The south.
North - Ulysses S. Grant South - Robert E. Lee
I'm not sure what you mean by the advantage, but the Battle of the Wilderness was a tactical Confederate victory. The Federals were outmanoeuvered and their flanks were rolled up, and they lost 18000 men to the south's 8000.
The south, under Robert E Lee.
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.
Ambrose Burnside for the north and Robert E. Lee for the south
This meant that they had got the south's capital. This basically ended the war, except two last short battle at the Battle of Wilderness, and the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House.
General George Meade for the North, General Robert E. Lee for the South.
General Robert E. Lee for the south, General George Meade for the north.
In the Battle of the Wilderness, which took place from May 5 to May 7, 1864, the commanding Confederate officer was General Robert E. Lee, who led the Army of Northern Virginia. On the Union side, General Ulysses S. Grant commanded the Army of the Potomac. This battle was part of Grant's Overland Campaign, aimed at engaging Lee's forces in Virginia. Despite the fierce fighting, the battle ended inconclusively, with both sides suffering significant casualties.
The battle was a Union (North) victory.
what does the north call the battle of shiloh
The North and the South called it the Battle of Fredericksburg. Almost 1,900 soldiers from the North and South died in the battle along with thousands more wounded.