It is sometimes
easy for us to sit back and relish in the campaign maps that we have available
at our fingertips. I have a large notebook full of maps from the American
Battlefield Trust, and on my shelves are books with maps of campaigns like
Antietam and Gettysburg. (Savas Beattie is producing some fine map volumes
these days.) But for commanders during the war, this was not often true. Two
faulty maps during the Peninsula Campaign in 1862 changed the course of battle.
Maj. Gen. George B.
McClellan commanded the Federal Army of the Potomac. Appointed commander
following the disastrous route at First Manassas, McClellan built a fine army –
over 100,000 men, well armed, well equipped. After his first plan of
circumnavigating the Confederate entrenchments near Manassas by taking a route
down the Chesapeake River to Urbanna fell apart due to the repositioning of
Confederate forces, McClellan chose to land his army at Fortress Monroe and
move quickly up the Peninsula and capture Richmond. The first part of his plan
worked well, for a day. Then he quickly discovered that the map he was studying
was incorrect. McClellan believed that the Warwick River paralleled the James
River. McClellan had even considered moving gunboats into the Warwick River to
protect his left flank as he advance toward Richmond. Instead, the Warwick
River flowed more across the Peninsula, and, the Confederates had built
extensive works behind the river. Plus, the foliage on the Confederate side
blocked the view of McClellan’s scouts, and he had no idea just how many
Confederates were on the other side. McClellan called for a siege. It took a
month to construct works and haul heavy cannons into place. All the while, his
men were getting sick in the swamps that surrounded them. The force that
McClellan faced on April 1: 13,000 Confederate soldiers. That inaccurate map cost
McClellan a chance to quickly move on Richmond, and it cost him men and
material.
But there is
another case of a poorly drawn map. This one cost the Confederates. After the
wounding of Confederate commander Joseph E. Johnston at Seven Pines on May 31,
Robert E. Lee was placed in command of the newly styled Army of Northern
Virginia. Lee developed a plan in which Stonewall Jackson’s force would leave
the Shenandoah Valley and arrive on the battlefield below Richmond. Once in
position, he could flank the Federals while other Confederate divisions’ assaults
pressured the front. Yet on day one of the offensive, June 26, Jackson sat at
Hundley’s Corner, two and a half miles north of where he should have been. This
intersection was not on his map. According to Stephen Sears, “Jackson
apparently reasoned that it would be late before he could reach the scene and
to move blindly would be dangerous in any event. He elected to put his army in
bivouac for the night and await the new day to set matters straight.” (To
the Gates of Richmond, 199) Jackson’s bad map proved costly to the
Confederates. Brig. Gen. Lawrence Branch and his brigade, the link between
Jackson and the rest of the Confederate army, after receiving word from Jackson
earlier in the day that he was close (he was not), marched toward
Mechanicsville. Skirmishing broke out. A. P. hill believed that everything was
in place and launched his attack. As the day worn on, other Confederate
divisions became involved. Several attacks were repulsed, and Lee lost somewhere
around 1,500 men. The only positive outcome was that the Federals abandoned
their position on that night.
Two events, the
same campaign, two mad maps.
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