Time for a little Civil War lesson – The Battle of the
Crater was a costly Union failure (of leadership) that should be remembered.
On this day in 1864, at the Battle of the Crater, the
Union’s ingenious attempt to break the Confederate lines at Petersburg, Virginia,
by blowing up a tunnel that had been dug under the Rebel trenches fails.
Although the explosion created a gap in the Confederate defenses, a poorly
planned Yankee attack wasted the effort and the result was an eight-month
continuation of the siege.
The bloody campaign between Union General Ulysses S. Grant
and Confederate Robert E. Lee ground to a halt in mid-June, when the two armies
dug in at Petersburg, south of Richmond. For the previous six weeks, Grant had
pounded away at Lee, producing little results other than frightful casualties.
A series of battles and flanking maneuvers brought Grant to Petersburg, where
he opted for a siege rather than another costly frontal assault.
In late June, a Union regiment from the 48th Pennsylvania
Infantry began digging a tunnel under the Rebel fortifications. The soldiers,
experienced miners from Pennsylvania's anthracite coal regions, dug for nearly
a month to construct a horizontal shaft over 500 feet long. At the end of the
tunnel, they ran two drifts, or side tunnels, totaling 75 feet along the
Confederate lines to maximize the destruction. Four tons of gunpowder filled
the drifts, and the stage was set.
Union soldiers lit the fuse before dawn on July 30. The
explosion that came just before 5:00 a.m. blew up a Confederate battery and
most of one infantry regiment, creating a crater 170 feet long, 60 to 80 feet
wide, and 30 feet deep. As one Southern soldier wrote, "Several hundred
yards of earth work with men and cannon was literally hurled a hundred feet in
the air." However, the Union was woefully unprepared to exploit the gap.
The Yankees were slow to exit the trenches, and when they did the 15,000
attacking troops ran into the crater rather than around it. Part of the Rebel
line was captured, but the Confederates that gathered from each side fired down
on the Yankees. The Union troops could not maintain the beachhead, and by early
afternoon they retreated back to their original trenches.
This failure led to finger pointing among the Union command.
General Ambrose Burnside, the corps commander of the troops involved, had
ordered regiments from the United States Colored Troops to lead the attack, but
the commander of the Army of the Potomac, George G. Meade, nixed that plan
shortly before the attack was scheduled. Fearing that it may be perceived as a
ploy to use African-American soldiers as cannon fodder, Meade ordered that
white troops lead the charge. With little time for training, General James H.
Ledlie was left to command the attack.
The Battle of the Crater essentially marked the end of
Burnside's military career, and on April 15, 1865, he resigned from the army.
No comments:
Post a Comment