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Virtual Tour by Markers of the Jackson Flank March and Attack.
 
Chancellorsville Campaign Marker image, Touch for more information
By Craig Swain, November 10, 2007
Chancellorsville Campaign Marker
SHOWN IN SOURCE-SPECIFIED ORDER
1 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Chancellorsville Campaign
May 2, 1863. Having lost the Furnace, the 23rd Georgia Regiment established a new line here in the bed of the Unfinished Railroad. Other troops reinforced the position. During late afternoon, while Jackson's front lines were hitting the Federal . . . Map (db m3906) HM
2 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Ordeal of the WellfordsThe Battle of Chancellorsville — Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park —
In December 1862 the Wellford family fled Fredericksburg to escape the ravages of battle. Five months later war found them again - here, in a commodious brick home that stood in the field in front of you. On April 30, Union troops arrived. "About . . . Map (db m3919) HM
3 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Rearguard ActionThe Battle of Fredericksburg
On May 2, 1863, as the tail end of Stonewall Jackson's flanking column neared the Wellford place, Union infantry launched an attack. They struck Jackson's rearguard (the 23rd Georgia) a half-mile to the north, at Catharine Furnace. From there, they . . . Map (db m11432) HM
4 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Chancellorsville Campaign
Jackson's marching soldiers filled this narrow road from shoulder to shoulder making it slow and tedious work for any mounted officer to pass along the column. One of Stonewall's aides, Captain James Power Smith, attempted to catch up to the General . . . Map (db m3920) HM
5 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Chancellorsville Campaign
Jackson's most direct route toward the enemy's flank lay in the right turn onto the Brock Road here. Instead of following that route he turned left, or southward, proceeded a quarter of a mile, and then turned right into a parallel woods road. This . . . Map (db m3921) HM
6 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Chancellorsville Campaign
May 2, 1863. Deluding the enemy was the secret of Jackson's success. Since his troops had been observed from Federal signal stations as they marched across the front of Hooker's army, he turned them south on the Brock Road to create the impression . . . Map (db m3927) HM
7 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Chancellorsville Campaign
If a balloonist had been high overhead, Jackson's column might have resembled a huge serpent as it wound through the forest. Closer up, it became thousands of marchers in worn battle dress. From this point, they stretched back about six miles to the . . . Map (db m3929) HM
8 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Chancellorsville Campaign
May 2, 1863. Hour by hour, the long gray columns of Jackson's Corps splashed through the shallow ford here, which was not stone-paved then, stirring the crossing into a mud hole. Before the water of this branch of Poplar Run ran clear again in its . . . Map (db m3931) HM
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9 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Chancellorsville Campaign
"Stonewall" Jackson's way here was a woodland road west of and parallel to the Brock Road. This park trail approximates the old appearance. No tar, asphalt, or cement highway existed in the 1860's. Even the best of that time, the stone turnpikes and . . . Map (db m3932) HM
10 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Chancellorsville Campaign
May 2, 1863. The head of Jackson's column reached this point about 12:30 p.m. Eight miles away, the rear , under fire of Federal guns, was closing up near the Catharine Furnace. Jackson planned to turn the column right onto the Plank Road (1 mile . . . Map (db m3934) HM
11 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Pressing the AttackThe Battle of Chancellorsville — Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park —
That evening, as the fighting subsided, Confederate officers reassembled their commands in the clearing surrounding Wilderness Church, one-half mile in front of you. The attack had taken a heavy toll on the army's organization. Units had become . . . Map (db m3938) HM
12 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — The Flying DutchmenThe Battle of Chancellorsville — Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park —
The target of Jackson's attack was General Oliver O. Howard's Eleventh Corps, which extended for more than a mile along the Orange Turnpike. The Eleventh Corps was relatively new to the Army of the Potomac. Its 11,000 men included a large . . . Map (db m3939) HM
13 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — Jackson AttacksThe Battle of Chancellorsville — Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park —
"You can go forward then." With those words "Stonewall" Jackson unleashed one of the most famous and successful attacks of the Civil War. On the afternoon of May 2, 1862, Jackson led 30,000 men of his Second Corps to a point just beyond the Union . . . Map (db m3941) HM
14 Virginia, Spotsylvania County, Spotsylvania Courthouse — 154th New York State Volunteer Infantry
(front): 1st Brigade, 2nd Division, 11th Corps "The Hardtack Regiment" Anchor of the Buschbeck Line Near Dowdall's Tavern Battle of Chancellorsville May 2, 1863 (back): 590 present for duty 240 killed, wounded, and captured Dedicated . . . Map (db m244406) HM
 
 
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Apr. 26, 2024