A week ago, I had a
chance to visit to Sharpsburg and the Antietam Battlefield. For the first time,
I sought out General Lee’s Headquarters. It is a beautiful spot, in a grove of
old trees, with a monument and plaque, and it is located on Main Street or
Shepherdstown Pike. However, looking at several different maps may lead one to conclude
that Lee’s headquarters seem to be elsewhere.
Lee arrived in
Sharpsburg early on the morning of September 15. He first surveyed the ground
from the Pry farm, crossed Antietam Creek, and moved to a hill near the
Lutheran Church Cemetery, where he was joined by Longstreet, and then Stuart. Later
that day, Lee set up his headquarters, but the location is not certain. William
Owens, a member of the Washington Artillery, wrote that Lee spent the night in
a house on the edge of town, with Longstreet using the same structure. (Owen, In
Camp and Battle with the Washington Artillery, 139) Ezra Carman, writing
after the war, tells us that Lee, Longstreet, and Jackson held a war council at
the home of Jacob A. Grove “at the southwest corner of the Sharpsburg town
square.” (Clemens, The Maryland Campaign, 2:30). Scott Hartwig writes
that Lee spent the night of September 15 “camped in a small woodlot about three
questers of a mile west of the center of Sharpsburg.” (To Antietam Creek,
596)
Lee was mobile
on September 16, riding over the field, meeting with generals, positioning
troops. It seems that his daylight headquarters were on Cemetery Hill, now the
site of the National Cemetery. Later that day, Lee moved back to the wooded lot
on the western edge of town. This spot was Lee’s headquarters for the remainder
of the battle. However, just where was this spot? Was it the location traditionally
known as Lee’s Headquarters on Main Street?
Maps from the time period show many different sites. The recently-found
Elliott map (1864, New York Public Library), places Lee’s Headquarters well
south of the Shepherdstown Pike.
The Robert K. Sneden map (Library of Congress), also war-time,
places headquarters at the S.D. Piper farm. The Piper farm was located off what
is today Snyder’s Landing Road.
Another Sneden map (Library of Congress), shows the headquarters just outside of town.
The Atlas of the Battle of Antietam (1904, Library of Congress),
places Lee’s headquarters about where the marker is today.
Finding and documenting the location of any Confederate
commander’s headquarters site is a challenge. While generals and staff officers
frequently tell us that they met a commanding general, they frequently do not
tell us where.
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