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Bloodiest single day in U.S. History took place 150 years ago

Antietam sign
Cecelia Mason
Sign at the entrance to the battlefield area

By Cecelia Mason

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September 11, 2012 · After Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson’s big victory at Harpers Ferry nearly 150 years ago, Jackson’s troops marched along the Potomac River north towards Sharpsburg, Md., to meet up with General Robert E. Lee, who planned to continue his campaign to bring the suffering caused by the Civil War to Pennsylvania.

 

While Lee waited, Union troops under General George McClellan attacked and the resulting battle changed the farm communities surrounding Sharpsburg and the tenor of the rest of the war.

 

Today Sharpsburg is a small and sleepy town surrounded by vast stretches of farm fields, not much different than it was on September 17 150 years ago.

 

“Sharpsburg was a quiet farming community like many, many others here in Washington County,” Tom Clemens, local historian, said. Clemens recently published a book about the battle of Antietam.

 

“People had of course been aware of the war; many of the young men had gone off to war on both sides,” Clemens said, “but it hadn’t really touched Sharpsburg much.”

 

“And Lee had a decision to make: is he even going to stay at all?” said Keith Snyder, park ranger, Antietam National Battlefield.

 

“But Lee is a very aggressive officer; I think he was convinced that he could defeat the Union army once and for all. In his mind he’s going to end the war here,” Snyder said.

 

Lee’s decision resulted in a 12-hour battle that involved up to 120,000 soldiers resulting in 23,000 casualties, the bloodiest one day battle on American soil.

 

“There are approximately 50,000 rounds of artillery fired onto the field,” Snyder said. “There are three to four million bullets fired in one day.”

 

“You have two, very large, very confident armies that come to this very concentrated field intent on destroying each other,” Snyder added “And then you throw in very effective weaponry fired by the tens of thousands, that’s a bad result, you’re going to get a lot of people hurt.”

 

But the battle didn’t end at Antietam. It continued across the Potomac River near Shepherdstown when the Confederates retreated.

 

“You might call it the final bloody exclamation point to a very bloody campaign and it also basically is the end of Lee’s first invasion of northern territory,” Mark Snell, director, Shepherd University’s George Tyler Moore Center for the Study of the Civil War, said.

 

Snell said the Confederates were able to get one last blow in against a new Union regiment caught in a ravine on the Virginia side of the river during the Battle of Shepherdstown on September 20, 1862. Snell said what began as an orderly Union retreat soon became chaotic. 

 

“Union soldiers were thrust off the bluffs a couple hundred feet above the river falling to their death, they were bayoneted, they scrambled back towards the river, they were shot in the river, they came under fire from their own cannons on the Maryland side of the river,” Snell said. “The 118th Pennsylvania’s going to lose 40 percent of its men in that one sharp engagement.”

 

The battles at Antietam and Shepherdstown wreaked havoc on the surrounding community.  Snell estimates more than 100,000 soldiers from both sides passed through Shepherdstown before the battles and in the weeks following.

 

Snell said the Union army remained on the Maryland side of the river in Washington County, Md., for more than a month while hundreds of Confederate soldiers passed through in the days after the battle.

 

“They’re going to take all of the livestock, they’re going to burn all the fence rails for wood, they’re going to take all the flour, grain and so forth to feed their army,” Snell said.

 

“The Union army is going to pay for it, the Confederate army perhaps might pay for it with basically worthless Confederate money, but it’s going to leave the people of Jefferson County fairly destitute,” he said. “So Jefferson County economically is hurting at the time.”

 

Clemens says it’s not coincidence that many farms in the area were auctioned in the spring of 1863 because the owners could not make a viable living.

 

“We live in something of an insulated life now where when some disaster happens almost immediately the state and the federal government come in and the Red Cross comes in and all these organizations,” Clemens said. “There’s nothing like that in 1862.”

 

Clemens said the people living around Sharpsburg and Shepherdstown are left with nothing.

 

“It’s September and you can’t get another crop in the field and harvested before winter,” he said. “How are you going to feed your family until next harvest season in the summer or fall? Where are you going to live if your house has been destroyed? How can you get anywhere if your horses have been confiscated, your wagon has been destroyed?”

 

“It was just dire, dire emergency and these people got by on charity and credit,” Clemens added.

 

“What an army also brings with it, even more destructive than any weapon ever created in the Civil War was disease,” Snyder said. “All those diseases travel with the army and the Union Army stayed here for six weeks and the community suffered terribly from that, diseases ravaged the community after the battle.”

 

Snyder points out there were also four thousand graves and thousands of dead horses; the water was tainted and soldiers took all the food.

 

“(It was) just an incredibly destructive two months for the people who lived here and it took them years and years and years to recover,” Snyder said.

 

It was this devastation that greeted President Lincoln when he visited Sharpsburg two weeks after the battle. Snyder said Lincoln spent the first four days in October 1862 touring the battlefield with Gen. McClellan and visiting wounded soldiers from both sides of the conflict.

 

“And a big part of his mission was to assess the Army of the Potomac and see where they are because Lincoln wants them to keep moving, keep going, keep this offensive, go back after the Confederates back into Virginia and he wants to see for himself the condition of the army,” Snyder said.

 

“The one thing that I do know is that it was an incredibly emotional experience for the President because ultimately he’s responsible for what happened here,” Snyder said. “And by the time he got here most of the graves have been established but there are 4,000 graves, there are19,000 people hurt in 75 field hospitals over a 10 mile radius. It’s destruction that we’ve never seen before or since in this nation’s history.”

 

Despite the great emotion Lincoln must have felt when he saw the devastation; Snyder points out Lincoln still went through with a plan to create revolutionary change.  

 

That came in the form of a preliminary Emancipation Proclamation which was issued by Lincoln on September 22, 1862.

 

Tomorrow we’ll hear about the politics involved and the pitfalls of issuing that document.

 

Antietam National Battlefield will commemorate the sesquicentennial of the battle with a series of events running September 14- 22.

 

The Shepherdstown 250 organization is also hosting commemorative events next week including a remembrance walk from Sharpsburg to Shepherdstown on September 16.

 

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