9. THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
1862: BLOODY STALEMATE
CONTENTS
The battle of the ironclads at Hampton Roads (March 3)
The battle in the West
The battle for control of the Mississippi River
McClellan's Peninsula Campaign and the Seven Days Battles
The Second Battle of Manassas (or Bull Run) – August
Antietam (or Sharpsburg) – September 17
The Emancipation Proclamation (September
22)
Further action in the West
Fredericksburg (December 11 – 15)
The textual material on this webpage is drawn directly from my work
America – The Covenant Nation © 2021, Volume One, pages 299-304
A Timeline of Major Events during this period
1862 |
A North-South military stalemate develops
Feb Union general Grant defeats Confederate forces at Forts Henry and Donelson ... essentially taking much of Tennesee out of action
Mar An inconclusive battle of the "Ironclads" between the South's Merimac (or Virginia) and the North's
Monitor at Hampton Roads near Norfolk, Virginia, surprises everyone
Apr An inclusive battle at Shiloh catches Grant by surprise; but the seeming Confederate "victory" is very expensive for the
Confederates ... including the loss of their general A.S. Johnston
The very strategic
city of New Orleans is captured by Union Navy commander Farragut
Union commander
McClellan marches the main Union army along coast Virginia ... fighting
battles in a way to glorify his troops (and humself) – but of little strategic importance
May Grant moves his troops down the Mississippi River to Vickburg – the last key Confederate position on the
strategic river ... thus cutting off Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas from
the rest of the Confederacy – and outside the major action of the remainder of the war
Confederate General
Joe Johnston (another Johnston!) is badly wounded in another round of
battle with McClellan in coastal Virginia (at the Chickahominy Creek); Robert E Lee thus takes< Confederate command
Jun McClellan meets and defeats Confederate forces (the 7-Days Battles) ... then pulls back to rest – rather than finish off the Confederate military
Aug Union general Pope holds the ground at a Second Battle of Manassas or Bull Run ... unassisted by McClellan, who decides simply to not join him in the action
Sep Lee is stopped by McClellan at Antietam Creek ... resulting in the highest single-day losses in the war by
both sides; but McClellan then refuses to move to finish off the weary
Confederates
Lincoln then issues
the Emancipation Proclamation recognizing an official end to slavery in
the South ... even inviting
former slaves to join the Union troops in their action against the
Confederacy
Nov Lincoln finally removes McClellan from command ... giving the position to Ambrose Burnside
Dec Burnside understands that Lincoln wants an aggressive commander ... and heads south through central Virginia ...
only to be stopped at the well-defended city of Fredericksburg just across the wide Rappahannock River; an attempt to cross ends in disaster
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HAMPTON
ROADS – OR THE BATTLE OF THE IRONCLADS(March 3) |
With the Union naval blockade in place and the
South now unable to get to or from the high seas, the South's vital
export business was crippled.
But
Confederate naval designers came up with an ingenious plan. They
would restore the sunken Union steam-driven frigate, the Merrimac,
and cover her topsides with steel plating which would make her
invulnerable to Union cannons. This would turn her into a terror
against the blockading Union fleet.
On March 2nd, renamed the Virginia,
this ten-cannon monster (operating under steam power and thus needing
no masts, and showing only slanting ironclad sides above water) steamed
into the Union fleet blockading the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay,
creating havoc. She rammed and sank the Cumberland, sank the Congress, and ran the Minnesota aground before night set in and she returned to port.
On the following morning she headed out toward the Union fleet with the intention of finishing off the Minnesota
and then turning on the three other Union ships still blockading the
harbor. But she was met by an equally strange ironclad sailing vessel,
the Monitor,
that the North had hastily put together when it first got wind of the
South's intention of building an ironclad ship. The Monitor
was just a round turret with two canons inside sitting atop a flat
barge whose deck barely rose above the water. These two monster
machines met and for four hours blasted away at each other. The match
finally ended when the Virginia (formerly Merrimac) withdrew. Overall however, there was no victor and no vanquished in this battle.
The two ships never met again. Then that May, the Union army captured Norfolk, the operational base of the Virginia.
Thus with nowhere to operate from, and with the South not wishing to
surrender the Virginia to the North, her crew blew her up.
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 The Confederate Ram Ironclad CSS Virginia or "Merrimac"  The Union Ironclad USS Monitor
Over in the West, in Central Tennessee along the
Tennessee and Cumberland Rivers at Forts Henry and Donelson, a series
of fierce battles in February raged back and forth between Union and
Confederate troops, with Grant inflicting a huge loss on the
Confederates (15,000 of their troops captured), essentially knocking
Kentucky and much of Tennessee out of the war.
But a Confederate comeback at Shiloh in
April caught Grant by surprise (he was resting his troops on his
approach to Memphis), causing 10,000 Union casualties over the two-day
battle. However, it was a costly victory for the Confederates, losing
almost an equal number of their own men, plus on the first day of the
battle their capable commanding officer Albert S. (A.S.) Johnston.
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Battle of Shiloh (April 6-7)

Union Commodore Andrew Hull Foote

General Ulysses S. Grant
Confederate General A.S. Johnston

Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard
THE BATTLE FOR CONTROL OF THE MISSISSIPPI RIVER |
Also in April, Union forces under Naval Captain
David Farragut captured the strategically key city of New Orleans at
the base of the Mississippi River. This opened up this vital waterway
to a massive Union advance that would cut off Texas and Arkansas from
the rest of the Confederacy.
Meanwhile, Grant quickly recovered from
the blow at Shiloh and moved from the north down the Mississippi River
until he approached the well-fortified town of Vicksburg located atop
high cliffs overlooking a sharp bend or loop in the river. Vicksburg
needed to be taken to complete the Union control of this vital
waterway, a task that would prove to be daunting.
At first Grant attempted in December a
direct assault on Vicksburg from the river, securing nothing in the
two-month-long process. Then he attempted the laborious process of
building levees in order to divert the river through the swamps, again
making no real headway in the process. But Grant was not one to quit.
But the year would be out before he was able to attempt yet a different
move on Vicksburg.
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Union Forces under Admiral David Farragut capture New Orleans (Apr 25)
US Naval History & Heritage Command

Union Admiral David Farragut

The Grapevine Bridge over the Chickahominy River built by the
5th New Hampshire Infantry (which however did not survive the May 1862 flood of the
river) 
The Seven Days Battles (June 26 – July 1st)

A Union field hospital – Savages Station, Virginia – June 30th – by James F. Gibson
THE SECOND BATTLE OF MANASSAS (OR BULL RUN) - August
29-30 |
With McClellan halting his troops in the Virginia
southeast, Lincoln was forced to set up yet another army under General
John Pope to help protect Washington and to press Lee from the north
while Lee stood facing McClellan to the south. Lincoln in fact hoped at
that point that Pope and McClellan might engage Lee from both the north
and the south in a pincer movement that might finally bring Lee to
defeat.
But Lee, rightly unconcerned about
McClellan, instead attacked the advancing Pope, also sending Jackson to
the north around Pope's army, now putting Pope in the same trap that
Lincoln had hoped to put Lee in. The two armies met again at Manassas,
with Pope's army losing 14,000 of his troops. It all appeared to be
something of a Confederate victory. But the results were almost as
devastating to the South, having themselves lost 8,000 men in the
process.
McClellan does his own thing
Subsequently in August McClellan, who had
avoided any involvement in the action, instead returned his army by
ship to Washington, and himself back to his adoring supporters, to
lobby with the politicians there for more troops and equipment. His
goal, he claimed, was to smash Lee Napoleon-style with a single massive
pitched battle. Indeed, this latter-day Napoleon did not approve of the
less dramatic process of winning the war with General Scott's Anaconda
strategy of gradually strangling the South. In fact he threatened to
resign his commission if Scott were not dismissed as commanding general
and he himself appointed in his place (to which Lincoln finally
yielded). Such a Napoleonic self-image did McClellan hold of himself
that it even caused some in Washington to suspect McClellan of planning
a Napoleon-style military takeover of the Union!
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For more on the Second Battle of Manassas or Bull Run

Union Generals John Pope

Union General Irvin McDowell

Union General N.P. Banks

Union General Franz Sigel

Confederate General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson

Confederate General James Longstreet
For details of the Second Battle of Manassas (or Bull Run)


Pictures taken after the Second Battle of Bull Run (or Second Manassas)
ANTIETAM (OR SHARPSBURG)- September
17) |
In early September Lee decided to take his army
across the Potomac into Maryland with the intent of invading the North
and taking the pressure off his home state of Virginia. He divided his
army into three groups, with the same idea he had used at Manassas of
surrounding from three directions and entrapping a Union army he was
expecting to come after him. But the plan was discovered by a couple of
Union soldiers and relayed to McClellan. McClellan now had the
opportunity to attack in full force one of the three Confederate groups
before they had a chance to converge. But he refused to go after any of
the Confederate groups. Thus Jackson, leading one of those three
groups, moved on Harpers Ferry, capturing 12,000 Union troops before
joining Lee for the main battle which broke out at the Antietam Creek
near Sharpsburg.
The fight at Antietam lasted all day and
produced the highest one-day casualty rate of the entire war, in fact
in any war America has ever been involved in. For instance, in one
Union charge against the Confederate lines, 2,300 Union soldiers fell
in just 20 minutes. Overall, the North lost over 12,000 men, the South
lost over 10,000. But Lee was stopped and his plan (at least at this
time) to take the war to the North was completely undone by the battle.
The next day Lee retreated back across
the Potomac into Virginia, stunned by the losses. But McClellan did not
pursue him (of course!) – much to the intense displeasure of Lincoln.
Ultimately Lincoln decided to relieve McClellan as commander of the
Army of the Potomac (November 7th) – and to turn that responsibility
over to General Ambrose Burnside, a rather unwilling recipient of this
responsibility.

Confederate Gen. A.P. Hill

Union Gen. Ambrose Burnside



Dead soldiers in front of the Dunker
Church, Antietam Library of Congress

THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION(September 22) |
The issue of slavery as a cause of war remained
quite controversial. Abolitionists had been pushing from the outset of
the war for Lincoln to take a strong stand against slavery, making it
the primary cause of the war. Lincoln, though highly opposed to
slavery, was more moved by the needs of preserving the unity of the
American nation against the divisiveness of Southern instincts. He was
also afraid that a strong stand against slavery might alienate the
border states of Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri.
But he knew it must be done, for there
was talk of the English and French possibly recognizing the
independence of the Confederacy. But if Lincoln were to make the war
seem more like a contention over slavery, both the British and French
would want to avoid appearing to be in any way supportive of a
slave-holding South. Lincoln therefore had to take some kind of public
position that clearly cast this war as a battle over slavery.
The Emancipation Proclamation. Thus on September 22nd, having the
victory of Antietam to show that he was not making this move out of
desperation, Lincoln announced that effective January 1st of the
following year, the slaves of any rebellious state would be considered
by the United States government as free persons. Further they could be
enlisted in the Union's military service.
This had the effect of further weakening
the South's social structure as more slaves poured North to escape
slavery, many of the men even taking up arms as Union troops against
their former masters.
It also made the war more clearly a civil
rights campaign – which had the effect in Europe of undermining any
thoughts of ever extending official diplomatic recognition to the
Confederacy by a European government, thus further isolating the South
politically and commercially.
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FURTHER ACTION IN THE WEST |

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