Charles Scott Venable (March 19, 1827 – August 11, 1900) was a - TopicsExpress



          

Charles Scott Venable (March 19, 1827 – August 11, 1900) was a mathematician, astronomer, and military officer. In mathematics, he is noted for authoring a series of publications as a University of Virginia professor. He was born in Virginia and graduated from Hampden-Sydney College at the age of 15. He was a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity while at Hampden-Sydney College. For several years following his graduation, he served as a mathematics tutor at the college. He received further education at the University of Virginia as well as in Berlin and Bonn, Germany. He became a professor in mathematics and astronomy in Virginia and South Carolina. Venable was present at the firing on Fort Sumter in April 1861, serving as a lieutenant in the South Carolina state militia. He then fought as a private in Company A, 2nd South Carolina Infantry. In the spring of 1862, Venable joined the staff of presidential military advisor General Robert E. Lee as an aide-de-camp with the rank of major. He continued serving on Lees staff when the general took command of the Army of Northern Virginia on June 1, 1862. He served on Lees staff from the Peninsula Campaign to Appomattox Court House and was promoted to lieutenant colonel. Following the war, Venable resumed his career as an educator. During a visit to Prussia, he was invited to the castle of Heros von Borcke, the former aide-de-camp to General J.E.B. Stuart. General Lee In The Wilderness Campaign By Charles S. Vernable, Lieutenant-Colonel, C. S. A., Of General Lees Staff DURING the winter of 1863-64 General Lees headquarters were near Orange Court House. They were marked by the same bare simplicity and absence of military form and display which always characterized them. Three or four tents of ordinary size, situated on the steep hillside, made the winter home of himself and his personal staff. It was without sentinels or guards. He used during the winter every exertion for filling up the thin ranks of his army and for obtaining the necessary supplies for his men. There were times in which the situation seemed to be critical in regard to the commissariat. The supplies of meat were brought mainly from the states south of Virginia, and on some days the Army of Northern Virginia had not more than twenty-four hours rations ahead. On one occasion the general received by mail an anonymous communication from a private soldier containing a very small slice of salt pork, carefully packed between two oak chips, and accompanied by a letter saying that this was the daily ration of meat, and that the writer having found it impossible to live on it had been, though he was a gentleman, reduced by the cravings of hunger to the necessity of stealing. The incident gave the commanding general great pain and anxiety, and led to some strong interviews and correspondence with the Commissary Department. During the winter General Lee neglected no interest of his soldiers. He consulted with their chaplains and attended their meetings, in which plans for the promotion of special religious services among the men were discussed and adopted. While he was accessible at all times, and rarely had even one orderly before his tent, General Lee had certain wishes which his aides-d they must conform to. They did not allow any friend of soldiers condemned by court-martial (when once the decree of the court had been confirmed by him) to reach his tent for personal appeal, asking reprieve or remission of sentence. He said that with the great responsibilities resting on him he could not bear the pain and distress of such applications, and to grant them when the judge advocate-general had attested the fairness and justice of the courts decision would be a serious injury to the proper discipline of the army. Written complaints of officers as to injustice done them in regard to promotion he would sometimes turn over to an aide-de-camp, with the old-fashioned phrase, Suage him, Colonel, suage him meaning thereby that a kind letter should be written in reply. But he disliked exceedingly that such disappointed men should be allowed to reach his tent and make complaints in person. On one occasion during the winter an officer came with a grievance and would not be satisfied without an interview with the commanding general. He went to the generals tent and remained some time. Immediately upon his departure General Lee came to the adjutants tent with flushed face and said , warmly, Why did you permit that man to come to my tent and make me show my temper ? The views which prevail with many as to the gentle temper of the great soldier, derived from observing him in domestic and social life, in fondling of children, or in kind expostulation with erring youths, are not altogether correct. No man could see the flush come over that grand forehead and the temple veins swell on occasions of great trial of patience and doubt that Lee had the high, strong temper of a Washington, and habitually under the same strong control. Cruelty he hated. In that same early spring of 1864 I saw him stop when in full gallop to the front ( on report of a demonstration of the enemy against his lines) to denounce scathingly and threaten with condign punishment a soldier who was brutally beating an artillery horse. The quiet camp-life at Orange had been broken in upon for a brief season in November by Meades Mine-Run campaign. In this General Lee, finding that Meade failed to attack the Confederate lines, made arrangements on the night of December 1st to bring on a general battle on the next morning by throwing two divisions against the Federal left, held by Warrens corps, which had been found by a close cavalry reconnaissance to present a fair occasion for successful attack. He had hoped to deal a severe blow to Mea very keenly his failure to carry out his designs. When he discovered that Meade had withdrawn, he exclaimed in the presence of his generals, I am too old to command this army ; we should never have permitted these people to get away. Some who were standing by felt that in his heart he was sighing for that great right arm which he threw around Hooker at Chancellorsville. Both armies returned quietly to winter quarters and rested until May 4th, when Lee marched out in the early morning to meet the Federal army which had moved under its new commander, at midnight on the 3d, to turn his right flank. He took with him Ewells corps (less two brigades which had been detached for duty elsewhere during the winter) and two divisions of Hills corps -with artillery and cavalry-leaving Long street with two divisions at Gordonsville (Picketts being absent below Richmond), Long streets third division and Andersons division of Hills corps, on the Rapidan heights, to follow him on the next day. On the morning of the 5th General Lee, though generally reticent at table on military affairs, spoke very cheerfully of the situation, having learned that Grant was crossing at Germanna Ford and moving into the Wilderness. He expressed his pleasure that the Federal general had not profited by General Hookers Wilderness experience, and that he seemed inclined to throw away to some extent the immense advantage which his great superiority in numbers in every arm of the service gave him. On the 5th Ewell marched on the old turnpike, and Hill on the Plank road, and the cavalry on a road still farther to the right into the Wilderness. Lee rode with Hill at the head of his column. He was at the front in the skirmish at Parkers Store and moved with the advance to the field on the edge of the forest which became the scene of the great conflict on the Plank road. Riding on in advance of the troops, the party, consisting of Generals Lee, Hill, and Stuart and their stamounted and sat under the shade of the tree,, when a party of the enemys skirmishers deployed from a grove of old-field pines on the left, thus revealing the close proximity of Grants forces, and the ease of concealing movements in the Wilderness. Hills troops were soon up and in line, and then began on the Plank road a fierce struggle, nearly simultaneously with that of Ewells forces on the old turnpike. Thus was inaugurated a contest of many battles, in which the almost daily deadly firing did not cease for eleven long months. Heths and Wilcoxs divisions, under Lees eye, maintained themselves well against the heavy assault of the Federal forces which greatly outnumbered them; Ewells corps did good work on the old turnpike in its contest with Warrens corps, and Rossers cavalry on the right had driven Wilson back. Lee slept on the field not far from his line of battle, sending orders to Long street to make a night march and reach the front by daybreak on the 6th. On that morning serious disaster seemed imminent. Longstreet did not arrive in time to reenforce Lees line of battle in the position it held at the close of the engagement of the preceding evening. Hancocks well-planned attack on our right forced the two Confederate divisions from their position, and it seemed at one moment that they would sweep the field. Lee gave orders to get his wagon trains ready for a movement in retreat, and sent an aide to quicken the march of Longstreets two divisions. These came soon, a little after sunrise, at double-quick, in parallel columns, down the Plank road. Lee was in the midst of Hills sullenly retreating troops, aiding in rallying them, and restoring confidence and order, when Longstreets men came gallantly in and reformed the line of battle under his eye. Lees presence at the front aroused his men to great enthusiasm. He was a superb figure as he sat on his spirited gray with the light of battle on his face. His presence was an inspiration. The retreating columns turned their face front once more, and the fresh divisions went forward under his eye with splendid spirit. It was on this occasion that the men of the Texas brigade (always favorites of the general), discovering that he was riding with them into the charge, shouted to him that they would not go on unless he went back. The battle line was restored early in the morning. Soon afterward, Andersons division, which had been left on the Rapidan heights, arrived on the ground; and a successful assault, which carried everything before it, was made on Grants left. The Federal troops were driven back, with heavy loss, to their intrenchments on the Brock road. Long streets wounding, and the necessary delay in the change of commanders, (1) caused loss of time in attacking them in this position. An attack made in the afternoon failed, after some partial successes, to gain possession of the Federal breastworks. The rumor which General Grant mentions in his Memoirs and , to which he seems to have given credence, that Lees men were in confusion after this attack and that his efforts failed to restore order, was without foundation in fact. On the same afternoon, of the 6th, a successful flank assault was made by Gordon, with three brigades of Ewells corps, the results of which were not so great as hoped for, because night put a stop to his further successful rolling up of Sedgwicks line. The Wilderness fighting closed with the night of the 6th of May. Lees grand tactics in these two days of battle had been a superb exhibition of military genius and skill in executing his plan of throwing his little army boldly against his opponent, where his great inferiority in numbers would place him at the least disadvantage ; where maneuvering of large bodies was most difficult, and where superiority in cavalry and artillery counted almost for nothing. (1)R. H. Anderson was taken from Hills corps to command Long streets, and Mahone assumed command of Andersons division.-editors.. The failure to push rapidly the successful movement in which Longstreet was wounded was a serious disappointment to General Lee. I believe his daring spirit conceived the signal defeat of Grants army, and the driving it back across the Rapidan, as a possibility within his immediate grasp. One thing remarkable in the position of the Confederate lines in these engagements is worthy of note, namely, the large gap between Ewells right and Longstreet and Hills left. I had occasion, on being sent with orders to General Ewell on the 6th, to ride across this lonesome interval of half a mile or more, and to meet or see no one, except two Federal soldiers, who had found it easier to desert to the front than to the rear. The quiet on the 7th told Lee that Grant would move on around his left. When Grant did move, the Confederate general, with that firm reliance upon the steadfast courage of his men in fighting against odds which had never failed him, and in the consequent ability of a small body of his troops to hold superior forces in check until he could come to their support, sent Anderson with Long streets two divisions to support Stuarts cavalry in holding Spotsylvania Court House until he could come up with the rest of his army. This mutual confidence between the general and his men was a striking feature of the campaign, and, indeed, a prime necessity for any possibility of success. General Grant sent troops to occupy Spotsylvania Court House, but retained Hancocks corps to guard against the contingency of another attack from Lee in the Wilderness. Lee had evidently won the respect of his foes when, with his smaller force, reduced by two days hard fighting, he could employ one part of his infantry to aid in checking the movement of the Army of the Potomac on Spotsylvania, Court House, and at the same time threaten its rear in the Wilderness. Meanwhile General Grant was sending to Washington for reenforcement. Lee sent an aide-de-camp with Anderson under orders to keep him constantly advised with the main body of his army, took up his position on the Spotsylvania lines in the afternoon of the 8th. And Grant again found himself in a position which required hard fighting and in which he could not use to great advantage his superiority in numbers and equipment. The Spotsylvania campaign of twelve days was marked by almost daily combats. It was General Lees habit in those days of physical and mental trial to retire about 10 or 11 at night, to rise at 3 A. M., breakfast by candle-light, and return to the front, spending the entire day on the lines. The 9th of May was spent by both armies mainly in strengthening their positions by throwing up intrenchments. The day was marked, however, by the death of General Sedgwick, who was killed by a Confederate sharp-shooter. He was much liked and respected by his old West Point comrades in the Confederate army, and his death was a real sorrow to them. Early on the morning of the 10th Hancocks corps made an effort to pass around Lees left wing and gain a position on his flank and rear. This was repulsed by Early, commanding Hills corps (Hill being ill). Almost simultaneously came fierce assaults on Lees left wing, which were repulsed with terrible slaughter. These were renewed again in the afternoon with the same result. The heaviest assault was made at 5 oclock by Hancock and Warren, and again repulsed; again reorganized and hurled at Lees lines only to meet with a still more bloody reception. In one of these attacks a small portion of the Confederate line was taken, but held for a short time only by the assailants. It was pitiful to see and hear the bravest of these brave men who had got up nearest to the Confederate lines as they lay the next day groaning with the pangs of thirst and pains of death, when to relieve them was impossible, on account of the active sharp-shooting of the Federal riflemen. One fair-haired New York youth lay thus twenty-four hours near the Confederate intrenchments before he was relieved from his sufferings by det to bring him in having been rendered unavailing by the sharp fire which his would-be rescuers met at the hands of his comrades, ignorant of their kind intentions. About the same hour at which these last assaults were made, there was a heavy attack by the Sixth Corps on Ewells front, near Lees headquarters for the day, about 200 yards in rear of Doless brigade, which captured and held a portion of the lines for a short time. This attack was repulsed and the line recaptured by Gordon, the men and officers, as in the Wilderness, again beseeching Lee to go to the rear, and shouting their promises to retake the line if he would only go back. The 11th of May was a comparatively quiet day, as there were no regular assaults on the Confederate lines. But on that day the gallant J. E. B. Stuart met his death in an engagement with Sheridan, whom he had followed up from Spotsylvania and boldly attacked with greatly inferior numbers near Richmond. Stuarts loss was greatly mourned by General Lee, (1) who prized him highly both as a skillful soldier of splendid courage and energy, and a hearty, joyous, loving friend. On the 12th, before dawn, came Hancocks famous assault on a weak salient in Ewells front-the sole appreciable success in attack of all the hard fighting by the Federal troops since they crossed the Rapidan. The threatening attitude of Hancocks attacking column, as indicated by the noise of the preparations going on in front of the salient during the night, had not been communicated to General Lee. The announcement of the disaster was the first news which came to him of this movement of the enemy. He galloped forward in the darkness of the morning and learned the extent of it from those engaged in rallying the remnants of Edward Johnsons division and in making arrangements to check Hancock. The occasion aroused all the combative energies of his soldier nature, and he rode forward with his columns toward the captured angle. His general with him, and his men cried him back shouting their promises to retake the lines. The advance of Hancocks troops, after his successful assault, was checked by the brigades of Hills corps, under Early, which held the lines on the right of the salient, and by Ewells troops on the left of it. A line of battle was formed making the base of the triangle of the salient, and the work on the retrenchment (which had been begun the day before as a new line to remedy this weak point in the lines) was pushed rapidly forward. During the day General Lee sent three brigades and a number of batteries of artillery to reenforce Rodezs division , on which fell the main task of holding the enemy in check and recovering, if practicable, the salient and the eighteen pieces of Confederate artillery which lay silent between the opposing lines (having arrived too late in the morning for effective use against Hancocks assault). In that narrow space of the salient captured before dawn raged the fiercest battle of the war. Lees position during the day was near Earlys lines, where he observed from time to time, the movements of the Federal troops in aid of Hancocks attack, and counter-movements of Earlys troops. He was with the artillery when it broke Burnsides assault. Lee was present dictating notes and orders in the midst of his guns. At one time he rode at the head of Harriss Mississippi brigade, which by his orders I was guiding down in column to the assistance of Rodez. The men marched steadily on until they noticed that Lee at their head was riding across a space swept by the artillery fire of the enemy. Then were renewed the same protesting shouts of Go back, General Lee, and the same promises to do their duty. The firing in the battle of the salient did not cease until far into the night. Hancock had been compelled to retire behind the lines which he had captured, holding them as breastworks for the protection of his troops. The Confederate front at the close covered four of the eighteen pieces of artillery entrenchment in rear of our battle-line (which rendered the salient a useless capture) had been completed. The wearied and worn Confederate battalions were withdrawn to this line late at night, but the four recovered guns, after being dragged off, were left hopelessly stuck in a swamp outside of the new lines, and became Hancocks trophies after all. General Grant did not leave Hancock unaided in this fight, having sent the Sixth and Fifth corps to his support. He expected much from Burnside also, but Earlys counter-movements in part prevented the realization of these hopes. I have gone into some detail in this brief sketch of the battle of the salient, because, as perhaps the fiercest struggle of the war, it is illustrative of the valor of the troops on both sides. On the 18th an attack was made on Earlys left and easily repulsed, though some of the assailants reached the breastworks. On the 19th Ewell was sent to the north side of the NY to threaten Grants communications. He met some Federal reenforcements, and, being without artillery (finding the ground impracticable for it), he regained his position on the south side of that stream with some loss. Hamptons cavalry brigade and battery of horse artillery proved of great assistance in his withdrawal from his hazardous position. The battles of Spotsylvania Court House closed with the 19th of May. It gives a clearer idea of the nature of this tremendous contest to group by days and count its various combats from the beginning of the campaign : On May 5th three on May 6th, four ; on May 8th, two ; on May 10th, five ; on May 12th, repeated assaults during twenty hours in salient and two combats on another part of the line ; May 18th, one ; May 19th, one. It is no wonder that on these fields the Confederate ordnance officers gathered more than 120,000 pounds of lead, which was recast in bullets and did work again before the campaign of 1864 was closed. (1) The news of Stuarts fall reached General Lee on the 12th.- C. S. V. Lee, discovering that Grant had set out on the 20th of May on his flanking movement southward, immediately marched so as to throw his army between the Federal forces and Richmond. He crossed the North Anna on the 21st. General Grant arrived on the 23rd. Lee would gladly have compelled battle in his position there. He was anxious now to strike a telling blow, as he was convinced that General Grants men were dispirited by the bloody repulses of their repeated attacks on our lines. Lee had drawn Pickett and Breckinridge to him. But in the midst of the operations on the North Anna he succumbed to sickness, against which he had struggled for some days. As he lay in his tent he would say, in his impatience, `~ We must strike them! Wethem pass us again ! We must strike them ! He had reports brought to him constantly from the field. But Lee ill in his tent was not Lee at the front. He was much disappointed in not securing larger results from the attack which prevented the junction of Hancocks and Warrens columns after they had crossed the North Anna. On May 26th Grant withdrew his army from its rather critical position on the south side of the North Anna, and moved again to the east, down the Pamunkey, which he crossed on the 28th, to find Lee confronting him on the Totopotomoy. Grant had received reenforcements from Washington, and had drawn Smiths corps from Butler in Bermuda Hundred. This corps reached him at Cold Harbor on June 1st. On the 30th the Confederate forces were in line of battle, with the left at Atlees Station confronting the Federal army. General Lee was still sick, and occupied a house at night for the first time during the campaign. As one of his trusted lieutenants has well said : In fact nothing but his own determined will kept him in the field; and it was then rendered more evident than ever that he was the head and front, the very life and soul of his army. Grant declined general battle and drew eastward; and after several lesser combats, with no serious results, the two armies confronted one another on the 3d of June at Cold Harbor. In these days Lee had drawn to himself Hokes division from Beauregard, and had been reenforced by Finegans Florida brigade and Keitts South Carolina regiment. The days from May 30th to June 2d were anxious ones for General Lee. For while General Grant had easy and safe communication with Petersburg and Bermuda Hundred, and commanded all the Federal troops north and south of Richmond, he commanded only the Army of Northern Virginia and was compelled to communicate his suggestions to General Beauregard through General Bragg and the War Department at Richmond. This marred greatly the unity, secrecy, and celerity of action so absolutely essential to success. That he considered this separation of commands, and the consequent circuitous mode of communication with its uncertain results, a very grave matter is plain from the telegrams which he sent at this time. General Beauregard had telegraphed from Chester (half-way between Richmond and Petersburg), on May 30th, 5 : 15 P. M., as follows : War Department must determine when and what troops to order from here. I send to General Bragg all information I obtain relative to movement of enemys troops in front. This called forth the following telegrams: (1) ATLEES, 71/2 P. M., 30th May, 1864. GENERAL G. T. Beauregard, Hancocks House : If you cannot determine what troops you can spare, the Department cannot. The result of your delay will be disaster. Butlers troops will be with Grant tomorrow. R. E. LEE. ATLEEs, 7 P. M., 30th May, 1864. HIS EXCELLENCY JEFFERSON DAVIS, RICHMOND : General Beauregard says the Department must determine What troops to send from him. He gives it all necessary information. The result of this delay will be disaster. Butlers troops (Smiths Corps) will be with Grant to-morrow. Hokes division at least should be with me by light to-morrow. R. E. LEE. INDORSEMENT. OPERATOR : Read last sentence by light to-morrow.C. S. V., A. A. G. (1) The first dispatch is from the original in possession of General T.F.. Rodenbough. The dispatch to Jefferson Davis is from the original in possession of the Massachusetts Commandery of the Loyal Legion.-editors. The battle of the 3d of June was a general assault by Grant along a front nearly six miles in length, and a complete and bloody repulse at all points, except at one weak salient on Breckinridges line, which the brave assailants occupied for a short time only to be beaten back in a bloody hand-to-hand conflict on the works. The Federal losses were naturally, under the circumstances, very large, and those of the Confederates very smallg lay in front of the Confederate lines in triangles, of which the apexes were the bravest men who came nearest to the breastworks under the withering, deadly fire. The battle lasted little more than one brief hour, beginning between 5 and 6 A. M. The Federal troops spent the remainder of the day in strengthening their own lines in which they rested quietly. Lees troops were in high spirits. General Early, on the 6th and 7th of June, made two efforts to attack Grants forces on his right flank and rear, but found him thoroughly protected with intrenchments. On the 12th General Hampton met Sheridan at Trevilian and turned him back from his march to the James River and Lynchburg. General Grant lay in his lines until the night of June 12th. On that night he moved rapidly across the peninsula. The overland campaign north of the James was at an end. Except in the temporary driving back of Lees right on the morning of May 6th before the arrival of Longstreets divisions, the brief occupation of Rodezs front on May 10th, Hancocks morning assault on May 12th, and a few minor events, the campaign had been one series of severe and bloody repulses of Federal attacks. The campaign on the Confederate side was an illustration of Lees genius, skill, and boldness. and as well of the steadiness, courage, and constancy of his greatly outnumbered forces, and of their sublime faith in their great commander. After the battle of Cold Harbor, Lee felt strong enough to send Breckinridge toward the valley to meet Hunters expedition, and on the 13th to detach Early with the Second Corps, now numbering some eight thousand muskets and twenty-four pieces of artillery, to join Breckinridge; he also restored Hokes division to Beauregard. When Grant set out for the James, Lee threw a corps of observation between him and Richmond. Grant moved his troops rapidly in order to capture Petersburg by a coup de main. Smiths corps was in front of the advanced lines of Petersburg on the morning of the 15th. The first brigade of Hokes division reached Beauregard on the evening of the 15th. On the night of the 15th Lee tented on the south side of the James, near Drewrys Bluff. On the 16th and 17th, his troops coming up, he superintended personally the recapture of Beauregards Bermuda Hundred line., which he found to be held very feebly by the forces of General Butler, who had taken possession of them on the withdrawal of Bushrod Johnsons division by Beauregard to Petersburg on the 16th. On the 17th a very pretty thing occurred, in these lines, of which I was an eye-witness, and which evinced the high spirit of Lees men, especially of a division which had been with him throughout the campaign, beginning at the Wilderness, namely, Fields division of Longstreets corps. After the left of Beauregards evacuated line had been taken up, there remained a portion the approach to which was more formidable. The order had been issued to General Anderson commanding the corps to retake this portion of the lines by a joint assault of Picketts and Fields divisions. Soon afterward the engineers, upon a careful reconnaissance, decided that a good line could be occupied without the loss of life which might result from this recapture. The order to attack was therefore withdrawn by General Lee. This rescinding order reached Field but did not reach Pickett. Picketts division began its assault under the first order. The men of Fields division, hearing the firing and seeing Picketts men engaged, leaped from their trenches,-first the men, then the officers and flagbearers,-rushed forward and were soon in the formidable trenches, which were found to be held by a very small force. On the 15th, 16th, and 17th battle raged along the lines of intrenchments and forts east of Petersburg, between Grants forces and Beauregards troops, who made a splendid defense against enormous odds. About dark on the 17th grave disaster to the Confederates seemed imminent, when Gracies brigade of Alabamians, justhaffins Bluff on the north side of the James, gallantly leaped over the works and drove the assailants back, capturing a thousand or more prisoners. Hoke, too, on his part of the lines, had easily repulsed Smiths assaults. This battle raged until near midnight. Meantime Beauregards engineers were preparing an interior line, to which his wearied troops fell back during the night. A renewal of the attack on the lines held by the Confederate troops on the night of the 17th had been ordered by Grant along his whole front for an early hour on the 18th. But the withdrawal of the Confederates to interior lines necessarily caused delay, and, when the attack was made at noon, Lee and two of his divisions, Kershaws and Fields had reached the Petersburg lines. Tho attack made no impression on the lines, which were held until the evacuation on April 2d, 1865. To some military critics General Lee seemed not to have taken in the full force of Beauregards urgent telegrams in those critical days of June. But it must be remembered how easy it was for General Grant to make a forced march on Richmond from the north side of the James, accompanied by a strong feint on the Petersburg lines. Then, too, any strategist will see that Petersburg, cut off from Richmond by an enemy holding the railroad between the two cities (or holding an intrenched line so near it as to make its use hazardous), would not have been a very desirable possession. The fact is, that the defense of Richmond against an enemy so superior in numbers to the defending army, and in possession of the James River to City Point as a great water-way to its base of supplies, was surrounded with immense difficulties. And, in fact, in sending back Hokes division to Beauregard, and in approving that generals withdrawing of Bushrod Johnsons division from the Bermuda Hundred line to Petersburg, Lee thereby sent him more reenforcements by far than he sent to Rodez on the 12th of May at Spotsylvania, when that general was holding the base of the salient and Wright and Warren. Besides this, Lee had already detached Breckinridges division and Earlys corps to meet Hunter at Lynchburg. And, after all, the result showed that Lees reliance on his men to hold in check attacking forces greatly superior in numbers did not fail him in this instance; that he was bold to audacity was a characteristic of his military genius. The campaign of 1864 now became the siege of Petersburg. On the night of June 18th Hunter retreated rapidly from before Lynchburg toward western Virginia, and Early, after a brief pursuit, marched into Maryland, and on July 11th his advance was before the outer defenses of Washington. Source: Battles and Leaders of the Civil War
Posted on: Mon, 05 May 2014 13:25:06 +0000

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