Pickett's Charge | |||||||
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Part of the Battle of Gettysburg in the Eastern Theater of the American Civil War | |||||||
General Pickett's Famous Charge at Gettysburg | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United States | Confederate States | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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Strength | |||||||
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
1,500 killed and wounded |
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Pickett's Charge was an infantry assault ordered by Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee against Maj. Gen. George G. Meade's Union positions on July 3, 1863, the last day of the Battle of Gettysburg in the state of Pennsylvania during the American Civil War. Its futility was predicted by the charge's commander, Lt. Gen. James Longstreet, and it was arguably an avoidable mistake from which the Southern
war effort never fully recovered militarily or psychologically. The
farthest point reached by the attack has been referred to as the high-water mark of the Confederacy. The charge is named after Maj. Gen. George Pickett, one of three Confederate generals who led the assault under Longstreet.
Pickett's Charge was part of Lee's "general plan" to take Cemetery Hill and the network of roads it commanded. His military secretary, Armistead Lindsay Long, described Lee's thinking:
There was ... a weak point ... where [Cemetery Ridge], sloping westward, formed the depression through which the Emmitsburg road passes. Perceiving that by forcing the Federal lines at that point and turning toward Cemetery Hill [Hays' Division] would be taken in flank and the remainder would be neutralized. ... Lee determined to attack at that point, and the execution was assigned to Longstreet.
On the night of July 2, Meade correctly predicted to General Gibbon, after a council of war, that Lee would attack the center of his lines the following morning.
The infantry assault was preceded by a massive artillery
bombardment that was meant to soften up the Union defense and silence
its artillery, but was largely ineffective. Approximately 12,500 men in
nine infantry brigades advanced over open fields for three-quarters of a
mile under heavy Union artillery and rifle fire. Although some
Confederates were able to breach the low stone wall that shielded many
of the Union defenders, they could not maintain their hold and were
repelled with over 50% casualties, a decisive defeat that ended the
three-day battle and Lee's campaign into Pennsylvania. Years later, when asked why his charge at Gettysburg failed, Pickett reportedly replied, "I've always thought the Yankees had something to do with it."
Plans and command structures
Pickett's Charge was planned for three Confederate divisions, commanded by Maj. Gen. George Pickett, Brig. Gen. J. Johnston Pettigrew, and Maj. Gen. Isaac R. Trimble, consisting of troops from Lt. Gen. James Longstreet's First Corps and Lt. Gen. A. P. Hill's Third Corps. Pettigrew commanded brigades from Maj. Gen. Henry Heth's old division, under Col. Birkett D. Fry (Archer's Brigade), Col. James K. Marshall (Pettigrew's Brigade), Brig. Gen. Joseph R. Davis, and Col. John M. Brockenbrough. Trimble, commanding Maj. Gen. Dorsey Pender's division, had the brigades of Brig. Gens. Alfred M. Scales (temporarily commanded by Col. William Lee J. Lowrance) and James H. Lane. Two brigades from Maj. Gen. Richard H. Anderson's division (Hill's Corps) were to support the attack on the right flank: Brig. Gen. Cadmus M. Wilcox and Col. David Lang (Perry's brigade).
The target of the Confederate assault was the center of the Union Army of the Potomac's II Corps, commanded by Maj. Gen. Winfield S. Hancock. Directly in the center was the division of Brig. Gen. John Gibbon with the brigades of Brig. Gen. William Harrow, Col. Norman J. Hall, and Brig. Gen. Alexander S. Webb. (On the night of July 2, Meade correctly predicted to Gibbon at a council of war that Lee would try an attack on Gibbon's sector the following morning.) To the north of this position were brigades from the division of Brig. Gen. Alexander Hays, and to the south was Maj. Gen. Abner Doubleday's division of the I Corps, including the 2nd Vermont Brigade of Brig. Gen. George J. Stannard and the 121st Pennsylvania under the command of Col. Chapman Biddle. Meade's headquarters were just behind the II Corps line, in the small house owned by the widow Lydia Leister.
The specific objective of the assault has been the source of historical controversy. Traditionally, the "copse
of trees" on Cemetery Ridge has been cited as the visual landmark for
the attacking force. Historical treatments such as the 1993 film Gettysburg continue to popularize this view, which originated in the work of Gettysburg Battlefield historian John B. Bachelder in the 1880s. However, recent scholarship, including published works by some Gettysburg National Military Park
historians, has suggested that Lee's goal was actually Ziegler's Grove
on Cemetery Hill, a more prominent and highly visible grouping of trees
about 300 yards (274 m) north of the copse. The much-debated theory
suggests that Lee's general plan for the second-day attacks (the seizure
of Cemetery Hill) had not changed on the third day, and the attacks on
July 3 were also aimed at securing the hill and the network of roads it
commanded. The copse of trees, currently a prominent landmark, was under
ten feet (3 m) high in 1863, only visible to a portion of the attacking
columns from certain parts of the battlefield.
From the beginning of the planning, things went awry for the
Confederates. While Pickett's division had not been used yet at
Gettysburg, A. P. Hill's health became an issue and he did not
participate in selecting which of his troops were to be used for the
charge. Some of Hill's corps had fought lightly on July 1 and not at all
on July 2. However, troops that had done heavy fighting on July 1 ended up making the charge.
Although the assault is known to popular history as Pickett's Charge,
overall command was given to James Longstreet, and Pickett was one of
his divisional commanders. Lee did tell Longstreet that Pickett's fresh
division should lead the assault, so the name is appropriate, although
some recent historians have used the name Pickett–Pettigrew–Trimble Assault (or, less frequently, Longstreet's Assault)
to more fairly distribute the credit (or blame). With Hill sidelined,
Pettigrew's and Trimble's divisions were delegated to Longstreet's
authority as well. Thus, Pickett's name has been lent to a charge in
which he commanded 3 out of the 11 brigades while under the supervision
of his corps commander throughout. Pickett's men were almost exclusively
from Virginia, with the other divisions consisting of troops from North Carolina, Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee. The supporting troops under Wilcox and Lang were from Alabama and Florida.
In conjunction with the infantry assault, Lee planned a cavalry action in the Union rear. Maj. Gen. J. E. B. Stuart
led his cavalry division to the east, prepared to exploit Lee's
hoped-for breakthrough by attacking the Union rear and disrupting its
line of communications (and retreat) along the Baltimore Pike.
Despite Lee's hope for an early start, it took all morning to
arrange the infantry assault force. Neither Lee's nor Longstreet's
headquarters sent orders to Pickett to have his division on the
battlefield by daylight. Historian Jeffrey D. Wert blames this oversight
on Longstreet, describing it either as a misunderstanding of Lee's
verbal order or a mistake. Some of the many criticisms of Longstreet's Gettysburg performance by the postbellum Lost Cause authors cite this failure as evidence that Longstreet deliberately undermined Lee's plan for the battle.
Meanwhile, on the far right end of the Union line, a seven-hour battle raged for the control of Culp's Hill.
Lee's intent was to synchronize his offensive across the battlefield,
keeping Meade from concentrating his numerically superior force, but the
assaults were poorly coordinated and Maj. Gen. Edward "Allegheny" Johnson's attacks against Culp's Hill petered out just as Longstreet's cannonade began.
Artillery barrage
The infantry charge was preceded by what Lee hoped would be a
powerful and well-concentrated cannonade of the Union center, destroying
the Union artillery batteries that could defeat the assault and
demoralizing the Union infantry. But a combination of inept artillery
leadership and defective equipment doomed the barrage from the
beginning. Longstreet's corps artillery chief, Col. Edward Porter Alexander, had effective command of the field; Lee's artillery chief, Brig. Gen. William N. Pendleton,
played little role other than to obstruct the effective placement of
artillery from the other two corps. Despite Alexander's efforts, then,
there was insufficient concentration of Confederate fire on the
objective.
The July 3 bombardment was likely the largest of the war, with hundreds of cannons from both sides firing along the lines for one to two hours, starting around 1 p.m. Confederate guns numbered between 150 and 170
and fired from a line over two miles (3 km) long, starting in the south
at the Peach Orchard and running roughly parallel to the Emmitsburg
Road. Confederate Brig. Gen. Evander M. Law
wrote, "The cannonade in the center ... presented one of the most
magnificent battle-scenes witnessed during the war. Looking up the
valley towards Gettysburg, the hills on either side were capped with
crowns of flame and smoke, as 300 guns, about equally divided between
the two ridges, vomited their iron hail upon each other."
Despite its ferocity, the fire was mostly ineffectual.
Confederate shells often overshot the infantry front lines—in some cases
because of inferior shell fuses that delayed detonation—and the smoke
covering the battlefield concealed that fact from the gunners. Union
artillery chief Brig. Gen. Henry J. Hunt
had only about 80 guns available to conduct counter-battery fire; the
geographic features of the Union line had limited areas for effective
gun emplacement. He also ordered that firing cease to conserve
ammunition, but to fool Alexander, Hunt ordered his cannons to cease
fire slowly to create the illusion that they were being destroyed one by
one. By the time all of Hunt's cannons ceased fire, and still blinded
by the smoke from battle, Alexander fell for Hunt's deception and
believed that many of the Union batteries had been destroyed. Hunt had
to resist the strong arguments of Hancock, who demanded Union fire to
lift the spirits of the infantrymen pinned down by Alexander's
bombardment. Even Meade was affected by the artillery—the Leister house
was a victim of frequent overshots, and he had to evacuate with his
staff to Powers Hill.
The day was hot, 87 °F (31 °C) by one account,
and humid, and the Confederates suffered under the hot sun and from the
Union counter-battery fire as they awaited the order to advance. When
Union cannoneers overshot their targets, they often hit the massed
infantry waiting in the woods of Seminary Ridge or in the shallow depressions just behind Alexander's guns, causing significant casualties before the charge began.
Longstreet had opposed the charge from the beginning, convinced
the charge would fail (which ultimately proved true), and had his own
plan that he would have preferred for a strategic movement around the
Union left flank. In his memoirs, he recalled telling Lee:
General, I have been a soldier all my life. I have been with soldiers engaged in fights by couples, by squads, companies, regiments, divisions, and armies, and should know, as well as any one, what soldiers can do. It is my opinion that no fifteen thousand men ever arrayed for battle can take that position.
Longstreet wanted to avoid personally ordering the charge by
attempting to pass the mantle onto young Colonel Alexander, telling him
that he should inform Pickett at the optimum time to begin the advance,
based on his assessment that the Union artillery had been effectively
silenced. Although he had insufficient information to accomplish this,
Alexander eventually notified Pickett that he was running dangerously
short of ammunition, sending the message "If you are coming at all, come
at once, or I cannot give you proper support, but the enemy's fire has
not slackened at all. At least eighteen guns are still firing from the
cemetery itself." Pickett asked Longstreet, "General, shall I advance?"
Longstreet recalled in his memoirs, "The effort to speak the order
failed, and I could only indicate it by an affirmative bow."
Longstreet made one final attempt to call off the assault. After
his encounter with Pickett, he discussed the artillery situation with
Alexander, and was informed that Alexander did not have full confidence
that all the enemy's guns were silenced and that the Confederate
ammunition was almost exhausted. Longstreet ordered Alexander to stop
Pickett, but the young colonel explained that replenishing his
ammunition from the trains in the rear would take over an hour, and this
delay would nullify any advantage the previous barrage had given them.
The infantry assault went forward without the Confederate artillery
close support that had been originally planned.
Infantry assault
The entire force that stepped off toward the Union positions at about 2 p.m. consisted of about 12,500 men.
Although the attack is popularly called a "charge", the men marched
deliberately in line, to speed up and then charge only when they were
within a few hundred yards of the enemy. The line consisted of Pettigrew
and Trimble on the left, and Pickett to the right. The nine brigades of
men stretched over a mile-long (1,600 m) front. The Confederates
encountered heavy artillery fire while advancing nearly three quarters
of a mile across open fields to reach the Union line and were slowed by
fences in their path. Initially sloping down, the terrain changed to a
gentle upward incline approximately midway between the lines. These
obstacles played a large role in the increasing number of casualties the
advancing Confederates faced. The ground between Seminary Ridge and
Cemetery Ridge is slightly undulating, and the advancing troops
periodically disappeared from the view of the Union cannoneers. As the
three Confederate divisions advanced, awaiting Union soldiers began
shouting "Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg! Fredericksburg!" in reference
to the disastrous Union advance on the Confederate line during the 1862 Battle of Fredericksburg. Fire from Lt. Col. Freeman McGilvery's concealed artillery positions north of Little Round Top
raked the Confederate right flank, while the artillery fire from
Cemetery Hill hit the left. Shell and solid shot in the beginning turned
to canister and musket
fire as the Confederates came within 400 yards of the Union line. The
mile-long front shrank to less than half a mile (800 m) as the men
filled in gaps that appeared throughout the line and followed the
natural tendency to move away from the flanking fire.
On the left flank of the attack, Brockenbrough's brigade was
devastated by artillery fire from Cemetery Hill. They were also
subjected to a surprise musket fusillade from the 8th Ohio Infantry
regiment. The 160 Ohioans, firing from a single line, so surprised
Brockenbrough's Virginians—already demoralized by their losses to
artillery fire—that they panicked and fled back to Seminary Ridge,
crashing through Trimble's division and causing many of his men to bolt
as well. The Ohioans followed up with a successful flanking attack on
Davis's brigade of Mississippians and North Carolinians, which was now
the left flank of Pettigrew's division. The survivors were subjected to
increasing artillery fire from Cemetery Hill. More than 1,600 rounds
were fired at Pettigrew's men during the assault. This portion of the
assault never advanced much farther than the sturdy fence at the
Emmitsburg Road. By this time, the Confederates were close enough to be
fired on by artillery canister and Alexander Hays' division unleashed
very effective musketry fire from behind 260 yards of stone wall, with
every rifleman of the division lined up as many as four deep, exchanging
places in line as they fired and then fell back to reload.
They were at once
enveloped in a dense cloud of smoke and dust. Arms, heads, blankets,
guns and knapsacks were thrown and tossed into the clear air. ... A moan
went up from the field, distinctly to be heard amid the storm of
battle.
Lt. Col. Franklin Sawyer, 8th Ohio
Trimble's division of two brigades followed Pettigrew's, but made
poor progress. Confusing orders from Trimble caused Lane to send only
three and a half of his North Carolina regiments forward. Renewed fire
from the 8th Ohio and the onslaught of Hays' riflemen prevented most of
these men from getting past the Emmitsburg Road. Scales's North Carolina
brigade, led by Col. William L. J. Lowrance, started with a heavier
disadvantage—they had lost almost two-thirds of their men on July 1.
They were also driven back and Lowrance was wounded. The Union defenders
also took casualties, but Hays encouraged his men by riding back and
forth just behind the battle line, shouting "Hurrah! Boys, we're giving
them hell!". Two horses were shot out from under him. Historian Stephen
W. Sears calls Hays' performance "inspiring".
On the right flank, Pickett's Virginians crossed the Emmitsburg
road and wheeled partially to their left to face northeast. They marched
in two lines, led by the brigades of Brig. Gen. James L. Kemper on the right and Brig. Gen. Richard B. Garnett on the left; Brig. Gen. Lewis A. Armistead's
brigade followed closely behind. As the division wheeled to the left,
its right flank was exposed to McGilvery's guns and the front of
Doubleday's Union division on Cemetery Ridge. Stannard's Vermont Brigade
marched forward, faced north, and delivered withering fire into the
rear of Kemper's brigade. At about this time, Hancock, who had been
prominent in displaying himself on horseback to his men during the
Confederate artillery bombardment, was wounded by a bullet striking the
pommel of his saddle, entering his inner right thigh along with wood
fragments and a large bent nail. He refused evacuation to the rear until
the battle was settled.
As Pickett's men advanced, they withstood the defensive fire of first
Stannard's brigade, then Harrow's, and then Hall's, before approaching a
minor salient in the Union center, a low stone wall taking an 80-yard
right-angle turn known afterward as "The Angle". It was defended by
Brig. Gen. Alexander S. Webb's Philadelphia Brigade. Webb placed the two remaining guns of (the severely wounded) Lt. Alonzo Cushing's Battery A, 4th U.S. Artillery, at the front of his line at the stone fence, with the 69th and 71st Pennsylvania
regiments of his brigade to defend the fence and the guns. The two guns
and 940 men could not match the massive firepower that Hays' division,
to their right, had been able to unleash.
Two gaps opened up in the Union line: the commander of the 71st
Pennsylvania ordered his men to retreat when the Confederates came too
close to the Angle; south of the copse of trees, the men of the 59th New
York (Hall's brigade) inexplicably bolted for the rear. In the latter
case, this left Captain Andrew Cowan and his 1st New York Independent
Artillery Battery to face the oncoming infantry. Assisted personally by
artillery chief Henry Hunt, Cowan ordered five guns to fire double canister
simultaneously. The entire Confederate line to his front disappeared.
The gap vacated by most of the 71st Pennsylvania, however, was more
serious, leaving only a handful of the 71st, 268 men of the 69th
Pennsylvania, and Cushing's two 3-inch rifled guns to receive the 2,500
to 3,000 men of Garnett's and Armistead's brigades as they began to
cross the stone fence. The Irishmen of the 69th Pennsylvania resisted
fiercely in a melee of rifle fire, bayonets, and fists. Webb, mortified that the 71st had retreated, attempted to bring the 72nd Pennsylvania (a Zouave
regiment) forward, but for some reason they did not obey the order, so
he had to bring other regiments in to help fill the gap. During the
fight, Lt. Cushing was killed as he shouted to his men, three bullets
striking him, the third in his mouth. The Confederates seized his two
guns and turned them to face the Union troops, but they had no
ammunition to fire. As more Union reinforcements arrived and charged
into the breach, the position became untenable and the Confederates
began to slip away individually, with no senior officers remaining to
call a formal retreat.
The infantry assault lasted less than an hour. The supporting attack
by Wilcox and Lang on Pickett's right was never a factor; they did not
approach the Union line until after Pickett was defeated, and their
advance was quickly broken up by McGilvery's guns and by the Vermont
Brigade.
Aftermath
While
the Union lost about 1,500 killed and wounded, the Confederate casualty
rate was over 50%. Pickett's division suffered 2,655 casualties (498
killed, 643 wounded, 833 wounded and captured, and 681 captured,
unwounded). Pettigrew's losses are estimated to be about 2,700 (470
killed, 1,893 wounded, 337 captured). Trimble's two brigades lost 885
(155 killed, 650 wounded, and 80 captured). Wilcox's brigade
reported losses of 200, Lang's about 400. Thus, total losses during the
attack were 6,555, of which at least 1,123 Confederates were killed on
the battlefield, 4,019 were wounded, and a good number of the injured
were also captured. Confederate prisoner totals are difficult to
estimate from their reports; Union reports indicated that 3,750 men were
captured.
The casualties were also high among the commanders of the charge.
Trimble and Pettigrew were the most senior casualties of the day;
Trimble lost a leg, and Pettigrew received a minor wound to the hand
(only to die from a bullet to the abdomen suffered in a minor skirmish
during the retreat to Virginia).
In Pickett's division, 26 of the 40 field grade officers (majors,
lieutenant colonels, and colonels) were casualties—twelve killed or
mortally wounded, nine wounded, four wounded and captured, and one
captured.
All of his brigade commanders fell: Kemper was wounded seriously,
captured by Union soldiers, rescued, and then captured again during the
retreat to Virginia; Garnett and Armistead were killed. Garnett had a
previous leg injury and rode his horse during the charge, despite
knowing that conspicuously riding a horse into heavy enemy fire would
mean almost certain death. Armistead, known for leading his brigade with
his cap on the tip of his sword, made the farthest progress through the
Union lines. He was mortally wounded, falling near "The Angle" at what
is now called the High Water Mark of the Confederacy
and died two days later in a Union hospital. Ironically, the Union
troops that fatally wounded Armistead were under the command of his old
friend, Winfield S. Hancock,
who was himself severely wounded in the battle. Per his dying wishes,
Longstreet delivered Armistead's Bible and other personal effects to
Hancock's wife, Almira. Of the 15 regimental commanders in Pickett's division, the Virginia Military Institute produced 11 and all were casualties—six killed, five wounded.
Stuart's cavalry action in indirect support of the infantry
assault was unsuccessful. He was met and stopped by Union cavalry under
the command of Brig. Gen. David McM. Gregg about three miles (5 km) to the east, in East Cavalry Field.
As soldiers straggled back to the Confederate lines along
Seminary Ridge, Lee feared a Union counteroffensive and tried to rally
his center, telling returning soldiers and Wilcox that the failure was
"all my fault". Pickett was inconsolable for the rest of the day and
never forgave Lee for ordering the charge. When Lee told Pickett to
rally his division for the defense, Pickett allegedly replied, "General,
I have no division."
The Union counteroffensive never came; the Army of the Potomac
was exhausted and nearly as damaged at the end of the three days as the
Army of Northern Virginia. Meade was content to hold the field. On July
4, the armies observed an informal truce and collected their dead and
wounded. Meanwhile, Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant accepted the surrender of the Vicksburg garrison along the Mississippi River, splitting the Confederacy in two. These two Union victories are generally considered the turning point of the Civil War.
History may never know the true story of Lee's intentions at
Gettysburg. He never published memoirs, and his after-action report from
the battle was cursory. Most of the senior commanders of the charge
were casualties and did not write reports. Pickett's report was
apparently so bitter that Lee ordered him to destroy it, and no copy has
been found.
The controversy over Lee's plans and his officers' implementation
of them have led historians to question whether the charge could have
succeeded if done differently. One study used a Lanchester model
to examine several alternative scenarios and their outcomes. The
results suggest that Lee could have captured a foothold on Cemetery
Ridge if he had committed several more infantry brigades to the charge;
but this likely would have left him with insufficient reserves to hold
or exploit the position.
Virginian newspapers praised Pickett's Virginia division as
making the most progress during the charge, and the papers used
Pickett's comparative success as a means of criticizing the actions of
the other states' troops during the charge. It was this publicity that
played a significant factor in selecting the name Pickett's Charge.
Pickett's military career was never the same after the charge, and he
was displeased about having his name attached to the repulsed charge. In
particular North Carolinians have long taken exception to the
characterizations and point to the poor performance of Brockenbrough's
Virginians in the advance as a major causative factor of failure.
Some historians have questioned the primacy of Pickett's role in the
battle. W. R. Bond wrote in 1888, "No body of troops during the last war
made as much reputation on so little fighting."
Additional controversy developed after the battle about Pickett's
personal location during the charge. The fact that fifteen of his
officers and all three of his brigadier generals were casualties while
Pickett managed to escape unharmed led many to question his proximity to
the fighting and, by implication, his personal courage. The 1993 film Gettysburg
depicts him observing on horseback from the Codori Farm at the
Emmitsburg Road, but there is no historical evidence to confirm this. It
was established doctrine in the Civil War that commanders of divisions
and above would "lead from the rear", while brigade and more junior
officers were expected to lead from the front, and while this was often
violated, there was nothing for Pickett to be ashamed of if he
coordinated his forces from behind.
Pickett's Charge became one of the iconic symbols of the literary and cultural movement known as the Lost Cause. William Faulkner, the quintessential Southern novelist, summed up the picture in Southern memory of this gallant but futile episode:
For every Southern boy fourteen years old, not once but whenever he wants it, there is the instant when it's still not yet two o'clock on that July afternoon in 1863, the brigades are in position behind the rail fence, the guns are laid and ready in the woods and the furled flags are already loosened to break out and Pickett himself with his long oiled ringlets and his hat in one hand probably and his sword in the other looking up the hill waiting for Longstreet to give the word and it's all in the balance, it hasn't happened yet, it hasn't even begun yet, it not only hasn't begun yet but there is still time for it not to begin against that position and those circumstances which made more men than Garnett and Kemper and Armistead and Wilcox look grave yet it's going to begin, we all know that, we have come too far with too much at stake and that moment doesn't need even a fourteen-year-old boy to think This time. Maybe this time with all this much to lose than all this much to gain: Pennsylvania, Maryland, the world, the golden dome of Washington itself to crown with desperate and unbelievable victory the desperate gamble, the cast made two years ago.
— William Faulkner, Intruder in the Dust
The battlefield today
The site of Pickett's Charge is one of the best-maintained portions of the Gettysburg Battlefield.
Despite millions of annual visitors to Gettysburg National Military
Park, very few have walked in the footsteps of Pickett's division. The National Park Service
maintains a neat, mowed path alongside a fence that leads from the
Virginia Monument on West Confederate Avenue (Seminary Ridge) due east
to the Emmitsburg Road in the direction of the Copse of Trees. Pickett's
division, however, started considerably south of that point, near the
Spangler farm, and wheeled to the north after crossing the road. In
fact, the Park Service pathway stands between the two main
thrusts of Longstreet's assault—Trimble's division advanced north of the
current path, while Pickett's division moved from farther south.
A cyclorama painting by the French artist Paul Philippoteaux entitled The Battle of Gettysburg, also known as the Gettysburg Cyclorama,
depicts Pickett's Charge from the vantage point of the Union defenders
on Cemetery Ridge. Completed and first exhibited in 1883, it is one of
the last surviving cycloramas in the United States. It was restored and
relocated to the new National Park Service Visitor Center in September
2008.