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View Full Version : Good Mprning...High Tide at Gettysburg



Okla-homey
7/1/2006, 07:25 AM
July 1, 1863 The Battle of Gettysburg begins

143 years ago, the largest military conflict in North American history begins this day when Federal and Confederate forces collide at a little transportation hub in southern Pennsylvania called Gettysburg. The epic battle lasted three days and resulted in a retreat to Virginia by Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia and the beginning of the end of Southern hopes for independence.

Two months prior to Gettysburg, Lee had dealt a stunning defeat to the Army of the Potomac at Chancellorsville whwn he defied military logic and split his outnumbered army and thrashed the Unionist force. He then made plans for a Northern invasion in order to relieve pressure on war-weary Virginia and to seize the initiative from the Yankees.

Lee's army, numbering about 80,000, began moving on June 3. The Army of the Potomac, commanded by Joseph Hooker and numbering just under 100,000, began moving shortly thereafter, staying between Lee and Washington, D.C. But on June 28, frustrated by the Lincoln administration's restrictions on his autonomy as commander, Hooker resigned and was replaced by George G. Meade.

Meade took command of the Army of the Potomac as Lee's army moved into Pennsylvania. On the morning of July 1, advance units of the forces came into contact with one another just outside of Gettysburg. The sound of battle attracted other units, and by noon the conflict was raging.

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On the first morning, Maj General John Buford commanded the First Division of of Meade's cavalry corps. The hard-riding Kentuckian put his troopers in position to block Lee's lead division commanded by Harry Heth and held on for two hours until the infantry under Reynolds arrived. At the base of Buford's monument on MacPherson's ridge at the spot he chose to hold are the rifled cannon used by his attached artillery which fired the first shots of the battle.
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During the first hours of battle, Union General John Reynolds was killed, and the Yankees found that they were outnumbered. The battle lines ran around the northwestern rim of Gettysburg. The Confederates applied pressure all along the Union front, and they slowly drove the Yankees through the town.

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Reynolds and Buford

By evening, the Federal troops rallied on high ground on the southeastern edge of Gettysburg. As more troops arrived, Meade's army formed a three-mile long, fishhook-shaped line running from Culp's Hill on the right flank, along Cemetery Hill and Cemetery Ridge, to the base of Little Round Top.

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The Battle of Gettysburg begins: On the morning of July 1, 1863, Confederate cavalry ran into Union horsemen on the Cashtown Road, northwest of town. Each side sent for help. The rebels got there first, and by afternoon had driven the Federals south of town, where they rallied into defensive positions on Culp's Hill and Cemetery Hill.

The Confederates held Gettysburg, and stretched along a six-mile arc around the Union position. For the next two days, Lee would batter each end of the Union position, and on July 3, he would launch one of the most famous assaults in military history against the Union center.

http://img279.imageshack.us/img279/5087/gpfanzgettysburgafloat9xn.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Wanna read more about Day One at Gettysburg? Best book in print out there IMHO.

http://img60.imageshack.us/img60/1593/insane7zo4ls.jpg

jk the sooner fan
7/1/2006, 07:34 AM
one of my absolute favorite places in the United States.....Gettysburg, PA

i recommend taking the bike tour of the battlefield if you're healthy enough....

definitely hallowed ground.....

BudSooner
7/1/2006, 08:12 AM
Mom and my sis went there the year before mom passed away, and said it was the most unforgettable place you could visit.
My uncle went to Manassas and Shiloh and said those were also worth taking a trip to.

Preservation Parcels
7/1/2006, 08:19 AM
Thanks, Homey. Well done!

Okla-homey
7/1/2006, 08:54 AM
Thanks, Homey. Well done!

Hey, I know you. How's it goen KB?:D

Folks, allow me to introduce Preservation Parcels. PP is a fellow historic preservation campaigner who lives in a distant state who, like moi, believes CW/WBTS battlefields are hallowed ground and need protection from development. She also puts her money where her mouth is on the issue. She's good people. Y'all be nice to her.;)

IB4OU2
7/1/2006, 09:04 AM
one of my absolute favorite places in the United States.....Gettysburg, PA

i recommend taking the bike tour of the battlefield if you're healthy enough....

definitely hallowed ground.....

The family went there 3 years ago and it was great. My knees were killing me so I did'nt re-enact Picketts charge but I did enjoy crawling around the rocks at Devils Den and Little Roundtop. Best battlefield visit evar. Btw, read Sherra's 'Killer Angels' before you go.....

Okla-homey
7/1/2006, 09:07 AM
The family went there 3 years ago and it was great. My knees were killing me so I did'nt re-enact Picketts charge but I did enjoy crawling around the rocks at Devils Den and Little Roundtop. Best battlefield visit evar. Btw, read Sherra's 'Killer Angels' before you go.....

FWIW, I believe The Killer Angels is probably the best historical novel ever written by an American. The US Defense Department does too. It was required reading for my generation of military officers.

jk the sooner fan
7/1/2006, 09:14 AM
FWIW, I believe The Killer Angels is probably the best historical novel ever written by an American. The US Defense Department does too. It was required reading for my generation of military officers.

i had to read it in WOCS and write an essay but i really think "Gods and Generals" by his son is even better.....

IB4OU2
7/1/2006, 09:15 AM
FWIW, I believe The Killer Angels is probably the best historical novel ever written by an American. The US Defense Department does too. It was required reading for my generation of military officers.

Absolutely! I'm greatfull his son took up his historical writing banner after his death, 'Gods and Generals' is a really good book too.

IB4OU2
7/1/2006, 09:17 AM
i had to read it in WOCS and write an essay but i really think "Gods and Generals" by his son is even better.....

Me too....sorry to duplicate your post. JINX! :D

OCUDad
7/1/2006, 10:56 AM
Another excellent and informative post, Homey. And good mprning to you, too. The day is just not complete if you haven't had at least one good mprn before breakfast. :P

Preservation Parcels, welcome. Any friend of Homey's...

IB4OU2
7/1/2006, 11:03 AM
Well, wer'e very lucky to have Homey post the Historical SO breakfast club posts. Someone taking the time to remind us of our past is a great benefit in this forum. I read everyone.......

Preservation Parcels
7/1/2006, 01:13 PM
Thank you for the kind welcome. Homey has worked hard to preserve some very precious places and pieces of our history. He's given of his valuable time, knowledge, resources, and sense of humor. His true patriotism is worthy of sincere appreciation, but you all already knew that :D

May I be the first to wish you all a very happy Independence Day. Homey, thank you for all you've personally done to help preserve our priceless past and future freedom.

Scott D
7/1/2006, 01:15 PM
I think Homey is a bastard myself ;)

Okla-homey
7/2/2006, 06:23 PM
Homey, thank you for all you've personally done to help preserve our priceless past and future freedom.

Nuthin to it PP, just good ol' Oklahoma values.

StoopTroup
7/2/2006, 06:28 PM
The South will rise again! ;)

SicEmBaylor
7/2/2006, 08:39 PM
My Great-Great Grandfather was a 17 year old 2nd. Lt. in the 15th Alabama that bravely charged up Little Round Top against the 20th Maine (as depicted in the movie Gettysburg). He was wounded but recovered and survived the war and died many many years later in Oklahoma.

I'd also like to point out that on the 3rd day of fighting a brave officer named Tazwell Patton the great-uncle of future general George S. Patton led his unit of Virginia troops all the way to the wall before being bayonated by yankee scum.

Here's to my great great granddaddy, his comrades, and glory be to the South, her people, and the lost cause!