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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #61027 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61027)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Richmond National Battlefield Park, Virginia, by
-Joseph P. Cullen
-
-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: Richmond National Battlefield Park, Virginia
- National Park Service Historical Handbook Series No. 33
-
-Author: Joseph P. Cullen
-
-Release Date: December 27, 2019 [EBook #61027]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RICHMOND NAT. BATTLEFIELD PARK, VIRGINIA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR · March 3, 1849]
-
- UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
- Stewart L. Udall, _Secretary_
-
- NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
- Conrad L. Wirth, _Director_
-
-
- _HISTORICAL HANDBOOK NUMBER THIRTY-THREE_
-
-This publication is one of a series of handbooks describing the
-historical and archeological areas in the National Park System
-administered by the National Park Service of the United States
-Department of the Interior. It is printed by the Government Printing
-Office and may be purchased from the Superintendent of Documents,
-Washington 25, D.C. Price 25 cents.
-
-
-
-
- RICHMOND
- National Battlefield Park
- Virginia
-
-
- [Illustration: {Sniper}]
-
- _by Joseph P. Cullen_
-
- NATIONAL PARK SERVICE HISTORICAL HANDBOOK SERIES NO. 33
- Washington, D.C., 1961
-
- [Illustration: _The National Park System, of which Richmond National
- Battlefield Park is a unit, is dedicated to conserving the scenic,
- scientific, and historic heritage of the United States for the
- benefit and inspiration of its people._]
-
-
-
-
- _Contents_
-
-
- _Page_
-
-
- Richmond 1
- The Army of the Potomac 2
-
-
- Part One
-
-
- THE PENINSULA CAMPAIGN, SUMMER 1862
- On to Richmond 3
- Up the Peninsula 4
- Drewry’s Bluff 5
- Seven Pines (Fair Oaks) 6
- Lee Takes Command 9
- The Seven Days Begin 12
- Beaver Dam Creek (Ellerson’s Mill) 13
- Gaines’ Mill 16
- Savage Station 18
- Glendale (Frayser’s Farm) 21
- Malvern Hill 22
- End of Campaign 24
- The Years Between 27
-
-
- Part Two
-
-
- THE FINAL STRUGGLE FOR RICHMOND, 1864-65
- Lincoln’s New Commander 28
- Cold Harbor 29
- Fort Harrison 37
- Richmond Falls 40
- The Park 46
- Administration 46
-
- [Illustration: _Richmond, 1858._ From a contemporary sketch.]
-
- [Illustration: ]
-
-The American Civil War _was unique in many respects. One of the great
-turning points in American history, it was a national tragedy of
-international significance. Simultaneously, it was the last of the old
-wars and the first of the new. Although it began in a blaze of glamor,
-romance, and chivalry, it ended in the ashes of misery, destruction, and
-death. It was, as Walt Whitman said, “a strange, sad war.”_
-
-
-Richmond National Battlefield Park preserves the scenes of some of the
-great battles that took place in the vicinity of the Confederate
-Capital. When we visit these now quiet, peaceful woods and fields, we
-feel an association with our past that is impossible to achieve with the
-written or spoken word. Here we are not reminded of the Blue or the Gray
-as such, only of the heroic struggle of men—men with two different
-beliefs and philosophies, welded together by the blood of battle, to
-give us our America of today.
-
-
-
-
- _Richmond_
-
-
-In session at Montgomery, Ala., in May 1861, the Confederate Congress
-voted to remove the Capital of the Confederate States to Richmond, Va.
-This decision, in effect, made Richmond a beleaguered city for 4 years.
-Essentially, the move was dictated by political and military
-considerations. The prestige of Virginia, richest and most populous
-State in the South, was considered necessary for the success of the
-Confederacy. For political reasons it was believed that the Capital
-should be near the border States and the heavy fighting expected there.
-
-Second only to New Orleans, Richmond was the largest city in the
-Confederacy, having a population of about 38,000. It was also the center
-of iron manufacturing in the South. The Tredegar Iron Works, main source
-of cannon supply for the Southern armies, influenced the choice of
-Richmond as the Confederate Capital and demanded its defense. During the
-course of the war, Tredegar made over 1,100 cannon, in addition to
-mines, torpedoes, propeller shafts, and other war machinery. It expanded
-to include rolling mills, forges, sawmills, and machine shops. The
-Richmond Laboratory made over 72 million cartridges, along with
-grenades, gun carriages, field artillery, and canteens, while the
-Richmond Armory had a capacity for manufacturing 5,000 small arms a
-month.
-
- [Illustration: _Tredegar Iron Works._ Courtesy, Library of
- Congress.]
-
-Thus Richmond became the political, military, and manufacturing center
-of the South, and the symbol of secession to the North.
-
-Situated near the head of the navigable waters of the James River, and
-within 110 miles of the National Capital at Washington, Richmond was the
-key to the military planning of both sides. For 4 years the city
-remained the primary military objective of the Union armies in the east.
-As one southern newspaper stated: “To lose Richmond is to lose Virginia,
-and to lose Virginia is to lose the key to the Southern Confederacy.”
-
-
-
-
- _The Army of the Potomac_
-
-
-In July 1861 the untrained Union Army of the Potomac suffered disaster
-at Manassas (Bull Run) in the first attempt to drive into Virginia and
-capture Richmond. President Abraham Lincoln then appointed Gen. George
-B. McClellan the new commander of the demoralized army. McClellan
-reported: “I found no army to command * * * just a mere collection of
-regiments cowering on the banks of the Potomac.”
-
-To this chaotic situation he brought order and discipline. During the
-long winter months, the raw recruits were marshalled and drilled into an
-efficient fighting machine of over 100,000 men—the largest army ever
-commanded by one man in the history of the western hemisphere. By the
-spring of 1862 this army was ready for the supreme test—the goal was
-Richmond.
-
-
-
-
- Part One
- THE PENINSULA CAMPAIGN, SUMMER, 1862
-
-
-
-
- _On To Richmond_
-
-
-Instead of marching overland, McClellan decided to take advantage of
-Union control of the inland waters and transport his army, with its vast
-supplies and materiel, down the Potomac River and across Chesapeake Bay
-to the tip of the peninsula between the York and James Rivers. Then with
-his supply ships steaming up the York, he planned to march northwestward
-up the peninsula, join another force under Gen. Irvin McDowell marching
-overland from Washington, and together, converge on Richmond.
-
- [Illustration: _McClellan’s plan of attack._ Painting by Sidney
- King.]
-
-To accomplish this, McClellan undertook the largest amphibious operation
-ever attempted in the western world. Over 400 steam vessels, brigs,
-schooners, sloops, ferry boats, and barges assembled on the Potomac
-River. In March 1862 these vessels ferried the Army of the Potomac, with
-its 3,600 wagons, 700 ambulances, 300 pieces of artillery, 2,500 head of
-cattle, and over 25,000 horses and mules, to the southeast coast of
-Virginia. As Q. M. Gen. Rufus Ingalls reported: “Operations so extensive
-and important as the rapid and successful embarkation of such an army,
-with all its vast equipment, its transfer to the peninsula, and its
-supply while there, had scarcely any parallel in history.”
-
-
-
-
- _Up The Peninsula_
-
-
-After landing at Fortress Monroe the Federal troops pushed aside the
-thinly held Confederate defenses at Yorktown and Williamsburg and
-proceeded up the peninsula according to plan. But progress was slow.
-Every day 500 tons of forage and subsistence were required to keep the
-army in the field. Early in May it rained and kept raining, day after
-dreary day. Federal soldiers had a saying: “Virginia used to be in the
-Union—now it’s in the mud.” Dirt roads turned into bottomless
-muck—creeks and gullies became swift flowing streams—fields were swamps.
-Roads and bridges had to be built and rebuilt, and still the thousands
-of wagons, horses, and mules continually stuck in the mud.
-
- [Illustration: _Sumner’s troops crossing Grapevine Bridge to
- reinforce Coach at Seven Pines._ From a contemporary sketch.]
-
-Realizing that an effective overland pursuit of the retreating
-Confederate forces under Gen. Joseph E. Johnston was out of the question
-because of the weather and the condition of the roads, McClellan on May
-6 sent Gen. William B. Franklin’s division up the York River by
-transport to West Point, terminus of the Richmond and York River
-Railroad, in an attempt to cut off the Confederate wagon train. Johnston
-anticipated the move, however, and on May 7 ordered Gen. W. H. C.
-Whiting’s troops to attack Franklin in the battle of West Point, or
-Eltham’s Landing.
-
-The attack was repulsed, but, even so, the wagon train managed to
-continue safely to Richmond. McClellan, however, had cleared the way to
-his next objective—the landing at White House on the Pamunkey River, a
-tributary of the York. Here the railroad crossed the Pamunkey on its way
-to West Point. This would be the Union base of supply for the
-contemplated attack on Richmond. This battle also cleared the way for
-the right wing of the Union army, which would have to stay north and
-east of Richmond in order to hook up with McDowell’s anticipated
-overland march from Washington.
-
-General Johnston, falling back steadily in front of McClellan’s slow
-advance, was the target of severe criticism from Richmond newspapers for
-not making a determined stand. But he wrote to Gen. Robert E. Lee: “We
-are engaged in a species of warfare at which we can never win. It is
-plain that Gen. McClellan will adhere to the system adopted by him last
-summer, and depend for success upon artillery and engineering. We can
-compete with him in neither.”
-
-
-
-
- _Drewry’s Bluff_
-
-
-After the fall of Norfolk on May 10 to the Union forces under Gen. John
-Wool, the crew of the _Virginia_ (_Merrimack_) scuttled their ship.
-River pilots had advised that the iron-clad vessel could not navigate
-the treacherous channel up the James River to Richmond. Loss of the
-_Virginia_ opened the river to Federal gunboats, and McClellan
-immediately telegraphed the War Department: “I would now most earnestly
-urge that our gunboats and the iron-clad boats be sent as far as
-possible up the James river without delay. Instructions have been given
-so that the Navy will receive prompt support wherever and whenever
-required.”
-
-Five Union gunboats, including the famous _Monitor_, started up the
-James under Comdr. John Rogers in the _Galena_. By May 15 they reached
-Drewry’s Bluff, just 7 miles below Richmond. Here, at a sharp bend, the
-Confederates had effectively obstructed the river and erected powerful
-batteries on a 90-foot bluff.
-
- [Illustration: _Battle of Drewry’s Bluff._ Diorama, Richmond
- National Battlefield Park Visitor Center.]
-
-At 7 that morning the Federal gunboats opened fire on Fort Darling. The
-battle raged for 4 hours while the fate of Richmond hung in the balance,
-and near panic spread through the city. However, the accurate fire of
-the heavy guns on the bluff, combined with effective sharpshooting along
-the riverbanks, finally proved too much for the gunboats, and the
-Federal fleet retreated down the river. One Confederate officer
-observed: “* * * had Commander Rogers been supported by a few brigades,
-landed at City Point or above on the south side, Richmond would have
-been evacuated.”
-
-Although the Secretary of the Navy requested “a cooperating land force”
-to help the gunboats pass Fort Darling and take Richmond, McClellan,
-despite his earlier promise of cooperation, wired the War Department:
-“Am not yet ready to cooperate with them.” He neglected to say when he
-would be ready. Richmond was never again seriously threatened by water.
-
-
-
-
- _Seven Pines_ (_Fair Oaks_)
-
-
-Slowed by the heavy rains and the bad condition of the roads, where
-“teams cannot haul over half a load, and often empty wagons are
-stalled,” McClellan finally established his base of supply at White
-House on May 15. Five days later his advance crossed the Chickahominy
-River at Bottoms Bridge. By the 24th the five Federal corps were
-established on a front partly encircling Richmond on the north and east,
-and less than 6 miles away. Three corps lined the north bank of the
-Chickahominy, while the two corps under Generals E. D. Keyes and Samuel
-P. Heintzelman were south of the river, astride the York River Railroad
-and the roads down the peninsula.
-
- [Illustration: _Gen. George B. McClellan._ Courtesy, Library of
- Congress.]
-
-With his army thus split by the Chickahominy, McClellan realized his
-position was precarious, but his orders were explicit: “General McDowell
-has been ordered to march upon Richmond by the shortest route. He is
-ordered * * * so to operate as to place his left wing in communication
-with your right wing, and you are instructed to cooperate, by extending
-your right wing to the north of Richmond * * *.”
-
-Then, because of Gen. Thomas J. (“Stonewall”) Jackson’s brilliant
-operations in the Shenandoah Valley threatening Washington, Lincoln
-telegraphed McClellan on May 24: “I have been compelled to suspend
-McDowell’s movements to join you.” McDowell wrote disgustedly: “If the
-enemy can succeed so readily in disconcerting all our plans by alarming
-us first at one point then at another, he will paralyze a large force
-with a very small one.” That is exactly what Jackson succeeded in doing.
-This fear for the safety of Washington—the skeleton that haunted
-Lincoln’s closet—was the dominating factor in the military planning in
-the east throughout the war.
-
-Lincoln’s order only suspended McDowell’s instructions to join
-McClellan; it did not revoke them. McClellan was still obliged to keep
-his right wing across the swollen Chickahominy.
-
-Learning of McDowell’s withdrawal, Johnston decided to attack the two
-Federal corps south of the river, drive them back and destroy the
-Richmond and York River Railroad to White House. Early in the morning on
-May 31, after a violent rainstorm that threatened to wash all the
-Federal bridges into the river, Johnston fell upon Keyes and Heintzelman
-with 23 of his 27 brigades at Seven Pines.
-
-The initial attack was sudden and vicious. Confederate Gen. James
-Longstreet threw Gen. D. H. Hill’s troops against Gen. Silas Casey’s
-division of Keyes’ corps, stationed about three-quarters of a mile west
-of Seven Pines. Longstreet overwhelmed the Federal division, forcing
-Casey to retreat a mile east of Seven Pines. Keyes then put Gen. D. N.
-Couch’s division on a line from Seven Pines to Fair Oaks, with Gen.
-Philip Kearney’s division on his left flank. Not until 4 that afternoon,
-however, did Confederate Gen. G. W. Smith send Whiting’s division
-against Couch’s right flank at Fair Oaks. The delay was fatal. Although
-Couch was forced back slowly, he drew up a new line of battle facing
-south towards Fair Oaks, with his back to the Chickahominy River. Here
-he held until Gen. Edwin V. Sumner, by heroic effort, succeeded in
-getting Gen. John Sedgwick’s division and part of Gen. I. B.
-Richardson’s across the tottering Grapevine Bridge to support him. Led
-by Sumner himself, Sedgwick’s troops repulsed Smith’s attack and drove
-the Confederates back with heavy losses.
-
-The battle plan had been sound, but the attack was badly bungled.
-Directed by vague, verbal orders instead of explicit, written ones,
-whole brigades got lost, took the wrong roads, and generally got in each
-other’s way. Nine of the 23 attacking brigades never actually got into
-the fight at all. Towards nightfall Johnston was severely wounded in the
-chest and borne from the field. The command then fell to G. W. Smith.
-Fighting ceased with darkness.
-
-Early next morning, June 1, Smith renewed the attack. His plan called
-for Whiting on the left flank to hold defensively, while Longstreet on
-the right swung counterclockwise in a pivot movement to hit Richardson’s
-division, which was facing south with its right near Fair Oaks. The
-Federal troops repulsed the assault, however, and when Heintzelman sent
-Gen. Joseph Hooker’s division on the Federal left on the offensive, the
-Confederates withdrew and the battle was over before noon.
-
-That afternoon President Jefferson Davis appointed his chief military
-advisor, Gen. Robert E. Lee, as commander of the Southern forces. Lee
-promptly named his new command the Army of Northern Virginia—a name
-destined for fame in the annals of the Civil War.
-
- [Illustration: _McClellan’s troops repairing Grapevine Bridge._
- Courtesy, Library of Congress.]
-
-Although the battle itself was indecisive, the casualties were heavy on
-both sides. The Confederates lost 6,184 in killed, wounded, and missing;
-the Federals, 5,031. Undoubtedly the most important result of the fight
-was the wounding of Johnston and the resultant appointment of Lee as
-field commander.
-
-
-
-
- _Lee Takes Command_
-
-
-Lee immediately began to reorganize the demoralized Southern forces, and
-put them to work digging the elaborate system of entrenchments that
-would eventually encircle Richmond completely. For this the troops
-derisively named him the “King of Spades.” But Lee was planning more
-than a static defense. When the time came these fortifications could be
-held by a relatively small number of troops, while he massed the bulk of
-his forces for a counteroffensive. He was familiar with and believed in
-Napoleon’s maxim: “* * * to manoeuver incessantly, without submitting to
-be driven back on the capital which it is meant to defend * * *.”
-
-On June 12 Lee sent his cavalry commander, Gen. J. E. B. (“Jeb”) Stuart,
-with 1,200 men, to reconnoiter McClellan’s right flank north of the
-Chickahominy, and to learn the strength of his line of communication and
-supply to White House. Stuart obtained the information, but instead of
-retiring from White House the way he had gone, he rode around the Union
-army and returned to Richmond on June 15 by way of the James River,
-losing only one man in the process.
-
- [Illustration: _Gen. Robert E. Lee._ Courtesy, National Archives.]
-
- [Illustration: _Lee’s fortifications east of Mechanicsville
- Turnpike._ From a contemporary sketch.]
-
- [Illustration: _Chickahominy swamps._ Courtesy, National Archives.]
-
-It was a bold feat, and Stuart assured his chief that there was nothing
-to prevent his turning the Federal right flank. But the daring ride
-probably helped McClellan more than Lee. Alerted to the exposed position
-of his right flank and base of supply, McClellan withdrew his whole army
-south of the Chickahominy, with the exception of Gen. Fitz-John Porter’s
-corps, which stretched from Grapevine Bridge to the Meadow Bridge west
-of Mechanicsville. On June 18 he started the transfer of his enormous
-accumulation of supplies with the shipment of 800,000 rations from White
-House to Harrison’s Landing on the James River. After Jackson’s success
-in the Shenandoah Valley at Cross Keys and Port Republic, it was
-becoming apparent even to McClellan that McDowell probably never would
-join him, in which case he wanted his base of operations to be the James
-rather than the York River.
-
-Meanwhile, pressure from Washington for an offensive movement against
-Richmond was mounting. But because of the wettest June in anyone’s
-memory, McClellan was having trouble bringing up his heavy siege guns,
-corduroying roads, and throwing bridges across the flooded Chickahominy
-swamps. As one bedraggled soldier wrote: “It would have pleased us much
-to have seen those ‘On-to-Richmond’ people put over a 5 mile course in
-the Virginia mud, loaded with a 40-pound knapsack, 60 rounds of
-cartridges, and haversacks filled with 4 days rations.”
-
-Also, McClellan believed erroneously that the Confederates had twice as
-many available troops as he had. Consequently, his plan of action, as he
-wrote his wife, was to “make the first battle mainly an artillery
-combat. As soon as I gain possession of the ‘Old Tavern’ I will push
-them in upon Richmond and behind their works; then I will bring up my
-heavy guns, shell the city, and carry it by assault.”
-
-
-
-
- _The Seven Days Begins_
-
-
- [Illustration: _Lee’s plan of attack._ Painting by Sidney King.]
-
-McClellan’s plan probably would have succeeded had Lee been willing to
-stand still for it. But the Confederate commander did not intend to let
-McClellan fight that type of warfare. As he wrote to Jackson: “Unless
-McClellan can be driven out of his entrenchments he will move by
-positions under cover of his heavy guns within shelling distance of
-Richmond.” It was almost as if Lee had read McClellan’s letter to his
-wife.
-
-Lee’s plan to drive McClellan away from Richmond was bold and daring,
-and strategically brilliant. He would bring Jackson’s forces down from
-the valley quickly and secretly to turn McClellan’s right flank at
-Mechanicsville. At the same time Gen. A. P. Hill’s division would cross
-the Chickahominy at Meadow Bridge, turn east and clear the Federal
-forces from Mechanicsville, thereby opening the Mechanicsville Turnpike
-bridge for D. H. Hill and Longstreet’s troops to cross. Then, in
-echelon, the four divisions would sweep down the north side of the
-Chickahominy, annihilate Porter’s corps, capture the supply base at
-White House, then turn and destroy the rest of the Union army. With
-Jackson’s forces and other reinforcements from farther south, Lee would
-have about 90,000 men, the largest army he would ever command in the
-field.
-
-To protect Richmond, he planned to leave about one-third of his army,
-under Generals John B. Magruder and Benjamin Huger, in the entrenchments
-around the city to hold back the main part of McClellan’s force, about
-70,000 men, from marching into the Confederate Capital. If this force
-started to withdraw, then Magruder and Huger would attack.
-
-Lee apparently believed that McClellan would try to retreat to his base
-at White House, or failing that, would retire back down the peninsula.
-He assured Jefferson Davis that “any advance of the enemy toward
-Richmond will be prevented by vigorously following his rear and
-crippling and arresting his progress.” The strategy was just about
-perfect, but, unfortunately for Lee, the tactics were not.
-
-On the morning of June 25 the Seven Days began with the advance of
-Hooker’s division along the Williamsburg road at Oak Grove, preparatory
-to a general advance McClellan planned for the next day. But Hooker ran
-into strong opposition from Huger’s troops, and when McClellan received
-intelligence of Jackson’s approach, Hooker was ordered back. McClellan
-wired Washington: “I incline to think that Jackson will attack my right
-and rear.” He had delayed too long—the next day Lee wrested the
-initiative from him.
-
-
-
-
- _Beaver Dam Creek_ (_Ellerson’s Mill_)
-
-
-According to Lee’s plan, Jackson was to march from Ashland on June 25
-and encamp that night just west of the Central Railroad. At 3 a.m. on
-the 26th he was to advance and envelop Porter’s right flank at Beaver
-Dam Creek. Then, wrote Lee, “A. P. Hill was to cross the Chickahominy at
-Meadow Bridge when Jackson’s advance beyond that point should be known
-and move directly upon Mechanicsville.”
-
- [Illustration: _Confederate attack at Beaver Dam Creek._ From a
- contemporary sketch.]
-
-But from the beginning, unforeseen circumstances upset the operation and
-timing of this plan. McClellan suspected Jackson’s approach, so the
-element of surprise was lacking. And when the action of the Union
-pickets in destroying bridges and felling trees in Jackson’s path, as
-well as the fatigue of his weary troops, combined to delay him, the
-all-important time element was lost.
-
-As the day wore on with no word from Jackson, A. P. Hill became
-impatient and fearful for the success of Lee’s plan. He decided to
-attack regardless. At 3 that afternoon he crossed the Chickahominy and
-swept the Union outposts from Mechanicsville, thus clearing the way for
-D. H. Hill and Longstreet’s troops to cross. Porter withdrew to a
-prepared position behind Beaver Dam Creek, a mile east of
-Mechanicsville. This naturally strong position was further fortified by
-felled trees and the banks of a millrace. Here, atop the high banks of
-the stream, he placed Gen. George McCall’s division, extending from near
-the Chickahominy on the south, across Old Church road (now U.S. 360) on
-the north. Gen. Truman Seymour’s brigade held the left and Gen. John
-Reynold’s the right, with Gen. George G. Meade’s brigade in reserve. The
-only approaches to the position were across open fields, commanded by
-the Federal artillery, and down the steep banks of the stream, covered
-by the soldiers’ muskets.
-
-Hill recklessly hurled his brigades forward in a hopeless frontal
-assault. The gray-clad infantry charged bravely down the steep banks and
-up to the stream before the murderous fire of artillery and musketry
-from the surrounding slopes forced a bloody withdrawal. Casualties in
-killed and wounded were: Confederate 1,485; Union, 258.
-
-Despite the successful defense, when Jackson’s forces finally appeared
-on his right flank later that night, Porter’s position became untenable
-and McClellan ordered him to withdraw to a previously prepared position
-behind Boatswain Swamp, near Gaines’ Mill. At the same time he ordered
-his quartermaster general at White House to reship all the supplies he
-possibly could to Harrison’s Landing on the James, and send all the beef
-cattle to the vicinity of Savage Station. Early next morning, June 27,
-the herd of 2,500 head of cattle started on its drive from White House.
-
- [Illustration: _Battle of Gaines’ Mill._ From _Battles and Leaders
- of the Civil War_.]
-
- OLD COLD HARBOR
- Gaines’s MILL
- NEW COLD HARBOR
- _CONFEDERATE_
- Lee’s Headq’rs
- D. H. HILL
- JACKSON
- EWELL
- A. P. HILL
- WHITING
- LONGSTREET
- _UNION_
- SYKES
- McGehee
- BUCHANAN
- WARREN
- LOVELL
- MORELL
- Porter’s Headq’rs
- GRIFFIN
- MARTINDALE
- BUTTERFIELD
- McCALL
- REYNOLDS
- SEYMOUR
- MEADE
- J. Martin
- W. F. SMITH
- SLOCUM _ARRIVING 4 O’CLOCK_
- NEWTON
- TAYLOR
- BARTLETT
- FRENCH & MEACHER _ARRIVING TO COVER RETREAT about 6.30 p.m._
-
- [Illustration: _McClellan’s change of base._ Painting by Sidney
- King.]
-
- WHITE HOUSE
- MECHANICSVILLE
- GAINES MILL
- Pomunkey
- SAVAGE STATION
- Chickahominy
- GLENDALE
- MALVERN HILL
- HARRISON’S LANDING
-
-
-
-
- _Gaines’ Mill_
-
-
-The tactical situation was now extremely critical for both Lee and
-McClellan. Because of the repulse at Beaver Dam, Lee had not yet
-achieved his first objective, which, according to his battle order, was
-to “drive the enemy from his position above New Bridge,” about 4 miles
-east of Mechanicsville. Lee’s whole plan for the defense of Richmond, in
-the event McClellan should elect to march on the city with his main
-force south of the Chickahominy, hinged on his ability to cross the
-river quickly and attack the Federal rear. Lacking control of New Bridge
-this would be impossible. Although the Union position behind Boatswain
-Swamp was actually east of New Bridge, the approaches to the bridge
-could be covered by Porter’s artillery.
-
-The situation was equally serious for McClellan. With Jackson enveloping
-his right flank and rear, and believing he “had to deal with at least
-double” his numbers, White House would have to be abandoned. Having made
-the decision to change his base to the James, he desperately needed time
-to perfect the arrangements and to get the thousands of wagons and the
-herd of cattle safely started. His order to Porter was explicit, “hold
-our position at any cost until night * * *.”
-
-Porter’s corps now occupied a semicircular line of battle along the
-crest of the partially wooded plateau behind Boatswain Swamp, with both
-extremes resting on the Chickahominy River. It was another naturally
-strong position further strengthened by felling trees and digging rifle
-pits. The approaches to the position were over an open plain and across
-a sharp ravine. Gen. George Morell’s division held the left and Gen.
-George Sykes’ right, with McCall’s weary troops in reserve. Gen. Philip
-St. George Cooke’s cavalry was on Porter’s extreme left, in the lowlands
-bordering the Chickahominy. During the course of the impending battle of
-Gaines’ Mill, Porter would be reinforced by Gen. Willard Slocum’s
-division, giving him a total strength of about 35,000, as opposed to
-about 60,000 for Lee.
-
-On the Confederate side, Longstreet was on Lee’s right opposite Morell,
-A. P. Hill in the center, and Jackson and D. H. Hill on the left. Lee
-was convinced that the greater part of the Federal army was in his
-front, and he still thought McClellan would try to protect his base and
-retreat toward White House. On these erroneous assumptions he made his
-plans.
-
-A. P. Hill would attack the center while Longstreet made a feint on the
-Union left. Then when Jackson appeared on the Union right, Lee believed
-Porter would shift part of his troops to meet Jackson’s threat in order
-to keep him from getting between the Union army and its base at White
-House. As soon as Porter did this, Longstreet would turn the feint into
-a full assault, and together with Hill drive the Union forces into
-Jackson and D. H. Hill, waiting on Lee’s left.
-
-About 2:30 p.m. Hill attacked the center of the Federal line, but under
-a devastating fire of artillery and musketry, “where men fell like
-leaves in an autumn wind,” his troops were hurled back with heavy
-losses. Longstreet, realizing a feint now would not help Hill, ordered a
-full-scale attack, but he too suffered a bloody repulse. Jackson,
-sensing that “Porter didn’t drive worth two cents,” as he quaintly put
-it, threw D. H. Hill against Sykes on Porter’s right.
-
-By now A. P. Hill’s division was badly cut up, and on Lee’s request
-Jackson sent Whiting’s division, consisting of Gen. E. M. Law’s and John
-B. Hood’s brigades, over to support him. Porter then threw in Slocum’s
-division of Franklin’s corps, to protect threatened points along the
-line. The vicious battle waged furiously for 4 hours. “The noise of the
-musketry,” said one veteran, “was not rattling, as ordinarily, but one
-intense metallic din.”
-
-Finally, just as darkness covered the bloody field, Hood’s Texas
-brigade, along with Gen. George Pickett’s brigade on Longstreet’s left,
-penetrated the right of Morell’s line in a courageous bayonet charge
-that broke the morale of the Federal troops. They went streaming back
-across the plateau to the safety of the Chickahominy River. In a last
-desperate attempt to stem the tide, General Cooke (“Jeb” Stuart’s
-father-in-law) sent his cavalry in a wild charge against the pressing
-Confederates. But the retreating Union infantry and artillery obstructed
-the cavalry and broke its attack. The only result was the loss of
-several more artillery pieces in the confusion.
-
-With darkness closing in and the Confederate troops disorganized after
-the breakthrough, Lee did not attempt to pursue the Federals farther.
-Porter withdrew the remnants of his corps across the river and rejoined
-the main Union army. Total casualties in this crucial battle, the most
-costly and vicious of the Seven Days, were: Union, 6,837; Confederate,
-8,751.
-
-In a sense, both sides had achieved their immediate objectives. Porter
-had held until night, so McClellan could get his army safely started for
-Harrison’s Landing. Lee had cleared the north side of the Chickahominy
-of all Federal forces, broken their supply line to White House,
-controlled strategic New Bridge, and had turned back McClellan’s advance
-on Richmond.
-
-
-
-
- _Savage Station_
-
-
- [Illustration: _Battle of Savage Station._ From _Battles and Leaders
- of the Civil War_.]
-
- MAGRUDER’S HEADQUARTERS ON BRIDGE OVER RAILROAD
- TOOMB’S BRIGADE
- BARKSDALE’S BRIGADE
- COBB’S BRIGADE
- HART’S BATTERY
- RAILROAD BATTERY
- KERSHAW’S BRIGADE
- SEMMES’S BRIG.
- KEMPER’S BATTERY
- 17^TH. & 21^ST. MISS. OF BARKESDALE’S BRIG.
-
- RICHARDSON’S DIVISION
- SUMNER’S CORPS
- MEAGHER
- CALDWELL
- FRENCH
- FIELD HOSPITAL
- SEDGWICK’S DIVISION
- BURN’S BRIG.
- GORMAN
- 1ST-MINN. GORMAN’S BRIG.
- DANA
- PETTIT, HAZZARD AND OSBORN
- SUMNER & FRANKLIN _HEADQUARTERS IN THE FIELD_
- HANCOCK’S BRIGADE, SMITH’S DIVISION, FRANKLIN’S CORPS
- CENTER’S BATTERY
- BROOKS’S BRIG., SMITH’S DIV., FRANKLIN’S CORPS
- DAVIDSON’S BRIGADE
-
-McClellan was now engaged in the most difficult move an army can be
-called upon to make in the face of an aggressive enemy—a flanking
-movement to effect a change of base. There was no thought given to any
-offensive movement. President Lincoln telegraphed: “Save your army at
-all events.” This was now McClellan’s only objective.
-
-That McClellan had not tried to fall back on White House surprised Lee,
-as he had believed he was facing the main part of the Federal army at
-Gaines’ Mill. The next day, June 28, he spent burying the dead,
-reorganizing for another offensive movement, and attempting to divine
-McClellan’s plans. Lee reported to Jefferson Davis that “the bridges
-over the Chickahominy in rear of the enemy were destroyed, and their
-reconstruction impracticable in the presence of his whole army and
-powerful batteries. We were therefore compelled to wait until his
-purpose should be developed.” By nightfall, however, he realized that
-McClellan was headed for the James River, and made his plans
-accordingly.
-
-Early next morning, June 29, Longstreet and A. P. Hill were to cross the
-Chickahominy at New Bridge and take the Darbytown road to where it met
-the Long Bridge road. Huger and Magruder, already on the south side of
-the river in front of Richmond, were ordered in pursuit of the Federal
-forces—Huger by Charles City road and Magruder by the Williamsburg road.
-In the meantime, Jackson would cross Grapevine Bridge and sweep down the
-south side of the river to get in McClellan’s rear.
-
-Again, Lee’s strategy was brilliant. The Charles City road met the Long
-Bridge road at a place called Glendale or Frayser’s Farm. Lee planned to
-have all his divisions converge there at about the time the middle of
-McClellan’s long column should be passing. The impact of the expected
-blow would undoubtedly split the Union army, and with Jackson’s corps in
-the rear of one half, the other half could be cut off and annihilated.
-Once again, however, the staff work and tactics were pitiful.
-
-McClellan’s rearguard was posted about Savage Station on the Richmond
-and York River Railroad, facing west. Richardson’s division, of Sumner’s
-corps, was in an open field north of the railroad tracks in back of the
-station. Sedgwick’s division held the center in another open field south
-of the tracks, with its left resting on the Williamsburg road. Gen.
-William F. (“Baldy”) Smith’s division, of Franklin’s corps, took
-position in the woods south of the Williamsburg road.
-
-Magruder reached the vicinity of Savage Station about noon, June 29, but
-did not attack as he realized his four brigades were badly outnumbered.
-He halted and waited for Jackson, who was supposed to turn the Federal
-right flank along the Chickahominy and get in their rear. But Jackson
-“was delayed by the necessity of reconstructing Grapevine Bridge.”
-Magruder then mistakenly reported McClellan advancing and sent for two
-brigades from Huger to support him. Lee cancelled the order when he
-realized that what Magruder had hit was only the rearguard covering the
-Federal army’s passage across White Oak swamp. What Lee did not realize,
-however, was that Jackson was not in position and would not reach Savage
-Station until 3 the following morning. Finally, about 5 that afternoon,
-Magruder attacked with his four brigades and two regiments, but it was
-too late with too little. The Federals withdrew hastily but safely. In
-their haste they were forced to leave 2,500 sick and wounded men in the
-field hospital at Savage Station and to abandon or destroy a vast amount
-of supplies and equipment.
-
- [Illustration: _Battle of Savage Station._ From a contemporary
- sketch.]
-
- [Illustration: _Battle of Glendale._ From _Battles and Leaders of
- the Civil War_.]
-
- _CONFEDERATE_
- JACKSON’S CORPS & D. H. HILL
- HUGER
- LONGSTREET
- A. P. HILL
- _UNION_
- SMITH
- RICHARDSON
- 1 REG^T., 1 GUN
- SLOCUM
- KEARNY
- McCALL
- SEDGWICK
- HOOKER
-
-
-
-
- _Glendale (Frayser’s Farm)_
-
-
-Lee now ordered Magruder to follow Longstreet and A. P. Hill down the
-Darbytown road. The next day, June 30, Longstreet and Hill came upon the
-Union troops of McCall and Kearney across the Long Bridge road about a
-mile west of the Charles City road intersection at Glendale. Hooker held
-the left or south flank, with Slocum on the right guarding the Charles
-City road approach. Sedgwick was in the rear in reserve. Longstreet and
-Hill halted and waited for Huger, coming down the Charles City road, and
-Jackson, supposedly coming on the Federal rear from White Oak Swamp.
-
-Meanwhile, Gen. T. H. Holmes, who had come from the south side of the
-James River with part of his division and Gen. Henry A. Wise’s brigade,
-had been sent by Lee down the River, or New Market road in an attempt to
-get between McClellan and the James River. McClellan anticipated the
-move, however, and Warren of Sykes’ division stopped Holmes south of
-Malvern Hill. Lee then ordered Magruder on the Darbytown road to
-reinforce him, but Magruder’s forces did not get there in time to help.
-
-Huger was delayed by obstructions, mostly felled trees, with which the
-Federals had blocked his path. Instead of going around the obstructions,
-Huger continually halted to clear the road. Thus it resolved itself into
-a question of whether Huger could clear the trees as fast as the Union
-soldiers cut them down. In this so-called “battle of the axes” Huger
-lost, and did not get to Glendale in time to participate in the
-engagement.
-
-About 4 that afternoon, however, Longstreet heard artillery firing from
-Huger’s direction which “was supposed to indicate his approach,” and
-expecting Jackson’s appearance momentarily, he opened with one of his
-batteries and thus brought on the battle. Jackson never did show up,
-being held north of White Oak Swamp by the artillery of Richardson and
-Smith, and did not get to Glendale until the next day. The fight was
-particularly vicious with many pockets of hand-to-hand combat, but,
-without the expected support of Huger and Jackson, Longstreet could not
-break the Union lines in time to inflict any serious damage or to
-interrupt the withdrawal. Lee stated in his report: “Could the other
-commands have cooperated in the action the result would have proved most
-disastrous to the enemy.” Gone was Lee’s last chance to cut McClellan’s
-army in two.
-
-
-
-
- _Malvern Hill_
-
-
-McClellan had already selected another naturally strong position, this
-time on Malvern Hill, for the last stand before reaching the James
-River. On the morning of July 1, Morell and Sykes’ divisions of Porter’s
-corps were drawn up on the crest of the hill west of the Quaker road.
-East of the road Couch’s division of Keyes’ corps held the front, with
-Kearney and Hooker of Heintzelman’s corps flanked to the right and rear.
-Sumner’s troops were in the rear in reserve. The position was flanked on
-either side by creeks in deep ravines less than a mile apart, and across
-this narrow front, Porter placed his batteries with the guns almost hub
-to hub. In front, the ground was open, sloping down to woods, marshes,
-and swamps, through which the Confederate forces had to form for attack
-within range of the Federal artillery.
-
-Lee had Jackson on his left facing Kearney, Hooker, and Couch’s right.
-D. H. Hill was in the center opposite Couch’s left and Morell’s right.
-Lee then ordered Magruder to the right of Hill, but Magruder was delayed
-by taking the wrong road; so instead two brigades of Huger’s were placed
-on Hill’s right. Longstreet and A. P. Hill, their ranks decimated from
-the actions at Gaines’ Mill and Glendale, were held in reserve. The
-terrain rendered it almost impossible for effective use of Confederate
-artillery, and the few batteries that did get into position were quickly
-cut to pieces by the massed Union guns.
-
- [Illustration: _Battle of Malvern Hill._ From _Battles and Leaders
- of the Civil War_.]
-
- _Confederate Forces_
- LONGSTREET’S DIVISIONS
- FIELD OF A. P. HILL
- THOMAS OF A. P. HILL
- BRANCH OF A. P. HILL
- COBB OF MAGRUDER
- G. T. ANDERSON OF MAGRUDER
- RANSOM OF HUGER
- JONES OF JACKSON
- WINDER OF JACKSON
- LAWTON
- EARLY OF EWELL
- MAHONE OF HUGER
- SEMMES OF MAGRUDER
- KERSHAW OF MAGRUDER
- BARKDALE OF MAGRUDER
- TOOMBS OF MAGRUDER
- TAYLOR OF EWELL
- HAMPTON OF JACKSON
- LAW OF WHITING
- TRIMBLE OF EWELL
- WRIGHT OF HUGER
- ARMISTEAD OF HUGER
- GORDON OF HUGER
- OF D. H. HILL:
- E. B. ANDERSON
- RIPLEY
- GARLAND
- COLQUITT
- HOOD OF WHITING
- HOLMES’ DIVISION
- _Union Forces_
- BERDAN’S SHARPSHOOTERS
- MEAGHER _after dark_
- QUAKER
- PALMER
- ABERCROMBIE
- HOWE
- J. W. Binford
- GRIFFIN
- McQUADE
- MORELL
- Crew
- West
- CALDWELL
- NICKLES OF HOOKER
- KEARNY
- HOOKER
- HEINTZELMAN’S CORPS
- FRANKLIN
- SUMNER’S CORPS
- Binford
- BUCHANAN
- MARTINDALE
- BUTTERFIELD
- LOVELL
- SYKES
- HOLMES’ DIVISION
- RESERVE BATTERIES
- WARREN OF SYKES
- Malvern House _HEADQUARTERS OF GEN. PORTER_
- SEYMOUR OF McCALL
- Greenwood _(HOSPITAL)_
- GUN-BOAT FIRE FROM JAMES RIVER
-
-“Owing to ignorance of the country, the dense forests impeding necessary
-communications, and the extreme difficulty of the ground,” Lee reported,
-“the whole line was not formed until a late hour in the afternoon.” The
-first real assault did not take place until after 5, and then it was
-uncoordinated and confused. The signal for the attack was to be a yell
-from one of Huger’s brigades, after the Confederate artillery had
-blasted a hole in the Union lines. This put the responsibility of where
-and when to begin the attack on a mere brigade commander.
-
-The artillery was unable to put concentrated fire in any one spot, but
-Huger attacked regardless and was beaten back with heavy losses. Then D.
-H. Hill attacked, only to suffer the same fate. Magruder finally sent
-his troops in a gallant charge across the open fields right up to the
-cannons’ muzzles, only to be mowed down like wheat at harvest time. Late
-in the battle Jackson sent his own division to Magruder’s and Hill’s
-support, but in the heavily wooded and swampy ground they got lost and
-did not arrive in time to help. Darkness finally put an end to these
-hopeless attacks. As D. H. Hill declared bitterly, “It was not war—it
-was murder.”
-
-
-
-
- _End of Campaign_
-
-
- [Illustration: _McClellan’s withdrawal._ From a contemporary
- sketch.]
-
-During the night McClellan continued his withdrawal, and the next day
-found the Army of the Potomac safe at Harrison’s Landing under the
-protection of the Federal gunboats on the James. The Seven Days were
-over. Total casualties: Army of Northern Virginia, 20,614; Army of the
-Potomac, 15,849.
-
- [Illustration: _Army of the Potomac at Harrison’s Landing._ From a
- contemporary sketch.]
-
-In his official report of the campaign Lee stated: “Under ordinary
-circumstances the Federal Army should have been destroyed. Its escape
-was due to * * * the want of correct and timely information. This fact,
-attributable chiefly to the character of the country, enabled Gen.
-McClellan skillfully to conceal his retreat and to add much to the
-obstructions with which nature had beset the way of our pursuing columns
-* * *.” But his other objective had been achieved—Richmond was safe, at
-least for the time being.
-
-While McClellan had successfully changed his base of operations from the
-York to the James River and saved his army in the process, he had failed
-in his first objective of capturing Richmond and possibly ending the
-war. The decision to remove the army from the peninsula, rather than
-reinforce it for another attempt on Richmond, was made in Washington
-over McClellan’s strong objections. He wrote to Gen. Henry W. Halleck:
-“It is here on the banks of the James, that the fate of the Union should
-be decided.”
-
- [Illustration: _McClellan’s cartographers._ Courtesy, Library of
- Congress.]
-
-Although McClellan wisely realized the advantages of another assault on
-Richmond on the line of the James, it was his own mistaken view of Lee’s
-strength that was the major reason for the withdrawal. As Halleck
-explained to him:
-
- You and your officers at one interview estimated the enemy’s forces in
- and around Richmond at 200,000 men. Since then you and others report
- that they have received and are receiving large re-enforcements from
- the South. General Pope’s army covering Washington is only about
- 40,000. Your effective force is only about 90,000. You are 30 miles
- from Richmond, and General Pope 80 or 90, with the enemy directly
- between you, ready to fall with his superior numbers upon one or the
- other, as he may elect. Neither can re-enforce the other in case of
- such an attack. If General Pope’s army be diminished to re-enforce
- you, Washington, Maryland, and Pennsylvania would be left uncovered
- and exposed. If your force be reduced to strengthen Pope, you would be
- too weak to even hold the position you now occupy should the enemy
- turn around and attack you in full force. In other words, the old Army
- of the Potomac is split into two parts * * * and I wish to unite them.
-
-In August the Army of the Potomac was transported by water back to
-Washington to support Pope’s campaign in Northern Virginia. McClellan’s
-failure to capture the Confederate Capital, combined with Lee’s failure
-to destroy the Union Army, assured the nation a long, bitter war that
-became one of the great turning points in American history.
-
-
-
-
- _The Years Between_
-
-
- [Illustration: _Richmond, summer of 1862._ From a contemporary
- sketch.]
-
-In August 1862 Lee wrote to Jefferson Davis: “If we are able to change
-the theater of the war from the James River to the north of the
-Rappahannock we shall be able to consume provisions and forage now being
-used in supporting the enemy.” So Lee moved into Northern Virginia to
-meet Pope’s threatened overland campaign against Richmond. At Second
-Manassas (Bull Run) the Union army was defeated again and withdrew into
-the fortifications around Washington.
-
-Lee took advantage of this opportunity and made his first invasion north
-into Maryland, only to be defeated by McClellan at Antietam (Sharpsburg)
-in September. Lee then withdrew into Virginia, and at Fredericksburg in
-December he severely repulsed Gen. Ambrose Burnside’s move on Richmond.
-In the spring of 1863 the Union army, now under Hooker, attempted to
-flank Lee’s left and rear to cut him off from Richmond, but it was
-decisively defeated at Chancellorsville and driven back across the
-Rapidan. Lee then made his second thrust north, penetrating into
-Pennsylvania, but was beaten back by Meade at Gettysburg in the summer
-of 1863 and, once again, retired into Virginia.
-
-These gallant armies fought each other across the fields of
-Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia before they clashed again in the
-outskirts of Richmond 2 years later.
-
-
-
-
- Part Two
- THE FINAL STRUGGLE FOR RICHMOND, 1864-65
-
-
-
-
- _Lincoln’s New Commander_
-
-
-In March 1864 President Lincoln appointed Gen. Ulysses S. Grant as
-commanding general of all the Union armies. Said Grant: “In the east the
-opposing forces stood in substantially the same relations toward each
-other as three years before, or when the war began; they were both
-between the Federal and Confederate Capitals. Battles had been fought of
-as great severity as had ever been known in war * * * from the James
-River to Gettysburg, with indecisive results.” He hoped to change this
-situation by putting pressure on all Confederate armies at the same
-time, something that had never been done before.
-
-Grant’s plan called for Gen. Benjamin F. Butler to march up the south
-side of the James and attack Petersburg or Richmond or both; Gen. Franz
-Sigel to push down the Shenandoah Valley driving Gen. Jubal Early before
-him, thereby protecting Washington; Gen. Nathaniel Banks in New Orleans
-to march on Mobile; Gen. William T. Sherman to cut across Georgia
-driving Johnston before him, take Atlanta, and if necessary swing north
-to Richmond; Meade’s Army of the Potomac, with Grant in command, to push
-Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia and capture Richmond. As Grant stated:
-“Lee, with the Capital of the Confederacy, was the main end to which all
-were working.”
-
-Lee’s objective now was to stop Grant and protect Richmond. Said Lee:
-“We must destroy this army of Grant’s before he gets to the James River.
-If he gets there it will become a siege, and then it will be a mere
-question of time.”
-
-The campaign started in the spring of 1864 when the Army of the Potomac
-crossed the Rapidan River and the Army of Northern Virginia blocked its
-path at the Wilderness. After a particularly vicious and costly battle,
-Grant instead of retreating to lick his wounds as other Federal
-commanders had done, executed a left flank movement, still heading south
-and trying to get between Lee and Richmond. A few days later the two
-armies clashed again at Spotsylvania in a series of grim battles, but
-still indecisive as far as major objectives were concerned. Although
-Grant’s losses were staggering, he was slowly but methodically
-destroying Lee’s ability to wage offensive war.
-
- [Illustration: _Gen. Ulysses S. Grant._ From a contemporary sketch.]
-
-Again Grant executed a left flank movement to get around Lee, and then
-by a series of flanking marches, which the Confederate soldiers called
-the “sidling movement,” and the Union soldiers the “jug-handle”
-movement, Grant gradually worked his way down to Cold Harbor.
-
-
-
-
- _Cold Harbor_
-
-
-Where and what was Cold Harbor? Cold Harbor was a seedy-looking tavern,
-squatting by a dusty crossroads 8 miles from Richmond, on the flat,
-featureless plain, intersected by hundreds of small creeks, gullies, and
-swamps, that is characteristic of the land between the Pamunkey and the
-Chickahominy Rivers. There wasn’t a harbor for miles and it was anything
-but cold. It was the only Cold Harbor in the United States, although
-there were many Cold Harbors on the stagecoach routes along the Thames
-River in England. The name indicated a place to get a bed for the night
-and something cold to drink, but not hot meals.
-
- [Illustration: _Cold Harbor Tavern._ From a photograph taken in 1885
- as it appears in _Battles and Leaders of the Civil War_.]
-
-But these dusty crossroads were strategically important if Grant was to
-attack Richmond, and both Lee and Grant realized it. Also, it was
-Grant’s last chance to continue his strategy of trying to get between
-Lee and Richmond—any more flanking movements and Lee would be in the
-entrenchments around the Confederate Capital where Grant did not want to
-fight him. As Grant stated: “Richmond was fortified and entrenched so
-perfectly that one man inside to defend was more than equal to five
-outside besieging or assaulting.”
-
-It is significant that Lee also did not want to fight in the
-entrenchments around Richmond. There he would be on the defensive, and
-in such a position could not possibly destroy Grant’s army. So both
-commanders were willing for the test.
-
-And what of the lowly foot-soldier, the unsung hero in the ranks, the
-poor bloody infantryman? Was he ready for the awful test?
-
- [Illustration: _Confederate camp._ From a contemporary sketch.]
-
-To the average soldier, this whole campaign was fast becoming just a
-series of hazy, indistinct recollections, like the fragments of a
-half-forgotten dream: Long columns of sweat-soaked soldiers marching
-over hills and rivers and swamps, across ploughed fields and corn
-fields, down endless dusty roads through dark, lonely woods; 30 days of
-marching by night and fighting by day, until it must have seemed to them
-that the only things left in life were stupefying fatigue, merciless
-heat, choking dust, smoke and noise, mud and blood.
-
-In the Union ranks many of the men began to find out for the first time
-what hunger really was. They had moved so fast and so often the ration
-wagons were left far behind. Hardtack was selling for a dollar apiece—if
-you could find a seller. And here at Cold Harbor the soldiers wrote
-their names and regiments on pieces of paper and pinned or sewed them to
-the inside of their dirty blouses, with the forlorn hope that if and
-when they were killed someone might take the time to find out who they
-were.
-
-To Lee’s barefoot, ragged veterans, hunger had been a constant companion
-for a long time, but at Cold Harbor they approached starvation. A
-Confederate sergeant recorded in his diary: “When we reached Cold Harbor
-the command to which I belonged had been marching almost continuously
-day and night for more than fifty hours without food, and for the first
-time we knew what actual starvation was.” When scurvy appeared among the
-men, owing primarily to a lack of fresh vegetables, Lee advised them to
-eat the roots of the sassafras and wild grape, if they could find any.
-
-In the race for initial possession of the crossroads at Cold Harbor,
-Lee’s cavalry won by a few hours. But in the afternoon of May 31 Gen.
-Philip Sheridan’s cavalry drove them out and held the crossroads until
-relieved by the Federal VI Corps under Gen. Horatio Wright. Most of
-Sheridan’s troopers were armed with the new Spencer repeating carbine,
-which made dismounted cavalrymen effective infantry.
-
-The next morning, June 1, Lee threw Gen. Richard Anderson’s corps
-(Longstreet’s old corps—Longstreet having been wounded in the
-Wilderness) against the Federal VI Corps in a bold attempt to seize the
-crossroads and roll up Grant’s left flank before he could reinforce it,
-but Anderson was repulsed. Grant then moved the XVIII Corps under
-“Baldy” Smith, which he had borrowed from Butler’s army bottled up on
-the south side of the James, over to the right of the VI Corps. That
-afternoon they attacked Anderson, now supported by Gen. Robert Hoke’s
-division.
-
-The assault failed to break the Confederate line, but it did bend it
-back in several places. Grant believed that with a greater concentration
-a breakthrough could be achieved. Consequently, he ordered the II Corps
-under Gen. Winfield Hancock over to the left of the VI Corps, between it
-and the Chickahominy River, and planned an all out attack by the three
-corps for the morning of June 2.
-
-Anticipating the move, Lee put A. P. Hill, supported by Gen. John
-Breckinridge’s division, over to his right between Anderson and the
-Chickahominy and waited.
-
-The expected attack failed to materialize, however. Hancock got lost in
-the woods and swamps moving to his assigned position, and after an
-all-night forced march the men were too exhausted to mount an attack.
-Any chance the assault might have had for success was now gone. The
-delay was fortunate for Lee because Breckinridge also got lost and was
-not in position to support Hill on the morning of June 2. The attack was
-then ordered for that afternoon but again postponed until 4:30 the
-morning of June 5. And each corps commander received a telegram from
-Grant’s headquarters that read: “Corps Commanders will employ the
-interim in making examinations of the ground in their front and
-perfecting arrangements for the assault.”
-
-Lee’s veterans took advantage of this fatal 24-hour delay to entrench
-themselves quickly and effectively, using every creek, gully, ravine,
-and swamp in such fashion that all approaches to their positions could
-be covered with a murderous fire. A newspaper reporter present at Cold
-Harbor wrote a vivid description of those entrenchments. “They are
-intricate, zig-zagged lines within lines, lines protecting flanks of
-lines, lines built to enfilade opposing lines * * * works within works
-and works outside works, each laid out with some definite design.”
-
-Lee needed this strong position; he would fight at Cold Harbor without a
-reserve. He wrote to Jefferson Davis: “If I shorten my lines to provide
-a reserve, he will turn me; if I weaken my lines to provide a reserve,
-he will break them.”
-
-Grant’s battle plan was relatively uncomplicated. It was, essentially, a
-simple, frontal assault. Hancock’s II Corps and Wright’s VI Corps,
-between the Chickahominy and the Cold Harbor road (now State Route 156),
-together with Smith’s XVIII Corps north of the road, were to attack all
-out and break the Confederate lines. Gen. Gouverneur Warren’s V Corps,
-north of the XVIII, was to be held in reserve, while Burnside’s IX
-Corps, on Grant’s extreme right, was not to enter the fight unless Lee
-weakened his line in that sector, then it would attack, supported by the
-V Corps. Lee did not weaken any part of his line, so these two corps
-were not engaged to any appreciable extent. Thus the battle actually
-took place on approximately a 2½-mile front, although the armies
-stretched for 6 miles from south to north, with the Union army facing
-west. Grant’s total strength was over 100,000 men, but less than 50,000
-were actually engaged in the struggle.
-
-Lee now had A. P. Hill, supported by Breckinridge, on his south flank
-next to the Chickahominy opposite Hancock and Wright. Hoke’s division
-straddled the Cold Harbor road with Gen. Joseph Kershaw’s division just
-north of Hoke, then Anderson and Gen. Richard Ewell’s corps. Lee’s total
-strength consisted of less than 60,000 men, but only about half were
-involved in the action of June 3.
-
-It rained all night the night of June 2. Toward morning the heavy rain
-died to a soft, sticky mist that held the area in clammy fingers. The
-first gray streaks of dawn warned of the approach of a scorching sun
-that would turn the rain-soaked plain, with its myriad streams and
-swamps, into a steaming cauldron. Promptly at 4:30 the three corps
-jumped off to the attack, knowing nothing of the strength of the
-Confederate positions they would have to face. The corps commanders had
-ignored Grant’s telegraphed order of the previous afternoon and no
-proper reconnaissance was made.
-
-The average soldier saw little in any battle in the Civil War, and even
-less at Cold Harbor because of the terrain. But as the first yellow rays
-of the sun shifted the gray mists, most of the Union soldiers could see
-the main line of Confederate entrenchments across the open spaces in
-front of them—a tracing of raw earth that had been turned up like a huge
-furrow, along a line of uneven ridges, looking empty but strangely
-ominous. Here and there bright regimental colors perched insolently on
-the dirt hills.
-
-Suddenly, it seemed, the line was dotted with black slouch hats and
-glistening bayonets. Yellow sheets of flame flashed from end to end,
-then disappeared in a heavy cloud of smoke. Regiment after regiment
-exploded into action with a metallic roar. Gigantic crashes of artillery
-split the air. Shells screamed overhead like a pack of banshees,
-exploding in clouds of earth, horses, and men. The noise roared to a
-crescendo with a volume of sound that left the men dazed and confused.
-One veteran said it was more like a volcanic blast than a battle.
-
-It was over in less than 30 minutes, but 7,000 killed and wounded Union
-soldiers were left lying in the sun between the trenches. Said one
-general sadly: “In that little period more men fell bleeding as they
-advanced than in any other like period of time throughout the war.”
-
-Those not already killed or wounded threw themselves on the ground and
-desperately heaved up little mounds of earth in front of them with
-bayonets, spoons, cups, and broken canteens. They could neither advance
-nor retreat—nothing standing could live long in that hail of lead and
-iron. They just dug in and stayed there.
-
-A peculiar thing about the battle came to light afterwards. The three
-corps commanders sent identical telegrams to Grant’s headquarters, each
-accusing the other of not supporting him in the attack. Later it was
-discovered what had actually happened. Hancock, on the left, had veered
-to his left because of the heavy fire from there and the peculiarities
-of the terrain. Wright, in the center, had gone straight ahead. And
-Smith, on the right, bore off to his right because of swamps and
-ravines. So the farther they advanced the more separated they became and
-the more their flanks were left open to a deadly crossfire.
-
-No other major assault was attempted by either army, although the troops
-stayed in the hot, filthy trenches until June 12, with constant,
-nerve-wracking sharpshooting and skirmishing. From June 1 to 12 the
-Union losses totaled 12,700; Confederate losses are estimated at between
-1,500 and 2,000.
-
-Cold Harbor proved to be Lee’s last major victory in the field, and
-although it was a military zero so far as Grant was concerned, it turned
-out to be one of the most important and significant battles fought
-during the Civil War. The results of this battle changed the course of
-the war in the east from a war of maneuver to a war of siege. It also
-influenced the strategy and tactics of future wars by showing that
-well-selected, well-manned entrenchments, adequately supported by
-artillery, were practically impregnable to frontal assaults.
-
- [Illustration: _Federal trenches at Cold Harbor._ From a
- contemporary sketch.]
-
- [Illustration: _Federal coehorn mortars at Cold Harbor._ From a
- contemporary sketch.]
-
- [Illustration: _Looking for a friend at Cold Harbor._ From a
- contemporary sketch.]
-
-On June 5, Grant decided to bypass Richmond, cross the James and attack
-Petersburg, an important railway center 25 miles south of the
-Confederate Capital. This would still keep Lee’s army pinned down, and
-if successful would cut communications between Richmond and the rest of
-the Confederacy.
-
-On June 6 he withdrew Warren’s V Corps from the lines and used it to
-secure the passages across the Chickahominy and down to the James. On
-June 7 he sent Sheridan, with two divisions of cavalry, back into the
-Shenandoah Valley against Early. To counter this, Lee was forced to send
-Gen. Wade Hampton’s cavalry after Sheridan, which in effect left Lee
-without adequate cavalry. During the night of June 12 Grant secretly
-moved all the troops out of the trenches at Cold Harbor, without Lee’s
-being aware of the move until the following morning, and by June 16 the
-Army of the Potomac of over 100,000 men, 5,000 wagons, 2,800 head of
-cattle, and 25,000 horses and mules, were all safely across the James
-River. Richmond was saved for another 10 months.
-
- [Illustration: _Pontoon bridge across the James._ Courtesy, National
- Archives.]
-
-
-
-
- _Fort Harrison_
-
-
-In the pre-dawn darkness of September 29, Grant quietly slipped Gen.
-David Birney’s X Corps and Gen. Edward Ord’s XVIII Corps back across the
-James in a surprise move against the outer defenses of Richmond. The
-primary purpose was to prevent Lee from re-enforcing Early in the
-Shenandoah Valley. If, however, any weakness was discovered it could be
-exploited fully, and it might force Lee to weaken some part of the
-Petersburg line.
-
-Shortly after daybreak Gen. George Stannard’s division of the XVIII
-Corps successfully stormed heavily armed but badly undermanned Fort
-Harrison on the Varina road. Gen. Hiram Burnham, commanding the leading
-brigade, was killed in the assault and the Union forces renamed the
-captured fort for him. A mile and a half farther north, Gen. Adelbert
-Ames’ division of the X Corps was repulsed in a similar attack on
-another fortification, Fort Gilmer, on the New Market road.
-
- [Illustration: _Area of the Richmond battlefields._ From _Battles
- and Leaders of the Civil War_.]
-
-General Lee regarded the loss of Fort Harrison as serious enough to
-demand his personal attention. The next day, with re-enforcements rushed
-from Petersburg, he directed several vigorous assaults against the fort.
-However, the Union forces had closed in the rear and strengthened it,
-and, armed with new repeating rifles, successfully beat back the attacks
-and inflected heavy losses on the Confederates.
-
- [Illustration: _Members of the 1st Connecticut Artillery at Fort
- Brady, 1864._ Courtesy, Library of Congress.]
-
-The fall of Fort Harrison forced Lee to draw back that part of his outer
-line and to build new entrenchments to compensate for the loss. It also
-forced him to extend his line north of the James, thus weakening his
-already dangerously undermanned defenses in front of Petersburg. The
-Union forces, to protect their position further and to neutralize
-Confederate gunboats, constructed Fort Brady a few miles south of Fort
-Burnham (Harrison) on a high bluff overlooking the James River.
-
-No further serious efforts were made to enter Richmond from the north
-side of the James, and the two armies faced each other in these
-respective positions until Grant finally broke Lee’s lines at Petersburg
-on April 1, 1865, forcing the Confederates to abandon Richmond.
-
-
-
-
- _Richmond Falls_
-
-
-Spring came gently to Richmond that year of 1865. The winter had been
-long and hard. After a cold, wet March, Sunday, April 2, dawned mild and
-pleasant. The green buds on the trees and the bright new grass put the
-breath of seedtime in the air; sap flowed warm in the lilac and the
-magnolia. Under a rich blue sky the people strolled leisurely to church
-amid the cheerful music of the bells and the soft murmur of the James
-River falls.
-
-In St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, at the corner of Ninth and Grace
-streets, Jefferson Davis sat in the family pew listening to the sermon.
-The sexton walked up the aisle and handed him a message from General
-Lee.
-
-“I advise that all preparation be made for leaving Richmond tonight.”
-
-Davis arose quietly and left the church, walked a block down Ninth
-street to his office in the War Department and gave the necessary orders
-for evacuation.
-
-Late in the afternoon the official order was posted—then pandemonium
-reigned. Trunks, boxes, bundles of every description were piled on the
-sidewalks and in the streets. Wagons, carts, buggies, anything that had
-wheels and could move, were loaded and raced through the city to fight
-their way across Mayo’s Bridge in the mad rush to cross the James and
-flee south.
-
-A frantic mob trampled each other without mercy and jammed the streets
-leading to the railroad stations, only to be turned back by soldiers’
-bayonets. The few trains that would manage to leave were reserved for
-government officials, archives, the treasury, and military personnel.
-
-Early in the evening the character of the crowds began to change. From a
-city of less than 38,000 before the war, Richmond now had over 100,000
-people jammed into every available nook and cranny. They had come by the
-thousands to work for the various government departments and in the
-munitions factories. Refugees from the many battles fought in Virginia
-had poured in, as well as the sick and wounded, followed inevitably by
-deserters, spies, criminals, gamblers, speculators, and derelicts of
-every kind.
-
-And now the cheap hotels, saloons, and gambling dens began to empty
-their customers into the streets, many of them half drunk.
-
-All semblance of law and order disappeared. When the guards at the State
-penitentiary fled, the prisoners broke loose to roam the city at will.
-The provost guard took the prisoners of war from Libby Prison down the
-river to be exchanged. This left only the Local Defense Brigade,
-consisting of government and munitions workers. But most of them were
-required in government buildings to pack and burn records; some guarded
-the railroad depots, while others were engaged in destruction
-assignments. The order had been given to burn all tobacco and cotton
-that could not be removed by tossing flaming balls of tar into the
-warehouses along the riverfront.
-
-In the meantime, Mayor Mayo and the city council had appointed a
-committee in each ward to see that all liquor was destroyed, and shortly
-after midnight they set to work. Casks and barrels of the finest
-southern bourbons were rolled to the curbs, the tops smashed open and
-left to drain.
-
-Like flies around honey, the mobs swarmed and fought their way into the
-streets where the whiskey flowed like water. Men, women, and children,
-clawing and screaming, scooped it up with bare hands, or used pails,
-cups, basins, bottles, anything that would hold the amber liquid. They
-used rags on sticks dipped in whiskey for torches, and went howling
-through the city in search of food and plunder like a pack of mad
-wolves, looting, killing, burning.
-
-The soft night sky became pink, then turned a dull red. The blaze from
-the Shockhoe Warehouse at Thirteenth and Cary streets, where 10,000
-hogsheads of tobacco was put to the torch, flew skyward as if shot from
-a huge blowtorch. The flames quickly spread to the Franklin Paper Mills
-and the Gallego Flour Mills, 10 stories high. Higher and higher they
-soared, and then widened until it seemed a red hot sea of fire would
-engulf the whole city.
-
- [Illustration: _Evacuation of Richmond._ From a contemporary
- engraving]
-
-A faint hot breeze began to stir from the southeast, scattering burning
-embers through the streets and alleys and houses. Powder magazines and
-arsenals let go with a whooshing boom. Thousands of bullets and shells
-tore through buildings and ploughed up the streets. Shells exploded high
-in the smoke cascading a metal spray over the area, followed by the
-rattle of bursting cartridges in one great metallic roar. Just before
-daybreak a deafening explosion from the James River signalled the
-destruction of the Confederate warships and the Navy Yard.
-
-Richmond was now one vast inferno of flame, noise, smoke, and trembling
-earth. The roaring fire swept northwestward from the riverfront,
-hungrily devouring the two railroad depots, all the banks, flour and
-paper mills, and hotels, warehouses, stores, and houses by the hundreds.
-
-About dawn a large crowd gathered in front of the huge government
-commissary at Fourteenth and Cary streets, on the eastern edge of the
-fire. The doors were thrown open and the government clerks began an
-orderly distribution of the supplies. Then the drunken mob joined the
-crowd.
-
-Barrels of hams, bacon, flour, molasses, sugar, coffee, and tea were
-rolled into the streets or thrown from windows. Women ran screaming
-through the flames waving sides of bacon and whole hams. Wheelbarrows
-were filled and trundled away. When the building finally caught fire
-from the whiskey torches, the mob swarmed into other sections of the
-doomed city where the few remaining clothing, jewelry, and furniture
-stores were ruthlessly looted and burned. A casket factory was broken
-into, the caskets loaded with plunder and carried through the streets,
-and the fiendish rabble roared on unchecked.
-
-As the drunken night reeled into morning the few remaining regiments of
-General Kershaw’s brigade, which had been guarding the lines east of
-Richmond, galloped into the city on their way south to join Lee in his
-retreat to Appomattox. They had to fight their way through the howling
-mob to reach Mayo’s Bridge. As the rearguard clattered over, Gen. M. W.
-Gary shouted, “All over, good-bye; blow her to hell.”
-
-The barrels of tar placed along the bridge were promptly put to the
-torch. Soon tall flames shot high into the air, and with the two
-railroad bridges already burning, the three high-arched structures were
-like blazing arrows pointing to the very gates of hell.
-
-Then down Osborne Turnpike and into Main Street trotted the Fourth
-Massachusetts cavalry. When the smoke and heat blocked their path, they
-turned into Fourteenth Street past fire engines blazing in the street
-and proceeded up the hill to Capitol Square, where a tragic scene
-awaited them.
-
- [Illustration: _Richmond burns._ From a contemporary sketch.]
-
-Like a green oasis in a veritable desert of fire and destruction, the
-sloping lawn around the Capitol was jammed with frightened people
-seeking safety from the flames. Family groups, trying desperately to
-stay together, huddled under the linden trees for protection from the
-burning sparks. Piles of furniture were scattered in every
-direction—beds, chairs, settees, paintings, silverware, gilt-framed
-mirrors—the few possessions left, the family heirlooms, the treasures
-faithfully passed down from generation to generation. In the background
-the massive white columns of the Capitol, designed by Thomas Jefferson
-as a replica of the famous Maison Carée at Nimes, stood guard over the
-huddled masses below.
-
-The soldiers in blue quickly dispersed the mobs at bayonet point. Guards
-were immediately placed to prevent further looting. The fire was
-contained by blowing up buildings in its path to create a fire-lane,
-leaving the main part to burn itself out. By nightfall everything was
-under control, but most of the business and industrial section of the
-city was gone.
-
-The stars shone down that night on the smouldering ruins of more than
-700 buildings. Gaunt chimneys stood naked against the black velvet sky.
-A Federal officer, picking his way through thousands of pieces of white
-granite columns and marble facades that littered the streets to inspect
-the guard, noted that the silence of death brooded over the city.
-Occasionally a shell exploded somewhere in the ruins. Then it was quiet
-again.
-
-A week later Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Court House, Va. The
-war was over.
-
- [Illustration: _Richmond after the war._ Courtesy, Library of
- Congress.]
-
- [Illustration: _Richmond National Battlefield Park._]
-
-
-
-
- _The Park_
-
-
-Richmond National Battlefield Park was established on July 14, 1944, as
-authorized by act of Congress. The property was originally acquired by a
-group of public-spirited Virginians who donated it to the Commonwealth
-of Virginia in 1932. The park occupies nearly 800 acres of land in 10
-widely separated parcels. Included are some 6 acres in Chimborazo Park
-on East Broad Street, site of Chimborazo Hospital during the Civil War.
-
-A complete tour of the battlefields requires a 57-mile drive which is
-outlined on the map in this booklet. We suggest that you begin at the
-main Visitor Center in Chimborazo Park, 3215 East Broad Street,
-Richmond, where museum exhibits and an audio-visual program are
-available to enhance your appreciation of this battlefield area.
-
-Markers, maps, and interpretive devices along the tour will help you to
-understand the military operations. You will see parts of the fields of
-combat, massive forts, and intricate field fortifications. Two houses on
-the battlefields have wartime associations—the Watt House (Gen.
-Fitz-John Porter’s headquarters) and the Garthright House (Union field
-hospital).
-
-
-
-
- _Administration_
-
-
-Richmond National Battlefield Park is administered by the National Park
-Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. A superindendent, whose
-address is 3215 East Broad Street, Richmond, Va., is in immediate
-charge.
-
- U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1961 OF-588588
-
-
-
-
- NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
- HISTORICAL HANDBOOK SERIES
-
-
- (PRICE LISTS OF NATIONAL PARK SERVICE PUBLICATIONS MAY BE OBTAINED
- FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS, WASHINGTON 25, D.C.)
-
- Antietam
- Bandelier
- Chalmette
- Chickamauga and Chattanooga Battlefields
- Custer Battlefield
- Custis-Lee Mansion, The Robert E. Lee Memorial
- Fort Laramie
- Fort McHenry
- Fort Necessity
- Fort Pulaski
- Fort Raleigh
- Fort Sumter
- George Washington Birthplace
- Gettysburg
- Guilford Courthouse
- Hopewell Village
- Independence
- Jamestown, Virginia
- Kings Mountain
- The Lincoln Museum and the House Where Lincoln Died
- Manassas (Bull Run)
- Montezuma Castle
- Morristown, A Military Capital of the Revolution
- Ocmulgee
- Petersburg Battlefields
- Richmond Battlefields
- Saratoga
- Scotts Bluff
- Shiloh
- Statue of Liberty
- Vanderbilt Mansion
- Vicksburg
- Yorktown
-
- [Illustration: _Roll book of 27th N. Y. Regiment punctured by
- Confederate bullet_]
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Richmond National Battlefield Park, Virginia, by
-Joseph P. Cullen
-
-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: Richmond National Battlefield Park, Virginia
- National Park Service Historical Handbook Series No. 33
-
-Author: Joseph P. Cullen
-
-Release Date: December 27, 2019 [EBook #61027]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RICHMOND NAT. BATTLEFIELD PARK, VIRGINIA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Richmond National Battlefield Park, Virginia" width="500" height="794" />
-</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p02.jpg" alt="U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR &middot; March 3, 1849" width="300" height="301" />
-</div>
-<p class="center"><b>UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
-<br /><span class="small">Stewart L. Udall, <i>Secretary</i></span></b></p>
-<p class="center"><b>NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
-<br /><span class="small">Conrad L. Wirth, <i>Director</i></span></b></p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><i><b>HISTORICAL HANDBOOK NUMBER THIRTY-THREE</b></i></p>
-<p>This publication is one of a series of handbooks describing the
-historical and archeological areas in the National Park System
-administered by the National Park Service of the United States
-Department of the Interior. It is printed by the Government
-Printing Office and may be purchased from the Superintendent of
-Documents, Washington 25, D.C. Price 25 cents.</p>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>RICHMOND
-<br /><span class="smaller">National Battlefield Park
-<br />Virginia</span></h1>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p02a.jpg" alt="{Sniper}" width="400" height="436" />
-</div>
-<p class="center"><i>by Joseph P. Cullen</i></p>
-<p class="center smaller">NATIONAL PARK SERVICE HISTORICAL HANDBOOK SERIES NO. 33
-<br />Washington, D.C., 1961</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_i">i</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig1">
-<img src="images/p03.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="376" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>The National Park System, of which Richmond National
-Battlefield Park is a unit, is dedicated to conserving the
-scenic, scientific, and historic heritage of the United
-States for the benefit and inspiration of its people.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_ii">ii</div>
-<h2 id="toc" class="center"><i>Contents</i></h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt class="small"><i>Page</i></dt>
-</dl>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt><a href="#c1">Richmond</a> 1</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c2">The Army of the Potomac</a> 2</dt>
-<dt class="center"><span class="sc">Part One</span></dt>
-<dt class="center"><span class="small">THE PENINSULA CAMPAIGN, SUMMER 1862</span></dt>
-<dt><a href="#c3">On to Richmond</a> 3</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c4">Up the Peninsula</a> 4</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c5">Drewry&rsquo;s Bluff</a> 5</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c6">Seven Pines (Fair Oaks)</a> 6</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c7">Lee Takes Command</a> 9</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c8">The Seven Days Begin</a> 12</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c9">Beaver Dam Creek (Ellerson&rsquo;s Mill)</a> 13</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c10">Gaines&rsquo; Mill</a> 16</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c11">Savage Station</a> 18</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c12">Glendale (Frayser&rsquo;s Farm)</a> 21</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c13">Malvern Hill</a> 22</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c14">End of Campaign</a> 24</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c15">The Years Between</a> 27</dt>
-<dt class="center"><span class="sc">Part Two</span></dt>
-<dt class="center"><span class="small">THE FINAL STRUGGLE FOR RICHMOND, 1864-65</span></dt>
-<dt><a href="#c16">Lincoln&rsquo;s New Commander</a> 28</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c17">Cold Harbor</a> 29</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c18">Fort Harrison</a> 37</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c19">Richmond Falls</a> 40</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c20">The Park</a> 46</dt>
-<dt><a href="#c21">Administration</a> 46</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_iii">iii</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig2">
-<img src="images/p04.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="430" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Richmond, 1858.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig3">
-<img src="images/p04a.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="225" />
-<p class="pcap"></p>
-</div>
-<p>The American Civil War <i>was unique in many respects. One
-of the great turning points in American history, it was a national
-tragedy of international significance. Simultaneously, it was the last of the
-old wars and the first of the new. Although it began in a blaze of glamor,
-romance, and chivalry, it ended in the ashes of misery, destruction, and death.
-It was, as Walt Whitman said, &ldquo;a strange, sad war.&rdquo;</i></p>
-<p class="tb">Richmond National Battlefield Park preserves the scenes of some
-of the great battles that took place in the vicinity of the Confederate
-Capital. When we visit these now quiet, peaceful woods and fields,
-we feel an association with our past that is impossible to achieve
-with the written or spoken word. Here we are not reminded of
-the Blue or the Gray as such, only of the heroic struggle of men&mdash;men
-with two different beliefs and philosophies, welded together
-by the blood of battle, to give us our America of today.</p>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small"><i>Richmond</i></span></h2>
-<p>In session at Montgomery, Ala., in May 1861, the Confederate Congress
-voted to remove the Capital of the Confederate States to
-Richmond, Va. This decision, in effect, made Richmond a beleaguered
-city for 4 years. Essentially, the move was dictated by
-political and military considerations. The prestige of Virginia, richest
-and most populous State in the South, was considered necessary
-for the success of the Confederacy. For political reasons it was
-believed that the Capital should be near the border States and the
-heavy fighting expected there.</p>
-<p>Second only to New Orleans, Richmond was the largest city in
-the Confederacy, having a population of about 38,000. It was also
-the center of iron manufacturing in the South. The Tredegar Iron
-<span class="pb" id="Page_2">2</span>
-Works, main source of cannon supply for the Southern armies, influenced
-the choice of Richmond as the Confederate Capital and demanded
-its defense. During the course of the war, Tredegar made
-over 1,100 cannon, in addition to mines, torpedoes, propeller shafts,
-and other war machinery. It expanded to include rolling mills,
-forges, sawmills, and machine shops. The Richmond Laboratory
-made over 72 million cartridges, along with grenades, gun carriages,
-field artillery, and canteens, while the Richmond Armory had a capacity
-for manufacturing 5,000 small arms a month.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig4">
-<img src="images/p05.jpg" alt="" width="795" height="408" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Tredegar Iron Works.</i> Courtesy, Library of Congress.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Thus Richmond became the political, military, and manufacturing
-center of the South, and the symbol of secession to the North.</p>
-<p>Situated near the head of the navigable waters of the James
-River, and within 110 miles of the National Capital at Washington,
-Richmond was the key to the military planning of both sides. For
-4 years the city remained the primary military objective of the
-Union armies in the east. As one southern newspaper stated: &ldquo;To
-lose Richmond is to lose Virginia, and to lose Virginia is to lose
-the key to the Southern Confederacy.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2 id="c2"><span class="small"><i>The Army of the Potomac</i></span></h2>
-<p>In July 1861 the untrained Union Army of the Potomac suffered
-disaster at Manassas (Bull Run) in the first attempt to drive into
-Virginia and capture Richmond. President Abraham Lincoln then
-appointed Gen. George B. McClellan the new commander of the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_3">3</span>
-demoralized army. McClellan reported: &ldquo;I found no army to command
-* * * just a mere collection of regiments cowering on the
-banks of the Potomac.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>To this chaotic situation he brought order and discipline. During
-the long winter months, the raw recruits were marshalled and
-drilled into an efficient fighting machine of over 100,000 men&mdash;the
-largest army ever commanded by one man in the history of the
-western hemisphere. By the spring of 1862 this army was ready for
-the supreme test&mdash;the goal was Richmond.</p>
-<h2 class="center"><span class="sc">Part One</span>
-<br />THE PENINSULA CAMPAIGN, SUMMER,&nbsp;1862</h2>
-<h2 id="c3"><span class="small"><i>On To Richmond</i></span></h2>
-<p>Instead of marching overland, McClellan decided to take advantage
-of Union control of the inland waters and transport his army, with
-its vast supplies and materiel, down the Potomac River and across
-Chesapeake Bay to the tip of the peninsula between the York and
-James Rivers. Then with his supply ships steaming up the York,
-he planned to march northwestward up the peninsula, join another
-force under Gen. Irvin McDowell marching overland from Washington,
-and together, converge on Richmond.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig5">
-<img src="images/p05a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="544" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>McClellan&rsquo;s plan of attack.</i> Painting by Sidney King.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div>
-<p>To accomplish this, McClellan undertook the largest amphibious
-operation ever attempted in the western world. Over 400 steam
-vessels, brigs, schooners, sloops, ferry boats, and barges assembled on
-the Potomac River. In March 1862 these vessels ferried the Army
-of the Potomac, with its 3,600 wagons, 700 ambulances, 300 pieces
-of artillery, 2,500 head of cattle, and over 25,000 horses and mules,
-to the southeast coast of Virginia. As Q. M. Gen. Rufus Ingalls
-reported: &ldquo;Operations so extensive and important as the rapid and
-successful embarkation of such an army, with all its vast equipment,
-its transfer to the peninsula, and its supply while there, had scarcely
-any parallel in history.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2 id="c4"><span class="small"><i>Up The Peninsula</i></span></h2>
-<p>After landing at Fortress Monroe the Federal troops pushed aside
-the thinly held Confederate defenses at Yorktown and Williamsburg
-and proceeded up the peninsula according to plan. But progress
-was slow. Every day 500 tons of forage and subsistence were required
-to keep the army in the field. Early in May it rained and
-kept raining, day after dreary day. Federal soldiers had a saying:
-&ldquo;Virginia used to be in the Union&mdash;now it&rsquo;s in the mud.&rdquo; Dirt
-roads turned into bottomless muck&mdash;creeks and gullies became swift
-flowing streams&mdash;fields were swamps. Roads and bridges had to be
-built and rebuilt, and still the thousands of wagons, horses, and
-mules continually stuck in the mud.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig6">
-<img src="images/p06.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="504" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Sumner&rsquo;s troops crossing Grapevine Bridge to reinforce Coach at Seven Pines.</i> From a
-contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
-<p>Realizing that an effective overland pursuit of the retreating Confederate
-forces under Gen. Joseph E. Johnston was out of the question
-because of the weather and the condition of the roads, McClellan
-on May 6 sent Gen. William B. Franklin&rsquo;s division up the York
-River by transport to West Point, terminus of the Richmond and
-York River Railroad, in an attempt to cut off the Confederate
-wagon train. Johnston anticipated the move, however, and on May
-7 ordered Gen. W. H. C. Whiting&rsquo;s troops to attack Franklin in
-the battle of West Point, or Eltham&rsquo;s Landing.</p>
-<p>The attack was repulsed, but, even so, the wagon train managed
-to continue safely to Richmond. McClellan, however, had cleared
-the way to his next objective&mdash;the landing at White House on the
-Pamunkey River, a tributary of the York. Here the railroad crossed
-the Pamunkey on its way to West Point. This would be the
-Union base of supply for the contemplated attack on Richmond.
-This battle also cleared the way for the right wing of the Union
-army, which would have to stay north and east of Richmond in order
-to hook up with McDowell&rsquo;s anticipated overland march from
-Washington.</p>
-<p>General Johnston, falling back steadily in front of McClellan&rsquo;s slow
-advance, was the target of severe criticism from Richmond newspapers
-for not making a determined stand. But he wrote to Gen.
-Robert E. Lee: &ldquo;We are engaged in a species of warfare at which
-we can never win. It is plain that Gen. McClellan will adhere to
-the system adopted by him last summer, and depend for success upon
-artillery and engineering. We can compete with him in neither.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="small"><i>Drewry&rsquo;s Bluff</i></span></h2>
-<p>After the fall of Norfolk on May 10 to the Union forces under Gen.
-John Wool, the crew of the <i>Virginia</i> (<i>Merrimack</i>) scuttled their ship.
-River pilots had advised that the iron-clad vessel could not navigate
-the treacherous channel up the James River to Richmond. Loss of
-the <i>Virginia</i> opened the river to Federal gunboats, and McClellan
-immediately telegraphed the War Department: &ldquo;I would now most
-earnestly urge that our gunboats and the iron-clad boats be sent as
-far as possible up the James river without delay. Instructions have
-been given so that the Navy will receive prompt support wherever
-and whenever required.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Five Union gunboats, including the famous <i>Monitor</i>, started up
-the James under Comdr. John Rogers in the <i>Galena</i>. By May 15
-they reached Drewry&rsquo;s Bluff, just 7 miles below Richmond. Here,
-at a sharp bend, the Confederates had effectively obstructed the river
-and erected powerful batteries on a 90-foot bluff.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_6">6</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig7">
-<img src="images/p07.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="353" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Battle of Drewry&rsquo;s Bluff.</i> Diorama, Richmond National Battlefield Park Visitor Center.</p>
-</div>
-<p>At 7 that morning the Federal gunboats opened fire on Fort Darling.
-The battle raged for 4 hours while the fate of Richmond hung in
-the balance, and near panic spread through the city. However, the
-accurate fire of the heavy guns on the bluff, combined with effective
-sharpshooting along the riverbanks, finally proved too much for
-the gunboats, and the Federal fleet retreated down the river. One
-Confederate officer observed: &ldquo;* * * had Commander Rogers been
-supported by a few brigades, landed at City Point or above on the
-south side, Richmond would have been evacuated.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Although the Secretary of the Navy requested &ldquo;a cooperating land
-force&rdquo; to help the gunboats pass Fort Darling and take Richmond,
-McClellan, despite his earlier promise of cooperation, wired the War
-Department: &ldquo;Am not yet ready to cooperate with them.&rdquo; He neglected
-to say when he would be ready. Richmond was never again
-seriously threatened by water.</p>
-<h2 id="c6"><span class="small"><i>Seven Pines</i> (<i>Fair Oaks</i>)</span></h2>
-<p>Slowed by the heavy rains and the bad condition of the roads, where
-&ldquo;teams cannot haul over half a load, and often empty wagons are
-stalled,&rdquo; McClellan finally established his base of supply at White
-House on May 15. Five days later his advance crossed the Chickahominy
-River at Bottoms Bridge. By the 24th the five Federal
-corps were established on a front partly encircling Richmond on the
-north and east, and less than 6 miles away. Three corps lined the
-<span class="pb" id="Page_7">7</span>
-north bank of the Chickahominy, while the two corps under Generals
-E. D. Keyes and Samuel P. Heintzelman were south of the
-river, astride the York River Railroad and the roads down the
-peninsula.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig8">
-<img src="images/p07a.jpg" alt="" width="448" height="500" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Gen. George B. McClellan.</i> Courtesy,
-Library of Congress.</p>
-</div>
-<p>With his army thus split by the Chickahominy, McClellan realized
-his position was precarious, but his orders were explicit: &ldquo;General
-McDowell has been ordered to march upon Richmond by the shortest
-route. He is ordered * * * so to operate as to place his left
-wing in communication with your right wing, and you are instructed
-to cooperate, by extending your right wing to the north of
-Richmond * * *.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then, because of Gen. Thomas J. (&ldquo;Stonewall&rdquo;) Jackson&rsquo;s brilliant
-operations in the Shenandoah Valley threatening Washington, Lincoln
-telegraphed McClellan on May 24: &ldquo;I have been compelled to
-suspend McDowell&rsquo;s movements to join you.&rdquo; McDowell wrote
-disgustedly: &ldquo;If the enemy can succeed so readily in disconcerting
-all our plans by alarming us first at one point then at another, he
-will paralyze a large force with a very small one.&rdquo; That is exactly
-what Jackson succeeded in doing. This fear for the safety of Washington&mdash;the
-skeleton that haunted Lincoln&rsquo;s closet&mdash;was the dominating
-factor in the military planning in the east throughout the
-war.</p>
-<p>Lincoln&rsquo;s order only suspended McDowell&rsquo;s instructions to join
-McClellan; it did not revoke them. McClellan was still obliged to
-keep his right wing across the swollen Chickahominy.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<p>Learning of McDowell&rsquo;s withdrawal, Johnston decided to attack
-the two Federal corps south of the river, drive them back and destroy
-the Richmond and York River Railroad to White House.
-Early in the morning on May 31, after a violent rainstorm that
-threatened to wash all the Federal bridges into the river, Johnston
-fell upon Keyes and Heintzelman with 23 of his 27 brigades at
-Seven Pines.</p>
-<p>The initial attack was sudden and vicious. Confederate Gen.
-James Longstreet threw Gen. D. H. Hill&rsquo;s troops against Gen. Silas
-Casey&rsquo;s division of Keyes&rsquo; corps, stationed about three-quarters of a
-mile west of Seven Pines. Longstreet overwhelmed the Federal division,
-forcing Casey to retreat a mile east of Seven Pines. Keyes then
-put Gen. D. N. Couch&rsquo;s division on a line from Seven Pines to Fair
-Oaks, with Gen. Philip Kearney&rsquo;s division on his left flank. Not
-until 4 that afternoon, however, did Confederate Gen. G. W. Smith
-send Whiting&rsquo;s division against Couch&rsquo;s right flank at Fair Oaks.
-The delay was fatal. Although Couch was forced back slowly, he
-drew up a new line of battle facing south towards Fair Oaks, with
-his back to the Chickahominy River. Here he held until Gen. Edwin
-V. Sumner, by heroic effort, succeeded in getting Gen. John Sedgwick&rsquo;s
-division and part of Gen. I. B. Richardson&rsquo;s across the tottering
-Grapevine Bridge to support him. Led by Sumner himself,
-Sedgwick&rsquo;s troops repulsed Smith&rsquo;s attack and drove the Confederates
-back with heavy losses.</p>
-<p>The battle plan had been sound, but the attack was badly
-bungled. Directed by vague, verbal orders instead of explicit,
-written ones, whole brigades got lost, took the wrong roads, and
-generally got in each other&rsquo;s way. Nine of the 23 attacking brigades
-never actually got into the fight at all. Towards nightfall
-Johnston was severely wounded in the chest and borne from the field.
-The command then fell to G. W. Smith. Fighting ceased with
-darkness.</p>
-<p>Early next morning, June 1, Smith renewed the attack. His plan
-called for Whiting on the left flank to hold defensively, while Longstreet
-on the right swung counterclockwise in a pivot movement to
-hit Richardson&rsquo;s division, which was facing south with its right near
-Fair Oaks. The Federal troops repulsed the assault, however, and
-when Heintzelman sent Gen. Joseph Hooker&rsquo;s division on the Federal
-left on the offensive, the Confederates withdrew and the battle was
-over before noon.</p>
-<p>That afternoon President Jefferson Davis appointed his chief military
-advisor, Gen. Robert E. Lee, as commander of the Southern
-forces. Lee promptly named his new command the Army of Northern
-Virginia&mdash;a name destined for fame in the annals of the Civil
-War.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig9">
-<img src="images/p08.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="513" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>McClellan&rsquo;s troops repairing Grapevine Bridge.</i> Courtesy, Library of Congress.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Although the battle itself was indecisive, the casualties were heavy
-on both sides. The Confederates lost 6,184 in killed, wounded, and
-missing; the Federals, 5,031. Undoubtedly the most important result
-of the fight was the wounding of Johnston and the resultant
-appointment of Lee as field commander.</p>
-<h2 id="c7"><span class="small"><i>Lee Takes Command</i></span></h2>
-<p>Lee immediately began to reorganize the demoralized Southern forces,
-and put them to work digging the elaborate system of entrenchments
-that would eventually encircle Richmond completely. For
-this the troops derisively named him the &ldquo;King of Spades.&rdquo; But
-Lee was planning more than a static defense. When the time came
-these fortifications could be held by a relatively small number of
-troops, while he massed the bulk of his forces for a counteroffensive.
-He was familiar with and believed in Napoleon&rsquo;s maxim:
-&ldquo;* * * to manoeuver incessantly, without submitting to be driven
-back on the capital which it is meant to defend * * *.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On June 12 Lee sent his cavalry commander, Gen. J. E. B. (&ldquo;Jeb&rdquo;)
-Stuart, with 1,200 men, to reconnoiter McClellan&rsquo;s right flank north
-<span class="pb" id="Page_10">10</span>
-of the Chickahominy, and to learn the strength of his line of communication
-and supply to White House. Stuart obtained the information,
-but instead of retiring from White House the way he had
-gone, he rode around the Union army and returned to Richmond
-on June 15 by way of the James River, losing only one man in the
-process.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig10">
-<img src="images/p09.jpg" alt="" width="406" height="500" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Gen. Robert E. Lee.</i> Courtesy,
-National Archives.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig11">
-<img src="images/p09a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="487" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Lee&rsquo;s fortifications east of Mechanicsville Turnpike.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig12">
-<img src="images/p09c.jpg" alt="" width="700" height="714" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Chickahominy swamps.</i> Courtesy, National Archives.</p>
-</div>
-<p>It was a bold feat, and Stuart assured his chief that there was nothing
-to prevent his turning the Federal right flank. But the daring
-ride probably helped McClellan more than Lee. Alerted to the
-exposed position of his right flank and base of supply, McClellan
-withdrew his whole army south of the Chickahominy, with the exception
-of Gen. Fitz-John Porter&rsquo;s corps, which stretched from Grapevine
-Bridge to the Meadow Bridge west of Mechanicsville. On
-June 18 he started the transfer of his enormous accumulation of
-supplies with the shipment of 800,000 rations from White House
-to Harrison&rsquo;s Landing on the James River. After Jackson&rsquo;s success
-in the Shenandoah Valley at Cross Keys and Port Republic, it was
-becoming apparent even to McClellan that McDowell probably never
-would join him, in which case he wanted his base of operations to
-be the James rather than the York River.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>Meanwhile, pressure from Washington for an offensive movement
-against Richmond was mounting. But because of the wettest June
-in anyone&rsquo;s memory, McClellan was having trouble bringing up his
-heavy siege guns, corduroying roads, and throwing bridges across
-the flooded Chickahominy swamps. As one bedraggled soldier wrote:
-&ldquo;It would have pleased us much to have seen those &lsquo;On-to-Richmond&rsquo;
-people put over a 5 mile course in the Virginia mud, loaded
-with a 40-pound knapsack, 60 rounds of cartridges, and haversacks
-filled with 4 days rations.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Also, McClellan believed erroneously that the Confederates had
-twice as many available troops as he had. Consequently, his plan
-of action, as he wrote his wife, was to &ldquo;make the first battle mainly an
-artillery combat. As soon as I gain possession of the &lsquo;Old Tavern&rsquo;
-I will push them in upon Richmond and behind their works; then
-I will bring up my heavy guns, shell the city, and carry it by assault.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2 id="c8"><span class="small"><i>The Seven Days Begins</i></span></h2>
-<div class="img" id="fig13">
-<img src="images/p10.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="558" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Lee&rsquo;s plan of attack.</i> Painting by Sidney King.</p>
-</div>
-<p>McClellan&rsquo;s plan probably would have succeeded had Lee been willing
-to stand still for it. But the Confederate commander did not
-intend to let McClellan fight that type of warfare. As he wrote to
-Jackson: &ldquo;Unless McClellan can be driven out of his entrenchments
-he will move by positions under cover of his heavy guns within
-<span class="pb" id="Page_13">13</span>
-shelling distance of Richmond.&rdquo; It was almost as if Lee had read
-McClellan&rsquo;s letter to his wife.</p>
-<p>Lee&rsquo;s plan to drive McClellan away from Richmond was bold and
-daring, and strategically brilliant. He would bring Jackson&rsquo;s forces
-down from the valley quickly and secretly to turn McClellan&rsquo;s right
-flank at Mechanicsville. At the same time Gen. A. P. Hill&rsquo;s division
-would cross the Chickahominy at Meadow Bridge, turn east
-and clear the Federal forces from Mechanicsville, thereby opening
-the Mechanicsville Turnpike bridge for D. H. Hill and Longstreet&rsquo;s
-troops to cross. Then, in echelon, the four divisions would sweep
-down the north side of the Chickahominy, annihilate Porter&rsquo;s corps,
-capture the supply base at White House, then turn and destroy the
-rest of the Union army. With Jackson&rsquo;s forces and other reinforcements
-from farther south, Lee would have about 90,000 men, the
-largest army he would ever command in the field.</p>
-<p>To protect Richmond, he planned to leave about one-third of his
-army, under Generals John B. Magruder and Benjamin Huger, in
-the entrenchments around the city to hold back the main part of
-McClellan&rsquo;s force, about 70,000 men, from marching into the Confederate
-Capital. If this force started to withdraw, then Magruder
-and Huger would attack.</p>
-<p>Lee apparently believed that McClellan would try to retreat to his
-base at White House, or failing that, would retire back down the
-peninsula. He assured Jefferson Davis that &ldquo;any advance of the
-enemy toward Richmond will be prevented by vigorously following
-his rear and crippling and arresting his progress.&rdquo; The strategy was
-just about perfect, but, unfortunately for Lee, the tactics were not.</p>
-<p>On the morning of June 25 the Seven Days began with the advance
-of Hooker&rsquo;s division along the Williamsburg road at Oak
-Grove, preparatory to a general advance McClellan planned for the
-next day. But Hooker ran into strong opposition from Huger&rsquo;s
-troops, and when McClellan received intelligence of Jackson&rsquo;s approach,
-Hooker was ordered back. McClellan wired Washington:
-&ldquo;I incline to think that Jackson will attack my right and rear.&rdquo; He
-had delayed too long&mdash;the next day Lee wrested the initiative from
-him.</p>
-<h2 id="c9"><span class="small"><i>Beaver Dam Creek</i> (<i>Ellerson&rsquo;s Mill</i>)</span></h2>
-<p>According to Lee&rsquo;s plan, Jackson was to march from Ashland
-on June 25 and encamp that night just west of the Central Railroad.
-At 3 a.m. on the 26th he was to advance and envelop Porter&rsquo;s
-right flank at Beaver Dam Creek. Then, wrote Lee, &ldquo;A. P. Hill
-was to cross the Chickahominy at Meadow Bridge when Jackson&rsquo;s
-<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
-advance beyond that point should be known and move directly upon
-Mechanicsville.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig14">
-<img src="images/p11.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="493" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Confederate attack at Beaver Dam Creek.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<p>But from the beginning, unforeseen circumstances upset the operation
-and timing of this plan. McClellan suspected Jackson&rsquo;s approach,
-so the element of surprise was lacking. And when the action of
-the Union pickets in destroying bridges and felling trees in Jackson&rsquo;s
-path, as well as the fatigue of his weary troops, combined to
-delay him, the all-important time element was lost.</p>
-<p>As the day wore on with no word from Jackson, A. P. Hill became
-impatient and fearful for the success of Lee&rsquo;s plan. He decided
-to attack regardless. At 3 that afternoon he crossed the Chickahominy
-and swept the Union outposts from Mechanicsville, thus clearing
-the way for D. H. Hill and Longstreet&rsquo;s troops to cross. Porter
-withdrew to a prepared position behind Beaver Dam Creek, a mile
-east of Mechanicsville. This naturally strong position was further
-fortified by felled trees and the banks of a millrace. Here, atop the high
-banks of the stream, he placed Gen. George McCall&rsquo;s division, extending
-from near the Chickahominy on the south, across Old Church
-road (now U.S. 360) on the north. Gen. Truman Seymour&rsquo;s brigade
-held the left and Gen. John Reynold&rsquo;s the right, with Gen. George G.
-Meade&rsquo;s brigade in reserve. The only approaches to the position
-were across open fields, commanded by the Federal artillery, and down
-the steep banks of the stream, covered by the soldiers&rsquo; muskets.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
-<p>Hill recklessly hurled his brigades forward in a hopeless frontal
-assault. The gray-clad infantry charged bravely down the steep banks
-and up to the stream before the murderous fire of artillery and
-musketry from the surrounding slopes forced a bloody withdrawal.
-Casualties in killed and wounded were: Confederate 1,485; Union, 258.</p>
-<p>Despite the successful defense, when Jackson&rsquo;s forces finally appeared
-on his right flank later that night, Porter&rsquo;s position became untenable
-and McClellan ordered him to withdraw to a previously prepared
-position behind Boatswain Swamp, near Gaines&rsquo; Mill. At
-the same time he ordered his quartermaster general at White House
-to reship all the supplies he possibly could to Harrison&rsquo;s Landing
-on the James, and send all the beef cattle to the vicinity of Savage
-Station. Early next morning, June 27, the herd of 2,500 head of
-cattle started on its drive from White House.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig15">
-<img src="images/p11a.jpg" alt="" width="700" height="740" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Battle of Gaines&rsquo; Mill.</i> From <i>Battles and Leaders of the Civil War</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<dl class="undent pcap"><dt>OLD COLD HARBOR</dt>
-<dt>Gaines&rsquo;s MILL</dt>
-<dt>NEW COLD HARBOR</dt>
-<dt><i>CONFEDERATE</i></dt>
-<dd>Lee&rsquo;s Headq&rsquo;rs</dd>
-<dd>D. H. HILL</dd>
-<dd>JACKSON</dd>
-<dd class="t">EWELL</dd>
-<dd>A. P. HILL</dd>
-<dd class="t">WHITING</dd>
-<dd>LONGSTREET</dd>
-<dt><i>UNION</i></dt>
-<dd>SYKES</dd>
-<dd class="t">McGehee</dd>
-<dd class="t">BUCHANAN</dd>
-<dd class="t">WARREN</dd>
-<dd class="t">LOVELL</dd>
-<dd>MORELL</dd>
-<dd class="t">Porter&rsquo;s Headq&rsquo;rs</dd>
-<dd class="t">GRIFFIN</dd>
-<dd class="t">MARTINDALE</dd>
-<dd class="t">BUTTERFIELD</dd>
-<dd>McCALL</dd>
-<dd class="t">REYNOLDS</dd>
-<dd class="t">SEYMOUR</dd>
-<dd class="t">MEADE</dd>
-<dd>J. Martin</dd>
-<dd>W. F. SMITH</dd>
-<dd>SLOCUM <i>ARRIVING 4 O&rsquo;CLOCK</i></dd>
-<dd class="t">NEWTON</dd>
-<dd class="t">TAYLOR</dd>
-<dd class="t">BARTLETT</dd>
-<dd>FRENCH &amp; MEACHER <i>ARRIVING TO COVER RETREAT about 6.30 p.m.</i></dd></dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig16">
-<img src="images/p12.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="557" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>McClellan&rsquo;s change of base.</i> Painting by Sidney King.</p>
-</div>
-<dl class="undent pcap"><dt>WHITE HOUSE</dt>
-<dt>MECHANICSVILLE</dt>
-<dt>GAINES MILL</dt>
-<dt>Pomunkey</dt>
-<dt>SAVAGE STATION</dt>
-<dt>Chickahominy</dt>
-<dt>GLENDALE</dt>
-<dt>MALVERN HILL</dt>
-<dt>HARRISON&rsquo;S LANDING</dt></dl>
-<h2 id="c10"><span class="small"><i>Gaines&rsquo; Mill</i></span></h2>
-<p>The tactical situation was now extremely critical for both Lee and
-McClellan. Because of the repulse at Beaver Dam, Lee had not yet
-achieved his first objective, which, according to his battle order, was
-to &ldquo;drive the enemy from his position above New Bridge,&rdquo; about 4
-miles east of Mechanicsville. Lee&rsquo;s whole plan for the defense of
-Richmond, in the event McClellan should elect to march on the city
-with his main force south of the Chickahominy, hinged on his ability
-to cross the river quickly and attack the Federal rear. Lacking
-control of New Bridge this would be impossible. Although the
-Union position behind Boatswain Swamp was actually east of New
-Bridge, the approaches to the bridge could be covered by Porter&rsquo;s
-artillery.</p>
-<p>The situation was equally serious for McClellan. With Jackson
-enveloping his right flank and rear, and believing he &ldquo;had to deal
-with at least double&rdquo; his numbers, White House would have to be
-abandoned. Having made the decision to change his base to the
-James, he desperately needed time to perfect the arrangements and
-to get the thousands of wagons and the herd of cattle safely started.
-His order to Porter was explicit, &ldquo;hold our position at any cost
-until night * * *.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<p>Porter&rsquo;s corps now occupied a semicircular line of battle along the
-crest of the partially wooded plateau behind Boatswain Swamp, with
-both extremes resting on the Chickahominy River. It was another
-naturally strong position further strengthened by felling trees and
-digging rifle pits. The approaches to the position were over an
-open plain and across a sharp ravine. Gen. George Morell&rsquo;s division
-held the left and Gen. George Sykes&rsquo; right, with McCall&rsquo;s weary
-troops in reserve. Gen. Philip St. George Cooke&rsquo;s cavalry was on
-Porter&rsquo;s extreme left, in the lowlands bordering the Chickahominy.
-During the course of the impending battle of Gaines&rsquo; Mill, Porter
-would be reinforced by Gen. Willard Slocum&rsquo;s division, giving him
-a total strength of about 35,000, as opposed to about 60,000 for Lee.</p>
-<p>On the Confederate side, Longstreet was on Lee&rsquo;s right opposite
-Morell, A. P. Hill in the center, and Jackson and D. H. Hill on
-the left. Lee was convinced that the greater part of the Federal
-army was in his front, and he still thought McClellan would try to
-protect his base and retreat toward White House. On these erroneous
-assumptions he made his plans.</p>
-<p>A. P. Hill would attack the center while Longstreet made a feint
-on the Union left. Then when Jackson appeared on the Union
-right, Lee believed Porter would shift part of his troops to meet
-Jackson&rsquo;s threat in order to keep him from getting between the
-Union army and its base at White House. As soon as Porter did
-this, Longstreet would turn the feint into a full assault, and together
-with Hill drive the Union forces into Jackson and D. H. Hill, waiting
-on Lee&rsquo;s left.</p>
-<p>About 2:30 p.m. Hill attacked the center of the Federal line, but
-under a devastating fire of artillery and musketry, &ldquo;where men fell
-like leaves in an autumn wind,&rdquo; his troops were hurled back with
-heavy losses. Longstreet, realizing a feint now would not help Hill,
-ordered a full-scale attack, but he too suffered a bloody repulse.
-Jackson, sensing that &ldquo;Porter didn&rsquo;t drive worth two cents,&rdquo; as he
-quaintly put it, threw D. H. Hill against Sykes on Porter&rsquo;s right.</p>
-<p>By now A. P. Hill&rsquo;s division was badly cut up, and on Lee&rsquo;s request
-Jackson sent Whiting&rsquo;s division, consisting of Gen. E. M.
-Law&rsquo;s and John B. Hood&rsquo;s brigades, over to support him. Porter
-then threw in Slocum&rsquo;s division of Franklin&rsquo;s corps, to protect
-threatened points along the line. The vicious battle waged furiously
-for 4 hours. &ldquo;The noise of the musketry,&rdquo; said one veteran, &ldquo;was
-not rattling, as ordinarily, but one intense metallic din.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Finally, just as darkness covered the bloody field, Hood&rsquo;s Texas
-brigade, along with Gen. George Pickett&rsquo;s brigade on Longstreet&rsquo;s
-left, penetrated the right of Morell&rsquo;s line in a courageous bayonet
-charge that broke the morale of the Federal troops. They went
-streaming back across the plateau to the safety of the Chickahominy
-<span class="pb" id="Page_18">18</span>
-River. In a last desperate attempt to stem the tide, General Cooke
-(&ldquo;Jeb&rdquo; Stuart&rsquo;s father-in-law) sent his cavalry in a wild charge against
-the pressing Confederates. But the retreating Union infantry and
-artillery obstructed the cavalry and broke its attack. The only result
-was the loss of several more artillery pieces in the confusion.</p>
-<p>With darkness closing in and the Confederate troops disorganized
-after the breakthrough, Lee did not attempt to pursue the Federals
-farther. Porter withdrew the remnants of his corps across the river
-and rejoined the main Union army. Total casualties in this crucial
-battle, the most costly and vicious of the Seven Days, were: Union,
-6,837; Confederate, 8,751.</p>
-<p>In a sense, both sides had achieved their immediate objectives.
-Porter had held until night, so McClellan could get his army safely
-started for Harrison&rsquo;s Landing. Lee had cleared the north side of
-the Chickahominy of all Federal forces, broken their supply line to
-White House, controlled strategic New Bridge, and had turned back
-McClellan&rsquo;s advance on Richmond.</p>
-<h2 id="c11"><span class="small"><i>Savage Station</i></span></h2>
-<div class="img" id="fig17">
-<img src="images/p13.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="545" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Battle of Savage Station.</i> From <i>Battles and Leaders of the Civil War</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<dl class="undent pcap"><dt>MAGRUDER&rsquo;S HEADQUARTERS ON BRIDGE OVER RAILROAD</dt>
-<dd>TOOMB&rsquo;S BRIGADE</dd>
-<dd>BARKSDALE&rsquo;S BRIGADE</dd>
-<dd>COBB&rsquo;S BRIGADE</dd>
-<dd>HART&rsquo;S BATTERY</dd>
-<dd>RAILROAD BATTERY</dd>
-<dd>KERSHAW&rsquo;S BRIGADE</dd>
-<dd>SEMMES&rsquo;S BRIG.</dd>
-<dd>KEMPER&rsquo;S BATTERY</dd>
-<dd>17<sup>TH.</sup> &amp; 21<sup>ST.</sup> MISS. OF BARKESDALE&rsquo;S BRIG.</dd></dl>
-<dl class="undent pcap"><dt>RICHARDSON&rsquo;S DIVISION</dt>
-<dd>SUMNER&rsquo;S CORPS</dd>
-<dd class="t">MEAGHER</dd>
-<dd class="t">CALDWELL</dd>
-<dd class="t">FRENCH</dd>
-<dd>FIELD HOSPITAL</dd>
-<dt>SEDGWICK&rsquo;S DIVISION</dt>
-<dd>BURN&rsquo;S BRIG.</dd>
-<dd>GORMAN</dd>
-<dd class="t">1ST-MINN. GORMAN&rsquo;S BRIG.</dd>
-<dd>DANA</dd>
-<dd>PETTIT, HAZZARD AND OSBORN</dd>
-<dt>SUMNER &amp; FRANKLIN <i>HEADQUARTERS IN THE FIELD</i></dt>
-<dt>HANCOCK&rsquo;S BRIGADE, SMITH&rsquo;S DIVISION, FRANKLIN&rsquo;S CORPS</dt>
-<dt>CENTER&rsquo;S BATTERY</dt>
-<dt>BROOKS&rsquo;S BRIG., SMITH&rsquo;S DIV., FRANKLIN&rsquo;S CORPS</dt>
-<dt>DAVIDSON&rsquo;S BRIGADE</dt></dl>
-<p>McClellan was now engaged in the most difficult move an army can
-be called upon to make in the face of an aggressive enemy&mdash;a flanking
-movement to effect a change of base. There was no thought
-<span class="pb" id="Page_19">19</span>
-given to any offensive movement. President Lincoln telegraphed:
-&ldquo;Save your army at all events.&rdquo; This was now McClellan&rsquo;s only
-objective.</p>
-<p>That McClellan had not tried to fall back on White House surprised
-Lee, as he had believed he was facing the main part of the
-Federal army at Gaines&rsquo; Mill. The next day, June 28, he spent
-burying the dead, reorganizing for another offensive movement, and
-attempting to divine McClellan&rsquo;s plans. Lee reported to Jefferson
-Davis that &ldquo;the bridges over the Chickahominy in rear of the enemy
-were destroyed, and their reconstruction impracticable in the presence
-of his whole army and powerful batteries. We were therefore compelled
-to wait until his purpose should be developed.&rdquo; By nightfall,
-however, he realized that McClellan was headed for the James
-River, and made his plans accordingly.</p>
-<p>Early next morning, June 29, Longstreet and A. P. Hill were to
-cross the Chickahominy at New Bridge and take the Darbytown
-road to where it met the Long Bridge road. Huger and Magruder,
-already on the south side of the river in front of Richmond, were
-ordered in pursuit of the Federal forces&mdash;Huger by Charles City road
-and Magruder by the Williamsburg road. In the meantime, Jackson
-would cross Grapevine Bridge and sweep down the south side
-of the river to get in McClellan&rsquo;s rear.</p>
-<p>Again, Lee&rsquo;s strategy was brilliant. The Charles City road met
-the Long Bridge road at a place called Glendale or Frayser&rsquo;s Farm.
-Lee planned to have all his divisions converge there at about the
-time the middle of McClellan&rsquo;s long column should be passing.
-The impact of the expected blow would undoubtedly split the Union
-army, and with Jackson&rsquo;s corps in the rear of one half, the other
-half could be cut off and annihilated. Once again, however, the staff
-work and tactics were pitiful.</p>
-<p>McClellan&rsquo;s rearguard was posted about Savage Station on the
-Richmond and York River Railroad, facing west. Richardson&rsquo;s division,
-of Sumner&rsquo;s corps, was in an open field north of the railroad
-tracks in back of the station. Sedgwick&rsquo;s division held the
-center in another open field south of the tracks, with its left resting
-on the Williamsburg road. Gen. William F. (&ldquo;Baldy&rdquo;) Smith&rsquo;s
-division, of Franklin&rsquo;s corps, took position in the woods south of
-the Williamsburg road.</p>
-<p>Magruder reached the vicinity of Savage Station about noon, June
-29, but did not attack as he realized his four brigades were badly
-outnumbered. He halted and waited for Jackson, who was supposed
-to turn the Federal right flank along the Chickahominy and get in
-their rear. But Jackson &ldquo;was delayed by the necessity of reconstructing
-Grapevine Bridge.&rdquo; Magruder then mistakenly reported McClellan
-advancing and sent for two brigades from Huger to support
-<span class="pb" id="Page_20">20</span>
-him. Lee cancelled the order when he realized that what Magruder
-had hit was only the rearguard covering the Federal army&rsquo;s passage
-across White Oak swamp. What Lee did not realize, however,
-was that Jackson was not in position and would not reach Savage
-Station until 3 the following morning. Finally, about 5 that afternoon,
-Magruder attacked with his four brigades and two regiments,
-but it was too late with too little. The Federals withdrew hastily
-but safely. In their haste they were forced to leave 2,500 sick and
-wounded men in the field hospital at Savage Station and to abandon
-or destroy a vast amount of supplies and equipment.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig18">
-<img src="images/p14.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="682" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Battle of Savage Station.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig19">
-<img src="images/p14a.jpg" alt="" width="700" height="627" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Battle of Glendale.</i> From <i>Battles and Leaders of the Civil War</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<dl class="undent pcap"><dt><i>CONFEDERATE</i></dt>
-<dd>JACKSON&rsquo;S CORPS &amp; D. H. HILL</dd>
-<dd>HUGER</dd>
-<dd>LONGSTREET</dd>
-<dd>A. P. HILL</dd>
-<dt><i>UNION</i></dt>
-<dd>SMITH</dd>
-<dd>RICHARDSON</dd>
-<dd>1 REG<sup>T.</sup>, 1 GUN</dd>
-<dd>SLOCUM</dd>
-<dd>KEARNY</dd>
-<dd>McCALL</dd>
-<dd>SEDGWICK</dd>
-<dd>HOOKER</dd>
-<dd></dd></dl>
-<h2 id="c12"><span class="small"><i>Glendale (Frayser&rsquo;s Farm)</i></span></h2>
-<p>Lee now ordered Magruder to follow Longstreet and A. P. Hill down
-the Darbytown road. The next day, June 30, Longstreet and Hill
-came upon the Union troops of McCall and Kearney across the Long
-Bridge road about a mile west of the Charles City road intersection
-at Glendale. Hooker held the left or south flank, with Slocum on
-the right guarding the Charles City road approach. Sedgwick was
-in the rear in reserve. Longstreet and Hill halted and waited for
-Huger, coming down the Charles City road, and Jackson, supposedly
-coming on the Federal rear from White Oak Swamp.</p>
-<p>Meanwhile, Gen. T. H. Holmes, who had come from the south
-side of the James River with part of his division and Gen. Henry
-A. Wise&rsquo;s brigade, had been sent by Lee down the River, or New
-Market road in an attempt to get between McClellan and the James
-River. McClellan anticipated the move, however, and Warren of
-Sykes&rsquo; division stopped Holmes south of Malvern Hill. Lee then
-<span class="pb" id="Page_22">22</span>
-ordered Magruder on the Darbytown road to reinforce him, but
-Magruder&rsquo;s forces did not get there in time to help.</p>
-<p>Huger was delayed by obstructions, mostly felled trees, with which
-the Federals had blocked his path. Instead of going around the
-obstructions, Huger continually halted to clear the road. Thus it
-resolved itself into a question of whether Huger could clear the
-trees as fast as the Union soldiers cut them down. In this so-called
-&ldquo;battle of the axes&rdquo; Huger lost, and did not get to Glendale in
-time to participate in the engagement.</p>
-<p>About 4 that afternoon, however, Longstreet heard artillery firing
-from Huger&rsquo;s direction which &ldquo;was supposed to indicate his approach,&rdquo;
-and expecting Jackson&rsquo;s appearance momentarily, he opened
-with one of his batteries and thus brought on the battle. Jackson
-never did show up, being held north of White Oak Swamp by the
-artillery of Richardson and Smith, and did not get to Glendale until
-the next day. The fight was particularly vicious with many pockets
-of hand-to-hand combat, but, without the expected support of Huger
-and Jackson, Longstreet could not break the Union lines in time to
-inflict any serious damage or to interrupt the withdrawal. Lee stated
-in his report: &ldquo;Could the other commands have cooperated in the
-action the result would have proved most disastrous to the enemy.&rdquo;
-Gone was Lee&rsquo;s last chance to cut McClellan&rsquo;s army in two.</p>
-<h2 id="c13"><span class="small"><i>Malvern Hill</i></span></h2>
-<p>McClellan had already selected another naturally strong position, this
-time on Malvern Hill, for the last stand before reaching the James
-River. On the morning of July 1, Morell and Sykes&rsquo; divisions of
-Porter&rsquo;s corps were drawn up on the crest of the hill west of the
-Quaker road. East of the road Couch&rsquo;s division of Keyes&rsquo; corps
-held the front, with Kearney and Hooker of Heintzelman&rsquo;s corps
-flanked to the right and rear. Sumner&rsquo;s troops were in the rear in
-reserve. The position was flanked on either side by creeks in deep
-ravines less than a mile apart, and across this narrow front, Porter
-placed his batteries with the guns almost hub to hub. In front,
-the ground was open, sloping down to woods, marshes, and swamps,
-through which the Confederate forces had to form for attack within
-range of the Federal artillery.</p>
-<p>Lee had Jackson on his left facing Kearney, Hooker, and Couch&rsquo;s
-right. D. H. Hill was in the center opposite Couch&rsquo;s left and Morell&rsquo;s
-right. Lee then ordered Magruder to the right of Hill, but
-Magruder was delayed by taking the wrong road; so instead two
-brigades of Huger&rsquo;s were placed on Hill&rsquo;s right. Longstreet and
-A. P. Hill, their ranks decimated from the actions at Gaines&rsquo; Mill
-and Glendale, were held in reserve. The terrain rendered it almost
-impossible for effective use of Confederate artillery, and the few batteries
-that did get into position were quickly cut to pieces by the
-massed Union guns.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig20">
-<img src="images/p15.jpg" alt="" width="671" height="1000" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Battle of Malvern Hill.</i> From <i>Battles and Leaders of the Civil War</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<dl class="undent pcap"><dt><i>Confederate Forces</i></dt>
-<dd>LONGSTREET&rsquo;S DIVISIONS</dd>
-<dd>FIELD OF A. P. HILL</dd>
-<dd>THOMAS OF A. P. HILL</dd>
-<dd>BRANCH OF A. P. HILL</dd>
-<dd>COBB OF MAGRUDER</dd>
-<dd>G. T. ANDERSON OF MAGRUDER</dd>
-<dd>RANSOM OF HUGER</dd>
-<dd>JONES OF JACKSON</dd>
-<dd>WINDER OF JACKSON</dd>
-<dd>LAWTON</dd>
-<dd>EARLY OF EWELL</dd>
-<dd>MAHONE OF HUGER</dd>
-<dd>SEMMES OF MAGRUDER</dd>
-<dd>KERSHAW OF MAGRUDER</dd>
-<dd>BARKDALE OF MAGRUDER</dd>
-<dd>TOOMBS OF MAGRUDER</dd>
-<dd>TAYLOR OF EWELL</dd>
-<dd>HAMPTON OF JACKSON</dd>
-<dd>LAW OF WHITING</dd>
-<dd>TRIMBLE OF EWELL</dd>
-<dd>WRIGHT OF HUGER</dd>
-<dd>ARMISTEAD OF HUGER</dd>
-<dd>GORDON OF HUGER</dd>
-<dd>OF D. H. HILL:</dd>
-<dd class="t">E. B. ANDERSON</dd>
-<dd class="t">RIPLEY</dd>
-<dd class="t">GARLAND</dd>
-<dd class="t">COLQUITT</dd>
-<dd>HOOD OF WHITING</dd>
-<dd>HOLMES&rsquo; DIVISION</dd>
-<dt><i>Union Forces</i></dt>
-<dd>BERDAN&rsquo;S SHARPSHOOTERS</dd>
-<dd>MEAGHER <i>after dark</i></dd>
-<dd>QUAKER</dd>
-<dd>PALMER</dd>
-<dd>ABERCROMBIE</dd>
-<dd>HOWE</dd>
-<dd>J. W. Binford</dd>
-<dd>GRIFFIN</dd>
-<dd>McQUADE</dd>
-<dd>MORELL</dd>
-<dd class="t">Crew</dd>
-<dd class="t">West</dd>
-<dd>CALDWELL</dd>
-<dd>NICKLES OF HOOKER</dd>
-<dd>KEARNY</dd>
-<dd>HOOKER</dd>
-<dd>HEINTZELMAN&rsquo;S CORPS</dd>
-<dd>FRANKLIN</dd>
-<dd>SUMNER&rsquo;S CORPS</dd>
-<dt>Binford</dt>
-<dd>BUCHANAN</dd>
-<dd>MARTINDALE</dd>
-<dd>BUTTERFIELD</dd>
-<dd>LOVELL</dd>
-<dd>SYKES</dd>
-<dd>HOLMES&rsquo; DIVISION</dd>
-<dd>RESERVE BATTERIES</dd>
-<dd>WARREN OF SYKES</dd>
-<dd>Malvern House <i>HEADQUARTERS OF GEN. PORTER</i></dd>
-<dd>SEYMOUR OF McCALL</dd>
-<dd>Greenwood <i>(HOSPITAL)</i></dd>
-<dd>GUN-BOAT FIRE FROM JAMES RIVER</dd></dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Owing to ignorance of the country, the dense forests impeding
-necessary communications, and the extreme difficulty of the
-ground,&rdquo; Lee reported, &ldquo;the whole line was not formed until a late
-hour in the afternoon.&rdquo; The first real assault did not take place
-until after 5, and then it was uncoordinated and confused. The signal
-for the attack was to be a yell from one of Huger&rsquo;s brigades,
-after the Confederate artillery had blasted a hole in the Union lines.
-This put the responsibility of where and when to begin the attack
-on a mere brigade commander.</p>
-<p>The artillery was unable to put concentrated fire in any one spot,
-but Huger attacked regardless and was beaten back with heavy losses.
-Then D. H. Hill attacked, only to suffer the same fate. Magruder
-finally sent his troops in a gallant charge across the open fields
-right up to the cannons&rsquo; muzzles, only to be mowed down like wheat
-at harvest time. Late in the battle Jackson sent his own division
-to Magruder&rsquo;s and Hill&rsquo;s support, but in the heavily wooded and
-swampy ground they got lost and did not arrive in time to help.
-Darkness finally put an end to these hopeless attacks. As D. H. Hill
-declared bitterly, &ldquo;It was not war&mdash;it was murder.&rdquo;</p>
-<h2 id="c14"><span class="small"><i>End of Campaign</i></span></h2>
-<div class="img" id="fig21">
-<img src="images/p16.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="450" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>McClellan&rsquo;s withdrawal.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<p>During the night McClellan continued his withdrawal, and the next
-day found the Army of the Potomac safe at Harrison&rsquo;s Landing
-<span class="pb" id="Page_25">25</span>
-under the protection of the Federal gunboats on the James. The
-Seven Days were over. Total casualties: Army of Northern Virginia,
-20,614; Army of the Potomac, 15,849.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig22">
-<img src="images/p16a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="530" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Army of the Potomac at Harrison&rsquo;s Landing.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<p>In his official report of the campaign Lee stated: &ldquo;Under ordinary
-circumstances the Federal Army should have been destroyed. Its
-escape was due to * * * the want of correct and timely information.
-This fact, attributable chiefly to the character of the country,
-enabled Gen. McClellan skillfully to conceal his retreat and to add
-much to the obstructions with which nature had beset the way of
-our pursuing columns * * *.&rdquo; But his other objective had been
-achieved&mdash;Richmond was safe, at least for the time being.</p>
-<p>While McClellan had successfully changed his base of operations
-from the York to the James River and saved his army in the process,
-he had failed in his first objective of capturing Richmond and possibly
-ending the war. The decision to remove the army from the
-peninsula, rather than reinforce it for another attempt on Richmond,
-was made in Washington over McClellan&rsquo;s strong objections. He
-wrote to Gen. Henry W. Halleck: &ldquo;It is here on the banks of the
-James, that the fate of the Union should be decided.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig23">
-<img src="images/p17.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="574" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>McClellan&rsquo;s cartographers.</i> Courtesy, Library of Congress.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Although McClellan wisely realized the advantages of another
-assault on Richmond on the line of the James, it was his own mistaken
-view of Lee&rsquo;s strength that was the major reason for the withdrawal.
-As Halleck explained to him:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>You and your officers at one interview estimated the enemy&rsquo;s forces
-in and around Richmond at 200,000 men. Since then you and others
-report that they have received and are receiving large re-enforcements
-from the South. General Pope&rsquo;s army covering Washington is only
-about 40,000. Your effective force is only about 90,000. You are 30
-miles from Richmond, and General Pope 80 or 90, with the enemy
-directly between you, ready to fall with his superior numbers upon
-one or the other, as he may elect. Neither can re-enforce the other in
-case of such an attack. If General Pope&rsquo;s army be diminished to re-enforce
-you, Washington, Maryland, and Pennsylvania would be left
-uncovered and exposed. If your force be reduced to strengthen Pope,
-you would be too weak to even hold the position you now occupy
-should the enemy turn around and attack you in full force. In other
-words, the old Army of the Potomac is split into two parts * * * and
-I wish to unite them.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In August the Army of the Potomac was transported by water
-back to Washington to support Pope&rsquo;s campaign in Northern Virginia.
-McClellan&rsquo;s failure to capture the Confederate Capital, combined
-with Lee&rsquo;s failure to destroy the Union Army, assured the nation
-a long, bitter war that became one of the great turning points in
-American history.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_27">27</div>
-<h2 id="c15"><span class="small"><i>The Years Between</i></span></h2>
-<div class="img" id="fig24">
-<img src="images/p17a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="468" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Richmond, summer of 1862.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<p>In August 1862 Lee wrote to Jefferson Davis: &ldquo;If we are able to
-change the theater of the war from the James River to the north
-of the Rappahannock we shall be able to consume provisions and
-forage now being used in supporting the enemy.&rdquo; So Lee moved
-into Northern Virginia to meet Pope&rsquo;s threatened overland campaign
-against Richmond. At Second Manassas (Bull Run) the Union
-army was defeated again and withdrew into the fortifications around
-Washington.</p>
-<p>Lee took advantage of this opportunity and made his first invasion
-north into Maryland, only to be defeated by McClellan at Antietam
-(Sharpsburg) in September. Lee then withdrew into Virginia,
-and at Fredericksburg in December he severely repulsed Gen.
-Ambrose Burnside&rsquo;s move on Richmond. In the spring of 1863 the
-Union army, now under Hooker, attempted to flank Lee&rsquo;s left and
-rear to cut him off from Richmond, but it was decisively defeated
-at Chancellorsville and driven back across the Rapidan. Lee then
-made his second thrust north, penetrating into Pennsylvania, but
-was beaten back by Meade at Gettysburg in the summer of 1863
-and, once again, retired into Virginia.</p>
-<p>These gallant armies fought each other across the fields of Pennsylvania,
-Maryland, and Virginia before they clashed again in the
-outskirts of Richmond 2 years later.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
-<h2 class="center"><span class="sc">Part Two</span>
-<br />THE FINAL STRUGGLE FOR RICHMOND, 1864-65</h2>
-<h2 id="c16"><span class="small"><i>Lincoln&rsquo;s New Commander</i></span></h2>
-<p>In March 1864 President Lincoln appointed Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
-as commanding general of all the Union armies. Said Grant: &ldquo;In
-the east the opposing forces stood in substantially the same relations
-toward each other as three years before, or when the war
-began; they were both between the Federal and Confederate Capitals.
-Battles had been fought of as great severity as had ever been known
-in war * * * from the James River to Gettysburg, with indecisive
-results.&rdquo; He hoped to change this situation by putting pressure on
-all Confederate armies at the same time, something that had never
-been done before.</p>
-<p>Grant&rsquo;s plan called for Gen. Benjamin F. Butler to march up the
-south side of the James and attack Petersburg or Richmond or both;
-Gen. Franz Sigel to push down the Shenandoah Valley driving
-Gen. Jubal Early before him, thereby protecting Washington; Gen.
-Nathaniel Banks in New Orleans to march on Mobile; Gen. William
-T. Sherman to cut across Georgia driving Johnston before him,
-take Atlanta, and if necessary swing north to Richmond; Meade&rsquo;s
-Army of the Potomac, with Grant in command, to push Lee&rsquo;s Army
-of Northern Virginia and capture Richmond. As Grant stated: &ldquo;Lee,
-with the Capital of the Confederacy, was the main end to which all
-were working.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lee&rsquo;s objective now was to stop Grant and protect Richmond.
-Said Lee: &ldquo;We must destroy this army of Grant&rsquo;s before he gets to
-the James River. If he gets there it will become a siege, and then
-it will be a mere question of time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The campaign started in the spring of 1864 when the Army of
-the Potomac crossed the Rapidan River and the Army of Northern
-Virginia blocked its path at the Wilderness. After a particularly
-vicious and costly battle, Grant instead of retreating to lick his
-wounds as other Federal commanders had done, executed a left flank
-movement, still heading south and trying to get between Lee and
-Richmond. A few days later the two armies clashed again at Spotsylvania
-in a series of grim battles, but still indecisive as far as
-major objectives were concerned. Although Grant&rsquo;s losses were staggering,
-he was slowly but methodically destroying Lee&rsquo;s ability to
-wage offensive war.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig25">
-<img src="images/p18.jpg" alt="" width="700" height="794" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Gen. Ulysses S. Grant.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<p>Again Grant executed a left flank movement to get around Lee,
-and then by a series of flanking marches, which the Confederate soldiers
-called the &ldquo;sidling movement,&rdquo; and the Union soldiers the &ldquo;jug-handle&rdquo;
-movement, Grant gradually worked his way down to Cold
-Harbor.</p>
-<h2 id="c17"><span class="small"><i>Cold Harbor</i></span></h2>
-<p>Where and what was Cold Harbor? Cold Harbor was a seedy-looking
-tavern, squatting by a dusty crossroads 8 miles from Richmond,
-on the flat, featureless plain, intersected by hundreds of small
-<span class="pb" id="Page_30">30</span>
-creeks, gullies, and swamps, that is characteristic of the land between
-the Pamunkey and the Chickahominy Rivers. There wasn&rsquo;t
-a harbor for miles and it was anything but cold. It was the only
-Cold Harbor in the United States, although there were many Cold
-Harbors on the stagecoach routes along the Thames River in England.
-The name indicated a place to get a bed for the night and
-something cold to drink, but not hot meals.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig26">
-<img src="images/p19.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="519" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Cold Harbor Tavern.</i> From a photograph taken in 1885 as it appears in <i>Battles and
-Leaders of the Civil War</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<p>But these dusty crossroads were strategically important if Grant
-was to attack Richmond, and both Lee and Grant realized it. Also,
-it was Grant&rsquo;s last chance to continue his strategy of trying to get
-between Lee and Richmond&mdash;any more flanking movements and Lee
-would be in the entrenchments around the Confederate Capital
-where Grant did not want to fight him. As Grant stated: &ldquo;Richmond
-was fortified and entrenched so perfectly that one man inside
-to defend was more than equal to five outside besieging or assaulting.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>It is significant that Lee also did not want to fight in the entrenchments
-around Richmond. There he would be on the defensive, and
-in such a position could not possibly destroy Grant&rsquo;s army. So both
-commanders were willing for the test.</p>
-<p>And what of the lowly foot-soldier, the unsung hero in the ranks,
-the poor bloody infantryman? Was he ready for the awful test?</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig27">
-<img src="images/p19a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="492" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Confederate camp.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<p>To the average soldier, this whole campaign was fast becoming
-just a series of hazy, indistinct recollections, like the fragments of
-a half-forgotten dream: Long columns of sweat-soaked soldiers marching
-over hills and rivers and swamps, across ploughed fields and corn
-fields, down endless dusty roads through dark, lonely woods; 30
-days of marching by night and fighting by day, until it must have
-seemed to them that the only things left in life were stupefying
-fatigue, merciless heat, choking dust, smoke and noise, mud and
-blood.</p>
-<p>In the Union ranks many of the men began to find out for the
-first time what hunger really was. They had moved so fast and so
-often the ration wagons were left far behind. Hardtack was selling
-for a dollar apiece&mdash;if you could find a seller. And here at Cold
-Harbor the soldiers wrote their names and regiments on pieces of
-paper and pinned or sewed them to the inside of their dirty blouses,
-with the forlorn hope that if and when they were killed someone
-might take the time to find out who they were.</p>
-<p>To Lee&rsquo;s barefoot, ragged veterans, hunger had been a constant
-companion for a long time, but at Cold Harbor they approached
-starvation. A Confederate sergeant recorded in his diary: &ldquo;When
-we reached Cold Harbor the command to which I belonged had
-<span class="pb" id="Page_32">32</span>
-been marching almost continuously day and night for more than
-fifty hours without food, and for the first time we knew what actual
-starvation was.&rdquo; When scurvy appeared among the men, owing
-primarily to a lack of fresh vegetables, Lee advised them to eat the
-roots of the sassafras and wild grape, if they could find any.</p>
-<p>In the race for initial possession of the crossroads at Cold Harbor,
-Lee&rsquo;s cavalry won by a few hours. But in the afternoon of May 31
-Gen. Philip Sheridan&rsquo;s cavalry drove them out and held the crossroads
-until relieved by the Federal VI Corps under Gen. Horatio
-Wright. Most of Sheridan&rsquo;s troopers were armed with the new
-Spencer repeating carbine, which made dismounted cavalrymen
-effective infantry.</p>
-<p>The next morning, June 1, Lee threw Gen. Richard Anderson&rsquo;s
-corps (Longstreet&rsquo;s old corps&mdash;Longstreet having been wounded in
-the Wilderness) against the Federal VI Corps in a bold attempt to
-seize the crossroads and roll up Grant&rsquo;s left flank before he could
-reinforce it, but Anderson was repulsed. Grant then moved the
-XVIII Corps under &ldquo;Baldy&rdquo; Smith, which he had borrowed from
-Butler&rsquo;s army bottled up on the south side of the James, over to
-the right of the VI Corps. That afternoon they attacked Anderson,
-now supported by Gen. Robert Hoke&rsquo;s division.</p>
-<p>The assault failed to break the Confederate line, but it did bend
-it back in several places. Grant believed that with a greater concentration
-a breakthrough could be achieved. Consequently, he
-ordered the II Corps under Gen. Winfield Hancock over to the left
-of the VI Corps, between it and the Chickahominy River, and
-planned an all out attack by the three corps for the morning of
-June 2.</p>
-<p>Anticipating the move, Lee put A. P. Hill, supported by Gen.
-John Breckinridge&rsquo;s division, over to his right between Anderson
-and the Chickahominy and waited.</p>
-<p>The expected attack failed to materialize, however. Hancock got
-lost in the woods and swamps moving to his assigned position, and
-after an all-night forced march the men were too exhausted to
-mount an attack. Any chance the assault might have had for success
-was now gone. The delay was fortunate for Lee because
-Breckinridge also got lost and was not in position to support Hill
-on the morning of June 2. The attack was then ordered for that
-afternoon but again postponed until 4:30 the morning of June 5.
-And each corps commander received a telegram from Grant&rsquo;s headquarters
-that read: &ldquo;Corps Commanders will employ the interim in
-making examinations of the ground in their front and perfecting
-arrangements for the assault.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lee&rsquo;s veterans took advantage of this fatal 24-hour delay to entrench
-themselves quickly and effectively, using every creek, gully, ravine,
-<span class="pb" id="Page_33">33</span>
-and swamp in such fashion that all approaches to their positions
-could be covered with a murderous fire. A newspaper reporter
-present at Cold Harbor wrote a vivid description of those entrenchments.
-&ldquo;They are intricate, zig-zagged lines within lines, lines protecting
-flanks of lines, lines built to enfilade opposing lines * * *
-works within works and works outside works, each laid out with
-some definite design.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Lee needed this strong position; he would fight at Cold Harbor
-without a reserve. He wrote to Jefferson Davis: &ldquo;If I shorten my
-lines to provide a reserve, he will turn me; if I weaken my lines
-to provide a reserve, he will break them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Grant&rsquo;s battle plan was relatively uncomplicated. It was, essentially,
-a simple, frontal assault. Hancock&rsquo;s II Corps and Wright&rsquo;s
-VI Corps, between the Chickahominy and the Cold Harbor road
-(now State Route 156), together with Smith&rsquo;s XVIII Corps north
-of the road, were to attack all out and break the Confederate lines.
-Gen. Gouverneur Warren&rsquo;s V Corps, north of the XVIII, was to
-be held in reserve, while Burnside&rsquo;s IX Corps, on Grant&rsquo;s extreme
-right, was not to enter the fight unless Lee weakened his line in
-that sector, then it would attack, supported by the V Corps. Lee
-did not weaken any part of his line, so these two corps were not
-engaged to any appreciable extent. Thus the battle actually took
-place on approximately a 2&frac12;-mile front, although the armies stretched
-for 6 miles from south to north, with the Union army facing west.
-Grant&rsquo;s total strength was over 100,000 men, but less than 50,000
-were actually engaged in the struggle.</p>
-<p>Lee now had A. P. Hill, supported by Breckinridge, on his south
-flank next to the Chickahominy opposite Hancock and Wright.
-Hoke&rsquo;s division straddled the Cold Harbor road with Gen. Joseph
-Kershaw&rsquo;s division just north of Hoke, then Anderson and Gen.
-Richard Ewell&rsquo;s corps. Lee&rsquo;s total strength consisted of less than
-60,000 men, but only about half were involved in the action of
-June 3.</p>
-<p>It rained all night the night of June 2. Toward morning the heavy
-rain died to a soft, sticky mist that held the area in clammy fingers.
-The first gray streaks of dawn warned of the approach of a scorching
-sun that would turn the rain-soaked plain, with its myriad
-streams and swamps, into a steaming cauldron. Promptly at 4:30
-the three corps jumped off to the attack, knowing nothing of the
-strength of the Confederate positions they would have to face. The
-corps commanders had ignored Grant&rsquo;s telegraphed order of the
-previous afternoon and no proper reconnaissance was made.</p>
-<p>The average soldier saw little in any battle in the Civil War, and
-even less at Cold Harbor because of the terrain. But as the first
-yellow rays of the sun shifted the gray mists, most of the Union
-<span class="pb" id="Page_34">34</span>
-soldiers could see the main line of Confederate entrenchments across
-the open spaces in front of them&mdash;a tracing of raw earth that had
-been turned up like a huge furrow, along a line of uneven ridges,
-looking empty but strangely ominous. Here and there bright
-regimental colors perched insolently on the dirt hills.</p>
-<p>Suddenly, it seemed, the line was dotted with black slouch hats
-and glistening bayonets. Yellow sheets of flame flashed from end
-to end, then disappeared in a heavy cloud of smoke. Regiment after
-regiment exploded into action with a metallic roar. Gigantic crashes
-of artillery split the air. Shells screamed overhead like a pack of
-banshees, exploding in clouds of earth, horses, and men. The noise
-roared to a crescendo with a volume of sound that left the men
-dazed and confused. One veteran said it was more like a volcanic
-blast than a battle.</p>
-<p>It was over in less than 30 minutes, but 7,000 killed and wounded
-Union soldiers were left lying in the sun between the trenches. Said
-one general sadly: &ldquo;In that little period more men fell bleeding as
-they advanced than in any other like period of time throughout the
-war.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Those not already killed or wounded threw themselves on the
-ground and desperately heaved up little mounds of earth in front
-of them with bayonets, spoons, cups, and broken canteens. They
-could neither advance nor retreat&mdash;nothing standing could live long
-in that hail of lead and iron. They just dug in and stayed there.</p>
-<p>A peculiar thing about the battle came to light afterwards. The
-three corps commanders sent identical telegrams to Grant&rsquo;s headquarters,
-each accusing the other of not supporting him in the
-attack. Later it was discovered what had actually happened. Hancock,
-on the left, had veered to his left because of the heavy fire from
-there and the peculiarities of the terrain. Wright, in the center,
-had gone straight ahead. And Smith, on the right, bore off to his
-right because of swamps and ravines. So the farther they advanced
-the more separated they became and the more their flanks were left
-open to a deadly crossfire.</p>
-<p>No other major assault was attempted by either army, although
-the troops stayed in the hot, filthy trenches until June 12, with
-constant, nerve-wracking sharpshooting and skirmishing. From June
-1 to 12 the Union losses totaled 12,700; Confederate losses are
-estimated at between 1,500 and 2,000.</p>
-<p>Cold Harbor proved to be Lee&rsquo;s last major victory in the field,
-and although it was a military zero so far as Grant was concerned,
-it turned out to be one of the most important and significant battles
-fought during the Civil War. The results of this battle changed
-the course of the war in the east from a war of maneuver to a war
-of siege. It also influenced the strategy and tactics of future wars
-by showing that well-selected, well-manned entrenchments, adequately
-supported by artillery, were practically impregnable to frontal assaults.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_35">35</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig28">
-<img src="images/p20.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="452" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Federal trenches at Cold Harbor.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig29">
-<img src="images/p20a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="454" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Federal coehorn mortars at Cold Harbor.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig30">
-<img src="images/p21.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="585" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Looking for a friend at Cold Harbor.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<p>On June 5, Grant decided to bypass Richmond, cross the James and
-attack Petersburg, an important railway center 25 miles south of the
-Confederate Capital. This would still keep Lee&rsquo;s army pinned down,
-and if successful would cut communications between Richmond and
-the rest of the Confederacy.</p>
-<p>On June 6 he withdrew Warren&rsquo;s V Corps from the lines and
-used it to secure the passages across the Chickahominy and down
-to the James. On June 7 he sent Sheridan, with two divisions of
-cavalry, back into the Shenandoah Valley against Early. To counter
-this, Lee was forced to send Gen. Wade Hampton&rsquo;s cavalry after
-Sheridan, which in effect left Lee without adequate cavalry. During
-the night of June 12 Grant secretly moved all the troops out of the
-trenches at Cold Harbor, without Lee&rsquo;s being aware of the move
-until the following morning, and by June 16 the Army of the
-Potomac of over 100,000 men, 5,000 wagons, 2,800 head of cattle,
-and 25,000 horses and mules, were all safely across the James River.
-Richmond was saved for another 10 months.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig31">
-<img src="images/p21a.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="571" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Pontoon bridge across the James.</i> Courtesy, National Archives.</p>
-</div>
-<h2 id="c18"><span class="small"><i>Fort Harrison</i></span></h2>
-<p>In the pre-dawn darkness of September 29, Grant quietly slipped
-Gen. David Birney&rsquo;s X Corps and Gen. Edward Ord&rsquo;s XVIII Corps
-back across the James in a surprise move against the outer defenses
-of Richmond. The primary purpose was to prevent Lee from re-enforcing
-Early in the Shenandoah Valley. If, however, any weakness
-was discovered it could be exploited fully, and it might force
-Lee to weaken some part of the Petersburg line.</p>
-<p>Shortly after daybreak Gen. George Stannard&rsquo;s division of the
-XVIII Corps successfully stormed heavily armed but badly undermanned
-Fort Harrison on the Varina road. Gen. Hiram Burnham,
-commanding the leading brigade, was killed in the assault and the
-Union forces renamed the captured fort for him. A mile and a
-half farther north, Gen. Adelbert Ames&rsquo; division of the X Corps
-was repulsed in a similar attack on another fortification, Fort Gilmer,
-on the New Market road.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig32">
-<img src="images/p22.jpg" alt="" width="741" height="1000" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Area of the Richmond battlefields.</i> From <i>Battles and Leaders of the Civil War</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<p>General Lee regarded the loss of Fort Harrison as serious enough
-to demand his personal attention. The next day, with re-enforcements
-rushed from Petersburg, he directed several vigorous assaults
-against the fort. However, the Union forces had closed in the rear
-and strengthened it, and, armed with new repeating rifles, successfully
-beat back the attacks and inflected heavy losses on the Confederates.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig33">
-<img src="images/p22a.jpg" alt="" width="796" height="611" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Members of the 1st Connecticut Artillery at Fort Brady, 1864.</i> Courtesy, Library of
-Congress.</p>
-</div>
-<p>The fall of Fort Harrison forced Lee to draw back that part of his
-outer line and to build new entrenchments to compensate for the
-loss. It also forced him to extend his line north of the James, thus
-weakening his already dangerously undermanned defenses in front
-of Petersburg. The Union forces, to protect their position further
-and to neutralize Confederate gunboats, constructed Fort Brady a
-few miles south of Fort Burnham (Harrison) on a high bluff overlooking
-the James River.</p>
-<p>No further serious efforts were made to enter Richmond from the
-north side of the James, and the two armies faced each other in
-these respective positions until Grant finally broke Lee&rsquo;s lines at
-Petersburg on April 1, 1865, forcing the Confederates to abandon
-Richmond.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_40">40</div>
-<h2 id="c19"><span class="small"><i>Richmond Falls</i></span></h2>
-<p>Spring came gently to Richmond that year of 1865. The winter
-had been long and hard. After a cold, wet March, Sunday, April
-2, dawned mild and pleasant. The green buds on the trees and the
-bright new grass put the breath of seedtime in the air; sap flowed
-warm in the lilac and the magnolia. Under a rich blue sky the
-people strolled leisurely to church amid the cheerful music of the
-bells and the soft murmur of the James River falls.</p>
-<p>In St. Paul&rsquo;s Episcopal Church, at the corner of Ninth and Grace
-streets, Jefferson Davis sat in the family pew listening to the sermon.
-The sexton walked up the aisle and handed him a message
-from General Lee.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I advise that all preparation be made for leaving Richmond
-tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Davis arose quietly and left the church, walked a block down
-Ninth street to his office in the War Department and gave the necessary
-orders for evacuation.</p>
-<p>Late in the afternoon the official order was posted&mdash;then pandemonium
-reigned. Trunks, boxes, bundles of every description were
-piled on the sidewalks and in the streets. Wagons, carts, buggies,
-anything that had wheels and could move, were loaded and raced
-through the city to fight their way across Mayo&rsquo;s Bridge in the mad
-rush to cross the James and flee south.</p>
-<p>A frantic mob trampled each other without mercy and jammed
-the streets leading to the railroad stations, only to be turned back
-by soldiers&rsquo; bayonets. The few trains that would manage to leave
-were reserved for government officials, archives, the treasury, and
-military personnel.</p>
-<p>Early in the evening the character of the crowds began to change.
-From a city of less than 38,000 before the war, Richmond now had
-over 100,000 people jammed into every available nook and cranny.
-They had come by the thousands to work for the various government
-departments and in the munitions factories. Refugees from
-the many battles fought in Virginia had poured in, as well as the
-sick and wounded, followed inevitably by deserters, spies, criminals,
-gamblers, speculators, and derelicts of every kind.</p>
-<p>And now the cheap hotels, saloons, and gambling dens began to
-empty their customers into the streets, many of them half drunk.</p>
-<p>All semblance of law and order disappeared. When the guards
-at the State penitentiary fled, the prisoners broke loose to roam the
-city at will. The provost guard took the prisoners of war from
-Libby Prison down the river to be exchanged. This left only the
-Local Defense Brigade, consisting of government and munitions
-workers. But most of them were required in government buildings
-<span class="pb" id="Page_41">41</span>
-to pack and burn records; some guarded the railroad depots, while
-others were engaged in destruction assignments. The order had
-been given to burn all tobacco and cotton that could not be
-removed by tossing flaming balls of tar into the warehouses along
-the riverfront.</p>
-<p>In the meantime, Mayor Mayo and the city council had appointed
-a committee in each ward to see that all liquor was destroyed, and
-shortly after midnight they set to work. Casks and barrels of the
-finest southern bourbons were rolled to the curbs, the tops smashed
-open and left to drain.</p>
-<p>Like flies around honey, the mobs swarmed and fought their way
-into the streets where the whiskey flowed like water. Men, women,
-and children, clawing and screaming, scooped it up with bare hands, or
-used pails, cups, basins, bottles, anything that would hold the amber
-liquid. They used rags on sticks dipped in whiskey for torches,
-and went howling through the city in search of food and plunder
-like a pack of mad wolves, looting, killing, burning.</p>
-<p>The soft night sky became pink, then turned a dull red. The blaze
-from the Shockhoe Warehouse at Thirteenth and Cary streets, where
-10,000 hogsheads of tobacco was put to the torch, flew skyward as if
-shot from a huge blowtorch. The flames quickly spread to the
-Franklin Paper Mills and the Gallego Flour Mills, 10 stories high.
-Higher and higher they soared, and then widened until it seemed
-a red hot sea of fire would engulf the whole city.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig34">
-<img src="images/p23.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="593" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Evacuation of Richmond.</i> From a contemporary engraving</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<p>A faint hot breeze began to stir from the southeast, scattering
-burning embers through the streets and alleys and houses. Powder
-magazines and arsenals let go with a whooshing boom. Thousands
-of bullets and shells tore through buildings and ploughed up the
-streets. Shells exploded high in the smoke cascading a metal spray
-over the area, followed by the rattle of bursting cartridges in one
-great metallic roar. Just before daybreak a deafening explosion
-from the James River signalled the destruction of the Confederate
-warships and the Navy Yard.</p>
-<p>Richmond was now one vast inferno of flame, noise, smoke, and
-trembling earth. The roaring fire swept northwestward from the
-riverfront, hungrily devouring the two railroad depots, all the banks,
-flour and paper mills, and hotels, warehouses, stores, and houses by
-the hundreds.</p>
-<p>About dawn a large crowd gathered in front of the huge government
-commissary at Fourteenth and Cary streets, on the eastern
-edge of the fire. The doors were thrown open and the government
-clerks began an orderly distribution of the supplies. Then the
-drunken mob joined the crowd.</p>
-<p>Barrels of hams, bacon, flour, molasses, sugar, coffee, and tea were
-rolled into the streets or thrown from windows. Women ran
-screaming through the flames waving sides of bacon and whole
-hams. Wheelbarrows were filled and trundled away. When the
-building finally caught fire from the whiskey torches, the mob
-swarmed into other sections of the doomed city where the few remaining
-clothing, jewelry, and furniture stores were ruthlessly looted
-and burned. A casket factory was broken into, the caskets loaded
-with plunder and carried through the streets, and the fiendish rabble
-roared on unchecked.</p>
-<p>As the drunken night reeled into morning the few remaining regiments
-of General Kershaw&rsquo;s brigade, which had been guarding the
-lines east of Richmond, galloped into the city on their way south
-to join Lee in his retreat to Appomattox. They had to fight their
-way through the howling mob to reach Mayo&rsquo;s Bridge. As the
-rearguard clattered over, Gen. M. W. Gary shouted, &ldquo;All over,
-good-bye; blow her to hell.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The barrels of tar placed along the bridge were promptly put to
-the torch. Soon tall flames shot high into the air, and with the
-two railroad bridges already burning, the three high-arched structures
-were like blazing arrows pointing to the very gates of hell.</p>
-<p>Then down Osborne Turnpike and into Main Street trotted the
-Fourth Massachusetts cavalry. When the smoke and heat blocked
-their path, they turned into Fourteenth Street past fire engines blazing
-in the street and proceeded up the hill to Capitol Square, where a
-tragic scene awaited them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig35">
-<img src="images/p24.jpg" alt="" width="587" height="799" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Richmond burns.</i> From a contemporary sketch.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_44">44</div>
-<p>Like a green oasis in a veritable desert of fire and destruction, the
-sloping lawn around the Capitol was jammed with frightened people
-seeking safety from the flames. Family groups, trying desperately to
-stay together, huddled under the linden trees for protection from
-the burning sparks. Piles of furniture were scattered in every direction&mdash;beds,
-chairs, settees, paintings, silverware, gilt-framed mirrors&mdash;the
-few possessions left, the family heirlooms, the treasures faithfully
-passed down from generation to generation. In the background
-the massive white columns of the Capitol, designed by
-Thomas Jefferson as a replica of the famous Maison Car&eacute;e at Nimes,
-stood guard over the huddled masses below.</p>
-<p>The soldiers in blue quickly dispersed the mobs at bayonet point.
-Guards were immediately placed to prevent further looting. The
-fire was contained by blowing up buildings in its path to create a
-fire-lane, leaving the main part to burn itself out. By nightfall
-everything was under control, but most of the business and industrial
-section of the city was gone.</p>
-<p>The stars shone down that night on the smouldering ruins of more
-than 700 buildings. Gaunt chimneys stood naked against the black
-velvet sky. A Federal officer, picking his way through thousands of
-pieces of white granite columns and marble facades that littered the
-streets to inspect the guard, noted that the silence of death brooded
-over the city. Occasionally a shell exploded somewhere in the ruins.
-Then it was quiet again.</p>
-<p>A week later Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox Court
-House, Va. The war was over.</p>
-<div class="img" id="fig36">
-<img src="images/p25.jpg" alt="" width="800" height="549" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Richmond after the war.</i> Courtesy, Library of Congress.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig37">
-<img src="images/p25a.jpg" alt="" width="681" height="1000" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Richmond National Battlefield Park.</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
-<h2 id="c20"><span class="small"><i>The Park</i></span></h2>
-<p>Richmond National Battlefield Park was established on July 14,
-1944, as authorized by act of Congress. The property was originally
-acquired by a group of public-spirited Virginians who donated it to
-the Commonwealth of Virginia in 1932. The park occupies nearly
-800 acres of land in 10 widely separated parcels. Included are some
-6 acres in Chimborazo Park on East Broad Street, site of Chimborazo
-Hospital during the Civil War.</p>
-<p>A complete tour of the battlefields requires a 57-mile drive which
-is outlined on the map in this booklet. We suggest that you begin
-at the main Visitor Center in Chimborazo Park, 3215 East
-Broad Street, Richmond, where museum exhibits and an audio-visual
-program are available to enhance your appreciation of this
-battlefield area.</p>
-<p>Markers, maps, and interpretive devices along the tour will help
-you to understand the military operations. You will see parts of
-the fields of combat, massive forts, and intricate field fortifications.
-Two houses on the battlefields have wartime associations&mdash;the Watt
-House (Gen. Fitz-John Porter&rsquo;s headquarters) and the Garthright
-House (Union field hospital).</p>
-<h2 id="c21"><span class="small"><i>Administration</i></span></h2>
-<p>Richmond National Battlefield Park is administered by the National
-Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. A superindendent,
-whose address is 3215 East Broad Street, Richmond, Va., is in immediate
-charge.</p>
-<p><span class="lr"><span class="smaller"><span class="ss">U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1961 OF-588588</span></span></span></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<h2 class="center"><span class="small">NATIONAL PARK SERVICE</span>
-<br />HISTORICAL HANDBOOK SERIES</h2>
-<p class="center smaller">(PRICE LISTS OF NATIONAL PARK SERVICE PUBLICATIONS MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS, WASHINGTON 25, D.C.)</p>
-<dl class="undent"><dt>Antietam</dt>
-<dt>Bandelier</dt>
-<dt>Chalmette</dt>
-<dt>Chickamauga and Chattanooga Battlefields</dt>
-<dt>Custer Battlefield</dt>
-<dt>Custis-Lee Mansion, The Robert E. Lee Memorial</dt>
-<dt>Fort Laramie</dt>
-<dt>Fort McHenry</dt>
-<dt>Fort Necessity</dt>
-<dt>Fort Pulaski</dt>
-<dt>Fort Raleigh</dt>
-<dt>Fort Sumter</dt>
-<dt>George Washington Birthplace</dt>
-<dt>Gettysburg</dt>
-<dt>Guilford Courthouse</dt>
-<dt>Hopewell Village</dt>
-<dt>Independence</dt>
-<dt>Jamestown, Virginia</dt>
-<dt>Kings Mountain</dt>
-<dt>The Lincoln Museum and the House Where Lincoln Died</dt>
-<dt>Manassas (Bull Run)</dt>
-<dt>Montezuma Castle</dt>
-<dt>Morristown, A Military Capital of the Revolution</dt>
-<dt>Ocmulgee</dt>
-<dt>Petersburg Battlefields</dt>
-<dt>Richmond Battlefields</dt>
-<dt>Saratoga</dt>
-<dt>Scotts Bluff</dt>
-<dt>Shiloh</dt>
-<dt>Statue of Liberty</dt>
-<dt>Vanderbilt Mansion</dt>
-<dt>Vicksburg</dt>
-<dt>Yorktown</dt></dl>
-<div class="img" id="fig38">
-<img src="images/p30.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="385" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Roll book of 27th N. Y. Regiment punctured by Confederate bullet</i></p>
-</div>
-<h2>Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>Corrected a few palpable typos.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Richmond National Battlefield Park,
-Virginia, by Joseph P. Cullen
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