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On
August 28, 29, and 30 1862 the Union and Confederate armies
collided for a second time in little over a year on the fields
of Manassas. The first meeting saw a green Union army fleeing
for its life on the roads to Washington. Now 13 months later,
a confident and arrogant Union General John Pope bragged that
he would destroy the Confederate army in short order. Unfortunately
for Pope, Southern General Robert E. Lee was now in command
of the Army of Northern Virginia. Second Manassas would be one
of Lees most decisive victories.
[Prelude] [Aug
28 , 1862] [Aug
29 , 1862] [Aug
30 , 1862]

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Prelude
to Second Manassas
The
First Battle of Manassas lasted more than eight
grueling hours and culminated with the wounded Union army
fleeing for its life. It was a sobering event that proved
the civil war would be anything but short and bloodless.
Thirteen months later, the Union and Confederate armies
once again clashed at Manassas. However, both armies were
a far cry from the novice soldiers that squared off the
previous summer. The troops were now seasoned veterans,
hardened to the gruesome realities of warfare. And with
numbers twice the size of the previous battle, it ensured
a level of destruction that was unparalleled up to this
point in the war.
In
the spring of 1862, General George McClellan and the Union
army fought their way up the Virginia peninsula to the
Confederate capital of Richmond. But a newly appointed
Commander of the Confederate army-- General Robert E.
Lee, stopped McClellan at the gates of Richmond. In a
matter of weeks, Lee forced the Union troops away from
Richmond. He then re-organized his army into two "wings".
The famed General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson
captained the left wing, while Lee's "Old War Horse"
, General James Longstreet assumed command of the right
wing.
While
Lee was busy reorganizing his army, President Lincoln
was desperately seeking a commander who could match wits
with the Confederates. He called upon 40-year-old General
John Pope, a West Point graduate of the class of 1842.
Pope was also connected by marriage to President Lincoln's
wife, Mary Todd Lincoln.
In
July, Lee learned that McClellan's army was retreating
off of the Peninsula. They had been ordered to join forces
with Pope, a combination that would produce a collosal
army of 150,000 men. Located in the middle was Lee's army
of 55,000 men. Lee knew he had destroy Pope before the
two Federal armies could combine their forces. In mid
August, Lee found the opportunity he was looking for.
Pope's Army of Virginia that was positioned between the
confluence of the Rapidan and Rappahannock rivers, an
ideal location for Lee to isolate and destroy it. But
on the morning of August 18th, a detachment of Union Cavalry
captured a copy of Lee's attack orders. Pope immediately
withdrew his army from the trap and established a strong
position on the north bank of the Rappahannock. Time was
running out for Lee. McClellan's army was fast approaching.
Lee's
plan was to lure Pope away from his advantageous position
on the Rappahannock River. To achieve this, he would cut
the North's line of supply and communication.
In
the pre-dawn hours of August 25th, Jackson's men started
a 54-mile march around Pope. In less than 40 hours, Jackson's
men descended on the Bristoe Railroad Station, cutting
Pope's supply line, the Orange & Alexandria Railroad,
and his telegraph communications with Washington. Next
they ransacked the supply depot at Manassas Junction and
burned what they couldn't take. It was a remarkable feat
even by modern military standards.
Pope
reacted quickly. He knew that Jackson was isolated. He
ordered his army, nearly 60,000 strong, to concentrate
at Manassas Junction. But by the time he arrived, Jackson
was nowhere to be found. Upon receiving a report that
Jackson was near Centerville, he ordered his army to once
again take to the roads. Like a horse with blinders on,
Pope fixated on finding and destroying Jackson. Somewhere
out there in the Virginia countryside was the other half
of Lee's army; 30,000 men of Longstreet's Wing.
As
evening approached on August 28th, Pope was finally about
to find Jackson. Unfortunately for Pope, it would be on
Jackson's terms. With no lit fires to give their position
away, Jackson's men patiently waited along a rise of ground
known as Stoney Ridge north of the First Manassas battlefield.
As a division of Federal soldiers marched east along the
Warrenton Turnpike, they passed right in front of Jackson's
waiting troops. Turning to his field commanders, Jackson
issued the orders, "Bring out your men gentlemen".
The Second Battle of Manassas was about to begin.

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August
28 1862 - A standup fight at Brawner Farm
About
6:00 PM on August 28th, Union General John Gibbon observed
a group of horses emerge from the trees in the far distance.
Gibbon was an experienced artillerist and knew by the
action of the horses that Confederate artillery was present.
Within moments a Confederate cannon opened fire, sending
shells hissing over the heads of the Union division spread
out on the turnpike.
Believing
that the enemy battery belonged to JEB Stuart's horse
artillery, Gibbon sent his only veteran regiment, the
2nd Wisconsin, to charge the guns and capture them. Even
though they had seen action at Manassas the previous summer,
the 2nd Wisconsin regiment was not prepared for what followed.
They
were not simply chasing off an unsupported battery of
light horse artillery, they were heading right into
the veteran infantry of "Stonewall" Jackson.
Gibbon's men left the turnpike, plowing there way the
thicket of woods that bordered the road. Meanwhile,
Jackson called his infantry forward. First to arrive
was the famed "Stonewall" brigade. These were
the same men that Jackson had personally led at the
First Battle of Manassas the previous year. Back then
the brigade numbered 2,500 men. Now, they had withered
to just over 800 rifles but they were some of the best
in the Confederate army. Both sides surged forward and
unleashed volleys of musket fire. The fighting quickly
escalated as both sides threw in additional troops.
Within 40 minutes, the men from Gibbon's and portions
of another brigade found themselves in a battle for
their lives against a Confederate force that had swelled
to nearly three times their size. It was a brutal contest
of wills. Seventy yards separated the lines. Both sides
stood their ground firing into each other's ranks. Neither
side advanced, and neither side retired.
Darkness
finally brought an end to the bitter contest. The musketry
that Gibbon described as a "long and continuous
roll" gave way to the anguished cries of the wounded.
One in every three soldiers was shot. The "Stonewall"
Brigade lost 40% of their men, while the 2nd Wisconsin
lost almost 50%.

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August
29, 1862 - A day of bloody diversions
After
the fighting at Brawner Farm the night before, Pope mistakenly
believed that Jackson was trying to escape. Pope envisioned
a pincer movement against Jackson's fleeing troops. He
would send units straight ahead to keep Jackson pinned
down while the entire 5th corps, 10,000 men commanded
by General Fitz-John Porter would swing around and strike
Jackson's exposed right flank or end. There was only one
problem. The flank attack would never happen. The battle
orders Porter received were vague, but more importantly,
Longstreet arrived with his 30,000 men and sat squarely
between Porter and the right flank of Jackson.
The
attack, as originally planned was no longer realistic
and Porter halted his corps. Nevertheless, Porter's inaction
did ensure that the piecemeal attacks made by the other
Union troops on the 29th faced the full brunt of Jackson's
men. Sadly, the men who marched forward on those attacks,
had no idea of the diversionary role they were playing.
They struck with every ounce of energy they could muster,
thinking that their prime objective was to destroy Jackson.
German born, Major General Franz Sigel led the way. At
first light on the morning of August 29th, his men advanced
on a broad front. Their purpose was to locate and probe
the Confederate line. He achieved his goal. Well before
10:00 AM, Sigel's men were heavily engaged with Jackson's
troops positioned behind an unfinished railroad bed. By
12:30 Sigel had settled into a stalemate in front of the
unfinished railroad and a deceptive lull settled over
the battlefield. Then suddenly in the afternoon in quick
succession, two Union brigades hurled themselves in unsupported
attacks on Jackson's Line. Each attack met with initial
success but was swiftly beaten back by Confederate counterattacks.
At
around 5 pm Pope ordered the fiery one-armed general,
Phil Kearney to assault the left end of Jackson's line,
held by AP Hill's famed "Light Division". After
9 hours of near continuous fighting, Hill's men were nearing
the limits of human endurance. Hill's men were slowly
pushed back and on the verge of collapse when Jackson
threw his last reserves into the fray. A large brigade
under the command of Confederate General Jubal A. Early
slammed into Kearny's men like a hammer blow and sent
the Federals all the way back to their starting line.
Back at his headquarters, Union General John Pope continued
to delude himself. Despite the failure to crack Jackson's
line and the obvious arrival of Longstreet's corps on
the battlefield, Pope believed that the next day a grand
pursuit of Lee would bring a great victory. He was soon
to learn otherwise.

August
30, 1862 - The very vortex of hell
Pope's
grand pursuit never happened. In fact, it was Pope's army
that became the pursued that day. The first Union troops
to discover the truth belonged to general James Ricketts.
His men advanced at around noon and were immediately repulsed
by Jackson's troops. Pope could delude himself no longer.
Lee was not retreating and he knew it. But that realization
did not stop what happened next. Pope sent orders for
the 10,000 men of Fitz John Porter's V corps to hit Jacksonhard.
Ironically,
this is exactly what Lee hoped for. Porter's attack set
the stage for one of the largest and most successful flank
attacks of the war. At 3:00 PM. like a giant avalanche,
Porter's men stormed out from the protection of the woods
into the open fields in front of Jackson's line.
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Porter's
Attack

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The
Confederate artillery wasted no time. Jackson's batteries
along with eighteen cannons under the command of Stephen
D. Lee (no relationship to Robert E. Lee) were in a perfect
position to rake the Union advance. Despite the devastating
artillery fire, Porter's men along with Hatch's division
closed ranks and pushed forward. The Union ranks degenerated
into confused clusters of men. A fierce battle raged along
the Unfinished Railroad, behind which Jackson's men had
take cover. At some spots along the line Confederates
ran out of ammunition and began to hurl stones at the
assaulting Union troops. The Union attack stalled and
Porter refused to risk sending reinforcements into the
artillery death trap. Porter's assault was shattered an
hour after it had started. Nearly 3,000 men now lay dead,
wounded, or missing on the field.
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of the men who witnessed Porter's attack crumble was Union
Third Corps Commander General Irvin McDowell. In July of
the previous year, McDowell had commanded the Union troops
that were routed on these same fields at the First Battle
of Manassas. Now, from his vantage point, it appeared that
the center of the Union line was in total disarray and in
danger of collapsing. McDowell promptly ordered General
John Reynold's to move his men to the north side of the
Warrenton Turnpike and shore up the weakness. It was one
of the worst decisions of his military career. With Reynolds'
departure, it left a mere 2,500 Union troops south of the
turnpike.
For
the Confederates, the moment to strike was at hand. Longstreet's
30,000 fresh troops surged forward in one of the largest
flank attacks of the Civil War. The Confederate juggernaut
was about to steam role everything in its path. Leading
the way was John Hood's Texas Brigade and only Union resistance
in their path was a small brigade of New York Zouave's
commanded by Colonel Gouverneur K. Warren. In a matter
of ten minutes the 5th New York lost approximately half
its men. For a single infantry regiment, it was the largest
loss of life in any single battle of the entire Civil
War. Longstreet was guiding his men straight for Henry
Hill, the key to cutting off the Union retreat back across
the Bull Run. With only a handful of troops in their path,
it appeared as if nothing could stop the Confederate onslaught.
Pope was rapidly reaching the same conclusion. His next
series of orders would reveal how desperate the situation
had become.
On
Chinn Ridge Pope sacrificed one brigade after another
in an attempt to buy time while his army established a
last ditch defense on Henry Hill. The Union troops defending
Chinn Ridge were grudgingly pushed back by successive
waves of Confederate infantry. Following a brief but valiant
attempt by Koltes' brigade to recapture a Union battery,
Longstreet's men finally conquered Chinn Ridge around
6:00 PM. It had been 90 minutes of the most intense and
sustained fighting of the battle.
Lee's
army was now poised to take Henry Hill and destroy Pope's
army. But the struggle for Chinn Ridge had been costly.
As darkness approached, Longstreet's troops were becoming
disorganized and tired. He had three more divisions remaining
for the final assault on Henry Hill. Two of these were
fresh divisions but were still some ways off the front
line. That left David R. Jones's Division. The Union line
braced itself, leveled their rifles atop the road bank
and let loose a deafening volley. The Georgia troops of
Colonel George T. Anderson's line staggered. Anderson
urged his men forward. "Knock hell out of those blue
shirts," he yelled. His men were now within 50 yards
of the road, but The Yankees would not give an inch. Union
artillery belched canister into the Confederates lines
with dreadful effect. Still the Rebels pushed forward.
The
weight of the Confederate attack was beginning to show.
Pushing through the Federal line, Georgians from Benning's
Brigade forced a toehold on the Manassas-Sudley road.
Union reinforcements rushed forward to seal the breach.
The Confederate attack began to wane. Darkness had nearly
enveloped the battlefield when Confederate troops finally
maneuvered around the southern end of the Union line.
Inexplicably, however, the Confederates did not exploit
their advantage. JEB Stuart, the Confederate cavalry commander,
urged General Armistead to advance his brigade and attack
the exposed Union line. Armistead declined. In the smoke
and darkness, he feared his men would not be able to tell
friend from foe.
With
that the Confederate sweep to Henry Hill ground to a halt.
By 11:00 PM, most of the Union army had retreated across
Bull Run, bloodied but intact. As the Union troops filed
across the wooden bridge on their way towards the Washington
defenses, they left behind nearly 10,000 of their men
dead, wounded or captured on the fields of Manassas. Lee
had lost just over 8,000 men. His telegram to Confederate
President Davis read as follows: "This army achieved
today on the plains of Manassas a signal victory over
the combined forces of Generals McClellan and Pope."
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