THE BATTLE OF CHANCELLORSVILLE
AFTER
men of the Eleventh Corps. There was
no time for the Union regiments to
realign and react; the only safety was
in flight. But further along the Orange
Turnpike, two stubborn holding actions
delayed the Southern advance, including
a stand made by Brigadier General Carl
Schurz’s totally German Third Division
at the Wilderness Church. Unfairly
labeled by nativistic Anglo-Americans
as the “flying Dutchmen,” these men
had in fact bought time for the rest of
the Federal Army to react.
Lee’s greatest day
Frustrated by the failing momentum of
his attack, and in the pitch black of the
woods, Jackson reconnoitered in front
of his lines to ascertain the positions of
the Union forces and was accidentally
shot by his own men. Stuart took over.
May 3 dawned a brilliant, crisp day,
and by the time the sun was rising
above the trees at Hazel Grove, this
key terrain was in Confederate hands.
Southern artillery swarmed the open
ground, dominating the clearings of
Fairview and Chancellorsville, and
opened a murderous fire on Union
infantry and artillery holding those
positions. Waves of Southern infantry
assaulted hastily prepared Federal
brigades posted in the woods to the
Union failure at Chancellorsville
After Jackson’s rapid march to outflank the Union right on
May 2, the Union army was outfought in the fierce action
of the following day. Union commander Joseph Hooker
lost his nerve and retreated back across the Rappahannock.
The strategic initiative in the East passed
to the Confederates. As the Union army
reorganized, Lee’s next major move would
be the advance to Gettysburg.
SALEM CHURCH
Union Major General Sedgwick and his Sixth
Corps attacked Jubal Early at Fredericksburg on
the morning of May 3. They pushed him off
Marye’s Heights, and proceeded west down the
Orange Turnpike toward Lee’s rear. A desperate
stand by Brigadier General Cadmus
Wilcox’s Rebel brigade at Salem Church
stopped Sedgwick cold. The next day, the
Confederates launched a series of
uncoordinated assaults on Sedgwick, who
beat each of them off in turn and escaped
relatively unscathed back across the river.
Confronting his tired and unsuccessful division
commanders, Robert E. Lee reportedly lost his
temper over this lost opportunity.
“WHAT WILL THE PEOPLE SAY?”
Upon hearing news of Hooker’s withdrawal
across the Rappahannock River, a horrified
President Lincoln turned to a colleague and
said, “My God, my God, what will the people
say?” Yet another campaign in the East had come
to nothing. Northern morale plummeted.
CASUALTIES AT MARYE’S HEIGHTS
“At that moment I believed my commanding
general a whipped man.”
DARIUS COUCH, COMMANDING THE UNION SECOND CORPS, ON HOOKER’S LOSS OF NERVE, MAY 1, 1863
north and south of Fairview. Some of
the most vicious fighting of the war
occurred before Hooker ordered the
abandonment of first Fairview, and
then Chancellorsville.
Despite having two corps standing
idly by that could have crashed into
Stuart’s northern flank, Hooker chose
to retreat. Nearly all his subordinates
agreed that Chancellorsville was one of
the greatest Northern lost opportunities
of the war. Against all odds, Lee had
scored a tactical victory, inflicting 17,000
casualties on the enemy while suffering
13,000 of his own—though among
these was the irreplaceable Jackson.
The
W
ild
er
ne
ss
Wilderness
Church
United
States
Ford
River Road
Orange^ Plank
Road
Orange
Turnpike
Rap
pah
ann
oc
k
Riv
er
Hazel
Grove Fairview
LEE
McLAWS
ANDERSON
JACKSON
replaced by
STUART
REYNOLDS
MEADE
HOOKER
SICKLES
SLOCUM
COUCH
HOWARD
JACKSON
Chancellorsville
Fredericksburg
Salem
Church
④ May 3: Lee
dispatches McLaws
to reinforce troops
at Fredericksburg
⑥ May 6:
Hooker retreats
back across river
② May2, 5:30pm:
Jackson’s attack takes
Howard’s corps by complete
surprise. 4,000 prisoners
taken. Jackson later
wounded by friendly fire
③ May 3:
Confederates gain
upper hand in fierce
fighting around
Chancellorsville
⑤ May 4:
Anderson’s division
also redeployed to
Fredericksburg
① May 2:
Jackson makes
long march
that outflanks
Union right
KEY
Union positions May 2
Union front line May 4
Confederate positions May 2
Confederate front line May 4
0 km
0 miles 1 2
1 2
N