As the commanding officer of the Union army, General Grant was expected to mange Union military operations in Virginia. Because the Army of Northern Virginia under the command of Robert E. Lee was the foremost army of the Confederacy, Grant was expected by the government, the newspapers and the public, to challenge Lee in Virginia. He was not looking forward to this for a number of reasons. One was that he expected no warm welcome from the Army of the Potomac. To the officers in that army, Grant was an outsider. He later wrote that in the West, he knew the terrain, the generals, and his total resources available to him. He knew the capabilities of the generals he commanded in the West.
General Grant had ordered General Thomas in Nashville in 1864 to attack the Confederates led by General John Bell Hood. When Thomas refused to advance, Grant considered replacing him with General Schofield.
General Robert E. Lee viewed Union General John Pope's army in northern Virginia to be a threat to the Virginia Central Railroad. This was an important line of supply and communications between Richmond and the Shenandoah Valley. While General McClellan was slow to move his troops out of the Peninsula, Lee decided to focus his attention on Pope and prepare an assault on his Union army.
Major General Joseph Hooker became the new commander of the Army of the :Potomac late in January 1863. Hooker knew that the weather in northern Virginia was usually rough in the Winter and he believed that his campaign in Virginia should wait until the Spring. Also, Hooker wanted to make some important organizational changes with his new army.
After Confederate General Bragg's victory at Chickamauga, he was slow to capitalize on the momentum and this gave the Union forces who had retreated time to reorganize and fortify their position around a key railroad junction at Chattanooga, Tennessee. Bragg's delay caused dissension among his commanding officers. This was so critical that Jefferson Davis took a train from Richmond to meet with Bragg and mediate the situation.
Based on the failed Peninsula campaign, President Lincoln sought new leadership in the Eastern Theater. He selected Major General John Pope to head the newly created Army of Virginia. To do this, forces from other sources were required. The merger of General Fremont's Mountain Department, General Bank's Department of the Shenandoah, and General McDowell's Department of the Rappahannock. To round out the new army, forces from General Sturgis's Military District of Washington. These sectors combined to form Pope's new army. President Lincoln had great hopes for this combination and he trusted General Pope much more than General McClellan.
General Robert Edward Lee, the commander of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, dies peacefully at his home in Lexington, Virginia. He was 63 years old
General Grant had ordered General Thomas in Nashville in 1864 to attack the Confederates led by General John Bell Hood. When Thomas refused to advance, Grant considered replacing him with General Schofield.
President Lincoln was ever the general to be during the US Civil War. He pressured General Meade to begin an assault on Lee's forces in Virginia at the end of November 1863. This measure was endorsed by General in Chief Henry W. Halleck.
This caused Virginia to become a confederate state and fight with the south in the Civil war.
A slave insurrection led by Nat Turner that killed fifty-seven whites, caused some in the Virginia General Assembly consider ending slavery as a safety precaution. However, this suggestion did not gain the needed support from the majority and never became law.
No, the slavery problem was what caused the formation of West Virginia.
General Robert E. Lee viewed Union General John Pope's army in northern Virginia to be a threat to the Virginia Central Railroad. This was an important line of supply and communications between Richmond and the Shenandoah Valley. While General McClellan was slow to move his troops out of the Peninsula, Lee decided to focus his attention on Pope and prepare an assault on his Union army.
Most of the rock formations in West Virginia are caused by erosion.
Major General Joseph Hooker became the new commander of the Army of the :Potomac late in January 1863. Hooker knew that the weather in northern Virginia was usually rough in the Winter and he believed that his campaign in Virginia should wait until the Spring. Also, Hooker wanted to make some important organizational changes with his new army.
Although Lee's Army of Northern Virginia did not reach the so-called "culmination point" which would have caused Union General Meade to possibly embark on a furious counterattack, Lee decided to retreat to Virginia to avoid more losses. He was defeated at Gettysburg but his strong rear guard impeded Meade's attempt to attack Lee's retreating forces.
After Confederate General Bragg's victory at Chickamauga, he was slow to capitalize on the momentum and this gave the Union forces who had retreated time to reorganize and fortify their position around a key railroad junction at Chattanooga, Tennessee. Bragg's delay caused dissension among his commanding officers. This was so critical that Jefferson Davis took a train from Richmond to meet with Bragg and mediate the situation.
Virginia Mayo's husband (Michael O'Shea) died of heart failure.