answersLogoWhite

0

General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.

User Avatar

Macy Wuckert

Lvl 10
3y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

How did General Lee smaller army defeat McClellan force and keep Union troops out of Richmond?

General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.


How did General lee's smaller army defeat mcClellan's force and keep union troops of out of Richmond?

General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.


How did General Lee smaller army defeat McClellan and force and keep Union troops out of Richmond?

General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.


How did general lee's smaller army defeat McClellan's force and keep Union troops out of Richmond?

General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.


How did General Lee and smaller army defeat McClellan's force and keep Union troops out of Richmond?

General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.


How did Generals Lee smaller army defeat McClellan force and keep Union troops out of Richmond?

General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.


After his defeat at Manassas General Irwin McDowell was replaced by General?

McDowell was replaced by George B. McClellan.


What was President Lincoln's plans to defeat the Confederates after the Battle of Antietam?

President Lincoln saw the Confederate retreat back to Virginia after the Battle of Antietam as an opportunity to severely damage the Confederate army in Virginia. He urged General McClellan to rapidly pursue Lee's army into Virginia and cut his lines of communication with Richmond. This would force Lee into another battle with the Army of the Potomac and suffer a defeat due to Lee's smaller army. This would then leave Richmond ripe for a take over.


How did President Lincoln explain his dismissal of General George B McClellan in 1862?

President Lincoln would have several things to say about his dismissal of General George B. McClellan in 1862. Lincoln informed John Hay that McClellan's refusal to obey the order to advance on October 6, 1862 convinced him that McClellan was not to be trusted to defeat the Rebels in the manner Lincoln had wanted. Lincoln also said that he would have been willing to leave McClellan in command if he would advance before the onset of Winter. This would cut Lee's communications with Richmond. It clearly appears that the former reason is why Lincoln dismissed McClellan.


What did Union general George B McClellan blame for the defeat of the Peninsula campaign?

A more cautious Confederate general was replaced by the more aggressive Robert E. Lee.


What failure of action on the part of the Union helped cause the defeat of General John Pope at the Battle of the Second Bull Run?

In July of 1862, in any way possible, General George B. McClellan needed to threaten Richmond to keep the Army of Northern Virginia from concentrating against John Pope's army. If McClellan would not advance or stall with helping Pope, President Lincoln should have replaced him at once and pressure on Richmond from the new general of the Army of the Potomac, fail or succeed, wou;d most likely have saved the Union loss at the Second Battle of Bull Run. Yes, hindsight is always 20-20, however, McClellan had already made many serious errors.


How did General George B McClellan plan to defeat the Confederate army defending Richmond when he was outnumbered?

The "Occoquan River Plan" was McClellan's original concept of directly invading Virginia by crossing a Virginia tributary of the Lower Potomac (the Occoquan River) at a point SE of Manassas, VA (site of the earlier Battle of Bull Run). By December, 1861, President Lincoln grew impatient enough to suggest a modified form of the plan, not knowing that McClellan was by then focused on a Peninsular plan to attack Richmond from the east, by transporting Union troops south along Chesapeake Bay. Eventually this plan was changed from a landing at Urbana VA to one farther south at Yorktown, VA. This plan was initiated in March 1862, but by July 1962 the overcautious McClellan could not break through. The North abandoned the campaign and retreated.