Culp's Hill Battle Analysis

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Early on the morning of the last day of the battle July 3, The Union was the first to strike by having a change of events. The Northerners offensively attacked and pushed on the Confederate troops on Culp’s Hill in hopes of regaining territory lost the day before. Union forces pushed back the Confederate threat for around 8 hours and regained their lost land from the Confederate soldiers on day 2 of the battle on Culp’s Hill. Lee believed that on July 2nd; victory was within his grasps, so he decided to send three divisions of his men covered by an artillery attack against the Union center line on Cemetery Ridge. 15,000 troops, led by George Pickett, who would be asking these 15,000 men to accept the task of marching around 3/4 of a mile across an open field to attack entrenched Union positions with good stone walls for cover, who would with heavy artillery support behind them belittle the Confederate troops with barrages of fire. Longstreet strongly protested against …show more content…

Union infantry fired down on the headway Confederates from behind sturdy stone walls. Even after making it over one stone wall there were enough Union reinforcements that the charge didn't even make a dent in their line the Southerners were caught in the middle of a huge crossfire, Lee was lucky to get half of his soldiers back from the attack, and Pickett lost around upwards to about two-thirds of his men. As the survivors stumbled back from the mass collection of bodies on the open field, Lee began to lose confidence and had trouble to just build up their defensive line after the failed assault. After this last conflict, an entire day past and neither side moved a muscle toward each other. The battle of Gettysburg came to an official end as the Union left Gettysburg on the night of July

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