General Lee understood the gamble he was going to take by assaulting Cemetery Ridge on the third day of the Battle of Gettysburg. He also understood the caution that General James Longstreet had given to Lee which was not to attack the Union's position on the Ridge. Part of Lee's confidence lay in the massive artillery barrage that he ordered at 1:00 PM on July 3, 1863. The Confederate artillery barrage came from 140 cannons. Many shots overshot their targets and left the Union's 80 guns ready for a Rebel advance which began at 3 PM that afternoon. The assaults failed and the battle was lost. Lee expected a counter attack on July 4th but General Meade wisely held back from a possible defeat.
He invaded the North for one thing.
General Lee's decision to divide his forces and attack the Union army at Gettysburg was influenced by his belief that a decisive victory on Northern soil would force the Union to negotiate for peace.
because they did
The Confederate attack on the Union center on Cemetery Ridge resulted in nearly 10,000 Confederate casualties on the third day of the Battle of Gettysburg. This force, made up of elements from Ewell's and Longstreet's Corps' was led by General George Pickett whose own division would be decimated in the attack. This sad episode would be known to future generations as Pickett's Charge.
He knew Grant would do anything to win the war.
He led Pickett's Charge in the Battle of Gettysburg on the third day which determined who would win
he said "no".
He invaded the North for one thing.
After Gettysburg, he was never in a position to carry out his bold, aggressive thrusts. When Grant became Union General-in-Chief, he managed to keep Lee on the defensive till the surrender.
General Lee's decision to divide his forces and attack the Union army at Gettysburg was influenced by his belief that a decisive victory on Northern soil would force the Union to negotiate for peace.
because they did
The Confederate attack on the Union center on Cemetery Ridge resulted in nearly 10,000 Confederate casualties on the third day of the Battle of Gettysburg. This force, made up of elements from Ewell's and Longstreet's Corps' was led by General George Pickett whose own division would be decimated in the attack. This sad episode would be known to future generations as Pickett's Charge.
I don't think so. From what I can remember he wrote the Gettysburg Address himself, so I would think he wrote others himself too.
He knew Grant would do anything to win the war.
Call up the stores on Third Street that you would think would have them, and ask them if they do.
He knew Grant would do anything to win the war.
Affectionate and respectful to the end of Lee's life. It was other Confederates who blamed Longstreet for the defeat at Gettysburg, not Lee himself.