|
Little Round Top
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
July 2, 1863 |
|
 |
|
|
July 1, 1863 found the men of the 20th
Maine worn out. The regiment had acted as the advance guard
of the Third Brigade, part of the First Division, Fifth
Corps all the day long. As they readied themselves for an
expected bivouac near Hanover, Pennsylvania, word came that
the enemy had been encountered and a battle fought. All
thought of rest was forgotten. The regiment moved out
promptly, stopping for only a couple of hours' sleep beside
the road before daybreak. By 7:00 A.M. on July 2 they were
on the high ground southeast of the little town of
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
The
men from Maine remained in line of battle all day, expecting
at any moment to be put into the fight. The men watched as
regiment after regiment was sent into battle and
destruction. The 20th Maine was moved slowly down the line
toward the left side of Federal forces, which General Meade
had extended south along Cemetery Ridge. At 4:00 P.M. the
entire division was rushed in the direction of an increased
volume of fire coming from the extreme left. The brigade
crossed Plum Run and took up position on the southern slope
of Little Round Top. Colonel Joshua L. Chamberlain, the
20th Maine's commander, states in his report: "Colonel
Vincent indicated to me the ground my regiment was to
occupy, informing me that this was the extreme left of our
general line, and that a desperate attack was expected in
order to turn that position, concluding by telling me I was
to 'hold that ground at all hazards.' This was the last
word I heard from him."
Confederate veteran troops of Hood's division from Alabama,
not accustomed to failure, charged up Little Round Top and
attacked ferociously. Chamberlain described the assault.
"We opened a brisk fire at close range, which was so sudden
and effective that they soon fell back- only to burst forth
again with a shout, and rapidly advanced, firing as they
came." Mounting a rock Chamberlain saw a large body of
southern infantry moving to his left flank and rear. The
colonel's next move was to extend his line to cover the
flank. Chamberlain's men would now be facing the assault
with a single row of men rather than the customary double
line of battle. Using the last of the ammunition gathered
from the cartridge-boxes of the fallen, Chamberlain felt
that "It did not seem possible to withstand another shock
like this now coming on." A bullet struck Chamberlain, with
a force that knocked him to the ground. He was not
seriously injured as the round had struck the scabbard of
his sword. Chamberlain wrote, "At times I saw around me
more of the enemy then of my own men; gaps opening,
swallowing, closing again with sharp convulsive energy;
squads of stalwart men who had cut their way through us,
disappearing as if translated."
From
behind two large rocks a soldier from the 15th Alabama
Regiment drew a bead on the Colonel of the 20th Maine. A
strange feeling came to him and he did not fire. Ashamed at
not taking action, again the southerner took aim, and an
even stronger impression stopped him. Chamberlain would
later say, "I am so confident of the sincerity of my motives
that I can trust my own life and the welfare of my family in
the hands of providence."
The
crucial moment for the 20th Maine and the Army of the
Potomac was at hand. Chamberlain continues, "My men were
firing their last shot and getting ready to club their
muskets. At that crisis, I ordered the bayonet. The word
was enough. It ran like fire along the line, from man to
man, and rose into a shout, with which they sprang forward
upon the enemy, now not 30 yards away." There was no
holding back the counterattack of the men from Maine.
Chamberlain described how a Confederate officer attempted to
fire his pistol at his head; the pistol either misfired or
was empty. The next moment the same Confederate officer
then offered his sword in surrender. The Federal Army's
flank had been held. But the battle of Gettysburg would
continue on for another history-making day before the
outcome would be known.
Artist
Comments
Featured in
the painting, starting from the left is Lt. Holman S.
Melcher of Company F, Col. Joshua L. Chamberlain, and Lt.
Thomas D. Chamberlain the regimental adjutant. An
interesting effect that I placed in the painting is that the
rifle of the federal soldier next to the tree will seem to
be pointing at the viewer from any angle.
950 Limited
Edition Numbered and Signed
Image Size 20 1/2" x 29
This print may still be
available through our authorized dealers. Please call
817-560-2143 or
contact
us
through our website for a list of
dealers in your area.
|