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<h2> THE CHARGE AT GETTYSBURG </h2>
<p>For the Lord<br/>
On the whirlwind is abroad;<br/>
In the earthquake he has spoken;<br/>
He has smitten with his thunder<br/>
The iron walls asunder,<br/>
And the gates of brass are broken!<br/>
—Whittier<br/>
<br/>
With bray of the trumpet,<br/>
And roll of the drum,<br/>
And keen ring of bugle<br/>
The cavalry come:<br/>
Sharp clank the steel scabbards,<br/>
The bridle-chains ring,<br/>
And foam from red nostrils<br/>
The wild chargers fling!<br/>
<br/>
Tramp, tramp o'er the greensward<br/>
That quivers below,<br/>
Scarce held by the curb bit<br/>
The fierce horses go!<br/>
And the grim-visaged colonel,<br/>
With ear-rending shout,<br/>
Peals forth to the squadrons<br/>
The order, "Trot Out"!<br/>
—Francis A. Durivage.<br/></p>
<p>The battle of Chancellorsville marked the zenith of Confederate good
fortune. Immediately afterward, in June, 1863, Lee led the victorious army
of Northern Virginia into Pennsylvania. The South was now the invader, not
the invaded, and its heart beat proudly with hopes of success; but these
hopes went down in bloody wreck on July 4, when word was sent to the world
that the high valor of Virginia had failed at last on the field of
Gettysburg, and that in the far West Vicksburg had been taken by the army
of the "silent soldier."</p>
<p>At Gettysburg Lee had under him some seventy thousand men, and his
opponent, Meade, about ninety thousand. Both armies were composed mainly
of seasoned veterans, trained to the highest point by campaign after
campaign and battle after battle; and there was nothing to choose between
them as to the fighting power of the rank and file. The Union army was the
larger, yet most of the time it stood on the defensive; for the difference
between the generals, Lee and Meade, was greater than could be bridged by
twenty thousand men. For three days the battle raged. No other battle of
recent time has been so obstinate and so bloody. The victorious Union army
lost a greater percentage in killed and wounded than the allied armies of
England, Germany, and the Netherlands lost at Waterloo. Four of its seven
corps suffered each a greater relative loss than befell the world-renowned
British infantry on the day that saw the doom of the French emperor. The
defeated Confederates at Gettysburg lost, relatively, as many men as the
defeated French at Waterloo; but whereas the French army became a mere
rabble, Lee withdrew his formidable soldiery with their courage unbroken,
and their fighting power only diminished by their actual losses in the
field.</p>
<p>The decisive moment of the battle, and perhaps of the whole war, was in
the afternoon of the third day, when Lee sent forward his choicest troops
in a last effort to break the middle of the Union line. The center of the
attacking force was Pickett's division, the flower of the Virginia
infantry; but many other brigades took part in the assault, and the
column, all told, numbered over fifteen thousand men. At the same time,
the Confederates attacked the Union left to create a diversion. The attack
was preceded by a terrific cannonade, Lee gathering one hundred and
fifteen guns, and opening a fire on the center of the Union line. In
response, Hunt, the Union chief of artillery, and Tyler, of the artillery
reserves, gathered eighty guns on the crest of the gently sloping hill,
where attack was threatened. For two hours, from one till three, the
cannonade lasted, and the batteries on both sides suffered severely. In
both the Union and Confederate lines caissons were blown up by the fire,
riderless horses dashed hither and thither, the dead lay in heaps, and
throngs of wounded streamed to the rear. Every man lay down and sought
what cover he could. It was evident that the Confederate cannonade was but
a prelude to a great infantry attack, and at three o'clock Hunt ordered
the fire to stop, that the guns might cool, to be ready for the coming
assault. The Confederates thought that they had silenced the hostile
artillery, and for a few minutes their firing continued; then, suddenly,
it ceased, and there was a lull.</p>
<p>The men on the Union side who were not at the point directly menaced
peered anxiously across the space between the lines to watch the next
move, while the men in the divisions which it was certain were about to be
assaulted, lay hugging the ground and gripping their muskets, excited, but
confident and resolute. They saw the smoke clouds rise slowly from the
opposite crest, where the Confederate army lay, and the sunlight glinted
again on the long line of brass and iron guns which had been hidden from
view during the cannonade. In another moment, out of the lifting smoke
there appeared, beautiful and terrible, the picked thousands of the
Southern army coming on to the assault. They advanced in three lines, each
over a mile long, and in perfect order. Pickett's Virginians held the
center, with on their left the North Carolinians of Pender and Pettigrew,
and on their right the Alabama regiments of Wilcox; and there were also
Georgian and Tennessee regiments in the attacking force. Pickett's
division, however, was the only one able to press its charge home. After
leaving the woods where they started, the Confederates had nearly a mile
and a half to go in their charge. As the Virginians moved, they bent
slightly to the left, so as to leave a gap between them and the Alabamians
on the right.</p>
<p>The Confederate lines came on magnificently. As they crossed the
Emmetsburg Pike the eighty guns on the Union crest, now cool and in good
shape, opened upon them, first with shot and then with shell. Great gaps
were made every second in the ranks, but the gray-clad soldiers closed up
to the center, and the color-bearers leaped to the front, shaking and
waving the flags. The Union infantry reserved their fire until the
Confederates were within easy range, when the musketry crashed out with a
roar, and the big guns began to fire grape and canister. On came the
Confederates, the men falling by hundreds, the colors fluttering in front
like a little forest; for as fast as a color-bearer was shot some one else
seized the flag from his hand before it fell. The North Carolinians were
more exposed to the fire than any other portion of the attacking force,
and they were broken before they reached the line. There was a gap between
the Virginians and the Alabama troops, and this was taken advantage of by
Stannard's Vermont brigade and a demi-brigade under Gates, of the 20th New
York, who were thrust forward into it. Stannard changed front with his
regiments and fell on Pickett's forces in flank, and Gates continued the
attack. When thus struck in the flank, the Virginians could not defend
themselves, and they crowded off toward the center to avoid the pressure.
Many of them were killed or captured; many were driven back; but two of
the brigades, headed by General Armistead, forced their way forward to the
stone wall on the crest, where the Pennsylvania regiments were posted
under Gibbon and Webb.</p>
<p>The Union guns fired to the last moment, until of the two batteries
immediately in front of the charging Virginians every officer but one had
been struck. One of the mortally wounded officers was young Cushing, a
brother of the hero of the Albemarle fight. He was almost cut in two, but
holding his body together with one hand, with the other he fired his last
gun, and fell dead, just as Armistead, pressing forward at the head of his
men, leaped the wall, waving his hat on his sword. Immediately afterward
the battle-flags of the foremost Confederate regiments crowned the crest;
but their strength was spent. The Union troops moved forward with the
bayonet, and the remnant of Pickett's division, attacked on all sides,
either surrendered or retreated down the hill again. Armistead fell,
dying, by the body of the dead Cushing. Both Gibbon and Webb were wounded.
Of Pickett's command two thirds were killed, wounded or captured, and
every brigade commander and every field officer, save one, fell. The
Virginians tried to rally, but were broken and driven again by Gates,
while Stannard repeated, at the expense of the Alabamians, the movement he
had made against the Virginians, and, reversing his front, attacked them
in flank. Their lines were torn by the batteries in front, and they fell
back before the Vermonter's attack, and Stannard reaped a rich harvest of
prisoners and of battle-flags.</p>
<p>The charge was over. It was the greatest charge in any battle of modern
times, and it had failed. It would be impossible to surpass the gallantry
of those that made it, or the gallantry of those that withstood it. Had
there been in command of the Union army a general like Grant, it would
have been followed by a counter-charge, and in all probability the war
would have been shortened by nearly two years; but no countercharge was
made.</p>
<p>As the afternoon waned, a fierce cavalry fight took place on the Union
right. Stuart, the famous Confederate cavalry commander, had moved forward
to turn the Union right, but he was met by Gregg's cavalry, and there
followed a contest, at close quarters, with "the white arm." It closed
with a desperate melee, in which the Confederates, charged under Generals
Wade Hampton and Fitz Lee, were met in mid career by the Union generals
Custer and McIntosh. All four fought, saber in hand, at the head of their
troopers, and every man on each side was put into the struggle. Custer,
his yellow hair flowing, his face aflame with the eager joy of battle, was
in the thick of the fight, rising in his stirrups as he called to his
famous Michigan swordsmen: "Come on, you Wolverines, come on!" All that
the Union infantry, watching eagerly from their lines, could see, was a
vast dust-cloud where flakes of light shimmered as the sun shone upon the
swinging sabers. At last the Confederate horsemen were beaten back, and
they did not come forward again or seek to renew the combat; for Pickett's
charge had failed, and there was no longer hope of Confederate victory.</p>
<p>When night fell, the Union flags waved in triumph on the field of
Gettysburg; but over thirty thousand men lay dead or wounded, strewn
through wood and meadow, on field and hill, where the three days' fight
had surged.</p>
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