Gettysburg: The Last Invasion (137 page)

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Authors: Allen C. Guelzo

Tags: #Non-Fiction, #History

BOOK: Gettysburg: The Last Invasion
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Wright, James

Wrightsville Bridge,
7.1
,
7.2
,
7.3

“Yankee Doodle”,
3.1
,
24.1

York, Pa.,
5.1
,
7.1
,
7.2
,
7.3
,
7.4
,
7.5
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7.6
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7.7
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8.1
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8.2
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8.3
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10.1
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10.2
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20.1
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22.1

York County, Pa.,
7.1
,
7.2
,
26.1

York Gazette

York Pike,
7.1
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7.2
,
8.1
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11.1
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20.1
,
20.2
,
24.1
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26.1
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26.2

York River

Young, Jesse Bowman
,
n

Young, John Mumma

Young, Louis

Zeigler, David,
8.1
,
22.1
,
23.1
,
23.2

Zook, Samuel Kosciusko,
16.1
,
16.2
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16.3
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16.4
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16.5
,
nts.1
n
–60
n

Zouaves,
1.1
,
14.1
,
15.1
,
15.2
,
15.3
,
17.1
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23.1
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23.2

ILLUSTRATION CREDITS

bm2.1
George Gordon Meade: Union League of Philadelphia

bm2.2
Robert Edward Lee: Mathew Brady, Library of Congress

bm2.3
James Longstreet: Mathew Brady carte de visite, Library of Congress

bm2.4
John Fulton Reynolds: Union League of Philadelphia

bm2.5
Andrew Gregg Curtin: Library of Congress

bm2.6
Oliver Otis Howard: Library of Congress

bm2.7
James Wadsworth: Mathew Brady, National Archives & Records Administration.

bm2.8
Richard Stoddert Ewell: Library of Congress

bm2.9
Winfield Scott Hancock: Library of Congress

bm2.10
Daniel Edgar Sickles: Julian Vannerson, Library of Congress

bm2.11
Colors of the 14th Brooklyn: Alfred Waud, Library of Congress

bm2.12
Pennsylvania College: Isaac and Charles Tyson, Gettysburg College Special Collections

bm2.13
View from college cupola: William Tipton, Adams County Historical Society

bm2.14
Defending the Colors at Gettysburg, July 1, 1863:
from Orson Blair Curtis,
History of the Twenty-fourth Michigan of the Iron Brigade
(1891)

bm2.15
Lutheran Theological Seminary and Seminary Ridge: Alfred Waud, Library of Congress

bm2.16
Evergreen Cemetery gatehouse: Charles Himes stereo half, Cumberland County Historical Society

bm2.17
John Burns: Isaac and Charles Tyson, carte de visite, Adams County Historical Society

bm2.18
Barlow’s (or Blocher’s) Knoll: Adams County Historical Society

bm2.19
Francis Channing Barlow: Library of Congress

bm2.20
Lee’s headquarters: William H. Tipton, Library of Congress

bm2.21
Michael Jacobs: Isaac and Charles Tyson, Gettysburg College Special Collections

bm2.22
Lafayette McLaws: Library of Congress

bm2.23
Spine of Little Round Top, looking south: William Tipton, 1888, Adams County Historical Society

bm2.24
Spine of Little Round Top, looking northwest: William Tipton, 1888, Adams County Historical Society

bm2.25
Strong Vincent: Carte de visite, Library of Congress

bm2.26
The Joseph Sherfy house: William Tipton, 1888, Adams County Historical Society

bm2.27
Wheat field lane, looking east: William Tipton, 1880, Adams County Historical Society

bm2.28
Confederate dead: Alexander Gardner/Timothy O’Sullivan, Library of Congress

bm2.29
Francis Edward Heath: Maine Department of History

bm2.30
Union skirmishers at Cemetery Hill: Alfred Waud, Library of Congress

bm2.31
Wreckage of John Bigelow’s 9th Massachusetts Artillery: Timothy O’Sullivan, Library of Congress

bm2.32
Officers and staff of the 69th Pennsylvania: William Morris Smith, Library of Congress

bm2.33
Cadmus Marcellus Wilcox: Library of Congress

bm2.34
William Barksdale: Julian Vannerson, Library of Congress

bm2.35
Edward Porter Alexander: frontispiece from
Military Memoirs of a Confederate: A Critical Narrative
(1907)

bm2.36
Meade’s headquarters: Alexander Gardner, Library of Congress

bm2.37
The angle, looking south: William Tipton, Adams County Historical Society

bm2.38
Albertus McCreary’s retreat: from “Gettysburg: A Boy’s Experience of the Battle,”
McClure’s Magazine
(July 1909)

bm2.39
David Emmons Johnston: frontispiece to
The Story of a Confederate Boy in the Civil War
(1914)

bm2.40
House of Abraham Bryan: Mathew Brady, Library of Congress

bm2.41
Alexander Stewart Webb: Mathew Brady, Library of Congress

A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Dr. Allen C. Guelzo is the Henry R. Luce Professor of the Civil War Era and Director of Civil War Era Studies at Gettysburg College. He is the author of
Abraham Lincoln: Redeemer President; Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation: The End of Slavery in America; Lincoln and Douglas: The Debates That Defined America; Lincoln: A Very Short Introduction; Abraham Lincoln as a Man of Ideas;
and
Fateful Lightning: A New History of the Civil War and Reconstruction
. He is a member of the National Council on the Humanities.

Major General George Gordon Meade (1815–1872). Put hastily and unexpectedly in command of the Army of the Potomac, Meade preferred to conduct a cautious, defensive campaign against the 1863 Confederate invasion. He was “cownservative and cautious to the last degree, good qualities in a defensive battle, but liable to degenerate into timidity when an aggressive or bold offensive becomes imperative.”
(Illustration Credit bm2.1)

General Robert Edward Lee (1807–1870) was convinced that only by risking an invasion of the North in 1863 could he save the Confederacy from the defeat he was certain would otherwise occur. “He is a strongly built man, about five-feet-eleven in height, and apparently not more than fifty years of age,” wrote a British admirer. “His hair and beard are nearly white; but his dark brown eyes still shine with all the brightness of youth, and beam with a most pleasing expression. Indeed, his whole face is kindly and benevolent in the highest degree.”
(Illustration Credit bm2.2)

James Longstreet (1821–1904) was the senior corps commander of the Army of Northern Virginia. Lee regarded him as his “warhorse,” even though Longstreet questioned the wisdom of a Pennsylvania invasion in general and fighting an offensive battle at Gettysburg in particular. In the years after the war, he would be mercilessly (and unjustly) pilloried by Lee’s partisans as the principal bearer of blame for Confederate defeat.
(Illustration Credit bm2.3)

Major General John Fulton Reynolds (1820–1863), commander of the 1st Corps of the Army of the Potomac. His determination not to leave Pennsylvania open to Lee’s invasion helped trigger the battle at Gettysburg.
(Illustration Credit bm2.4)

Andrew Gregg Curtin (1817–1894). Republican governor of Pennsylvania, Curtin struggled to rouse the surprisingly sluggish response of his state to the Confederate invasion. “Five counties of our State are invaded and in the hands of rebels, five counties are overrun, and the soil of Pennsylvania is poisoned by the tread of rebel hordes. My God! Can Pennsylvanians sleep when Pennsylvanians are driven from their homes?” After the battle, Curtin authorized David Wills to take oversight of the creation of the Soldiers’ National Cemetery at Gettysburg.
(Illustration Credit bm2.5)

Major General Oliver Otis Howard (1830–1909), commander of the 11th Corps of the Army of the Potomac. Together with Reynolds, Howard was responsible for forcing a fight at Gettysburg, instead of waiting passively at Pipe Creek. “He is the only religious man of high rank that I know of in the army,” wrote Charles Wainwright in his diary, “and, in the little intercourse I have had with him, shewed himself the most polished gentleman I have met.”
(Illustration Credit bm2.6)

Major General James S. Wadsworth (1807–1864). A wealthy lawyer and committed abolitionist from upstate New York, Wadsworth commanded the first of the Army of the Potomac’s infantry divisions to reach Gettysburg on July 1, 1863.
(Illustration Credit bm2.7)

Lieutenant General Richard Stoddert Ewell (1817–1872), who inherited command of “Stonewall” Jackson’s corps in the Army of Northern Virginia after Jackson’s death. He won accolades for his perfectly executed capture of Winchester in the first stages of the Gettysburg campaign, but was widely blamed for not pushing his corps to finish the rout of the Union forces on July 1, 1863. After the war, Ewell was supposed to have admitted that it took many mistakes to cause the Confederate loss at Gettysburg, “and I made most of them.”
(Illustration Credit bm2.8)

Major General Winfield Scott Hancock (1824–1886), commander of the 2nd Corps of the Army of the Potomac. Colorful, profane, and combative, Hancock played the lead role in holding off Confederate attackers on both July 2nd and 3rd.
(Illustration Credit bm2.9)

Major General Daniel Edgar Sickles (1819–1914) was the prime example of everything that was wrong with the practice of putting politicians in command of troops in the Civil War. Commander of the 3rd Corps, he nearly lost the battle singlehandedly for the Army of the Potomac on July 2nd. “He is, perhaps, loved more sincerely, and hated more heartily, than any man of his day. To serve his friends he will do anything which is tolerated by the license of modern politics: when he resolves upon the overthrow of a political enemy the strongest man finds him formidable.”
(Illustration Credit bm2.10)

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