1 / 28

IX. The Tide Turns

IX. The Tide Turns. 1863. A. Lee Invades the North Part II. CSA on the move Began June 3, 1863 With Jackson gone, Lee reorganizes the army I corps: James Longstreet (take Culpepper Courthouse II corps: Richard S. Ewell (drive off scattered Union forces

Télécharger la présentation

IX. The Tide Turns

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IX. The Tide Turns 1863

  2. A. Lee Invades the North Part II • CSA on the move • Began June 3, 1863 • With Jackson gone, Lee reorganizes the army • I corps: James Longstreet (take Culpepper Courthouse • II corps: Richard S. Ewell (drive off scatteredUnion forces • III corps: A.P. Hill (moves northward with Lee)

  3. Lee sets off northward on June 14, crosses the Potomac and heads east • J.E.B. Stuart’s mistake • Stuart was riding Lee’s right flank informing him ofUnion movements • Stuart believed he could ride aroundHooker and get a better idea ofUnion movements • Union movement pushedStuart farther east than anticipated and he was out of contact with Lee for 10 days

  4. B. Road to Gettysburg • Lee arrives inPennsylvaniawith his army spread out because he believes theUnion has not crossed the Potomac yet • June 28: Lee learns from Longstreet’s scout (Henry T. Harrison- actor) thatthe Union army is concentrated squarely onLee’s flank in Frederick, MD • Lee moves south to the nearest defensible position just outside Gettysburg • Hooker is replaced by George G. Meade

  5. C. Battle of Gettysburg- Day 1 • General Henry Heth, on a mission to find shoes, encountersGen. John Buford’s dismounted cavalry- he attacks though ordered not to • Buford’s cavalry holds for several hours as Gen. John Reynolds and 3 corps of infantry arrive to reinforce • Reynolds is shot and killed • Lee orders A.P. Hill’s corps to attack

  6. Gen. Ewell’s corps comes over the mountain and arrives on the field hittingthe Union right flank hard • Union retreat through the town and occupy the high ground beyond • Union occupy Culp’s and Cemetery Hill. Lee orders Ewell to take the hill if practicable. Ewell refuses to take the hill and day 1 ends • Longstreet and Lee argue whether or not to stay and fight- Lee chooses to stay

  7. D. Day 2 8) Lonstreet’s artillery opens the battle on day 2- Hood takes the Devil’s Den but is wounded and loses his arm 9) Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain commands the 20th Maine regiment on Little Round Top, the end of the Union line- he is ordered by Col. Vincent to hold to the last.

  8. Little Round Top • After resisting 4 charges by the15th Alabama,Chamberlain reforms his line at a right angle • It is after a 5th charge that the 20th Maine are out of ammunition- Chamberlain orders his men to fix bayonets • As the 15th Alabama approaches,Co. B of the 20th Maine arises from behind a stone wall and fires intotheir side • Chamberlain orders a bayonet charge swinging down the hill like a gate

  9. 10) Longstreet moves on the peach orchard and wheat field smashingGen. Dan Sickles line- Sickles loses his leg 11 & 12)Union re-patch the line as they are heavily attacked 13) Longstreet attacks the center wherethe Union and the 1st Minnesota repulsethem 14 & 15) Generals Ewell and Early attack Cemetery & Culp’s Hill unsuccessfully- Day 2 ends • Longstreet begs Lee to allow him to flankthe Union-Lee chooses to attack the center

  10. E. Day 3 16) Day 3 begins with an artillery barrage by Col. E. Porter Alexander 17) The barrage is accompanied by diversionary attacks on both flanks • Longstreet waits too long to begin his attack 18) General George Pickett leads a mile-long, uphill, open ground charge againstGen. Winfield Scott Hancock and the Union center 19) CSA retreat after suffering massive casualties during Pickett’s Charge

  11. George Meade 90,000 23,049 casualties Robert E. Lee 75,000 28,063 casualties F. Captain’s Report Union Victory

  12. G. Vicksburg • Grant lays siege to Vicksburgand surrounding areas for 8 months • Gen. Pemberton was caught off guard and never got back on track againstGrant • Grant trapsPemberton in Vicksburgand forces a surrender on July 4- Union now control the Mississippi River • Gettysburg falls on the 3rd, Vicksburg the 4th, and the tide has turned in favor of the North

  13. H. Chickamauga • Longstreet’s corps is transferred to the west to aid the Army of Tennessee in stopping the advancement ofRosecrans • Lee chose to rest his army and take up defensive positions in Virginia • Rosecrans moves on Chattanooga and opens the way for East Tennessee to be liberated by Ambrose Burnside in early September when he occupies Knoxville • Rosecrans pushesBraggout of Chattanooga- Bragg stops @ Chickamauga & awaits reinforcements

  14. I. Battle of Chickamauga • Gen. Polk’s attacks fail to break thoughGen. George H. Thomas’ line • Gen. Longstreet slams through a gap inthe Union center • Panic sweeps through the Union flank as commanding officers flee including Gen. Rosecrans • Union avoids complete destruction as Gen. Thomas makes a stand on Snodgrass Hill • Gen. Grainger stopsCSA chargesas the Union retreats to Chattanooga

  15. William Rosecrans 60,000 16,170 casualties Braxton Bragg & James Longstreet 67,000 18,454 causualties J. Captain’s Report CSA Victory

  16. K. Aftermath of Chickamauga • Bragg handled his army poorly @ Chickamauga • Longsteet had saved the CSA from destruction during the battle • Bragg’s subordinates asked Davis to remove him- Bragg removed all his subordinates • Longstreet wrote Davis pleading for Bragg’s removal- Bragg attempted to remove Longstreet • Davis had to resolve the problem in person • Rosecrans was replaced by Gen. Thomas

  17. L. Chattanooga • Union forces move into Chattanooga after their defeat at Chickamauga • They receive reinforcements • Gen. Joseph Hooker (2 corps) from VA • Gen. William T. Sherman from Memphis • The armies of the Tennessee and the Cumberland are now concentrated in Chattanooga • Ulysses S. Grant is made overall commander of the western armies

  18. M. Battle of Chattanooga • Following the defeat @ Chickamauga, the Union retreat to a fortified Chattanooga • Grant creates a supply line through Brown’s Ferry • Nov. 23: Grant attacks and seizes Orchard Knob • Nov 24: Grant attacks bothCSA flanksas Hooker attacks and captures Lookout Mt.

  19. 5 & 6) Sherman crosses the Tennessee River and aims for Tunnel Hill- he misses & entrenches on a nearby hill 7) Nov. 25: Sherman tries to take Tunnel Hill and fails 8) Grant orders Thomas to seize the foot of Missionary Ridge 9) Thomas’ men refuse to stop and they pushBraggoff of the Ridge asthe CSA retreat

  20. Ulysses S. Grant 60,000 5,824 casualties Braxton Bragg 46,000 6,667 casualties N. Captain’s Report Union Victory

  21. O. Occupation of Knoxville • Burnside was sent to take command of the Department of Ohio in March of 1863 • He was sent to occupy the city of Knoxville on September 2, 1863 to “liberate East Tennessee” of theCSA presence-Lincoln believed that by taking East Tennessee, he would have theCSA by the throat • Jefferson Davis had to make a trip to Chickamauga to settle the dispute between Bragg & Longstreet- Davis sends Longstreet to Knoxville

  22. Longstreet moved his men on November 2 toward Knoxville- due to the condition of the trains, he did not arrive in Sweetwater until November 13 • Burnside’s fortifications surrounded the city of Knoxville • Longstreet began his siege of Knoxville on Nov. 17 • Longstreet made his headquarters in Bleak House owned by Robert Armstrong(located today on Kingston Pike not far from Neyland Dr.)

  23. P. The Battle of Knoxville • Longstreet determined that the best point of attack was on Ft. Sanders • Longstreet believed this to be the weakest point ofBurnside’s defenses- the fort was deceiving • The fort was surrounded by a ditch 6-8 feet deep and appeared to be only 3-4 feet deep. Some planks had been placed across it and, from distantConfederate observation posts,troops were observed crossing easily -- but they were using the planks.

  24. The earthen walls were 13 feet high in most places, and had cotton bales piled on top to protect the riflemen and were wrapped in rawhide to prevent fire. • Water had been poured down the side of the earthen fort. It froze overnight and created ice on its sides and in the ditch. • For perhaps 30 to 80 yards in front of the northwest bastion that was selected for the assault, there were 18-inch tree stumps between which the engineers had stretched telegraph wire to trip and delaythe attackers.

  25. Longstreet ordered a short artillery barrage by Gen. E.P. Alexander, afterwards, 3 brigades charged the fort • The telegraph wires and the now apparent 12 ft. wide ditch slowed the CSA down under considerable musket fire • The CSA did enter the ditch, but without scaling ladders • The battle lasted 20 minutes and resulted in a devastating defeat for the CSA • Lonstreet retreated to Jefferson County for the winter- a record cold winter

  26. Gen. Ambrose Burnside 23,000 100 casualties Gen. James Longstreet 15,000 800 casualties P. Captain’s Report Union Victory

More Related