yes
The battle was a Union (North) victory.
The North was victorious over the South at Gettysburg because of superior position and logistics. The North had a better supply system and was able to reinforce efficiently.
they had more troops than the south.
"The Union" means the North when writing about the Civil War. The South is the Confederacy or the Confederates, sometimes the rebels. The union is what was left of the United States after the southern states seceded.
For the North (Union) it was George Meade and for the South (Confederacy) it was Robert E. Lee. The North won the battle and the battle marked the end of the South's attempts to invade the North.
NORTH
The battle was a Union (North) victory.
In Pennsylvania.
The North
The North
The South fought the North.
Is this a serious question? The north won the Battle of Gettysburg... not the South...
Lee for the South, Meade for the North
The leaders of the Battle of Gettysburg was lee and his second in command Longstreet for the South and Meade, Reynolds, Chamberlain for the north.
It shifted the initiative from the South to the North in the East.
Lee for the South; Meade for the North…
The North was victorious over the South at Gettysburg because of superior position and logistics. The North had a better supply system and was able to reinforce efficiently.