Battle of Gettysburg, battle fought July 1 through July 3, 1863,
considered by most military historians the turning point in the American Civil
War. The Battle of Gettysburg was a decisive engagement in that it arrested the
Confederates' second and last major invasion of the North, destroyed their
offensive strategy, and forced them to fight a defensive war in which the
inadequacies of their manufacturing capacity and transportation facilities
doomed them to defeat.
The Army of the Potomac, under the Union general George Gordon
Meade, numbered about 85,000; the Confederate army, under General Robert E.
Lee, numbered about 75,000. After the Battle of Chancellorsville on May 2 to 4,
an important victory for the Confederates, Lee divided his army into three
corps, commanded by three lieutenant generals: James Longstreet, Richard
Stoddert Ewell, and Ambrose Powell Hill. Lee then formulated a plan for
invading Pennsylvania, hoping to avert another federal offensive in Virginia
and planning to fight if he could get the federal army into a vulnerable
position; he also hoped that the invasion might increase Northern war-weariness
and lead the North to recognize the independence of the Confederate States of
America. In pursuit of this plan, Lee crossed the Blue Ridge Mountains,
proceeded up the Shenandoah Valley, and, crossing Maryland, entered
Pennsylvania. Upon learning federal troops were north of the Potomac, Lee
decided to concentrate his whole army at Gettysburg.
On June 30, Confederate troops from General Hill's corps, on their
way to Gettysburg, noted federal troops that Meade had moved down to intercept
the Confederate army. The battle began on July 1 outside of Gettysburg with an
encounter between Hill's advance brigades and the federal cavalry division
commanded by Major General John Buford, supported by infantry under Major
General John Fulton Reynolds. Hill encountered stubborn resistance, and the
fighting was inconclusive until Ewell arrived from the north in the afternoon.
The Confederates pushed against General Oliver Howard's corps and forced the
federal troops to retire from their forward positions to Culp's Hill and
Cemetery Ridge, southeast of Gettysburg. The fighting had been heavy on both
sides, but the Union troops suffered more losses. More than 4000 men were taken
prisoner by the Confederates, and Federal General John Reynolds was killed in battle.
The federals did manage to capture Confederate General Archer, the first
Confederate officer to be taken prisoner after Lee assumed command of the
Confederate army. The corps led by Ewell did not move in to attack the Union
troops but waited for General Longstreet to bring in his corps to reinforce the
outnumbered Confederate troops.
On the following day, July 2, Meade formed his main forces in the
shape of a J (resembling a fishhook), extending westward from Culp's Hill and
southward along Cemetery Ridge to the hills of Little Round Top and Round Top.
The Confederates, on the other hand, were deployed in a long, thin, concave
line, with Longstreet and Ewell on the flanks and Hill in the center.
Lee, against the advice of Longstreet and despite the fact that he
had no cavalry, resolved to attack the federal positions. Longstreet was unable
to advance until late afternoon, thus allowing the federal troops to make
preparations for the expected assault. General Abner Doubleday of the federal
army strengthened his hold on Cemetery Hill. The federals held Cemetery Ridge
and Little Round Top, but Longstreet moved Confederate troops along Peach
Orchard, driving the federals from their positions there. Although Ewell won
part of Culp's Hill, he was unable to break the federal line there or on the
eastern part of Cemetery Ridge. On the night of July 2, Meade held a council of
war in which the decision was made not to retreat. On the third day of battle,
the federals were secure in their positions and the Confederates had lost their
offensive stance. General Lee decided to mount an attack despite opposition
from other Confederate generals. The offensive did not begin until after noon.
Groups from three Confederate divisions, including the division led by Major General
George E. Pickett, totaling fewer than 15,000 men, took part in a memorable
charge on Cemetery Ridge against a withering barrage of federal artillery and
musket fire. The attack is known as Pickett's Charge. Although the Confederate
troops breached Meade's first line of defense, the strain on the Confederates
proved too great, and they fell back, having lost over three-fourths of their
force.
With the repulse of Pickett's Charge, the Battle of Gettysburg was
virtually over. On the night of July 4, Lee began his retreat to Virginia,
expecting a counterattack from the federal army. Meade, however, did not
attack, due perhaps to heavy rains which hampered pursuit of the retreating
Confederates. During the three days of battle, the Union Army had about 23,000
casualties, and the Confederates had at least 25,000.