Second Manassas 1862 Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Second Manassas 1862: Robert E Lee’s greatest victory Second Manassas 1862: Robert E Lee’s greatest victory by John P. Langellier
22 ratings, 4.00 average rating, 2 reviews
Open Preview
Second Manassas 1862 Quotes Showing 1-1 of 1
“By the afternoon of 30 August, Brig. Gen. William Starke's Louisiana Brigade of Jackson's Division had begun to run very low on ammunition. Then around 3.00 pm the men of John Hatch's Federal Brigade advanced on the Louisiana troops who were defending a section of the unfinished railroad near the "Deep Cut". Despite heavy fire Hatch's men pressed forward. A number of the Southern infantrymen eventually ran out of cartridges and rather than stand idly by they began throwing stones at the advancing Yankees. The Confederate line was never in serious danger; Porter's attack had already spent itself and the Louisianians were speedily reinforced by C.W. Field's Brigade of Virginians. However, the symbolism of the event was too powerful to ignore and became on of the most famous of the war.”
John P. Langellier, Second Manassas 1862: Robert E Lee’s greatest victory