savior of the free
-school system of Pennsylvania, and after his removal to Lancaster, in
-1842, a brilliant leader in the House of Representatives during the war.
-The vicinity furnished its full quota of soldiers, though none of its
-companies except one, Company K, First Pennsylvania Reserves,
-participated in the battle, the rest being on duty elsewhere.
-
-The population of Gettysburg has increased to 5,500. The College and
-Seminary are still flourishing. The College has an enrollment of over
-600 students. A Reserve Officers Training Corps has been added to the
-course, and students are being instructed in military tactics by United
-States Army officers.
-
-The area of Gettysburg National Military Park, including East Cavalry
-Field 15 miles east of the town, and South Cavalry Field 3 miles south,
-is nearly 40 square miles. The part surrounding Gettysburg covers about
-24 square miles, and was the scene of the principal engagements on July
-1st, 2nd, and 3rd, 1863. The Government owns a total of 2,441 acres; the
-remainder is held by private owners.
-
-The first organization in charge of the battlefield was the Gettysburg
-Battlefield Memorial Association, upon which the Legislature of
-Pennsylvania, on April 30th, 1864, conferred the rights of a
-corporation. In 1867-68 the Legislature appropriated $6,000 to be
-applied to the purchase of portions of the battlegrounds and the general
-purposes for which the Association was incorporated. The money was used
-to secure the portion of Culp’s Hill upon which the breastworks were
-still standing; the section of East Cemetery Hill where Stewart’s,
-Reynolds’, Ricketts’, Cooper’s and Weidrick’s batteries were posted,
-where the lunettes still remain; and also a small piece of ground on the
-slope and summit of Little Round Top. This purchase was the nucleus of
-what became, by additional purchases of the Association and later of the
-Gettysburg National Park Commission, the present Gettysburg National
-Military Park.
-
- [Illustration: View from Culp’s Hill.—Gettysburg’s fine trees. In
- the distance is the Phillipoteaux Cyclorama with its vivid
- representation of Pickett’s Charge]
-
-The Legislatures of the Northern States represented in the battle
-contributed various sums for the prosecution of the work, and from time
-to time new members of the Association were appointed. As the
-appropriations were received, additional land was acquired and avenues
-were laid out. The erection of monuments to the different regiments was
-begun by the State of Massachusetts in 1879. In 1894, the whole
-property, about 600 acres of land, with 17 miles of avenues, giving
-access to 320 monuments, was transferred to the United States
-Government. The Gettysburg National Military Park was established by Act
-of Congress, approved February 11th, 1895, and the Secretary of War
-appointed the Gettysburg National Park Commission: Colonel John P.
-Nicholson, Pennsylvania, Chairman, John B. Bachelder, Massachusetts, and
-Brigadier General William H. Forney, Alabama. Colonel E. B. Cope was
-selected as topographical engineer.
-
-Upon the death of General Forney, Major William M. Robbins, of North
-Carolina, was appointed to fill the vacancy. John B. Bachelder was
-succeeded by Major Charles A. Richardson, of New York. On the death of
-Major Robbins, General L. L. Lomax, of Virginia, was appointed. General
-Lomax died May 28th, 1913, and Major Richardson on January 24th, 1917.
-Colonel Nicholson, the last surviving member of the Commission, died on
-March 8th, 1922. All Commissioners, with the exception of John B.
-Bachelder, served in the Battle of Gettysburg, and he reached the field
-immediately after the battle, continuing his interest and his historical
-researches until his death. On the death of Colonel Nicholson, Colonel
-E. B. Cope was appointed Superintendent.
-
-The Park is a monument to the devotion of this Commission, in active
-operation for thirty years. Colonel Cope was succeeded (1931) by Colonel
-E. E. Davis, a native of Iowa, commissioned Major Quartermaster Reserve
-Corps, March 6th, 1917, who served overseas in the World War. Colonel
-Davis retired on July 16th, 1932. James R. McConaghie, native of Iowa, a
-graduate of Harvard College, 1st Lieutenant, 4th Infantry, 3rd Division
-in the World War, was appointed Superintendent February 8th, 1933.
-
-The development begun by the Association included laying out of avenues
-and erecting of regimental monuments, but nothing was done toward
-converting the avenues into permanent roads. The different lines of
-battle were not accurately marked, and important sections of land
-remained in private hands. By the end of the year the new Commission had
-made preliminary survey of 20 miles of avenues and proposed avenues,
-and, the following year, began construction. Gradually the whole field
-was made accessible by almost 35 miles of telford and macadam avenues.
-These avenues show the important positions occupied by the contending
-forces. Stone bridges were built across the streams. Miles of
-pipe-fencing and post-and-rail fencing were constructed, the former
-along the avenues indicating the battle-lines and the latter to enclose
-the Government land. Five steel observation towers were erected on
-prominent points, affording views in all directions.
-
- [Illustration: Jennie Wade House.—Here Jennie Wade was killed while
- baking bread. The house is practically unchanged: bullet-marks and
- other injuries have been preserved]
-
-An important task of the Commission was the accurate marking of the
-lines of battle of the opposing forces. Prominent commanders of both
-armies visited the field and assisted in locating the positions of the
-corps, divisions, and brigades. Suitable monuments and markers were then
-erected, with bronze tablets inscribed with an account of the operations
-of each corps, division, and brigade.
-
-Markers also show the locations of the headquarters of the
-Commander-in-Chief, as well as of the corps commanders of both armies.
-Six equestrian statues have been erected by States; also, imposing State
-monuments by New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia, North Carolina and
-Alabama. There are many smaller markers, placed by States and other
-organizations. Bronze statues of division and brigade commanders have
-been erected. There are a number of National Monuments; one in the
-National Cemetery, where Lincoln stood when making his immortal address
-at the dedication of the cemetery, November 19th, 1863; also one in the
-south end of the cemetery bearing a bust of Lincoln, and another on
-Hancock Avenue in memory of the troops of the Regular Army. All the
-positions held by the Regulars have been marked. The total number of
-monuments to date is 845. Four hundred and fifteen guns indicate the
-positions of the artillery brigades and battalions.
-
-The relief maps of the Gettysburg National Military Park, on exhibition
-at the office in the Federal Building, in Gettysburg, were designed by
-the Engineer of the Commission, Colonel E. B. Cope, and built under his
-supervision. The largest reproduces 24 square miles and correctly
-delineates all the topographical features of the Park. Many of the
-monuments and markers erected by the Commission were also designed by
-Colonel Cope. The imposing stone gateway at the entrance to Hancock
-Avenue was proposed by the Chairman, Colonel Nicholson, and designed by
-the Engineer. This gateway is built of native granite taken from the
-battlefield.
-
-Celebrations, reunions, dedications, and campfires almost without number
-have been held at Gettysburg, bringing to the field those who
-participated in the battle, their families and friends, and many other
-visitors. For many years, until a permanent camp was established at Mt.
-Gretna, the National Guard of Pennsylvania encamped on the field. The
-two greatest occasions were the Twenty-fifth Anniversary in 1888, and
-the Fiftieth Anniversary in 1913. The latter was attended by almost
-55,000 survivors of the two armies. Ample accommodations were provided
-for their comfort and enjoyment. The time extended over a period of
-eight days, June 29th to July 6th, and every State in the Union was
-represented. The men who had met as mortal enemies fifty years before
-now met as brothers. The American soldier is not only a good fighter but
-also a good friend. Many donned their uniforms of ’63, some of Blue and
-some of Gray, but in the wearers great changes had been wrought. The
-sturdy veterans who in the vigor of their youth met fifty years before
-in battle, returned grizzled with age and the ravages of war, many
-bearing scars. With keen interest, in pairs and groups, they moved from
-place to place relating to each other their experiences. In startling
-contrast to the 45,000 casualties of ’63 there were only seven deaths,
-and these from the infirmities of age and natural causes. The President
-of the United States and many able speakers from all sections of the
-country made addresses to large audiences. It was an event never to be
-forgotten and did much finally to heal the animosities engendered by the
-war.
-
-On July 3, 1922, Marines from Quantico, Va., under the command of
-Brigadier-General Smedley D. Butler, repeated Pickett’s Charge as it was
-made in 1863, and on July 4th conducted it as such a charge would be
-made under present warfare conditions with modern equipment and
-maneuvers. President Harding, General Pershing, and many others
-prominent in the State and Nation enjoyed the display.
-
- [Illustration: Culp’s Hill.—Here the Union troops held their line
- late in the afternoon of the second day.]
-
-For many years the West Point Military Academy seniors visited the
-field, usually in the month of May, remaining several days in order to
-study the strategical and tactical features of the battle in preparation
-for a required thesis. These visits have been discontinued since the
-World War.
-
-In May, 1917, a training-camp for World War soldiers was established
-within the limits of the Park. The 4th, 7th and 58th Regiments of U. S.
-Infantry were transferred from El Paso, Texas, augmented by recruits,
-and divided into six United States Regular Regiments, viz.: 4th, 7th,
-58th, 59th, 60th, and 61st. After being trained they were sent either to
-other camps or to the battlefields of France. During the year 1918 a
-unit of Tank Service was trained on the battlefield.
-
-The fortifications remaining within the park include a line of
-earthworks on Culp’s Hill, which was thrown up by the Union troops of
-the 12th Corps. On East Cemetery Hill there are a number of lunettes at
-the position held by the Union batteries. The stone wall along the west
-side of Hancock Avenue, extending from the Taneytown Road to some
-distance south of the Angle, where Armistead crossed it in Pickett’s
-Charge, is well preserved, and practically the same as at the time of
-the battle. There are some stone walls on the south side of Little Round
-Top that were erected and used by the Union forces. At the base of Big
-Round Top and along Seminary Ridge are long stone walls, erected and
-used by the Confederates. The boulders in the vicinity of Devil’s Den
-and the Round Tops afforded natural defences for both armies. A line of
-earthworks on South Hancock Avenue is still in good condition.
-
- [Illustration: The Virginia Memorial.—The bronze group represents
- the various arms of the Confederate service. Above is a portrait
- statue of General Lee. The Memorial is the work of F. W. Sievers.]
-
-The physical features of the Park are both varied and interesting.
-Standing in bold relief in the background at a distance of about 8 miles
-is a continuation of the Blue Ridge, designated locally as the South
-Mountain. This range, bounding the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia and the
-Cumberland Valley of Pennsylvania, screened the advance of the
-Confederate Army, and it was at the Cashtown Gap that General Lee
-ordered a concentration of his forces before his advance on Gettysburg.
-
-The entire surface of the Park consists of low ridges and intervening
-valleys, beginning on the north in Herr’s Ridge, upon which Heth’s
-Division was deployed at the opening of the battle on July 1st. Opposite
-this ridge, and extending in the same direction, is McPherson Ridge,
-where the Union cavalry forces under Buford were deployed. Along
-Willoughby Run, which flows between these ridges, the battle opened on
-July 1, 1863. The next elevation, immediately north and west of the
-town, is known as Oak Ridge at its northern extremity and as far south
-as the Chambersburg Pike; from this point to its southern extremity it
-is called Seminary Ridge, taking its name from the yet existing Lutheran
-Theological Seminary. It was held by the Union Army on the first day of
-the battle and formed its principal line of defence. On the second and
-third days it was the principal Confederate line.
-
-Seminary Ridge at its southern extremity drops off to a small ravine
-beyond which is Warfield Ridge, which extends in a southerly direction
-opposite Big Round Top; this formed the right of the Confederate line of
-battle on the second and third days.
-
-South and southwest of the town is Cemetery Ridge, of which Big Round
-Top and Little Round Top are spurs, named from the Evergreen Cemetery
-and the site of the National Cemetery after the battle.
-
- [Illustration: Ricketts’ Battery.—Ricketts’ Battery on East Cemetery
- Hill was remanned four times. Owing to the slope, the guns could not
- be sufficiently depressed, and the defenders fought with sticks and
- stones]
-
-Cemetery Ridge formed the main line of battle of the Union Army during
-the battles of the 2nd and 3rd. A short distance east of the cemetery it
-bends sharply to the right, forming two rocky and wooded prominences,
-Culp’s Hill and Spangler’s Hill. Between Seminary Ridge on the west and
-Cemetery Ridge on the east, a low ridge along the line of the Emmitsburg
-Road is designated Emmitsburg Road Ridge. This extends to the Peach
-Orchard. It was crossed on the afternoon of the 3rd by the assaulting
-column of Pickett’s Charge, and is one of the interesting points of the
-battle. Another ridge on the west front of Little Round Top contains
-Devil’s Den, a mass of enormous granite rocks, apparently tossed in
-confusion by some giant hand. In this picturesque spot Longstreet made
-his famous assault against the Union left on the afternoon of July 2nd.
-The trend of these various ridges conforms generally to that of the Blue
-Ridge.
-
- [Illustration: Guns Supporting Pickett’s Charge.—These guns took
- part in the great artillery duel which preceded Pickett’s Charge]
-
-There are no large streams on the battlefield. The largest is Marsh
-Creek, only a small part of which is within the Park area. On the east
-is Rock Creek, extending the whole length of the Park, so named on
-account of the immense boulders within the channel and along the
-borders. On the north and west of Gettysburg is Willoughby Run, also
-extending the entire length of the Park and flowing south to Marsh
-Creek. Another small stream is Plum Run, near the center, beginning on
-the Codori farm and running south through the gorge at the Round Tops;
-this was crossed and recrossed by both armies during the second and
-third days. Lying wholly within the Potomac basin, all the streams flow
-south.
-
-The highest point within the Park is Big Round Top on the south, which
-rises to an elevation of 786 feet, and is visible for miles in all
-directions. From Big Round Top, Little Round Top, Culp’s Hill, Cemetery
-Hill, and Oak Hill there are extensive panoramic views. Aside from the
-historic association there is much in the magnificent and beautiful
-scenery to interest the visitor. In the woods and meadows, in the glens
-and vales of the battlefield there are romantic and charming bits of
-landscape. The prospect from the National Cemetery as the sun disappears
-behind the South Mountain is one of great beauty and impressiveness.
-
-A large portion of the Park is covered with timber, chiefly the
-different varieties of oak, hickory, ash, poplar, elm, gum, cedar, and
-pine. Many of the groves are forests primeval, and in the fall the lofty
-pines of Big Round Top, contrasting with the crimson of the gigantic
-oaks covering it from base to summit and the gray-lichened surface of
-the massive boulders, form a striking and beautiful picture. Much care
-is given to the protection of the groves, in order to preserve the
-original condition of the field. Tree-surgery has prolonged the lives of
-trees of special historic interest. Visitors return year after year in
-spring to see the glorious masses of dogwood and redbud.
-
- [Illustration: Center of Union Line.—The center of the Union line,
- showing the Angle and the rounded clump of trees toward which
- Pickett directed his charge]
-
- [Illustration: High-Water Mark.—This monument, erected close to the
- rounded clump of trees toward which Pickett directed his charge,
- marks the turning-point of the conflict]
-
-East Cavalry Field, 3 miles east of Gettysburg, is the point from which
-Stuart’s Cavalry started to move round the right wing of the Union Army
-in order to reach the rear of Meade’s line at the time of Pickett’s
-Charge. South Cavalry Field, 3 miles south of Gettysburg, was held by
-Farnsworth’s Brigade of Kilpatrick’s Division, and Merritt’s Brigade of
-Buford’s Division. All these positions have been marked with suitable
-tablets. The Cavalry Fields, though not contiguous to the main field,
-are important parts of the National Military Park.
-
-Gettysburg has two railroads: the Philadelphia & Reading, and the
-Western Maryland, affording service from all points. Ten roads radiate
-from the town like the spokes of a wheel, and these provide ample
-approaches. The Lincoln Highway, entering via the Chambersburg Pike and
-continuing on the York Pike, gives a through route from west to east,
-and the Harrisburg Road leads directly to the State Capital. The
-Emmitsburg Road runs southwest to Emmitsburg, and thence to Frederick
-and Washington. The Baltimore Pike is a through route to Baltimore and
-the South. The Hanover Road runs to Hanover on the east. There are also
-the Taneytown and Hagerstown roads, the latter the line of General Lee’s
-retreat.
-
-A uniformed guide service with an established schedule of rates was
-authorized by the Secretary of War in 1916. No person is allowed to act
-as guide for pay without being examined and licensed by the
-Superintendent of the Park. There are interesting collections of Civil
-War relics at the Jennie Wade House, the Lee Museum, and other places. A
-single year has brought 800,000 visitors to the field. The average
-yearly number is 700,000.
-
-
-
-
- THE SOLDIERS’ NATIONAL CEMETERY
-
-
-Of the eighty-three cemeteries in the United States dedicated
-exclusively to the burial of soldiers, that at Gettysburg was the first.
-
-A few days after the battle, Governor A. G. Curtin, of Pennsylvania,
-solicitous for the welfare of the soldiers, came to Gettysburg and
-appointed David Wills, a leading attorney, to act as his agent in the
-work of establishing a cemetery. Correspondence with the governors of
-other States was begun. Grounds were selected by Mr. Wills, and by the
-direction of Governor Curtin purchased for the State of Pennsylvania, to
-provide a burial-place for soldiers who fell in the battle.
-
-Lots in the cemetery were tendered without cost to each State having
-dead upon the field. The expense of removing the bodies, laying out,
-ornamenting and enclosing the grounds, erecting a lodge for the keeper,
-and erecting a suitable monument to the memory of the dead, was to be
-borne by the several States, assessed in proportion to their population.
-
-The seventeen acres of land which were purchased lie on Cemetery Hill
-adjoining the Citizens’ Cemetery, at the apex of what had been the
-triangular battle-line of the Union Army, and an important tactical
-position on July 2nd and 3rd. At the time of the battle this land was a
-cornfield, divided by stone fences which were used to great advantage by
-the infantry of the Union Army. The most elevated portions had been
-points of vantage for many batteries of artillery.
-
-The land was surrounded on the west, east, and north by a substantial,
-well-built wall of native granite, topped by a heavy dressed coping. A
-division fence of iron was erected between the Soldiers’ National
-Cemetery and the Citizens’ Cemetery.
-
-The plans and designs for the laying out of the cemetery were prepared
-by William Saunders, an able landscape gardener of the Department of
-Agriculture, Washington, D. C. A semi-circular plan for the arrangement
-of the graves was adopted. The ground allotted to each State converges
-upon a central point. The size of each plot was determined by the number
-of graves belonging to each State. The bodies were placed side by side
-in parallel trenches with a space of twelve feet to each parallel and
-with a grass path between the rows of graves. The outer section is
-lettered A, and so on in alphabetical order. Two feet of space was
-allowed to each body, and a person standing in the center of the
-semi-circle and facing the circumference reads the names from left to
-right. The bodies are laid with the heads towards the center. The
-headstones are uniform in size and contain the name, regiment and
-company of each soldier so far as it was possible to obtain them.
-Another lot was set apart for the soldiers of the Regular Army. The
-graves of the unknown dead are located at each end of the semi-circle.
-
-On the 27th of October, 1863, the work of exhumation was begun under the
-supervision of Samuel Weaver, a citizen of Gettysburg. It was completed
-on March 18th, 1864. The number of bodies exhumed and interred in the
-cemetery was 3,512, including 158 taken up by the authorities of Boston.
-Of the total number, 979 were unknown. Later other bodies were
-discovered and added, and the total interred was 3,734. Many other Union
-dead were sent to their family burial places. The Confederate bodies
-remained in the original trenches until 1870-73, when 3,320 were
-transferred to southern cemeteries.
-
-The central point of the semi-circle from which Lincoln delivered his
-address is now occupied by the National Monument, one of the finest on
-the field. It is 60 feet in height; the pedestal, 25 feet square at the
-base, is crowned by a colossal statue representing the Genius of
-Liberty. Projecting from the angles are four buttresses, each supporting
-an allegorical statue. War is personified by an American soldier.
-History, a figure with stylus and pen, records the achievements and
-names of the dead. Peace is typified by a statue of an American
-mechanic; Plenty by a female figure with a sheaf of wheat. The main die
-of the pedestal is panelled. Upon one of the panels is inscribed an
-extract from Lincoln’s Address.
-
-From the point where this monument stands, a magnificent view is
-presented to the beholder. Sloping gradually toward the north and the
-west, the entire cemetery is spread out as a beautiful panorama, showing
-on a carpet of green the semi-circle of graves, the driveways lined with
-rows of splendid maples, spruces, birches, magnolias, and many other
-trees, as well as many clumps of shrubbery filling the intervals
-between. A view from this point as the sun sinks behind the distant
-range of the South Mountain is one long to be remembered.
-
-Standing at the upper end of the cemetery is a lesser monument in the
-form of an exedra, the center of which contains a bust of Lincoln. Two
-panels, one to the left, the other to the right, contain inscriptions;
-one giving David Wills’ letter of invitation to President Lincoln to
-attend the dedicatory exercises on November 19th, 1863; the other,
-Lincoln’s immortal address in its entirety.
-
-Opposite this monument is the Rostrum from which the memorial addresses
-are now delivered. The first memorial exercise was held on May 30th,
-1868, establishing a custom continued until this day. Among the speakers
-of recent years, either in the cemetery or on adjoining sections of the
-Park, have been Presidents Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson, Coolidge, and
-Hoover; Vice-President Curtis; Pennsylvania Governors Sproul and
-Pinchot, and Honorable James J. Davis.
-
- [Illustration: Airplane View.—The National Cemetery with its curving
- rows of headstones]
-
-
-
-
- LINCOLN AT GETTYSBURG
-
-
-No action of the battle itself has been more variously reported than the
-visit of President Lincoln at the time of the dedication of the National
-Cemetery on November 19, 1863. A wise collector and judge among many
-conflicting accounts is Dr. William E. Barton, noted Lincoln scholar,
-who in his “Lincoln at Gettysburg” has assembled all available material.
-
-Dr. Barton gives various interesting reasons why Lincoln chose to come
-to Gettysburg, though his presence was not very earnestly desired by the
-committee of arrangements. His ability as anything but a political
-speaker had not been demonstrated, and it was feared that he might spoil
-the occasion. Until two weeks before the dedication, the only invitation
-sent him was one of the printed circulars mailed to all national
-officials, congressmen, and others.
-
- [Illustration: National Monument.—On the site of National Monument
- stood the platform from which Abraham Lincoln delivered his immortal
- address]
-
-He was eager, Dr. Barton thinks, to see the field of Gettysburg. He had
-rejoiced in the victory, and had deplored with equal earnestness Meade’s
-cautious policy in making no pursuit. He wished to urge the people to
-renewed devotion to the cause which at that moment did not look
-altogether promising. He wished also, Dr. Barton believes, to counteract
-the impression made by a cruel slander which had wide circulation. Again
-and again newspapers inimical to him had published an account of his
-visit to the Antietam battlefield a year earlier, asserting that he had
-asked his friend Ward Hill Lamon to sing a ribald song as they drove
-about among the unburied dead.
-
- [Illustration: Lincoln Memorial.—Memorial in honor of Lincoln’s
- Address
- Henry K. Bush-Brown, Sculptor]
-
-Lincoln turned a deaf ear to most slanders, but this touched him to the
-quick. It was not unlikely that he longed to prove the libel false by a
-visit to another battlefield. The story continued to be told, however,
-throughout his life.
-
-Following is Ward Hill Lamon’s account of the visit to Gettysburg, from
-his “Recollections of Lincoln.” It is the opinion of the author of this
-book, an eye-witness, that the reception which Lamon describes had other
-causes than failure to value Lincoln’s words. The address was intended
-to be merely a simple dedication which would not naturally be followed
-by applause. The audience had stood through the address of Edward
-Everett which occupied two hours, and through a prayer and musical
-numbers in addition. Many of the crowd were turning away—they turned
-back and listened earnestly, but with no impulse to applaud.
-
-At the time of the dedication, Mr. Lamon was chief marshal of the parade
-and was with Lincoln on the platform when the address was delivered.
-Lamon writes:
-
- ... A day or two before the dedication of the National Cemetery at
- Gettysburg, Mr. Lincoln told me that he would be expected to make a
- speech on the occasion; that he was extremely busy, and had no time
- for preparation; and that he greatly feared he would not be able to
- acquit himself with credit, much less to fill the measure of public
- expectation. From his hat (the usual receptacle for his private notes
- and memoranda) he drew a sheet of foolscap, one side of which was
- closely written with what he informed me was a memorandum of his
- intended address. This he read to me, first remarking that it was not
- at all satisfactory to him. It proved to be in substance, if not the
- exact words, what was afterwards printed as his famous Gettysburg
- speech.
-
- After its delivery on the day of commemoration, he expressed deep
- regret that he had not prepared it with greater care. He said to me on
- the stand, immediately after concluding the speech: “Lamon, that
- speech won’t scour! It is a flat failure, and the people are
- disappointed.” (The word “scour” he often used in expressing his
- conviction that a thing lacked merit, or would not stand the test of
- close criticism or the wear of time.) He seemed deeply concerned about
- what the people might think of his address; more deeply, in fact, than
- I had ever seen him on any public occasion. His frank and regretful
- condemnation of his effort, and more especially his manner of
- expressing that regret, struck me as somewhat remarkable; and my own
- impression was deepened by the fact that the orator of the day, Mr.
- Everett, and Secretary Seward both coincided with Mr. Lincoln in his
- unfavorable view of its merits.
-
- [Illustration: The Rostrum.—From the vine-draped Rostrum many famous
- speakers have addressed the throngs that visit Gettysburg on
- Memorial Day]
-
- The occasion was solemn, impressive, and grandly historic. The people,
- it is true, stood apparently spellbound; and the vast throng was
- hushed and awed into profound silence while Mr. Lincoln delivered his
- brief speech. But it seemed to him that this silence and attention to
- his words arose more from the solemnity of the ceremonies and the
- awful scenes which gave rise to them, than anything he had said. He
- believed that the speech was a failure. He thought so at the time, and
- he never referred to it afterwards, in conversation with me, without
- some expression of unqualified regret that he had not made the speech
- better in every way.
-
- On the platform from which Mr. Lincoln delivered his address, and only
- a moment after it was concluded, Mr. Seward turned to Mr. Everett and
- asked him what he thought of the President’s speech. Mr. Everett
- replied, “It is not what I expected from him. I am disappointed.” Then
- in his turn Mr. Everett asked, “What do you think of it, Mr. Seward?”
- The response was, “He has made a failure, and I am sorry for it. His
- speech is not equal to him.” Mr. Seward then turned to me and asked,
- “Mr. Marshal, what do you think of it?” I answered, “I am sorry to say
- that it does not impress me as one of his great speeches.”
-
- In the face of these facts it has been repeatedly published that this
- speech was received by the audience with loud demonstrations of
- approval; that “amid the tears, sobs, and cheers it produced in the
- excited throng, the orator of the day, Mr. Everett, turned to Lincoln,
- grasped his hand and exclaimed, ‘I congratulate you on your success!’
- adding in a transport of heated enthusiasm, ‘Ah, Mr. President, how
- gladly would I give my hundred pages to be the author of your twenty
- lines!’” Nothing of the kind occurred. It is a slander on Mr. Everett,
- an injustice to Mr. Lincoln, and a falsification of history. Mr.
- Everett would not have used the words attributed to him, in the face
- of his own condemnation of the speech uttered a moment before, without
- subjecting himself to the charge of being a toady and a hypocrite; and
- he was neither one or the other.
-
- As a matter of fact, the silence during the delivery of the speech,
- and the lack of hearty demonstrations of approval immediately after
- its close, were taken by Mr. Lincoln as certain proof that it was not
- well received. In that opinion we all shared. If any person then
- present saw, or thought he saw, the marvelous beauties of that
- wonderful speech, as intelligent men in all lands now see and
- acknowledge them, his superabundant caution closed his lips and stayed
- his pen. Mr. Lincoln said to me after our return to Washington, “I
- tell you, Hill, that speech fell on the audience like a wet blanket. I
- am distressed about it. I ought to have prepared it with more care.”
- Such continued to be his opinion of that most wonderful of all his
- platform addresses up to the time of his death.
-
-
- HARVEST
-
- Only the seasons and the years invade
- These quiet wheatfields where the Armies crashed.
- And mockingbirds and quail fly unafraid
- Within the forest where the rifles flashed.
- Here where the bladed wings of death have mown
- And gleaned their harvestry of golden lives,
- The fruitful seeds of corn and wheat are sown,
- And where the cannon smoked, an orchard thrives.
-
- Long are the war years over, with their pain,
- Their passionate tears and fury, and the sun
- Lies hot and yellow on the heavy grain,
- And all the fighting on these fields is done.
- But in their peace, the quivering heart recalls
- The youth that bled beside these old stone walls.
-
- —Agnes Kendrick Gray.
- _By Permission of the Author._
-
-
-
-
-BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
-The principal source of data for this work is the “War of the Rebellion
-Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies.” The appended list
-of other sources has been made for those who wish to make an extended
-study.
-
- Annals of the War McClure
- Attack and Defense of Little Round Top Norton
- Abraham Lincoln Charnwood
- Abraham Lincoln, Life of Barton
- Battles and Leaders, 4 vols. Century Co.
- Battle of Gettysburg Young
- Battle of Gettysburg Comte de Paris
- Battle of Gettysburg Haskell
- Barlow, Major-General, at Gettysburg N. Y. Mon. Com.
- Campaign and Battle of Gettysburg Fiebeger
- Campaigns of the Civil War Geer
- Civil War Papers Mass. O. L. L.
- Chancellorsville and Gettysburg Doubleday
- Confederate Portraits Bradford
- Four Years with the Army of the Potomac de Trobriand
- From Manassas to Appomattox Longstreet
- Gettysburg Then and Now Vanderslice
- Gregg’s Cavalry Fight at Gettysburg Rawle
- Hays, Gen. Alexander, Life and Letters Fleming
- Lee, Gen. R. E., Recollections and Letters of Capt. R. E. Lee
- Lee, Gen. R. E., Personal Reminiscences of Jones
- Lee, Gen. R. E., Memoirs of Long
- Lincoln and His Generals Macartney
- Maine at Gettysburg Maine Com.
- Meade, Maj.-Gen., Life of Bache
- Meade at Gettysburg, With George G. Meade
- Meade, General George Gordon Pennypacker
- Military Memoirs of a Confederate Alexander
- Numbers and Losses in the Civil War Livermore
- New York at Gettysburg, 3 vols. N. Y. Mon. Com.
- Pennsylvania at Gettysburg Pa. Mon. Com.
- Recollections of Lincoln Lamon
- Regimental Losses in the Civil War Fox
- The War between the States Stevens
- The War between the Union and the Confederacy Oates
- Reminiscences of the Civil War Gordon
- Stuart’s Cavalry in the Gettysburg Campaign Mosby
-
-In addition to the many histories and biographies which include the
-battle among their subjects, there are novels, short stories, and poems
-whose authors have made a careful study of Gettysburg as a background.
-Among them are the following:
-
-
- John Brown’s Body—Benet
- Cease Firing—Johnston
- Gettysburg: Stories of the Red Harvest and the Aftermath—Singmaster
- _For Young People_
- Emmeline—Singmaster
- A Boy at Gettysburg—Singmaster
- Sewing Susie—Singmaster
-
-
-
-
- ORGANIZATION OF THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC
- Major-General George G. Meade
-
-
- First Corps
- John F. Reynolds, Major General
- John Newton, Major General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. James S. Wadsworth 1. Solomon Meredith, Brig. Gen.
- Brigadier General 2. Lysander Cutler, Brig. Gen.
- 2. John C. Robinson 1. Gabriel R. Paul, Brig. Gen.
- Brigadier General 2. Henry Baxter, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Abner Doubleday 1. Thomas Rowley, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. Roy Stone, Col.
- 3. George J. Stannard, Brig. Gen.
-
- Second Corps
- Winfield S. Hancock, Major General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. John C. Caldwell 1. Edward E. Cross, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Patrick Kelly, Col.
- 3. Samuel K. Zook, Brig. Gen.
- 4. John R. Brooke, Col.
- 2. John Gibbon 1. William Harrow, Brig. Gen.
- Brigadier General 2. Alexander Webb, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Norman J. Hall, Col.
- 3. Alexander Hays 1. Samuel S. Carroll, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Thomas A. Smyth, Col.
- 3. George L. Willard, Col.
-
- Third Corps
- Daniel E. Sickles, Major General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. David D. Birney 1. Charles K. Graham, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. J. H. Hobart Ward, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Regis de Trobriand, Col.
- 2. Andrew A. Humphreys 1. Joseph B. Carr, Brig. Gen.
- Brigadier General 2. Wm. R. Brewster, Col.
- 3. George C. Burling, Col.
-
- Fifth Corps
- George Sykes, Major General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. James Barnes 1. William S. Tilton, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Jacob B. Sweitzer, Col.
- 3. Strong Vincent, Col.
- 2. George Sykes 1. Hannibal Day, Col.
- Major General 2. Sidney Burbank, Col.
- Romeyne B. Ayres 3. Stephen Weed, Brig. Gen.
- Brigadier General
- 3. Samuel W. Crawford 1. William McCandless, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Joseph W. Fisher, Col.
-
- Sixth Corps
- John Sedgwick, Major General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. Horatio G. Wright 1. Alfred T. A. Torbet, Brig. Gen.
- Brigadier General 2. Joseph J. Bartlett, Brig. Gen.
- 3. David A. Russell, Brig. Gen.
- 2. Albion P. Howe 1. Lewis A. Grant, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Thomas H. Neill, Brig. Gen.
- 3. John Newton 1. Alexander Shaler, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. Henry L. Eustis, Col.
- Frank Wheaton 3. Frank Wheaton, Brig. Gen.
- Brigadier General
-
- Eleventh Corps
- Oliver O. Howard, Major General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. Francis C. Barlow 1. Leopold von Gilsa, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Adelbert Ames, Brig. Gen.
- 2. Adolph von Steinwehr 1. Charles Coster, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Orlando Smith, Col.
- 3. Carl Schurz 1. Alexander Schimmelfennig, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. W. Krzyzanowski, Col.
-
- Twelfth Corps
- Henry W. Slocum, Major General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. Alpheus S. Williams 1. Archibald L. McDougal, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Henry H. Lockwood, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Thomas H. Huger, Brig. Gen.
- 2. John W. Geary 1. Charles Candy, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. George A. Cobham, Col.
-
- Cavalry
- Alfred Pleasanton, Major General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. John Buford 1. William Gamble, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Thomas C. Devin, Col.
- 3. Wesley Merritt, Brig. Gen.
- 2. David McM. Gregg 1. John B. McIntosh, Col.
- Brigadier General 2. Pennock Ruey, Col.
- 3. J. Irvin Gregg, Col.
- 3. Judson Kilpatrick 1. Elon J. Farnsworth, Brig. Gen.
- Brigadier General 2. George A. Custer, Brig. Gen.
-
- Chief of Artillery, Brigadier-General Henry J. Hunt
- Number of guns belonging to the Artillery, 362
- Number of guns at Gettysburg, 354
-
-
-
-
- ORGANIZATION OF THE ARMY OF NORTHERN VIRGINIA
- General Robert E. Lee
-
-
- First Corps
- James E. Longstreet, Lieutenant General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. Lafayette McLaws 1. John B. Kershaw, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. William Barksdale, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Paul J. Semmes, Brig. Gen.
- 4. William T. Wofford, Brig. Gen.
- 2. George E. Pickett 1. Richard B. Garnett, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. James L. Kemper, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Lewis A. Armistead, Brig. Gen.
- 3. John B. Hood 1. Evander Law, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. Jerome B. Robertson, Brig. Gen.
- 3. George T. Anderson, Brig. Gen.
- 4. Henry L. Benning, Brig. Gen.
-
- Second Corps
- Richard S. Ewell, Lieutenant General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. Jubal A. Early 1. Harry T. Hays, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. Robert F. Hoke (Isaac E. Avery), Brig. Gen.
- 3. William Smith, Brig. Gen.
- 4. John B. Gordon, Brig. Gen.
- 2. Edward Johnson 1. George H. Steuart, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. James A. Walker, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Francis T. Nicholls (J. M. Williams), Brig.
- Gen.
- 4. John M. Jones, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Robert E. Rodes 1. Junius Daniel, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. Alfred Iverson, Brig. Gen.
- 3. George Doles, Brig. Gen.
- 4. Stephen D. Ramseur, Brig. Gen.
- 5. Edward A. O’Neil, Brig. Gen.
-
- Third Corps
- Ambrose P. Hill, Lieutenant General
-
- Divisions Brigades
- 1. Richard H. Anderson 1. Cadmus M. Wilcox, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. Ambrose R. Wright, Brig. Gen.
- 3. William Mahone, Brig. Gen.
- 4. Edward A. Perry (David Lang), Brig. Gen.
- 5. Garnet Posey, Brig. Gen.
- 2. Henry Heth 1. James J. Pettigrew, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. John M. Brockenbrough, Col.
- 3. James J. Archer, Brig. Gen.
- 4. Joseph R. Davis, Brig. Gen.
- 3. William D. Pender 1. James H. Lane, Brig. Gen.
- Major General 2. Edward L. Thomas, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Alfred M. Scales, Brig. Gen.
- 4. Samuel McGowan (Abner Perrin), Brig. Gen.
- 4. James E. B. Stuart 1. Wade Hampton, Brig. Gen.
- Major General (Cavalry) 2. Beverly H. Robertson, Brig. Gen.
- 3. Fitzhugh Lee, Brig. Gen.
- 4. Wm. H. F. Lee (John R. Chambliss), Brig. Gen.
- 5. William E. Jones, Brig. Gen.
- Valley District and
- Department of Western
- Virginia (Cavalry and
- mounted Infantry).
- 1. Albert G. Jenkins, Brig. Gen.
- 2. John D. Imboden, Brig. Gen.
-
- Chief of Artillery, William N. Pendleton
- Number of guns, 272
-
- [Illustration: NORTH CAROLINA MONUMENT
- Gutzon Borglum, Sculptor]
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typographical errors.
-
-—Retained copyright information from the printed edition (which has
- entered the public domain in the U.S.)
-
-—In the text versions, enclosed italicized text within _underscore
- characters_.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Battle of Gettysburg, by William C. Storrick
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