THE MARCH TO GETTYSBURG.
This attempt of the enemy to penetrate
his designs had not induced General Lee to interrupt
the movement of his infantry toward the Shenandoah
Valley. The Federal corps sent across the Rappahannock
at Fredericksburg, still remained facing General Hill;
and, two days after the Fleetwood fight. General
Hooker moved up the river with his main body, advancing
the Third Corps to a point near Beverley’s Ford.
But these movements were disregarded by Lee. On
the same day Ewell’s corps moved rapidly toward
Chester Gap, passed through that defile in the mountain,
pushed on by way of Front Royal, and reached Winchester
on the evening of the 13th, having in three days marched
seventy miles.
The position of the Southern army
now exposed it to very serious danger, and at first
sight seemed to indicate a deficiency of soldiership
in the general commanding it. In face of an enemy
whose force was at least equal to his own, Lee had extended his line until it stretched
over a distance of about one hundred miles. When
Ewell came in sight of Winchester, Hill was still
opposite Fredericksburg, and Longstreet half-way between
the two in Culpepper. Between the middle and rear
corps was interposed the Rapidan River, and between
the middle and advanced corps the Blue Ridge Mountains.
General Hooker’s army was on the north bank
of the Rappahannock, well in hand, and comparatively
massed, and the situation of Lee’s army seemed
excellent for the success of a sudden blow at it.
It seems that the propriety of attacking
the Southern army while thus in transitu, suggested
itself both to General Hooker and to President Lincoln,
but they differed as to the point and object of the
attack. In anticipation of Lee’s movement,
General Hooker had written to the President, probably
suggesting a counter-movement across the Rappahannock,
somewhere near Fredericksburg, to threaten Richmond,
and thus check Lee’s advance. This, however.
President Lincoln refused to sanction.
“In case you find Lee coming
to the north of the Rappahannock,” President
Lincoln wrote to General Hooker, “I would by
no means cross to the south of it. I would not
take any risk of being entangled upon the river, like
an ox jumped half over a fence, and liable to be torn
by dogs, front and rear, without a fair chance to gore
one way or kick the other”
Five days afterward the President
wrote: “I think Lee’s army, and not
Richmond, is your true objective point. If he
comes toward the Upper Potomac, fight him when opportunity
offers. If he stays where he is, fret him
and fret him.”
When intelligence now reached Washington
that the head of Lee’s column was approaching
the Upper Potomac, while the rear was south of the
Rappahannock, the President wrote to General Hooker:
“If the head of Lee’s army is at Martinsburg,
and the tail of it on the plank road between Fredericksburg
and Chancellorsville, the animal must be very slim
somewhere could you not break him?”
General Hooker did not seem to be
able to determine upon a decisive course of action,
in spite of the tempting opening presented to him by
Lee. It would seem that nothing could have been
plainer than the good policy of an attack upon Hill
at Fredericksburg, which would certainly have checked
Lee’s movement by recalling Longstreet from Culpepper,
and Ewell from the Valley. But this bold operation
did not appear to commend itself to the Federal authorities.
Instead of reenforcing the corps sent across at Fredericksburg
and attacking Hill, General Hooker withdrew the corps,
on the 13th, to the north bank of the river, got his
forces together, and began to fall back toward Manassas,
and even remained in ignorance, it seems, of all connected
with his adversary’s movements. Even as
late as the 17th of June, his chief-of-staff, General
Butterfield, wrote to one of his officers; “Try
and hunt up somebody from Pennsylvania who knows something,
and has a cool enough head to judge what is the actual
state of affairs there with regard to the enemy. My
impression is, that Lee’s movement on the Upper
Potomac is a cover for a cavalry-raid on the south
side of the river.... We cannot go boggling around
until we know what we are going after.”
Such was the first result of Lee’s
daring movement to transfer military operations to
the region north of the Potomac. A Northern historian
has discerned in his plan of campaign an amount of
boldness which “seemed to imply a great contempt
for his opponent.” This is perhaps a somewhat
exaggerated statement of the case. Without “boldness”
a commander is but half a soldier, and it may be declared
that a certain amount of that quality is absolutely
essential to successful military operations.
But the question is, Did Lee expose himself, by these
movements of his army, to probable disaster, if his
adversary equal to the occasion struck
at his flank? A failure of the campaign of invasion
would probably have resulted from such an attack either
upon Hill at Fredericksburg, or upon Longstreet in
Culpepper, inasmuch as Ewell’s column, in that
event, must have fallen back. But a defeat
of the combined forces of Hill and Longstreet, who
were within supporting distance of each other, was
not an event which General Hooker could count upon
with any degree of certainty. The two corps numbered
nearly fifty thousand men that is to say,
two-thirds of the Southern army; General Hooker’s
whole force was but about eighty thousand; and it
was not probable that the eighty thousand would be
able to rout the fifty thousand, when at Chancellorsville
less than this last number of Southerners had defeated
one hundred and twenty thousand.
There seems little reason to doubt
that General Lee took this view of the subject, and
relied on Hill and Longstreet to unite and repulse
any attack upon them, while Ewell’s great “raiding
column” drove forward into the heart of the
enemy’s territory. That the movement was
bold, there can certainly be no question; that it was
a reckless and hazardous operation, depending for
its success, in Lee’s eyes, solely on the supposed
inefficiency of General Hooker, does not appear.
These comments delay the narrative, but the subject
is fruitful in suggestion. It may be pardoned
a Southern writer if he lingers over this last great
offensive movement of the Southern army. The last,
it was also one of the greatest and most brilliant.
The war, therefore, was to enter upon its second stage,
in which the South was to simply maintain the defensive.
But Lee was terminating the first stage of the contest
by one of those great campaigns which project events
and personages in bold relief from the broad canvas,
and illumine the pages of history.
Events were now in rapid progress.
Ewell’s column the sharp head of
the Southern spear reached Winchester on
the 13th of June, and Rodes, who had been detached
at Front Royal to drive the enemy from Berryville,
reached the last-named village on the same day when
the force there retreated to Winchester. On the
next morning Early’s division attacked the forces
of Milroy at Winchester, stormed and captured their
“Star Fort,” on a hill near the place,
and so complete was the rout of the enemy that their
commander, General Milroy, had scarcely time to escape,
with a handful of his men, in the direction of the
Potomac.
For this disaster the unfortunate
officer was harshly criticised by General Hooker,
who wrote to his Government, “In my opinion,
Milroy’s men will fight better under a soldier.”
After thus clearing the country around
Winchester, Ewell advanced rapidly on Martinsburg,
where he took a number of prisoners and some artillery.
The captures in two days had been more than four thousand
prisoners and twenty-nine cannon, with four hundred
horses and a large amount of stores. Ewell continued
then to advance, and, entering Maryland, sent a portion
of his cavalry, under General Imboden, westward, to
destroy the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and another
body, under General Jenkins, in advance, toward Chambersburg.
Meanwhile, the rest of the army was moving to join
him. Hill, finding that the enemy had disappeared
from his front near Fredericksburg, hastened to march
from that vicinity, and was sent forward by Lee, on
the track of Ewell, passing in rear of Longstreet,
who had remained in Culpepper. The latter was
now directed by Lee to move along the eastern side
of the Blue Ridge, and, by occupying Ashby’s
and Snicker’s Gaps, protect the flank of the
column in the Valley from attack a work
in which Stuart’s cavalry, thrown out toward
the enemy, assisted.
Such was the posture of affairs when
General Hooker’s chief-of-staff became so much
puzzled, and described the Federal army as “boggling
around,” and not knowing “what they were
going after.” Lee’s whole movement,
it appears, was regarded as a feint to “cover
a cavalry-raid on the south side of the river” a
strange conclusion, it would seem, in reference to
a movement of such magnitude. It now became absolutely
necessary that Lee’s designs should be unmasked,
if possible; and to effect this object Stuart’s
cavalry force, covering the southern flank, east of
the Blue Ridge, must be driven back. This was
undertaken in a deliberate manner. Three corps
of cavalry, with a division of infantry and a full
supply of artillery, were sent forward from the vicinity
of Manassas, to drive Stuart in on all the roads leading
to the mountain. A fierce struggle followed, in
which Stuart, who knew the importance of his position,
fought the great force opposed to him from every hill
and knoll. But he was forced back steadily, in
spite of a determined resistance, and at Upperville
a hand-to-hand sabre-fight wound up the movement,
in which the Federal cavalry was checked, when Stuart
fell back toward Paris, crowned the mountain-side
with his cannon, and awaited a final attack. This
was not, however, made. Night approaching, the
Federal force fell back toward Manassas, and on the
next morning Stuart followed them, on the same road
over which he had so rapidly retreated, beyond Middleburg.
Lee paid little attention to these
operations on his flank east of the mountains, but
proceeded steadily, in personal command of his infantry,
in the direction of the Cumberland Valley. Ewell
was moving rapidly toward Harrisburg, with orders
to “take” that place “if he deemed
his force adequate," General Jenkins, commanding
cavalry, preceding the advance of his infantry.
He had thus pierced the enemy’s territory, and
it was necessary promptly to support him. Hill
and Longstreet were accordingly directed to pass the
Potomac at Shepherdstown and Williamsport. The
columns united at Hagerstown, and on the 27th of June
entered Chambersburg.
General Hooker had followed, crossing
the Potomac, opposite Leesburg, at about the moment
when Lee’s rear was passing from Maryland into
Pennsylvania. The direction of the Federal march
was toward Frederick, from which point General Hooker
could move in either one of two directions either
across the mountain toward Boonsboro, which would
throw him upon Lee’s communications, or northward
to Westminster, or Gettysburg, which would lead to
an open collision with the invading army in a pitched
battle.
At this juncture of affairs, just
as the Federal army was concentrating near Frederick,
General Hooker, at his own request, was relieved from
command. The occasion of this unexpected event
seems to have been a difference of opinion between
himself and General Halleck, the Federal general-in-chief,
on the question whether the fortifications at Harper’s
Ferry should or should not be abandoned. The
point at issue would appear to have been unimportant,
but ill feeling seems to have arisen: General
Hooker resented the action of the authorities, and
requested to be relieved; his request was complied
with, and his place was filled by Major-General George
G. Meade.
General Meade, an officer of excellent
soldiership, and enjoying the repute of modesty and
dignity, assumed command of the Federal army, and
proceeded rapidly in pursuit of Lee. The design
of moving directly across the South Mountain on Lee’s
communications, if ever entertained by him, was abandoned.
The outcry from Pennsylvania drew him perforce.
Ewell, with one division, had penetrated to Carlisle;
and Early, with another division, was at York; everywhere
the horses, cattle, and supplies of the country, had
been seized upon for the use of the troops; and General
Meade was loudly called upon to go to the assistance
of the people thus exposed to the terrible rebels.
His movements were rapid. Assuming command on
June 28th, he began to move on the 29th, and on the
30th was approaching the town of Gettysburg.