- Battle of Fort Stevens
The Battle of Fort Stevens was an
American Civil War battle fought onJuly 11 andJuly 12 in NorthwestWashington, D.C. , as part of theValley Campaigns of 1864 between forces under Confederate Lt. Gen. Jubal A. Early and Union GeneralHoratio Wright . The battle resulted in a Union victory.Background
In June 1864, Gen. Jubal Early was dispatched by Gen.
Robert E. Lee with the Second Corps of theArmy of Northern Virginia from the Confederate line around Richmond with orders to clear theShenandoah Valley of Federals and then if practical, invadeMaryland , disrupt theBaltimore and Ohio Railroad and if possible threatenWashington, D.C. The hope was that a movement into Maryland would force Union Lt. Gen.Ulysses S. Grant to send troops to defend Washington against the threat, thus reducing his strength to take the Confederate capital.After easily driving off the
Army of West Virginia under Maj. Gen.David Hunter at the short-livedBattle of Lynchburg onJune 18 , the Second Corps, marched down the valley, entering Maryland onJuly 5 near Sharpsburg. They then turned east towards Frederick where they arrived onJuly 7 . Two days later, as the Second Corps prepared to march on Washington, Maj. Gen.Lew Wallace leading a small rag-tag army, bolstered by the eleventh-hour addition of two brigades of the VI Corps sent from Richmond under Maj. Gen.James B. Ricketts , attempted to resist the Confederate advance at theBattle of Monocacy .The battle lasted from about 8:00 a.m. until around 4:00 p.m., but ultimately the Early's corps drove off the small Union force, which was the only substantial Union army between it and the capital. After the battle Early resumed his march on Washington, arriving at its northeast border near Silver Spring at around noontime on
July 11 . Because of the battle and then long march through stifling summer heat, and unsure of the strength of the federal position in front of him, Early decided to not send his army against the fortifications around Washington until the next day.Early's invasion of Maryland had the desired effect on Grant, who dispatched the rest of the VI Corp and XIX Corps under Maj. Gen.
Horatio G. Wright to Washington onJuly 9 . The steamer carrying the Union force arrived in southeast Washington around noon on theJuly 11 , at about the same time that Early himself had reached the outskirts of Fort Stevens with the lead elements of his troops.The battle
At about the time Wright's command was arriving in Washington, Early's corps began to arrive at the breastworks of Fort Stevens, yet Early delayed the attack because he was still unsure of the federal strength defending the fort, much of his army was still in transit to the front, and the troops he had were exhausted due to the excessive heat and the fact that they had been on the march since
June 13 . Additionally, many of the Confederate troops had looted the home of Montgomery Blair, the son of the founder of Silver Spring, Maryland. They found barrels of whiskey in the basement of the mansion, called Blair Mansion, and many troops were too drunk to get a good start in the morning. This allowed for further fortification by Union troops.Around 3 p.m., with the bulk of their force present, the Confederates commenced skirmishing, probing the defense maintained by Brig. Gen. Martin D. Hardin's division of the XXII Corps with a line of skirmishers backed by artillery. Near the start of the Confederate attack the lead elements of the VI and XIX Corps arrived at the fort, reinforcing it with battle-hardened troops. The battle picked up around 5 p.m. when Confederate cavalry pushed through the advance Union picket line. A Union counterattack drove back the Confederate cavalry and the two opposing lines confronted each other throughout the evening with periods of intense skirmishing. The Union front was aided by artillery from the fort, which shelled Confederate positions, destroying many houses that Confederate sharpshooters used for protection.
President
Abraham Lincoln , his wife Mary, and some officers rode out to observe the attack, and were briefly under enemy fire that wounded a Union surgeon standing next to him on the Fort Stevens parapet. Lincoln was brusquely ordered to take cover by an officer, probably Horatio Wright, although apocryphal stories claim that it wasOliver Wendell Holmes Jr. Maj. Gen.
John C. Breckinridge , former U.S. vice president and one of Lincoln's opponents in the presidential election of 1860, was one of the Confederate commanders; the Battle of Fort Stevens marks the only occasion in American history when two former opponents in a presidential election faced one another across battle lines and the only time in American history a sitting president was under fire in combat. Breckinridge was a cousin of Mary Todd Lincoln's and a beau in her youth. (Stephen Douglas - another Lincoln opponent in the 1860 presidential election - was also a beau of Mary Todd.)The skirmishing continued into
July 12 , until Early finally decided Washington could not be taken without heavy losses too severe to warrant the attempt. His corps withdrew that evening, headed back into Montgomery County, Maryland, and crossed thePotomac River onJuly 13 at White's Ferry intoLeesburg, Virginia . Early remarked to one of his officers after the battle, "Major, we didn't take Washington but we scared Abe Lincoln like hell." It would be nearly another day before the Union pursuit under Wright would set out after them.The battlefield
Fort Stevens is now maintained by the
National Park Service . The fort is located near 13th Street NW between Rittenhouse and Quackenbos Streets NW. The battlefield cemetery is located nearby, at 6625Georgia Avenue NW.References
* [http://www.cr.nps.gov/hps/abpp/battles/dc001.htm National Park Service battle description]
* Kennedy, Frances H., ed., "The Civil War Battlefield Guide", 2nd ed., Houghton Mifflin Co., 1998, ISBN 0-395-74012-6.
* Leepson, Marc, "Desperate Engagement: How a Little-Known Civil War Battle Saved Washington, D.C., and Changed American History", Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin's Press, 2007, ISBN 0-312-36364-8.Notes
External links
* [http://www.nps.gov/batt/ Battleground National Cemetery]
* [http://www.nps.gov/rocr/ftcircle/stevens.htm National Park Service website for Fort Stevens]
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