Jackson turned the battle around at Bull Run (Manassas). The day was going against the Rebel Army. An officer road by Jackson saying this. Jackson said, "If you think so, Sir, don't say anything more about it". From that moment on, Jackson found the best available ground to take a stand. The Union Army was then routed and sent panic stricken back to Washington. Why the Rebel Army did not take Washington (The Capital) following that route on that opening battle of the Civil War is a mystery.
American Civil War, Confederate, Southern, Rebel, General Thomas J. "Stone wall" Jackson has been labeled by historians as a hypochondriac who rode into battle with one hand raised, Jackson said, "to keep the blood balanced".
Just because he said he raised his hand above his head as he rode into battle to keep the blood balanced, does not mean he is a hypochondriac. Perhaps he said that because he didn't want people to know the truth of why he was doing it (i.e he did not want to cast his pearls before swine). He probably got asked that question over and over and was being facetious.
I can guess with a pretty good degree of probability that because Jackson was a student of theology that the reason he raised his hand going into battle was no different than Moses raising his staff in the air as the Children of Israel fled for their lives from the approaching Armies of Egypt as they were crossing the parted Red Sea. As long as they could see Moses' staff raised, they took courage and pushed forward.
Jackson surely did it to let his men know that God was with them and not to fear. Or perhaps Jackson did it for his own benefit, to keep up his own courage before God - for his men's sake. Jackson had his hand shot in doing so, but simply wrapped his hand and immediately held it back up.
A fast, nimble mover who could urge-on his men to conduct wild attacks of devastating effect.
He was the essential other half of the Lee-Jackson partnership. After he was killed, The Army of Northern Virginia was never the same again, and Lee's health is said to have started failing from that time.
Jackson was an orphan, raised by his uncle. As a teen he obtained an appointment to the US Military Academy at West Point, where he had to work very hard to overcome the deficiencies of his early lack of education. When he graduated he served in the US Army, and performed very well in the Mexican War. After that war he resigned from the Army and became a Professor of Mathematics and Artillery at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia. Jackson was very religious, and was remembered there for conducting a Sunday School for black children. The cadets at the Institute called him "Old Tom Fool" Jackson, or sometimes "Old Blue Light", on account of his piercing, very blue eyes, the "Blue Lights" being a type of Presbyterians, which was Jackson's denomination.
He was a general and one of the leaders of the Confederacy.
He was a Corps commander under Robert E.Lee..
He fought in the civil War
Thomas Jonathan Jackson is the real name of Stonewall Jackson, a Confederate general in the American Civil War.
"Stonewall" Jackson was a Confederate Civil War general. Andrew Jackson was a President of the USA and is on the 20 dollar bill.
Stonewall Jackson was a Confederate.
he lost the civil war
Chancellorsville
how did Stonewall Jackson contribute to the civil war
Civil War
Stonewall Jackson did not start the Civil War. The first shot was fired at Ft. Sumter, SC
Stonewall Jackson was never President.
Stonewall Jackson.
Thomas Jonathan Jackson is the real name of Stonewall Jackson, a Confederate general in the American Civil War.
The U.S Civil War.
Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson
"Stonewall" Jackson was a Confederate Civil War general. Andrew Jackson was a President of the USA and is on the 20 dollar bill.
Thomas Jonathan Jackson.
Stonewall Jackson was a Confederate.
Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson, is commonly known as Stonewall Jackson.