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Northern Virginia campaign

Northern Virginia campaign
Part of the American Civil War

John Pope and Robert E. Lee, commanding generals of the northern Virginia campaign
DateJuly 19 – September 1, 1862
Location
Northern Virginia
Result Confederate victory
Belligerents
 United States of America  Confederate States of America
Commanders and leaders
John Pope Robert E. Lee
Units involved
Army of Northern Virginia
Strength
75,000[1] 48,500[1]
Casualties and losses
16,843
(2,061 killed;
9,897 wounded;
4,885 missing/captured)[2][3]
9,197
(1,481 killed;
7,627 wounded;
89 missing/captured)[1]
Virginia (1862)
Northeastern Virginia (1862)

The Northern Virginia Campaign, also known as the Second Bull Run Campaign or Second Manassas Campaign, was a series of battles fought in Virginia during August and September 1862 in the Eastern Theater of the American Civil War. Confederate General Robert E. Lee followed up his successes of the Seven Days Battles in the Peninsula campaign by moving north toward Washington, D.C., and defeating Maj. Gen. John Pope and his Army of Virginia.

Concerned that Pope's army would combine forces with Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan's Army of the Potomac and overwhelm him, Lee sent Maj. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson north to intercept Pope's advance toward Gordonsville. The two forces initially clashed at Cedar Mountain on August 9, a Confederate victory. Lee determined that McClellan's army on the Virginia Peninsula was no longer a threat to Richmond and sent most of the rest of his army, Maj. Gen. James Longstreet's command, following Jackson. Jackson conducted a wide-ranging maneuver around Pope's right flank, seizing the large supply depot in Pope's rear, at Manassas Junction, placing his force between Pope and Washington, D.C. Moving to a very defensible position near the battleground of the 1861 First Battle of Bull Run (First Manassas), Jackson successfully repulsed Union assaults on August 29 as Lee and Longstreet's command arrived on the battlefield. On August 30, Pope attacked again, but was surprised to be caught between attacks by Longstreet and Jackson, and was forced to withdraw with heavy losses. The campaign concluded with another flanking maneuver by Jackson, which Pope engaged at the Battle of Chantilly on September 1.

Lee's maneuvering of the Army of Northern Virginia against Pope is considered a military masterpiece. Historian John J. Hennessy wrote that "Lee may have fought cleverer battles, but this was his greatest campaign."[4]

Background edit

I have come to you from the West, where we have always seen the backs of our enemies, from an army whose business it has been to seek the adversary, and to beat him to when he was found; whose policy has been to attack and not defense.... Let us look before us, and not behind. Success and glory are in the advance; disaster and shame lurk in the rear.

— John Pope, order to the "Officers and Soldiers of the Army of Virginia", July 14[5]

Military situation edit

After the collapse of McClellan's Peninsula campaign in the Seven Days Battles of June, President Abraham Lincoln appointed John Pope to command the newly formed Army of Virginia. Pope had achieved some success in the Western Theater, and Lincoln sought a more aggressive general than McClellan. Pope did not endear himself to his subordinate commanders—all three selected as corps commanders technically outranked him—or to his junior officers, by his boastful orders that implied Eastern soldiers were inferior to their Western counterparts. Some of his enlisted men were encouraged by Pope's aggressive tone.[6]

The Union Army of Virginia was constituted on June 26, from existing departments operating around Virginia, most of which had recently been outmaneuvered in Jackson's Valley campaign: Maj. Gen. John C. Frémont's Mountain Department, Maj. Gen Irvin McDowell's Department of the Rappahannock, Maj. Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks's Department of the Shenandoah, Brig. Gen. Samuel D. Sturgis's brigade from the Military District of Washington, and Brig. Gen Jacob D. Cox's division from western Virginia. The new army was divided into three corps of 51,000 men, under Maj. Gen. Franz Sigel (I Corps), replacing Frémont, who refused to serve under Pope (his junior in rank) and resigned his command; Banks (II Corps); and McDowell (III Corps). Sturgis's Washington troops constituted the Army reserve. Cavalry brigades under Col. John Beardsley and Brig. Gens. John P. Hatch and George D. Bayard were attached directly to the three infantry corps, a lack of centralized control that had negative effects in the campaign. Parts of three corps (III, V, and VI) of McClellan's Army of the Potomac and Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside's IX Corps (commanded by Maj. Gen. Jesse L. Reno), eventually joined Pope for combat operations, raising his strength to 77,000.[7]

On the Confederate side, General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia was organized into two "wings" or "commands" (the designation of these units as "corps" would not be authorized under Confederate law until November 1862) of about 55,000 men. The "right wing" was commanded by Maj. Gen. James Longstreet, the left by Maj. Gen. Stonewall Jackson. The Cavalry Division under Maj. Gen. J.E.B. Stuart was attached to Jackson's wing. The Confederate organization was considerably simpler than the one Lee inherited for the Seven Days Battles; in that campaign there had been eleven separate divisions, which led to breakdowns in communications and the inability of the army to execute Lee's battle plans properly. William H.C. Whiting , Theophilus Holmes, Benjamin Huger, and John B. Magruder were all reassigned elsewhere. The command structure was reorganized as follows: Jackson's wing comprised his old Valley Army; the Stonewall Division (now commanded by Brig. Gen. Charles S. Winder) and Maj. Gen. Richard Ewell's division, plus the newly added command of Maj. Gen. A.P. Hill. Longstreet had seven divisions. His former command was divided into two parts led by Brig. Gens. Cadmus Wilcox and James L. Kemper. Maj. Gen. Richard H. Anderson got Huger's division, and Brig. Gen. John B. Hood was leading Whiting's Division due to William H.C. Whiting being on sick leave. Brig. Gens. David R. Jones and Lafayette McLaws continued in command of their divisions, both of which had been part of Magruder's Army of the Peninsula. Maj. Gen. D.H. Hill's command was also placed under Longstreet. Also joining was Brig. Gen. .Nathan G. "Shanks" Evans's independent South Carolina brigade. McLaws and Hill were left in Richmond under the command of Maj. Gen. Gustavus W. Smith, and so Longstreet would take only five divisions north.[8]

Plans edit

Pope's mission was to fulfill a few objectives: protect Washington and the Shenandoah Valley, and draw Confederate forces away from McClellan by moving in the direction of Gordonsville.[9] Pope started on the latter by dispatching cavalry to break the Virginia Central Railroad connecting Gordonsville, Charlottesville, and Lynchburg. The cavalry under Hatch got off to a slow start and found that Stonewall Jackson had already occupied Gordonsville on July 19 with over 14,000 men. (After a subsequent second failure to cut the railroad on July 22, Pope removed Hatch from his cavalry command and reassigned him to command an infantry brigade in Brig. Gen. Rufus King's division of the III Corps.)[10]

Pope had an additional, broader objective, encouraged by Abraham Lincoln. For the first time, the Union intended to pressure the civilian population of the Confederacy by bringing some of the hardships of war directly to them. Pope issued three general orders on the subject to his army. General Order No. 5 directed the army to "subsist upon the country," reimbursing farmers with vouchers that were payable after the war only to "loyal citizens of the United States." To some soldiers, this became an informal license to pillage and steal. General Orders 7 and 11 dealt with persistent problems of Confederate guerrillas operating in the Union rear. Pope ordered that any house from which gunfire was aimed at Union troops be burned and the occupants treated as prisoners of war. Union officers were directed to "arrest all disloyal male citizens within their lines or within their reach." These orders were substantially different from the war philosophy of Pope's colleague McClellan, which undoubtedly caused some of the animosity between the two men during the campaign. Confederate authorities were outraged and Robert E. Lee labeled Pope a "miscreant" and added that he "ought to be suppressed."[11]

Based on his experiences in the Seven Days, Lee concluded that McClellan would not attack, and he could thus move most of his army away from Richmond. This allowed him to relocate Jackson to Gordonsville to block Pope and protect the Virginia Central. Lee had larger plans in mind. Since the Union Army was split between McClellan and Pope and they were widely separated, Lee saw an opportunity to destroy Pope before returning his attention to McClellan.[12]

Initial movements edit

On July 26, Lee met with cavalry commander and partisan fighter Capt. John S. Mosby, who had just been exchanged as a prisoner of war. Coming through the Hampton Roads area in Union custody, Mosby observed significant naval transport activity and deduced that Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside's troops, who had fought in North Carolina, were being shipped to reinforce Pope. Wanting to take immediate action before those troops were in position, the next day Lee committed Maj. Gen. A.P. Hill to join Jackson with 12,000 men, while distracting McClellan with artillery bombardments and diversionary movements. McClellan advanced a force from Harrison's Landing to Malvern Hill, and Lee moved south to meet the threat, but McClellan eventually withdrew his advance. Still convinced that he was heavily outnumbered, he sent messages to Washington that he would need at least 50,000 more men before he could attempt another attack on Richmond. On August 3, General-in-Chief Henry W. Halleck directed McClellan to begin his final withdrawal from the Peninsula and to return to Northern Virginia to support Pope. McClellan protested and did not begin his redeployment until August 14. The Army of the Potomac returned to Washington except for a division of the IV Corps, which was left on the Virginia Peninsula.[13]

Opposing forces edit

Union edit

Confederate edit

Battles and movements edit

 
Northern Virginia campaign, August 7–September 1, 1862
  Confederate
  Union
 
Second Bull Run campaign, August 17–30, 1862 (Additional map)

On July 29, Pope moved his headquarters from Washington to the field. He was informed by Halleck of the plan to link up with McClellan's army, but rather than waiting for this to occur, he moved some of his forces to a position near Cedar Mountain, from whence he could launch cavalry raids on Gordonsville. Jackson advanced to Culpeper Court House on August 7, hoping to attack one of Pope's corps before the rest of the army could be concentrated.[14]

Cedar Mountain edit

On August 9, Nathaniel Banks's corps attacked Jackson at Cedar Mountain, gaining an early advantage. Confederate Brig. Gen. Charles S. Winder was killed and his division mauled. A Confederate counterattack led by Maj. Gen. A.P. Hill drove Banks back across Cedar Creek. Jackson's advance was stopped, however, by the Union division of Brig. Gen. James B. Ricketts. By now Jackson had learned that Pope's corps were all together, foiling his plan of defeating each in separate actions. He remained in position until August 12, then withdrew to Gordonsville.[15]

Lee advances to the Rappahannock edit

On August 13, Lee sent Longstreet to reinforce Jackson, and on the following day Lee sent all of his remaining forces (except for two brigades) after he was certain that McClellan was leaving the Peninsula. Lee arrived at Gordonsville to take command on August 15. He massed the Army of Northern Virginia south of Clark's Mountain and planned a turning movement to defeat Pope before McClellan's army could arrive to reinforce it. His plan was to send his cavalry under Stuart, followed by his entire army, north to the Rapidan River on August 18, screened from view by Clark's Mountain. Stuart would cross and destroy the railroad bridge at Somerville Ford and then move around Pope's left flank into the Federal rear, destroying supplies and blocking their possible avenues of retreat. Logistical difficulties and cavalry movement delays caused the plan to be abandoned.[16]

On August 20–21, Pope withdrew to the line of the Rappahannock River. He was aware of Lee's plan because a Union cavalry raid captured a copy of the written order. Stuart was almost captured during this raid; his cloak and plumed hat did not escape, however, and Stuart retaliated on August 22 with a raid on Pope's headquarters at Catlett's Station, capturing the Union commander's dress coat. Stuart's raid demonstrated that the Union right flank was vulnerable to a turning movement, although river flooding brought on by heavy rains would make this difficult. It also revealed the plans for reinforcing Pope's army, which would eventually bring it to the strength of 130,000 men, more than twice the size of the Army of Northern Virginia.[17]

Skirmishing on the Rappahannock edit

 
Recovering a locomotive wrecked in a Confederate raid

The two armies fought a series of minor actions August 22–25 along the Rappahannock River, including Waterloo Bridge, Lee Springs, Freeman's Ford, and Sulphur Springs, resulting in a few hundred casualties.[18] Together, these skirmishes kept the attention of both armies along the river. Heavy rains had swollen the river and Lee was unable to force a crossing. Pope considered an attack across the river to strike Lee's right flank, but he was also stymied by the high water. By this time, reinforcements from the Army of the Potomac were arriving from the Peninsula: Maj. Gen. Samuel P. Heintzelman's III Corps, Maj. Gen. Fitz-John Porter's V Corps, and elements of the VI Corps under Brig. Gen. George W. Taylor. Lee's new plan in the face of all these additional forces outnumbering him was to send Jackson and Stuart with half of the army on a flanking march to cut Pope's line of communication, the Orange & Alexandria Railroad. The Hotchkiss journal shows that Jackson, most likely, originally conceived the movement. In the journal entries for March 4 and 6 1863, General Stuart tells Hotchkiss that "Jackson was entitled to all the credit" for the movement and that Lee thought the proposed movement "very hazardous" and "reluctantly consented" to the movement.[19][20] Pope would be forced to retreat and could be defeated while moving and vulnerable. Jackson departed on August 25 and reached Salem (present-day Marshall) that night.[21]

Raiding Manassas Station edit

 
Union soldiers at the Orange & Alexandria Railroad

On the evening of August 26, after passing around Pope's right flank via Thoroughfare Gap, Jackson's wing of the army struck the Orange & Alexandria Railroad at Bristoe Station and before daybreak August 27 marched to capture and destroy the massive Union supply depot at Manassas Junction. This surprise movement forced Pope into an abrupt retreat from his defensive line along the Rappahannock. On August 27, Jackson routed the New Jersey Brigade of the VI Corps near Bull Run Bridge, mortally wounding its commander George W. Taylor. Maj. Gen. Richard S. Ewell's Confederate division fought a brisk rearguard action against Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker's division at Kettle Run, resulting in about 600 casualties. Ewell held back Union forces until dark. During the night of August 27 – August 28, Jackson marched his divisions north to the First Bull Run (Manassas) battlefield, where he took position behind an unfinished railroad grade.[22] Pope did not know where Jackson had gone.

Thoroughfare Gap edit

After skirmishing near Chapman's Mill in Thoroughfare Gap, Ricketts's Union division was flanked on August 28 by a Confederate column passing through Hopewell Gap several miles to the north and by troops securing the high ground at Thoroughfare Gap. Ricketts retired, and Longstreet's wing of the army marched through the gap to join Jackson. This seemingly inconsequential action virtually ensured Pope's defeat during the battles of August 29–30 because it allowed the two wings of Lee's army to unite on the Manassas battlefield. Ricketts withdrew via Gainesville to Manassas Junction.[23]

Second Bull Run (Manassas) edit

 
Second Battle of Bull Run: actions on August 29 and 30

The most significant battle of the campaign, Second Bull Run (Second Manassas), was fought August 28–30.[24] In order to draw Pope's army into battle, Jackson ordered an attack on a Federal column that was passing across his front on the Warrenton Turnpike on August 28, alerting Pope to his position. The fighting at Brawner's Farm lasted several hours and resulted in a stalemate.

Pope became convinced that he had trapped Jackson and concentrated the bulk of his army against him. On August 29, Pope launched a series of assaults against Jackson's position along the unfinished railroad grade. The attacks were repulsed with heavy casualties on both sides. At noon, Longstreet arrived on the field from Thoroughfare Gap and took position on Jackson's right flank.

On August 30, Pope renewed his attacks, seemingly unaware that Longstreet was on the field. When massed Confederate artillery devastated a Union assault by Porter's corps, Longstreet's wing of 28,000 men counterattacked in the largest simultaneous mass assault of the war. The Union left flank was crushed and the army driven back to Bull Run. Only an effective Union rearguard action prevented a replay of the First Bull Run disaster. Pope's retreat to Centreville was precipitous, nonetheless. The next day, Lee ordered his army to pursue the retreating Union army.[25]

Chantilly edit

Making a wide flanking march, Jackson hoped to cut off the Union retreat from Bull Run. On September 1, beyond Chantilly Plantation on the Little River Turnpike near Ox Hill, Jackson sent his divisions against two Union divisions under Maj. Gens. Philip Kearny and Isaac Stevens. Confederate attacks were stopped by fierce fighting during a severe thunderstorm. Union generals Stevens and Kearny were both killed. Recognizing that his army was still in danger at Fairfax Courthouse, Pope ordered the retreat to continue to Washington.[26]

Aftermath edit

The northern Virginia campaign had been expensive for both sides, although Lee's smaller army spent its resources more carefully. Union casualties were 16,054 (1,724 killed, 8,372 wounded, 5,958 missing/captured) out of about 75,000 engaged, roughly comparable to the losses two months earlier in the Seven Days Battles; Confederate losses were 9,197 (1,481 killed, 7,627 wounded, 89 missing/captured) of 48,500.[1]

Edward Porter Alexander wrote:

The [Army of Northern Virginia] acquired that magnificent morale which made them equal to twice their numbers, & which they never lost even to the surrender at Appomattox. And [Lee's] confidence in them, & theirs in him, were so equal that no man can yet say which was greatest[27]

The campaign was a triumph for Lee and his two principal subordinates. Military historian John J. Hennessy described it as Lee's greatest campaign, the "happiest marriage of strategy and tactics he would ever attain." He balanced audacious actions with proper caution and chose his subordinates' roles to best effect. Jackson's flank march—54 miles in 36 hours into the rear of the Union Army—was "the boldest maneuver of its kind during the war, and Jackson executed it flawlessly." Longstreet's attack on August 30, "timely, powerful, and swift, would come as close to destroying a Union army as any ever would."[28]

Pope, outmaneuvered by Lee, was virtually besieged in Washington. If it were not for his close political and personal ties to President Lincoln, his military career might have been completely ruined. Instead, he was transferred to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and command of the Army's Department of the Northwest, where he fought the Dakota War of 1862.[29] Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan assumed command of all Union forces around Washington, and his Army of the Potomac absorbed the forces of the Army of Virginia, which was disbanded on September 12, 1862.

With Pope no longer a threat and McClellan reorganizing his command, Lee turned his army north on September 4 to cross the Potomac River and invade Maryland, initiating the Maryland campaign and the battles of Harpers Ferry, South Mountain, and Antietam.[30]

The Bull Run battlefields are preserved by the National Park Service in Manassas National Battlefield Park.

Notes/References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 334.
  2. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 12/1, pp. 139, 262.
  3. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 334–335
    16,054 (1,724 killed; 8,372 wounded; 5,958 missing/captured) according to Eicher.
  4. ^ Hennessy (1992), p. 458.
  5. ^ Hennessy (1992), p. 12.
  6. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 318; Hennessy (1992), p. 12; Martin (1996), p. 24, 32-33.
  7. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 318; Hennessy (1992), p. 6; Martin (1996), p. 280.
  8. ^ Freeman (1946), p. 610-614; Glatthaar (2008), p. 157-158; Harsh (1998), p. 106; Hennessy (1992), p. 561-567; Langellier (2002), p. 90-93.
  9. ^ Esposito (1959), p. 54
    Esposito's Map 54
  10. ^ Esposito (1959), p. 55; Martin (1996), p. 45-46
    Esposito's Map 55
  11. ^ Hennessy (1992), p. 14-21; Martin (1996), p. 36-37.
  12. ^ Harsh (1998), p. 119-123.
  13. ^ Esposito (1959), p. 56; Hennessy (1992), p. 157-158; Sears (1992), p. 106; Welcher (1989), p. 835-36
    Esposito's Map 56
  14. ^ Esposito (1959), p. 56
    Map 56
  15. ^ NPS Cedar Mountain.
  16. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 322; Esposito (1959), p. 57; Hennessy (1992), p. 35-51
    Esposito's Map 57
  17. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 322; Esposito (1959), p. 57; Martin (1996), p. 92, 101-02
    Esposito's Map 57
  18. ^ NPS First Rappahannock Station (White Sulphur Springs).
  19. ^ Collie. MilitaryHistoryOnline.com, 2017.
  20. ^ Hotchkiss (1973), p. 117-118; Robertson (1997), p. 547, 887.
  21. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 322-323; Esposito (1959), p. 58; Salmon (2001), p. 127-128
    Esposito's Map 58
  22. ^ NPS Manassas Station Operations.
  23. ^ NPS Thoroughfare Gap.
  24. ^ NPS Second Bull Run,
    The NPS has established these dates for the battle. The references by Greene, Hennessy, Salmon, and Kennedy, whose works are closely aligned with the NPS, adopt these dates as well. However, all of the other references to this article specify that the action on August 28 was a prelude to, but separate from, the Second Battle of Bull Run. Some of these authors name the action on August 28 the Battle of Groveton or Brawner's Farm.
  25. ^ NPS Second Bull Run.
  26. ^ NPS Battle of Chantilly.
  27. ^ Alexander (1989), p. 139.
  28. ^ Hennessy (1992), p. 457-61.
  29. ^ Martin (1996), p. 33.
  30. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 336-37.

Bibliography edit

  • Alexander, Edward P. (1989). Gary W. Gallagher (ed.). Fighting for the Confederacy: The Personal Recollections of General Edward Porter Alexander (1st (September 22, 1989) ed.). Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. p. 692. ISBN 9780807818480. OCLC 1053980665.
  • Eicher, David J.; McPherson, James M.; McPherson, James Alan (2001). The Longest Night: A Military History of the Civil War. New York City: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-7432-1846-9. OCLC 892938160.
  • Esposito, Vincent J. (1959). West Point Atlas of American Wars. New York City: Frederick A. Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8050-3391-5. OCLC 60298522.
  • Freeman, Douglas Southall (1946). Manassas to Malvern Hill (PDF). Lee's Lieutenants: A Study in Command. Vol. I (1970 Scribner ed.). New York, NY: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 773. ISBN 9780684187488. OCLC 1035890441.
  • Glatthaar, Joseph T. (2008). General Lee's Army: From Victory to Collapse (1st edition (March 18, 2008) ed.). New York, NY: Free Press. p. 624. ISBN 9780684827872. OCLC 144767946.
  • Harsh, Joseph L. (1998). Confederate Tide Rising: Robert E. Lee and the Making of Southern Strategy, 1861–1862 (Reprint edition (March 19, 2019) ed.). Kent, OH: Kent State University Press. p. 278. ISBN 9781606353844. OCLC 1089908147.
  • Hennessy, John J. (1992). Return to Bull Run: The Campaign and Battle of Second Manassas (First Edition (November 1, 1992) ed.). New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. p. 448. ISBN 9780671793685. OCLC 26095816.
  • Hotchkiss, Jedediah (1973). MacDonald, Archie P. (ed.). Make Me a Map of the Valley: The Civil War Journal of Stonewall Jackson's Topographer (PDF) (3rd (1988) ed.). Dallas, TX: Southern Methodist University Press. p. 410. ISBN 9780870741371. OCLC 562307122. Retrieved September 27, 2017.
  • Langellier, John (2002). Second Manassas 1862: Robert E. Lee's Greatest Victory. Osprey Campaign (1st edition (February 25, 2002) ed.). Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. p. 96. ISBN 9781841762302. OCLC 843344073.
  • Martin, David George (1996). The Second Bull Run Campaign: July–August 1862. Great Campaigns (1st ed. (November 21, 1996) ed.). New York, NY: Da Capo Press. p. 299. ISBN 9780938289807. OCLC 35198720.
  • Robertson, James I. Jr. (1997). Stonewall Jackson: The Man, The Soldier, The Legend (PDF). London, UK: Prentice Hall International. p. 950. ISBN 978-0-02-864685-5. OCLC 1151321680. Retrieved September 27, 2017.
  • Salmon, John S. (2001). The Official Virginia Civil War Battlefield Guide. Mechanicsburg, PA: Stackpole Books. ISBN 0811728684.
  • Sears, Stephen W. (1992). To the Gates of Richmond: The Peninsula Campaign (Hardcover) (1st ed. (September 1, 1992) ed.). Boston, MA: Stan Clark Military Books (Houghton Mifflin Co.). p. 468. ISBN 0899197906. OCLC 34006957.
  • U.S. War Department (1885). Reports, Mar 17 – Jun 25; Operations in Northern Virginia, West Virginia, and Maryland. Mar 17 – Sep 2, 1862. The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Vol. XII-XXIV-I. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. hdl:2027/coo.31924077725921. OCLC 427057.
  • Welcher, Frank J. (1989). The Eastern Theater. The Union Army, 1861-1865: Organization and Operations. Vol. 1 (1st, (October 1, 1989) ed.). Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 1084. ISBN 9780253364531. OCLC 799063447.
  • Collie, Michael (2017). . militaryhistoryonline.com. MilitaryHistoryOnline.com, LLC. Archived from the original on September 28, 2017. Retrieved September 27, 2017.
  • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. 2012. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012.
  • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. 2012. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012.
  • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. 2005. Archived from the original on November 26, 2005.
  • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. 2012. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012.
  • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. 2012. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012.
  • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. 2012. Archived from the original on July 14, 2012.

Further reading edit

  • Anthony, Nicholas J. (1984). Lee Takes Command: From Seven Days to Second Bull Run. The Civil War (1st edition (January 1, 1984) ed.). Alexandria, VA: Time Life Books. ISBN 9780809448043. OCLC 733726003.
  • Dyer, Frederick H (1908). A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion (PDF). Des Moines, IA: Dyer Pub. Co. ASIN B01BUFJ76Q. OCLC 8697590.
  • Greene, A. Wilson (1995). The Second Battle of Manassas. National Park Service Civil War Series (1st edition (January 1, 1995) ed.). Fort Washington, PA: Eastern National Park and Monument Association. p. 55. ISBN 091599285X. OCLC 33147466.
  • Hattaway, Herman; Jones, Archer (1983). How the North Won: A Military History of the Civil War. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press. p. 762. ISBN 9780252062100. OCLC 924976443.
  • Henderson, George Francis Robert (1898). Stonewall Jackson and the American Civil War (PDF). Vol. I (1st ed.). London UK: Longmans, Green, and Company. p. 648. OCLC 1085324715.
  • Kennedy, Frances H., ed. (1998). The Civil War Battlefield Guide (2nd ed.). Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Co. ISBN 0395740126.
  • Sauers, Richard Allen (2000). David Stephen Heidler; Jeanne T. Heidler; James M. McPherson (Introduction) (eds.). Second Battle of Bull Run. Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History (Reissue edition (September 16, 2002) ed.). New York, NY: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 2733. ISBN 9780393047585. OCLC 1001976604.
  • Stackpole, Edward J. (1959). From Cedar Mountain to Antietam (Hardcover) (1st edition (January 1, 1959) ed.). Harrisburg, PA: The Stackpole Company. p. 466. ISBN 9780811724388. OCLC 814411747.
  • Whitehorne, Joseph W. A. (1990). . Washington, DC: United States Army Center of Military History. p. 70. OCLC 644264587. Archived from the original on 2011-04-08. Retrieved 2010-08-04.
  • Wood, William J. (1997). Civil War Generalship: The Art of Command (PDF) (Praeger Illustrated edition (April 9, 1997) ed.). Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 288. ISBN 9780275950545. OCLC 1193365637.
  • Woodworth, Steven E.; Winkle, Kenneth J.; McPherson, James M. (foreword) (2004). Oxford Atlas of the Civil War. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 400. ISBN 9780195221312. OCLC 1136147162.

External links edit

  • National Park Service battle descriptions 2005-04-09 at the Wayback Machine

38°48′45″N 77°31′17″W / 38.8124°N 77.5213°W / 38.8124; -77.5213

northern, virginia, campaign, part, american, civil, warjohn, pope, robert, commanding, generals, northern, virginia, campaigndatejuly, september, 1862locationnorthern, virginiaresultconfederate, victorybelligerents, united, states, america, confederate, state. Northern Virginia campaignPart of the American Civil WarJohn Pope and Robert E Lee commanding generals of the northern Virginia campaignDateJuly 19 September 1 1862LocationNorthern VirginiaResultConfederate victoryBelligerents United States of America Confederate States of AmericaCommanders and leadersJohn PopeRobert E LeeUnits involvedArmy of Virginia Army of the Potomac III Corps V Corps IX CorpsArmy of Northern VirginiaStrength75 000 1 48 500 1 Casualties and losses16 843 2 061 killed 9 897 wounded 4 885 missing captured 2 3 9 197 1 481 killed 7 627 wounded 89 missing captured 1 Virginia 1862 Northeastern Virginia 1862 The Northern Virginia Campaign also known as the Second Bull Run Campaign or Second Manassas Campaign was a series of battles fought in Virginia during August and September 1862 in the Eastern Theater of the American Civil War Confederate General Robert E Lee followed up his successes of the Seven Days Battles in the Peninsula campaign by moving north toward Washington D C and defeating Maj Gen John Pope and his Army of Virginia Concerned that Pope s army would combine forces with Maj Gen George B McClellan s Army of the Potomac and overwhelm him Lee sent Maj Gen Thomas J Stonewall Jackson north to intercept Pope s advance toward Gordonsville The two forces initially clashed at Cedar Mountain on August 9 a Confederate victory Lee determined that McClellan s army on the Virginia Peninsula was no longer a threat to Richmond and sent most of the rest of his army Maj Gen James Longstreet s command following Jackson Jackson conducted a wide ranging maneuver around Pope s right flank seizing the large supply depot in Pope s rear at Manassas Junction placing his force between Pope and Washington D C Moving to a very defensible position near the battleground of the 1861 First Battle of Bull Run First Manassas Jackson successfully repulsed Union assaults on August 29 as Lee and Longstreet s command arrived on the battlefield On August 30 Pope attacked again but was surprised to be caught between attacks by Longstreet and Jackson and was forced to withdraw with heavy losses The campaign concluded with another flanking maneuver by Jackson which Pope engaged at the Battle of Chantilly on September 1 Lee s maneuvering of the Army of Northern Virginia against Pope is considered a military masterpiece Historian John J Hennessy wrote that Lee may have fought cleverer battles but this was his greatest campaign 4 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Military situation 1 2 Plans 1 3 Initial movements 2 Opposing forces 2 1 Union 2 2 Confederate 3 Battles and movements 3 1 Cedar Mountain 3 2 Lee advances to the Rappahannock 3 3 Skirmishing on the Rappahannock 3 4 Raiding Manassas Station 3 5 Thoroughfare Gap 3 6 Second Bull Run Manassas 3 7 Chantilly 4 Aftermath 5 Notes References 6 Bibliography 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground editI have come to you from the West where we have always seen the backs of our enemies from an army whose business it has been to seek the adversary and to beat him to when he was found whose policy has been to attack and not defense Let us look before us and not behind Success and glory are in the advance disaster and shame lurk in the rear John Pope order to the Officers and Soldiers of the Army of Virginia July 14 5 Military situation edit Main article American Civil WarFurther information Peninsula campaign and Seven Days Battles After the collapse of McClellan s Peninsula campaign in the Seven Days Battles of June President Abraham Lincoln appointed John Pope to command the newly formed Army of Virginia Pope had achieved some success in the Western Theater and Lincoln sought a more aggressive general than McClellan Pope did not endear himself to his subordinate commanders all three selected as corps commanders technically outranked him or to his junior officers by his boastful orders that implied Eastern soldiers were inferior to their Western counterparts Some of his enlisted men were encouraged by Pope s aggressive tone 6 The Union Army of Virginia was constituted on June 26 from existing departments operating around Virginia most of which had recently been outmaneuvered in Jackson s Valley campaign Maj Gen John C Fremont s Mountain Department Maj Gen Irvin McDowell s Department of the Rappahannock Maj Gen Nathaniel P Banks s Department of the Shenandoah Brig Gen Samuel D Sturgis s brigade from the Military District of Washington and Brig Gen Jacob D Cox s division from western Virginia The new army was divided into three corps of 51 000 men under Maj Gen Franz Sigel I Corps replacing Fremont who refused to serve under Pope his junior in rank and resigned his command Banks II Corps and McDowell III Corps Sturgis s Washington troops constituted the Army reserve Cavalry brigades under Col John Beardsley and Brig Gens John P Hatch and George D Bayard were attached directly to the three infantry corps a lack of centralized control that had negative effects in the campaign Parts of three corps III V and VI of McClellan s Army of the Potomac and Maj Gen Ambrose Burnside s IX Corps commanded by Maj Gen Jesse L Reno eventually joined Pope for combat operations raising his strength to 77 000 7 On the Confederate side General Robert E Lee s Army of Northern Virginia was organized into two wings or commands the designation of these units as corps would not be authorized under Confederate law until November 1862 of about 55 000 men The right wing was commanded by Maj Gen James Longstreet the left by Maj Gen Stonewall Jackson The Cavalry Division under Maj Gen J E B Stuart was attached to Jackson s wing The Confederate organization was considerably simpler than the one Lee inherited for the Seven Days Battles in that campaign there had been eleven separate divisions which led to breakdowns in communications and the inability of the army to execute Lee s battle plans properly William H C Whiting Theophilus Holmes Benjamin Huger and John B Magruder were all reassigned elsewhere The command structure was reorganized as follows Jackson s wing comprised his old Valley Army the Stonewall Division now commanded by Brig Gen Charles S Winder and Maj Gen Richard Ewell s division plus the newly added command of Maj Gen A P Hill Longstreet had seven divisions His former command was divided into two parts led by Brig Gens Cadmus Wilcox and James L Kemper Maj Gen Richard H Anderson got Huger s division and Brig Gen John B Hood was leading Whiting s Division due to William H C Whiting being on sick leave Brig Gens David R Jones and Lafayette McLaws continued in command of their divisions both of which had been part of Magruder s Army of the Peninsula Maj Gen D H Hill s command was also placed under Longstreet Also joining was Brig Gen Nathan G Shanks Evans s independent South Carolina brigade McLaws and Hill were left in Richmond under the command of Maj Gen Gustavus W Smith and so Longstreet would take only five divisions north 8 Plans edit Pope s mission was to fulfill a few objectives protect Washington and the Shenandoah Valley and draw Confederate forces away from McClellan by moving in the direction of Gordonsville 9 Pope started on the latter by dispatching cavalry to break the Virginia Central Railroad connecting Gordonsville Charlottesville and Lynchburg The cavalry under Hatch got off to a slow start and found that Stonewall Jackson had already occupied Gordonsville on July 19 with over 14 000 men After a subsequent second failure to cut the railroad on July 22 Pope removed Hatch from his cavalry command and reassigned him to command an infantry brigade in Brig Gen Rufus King s division of the III Corps 10 Pope had an additional broader objective encouraged by Abraham Lincoln For the first time the Union intended to pressure the civilian population of the Confederacy by bringing some of the hardships of war directly to them Pope issued three general orders on the subject to his army General Order No 5 directed the army to subsist upon the country reimbursing farmers with vouchers that were payable after the war only to loyal citizens of the United States To some soldiers this became an informal license to pillage and steal General Orders 7 and 11 dealt with persistent problems of Confederate guerrillas operating in the Union rear Pope ordered that any house from which gunfire was aimed at Union troops be burned and the occupants treated as prisoners of war Union officers were directed to arrest all disloyal male citizens within their lines or within their reach These orders were substantially different from the war philosophy of Pope s colleague McClellan which undoubtedly caused some of the animosity between the two men during the campaign Confederate authorities were outraged and Robert E Lee labeled Pope a miscreant and added that he ought to be suppressed 11 Based on his experiences in the Seven Days Lee concluded that McClellan would not attack and he could thus move most of his army away from Richmond This allowed him to relocate Jackson to Gordonsville to block Pope and protect the Virginia Central Lee had larger plans in mind Since the Union Army was split between McClellan and Pope and they were widely separated Lee saw an opportunity to destroy Pope before returning his attention to McClellan 12 Initial movements edit On July 26 Lee met with cavalry commander and partisan fighter Capt John S Mosby who had just been exchanged as a prisoner of war Coming through the Hampton Roads area in Union custody Mosby observed significant naval transport activity and deduced that Maj Gen Ambrose Burnside s troops who had fought in North Carolina were being shipped to reinforce Pope Wanting to take immediate action before those troops were in position the next day Lee committed Maj Gen A P Hill to join Jackson with 12 000 men while distracting McClellan with artillery bombardments and diversionary movements McClellan advanced a force from Harrison s Landing to Malvern Hill and Lee moved south to meet the threat but McClellan eventually withdrew his advance Still convinced that he was heavily outnumbered he sent messages to Washington that he would need at least 50 000 more men before he could attempt another attack on Richmond On August 3 General in Chief Henry W Halleck directed McClellan to begin his final withdrawal from the Peninsula and to return to Northern Virginia to support Pope McClellan protested and did not begin his redeployment until August 14 The Army of the Potomac returned to Washington except for a division of the IV Corps which was left on the Virginia Peninsula 13 Opposing forces editUnion edit Further information Cedar Mountain Union order of battle Second Bull Run Union order of battle and Chantilly Union order of battle Confederate edit Further information Cedar Mountain Confederate order of battle Second Bull Run Confederate order of battle and Chantilly Confederate order of battleBattles and movements edit nbsp Northern Virginia campaign August 7 September 1 1862 Confederate Union nbsp Second Bull Run campaign August 17 30 1862 Additional map On July 29 Pope moved his headquarters from Washington to the field He was informed by Halleck of the plan to link up with McClellan s army but rather than waiting for this to occur he moved some of his forces to a position near Cedar Mountain from whence he could launch cavalry raids on Gordonsville Jackson advanced to Culpeper Court House on August 7 hoping to attack one of Pope s corps before the rest of the army could be concentrated 14 Cedar Mountain edit Further information Battle of Cedar Mountain On August 9 Nathaniel Banks s corps attacked Jackson at Cedar Mountain gaining an early advantage Confederate Brig Gen Charles S Winder was killed and his division mauled A Confederate counterattack led by Maj Gen A P Hill drove Banks back across Cedar Creek Jackson s advance was stopped however by the Union division of Brig Gen James B Ricketts By now Jackson had learned that Pope s corps were all together foiling his plan of defeating each in separate actions He remained in position until August 12 then withdrew to Gordonsville 15 Lee advances to the Rappahannock edit On August 13 Lee sent Longstreet to reinforce Jackson and on the following day Lee sent all of his remaining forces except for two brigades after he was certain that McClellan was leaving the Peninsula Lee arrived at Gordonsville to take command on August 15 He massed the Army of Northern Virginia south of Clark s Mountain and planned a turning movement to defeat Pope before McClellan s army could arrive to reinforce it His plan was to send his cavalry under Stuart followed by his entire army north to the Rapidan River on August 18 screened from view by Clark s Mountain Stuart would cross and destroy the railroad bridge at Somerville Ford and then move around Pope s left flank into the Federal rear destroying supplies and blocking their possible avenues of retreat Logistical difficulties and cavalry movement delays caused the plan to be abandoned 16 On August 20 21 Pope withdrew to the line of the Rappahannock River He was aware of Lee s plan because a Union cavalry raid captured a copy of the written order Stuart was almost captured during this raid his cloak and plumed hat did not escape however and Stuart retaliated on August 22 with a raid on Pope s headquarters at Catlett s Station capturing the Union commander s dress coat Stuart s raid demonstrated that the Union right flank was vulnerable to a turning movement although river flooding brought on by heavy rains would make this difficult It also revealed the plans for reinforcing Pope s army which would eventually bring it to the strength of 130 000 men more than twice the size of the Army of Northern Virginia 17 Skirmishing on the Rappahannock edit nbsp Recovering a locomotive wrecked in a Confederate raidFurther information First Battle of Rappahannock Station The two armies fought a series of minor actions August 22 25 along the Rappahannock River including Waterloo Bridge Lee Springs Freeman s Ford and Sulphur Springs resulting in a few hundred casualties 18 Together these skirmishes kept the attention of both armies along the river Heavy rains had swollen the river and Lee was unable to force a crossing Pope considered an attack across the river to strike Lee s right flank but he was also stymied by the high water By this time reinforcements from the Army of the Potomac were arriving from the Peninsula Maj Gen Samuel P Heintzelman s III Corps Maj Gen Fitz John Porter s V Corps and elements of the VI Corps under Brig Gen George W Taylor Lee s new plan in the face of all these additional forces outnumbering him was to send Jackson and Stuart with half of the army on a flanking march to cut Pope s line of communication the Orange amp Alexandria Railroad The Hotchkiss journal shows that Jackson most likely originally conceived the movement In the journal entries for March 4 and 6 1863 General Stuart tells Hotchkiss that Jackson was entitled to all the credit for the movement and that Lee thought the proposed movement very hazardous and reluctantly consented to the movement 19 20 Pope would be forced to retreat and could be defeated while moving and vulnerable Jackson departed on August 25 and reached Salem present day Marshall that night 21 Raiding Manassas Station edit nbsp Union soldiers at the Orange amp Alexandria RailroadFurther information Battle of Manassas Station Operations On the evening of August 26 after passing around Pope s right flank via Thoroughfare Gap Jackson s wing of the army struck the Orange amp Alexandria Railroad at Bristoe Station and before daybreak August 27 marched to capture and destroy the massive Union supply depot at Manassas Junction This surprise movement forced Pope into an abrupt retreat from his defensive line along the Rappahannock On August 27 Jackson routed the New Jersey Brigade of the VI Corps near Bull Run Bridge mortally wounding its commander George W Taylor Maj Gen Richard S Ewell s Confederate division fought a brisk rearguard action against Maj Gen Joseph Hooker s division at Kettle Run resulting in about 600 casualties Ewell held back Union forces until dark During the night of August 27 August 28 Jackson marched his divisions north to the First Bull Run Manassas battlefield where he took position behind an unfinished railroad grade 22 Pope did not know where Jackson had gone Thoroughfare Gap edit Further information Battle of Thoroughfare Gap After skirmishing near Chapman s Mill in Thoroughfare Gap Ricketts s Union division was flanked on August 28 by a Confederate column passing through Hopewell Gap several miles to the north and by troops securing the high ground at Thoroughfare Gap Ricketts retired and Longstreet s wing of the army marched through the gap to join Jackson This seemingly inconsequential action virtually ensured Pope s defeat during the battles of August 29 30 because it allowed the two wings of Lee s army to unite on the Manassas battlefield Ricketts withdrew via Gainesville to Manassas Junction 23 Second Bull Run Manassas edit nbsp Second Battle of Bull Run actions on August 29 and 30Further information Second Battle of Bull Run The most significant battle of the campaign Second Bull Run Second Manassas was fought August 28 30 24 In order to draw Pope s army into battle Jackson ordered an attack on a Federal column that was passing across his front on the Warrenton Turnpike on August 28 alerting Pope to his position The fighting at Brawner s Farm lasted several hours and resulted in a stalemate Pope became convinced that he had trapped Jackson and concentrated the bulk of his army against him On August 29 Pope launched a series of assaults against Jackson s position along the unfinished railroad grade The attacks were repulsed with heavy casualties on both sides At noon Longstreet arrived on the field from Thoroughfare Gap and took position on Jackson s right flank On August 30 Pope renewed his attacks seemingly unaware that Longstreet was on the field When massed Confederate artillery devastated a Union assault by Porter s corps Longstreet s wing of 28 000 men counterattacked in the largest simultaneous mass assault of the war The Union left flank was crushed and the army driven back to Bull Run Only an effective Union rearguard action prevented a replay of the First Bull Run disaster Pope s retreat to Centreville was precipitous nonetheless The next day Lee ordered his army to pursue the retreating Union army 25 Chantilly edit Further information Battle of Chantilly Making a wide flanking march Jackson hoped to cut off the Union retreat from Bull Run On September 1 beyond Chantilly Plantation on the Little River Turnpike near Ox Hill Jackson sent his divisions against two Union divisions under Maj Gens Philip Kearny and Isaac Stevens Confederate attacks were stopped by fierce fighting during a severe thunderstorm Union generals Stevens and Kearny were both killed Recognizing that his army was still in danger at Fairfax Courthouse Pope ordered the retreat to continue to Washington 26 Aftermath editThe northern Virginia campaign had been expensive for both sides although Lee s smaller army spent its resources more carefully Union casualties were 16 054 1 724 killed 8 372 wounded 5 958 missing captured out of about 75 000 engaged roughly comparable to the losses two months earlier in the Seven Days Battles Confederate losses were 9 197 1 481 killed 7 627 wounded 89 missing captured of 48 500 1 Edward Porter Alexander wrote The Army of Northern Virginia acquired that magnificent morale which made them equal to twice their numbers amp which they never lost even to the surrender at Appomattox And Lee s confidence in them amp theirs in him were so equal that no man can yet say which was greatest 27 dd The campaign was a triumph for Lee and his two principal subordinates Military historian John J Hennessy described it as Lee s greatest campaign the happiest marriage of strategy and tactics he would ever attain He balanced audacious actions with proper caution and chose his subordinates roles to best effect Jackson s flank march 54 miles in 36 hours into the rear of the Union Army was the boldest maneuver of its kind during the war and Jackson executed it flawlessly Longstreet s attack on August 30 timely powerful and swift would come as close to destroying a Union army as any ever would 28 Pope outmaneuvered by Lee was virtually besieged in Washington If it were not for his close political and personal ties to President Lincoln his military career might have been completely ruined Instead he was transferred to Milwaukee Wisconsin and command of the Army s Department of the Northwest where he fought the Dakota War of 1862 29 Maj Gen George B McClellan assumed command of all Union forces around Washington and his Army of the Potomac absorbed the forces of the Army of Virginia which was disbanded on September 12 1862 With Pope no longer a threat and McClellan reorganizing his command Lee turned his army north on September 4 to cross the Potomac River and invade Maryland initiating the Maryland campaign and the battles of Harpers Ferry South Mountain and Antietam 30 The Bull Run battlefields are preserved by the National Park Service in Manassas National Battlefield Park Notes References edit a b c d Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 334 U S War Dept Official Records Vol 12 1 pp 139 262 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 334 33516 054 1 724 killed 8 372 wounded 5 958 missing captured according to Eicher Hennessy 1992 p 458 Hennessy 1992 p 12 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 318 Hennessy 1992 p 12 Martin 1996 p 24 32 33 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 318 Hennessy 1992 p 6 Martin 1996 p 280 Freeman 1946 p 610 614 Glatthaar 2008 p 157 158 Harsh 1998 p 106 Hennessy 1992 p 561 567 Langellier 2002 p 90 93 Esposito 1959 p 54Esposito s Map 54 Esposito 1959 p 55 Martin 1996 p 45 46Esposito s Map 55 Hennessy 1992 p 14 21 Martin 1996 p 36 37 Harsh 1998 p 119 123 Esposito 1959 p 56 Hennessy 1992 p 157 158 Sears 1992 p 106 Welcher 1989 p 835 36Esposito s Map 56 Esposito 1959 p 56Map 56 NPS Cedar Mountain Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 322 Esposito 1959 p 57 Hennessy 1992 p 35 51Esposito s Map 57 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 322 Esposito 1959 p 57 Martin 1996 p 92 101 02Esposito s Map 57 NPS First Rappahannock Station White Sulphur Springs Collie MilitaryHistoryOnline com 2017 Hotchkiss 1973 p 117 118 Robertson 1997 p 547 887 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 322 323 Esposito 1959 p 58 Salmon 2001 p 127 128Esposito s Map 58 NPS Manassas Station Operations NPS Thoroughfare Gap NPS Second Bull Run The NPS has established these dates for the battle The references by Greene Hennessy Salmon and Kennedy whose works are closely aligned with the NPS adopt these dates as well However all of the other references to this article specify that the action on August 28 was a prelude to but separate from the Second Battle of Bull Run Some of these authors name the action on August 28 the Battle of Groveton or Brawner s Farm NPS Second Bull Run NPS Battle of Chantilly Alexander 1989 p 139 Hennessy 1992 p 457 61 Martin 1996 p 33 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 336 37 Bibliography editAlexander Edward P 1989 Gary W Gallagher ed Fighting for the Confederacy The Personal Recollections of General Edward Porter Alexander 1st September 22 1989 ed Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press p 692 ISBN 9780807818480 OCLC 1053980665 Eicher David J McPherson James M McPherson James Alan 2001 The Longest Night A Military History of the Civil War New York City Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 7432 1846 9 OCLC 892938160 Esposito Vincent J 1959 West Point Atlas of American Wars New York City Frederick A Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 8050 3391 5 OCLC 60298522 Freeman Douglas Southall 1946 Manassas to Malvern Hill PDF Lee s Lieutenants A Study in Command Vol I 1970 Scribner ed New York NY Charles Scribner s Sons p 773 ISBN 9780684187488 OCLC 1035890441 Glatthaar Joseph T 2008 General Lee s Army From Victory to Collapse 1st edition March 18 2008 ed New York NY Free Press p 624 ISBN 9780684827872 OCLC 144767946 Harsh Joseph L 1998 Confederate Tide Rising Robert E Lee and the Making of Southern Strategy 1861 1862 Reprint edition March 19 2019 ed Kent OH Kent State University Press p 278 ISBN 9781606353844 OCLC 1089908147 Hennessy John J 1992 Return to Bull Run The Campaign and Battle of Second Manassas First Edition November 1 1992 ed New York NY Simon amp Schuster p 448 ISBN 9780671793685 OCLC 26095816 Hotchkiss Jedediah 1973 MacDonald Archie P ed Make Me a Map of the Valley The Civil War Journal of Stonewall Jackson s Topographer PDF 3rd 1988 ed Dallas TX Southern Methodist University Press p 410 ISBN 9780870741371 OCLC 562307122 Retrieved September 27 2017 Langellier John 2002 Second Manassas 1862 Robert E Lee s Greatest Victory Osprey Campaign 1st edition February 25 2002 ed Oxford UK Osprey Publishing p 96 ISBN 9781841762302 OCLC 843344073 Martin David George 1996 The Second Bull Run Campaign July August 1862 Great Campaigns 1st ed November 21 1996 ed New York NY Da Capo Press p 299 ISBN 9780938289807 OCLC 35198720 Robertson James I Jr 1997 Stonewall Jackson The Man The Soldier The Legend PDF London UK Prentice Hall International p 950 ISBN 978 0 02 864685 5 OCLC 1151321680 Retrieved September 27 2017 Salmon John S 2001 The Official Virginia Civil War Battlefield Guide Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole Books ISBN 0811728684 Sears Stephen W 1992 To the Gates of Richmond The Peninsula Campaign Hardcover 1st ed September 1 1992 ed Boston MA Stan Clark Military Books Houghton Mifflin Co p 468 ISBN 0899197906 OCLC 34006957 U S War Department 1885 Reports Mar 17 Jun 25 Operations in Northern Virginia West Virginia and Maryland Mar 17 Sep 2 1862 The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Vol XII XXIV I Washington DC U S Government Printing Office hdl 2027 coo 31924077725921 OCLC 427057 Welcher Frank J 1989 The Eastern Theater The Union Army 1861 1865 Organization and Operations Vol 1 1st October 1 1989 ed Bloomington Indiana University Press p 1084 ISBN 9780253364531 OCLC 799063447 Collie Michael 2017 Origin of the Movement Around Pope s Army of Virginia August 1862 militaryhistoryonline com MilitaryHistoryOnline com LLC Archived from the original on September 28 2017 Retrieved September 27 2017 Cedar Mountain nps gov U S National Park Service 2012 Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Chantilly nps gov U S National Park Service 2012 Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Manassas Second nps gov U S National Park Service 2005 Archived from the original on November 26 2005 Manassas Station Operations nps gov U S National Park Service 2012 Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Rappahannock Station nps gov U S National Park Service 2012 Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Thoroughfare Gap nps gov U S National Park Service 2012 Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Further reading editAnthony Nicholas J 1984 Lee Takes Command From Seven Days to Second Bull Run The Civil War 1st edition January 1 1984 ed Alexandria VA Time Life Books ISBN 9780809448043 OCLC 733726003 Dyer Frederick H 1908 A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion PDF Des Moines IA Dyer Pub Co ASIN B01BUFJ76Q OCLC 8697590 Greene A Wilson 1995 The Second Battle of Manassas National Park Service Civil War Series 1st edition January 1 1995 ed Fort Washington PA Eastern National Park and Monument Association p 55 ISBN 091599285X OCLC 33147466 Hattaway Herman Jones Archer 1983 How the North Won A Military History of the Civil War Urbana IL University of Illinois Press p 762 ISBN 9780252062100 OCLC 924976443 Henderson George Francis Robert 1898 Stonewall Jackson and the American Civil War PDF Vol I 1st ed London UK Longmans Green and Company p 648 OCLC 1085324715 Kennedy Frances H ed 1998 The Civil War Battlefield Guide 2nd ed Boston MA Houghton Mifflin Co ISBN 0395740126 Sauers Richard Allen 2000 David Stephen Heidler Jeanne T Heidler James M McPherson Introduction eds Second Battle of Bull Run Encyclopedia of the American Civil War A Political Social and Military History Reissue edition September 16 2002 ed New York NY W W Norton amp Company p 2733 ISBN 9780393047585 OCLC 1001976604 Stackpole Edward J 1959 From Cedar Mountain to Antietam Hardcover 1st edition January 1 1959 ed Harrisburg PA The Stackpole Company p 466 ISBN 9780811724388 OCLC 814411747 Whitehorne Joseph W A 1990 The Battle of Second Manassas Self Guided Tour Washington DC United States Army Center of Military History p 70 OCLC 644264587 Archived from the original on 2011 04 08 Retrieved 2010 08 04 Wood William J 1997 Civil War Generalship The Art of Command PDF Praeger Illustrated edition April 9 1997 ed Westport CT Greenwood Press p 288 ISBN 9780275950545 OCLC 1193365637 Woodworth Steven E Winkle Kenneth J McPherson James M foreword 2004 Oxford Atlas of the Civil War New York NY Oxford University Press p 400 ISBN 9780195221312 OCLC 1136147162 External links editNational Park Service battle descriptions Archived 2005 04 09 at the Wayback Machine Animated History of the Second Manassas Campaign 38 48 45 N 77 31 17 W 38 8124 N 77 5213 W 38 8124 77 5213 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northern Virginia campaign amp oldid 1191885187, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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