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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9XW_a-great-struggle-is-now-impending_Petersburg-VA.html
The Union high command began making preparations to attack the Confederate lines on the Boisseau Plantation shortly after the capture of the Rebels' picket line on March 25. Final orders arrived on the afternoon of April 1 for a dawn assault the f…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9XU_first-man-over-the-works_Petersburg-VA.html
In the hours, days, and years after the Breakthrough, many Union soldiers boasted that they or their regiment were the first troops to capture the Confederate works on the morning of April 2. Darkness, the chaos of the attack, and the wide Federal…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9XS_we-fought-desperately_Petersburg-VA.html
The passage of the picket posts and abatis shattered regimental formations in the Vermont Brigade. The attack degenerated into a rush of disorganized men rather than an example of textbook tactics. Orderly Sergeant Thomas H. McCauley of the 2nd Ve…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9XQ_the-attack-begins_Petersburg-VA.html
Major General Horatio G. Wright deployed the 14,000 attackers of his Sixth Corps in a wedge-shaped formation. Although the entire battle front extended for nearly a mile, the point of the wedge was here, manned by the Vermont Brigade commanded by …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9NH_the-battle-of-fort-whitworth_Petersburg-VA.html
This battery, also known as Fort Baldwin, Alexander or Anderson was garrisoned by the 19th & 48th Mississippi Infantry of Brig. Genl. Nathaniel Harris's brigade. They were initially supported by guns of Louisiana's Washington Artillery but these w…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9NG_confederate-fort-whitworth_Petersburg-VA.html
Named for the Whitworth family of Mayfield, the farm on which it was built, this outpost (a quarter-mile east) and Fort Gregg, 400 yards to the south, were constructed to protect the western approaches to Petersburg during the 1864-1865 siege. On …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9MF_the-battle-of-white-oak-road_Petersburg-VA.html
The Battle of White Oak Road left the Federals in position to block Confederate reinforcements from reaching their comrades further west. Both the Battle of White Oak Road and the Battle of Dinwiddie Court House were preludes to the climactic Apri…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9MC_the-battle-of-white-oak-road_Petersburg-VA.html
As the fight progressed, the Confederates met stiffening resistance. Lee and his subordinates realized they had too few troops to hold their advanced position. They determined to withdraw to the slight earthworks constructed by the Federal soldier…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9MA_the-battle-of-white-oak-road_Petersburg-VA.html
Early on the morning of March 31, 1865, Confederate General Robert E. Lee sent most of a division forward to attack the Federals from this location at White Oak Road. Fighting through the morning, the Confederate brigades enveloped and put to flig…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM9LE_white-oak-road_Petersburg-VA.html
The extreme right of Lee's line rested on this road, which was entrenched. General Warren, advancing against Lee's works here, March 31, 1865, was driven back. Reinforced, Warren advanced again, forcing the Confederates to retire to the road. On i…