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      <p class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align: center">
      <font face="Arial" size="2"><b>Longstreet at Antietam : Profile of a 
      Commander</b></font></p>
      <p align="center" style="text-align: center"><font size="2" face="Arial">
      Nicholas E. Hollis<br>
      (All Rights Reserved)</font></p>
      <p><font size="2" face="Arial">The Battle of Sharpsburg (Antietam) marked 
      the end of CSA General Robert E. Lee�s first invasion of Maryland 
      (September 1862). The epic clash pitted a heavily outnumbered Army of 
      Northern Virginia (ANV) of 41,000�arrayed in strong defensive 
      position�against the Union Army of the Potomac (AP) of nearly 87,000 under 
      the command of Major General George McClellan.</font></p>
      <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Cornered with his back against the Potomac 
      River, Lee had turned his army to face the pursuing Federals, positioning 
      the ANV�s first corps on the right/center under Major General James 
      Longstreet on the hills above Sharpsburg and Antietam Creek, with ANV�s 
      Second Corps, under Major General Thomas �Stonewall� Jackson, on the left 
      across Hagerstown Pike, partially concealed by woods near a cornfield and 
      an old German church. ANV�s cavalry, under Major General J.E.B. Stuart, 
      held the far left.</font></p>
      <p><b><i><font size="2" face="Arial">Deadly September Showdown <br>
      </font></i></b><font size="2" face="Arial">The bloodiest day in America 
      history (September 17) began with furious, yet uncoordinated Union attacks 
      on the ANV left. The Union First Corps under General �Fighting Joe� 
      Hooker, delivered the initial assault at dawn, pushing Jackson�s brigades 
      back, but then stalled as ANV Major General John Bell Hood�s Texas 
      brigades counterattacked savagely (1). The AP Twelfth Corps under Major 
      General Joseph Mansfield attacked next through a cornfield at 7:30 a.m., 
      capturing the Dunkard Church (2) � followed by a third massive Union drive 
      led by Major General Edwin Sumner�s Second Corps which slammed into the 
      struggle around Dunkard Church (3) and also pummeled the center of the ANV 
      line held by General D.H. Hill�s division along a sunken road (4) several 
      hundred yards away from Longstreet�s headquarters at Piper House.&nbsp;</font></p>
      <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Although there were many heroics on the 
      field on both sides, climaxed by the late afternoon arrival of A.P. Hill�s 
      brigades from Harper�s Ferry (6) in time to flank and check a broad Union 
      offensive on the right led by Union General Ambrose Burnside (5), the 
      actions of James Longstreet at the center deserve special attention. Lee 
      certainly thought so. As dusk settled on the bloody stalemate, and his 
      unit commanders gathered to assess their precarious situation, Lee saw the 
      melancholy and fatigue of near defeat in their eyes. But when Longstreet 
      rode up, Lee approached him as he dismounted , and with apparent 
      exuberance, clasped his shoulders with his hands, exclaiming �Ah, here is 
      General Longstreet, my old war horse. Let us hear what he has to say�.</font></p>
      <p><b><i><font size="2" face="Arial">A Thin Gray Line<br>
      </font></i></b><font size="2" face="Arial">In fact, Old Pete�s rugged 
      courage and steady performance at the front that day was the stuff of 
      legends. At the center of the rebel&nbsp; position, during the apex of Sumner�s 
      assault, Longstreet observed General Richardson�s division (AP) swinging 
      his line up along the crest of the hill (7) overlooking Piper House 
      (Longstreet�s field headquarters). The advance threatened to divide the 
      ANV�s position and rout the Confederates. But as the Federals swarmed over 
      �Bloody Lane�, moving toward the higher ground, Longstreet used his 
      presence to inspire his men and bolster the firing line, ordering his 
      staff officers to man an artillery battery and fire canister into the 
      advancing Federals. The rebel line was only fragmentary, but with shells 
      bursting around him, Old Pete calmly held the reins of his men's horses, 
      while surveying the desperate situation&nbsp; with his field glasses. He 
      remained mounted, if somewhat inelegant�with a slipper on an injured 
      foot�but his men were awestruck at his confident, imperturbable demeanor. 
      Moxley Sorrel, an aide, called him �magnificent�. When pressed by one of 
      his subordinates for help, Longstreet penned a short note, </font></p>
      <blockquote>
        <p align="left"><font face="Arial"><i><font size="2">� I am sending you 
        the guns, dear General (Pryor</font></i><font size="2">). <i>This</i>
        </font><i><font size="2">is a hard fight, and we had best all die than 
        lose it.� </font></i></font></p>
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              <img border="0" src="../images/bloody%20lane.jpg" width="444" height="290"><br>
              </font><font face="Arial" size="1">
              (Photo courtesy of Paul Breitenbach)</font></td>
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              <td width="100%"><font size="2" face="Times New Roman">BLOODY 
              LANE--Rebel troops held off Federal attacks for nearly three and a 
              half hours along this sunken road, before being dislodged by B-G 
              Israel B. Richardson�s division. <br>
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      </blockquote>
      <p><b><i><font size="2" face="Arial">The Fog of Battle<br>
      </font></i></b><font size="2" face="Arial">For the Union commanders facing 
      the ANV center there was no way to determine the depth of Confederate 
      troop strength behind the crest of the rolling hills. Could it be another 
      death trap like the Battle of Second Manassas a few weeks before or even 
      the as the West Woods had become earlier that same day? &nbsp;Union Cavalry 
      General Alfred Pleasanton (8) had orders to reinforce Richardson�s assault 
      and General Porter�s Fifth Corps was readied to deliver a crushing blow. 
      But the attack never came. Longstreet�s canisters and a demonstration move 
      by D.H. Hill fooled a Union command already in some disarray after both 
      Richardson, and his gallant Colonel Francis Barlow of New York, fell in 
      quick succession leading the advance.</font></p>
      <p><font size="2" face="Arial">Earlier that morning General Pleasanton had 
      dispatched one of his mounted companies (12<sup>th</sup> Pennsylvania) 
      under Major James A. Congdon, forward to the far right of the Union line 
      to monitor their rebel counterparts under Stuart. The detached unit was 
      posted off Hagerstown Pike (see diagram) on Poffenberger Lane (9) near the 
      East Woods for �provost duty� (herding stragglers, guarding prisoners) At 
      this position Congdon�s men, including 
      <a href="../Jennings%20Heritage/origins_of_a_farmer_soldier.htm">Pvt. Calvin W. Jennings</a>, a nineteen 
      year old farm boy with a bugle, witnessed the carnage of the cornfield � 
      some of the heaviest fighting of the war. Thousands fell in the neat rows 
      of blood spattered corn, and whole units were practically decimated with 
      neither side holding clear advantage. </font></p>
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            <td width="100%"><font size="2"><i>Sources:</i> National Park Service/Antietam -- Unit 
            Placement. William J. Clipson--Cartography.</font><font size="2" face="Times New Roman"><br>
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      <p><b><i><font size="2" face="Arial">A Captured Battle Flag<br>
      </font></i></b><font size="2" face="Arial">At one point after fresh Ohio 
      units slammed into the 6<sup>th</sup> and 27<sup>th</sup> Georgia 
      regiments, and the 4<sup>th</sup> Texas of General Hood�s division,&nbsp; Major 
      Congdon stopped and questioned an enlisted soldier carrying a captured 
      rebel battle flag toward the rear. When the flag�s identity could not be 
      determined, Congdon asked one of his new prisoners, Lt. William E. Barry 
      of G Company, 4<sup>th</sup> Texas, if he knew the flag. With great 
      emotion, Barry told his captors that the flag belonged to the First 
      Texas�a unit which had sustained heavy casualties, losing 182 out of 226 
      actives within a few minutes.<a href="#2/">2/</a></font></p>
      <p><font size="2" face="Arial">As bugler, posted near his commander, 
      Calvin Jennings probably witnessed the poignant moment, aware that some of 
      his Jennings relatives were fighting under ANV banners.</font></p>
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            <td width="100%"><font face="Times New Roman" size="2">VIEW FROM 
            EAST WOODS--Union troops could glimpse the battle, across the&nbsp; 
            cornfields and the West Woods. This present day photo looking west 
            from Poffenberger Lane near spot where the Twelfth Pennsylvania 
            Cavalry was posted on the morning of September 17, 1862.<br>
            <img border="0" src="../images/space.gif" width="15" height="14"> </font>
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      <p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Arial" size="2"><b><i>Aftermath<br>
      </i></b>Lee retreated across the Potomac into Virginia the following 
      night, his Maryland gamble lost, and later President Abraham Lincoln 
      sacked General McClellan for failing to press the attack. Lincoln would 
      also use Antietam to promulgate the Emancipation Proclamation giving new 
      inspiration to the Union cause. In Richmond, the near disaster of the 
      Maryland campaign prompted a reorganization of the Confederate army. Lee 
      remained in firm command, but on October 9, 1862 he chose Longstreet as 
      his chief lieutenant, elevating him to Lt. General of the ANV�s First 
      Corps. The next day commissions were signed for six other generals, ranked 
      as lieutenant generals, including Thomas �Stonewall� Jackson, who was 
      placed in command of ANV�s&nbsp; Second Corps.</font></p>
      <p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Arial" size="2">Antietam proved decisive 
      in other ways. Southern momentum, generated from a string of victories, 
      including Second Manassas in late August, was checked � and the potential 
      of foreign diplomatic recognition for the Confederacy as a sovereign 
      nation (likely with a CSA victory) faded.&nbsp; The sheer carnage of America�s 
      deadliest day had a profound impact on the country�s psyche � particularly 
      after Matthew Brady�s photographs became public. More than 3,650 Americans 
      had been killed on that September day in 1862 (2,100 Union, 1,550 CSA), 
      with over 17,000 wounded. A hundred forty years later, after the horrors 
      of September 11, 2001, comparisons would be made between Antietam, Pearl 
      Harbor, Omaha Beach (Normandy), and the World Trade Center towers.. But 
      the Battle of Sharpsburg stands apart with searing impact, as it reflected 
      the mounting losses of the larger Civil War � a tragic �family dispute� 
      out of control, with brothers-in-arms warring on each other, whose long 
      shadow still haunts us today.</font></p>
      <p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Arial" size="2"><b>Notes and Additional 
      Reading</b></font></p>
      <p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Arial" size="2"><i><a name="1/">1/</a>Landscape 
      Turned Red: Battle of Antietam, Stephen Sears, (1983,) p.272&nbsp;</i></font></p>
      <p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Arial" size="2"><i><a name="2/">2/</a>Antietam: 
      A Soldiers� Battle, John Michael Priest, (1989), p. 89</i></font></p>
      <p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Arial" size="2"><i>Leather and Steel: The 
      12<sup>th</sup> Pennsylvania Cavalry in the Civil War, Larry B. Maier,&nbsp; 
      (2001)</i></font></p>
      <p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Arial" size="2"><i>The Gleam of Bayonets: 
      The Battle of Antietam and Robert E. Lee�s Maryland Campaign, September 
      1862, James V. Murfin, (1965)</i></font></p>
      <p class="MsoNormal"><font face="Arial" size="2"><i>Manassas to 
      Appomattox, James Longstreet, (1895), p.250-252</i></font></td>
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