The First
Battle of Manassas (Bull Run)
Cheers rang out in the streets of Washington on July 16, 1861 as Gen. Irvin McDowell’s army, 35,000 strong, marched out to begin the long-awaited campaign to capture Richmond and end the war.
It was an army of green recruits, few of whom had the
faintest idea of the magnitude of the task facing them... but their swaggering
gait showed that none doubted the outcome. As excitement spread, many citizens
and congressman with wine and picnic baskets followed the army into the field
to watch what all expected would be a colorful show.
These
troops were 90-day volunteers summoned by President Abraham Lincoln after the
startling news of Fort Sumter burst over the nation in April 1861. Called from
shops and farms, they had little knowledge of what war would mean. The first
day’s march covered only five miles, as many straggled to pick blackberries or
fill canteens.
McDowell’s lumbering columns were headed for the vital railroad junction at Manassas.
Here
the Orange and Alexandria Railroad met the Manassas Gap Railroad, which led
west to the Shenandoah Valley. If McDowell could seize this junction, he would
stand astride the best overland approach to the Confederate capital.
On July 18 McDowell’s army reached Centreville.
Five miles ahead a small meandering stream named Bull Run crossed the route of the Union advance, and there guarding the fords from Union Mills to the Stone Bridge waited 22,000 Southern troops under the command of Gen. Pierre G.T. Beauregard. McDowell first attempted to move toward the Confederate right flank, but his troops were checked at Blackburn’s Ford.
He then spent the next two days scouting the Southern left flank.
In the meantime, Beauregard asked the Confederate
government at Richmond for help. Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, stationed in the
Shenandoah Valley with 10,000 Confederate troops, was ordered to support
Beauregard if possible. Johnston gave an opposing Union army the slip and,
employing the Manassas Gap Railroad, started his brigades toward Manassas
Junction. Most of Johnston’s troops arrived at the junction on July 20 and 21,
some marching directly into battle.
On the morning of July 21, McDowell sent his attack columns in a long march north towards Sudley Springs Ford.
This route took the Federals around the
Confederate left. To distract the Southerners, McDowell ordered a diversionary
attack where the Warrenton Turnpike crossed Bull Run at the Stone Bridge. At
5:30a.m. the deep-throated roar of a 30-pounder Parrott rifle shattered the morning
calm, and signaled the start of the battle.
McDowell’s new plan depended on speed and surprise, both difficult with inexperienced troops.
Valuable time was lost as the men stumbled through the darkness along
narrow roads. Confederate Col. Nathan Evans, commanding at the Stone Bridge,
soon realized that the attack on his front was only a diversion. Leaving a
small force to hold the bridge, Evans rushed the remainder of his command to
Matthews Hill in time to check McDowell’s lead unit. But Evans’ force was too
small to hold back the Federals for long.
Soon brigades under Barnard Bee and Francis Bartow marched to Evans’ assistance ... but even with these reinforcements, the thin gray line collapsed and Southerners fled in disorder toward Henry Hill.
Attempting to rally his men, Bee used Gen. Thomas J. Jackson’s newly arrived brigade as an anchor. Pointing to Jackson, Bee shouted, “There stands Jackson like a stone wall! Rally behind the Virginians!”
Generals Johnston and Beauregard then arrived on Henry Hill, where
they assisted in rallying shattered brigades and redeploying fresh units that
were marching to the point of danger.
About
noon, the Federals stopped their advance to reorganize for a new attack. The
lull lasted for about an hour, giving the Confederates enough time to reform
their lines. Then the fighting resumed, each side trying to force the other off
Henry Hill. The battle continued until just after 4p.m., when fresh Southern
units crashed into the Union right flank on Chinn Ridge, causing McDowell’s
tired and discouraged soldiers to withdraw.
At first the withdrawal was orderly.
Screened by the regulars, the three-month volunteers retired across Bull Run, where they found the road to Washington jammed with the carriages of congressmen and others who had driven out to Centreville to watch the fight. Panic now seized many of the soldiers and the retreat became a rout.
The Confederates, though bolstered by the arrival of President Jefferson Davis on the field just as the battle was ending, were too disorganized to follow up on their success.
Daybreak on July 22 found the
defeated Union army back behind the bristling defenses of Washington.
If you
visit the Manassas battlefield today .. you can almost smell the cannon smoke
still hanging in the air as you walk the unchanged bloodsoaked landscape where
the first big battle to preserve our Nation was fought.