THE WILDERNESS
This mortuary cannon marks the location of Brigadier General Alexander Hays' death along the Brock Road. |
Confederate artillery on the west end of Tapp Field. |
Confederate entrenchments bisecting Tapp Field...the Orange Plank Road is along the far treeline. |
Confederate earthworks north of the Orange Plank Road...Hancock's May 6 AM attack passed through these works before his troops were eventually pushed back through here towards the Brock Road. |
This monument marks the location of Brigadier General James Wadsworth's mortal wounding on May 6, 1864. |
SPOTSYLVANIA
Laurel Hill...this is where major fighting at Spotsylvania began on May 8, 1864. |
Looking up the steep northern slopes of Laurel Hill...the Brock Road runs along the crest. On May 8, Samuel Crawford's Division made attacks against well positioned Confederates here. |
Looking across the western works of the Mule Shoe towards the ruins of the Harrison House, which are located amid the clump of trees on the hill in the left center of the photo. |
Confederate entrenchments along the eastern part of the Mule Shoe. |
Confederate entrenchments on the eastern edge of the Mule Shoe, just below the Bloody Angle. |
Looking from the Bloody Angle in the direction from which Hancock's 2nd Corps made their massive assault in the early hours of May 12, 1864. They overwhelmed this part of the Confederate defenses. |
Union monuments along the Bloody Angle, giving an idea of the close nature of the fighting across the earthworks. |
Monument to the regiments of Upton's Charge on May 10 |
In this area on May 10, Emory Upton's men formed for their groundbreaking charge that helped to reformulate battlefield tactics of the time. |
The dense woods of Spotsylvania County |
Confederate Cemetery at Spotsylvania |
No comments:
Post a Comment