Burnside ordered one frontal attack after another at Fredericksburg. All had to be made against strong Rebel positions on high ground where the Rebels were well dug in and amply supported by artillery. None of these waves of Federal attackers came anywhere close to success. The nearest dead Yankees were fifty yards from the most forward Confederate positions. The Yankee soldiers realized much sooner than their commanders did how fruitless and hopeless this was. Soldiers did not wear dogtags than, but many Yankees wrote their name and address on a piece of paper and pinned it to the back of their coats before going forward to make the attack as ordered, hoping to provide a means for their bodies to be identified afterward and the families notified.
It was not especially important - just a case of a terrible battle that put the Army of the Potomac out of action for months, and cost the job of the ever-unlucky Burnside. Just one curiosity: it was the only time that Robert E. Lee was ever seen to lose his dignity and dance around hugging fellow-officers, because this victory had cost the Confederates so few casualties. IDK GO LOOK IT UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! - RIDDHIHAY DANIELLE EATS CHICKEN Ridhi eats corn on the cob
Generals commanding the Army of the Potomac (Union) were, in sequence: Irvin McDowell - pushed into action before his army was ready for operations George McLellan - bad mixture of rash promises and excessive caution Ambrose Burnside - a reluctant appointee, modest, agreeable, genuinely unlucky Joseph Hooker - performed better than expected, but wrong-footed by Lee George Meade - solid but unexciting, mostly to blame for the Crater disaster Generals commanding the Army of Northern Virginia (Confederate): Joseph E. Johnston - shrewd and sophisticated, victim of feuds at the top Robert E. Lee - unstoppable, until the death of his team-mate Stonewall Jackson
Yes, but it was a relatively nice railraod car, seeing as it transported the French general in charge of action on the Western Front.
Antonio Luna organized units of guerilla soldiers, known as Luna sharpshooters, and a three-tier defense in the Philippine-American war. He was a General and one of the first ones to see action. His nickname was the Fiery General.
Chester A Arthur was the Quartermaster General of the State of New York and held the rank of Brigadier General United States Volunteers during the Civil War. Although he did not see action he was instrumental in supplying a large number of Union Troops during the Rebellion.
Rebel soldiers occupying the town of Fredericksburg were a threat to the forces under the command of Major General Ambrose Burnside. Burnside need to force the removal of Rebel troops there in order for the main force of his Army of the Potomac to cross the Rappahannock River. Burnside succeeded in neutralizing the town by using 150 pieces of artillery to force the Confederates out. On December 11, 1862, this action was successful.
The first action of the Battle of Fredericksburg was that carried on the night of December 11, 1862 by the Union artillery, that bombarded the town of Fredericksburg, followed by the landing of 4 regiments, who drove off the Confederate defenders, thus allowing the engineers to throw floating bridges across the Rapahannock.
When President Lincoln believed he had to relieve General Ambrose Burnside from his command of the Army of the Potomac, he looked back to the general who had been his second choice to replace General George B. McClellan. The was General Joseph Hooker. Hooker accepted the appointment on the condition he would report directly to President Lincoln instead of the normal command structure that placed General in Chief Henry W. Halleck as his immediate superior general. The deal also by passed Secretary of War, Edward Stanton.Hooker took immediate action to follow the steps that George McClellan had taken when he first took command of the Army of the Potomac. Hooker drilled his men, cleaned up the camps to be spotless and had them on parade. This was needed after the army's horrible defeat under Burnside at Fredericksburg. Hooker and Lincoln agreed that Hooker's first assignment was to destroy the Army of Northern Virginia under Robert E. Lee. After that, Hooker would focus on taking Richmond. Hooker and Lincoln were confident that the past failures of McClellan and Burnside that demoralized the Union's premier army were now over. When he believed his troops were ready, he was prepared to execute his plans to assault Lee.
In an unusual action, generals John Cochrane and John Newton were given a visit to President Lincoln. At this time in December of 1862, General Burnside reported to the General in Chief Henry W. Halleck. Despite that, Lincoln granted an audience to the disenchanted generals under Burnside to request Burnside's removal as commander of the Army of the Potomac. Such a meeting with President Lincoln was highly irregular to say the least. Secretary of State William Seward helped to arrange the meeting with the president.
The fighting took place during the Battle of Antietam (September 17, 1862). In the afternoon of that day the commander of Unionist IX Corps, general Ambrose Burnside, attacked the Confederate right wing, forcing the passage on the Antietam Creek through a small bridge and deploying his troops beyond the same. From that day the bridge was called "Burnside Bridge" in memory of the brilliant action. The Battle of Antietam was tactically indecisive although McClellan claimed the victory because Lee's Army left the battlefield the following day, retreating from Maryland. Strategically it was a success for the Union because Lee failed his major task, that of destroy or put out of combat The Army of Potomac.
It was not especially important - just a case of a terrible battle that put the Army of the Potomac out of action for months, and cost the job of the ever-unlucky Burnside. Just one curiosity: it was the only time that Robert E. Lee was ever seen to lose his dignity and dance around hugging fellow-officers, because this victory had cost the Confederates so few casualties. IDK GO LOOK IT UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! - RIDDHIHAY DANIELLE EATS CHICKEN Ridhi eats corn on the cob
In the early part of 1863, the US Civil War had reached a situation where there was so little action it can be called a time of a stalemate. After Major Burnside's failure to successfully assault General Lee's army in January of 1863, President Lincoln decided to replace him with Major General Joseph Hooker. The January fiasco combined with Burnside's disaster at the Battle of Fredericksburg in December of 1862, was too much for Lincoln to bear. As for Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia, it was a cold and wet Winter in Virginia. He sought rest for his army and sought Winter quarters until the Spring. Hooker, being new to the Army of the Potomac, needed time to reorganize his new army.
Union General Adelbert Ames graduated from West Point in 1861. He was ranked fifth among his graduating class of 45 cadets. Ames saw action in the Eastern Theater of the US Civil War. He served in the First Battle of Bull Run and the battles of Antietam and Fredericksburg.
General Quarters for Action - 1901 was released on: USA: April 1901
action
Union General Gouverneur Kemble Warren graduated from West Point in 1850. He was ranked second among the 44 cadets graduating that year. Warren saw important action in the Eastern Theater. For example he participated in the battles of the Peninsula campaign, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville and the Overland campaign. He was noted by his comrades for his valor at the little known Battle of Bristoe Stattion.
In GENERAL (but not always) a bolt action is capable of greater accuracy than a semi auto. In GENERAL, may have a stronger action capable of firing a more powerful cartridge.