OCTOBER 21, 1861:
The Battle of Ball’s Bluff. A one-sided
rout of Union forces, this small scale engagement had political ramifications
that would change the nature of the war.
Based on misunderstood orders from Major General George B.
McClellan, Brigadier General Charles Stone sent a small scouting party across
the Potomac River in the vicinity of Leesburg, Virginia on the evening of
October 20, 1861. In the darkness of
night, the inexperienced head of the scouting party, Captain Chase Phillbrick,
mistook a tree line for a line of tents, and returned to Stone with a report of
an unguarded camp. Stone decided to take advantage of this opportunity with a
nighttime raid and sent about 300 men under Colonel Charles Devens back across
the river. When Devens discovered that the line of trees was not, in fact, a
campsite, in the early hours of the 21st, he decided to stay and wait for
reinforcements, to attempt to reach Leesburg.
As dawn broke on the 21st, Mississippians under Colonel
Nathan “Shanks” Evans encountered Devens’ advanced units and a sharp skirmish
began. Additional Union support or a
timely retreat across the river could have ended the matter at this point. However, there were only three small boats
available and attempts to use them to bring reinforcements resulted in a
terrific bottleneck. Stone sent Colonel
Edward Baker, a U.S. Senator to take command of the field and assess the
situation. Baker immediately began
gathering troops to reinforce the men on the Virginia side of the river. When support finally arrived—four hours
later—communications between the various Union commanders had been inefficient
and often misunderstood.
In the meantime, the delay gave Confederate commanders time
to organize their forces, as well as for fresh units to come offer
support. In the midafternoon, Evans led
a spirited counter attack. Whatever
resistance the Federals could have offered crumbled when Colonel Baker fell with
a mortal wound. A complete rout ensued
and Evans’ triumphant Mississippians drove the Yankees over the bluff and into
the Potomac River, firing into the backs of those who attempted to swim for
safety. Rather than risk escape, many
Union soldiers chose to surrender. By
the end of the day Evans had inflicted 1,000 casualties and captured 553
prisoners. By comparison, the
Confederates had suffered fewer than 200 total casualties.
The Union defeat at the Battle of Ball’s Bluff had severe
political ramifications in Washington.
The death of Baker, the only U.S. Senator ever to be killed in battle,
was particularly shocking, as was the disparity in casualties. As a result, a concerned Congress established
the Congressional Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War, which would
second-guess Union commanders for the rest of the war.
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