Fredericksburg, VA
December, 1862 |
Other Names:
Marye’s Heights
Location:
Spotsylvania County and Fredericksburg
Campaign:
Fredericksburg Campaign (November-December 1862)
Date(s):
December 11-15, 1862
Principal Commanders:
Maj. Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside [US]; Gen. Robert E. Lee [CS]
Forces Engaged:
172,504 total (US 100,007; CS 72,497)
Estimated Casualties:
17,929 total (US 13,353; CS 4,576)
Description:
On November 14, Burnside, now in command of the Army of the Potomac,
sent a corps to occupy the vicinity of Falmouth near Fredericksburg.
The rest of the army soon followed. Lee reacted by entrenching
his army on the heights behind the town.
On
December 11, Union engineers laid five pontoon bridges across the
Rappahannock under fire. On the 12th, the Federal army crossed over,
and on December 13, Burnside mounted a series of futile frontal
assaults on Prospect Hill and Marye’s Heights
that resulted in staggering casualties. Meade’s division, on the
Union left flank, briefly penetrated Jackson’s line but was driven
back by a counterattack. Union generals C. Feger Jackson and George
Bayard, and Confederate generals Thomas R.R. Cobb and Maxey Gregg
were killed. On December 15, Burnside called off the offensive and
recrossed the river, ending the campaign. Burnside initiated a
new offensive in January 1863, which quickly bogged down in the
winter mud. The abortive “Mud March” and other failures led to
Burnside’s replacement by Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker in January 1863.
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