3 May 1863 A.D. CHANCELLORSVILLE, VA: Union GEN Hooker Orders Retreat
3 May 1863 A.D. CHANCELLORSVILLE, VA: Union GEN Hooker Orders Retreat
Editors. “1863
– General Joseph Hooker and the Army of
the Potomac abandon a key hill on the Chancellorsville battlefield.” This Day in U.S. Military History. N.d. https://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/05/03/may-3/. Accessed 1 May 2015.
1863 – General
Joseph Hooker and the Army of the Potomac abandon a key hill on the
Chancellorsville battlefield. The Union army was reeling after Stonewall
Jackson’s troops swung around the Union right flank and stormed out of the
woods on the evening of May 2, causing the Federals to retreat some two miles
before stopping the Confederate advance. Nonetheless, Hooker’s forces were
still in a position to deal a serious defeat to Robert E. Lee’s Army of
Northern Virginia because they had a numerical advantage and a strategic
position between Lee’s divided forces. But Lee had Hooker psychologically beaten.
Union forces controlled the key geographical feature in the Chancellorsville
area: Hazel Grove, a hill that provided a prime artillery location. General
J.E.B. Stuart, the head of the Confederate cavalry, assumed temporary command
of Stonewall Jackson’s corps after Jackson was wounded the night before (a
wound that proved fatal a week later) and planned to attack Hazel Grove the
next morning. This move was made much easier when Hooker made the crucial
mistake of ordering an evacuation of the decisive hill. Once Stuart’s artillery
occupied Hazel Grove, the Confederates proceeded to wreak havoc on the Union
lines around Chancellorsville. Rebel cannons shelled the Union line, and the
fighting resulted in more Union casualties than Jackson’s attack the day before.
Hooker himself was wounded when an artillery shell struck the column he was
leaning against. Stunned, Hooker took a shot of brandy and ordered the retreat
from the Chancellorsville area, which allowed Jackson’s men to rejoin the bulk
of Lee’s troops. The daring flanking maneuver had worked. Hooker had failed to
exploit the divided Army of Northern Virginia, and allowed the smaller Rebel
force to defeat his numerically superior force.
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