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General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.
General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.
General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.
General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.
General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.
General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.
General Lee won the war in a funny way. He put steeping stones to keep his troops out of Richmond.
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.
When President Lincoln had appointed US General Grant as the Union's general in chief, he was given the sacred title of Lieutenant General, used only for George Washington. Grant would not be able to capture Richmond unless he first defeated the Lee led Army of Northern Virginia.
General US Grant had assigned over 30,000 troops to be under the command of Major General Benjamin F. Butler. Grant' s plan closely resembled the strategy of former General George B. McClellan. Butler would ascend to the James River in Virginia and land to the south of Richmond. Grant believed that Butler's army could easily defeat the small Confederate force left to defend Richmond. Butler was expected to cut Richmond's lines of supply and communications that led to the south of the city. If for some reason Butler could not capture Richmond, he would at least cut off its lines of supply and communications and place the city under siege.
On August 30,1862, Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith defeated a Union army under General William Nelson, near Richmond (Kentucky). It was a decisive Confederate victory: the Federal losses were 206 killed, 844 wounded and 4,303 prisoners, those of the Confederates 78 killed, 372 wounded and 1 missing.
general braddoks defeat