Authors: Noah Andre Trudeau
132 “a novel and grand sight”: Alleman,
At Gettysburg
, 28.
132 “receiving the most enthusiastic welcome”:
Rochester Daily Union
, July 9, 1863.
133 “As some of us did not know”: Alleman,
At Gettysburg
, 29.
133 “with General Lee”: Longstreet, “Lee’s Invasion,” 419.
133 “unusually careless”: Gallagher, ed.,
Fighting for the Confederacy
, 230.
133 “blocked by [Anderson’s Division]”: Longstreet, “Lee’s Invasion,” 419.
133 “very pleasantly”: Harwell, ed.,
Cities and Camps
, 44.
133 “He is a perfect gentleman”: Fremantle,
Three Months in the Southern States
, 248-49.
134 “I shall never forget”: Blackford,
War Years with Jeb Stuart
, 227.
134 “enemy entering the town”:
OR
, 27/1: 926.
134 “perfect view of the movements”: Young, “Pettigrew’s Brigade at Gettysburg,” 116.
135 “in coming in contact with the enemy”:
Winston-Salem Sentinel
, June 13, 1914.
136 Meade quotations:
OR
, 27/1: 69,
OR
, 27/3: 416.
136 “‘We’ll give you all we have’”/“nine cheers”: Smedley,
Life in Southern Prisons
, 54.
136 “After an extended search”: Kimball, “Young Hero of Gettysburg,” 133.
136 “The sisters gave us”: Winkler, ed.,
Letters of Frederick C. Winkler.
136 “to the edification of all”: Schurz,
Reminiscences of Carl Schurz
, 3.
137 “Lee’s troops cannot be far off”: Newell Burch Diary (MHS).
137 “told this evening”: Smith,
Camps and Campaigns of the 107th Ohio
, 87.
137 Meade proclamation:
OR
, 27/3: 415.
137 “sat down … to study the maps”: Howard, “Campaign and Battle of Gettysburg,” 52.
137 “General Reynolds was a tall”/“Probably he was anxious”: Howard, “First Day at Gettysburg,” 241.
137 “Kilpatrick showed no disposition”: McClellan,
I Rode with Jeb Stuart
, 329.
137 “was now a subject of serious”:
OR
, 27/2: 696.
138 “cars crowded to overflowing”: Smart, ed.,
Radical View
, 12.
138 “dead horses and dead soldiers”: Coffin,
Boys of’61
, 287.
138 “Frederick is Pandemonium”: Smart, ed.,
Radical View
, 12.
139 “Cashtown, near Gettysburg”:
OR
, 27/2: 443.
139 “This explanation did not satisfy”/“’Why can’t a commanding General’”: Ladd and Ladd, eds.,
Bachelder Papers
, 2: 927.
140 “A small band of Yankee cavalry”:
OR
, 27/1: 938.
140 “that he had not gone to Gettysburg”: Morrison, ed.,
Memoirs of Henry Heth
, 173.
140 “cavalry, probably a detachment”: Heth, “Letter to J. William Jones,” 157.
140 “well-trained troops”: Young, “Pettigrew’s Brigade at Gettysburg,” 116.
140 Hill-Heth exchange: Heth, “Letter to J. William Jones,” 157.
141 Buford report:
OR
, 27/1: 927.
141 “calm demeanor”: Skelly,
Boy’s Experiences
, 10.
141 “had never seen him so apprehensive”/“anxious”: Quoted in Kross, “Fight like the Devil,” 10.
142 “massed back of Cashtown”/“coming over the mountains”:
OR
, 27/1: 927.
143 “with a sense of security”: Skelly,
Boy’s Experiences
, 10.
143 “cavalry between us and the enemy”: Quoted in Bennett,
Days of
“
Uncertainty and Dread
,” 18.
143 “some great military event”: Alleman,
At Gettysburg
, 29.
143 “It begins to look as though”: Broadhead,
Diary
, 11.
Pages:
144 “the Confederate soldier did not make war”/“Cherries were ripe”: Clark, ed.,
Histories of the Several Regiments and Battalions
, 2: 342, 234.
145 “Gen Lee expected to concentrate”: Quoted in Bonham, “A Little More Light,” 521.
145 “But for the firm mountain pike”: Caldwell,
History of a Brigade of South Carolinians
, 133.
146 “None but a soldier”: Welch,
Confederate Surgeon’s Letters
, 62-63.
146 “That night whiskey was again issued”: Caldwell,
History of a Brigade of South Carolinians
, 133.
146 “at once aroused our suspicions”: Welch,
Confederate Surgeon’s Letters
, 63.
146 “Even when our men awoke”: Bradwell, “Crossing the Potomac,” 371.
146 “I expressed to my staff”: Gordon,
Reminiscences of the Civil War
, 140.
147 Buford communications:
OR
, 27/1: 924.
148 “‘You will have to fight’”: Hall, et al., eds.,
History of the Sixth New York Cavalry
, 136.
149 “We lived high here”: George Edward Finney Diary (ISL).
149 “I am kept full of business”: Dawes,
Service with the Sixth Wisconsin
, 158.
149 “[We] shall soon be engaged”:
New Haven Journal and Courier
, July 10, 1863.
149 “much needed rest”: Bisbee, “Three Years a Volunteer Soldier,” 120.
149 “If we had any lingering doubts”: Small,
Sixteenth Maine Regiment
, 115.
149 “I have come to feel”: Applegate, ed.,
Reminiscences and betters of George Arrowsmith
, 211.
150 “We are within two miles”: Quoted in Dunkelman and Winey, “The Hardtack Regiment in the Brickyard Fight,” 19.
150 Messages to Meade: Quoted in Fishel,
Secret War
, 516-17.
152 Meade’s orders:
OR
, 27/3: 416.
153 “a courier came and ordered”: Fite Memoir (TSL).
153 “very delicate”: Fremantle:
Three Months
, 254
153 “A courier came from Gen. Lee”: Quoted in Kempster, “The Cavalry,” 402.
153 “General Lee’s … intention”: Heth, “Letter to Jones,” 157.
154 “The members of our household”: Ziegler, “A Gettysburg Girl’s” (ACHS).
154 “I got up early”: Broadhead,
Diary of a Lady
, 11.
154 “Gettysburg awoke”: Jacobs, “How an Eye-Witness.”
154 “the camp was astir”: Beveridge, “The First Gun,” 90.
154 “riding the cavalry horses”: Warren, “Recollections” (ACHS).
155 Reid quotations: Smart, ed.,
Radical View
, 13-14.
156 “We moved forward leisurely”: Marye, “First Gun,” 62.
156 “He rode up to my headquarters”:
CCW
, 413.
156 “General Reynolds read”/“He told me that he had already”:
CCW
, 305.
156 “was … to fight the enemy”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 125.
157 “it is still cloudy”: Heller Diary (MHI).
157 “Rainy”: Jones Diary (NYSL).
157 “Whole regiments slept”:
OR
, 27/2: 696.
158 Meade dispatch:
OR
, 27/1: 70.
158 “told General Archer”: Young, “Pettigrew’s Brigade,” 117.
158 “That decided the question”: Marye, “First Gun,” 62-63.
159 “rode back to the color bearer”: Boland, “Beginning,” 308.
159 “he did not expect”: Nevins, ed.,
Diary of Battle
, 232.
159 “You have all the information”:
CCW
, 355.
160 Jones material: “First Shot” (GNP).
161 “My God”: Marye, “First Gun,” 31.
161 “Reveille at 5”: Buswell Diary (FNP).
161 “The weary miles”: Goldsborough,
Maryland Line
, 102.
161 “We left camp at 6”: Leon,
Diary of a Tar Heel
, 34.
161 “without thinking any danger”: Wellman,
Rebel Boast
, 121.
162 “the prophecy of a hot July day”: Tevis,
History of the Fighting 14th
, 81.
162 Dana quotations:
Philadelphia Weekly Times
, February 2, 1878.
163 “General Heth is ordered”/“We must fight them”: Meredith, “First Day,” 184.
163 “During Chaplain [W. C.] Way’s invocation”: Curtis,
History of the 24th Michigan
, 155.
163 “in the highest spirits”: Dawes,
Service with the 6th Wisconsin
, 164.
163 “soul stirring song”/“odd for men to march”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, December 20, 1884.
163 “a hundred rumors circulated”: J. D. S. Cook, “Reminiscences,” 322.
163 “traveled very hard”: Burch Diary (MHS).
164 “from the hurried & confused manner”: Bonham, “A Little More Light,” 521.
164 “warm”/“some rain”: Hall Diary (LOC).
164 “The true character”:
Philadelphia Weekly Times
, February 2, 1878.
165 “fought with the enemy overwhelming us”:
National Tribune
, December 31, 1891.
165 “was looking in perfect health”: Myers, “Campaign” (MOC).
165 “was in his usual cheerful spirits”/“General Lee proposed”: Longstreet,
From Manassas
, 351.
165 “the enemy was advancing”: Beveridge, “The First Gun,” 91.
166 “Our orders were to hold”:
National Tribune
, July 30, 1903.
167 “a good one for artillery”/“It was part of General Buford’s plan”: Calef, “Regular Artillery,” 47.
168 Bayly material: Bayly, “Mrs. Joseph Bayly’s Story”
(GNP).
168 5th Alabama and the farmer: Fulton,
Family Record
, 79.
168 “the enemy’s skirmishers open upon our pickets”: Calef, “Regular Artillery,” 48.
168 “an army corps advancing”: Ladd, ed.,
Bachelder Papers
, 1: 201.
169 “Buford and Reynolds were soldiers”: Rosengarten, “General Reynolds’ Last Battle,” 62.
169 “they were probably after cattle”: Ladd, ed.,
Bachelder Papers
, 2: 891.
169 “It was a matter of momentary consultation”:
CCW
, 413.
169 “that the enemy was advancing”/“The Genl sent an aid[e]”: Veil Letter (PHMC).
170 “Presently the boys”: Beveridge, “The First Gun,” 91.
170 “to fire at the woods in his front”: Morrison, ed.:
Memoirs
, 173.
170 “‘Devin, this is the key’”: Fox, ed.,
New York at Gettysburg
, 2: 1153.
171 “steady and well aimed”: Quoted in Krick,
Fredericksburg Artillery
, 59.
171 “Seeing the battery so greatly outnumbered”: Calef, “Regular Artillery,” 48.
171 “People were running”: Broadhead,
Diary of a Lady
, 11.
171 “Many of us sat on our doorsteps”: Quoted in Bennett,
Days of
“
Uncertainty and Dread
,” 21.
171 “there was then a general stampede”: Skelly,
Boy’s Experiences
, 11.
172 “did not climb down”: Leander Warren, “Recollections” (ACHS).
172 “had the effect of utterly removing”:
Gettysburg Compiler
, June 1, 1898.
172 “stated that our cavalry was fighting”: Veil Letter (PHMC).
172 “The rebels are driving in”: Weld,
War Diary
, 229.
172 “there was considerable excitement”: Veil Letter (PHMC).
172 Reynolds-Buford exchange: Quoted in DePeyster,
Decisive Conflicts
, 153.
172 “The enemy’s force (A. P. Hill’s)”:
OR
, 27/1: 924
172 “The Genl ordered Genl Buford”: Veil Letter (PHMC).
173 “all his remarks and appearance”: Rosengarten,
Reynolds Memorial Address.
173 “to say that the enemy was coming on”/“and told me to ride”: Weld,
War Diary
, 229-30.
173 “the sound of artillery firing”: Tevis,
History of the Fighting 14th
, 82.
173 “shells burst[ing] a little to the left”:
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
, July 11, 1863.
173 “gray-haired old men”: Smith,
History of the 76th
, 236.
173 “Pennsylvanians have made a mistake”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, February 15, 1885.
174 “Our fellows cheered like mad”:
Mauston Star
, February 13, 1883.
174 “conferring … as to the lay of the land”: Calef, “Regular Artillery,” 47.
174 “I … received instructions to hurry”: Halstead, “First Day,” 4.
174 “‘Gen. Reynolds desires’”:
National Tribune
, October 6, 1910.
174 “obliged to remove fences”: Smith,
History of the 76th
, 236.
175 “Then was heard the wild rattle”: Fox, ed.,
New York at Gettysburg
, 3: 990.
175 “firing was heard”: Long,
Memoirs
, 275.
175 “much older and somewhat careworn”: Harris Diary (FNP).
175 “he is instructed”/“to move in such direction”: Meade,
Life and Letters
, 31.
175 “‘Oh, they have been throwing dirt’”: Quoted in Edward J. Nichols,
Toward Gettysburg
, 203.
176 “that the enemy was in the vicinity”/“I … supposed it consisted”:
OR
, 27/2: 637.
176 “I did some lively work”: Kempster, “The Cavalry,” 403.
176 “thick underbrush and briars”:
OR
, 27/2: 649.
178 “a railroad which had been graded”: Clark, ed.,
Histories
, 3: 297.
178 “Is that the enemy?”: Hofmann,
Military Record
, 15.
178 “Two men of the color guard”: Clark, ed.,
Histories
, 3: 297.
179 “just before [we reached]”: Boland, “Beginning,” 308.
179 “battle-flags looked redder”: Calef, “Regular Artillery,” 48.
179 “moved somewhat faster”: Boland, “Beginning,” 308.
179 “the sweetest music”/“We halted to reform”: Moon, “Beginning,” 449.
179 “suggested that his brigade”/“strength and line of battle”: Turney, “First Tennessee,” 535.
180 “not a man showed”: Woollard, “Journals of Events” (LMS).
180 “After we got into the musketry”: McLean,
Cutler’s Brigade
, 69.
180 “no body of men ever withstood”:
National Tribune
, July 21, 1887.
180 “‘Yes, but do not pay any attention’”: Clark, ed.,
Histories
, 3: 297.