high ground is useful in battle because the enemies would have to fight upward towards you and you would have the advantage of fighting donwards. knights/cavalry weren't as effective because both the rider and the horse would tire easier.
Because then it's easier to aim for the person who are at the bottom. And the people at the bottom can't see what's coming towards them and people at the top could duck but the people at the bottom might not see.
It allowed the soldiers to see everything.
for snipers that is.
Whoever held the high ground held the tactical advantage.
Never attack a well defended position on the high ground with numerically inferior forces.
Federal Troops gained the High Ground and never relinquished control.
Longstreet and Lee commanded the Confederate army in Gettysburg, while George Meade commanded the Union army. George Pickett led Pickett's charge on the 3rd day, and Colonel Chamberlain held the high ground on Little Round Top.
yes. the battle of gettysburg is inmportant.it was the last hurrahfor the confederacy.an high mark of the cofederacy
Whoever held the high ground held the tactical advantage.
. They occupied the high ground
The high ground on the hilltops…
Because the high ground commanded the battlefield and the Union Army managed to seize and hold it, forcing the Confederates to attack them through open ground under a deadly fire.
They seized the high ground and never relinquished it.
The strategy was to hold the high ground and make the rebels attack them by cutting off their line of march.
Never attack a well defended position on the high ground with numerically inferior forces.
The Union seized and held the high ground, forcing the Confederates to assault from a tactically disadvantageous position.
Federal Troops gained the High Ground and never relinquished control.
The Battle of Gettysburg is considered to be the high tide of the Confederacy.
Longstreet and Lee commanded the Confederate army in Gettysburg, while George Meade commanded the Union army. George Pickett led Pickett's charge on the 3rd day, and Colonel Chamberlain held the high ground on Little Round Top.
Meade's Federal forces took the high ground, forcing the Confederates to waste their efforts of futile frontal attacks.