Episodes Nearest to June 19, 1863 to July 4, 1863: 1 through 25 of 25
- An account of an engineering captain in the Graveyard Road approach during the Battle of Vicksburg of the Civil War.
June 19, 1863 to July 4, 1863
JACKSON, Mississippi
"Vicksburg", "Civl War", "Graveyard Road", "engineer"Dispersing an already short supply of soldiers, artillery, and engineers, who dug trenches and pushed sap rollers, which were spherical devices filled with cotton that guarded engineers, the two unsuccessful approaches of the Union army to penetrate the city of Vicksburg in 1863 demonstrate the highly complex, yet haphazard nature in which war was engaged during the battle and throughout...
- Shelbyville Affects the Letter From An Everyday Soldier
June 27, 1863
BEDFORD, Tennessee
Crime/Violence, WarMatt Turner was an assistant surgeon caught in battle at Shelbyville with a little time to write his mother. The letter thought brief gave a great account to the attack that occurred in Tennessee from the 24th to the 28th of June in 1863. Turner gave the account of his army “falling back” and being “flanked” by the enemy, the hospital he feared would soon fall and...
- Pennsylvania Captain Writes His Final Letter Home
June 28, 1863
FREDERICK, Maryland
Civil War, Pennsylvania RegimentsCaptain David Acheson, Company C of the 140th Pennsylvania Volunteers was born in Washington, Pennsylvania, about thirty miles south of Pittsburgh. Robert L. Stewart remarked that Acheson was "one of the most promising young men in the College Class" at the then Washington College (now known as Washington & Jefferson College). A very thoughtful and god fearing young man, Acheson enlisted during...
- On the Way to Gettysburg: John B. Gordon’s “Chivalrous” War Tactics
June 28, 1863
YORK, Pennsylvania
John Brown Gordon, Wrightsville, Civil War“It was a case of adherence to the letter and neglect of the spirit; but there was no alternative except good-naturedly to admit that my men had gotten the better of me that time”—so wrote General John B. Gordon about the regrettable conduct of his soldiers as they marched through Pennsylvania on their way to Gettysburg. Gordon, being a Southern Gentleman and a reputable man, sought to bring...
- A Five-Year-Old Girl Meets her Confederate Father
May, 1863 to August, 1863
SUMTER, South Carolina
Civil War, Slavery, Family and Home Life, Military, Food/ProvisionsMrs. Doane remembers the hard work that had to be done on her South Carolina plantation while her father was away at war. Though they never saw any Yankees, Confederate soldiers were frequent guests at the Cumming’s home. Ragged and half-starved, these desperate soldiers took full liberties to raid their provisions, passing in hordes and killing their chickens. Mrs. Cummings, however, did...
- Slaves in the War
1863
MOBILE, Alabama
African-Americans, Law, Race-Relations, Slavery, WarThroughout southern history, masters continually feared that their slaves would rise up against them. When the Civil War broke, this was exacerbated by the fear that slaves would join the Union army. Louis Hughes was a slave from Mississippi. As the war progressed, Union armies came closer and closer to his hometown until ultimately they came through and destroyed Panola. Masters feared for their...
- Fire and Steel: Weaponry of the Confederacy
1863
CHARLESTON, South Carolina
Science/Technology, WarCannons and rifles perform a cacophony of blood and thunder as the cold steel of bayonets slice through the enemy line. Deadly technology meets close quarters fighting and Napoleonic tactics, and the result is not pretty.
These deadly weapons are listed in detail in Col. J. Gorgas' The Ordnance Manual for the Use of the Officers of the Confederate States Army....
- Chamberlain Holds His Ground at Little Round Top
July 2, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, WarOn July 2, 1863, the second day of Battle at Gettysburg, a crisis was at hand for the Union army. General Daniel E. Sickles, commanding the Third Corps, had moved his men off higher ground, which included Little Round Top, and created a line running from the Peach Orchard to Devil's Den. This placed the Union left flank open for an attack. Chief Engineer General Gouvernur K. Warren atop Little...
- The Burning of the Culp Home
July 1, 1863 to July 3, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Crime/Violence, Civil WarIn an effort to take revenge on the North, the ninth regiment of Alabama volunteers burned the Culp home in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, during the Gettysburg campaign. The reasons for this destruction are dictated by the volunteers, as after they burnt the Culp home they left a short, crudely handwritten note to the owners of the property. The note clearly indicates the intentions of the Confederate...
- General Abner Doubleday at Gettysburg: Why is he not remembered?
July 1, 1863 to July 3, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Civil War, Gettysburg, General Abner DoubledayAt approximately 10:15 AM on the morning of July 1, 1863, Major General Abner Doubleday was thrown into command of the forces along McPherson's Ridge when his immediate superior, General John F. Reynolds, was shot and killed in the early engagement between Union and Confederate infantry. Doubleday became responsible for the entire battlefield and holding back the Confederate advances until the...
- J.E.B. Stuart and His Performance in Gettysburg, or Lack of it!
July 1, 1863 to July 3, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Confederacy Calvary, Stuart, GettysburgJE.B. Stuart rode into Gettysburg overdue by two gory days to General Lee’s disappointed relief. Stuart’s role until then had been to serve as Lee’s eyes delivering updates of the Union’s movements. Until Gettysburg, Stuart had built a strong and very public reputation all over the South for his flamboyance, skill and valor on the battle field. A West Point graduate, he first garnered...
- General Ambrose P. Hill in the Battle of Gettysburg
July 1, 1863 to July 3, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Pickett's Charge, Civil War, GettysburgGeneral Ambrose Powell Hill viewed Gettysburg as his chance for redemption from a reputation as a cantankerous, argumentative and tardy leader in the Confederate Army, but the ill fate that befell his troops in the battle was not the ending he desired. It was day one of the Battle of Gettysburg and Ambrose Powell Hill was about to face his first battle as the promoted commander of the Third Corps,...
- Brigadier-General Harry T. Hays Leads the Tigers at Gettysburg
July 1, 1863 to July 2, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Civil War, MilitaryHarry T. Hays was the Brigadier General of the feared Louisiana Tigers. During the Civil War, the Tigers gained a reputation in the North as one of the fiercest Southern brigades. The Tigers are best known for their tremendous efforts at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, where Hays said they, “advanced through the city of Gettysburg, clearing it of the enemy and taking prisoners at every turn.”
The...
- Melville creates a literary Pickett's charge
July 3, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Civil War, literatureIn his poem "Gettysburg" written in 1866, Herman Melville, renowned writer and poet of the 19th century, who did not fight the war, gave a romanticized account of Pickett's charge.
At Gettysburg, on the third of July 1863, the issue of the battle was still uncertain. General Lee decided to launch a decisive attack against the army of the Union with the Major General Pickett in command...
- The Tragedy known as Pickett's Charge
July 3, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Military, Civil War, ConfederacyThe veteran soldiers geared for the attack, confident in their strategy and ability, ready to accept nothing less than success. As the enemy forces approached and the men “spearheaded the charge” with all that they had, it quickly became evident that it was not going to be enough. The “Union artillery opened” on the Confederates’ “parade-ground ranks” and the group suffered greatly...
- Chamberlain's Defense of Little Round Top
July 2, 1863 to July 3, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
War, Civil War, Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, GettysburgOn July 2, 1863, Colonel Strong Vincent looked to Joshua Chamberlain and the 20th Maine regiment to defend Little Round Top “at every hazard”. It was vital for the Union army to not lose this hilltop position to prevent the Confederates from breaking through their lines. At Gettysburg, the 20th Maine and other Union troops took both Little Round Top and Big Round Top. They have become immortalized...
- The Burden of Defeat: The XI Corps Breaks at Gettysburg
July 1, 1863 to July 4, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Gettysburg, Union Army, European immigrants, 11th Corps, Political GeneralsThe Burden of Defeat: The IX Corps Breaks at Gettysburg
The specter of defeat seemed to hang over the military career of German immigrant and revolutionary statesman turned Republican politician and Union General Carl Schurz and bad luck stalk his every move. Poorly positioned at the extreme right flank of Hooker’s army at Chancellorsville, the Eleventh Corps, especially Schurz’s...
- The Irish Brigade Endures More Hard Fighting at Gettysburg
July 2, 1863 to July 4, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Civil War, Gettysburg, Immigrants"After a long and fatiguing march, we arrived on the evening of the 1st instant within about 3 miles of Gettysburg,” wrote Major Sergeant Clair Mulholland in his 1863 battlefield report. There the 116th Pennsylvania Infantry, along with others of its Brigade, awaited orders to the sound of the surrounding battle. In the late afternoon the Brigade finally marched toward the battle,...
- The Surrender of Vicksburg
July 4, 1863
WARREN, Mississippi
WarAfter the Federal siege of Vicksburg, Mississippi during the Civil War that lasted from May 18, 1863 to July 4, 1863, the Confederates surrendered Vicksburg. It was the climax to the Vicksburg Campaign which was the Federals' attempt to relinquish the stronghold of the Mississippi River that the Confederates held through Vicksburg. Instead of attacking from the river, the Union chose to attack...
- Rachel Cormany Recounts Her Experiences of Gettysburg Campaign
June 15, 1863 to June 18, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
War, WomenRachel Cormany recorded her experiences of the civil war in her diary of the time that the Gettysburg campaign was taking place. She lived in a place close by called Chambersburg. On June 15, 1863 she wrote how she saw all sorts of wagon trains make their way through the town. She experienced the panic that shot through the town due to the Rebels. There had been a cry that the Rebels were in...
- George Meade: Hero at Gettysburg?
July 1, 1863 to July 13, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
War: American Civil War, Civil WarGeorge Meade was the commander of the Union Army of the Potomac during one of the most well-known battles of the Civil War, the Battle of Gettysburg from July 1-3, 1863, and he is one of the war's least well-known generals. As Meade learned of the escalating battle at Gettysburg, PA on July 1, he began ordering his army toward the town. At the end of the first day, the Confederate force failed...
- Siege of Port Hudson
May 21, 1863 to July 9, 1863
EAST BATON ROUG, Louisiana
African-Americans, WarPort Hudson was another confederate stronghold of 6,800 troops. Nearly forty thousand Union troops arrived here and began a full assault, but the Confederates successfully defended themselves, as the Union regiments were uncoordinated, and the Confederates had spent the past year preparing the terrain for an assault. The terrain was varied and difficult to traverse: a series of ridges;high...
- Gettysburg After the Battle
July 9, 1863
ADAMS, Pennsylvania
Civil War, Environment, Battle"Little of the enclosure remains save the wicket gateway, from which the gates have been torn," Thomas Knox wrote in a dispatch published in the New York Herald on July 9, 1863. This was just one scene of the aftermath of Gettysburg, which was the single bloodiest and most memorable battle of the American Civil War. In many cases, the battle spilled out of the field into the town and destroyed...
- Union Battery in the Campaign for Vicksburg
May 2, 1863 to July 27, 1863
WARREN, Mississippi
Second Iowa Battery, Joseph R. Reed, Union, Vicksburg, Civil WarThe Union Army achieved a decisive victory in the battle of Vicksburg, Mississippi, with the city surrendering to General Ulysses Grant on July 4, 1863. The battery divisions effectively utilized the large guns and cannons of the army, which were crucial to the Union victory at Vicksburg. First Lieutenant Joseph R. Reed of the Second Iowa Battery in the Union Army belonged to one of these battery...
- The Burning of Darien
June 12, 1863
MC INTOSH, Georgia
African-Americans, Crime/Violence, WarWith the exception of two white women and two African Americans, the town of Darien, Georgia was deserted when the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts Volunteers, the first all black regiment of the Union army, and the Second South Carolina Volunteers, a regiment of freed slaves, marched in on the afternoon of June 12, 1863. Neither the town nor its four inhabitants posed any threat to the Union forces....