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Antietam — the invasion of the North
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McClellan's last advance: the crossing after Antietam
This splendid landscape photograph of the pontoon bridge at Berlin, Maryland, was taken in October, 1862.
On the 26th McClellan crossed the Potomac here for the last time in command of an army.
Around this quiet and picturesque country the Army of the Potomac bivouacked during October, 1862, leaving two corps posted at Harper's Ferry to hold the outlet of the Shenandoah Valley.
At Berlin (a little village of about four hundred inhabitants), McClellan had his headquarters during the reorganization of the army, which he considered necessary after Antietam.
The many reverses to the Federal arms since the beginning of the war had weakened the popular hold of the Lincoln Administration, and there was constant political pressure for an aggressive move against Lee. McClellan, yielding at last to this demand, began advancing his army into Virginia.
Late on the night of November 7th, through a heavy rainstorm, General Buckingham, riding post-haste from Washington, reached McClellan's tent at Rectortown, and handed him Stanton's order relieving him from command.
Burnside was appointed his successor, and at the moment was with him in the tent.
Without a change of countenance, McClellan handed him the despatch, with the words: “Well, Burnside, you are to command the army.”
Whatever may have been McClellan's fault, the moment chosen for his removal was most inopportune and ungracious.
His last advance upon Lee was excellently planned, and he had begun to execute it with great vigor — the van of the army having reached Warrenton on November 7th, opposed only by half of Lee's army at Culpeper, while demonstrations across the gaps of the Blue Ridge compelled the retention of Jackson with the other half in the Shenandoah Valley.
Never before had the Federal military prospect been brighter than at that moment. |
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At Sharpsburg (Antietam) was sprung the keystone of the arch upon which the Confederate cause rested. --James Longstreet, Lieutenant-General C. S. A., in Battles and leaders of the Civil War.
A battle remarkable in its actualities but more wonderful in its possibilities was that of
Antietam, with the preceding capture of
Harper's Ferry and the other interesting events that marked the invasion of
Maryland by
General Lee.
It was one of the bloodiest and the most picturesque conflicts of the
Civil War, and while it was not all that the
North was demanding and not all that many military critics think it might have been, it enabled
President Lincoln to feel that he could with some assurance issue, as he did, his
Emancipation Proclamation.
Lee's army, fifty thousand strong, had crossed the
Potomac at
Leesburg and had concentrated around
Frederick, the scene of the
Barbara Frietchie legend, only forty miles from
Washington.
When it became known that
Lee, elated by his victory at
Second Bull Run, had taken the daring step of advancing into
Maryland, and now threatened the capital of the
Republic,
McClellan, commanding the Army of the Potomac, pushed his forces forward to encounter the invaders.
Harper's Ferry, at the junction of the
Potomac and the
Shenandoah rivers, was a valuable defense against invasion through the
Valley of Virginia, but once the
Confederates had crossed it, a veritable trap.
General Halleck ordered it held and
General Lee sent “
Stonewall”
Jackson to take it, by attacking the fortress on the
Virginia side.
Jackson began his march on September 10th with secret instructions from his commander to encompass and capture the
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Lee locks the gates
Sharpsburg, Maryland, September 17, 1862.
There were long minutes on that sunny day in the early fall of 1862 when Robert E. Lee, at his headquarters west of Sharpsburg, must have been in almost entire ignorance of how the battle went.
Outnumbered he knew his troops were; outfought he knew they never would be. Longstreet, Hood, D. B. Hill, Evans, and D. R. Jones had turned back more than one charge in the morning; but, as the day wore on, Lee perceived that the center must be held.
Sharpsburg was the key. He had deceived McClellan as to his numerical strength and he must continue to do so. Lee had practically no reserves at all. At one time General Longstreet reported from the center to General Chilton, Lee's Chief of Staff, that Cooke's North Carolina regiments--till keeping its colors at the front — had not a cartridge left.
None but veteran troops could hold a line like this, supported by only two guns of Miller's battery of the Washington Artillery.
Of this crisis in the battle General Longstreet wrote afterward: “We were already badly whipped and were holding our ground by sheer force of desperation.”
Actually in line that day on the Confederate side were only 37,000 men, and opposed to them were numbers that could be footed up to 50,000 more.
At what time in the day General Lee must have perceived that the invasion of Maryland must come to an end cannot be told.
He had lost 20,000 of his tired, footsore army by straggling on the march, according to the report of Longstreet, who adds: “Nearly one-fourth of the troops who went into the battle were killed or wounded.”
At dark Lee's rearward movement had begun. |
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Federal garrison and the vast store of war material at this place, made famous a few years before by old
John Brown.
To conceal his purpose from the inhabitants he inquired along the route about the roads leading into
Pennsylvania.
It was from his march through
Frederick that the
Barbara Frietchie story took its rise.
But there is every reason to believe that
General Jackson never saw the good old lady, that the story is a myth, and that
Mr. Whittier, who has given us the popular poem under the title of her name, was misinformed.
However,
Colonel H. K. Douglas, who was a member of
Jackson's staff, relates, in “Battles and leaders of the
Civil War,” an interesting incident where his commander on entering
Middletown was greeted by two young girls waving a Union flag.
The general bowed to the young women, raised his hat, and remarked to some of his officers, “We evidently have no friends in this town.”
Colonel Douglas concludes, “This is about the way he would have treated
Barbara Frietchie.”
On the day after
Jackson left
Frederick he crossed the
Potomac by means of a ford near
Williamsport and on the 13th he reached Bolivar Heights.
Harper's Ferry lies in a deep basin formed by
Maryland Heights on the north bank of the
Potomac, Loudon Heights on the south bank, and Bolivar Heights on the west.
The
Shenandoah River breaks through the pass between
Loudon and Bolivar Heights and the village lies between the two at the apex formed by the junction of the two rivers.
As
Jackson approached the place by way of Bolivar Heights,
Walker occupied Loudon Heights and
McLaws invested
Maryland Heights.
All were unopposed except
McLaws, who encountered
Colonel Ford with a force to dispute his ascent.
Ford, however, after some resistance, spiked his guns and retired to the
Ferry, where
Colonel Miles had remained with the greater portion of the
Federal troops.
Had Miles led his entire force to
Maryland Heights he could no doubt have held his ground until
McClellan came to his relief.
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Here sits
Colonel T. G. Morehead, who commanded the 106th Pennsylvania, of the Second Corps.
At 7.20 A. M. the order came to advance, and with a cheer the Second Corps--men who for over two years had never lost a gun nor struck a color — pressed forward.
But again they were halted.
It was almost an hour later when
Sedgwick's division, with
Sumner at the head, crossed the
Antietam.
Arriving nearly opposite the Dunker church, it swept out over the cornfields.
On it went, by
Greene's right, through the West Woods; here it met the awful counter-stroke of
Early's reinforced division and, stubbornly resisting, was hurled back with frightful loss.
Early in the morning of September 17, 1862,
Knap's battery (shown below) got into the thick of the action of
Antietam.
General Mansfield had posted it opposite the north end of the West Woods, close to the
Confederate line.
The guns opened fire at seven o'clock. Practically unsupported, the battery was twice charged upon during the morning; but quickly substituting canister for shot and shell, the men held their ground and stemmed the
Confederate advance.
Near this spot
General Mansfield was mortally wounded while deploying his troops.
About noon a section of
Knap's battery was detached to the assistance of
General Greene, in the East Woods.
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But
General Halleck had ordered him to hold
Harper's Ferry to the last, and Miles interpreted this order to mean that he must hold the town itself.
He therefore failed to occupy the heights around it in sufficient strength and thus permitted himself to be caught in a trap.
During the day of the 14th the Confederate artillery was dragged up the mountain sides, and in the afternoon a heavy fire was opened on the doomed Federal garrison.
On that day
McClellan received word from Miles that the latter could hold out for two days longer and the commanding general sent word: “Hold out to the last extremity.
If it is possible, reoccupy the
Maryland Heights with your entire force.
If you can do that I will certainly be able to relieve you. . . . Hold out to the last.”
McClellan was approaching slowly and felt confident he could relieve the place.
On the morning of the 15th the roar of Confederate artillery again resounded from hill to hill.
From
Loudon to
Maryland Heights the firing had begun and a little later the battle-flags of
A. P. Hill rose on Bolivar Heights.
Scarcely two hours had the firing continued when
Colonel Miles raised the white flag at
Harper's Ferry and its garrison of 12,500, with vast military stores, passed into the hands of the
Confederates.
Colonel Miles was struck by a stray fragment of a Confederate shell which gave him a mortal wound.
The force of
General Franklin, preparing to move to the garrison's relief, on the morning of the 15th noted that firing at the
Ferry had ceased and suspected that the garrison had surrendered, as it had.
The Confederate
Colonel Douglas, whose account of the surrender is both absorbing and authoritative, thus describes the surrender in “Battles and leaders of the
Civil War” :
Under instructions from General Jackson, I rode up the pike and into the enemy's lines to ascertain the purpose of the white flag.
Near the top of the hill I met General White and staff and told him my mission.
He replied that Colonel Miles had been mortally wounded, that the was in command and
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Antietam: the first to fall.
This photograph was taken back of the rail fence on the Hagerstown pike, where “Stonewall” Jackson's men attempted to rally in the face of Hooker's ferocious charge that opened the bloodiest day of the Civil War--September 17, 1862.
Hooker, advancing to seize high ground nearly three-quarters of a mile distant, had not gone far before the glint of the rising sun disclosed the bayonet-points of a large Confederate force standing in a cornfield in his immediate front.
This was a part of Jackson's Corps which had arrived during the morning of the 16th from the capture of Harper's Ferry and had been posted in this position to surprise Hooker in his advance.
The outcome was a terrible surprise to the Confederates.
All of Hooker's batteries hurried into action and opened with canister on the cornfield.
The Confederates stood bravely up against this fire, and as Hooker's men advanced they made a determined resistance.
Back and still farther back were Jackson's men driven across the open field, every stalk of corn in which was cut down by the battle as closely as a knife could have done it. On the ground the slain lay in rows precisely as they had stood in ranks.
From the cornfield into a small patch of woods (the West Woods) the Confederates were driven, leaving the sad result of the surprise behind them.
As the edge of the woods was approached by Hooker's men the resistance became stronger and more stubborn.
Nearly all the units of two of Jackson's divisions were now in action, and cavalry and artillery were aiding them.
“The two lines,” says General Palfrey, “almost tore each other to pieces.”
General Starke and Colonel Douglas on the Confederate side were killed.
More than half of Lawton's and Hays' brigades were either killed or wounded.
On the Federal side General Ricketts lost a third of his division.
The energy of both forces was entirely spent and reinforcements were necessary before the battle could be continued.
Many of Jackson's men wore trousers and caps of Federal blue, as did most of the troops which had been engaged with Jackson in the affair at Harper's Ferry. A. P. Hill's men, arriving from Harper's Ferry that same afternoon, were dressed in new Federal uniforms — a part of their booty — and at first were mistaken for Federals by the friends who were anxiously awaiting them. |
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desired to have an interview with General Jackson. . . . I conducted them to General Jackson, whom I found sitting on his horse where I had left him. . . . The contrast in appearances there presented was striking.
General White, riding a handsome black horse, was carefully dressed and had on untarnished gloves, boots, and sword.
His staff were equally comely in costume.
On the other hand, General Jackson was the dingiest, worst-dressed and worst-mounted general that a warrior who cared for good looks and style would wish to surrender to.
General Jackson . . . rode up to Bolivar and down into Harper's Ferry.
The curiosity in the Union army to see him was so great that the soldiers lined the sides of the road. . . . One man had an echo of response all about him when he said aloud: “ Boys, he's not much for looks, but if we'd had him we wouldn't have been caught in this trap.”
McClellan had failed to reach
Harper's Ferry in time to relieve it because he was detained at
South Mountain by a considerable portion of
Lee's army under
D. H. Hill and
Longstreet.
McClellan had come into possession of
Lee's
general order, outlining the campaign.
Discovering by this order that
Lee had sent
Jackson to attack
Harper's Ferry he made every effort to relieve it.
The affair at
Harper's Ferry, as that at
South Mountain, was but a prelude to the tremendous battle that was to follow two days later on the banks of the little stream called
Antietam Creek, in Maryland.
When it was known that
Lee had led his army across the
Potomac the people were filled with consternation — the people, not only of the immediate vicinity, but of
Harrisburg, of
Baltimore, of
Philadelphia.
Their fear was intensified by the memory of the
Second Bull Run of a few weeks earlier, and by the fact that at this very time
General Bragg was marching northward across
Kentucky with a great army, menacing
Louisville and
Cincinnati.
As one year before, the hopes of the
North had centered in
George B. McClellan, so it was now with the people of the
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The thrice-fought ground |
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Ruin of Mumma's house, Antietam
The field beyond the leveled fence is covered with both Federal and Confederate dead.
Over this open space swept Sedgwick's division of Sumner's Second Corps, after passing through the East and entering the West Woods.
This is near where the Confederate General Ewell's division, reinforced by McLaws and Walker, fell upon Sedgwick's left flank and rear.
Nearly two thousand Federal soldiers were struck down, the division losing during the day more than forty per cent. of its entire number.
One regiment lost sixty per cent.--the highest regimental loss sustained.
Later the right of the Confederate line crossed the turnpike at the Dunker church (about half a mile to the left of the picture) and made two assaults upon Greene, but they were repulsed with great slaughter.
General D. R. Jones, of Jackson's division, had been wounded.
The brave Starke who succeeded him was killed; and Lawton, who followed Starke, had fallen wounded.
A flaming mansion was the guidon for the extreme left of Greene's division when (early in the morning) he had moved forward along the ridge leading to the East Woods.
This dwelling belonged to a planter by the name of Mumma.
It stood in the very center of the Federal advance, and also at the extreme left of D. H. Hill's line.
The house had been fired by the Confederates, who feared that its thick walls might become a vantage-point for the Federal infantry.
It burned throughout the battle, the flames subsiding only in the afternoon.
Before it, just across the road, a battery of the First Rhode Island Light Artillery had placed its guns.
Twice were they charged, but each time they were repulsed.
From Mumma's house it was less than half a mile across the open field to the Dunker church.
The fencerails in the upper picture were those of the field enclosing Mumma's land, and the heroic dead pictured lying there were in full sight from the burning mansion. |
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East. They were ready to forget his failure to capture
Richmond in the early summer and to contrast his partial successes on the
Peninsula with the drastic defeat of his successor at the
Second Bull Run.
When
McClellan, therefore, passed through
Maryland to the scene of the coming battle, many of the people received him with joy and enthusiasm.
At Frederick City, he tells us in his “Own story,” he was “nearly overwhelmed and pulled to pieces,” and the people invited him into their houses and gave him every demonstration of confidence.
The first encounter, a double one, took place on September 14th, at two passes of
South Mountain, a continuation of the
Blue Ridge, north of the
Potomac.
General Franklin, who had been sent to relieve
Harper's Ferry, met a Confederate force at Crampton's Gap and defeated it in a sharp battle of three hours duration.
Meanwhile, the First and Ninth Army Corps, under
Burnside, encountered a stronger force at Turner's Gap seven miles farther up. The battle here continued many hours, till late in the night, and the
Union troops were victorious.
General Reno was killed.
Lee's loss was nearly twenty-seven hundred, of whom eight hundred were prisoners.
The Federals lost twenty-one hundred men and they failed to save
Harper's Ferry.
Lee now placed
Longstreet and
D. H. Hill in a strong position near
Keedysville, but learning that
McClellan was advancing rapidly, the
Confederate leader decided to retire to
Sharpsburg, where he could be more easily joined by
Jackson.
September 16th was a day of intense anxiety and unrest in the
valley of the Antietam.
The people who had lived in the farmhouses that dotted the golden autumn landscape in this hitherto quiet community had now abandoned their homes and given place to the armed forces.
It was a day of marshaling and maneuvering of the gathering thousands, preparatory to the mighty conflict that was clearly seen to be inevitable.
Lee had taken a strong position on the west bank of
Antietam
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Here, in the old sunken road connecting the
Hagerstown and the
Keedysville Turnpikes, lies the mute testimony of the stubbornness with which the
Confederates stood their ground in the most heroic resistance of the day. North of this sunken road was the original position of the
Confederate center under
General D. H. Hill when the battle opened at dawn.
As the fighting reached flood-tide,
Hill sent forward the brigades of
Colquitt,
Ripley, and
McRae to the assistance of
Jackson at the left.
“The men (says
Hill) advanced with alacrity, secured a good position, and were fighting bravely when
Captain Thompson, Fifth North Carolina, cried out: ‘They're flanking us!’
This cry spread like an electric shock along the ranks, bringing up vivid recollections of the flank fire at
South Mountain.
In a moment they broke and fell to the rear.”
Rallied again at the sunken road, the forces of
Hill now met the combined attack of the divisions of French and
Richardson of
Sumner's Corps, freshly come on the field.
It was resistance to the death; reenforced by the division of
Anderson,
Hill's men, in the face of the deadly fire poured upon them in the sunken road, bravely assumed the offensive in a determined effort to flank the
Federal forces to both left and right.
Seizing a vantage-point on higher ground to the left, the
Federals drove them back; while on the right
Barlow, changing front with his two regiments, poured in a rapid fire, capturing three hundred prisoners and two standards.
Then came the direct assault; swept by the enfilading fire from both sides, the remnant of the brave men in the sunken road was driven back, leaving the “bloody lane” behind them.
It was not an easy victory for the
Federals.
The determined fire of the
Confederates had brought down a heavy harvest, among which was numbered
General Richardson, mortally wounded, who had handled his division in this sanguinary contest with his usual valor and skill.
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Creek a few miles from where it flows into the
Potomac.
He made a display of force, exposing his men to the fire of the Federal artillery, his object being to await the coming of
Jackson's command from
Harper's Ferry.
It is true that
Jackson himself had arrived, but his men were weary with marching and, moreover, a large portion of his troops under
A. P. Hill and
McLaws had not yet reached the field.
McClellan spent the day arranging his corps and giving directions for planting batteries.
With a few companions he rode along the whole front, frequently drawing the fire of the Confederate batteries and thus revealing their ___location.
The right wing of his army, the corps of
Generals Hooker,
Mansfield, and
Sumner, lay to the north, near the village of
Keedysville.
General Porter with two divisions of the Fifth Corps occupied the center and
Burnside was on the left of the
Union lines Back of
McClellan's lines was a ridge on which was a signal station commanding a view of the entire field.
Late on the afternoon of the 16th, Hooker crossing the
Antietam, advanced against
Hood's division on the
Confederate left.
For several hours there was heavy skirmishing, which closed with the coming of darkness.
The two great armies now lay facing each other in a grand double line three miles in length.
At one point (the
Union right and the
Confederate left) they were so near together that the pickets could hear each other's tread.
It required no prophet to foretell what would happen on the morrow.
Beautiful and clear the morning broke over the
Maryland hills on the fateful 17th of September, 1862.
The sunlight had not yet crowned the hilltops when artillery fire announced the opening of the battle.
Hooker's infantry soon entered into the action and encountered the
Confederates in an open field, from which the latter were presently pressed back across the
Hagerstown pike to a line of woods where they made a determined stand.
Hooker then called on
General Mansfield to come to his aid, and the latter quickly did so, for he had led
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Here, at “Bloody Lane” in the sunken road, was delivered the most telling blow of which the
Federals could boast in the day's fighting at
Antietam, September 17, 1862.
In the lower picture we see the officers whose work first began to turn the tide of battle into a decisive advantage which the Army of the Potomac had every reason to expect would be gained by its superior numbers.
On the
Federal right
Jackson, with a bare four thousand men, had taken the fight out of
Hooker's eighteen thousand in the morning, giving ground at last to
Sumner's fresh troops.
On the
Federal left,
Burnside (at the lower bridge) failed to advance against
Longstreet's Corps, two-thirds of which had been detached for service elsewhere.
It was at the center that the forces of French and
Richardson, skilfully fought by their leaders, broke through the
Confederate lines and, sweeping beyond the sunken road, seized the very citadel of the center.
Meagher's Irish Brigade had fought its way to a crest from which a plunging fire could be poured upon the
Confederates in the sunken road.
Meagher's ammunition was exhausted, and
Caldwell threw his force into the position and continued the terrible combat.
When the
Confederates executed their flanking movement to the left,
Colonel D. R. Cross, of the Fifth New Hampshire, seized a position which exposed
Hill's men to an enfilading fire.
(In the picture
General Caldwell is seen standing to the left of the tree, and
Colonel Cross leans on his sword at the extreme right.
Between them stands
Lieut.-Colonel George W. Scott, of the Sixty-first New York Infantry, while at the left before the tent stands
Captain George W. Bulloch, A. C.S.
General Caldwell's hand rests on the shoulder of
Captain George H. Caldwell; to his left is seated
Lieutenant C. A. Alvord.)
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The harvest of “bloody Lane” |
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his corps across the
Antietam after dark the night before.
Mansfield, however, a gallant and honored veteran, fell mortally wounded while deploying his troops, and
General Alpheus S. Williams, at the head of his first division, succeeded to the command.
There was a wood west of the
Sharpsburg and Hagerstown turnpike which, with its outcropping ledges of rock, formed an excellent retreat for the
Confederates and from this they pushed their columns into the open fields, chiefly of corn, to meet the
Union attacks.
For about two hours the battle raged at this point, the lines swaying to and fro, with fearful slaughter on both sides.
At length,
General Greene, who commanded a division of the fallen
Mansfield's corps, gained possession of part of the coveted forest, near a little white church, known as the
Dunker's Chapel.
This was on high ground and was the key to the
Confederate left wing.
But
Greene's troops were exposed to a galling fire from
D. H. Hill's division and he called for reenforcements.
General Sumner then sent
Sedgwick's division across the stream and accompanied the troops to the aid of their hard-pressed comrades.
And the experience of this body of the gallant Second Corps during the next hour was probably the most thrilling episode of the whole day's battle.
Sedgwick's troops advanced straight toward the conflict.
They found
Hooker wounded and his and
Williams' troops quite exhausted.
A sharp artillery fire was turned on
Sedgwick before he reached the woods west of the
Hagerstown pike, but once in the shelter of the thick trees he passed in safety to the western edge.
Here the division found itself in an ambush.
Heavy Confederate reenforcements--ten brigades, in fact —
Walker's men, and
McLaws', having arrived from
Harper's Ferry — were hastening up, and they not only blocked the front, but worked around to the rear of
Sedgwick's isolated brigades.
Sedgwick was wounded in the awful slaughter that followed, but he and
Sumner finally extricated their men with
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The blunder at the bridge
Burnside's Bridge, as it was called after Antietam, bears the name of a noted Federal general — not because of the brilliant maneuver which he vainly tried to execute in his efforts to cross it, but rather because of the gallant resistance offered here by the Confederates.
General Toombs, with two Georgia regiments (the Second and the Twentieth) stood off a greatly superior force during the 16th and the greater part of the 17th of September.
This bridge (on the road from Sharpsburg to Porterstown and Rohersville) was not forced till late in the afternoon, when Burnside, after a series of delays and ineffectual attempts, managed to throw his troops across Antietam Creek.
The battle, however, was then practically decided.
Toombs' forces saved the Confederate right wing--to him Lee and Longstreet gave the highest praise. |
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a loss of two thousand, over three hundred left dead on the ghastly field.
Franklin now sent forward some fresh troops and after obstinately fighting, the
Federals finally held a cornfield and most of the coveted wood over which the conflict had raged till the ground was saturated with blood.
Before the close of this bloody conflict on the
Union right another, almost if not quite as deadly, was in progress near the center.
General French, soon joined by
General Richardson, both of
Sumner's corps, crossed the stream and made a desperate assault against the Southerners of
D. H. Hill's division, stationed to the south of where the battle had previously raged--French on a line of heights strongly held by the
Confederates,
Richardson in the direction of a sunken road, since known as “Bloody Lane.”
The fighting here was of a most desperate character and continued nearly four hours. French captured a few flags, several hundred prisoners, and gained some ground, but he failed to carry the heights.
Richardson was mortally wounded while leading a charge and was succeeded by
General Hancock; but his men finally captured Bloody Lane with the three hundred living men who had remained to defend it. The final Federal charge at this point was made by
Colonel Barlow, who displayed the utmost bravery and self-possession in the thickest of the fight, where he won a brigadier-generalship.
He was wounded, and later carried off the field.
The Confederates had fought desperately to hold their position in Bloody Lane, and when it was captured it was filled with dead bodies.
It was now about one o'clock and the infantry firing ceased for the day on the
Union right, and center.
Let us now look on the other part of the field.
Burnside held the
Federal left wing against
Lee's right, and he remained inactive for some hours after the battle had begun at the other end of the line.
In front of
Burnside was a triple-arched stone bridge across the
Antietam, since known as “Burnside's Bridge.”
Opposite this bridge, on the slope which extends to a
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Sherrick's house
In three distinct localities the battle waxed fierce from dawn to dusk on that terrible day at Antietam, September 17, 1862. First at the Federal right around the Dunker church; then at the sunken road, where the centers of both armies spent themselves in sanguinary struggle; lastly, late in the day, the struggle was renewed and ceased on the Sharpsburg road.
When Burnside finally got his troops in motion, Sturgis' division of the Ninth Corps was first to cross the creek; his men advanced through an open ravine under a withering fire till they gained the opposite crest and held it until reinforced by Wilcox.
To their right ran the Sharpsburg road, and an advance was begun in the direction of the Sherrick house. |
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General A. P. Hill, C. S. A.
The fighting along the Sharpsburg road might have resulted in a Confederate disaster had it not been for the timely arrival of the troops of General A. P. Hill.
His six brigades of Confederate veterans had been the last to leave Harper's Ferry, remaining behind Jackson's main body in order to attend to the details of the surrender.
Just as the Federal Ninth Corps was in the height of its advance, a cloud of dust on Harper's Ferry road cheered the Confederates to redoubled effort.
Out of the dust the brigades of Hill debouched upon the field.
Their fighting blood seemed to have but mounted more strongly during their march of eighteen miles. Without waiting for orders, Hill threw his men into the fight and the progress of the Ninth Corps was stopped.
Lee had counted on the arrival of Hill in time to prevent any successful attempt upon the Confederate right held by Longstreet's Corps, two-thirds of which had been detached in the thick of the fighting of the morning, when Lee's left and center suffered so severely.
Burnside's delay at the bridge could not have been more fortunate for Lee if he had fixed its duration himself.
Had the Confederate left been attacked at the time appointed, the outcome of Antietam could scarcely have been other than a decisive victory for the Federals.
Even at the time when Burnside's tardy advance began, it must have prevailed against the weakened and wearied Confederates had not the fresh troops of A. P. Hill averted the disaster. |
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Antietam: after the advance
In the advance along the Sharpsburg road near the Sherrick house the 79th New York “Highlanders” deployed as skirmishers.
From orchards and cornfields and from behind fences and haystacks the Confederate sharpshooters opened upon them, but they swept on, driving in a part of Jones' division and capturing a battery just before A. P. Hill's troops arrived.
With these reinforcements the Confederates drove back the brave Highlanders from the suburbs of Sharpsburg, which they had reached.
Stubborn Scotch blood would permit only a reluctant retreat.
Sharp fighting occurred around the Sherrick house with results seen in the lower picture.
Night closed the battle, both sides exhausted. |
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high ridge, were Confederate breastworks and rifle-pits, which commanded the bridge with a direct or enfilading fire.
While the
Federal right was fighting on the morning of the 17th,
McClellan sent an order to
Burnside to advance on the bridge, to take possession of it and cross the stream by means of it. It must have been about ten o'clock when
Burnside received the order as
McClellan was more than two miles away.
Burnside's chief officer at this moment was
General Jacob D. Cox (afterward Governor of
Ohio), who had succeeded
General Reno, killed at
South Mountain.
On
Cox fell the task of capturing the stone bridge.
The defense of the bridge was in the hands of
General Robert Toombs, a former
United States senator and a member of
Jefferson Davis' Cabinet.
Perhaps the most notable single event in the life of
General Toombs was his holding of the
Burnside Bridge at
Antietam for three hours against the assaults of the
Federal troops.
The Confederates had been weakened at this point by the sending of
Walker to the support of
Jackson, where, as we have noticed, he took part in the deadly assault upon
Sedgwick's division.
Toombs, therefore, with his one brigade had a heavy task before him in defending the bridge with his small force, notwithstanding his advantage of position.
McClellan sent several urgent orders to advance at all hazards.
Burnside forwarded these to
Cox, and in the fear that the latter would be unable to carry the bridge by a direct front attack, he sent
Rodman with a division to cross the creek by a ford some distance below.
This was accomplished after much difficulty.
Meanwhile, in rapid succession, one assault after another was made upon the bridge and, about one o'clock, it was carried, at the cost of five hundred men. The Confederates fell back.
A lull in the fighting along the whole line of battle now ensued.
Burnside, however, received another order from
McClellan to push on up the heights and to the village of
Sharpsburg.
The great importance of this move, if successful, was
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The flood-tide of the Federal advance
This Lutheran church on Main Street, to the east of Sharpsburg, marked the end of the Federal assault upon Lee's position at Antietam, as the little church of the non-resistant Dunkers to the north of the town had marked its beginning in the early morning.
About three o'clock in the afternoon Burnside's skirmishers advanced to the first cross-street beyond this church, threatening the town itself.
Out on the hills beyond the town, Main Street becomes the Shepherdstown road, and along this were arriving and hurrying through the town the anxiously awaited forces of A. P. Hill.
From that moment the Federals got no nearer Sharpsburg.
Hill drove them back steadily beyond the church, recapturing the battery which they had wrested from the troops of Jones and which had done damage to the little church as well as to the Confederates.
Hill's men, taking Rodman's division in flank, poured in a fire in which Rodman met his death.
Panic among his troops was averted only by Scammon, who (leading Cox's division) checked Hill for a breathing space; but Burnside's forces were steadily pushed back until at nightfall they lay discomfited, holding the bridge on the banks of Antietam creek, which he had wrested from Toombs' two Georgia regiments. |
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that it would cut
Lee out from his line of retreat by way of
Shepherdstown.
After replenishing the ammunition and adding some fresh troops,
Cox advanced at three o'clock with the utmost gallantry toward
Sharpsburg.
The Confederates disputed the ground with great bravery.
But
Cox swept all before him and was at the edge of the village when he was suddenly confronted by lines in blue uniforms who instantly opened fire.
The Federals were astonished to see the blue-clad battalions before them.
They must be Union soldiers; but how did they get there?
The matter was soon explained.
They were
A. P. Hill's division of
Lee's army which had just arrived from
Harper's Ferry, and they had dressed themselves in the uniforms that they had taken from the
Federal stores.
Hill had come just in time to save
Lee's headquarters from capture.
He checked
Cox's advance, threw a portion of the troops into great confusion, and steadily pressed them back toward the
Antietam.
In this, the end of the battle,
General Rodman fell mortally wounded.
Cox retired in good order and
Sharpsburg remained in the hands of the
Confederates.
Thus, with the approach of nightfall, closed the memorable
battle of Antietam.
For fourteen long hours more than one hundred thousand men, with five hundred pieces of artillery, had engaged in titanic combat.
As the pall of battle smoke rose and cleared away, the scene presented was one to make the stoutest heart shudder.
There lay upon the ground, scattered for three miles over the valleys and the hills or in the improvised hospitals, more than twenty thousand men.
Horace Greeley was probably right in pronouncing this the bloodiest day in American history.
Although tactically it was a drawn battle,
Antietam was decisively in favor of the
North inasmuch as it ended the first Confederate attempt at a Northern invasion.
General Lee realized that his ulterior plans had been thwarted by this engagement and after a consultation with his corps commanders
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The mediator
President Lincoln's Visit to the Camps at Antietam, October 8, 1862.
Yearning for the speedy termination of the war, Lincoln came to view the Army of the Potomac, as he had done at Harrison's Landing.
Puzzled to understand how Lee could have circumvented a superior force on the Peninsula, he was now anxious to learn why a crushing blow had not been struck.
Lincoln (after Gettysburg) expressed the same thought: “Our army held the war in the hollow of their hand and they would not close it!”
On Lincoln's right stands Allan Pinkerton, the famous detective and organizer of the Secret Service of the army.
At the President's left is General John A. McClernand, soon to be entrusted by Lincoln with reorganizing military operations in the West. |
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he determined to withdraw from
Maryland.
On the night of the 18th the retreat began and early the next morning the Confederate army had all safely recrossed the
Potomac.
The great mistake of the
Maryland campaign from the standpoint of the Confederate forces, thought
General Longstreet, was the division of
Lee's army, and he believed that if
Lee had kept his forces together he would not have been forced to abandon the campaign.
At
Antietam, he had less than forty thousand men, who were in poor condition for battle while
McClellan had about eighty-seven thousand, most of whom were fresh and strong, though not more than sixty thousand were in action.
The moral effect of the
battle of Antietam was incalculably great.
It aroused the confidence of the
Northern people.
It emboldened
President Lincoln to issue five days after its close the proclamation freeing the slaves in the seceded states.
He had written the proclamation long before, but it had lain inactive in his desk at
Washington.
All through the struggles of the summer of 1862 he had looked forward to the time when he could announce his decision to the people.
But he could not do it then.
With the doubtful success of Federal arms, to make such a bold step would have been a mockery and would have defeated the very end he sought.
The South had now struck its first desperate blow at the gateways to the
North.
By daring, almost unparalleled in warfare, it had swung its courageous army into a strategical position where with the stroke of fortune it might have hammered down the defenses of the
National capital on the south and then sweep on a march of invasion into the
North.
The Northern soldiers had parried the blow.
They had saved themselves from disaster and had held back the tide of the
Confederacy as it beat against the
Mason and
Dixon line, forcing it back into the
State of Virginia where the two mighty fighting bodies were soon to meet again in a desperate struggle for the right-of-way at
Fredericksburg.