| July 1st 1863 GETTYSBURG BATTLE SUPPLEMENT I |
|
|
|
| From the editor: Generals George Meade and Robert E. Lee never really have control over the day's events. Meade, new to his position, allows John Reynolds to decide if Gettysburg is a suitable place to fight a battle. When Reynolds is killed, Meade sends Winfield Hancock to take command of the field. In doing so, Meade allows his trusted corps commanders great latitude in deciding the fate of his army. The decision to send Hancock, the newest corps commander in the army, to Gettysburg, despite his lack of seniority, is especially risky. However, Oliver O. Howard, the XI Corps commander, and Hancock handle the delicate situation well and both work hard to fortify the Federal position on Cemetery Ridge and hold the position until Meade and the rest of the army can arrive. Lee's lack of control stems from two factors. First, he lacks sufficient cavalry to screen the army and provide him with the information necessary to give direction to his corps commanders. And second, many of his general officers are newly promoted and untried in their current commands; most especially, Henry Heth and Robert Rodes at the divisional level, and Archer, Davis, and Iverson on the brigade level. It is Heth who ignites the battle, and Rodes who eagerly joins in, despite Lee's desire to avoid "a general engagement" before his entire army is in position. The miserable showing of A.P. Hill's corps early in the day would have undoubtedly given Lee a battlefield defeat had not Jubal Early's division arrived fortuitously on the enemy's exposed right flank. The day ends with Lee and James Longstreet discussing their options. Despite "Old Pete's" insistence, that if Meade's army remains in position "it will be because he is anxious that we should attack him," Robert E. Lee is determined to press the engagement. "They are in position, and I am going to whip him or they are going to whip me." Lee's aggressiveness is well founded. Throughout his tenure as army commander, Lee has used aggressive tactics to defeat the Army of the Potomac on numerous battlefields and he has no reason to expect that the fields of Gettysburg will be any different. |
MAP ROOM (Gettysburg 06/30/63 Night)
![]()
Jul 01 1863 (Wednesday) GETTYSBURG
DAY ONE
After
receiving permission from A.P. Hill, Henry Heth has his division marching
toward Gettysburg at 5:00 a.m. Heth's goal is to capture a supply of shoes
which Jubal Early's men were rumored to have overlooked when it had passed
through the town several days earlier. James Archer's brigade leads the
way and runs into Federal skirmishers posted on Herr Ridge. Colonel William
Gamble reports, "About 8 o'clock in the morning..., the officer
commanding the squadron on picket in front gave me notice that the enemy,
consisting of infantry and artillery, in column, were approaching his pickets
from the direction of Cashtown....My brigade...was placed in line of battle
about 1 mile in front of the seminary....Three squadrons, part dismounted,
were ordered to the front, and deployed as skirmishers to support the squadron
on picket....Our battery of six 3-inch rifled guns was placed in battery,
one section on each side of the Cashtown road, covering the approaches
of the enemy....The enemy cautiously approached in column on the road,
with three extended lines on each flank, and his and our line of skirmishers
became engaged, and our artillery opened on the enemy's advancing column,
doing good execution....Our skirmishers, fighting under cover of trees
and fences, were sharply engaged, did good execution, and retarded the
progress of the enemy as much as could possibly be expected."
The Federal cavalrymen, making good use of their seven-shot Spencer rifles,
force Heth to deploy both of his brigades on either side of the Chambersburg
Pike. This maneuver gives General John Reynolds' (I) Corps time to relieve
Buford's hard-pressed cavalrymen. While Heth's motive is to "get
those shoes," Reynolds and Buford are more interested in holding
the high ground south of town. Reynolds sends General Meade a message:
"The enemy are advancing in strong force, and...I fear they will
get to the heights beyond the town before I can. I will fight them inch
by inch, and if driven into the town I will barricade the streets and hold
them back as long as possible."
HEADQUARTERS
HETH'S DIVISION, Camp near Orange Court-House. - Capt. W. N. STARKE, Asst.
Adjt. Gen., Third Corps, Army of Northern Virginia. - CAPTAIN: My division,
now within a mile of Gettysburg, was disposed as follows: Archer's brigade
in line of battle on the right of the turnpike; Davis' brigade on the left
of the same road, also in line of battle; Pettigrew's brigade and Heth's
old brigade (Colonel Brockenbrough commanding), were held in reserve. Archer
and Davis were now directed to advance, the object being to feel the enemy;
to make a forced reconnaissance, and determine in what force the enemy
were...massing his forces on Gettysburg. Heavy columns of the enemy were
soon encountered. Davis, on the left, advanced, driving the enemy before
him and capturing his batteries....The brigade maintained its position
until every field officer save two were shot down, and its ranks terribly
thinned....On the right of the road, Archer encountered heavy masses in
his front, and his gallant little brigade, after being almost surrounded
by overwhelming forces in front and on both flanks, was forced back....The
enemy had now been felt, and found to be in heavy force in and around Gettysburg....I
am, very respectfully, your obedient servant, H. HETH, Major-General.
Shortly after 10:00 a.m.,
General Reynolds is killed while deploying the brigades of Solomon Meredith
and Lysander Cutler. The presence of Meredith's "Iron Brigade"
in McPherson's Woods surprises the attacking Rebel infantrymen who are
expecting only dismounted cavalry. Colonel W.W. Robinson reports, "The
brigade was immediately moved...to the point where the cavalry were engaged,
where we formed them in position behind a grove of timber and slight elevation
of land....Just at the time we came up, a brigade of the enemy's infantry
was advancing upon the position....We had not halted to load, and no orders
had been received to do so, for the reason, I suppose, that no one expected
we were to be engaged so suddenly. I, however, gave the order to load during
the movement, which was executed by the men while on the double-quick,
so that no time was lost by this omission....I moved the line forward to
the crest of the ridge, delivered a volley, and gave the order to charge.
The three regiments--Seventh Wisconsin, Nineteenth Indiana, and Twenty-fourth
Michigan--rushed into the ravine with a yell. The enemy--what was left
of them able to walk--threw down their arms, ducked through between our
files, and passed to the rear." Confederate General James Archer
is among the captured men. Lieutenant-Colonel S. G. Shepard reports: "Our
position was...untenable, and the right of our line was forced back....Some
75 of the brigade were unable to make their escape, General Archer among
the rest. I saw General Archer a short time before he surrendered, and
he appeared to be very much exhausted with fatigue. Being completely overpowered...we
fell back across the field." Cutler's men enjoy equal success
as they advance along the railroad. Many of the men in Joseph Davis' (Jefferson
Davis' nephew) brigade are trapped in the railroad cut and forced to surrender.
The shattered Rebel attack is stalled, and the remaining grayclad infantrymen
retreat to the safety of Herr's Ridge.
HDQRS. SIXTH WISCONSIN
VOLUNTEERS. - Capt. J. D. WOOD, Asst. Adjt. Gen., First Brig., First Div.,
First Corps. - CAPTAIN: When my line had reached a fence on the Chambersburg
turnpike, about 40 rods from the line of the enemy, I ordered a fire by
file. This checked the advance of the rebels, who took refuge in a railroad
cut (an unfinished railroad cut through the ridge west of the seminary),
from which they opened a murderous fire upon us. I immediately ordered
the men over the fence, with a view to charging the cut. The Ninety-fifth
New York and Fourteenth Brooklyn here joined on my left....The men of the
whole line moved forward upon a double-quick, well closed, in face of a
terribly destructive fire from the enemy. When our line reached the edge
of the cut, the rebels began throwing down their arms in token of surrender.
Adjt. Ed. P. Brooks, with promptness and foresight, moved a detachment
of 20 men in position to enfilade the cut from the right, when the entire
regiment in my front, after some murderous skirmishing by the more desperate,
threw down their arms....I have the honor to be, very respectfully, your
obedient servant, R. R. DAWES, Lieutenant-Colonel, Comdg. Sixth Wisconsin
Volunteers.
After Heth's men retreat,
a lull falls over the battlefield. Abner Doubleday, now in command of I
Corps, welcomes Oliver O. Howard and the XI Corps to the field. As Doubleday's
senior, Howard assumes command of the field and orders Carl Schurz and
Francis Barlow to deploy their brigades north of town to protect Doubleday's
flank. Realizing the importance of Cemetery Hill, General Adolph Frederick
Von Steinwehr's brigade is left behind to maintain that position. As Howard's
men are filing forward, the van of Richard Ewell's Corps arrives, marching
up Mummasburg Road. General Rodes reports, "When within 4 miles
of the town, to my surprise, the presence of the enemy there in force was
announced by the sound of a sharp cannonade, and instant preparations for
battle were made. On arriving on the field, I found that by keeping along
the wooded ridge, on the left side of which the town of Gettysburg is situated,
I could strike the force of the enemy with which General Hill's troops
were engaged upon the flank....To get at these troops properly, which were
still over half a mile from us, it was necessary to move the whole of my
command by the right flank, and to change direction to the right....Before
my dispositions were made, the enemy began to show large bodies of men
in front of the town, most of which were directed upon the position which
I held, and almost at the same time a portion of the force opposed to General
Hill changed position so as to occupy the woods on the summit of the same
ridge I occupied." Robert Rodes' first battle as a division commander
turns into a nightmare. One brigade stalls almost immediately, another
drifts away from the intended target, and Alfred Iverson's brigade runs
into an ambush as Federal troops, deployed behind a stone fence, rise,
fire, and decimate his ranks.
CAMP NEAR DARKESVILLE,
W. VA. - Maj. H. A. WHITING, Assistant Adjutant-General. - SIR: I advanced
at once, and soon came in contact with the enemy, strongly posted in woods
and behind a concealed stone wall. My brigade advanced to within 100 yards,
and a most desperate fight took place....Brigadier-General Daniel came
up to my position, and I asked him for immediate support, as I was attacking
a strong position. He promised to send me a large regiment....At the same
time, I pointed out to General Daniel a large force of the enemy who were
about to outflank my right, and asked him to take care of them. He moved
past my position, and engaged the enemy some distance to my right, but
the regiment he had promised me..., did not report to me at all....When
I saw white handkerchiefs raised, and my line of battle still lying down
in position, I characterized the surrender as disgraceful; but when I found
afterward that 500 of my men were left lying dead and wounded on a line
as straight as a dress parade, I exonerated...the survivors, and claim
for the brigade that they nobly fought and died without a man running to
the rear. No greater gallantry and heroism has been displayed during this
war. I endeavored, during the confusion among the enemy incident to the
charge and capture of my men, to make a charge with my remaining regiment
and the Third Alabama, but in the noise and excitement I presume my voice
could not be heard. The fighting here ceased on my part....I have the honor
to be, your obedient servant, ALFRED IVERSON, Brigadier-General.
Shortly after 2:00 p.m.,
Robert E. Lee, riding to the sound of the guns, approaches the battlefield.
A frustrated Lee speaks to General Richard Anderson. "I cannot
think what has become of Stuart. I ought to have heard from him long before
now....I am in ignorance of what we have in front of us here. It may be
the whole Federal army....If it is..., we must fight a battle here."
Lee finds Heth's brigades in line of battle waiting for the order to
go forward. It is evident that Rodes' division is being well handled, but
Lee is not willing to risk a general engagement as, he explains, "Longstreet
is not up." It is not long before Lee changes his mind as a third
gray column, Jubal Early's, is spotted advancing up the Harrisburg Road.
Early's division is perfectly placed to strike at O.O. Howard's exposed
right flank and Lee, sensing the opportunity for a sweeping victory, gives
A.P. Hill permission to launch the rest of his corps against the stubborn
Federal defenders on McPherson's Ridge. Howard's defensive line is exposed
because the aggressive Barlow has pushed his men too far forward in an
attempt to attack Rode's flank near Oak Hill. General Schurz reports, "Feeling
much anxiety about my right, which was liable to be turned..., I dispatched
one of my aides...with the request to have one brigade of the Second Division
placed upon the north side of the town....After having taken the necessary
observations on my extreme left, I returned to the Mummasburg road, where
I discovered that General Barlow had moved forward his whole line, thus
losing on his left the connection with the Third Division....I immediately
gave orders to re-establish the connection by advancing the right wing
of the Third Division....Suddenly the enemy opened upon the First Division
from two batteries placed near the Harrisburg road, completely enfilading
General Barlow's line."
HEADQUARTERS GORDON'S
BRIGADE. - Maj. JOHN W. DANIEL, Assistant Adjutant-General, Early's Division.
- MAJOR: About 3 p.m. I was ordered to move my brigade forward to the support
of Major-General Rodes' left. The men were much fatigued from long marches,
and I therefore caused them to move forward slowly until within about 300
yards of the enemy's line, when the advance was as rapid as the nature
of the ground and a proper regard for the preservation of my line would
permit. The enemy had succeeded in gaining a position upon the left flank
of Doles' brigade, and in causing these troops to retreat....Moving forward
under heavy fire over rail and plank fences, and crossing a creek whose
banks were so abrupt as to prevent a passage excepting at certain points,
this brigade rushed upon the enemy with a resolution and spirit, in my
opinion, rarely excelled. The enemy made a most obstinate resistance until
the colors on portions of the two lines were separated by a space of less
than 50 paces, when his line was broken and driven back, leaving the flank
which this line had protected exposed to the fire from my brigade. An effort
was here made by the enemy to change his front and check our advance, but
the effort failed, and this line, too, was driven back in the greatest
confusion.... I was here ordered by Major-General Early to halt....I am,
major, very respectfully, your obedient servant, J. B. GORDON, Brigadier-General.
Determined to redeem
themselves after being swept from the field at Chancellorsville, the German
soldiers of the XI Corps put up a fierce resistance, but cannot stand up
to the Rebel assault hammering upon their right flank. General Howard reports,
"At 4.10 p.m., finding that I could hold out no longer, and that
the troops were already giving way, I sent a positive order to the commanders
of the First and Eleventh Corps to fall back gradually, disputing every
inch of ground, and to form near my position, the Eleventh Corps on the
right and the First Corps on the left of the Baltimore pike." The
retreating units of Howard's Corps collide with elements of I Corps who
have also been forced to flee the field. In the massive confusion of the
narrow streets of Gettysburg, all semblance of order is lost as the Union
soldiers make their way to Cemetery Hill.
HEADQUARTERS EARLY'S
DIVISION. - Maj. A. S. PENDLETON, Asst. Adjt. Gen., Second Corps. Army
of Northern Virginia. - MAJOR: As soon as Gordon was fairly engaged with
this force, Hays' and Hoke's brigades were ordered forward in line, and
the artillery, supported by Smith's brigade, was ordered to follow. After
a short but hot contest, Gordon succeeded in routing the force opposed
to him....Hays' brigade entered the town, fighting its way, and Avery moved
to the left of it across the railroad, and took his position in the fields
on the left, and facing Cemetery Hill, which here presented a very rugged
ascent....A very large number of prisoners were captured in the town, and
before reaching it, their number being so great as really to embarrass
us.....As soon as my brigades had entered the town, I rode...to find General
Ewell and General Rodes, or General Hill, for the purpose of urging an
immediate advance upon the enemy before he should recover from his evident
dismay, in order to get possession of the hills to which he had fallen
back with the remnant of his forces....Very respectfully, your obedient
servant, J. A. EARLY, Major-General, Commanding Division.
Instead of pressing the
attack, Jubal Early halts his men in the town and attempts to find General
Ewell for further instructions. As the Federal troops on Cemetery Hill
regroup, General Lee asks A.P. Hill if his men can carry the Federal position.
Hill replies that his men are too used up to be of further service. Lee
then sends orders to General Ewell to take the hill, if he found it "practicable,"
but to "avoid a general engagement until the arrival of the other
divisions of the army." Ewell decides that it would be unwise
to attack before the arrival of Edward Johnson's division, and, as Johnson
is still several miles away, any further assault would be impracticable.
General Winfield Hancock is now commanding the field for the Union army.
Sent by General Meade, Hancock agrees with Howard's decision to fight a
battle at Gettysburg. "I think this is the strongest position by
nature on which to fight a battle that I ever saw." Hancock, nicknamed
"The Superb," immediately advances troops to the stone wall on
the northern face of the hill as a show of strength and to discourage any
further advance by the Rebels. Carl Schurz finds Hancock's presence "most
fortunate," and comments: "It gave the troops a new inspiration....His
mere presence was a reinforcement, and everybody on the field felt stronger
for his being there."
HEADQUARTERS ELEVENTH
CORPS.- Brig. Gen. S. WILLIAMS, Asst. Adjt. Gen., Hdqrs. Army of the Potomac.
- GENERAL: After an examination of the general features of the country,
I came to the conclusion that the only tenable position for my limited
force was the ridge to the southeast of Gettysburg...known as Cemetery
Ridge. The highest point at the cemetery commanded every eminence within
easy range. The slopes toward the west and south were gradual, and could
be completely swept by artillery....I...dispatched Major Howard, my aide-de-camp,
to General Slocum, to inform him of the state of affairs....He met the
general on the Baltimore pike, about a mile from Gettysburg, [Slocum] replied
that he had...ordered a division to the right, and that he would send another
to cover the left..., but that he did not wish to come up in person to
the front and take the responsibility of that fight....General Steinwehr's
division, of the Eleventh Corps..., were so disposed as to check the enemy
attempting to come through the town, or to approach upon the right or left
of Gettysburg....At 4.30 p.m. the [retreating] columns reached Cemetery
Hill, the enemy pressing hard. He made a single attempt to turn our right,
ascending the slope northeast of Gettysburg, but his line was instantly
broken by Wiedrich's battery, in position on the heights. General Hancock
came to me about this time, and said General Meade had sent him on hearing
the state of affairs; that he had given him his instructions while under
the impression that he was my senior. We agreed at once that [it] was no
time for talking, and that General Hancock should further arrange the troops,
and place the batteries upon the left of the Baltimore pike, while I should
take the right of the same. Respectfully, O. O. HOWARD, Major-General.
.
![]()
|
|
NETSCAPE Sound Control
Page Updated 06/30/99
Copyright
@ Rienzi99 1997-99 / More
information