Monday, May 20, AD 2024 2:06am

July 2, 1863: 20th Maine Holds Little Round Top

 

A stirring tribute to Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, who, with his boys of the 20th Maine, quite possibly saved the Union at Little Round Top on July 2, 1863.  A professor who volunteered to fight, Chamberlain was typical of those who stepped forward, North and South, and risked their lives for love of their country, at a time when the question of what that country consisted of was being decided on the battlefield.

Here is Chamberlain’s report of the 20th Maine’s role in the defense of Little Round Top which he wrote on July 6, 1863:

Little_Round_Top2

Somewhere near 4 p.m. a sharp cannonade, at some distance to our left and front, was the signal for a sudden and rapid movement of our whole division in the direction of this firing, which grew warmer as we approached. Passing an open field in the hollow ground in which some of our batteries were going into position, our brigade reached the skirt of a piece of woods, in the farther edge of which there was a heavy musketry fire, and when about to go forward into line we received from Colonel Vincent, commanding the brigade, orders to move to the left at the double-quick, when we took a farm road crossing Plum Run in order to gain a rugged mountain spur called Granite Spur, or Little Round Top.

The enemy’s artillery got range of our column as we were climbing the spur, and the crashing of the shells among the rocks and the tree tops made us move lively along the crest. One or two shells burst in our ranks. Passing to the southern slope of Little Round Top, 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.

In order to commence by making my right firm, I formed my regiment on the right into line, giving such direction to the line as should best secure the advantage of the rough, rocky, and straggling wooded ground.

The line faced generally toward a more conspicuous eminence southwest of ours, which is known as Sugar Loaf, or Round Top. Between this and my position intervened a smooth and thinly wooded hollow. My line formed, I immediately detached Company B, Captain Morrill commanding, to extend from my left flank across this hollow as a line of skirmishers, with directions to act as occasion might dictate, to prevent a surprise on my exposed flank and rear.

The artillery fire on our position had meanwhile been constant and heavy, but my formation was scarcely complete when the artillery was replaced by a vigorous infantry assault upon the center of our brigade to my right, but it very soon involved the right of my regiment and gradually extended along my entire front. The action was quite sharp and at close quarters.

In the midst of this, an officer from my center informed me that some important movement of the enemy was going on in his front, beyond that of the line with which we were engaged. Mounting a large rock, I was able to see a considerable body of the enemy moving by the flank in rear of their line engaged, and passing from the direction of the foot of Great Round Top through the valley toward the front of my left. The close engagement not allowing any change of front, I immediately stretched my regiment to the left, by taking intervals by the left flank, and at the same time “refusing” my left wing, so that it was nearly at right angles with my right, thus occupying about twice the extent of our ordinary front, some of the companies being brought into single rank when the nature of the ground gave sufficient strength or shelter. My officers and men understood wishes so well that this movement was executed under fire, the right wing keeping up fire, without giving the enemy any occasion to seize or even to suspect their advantage. But we were not a moment too soon; the enemy’s flanking column having gained their desired direction, burst upon my left, where they evidently had expected an unguarded flank, with great demonstration.

We opened a brisk fire at close range, which was so sudden and effective that they soon fell back among the rocks and low trees in the valley, only to burst forth again with a shout, and rapidly advanced, firing as they came. They pushed up to within a dozen yards of us before the terrible effectiveness of our fire compelled them to break and take shelter.

They renewed the assault on our whole front, and for an hour the fighting was severe. Squads of the enemy broke through our line in several places, and the fight was literally hand to hand. The edge of the fight rolled backward and forward like a wave. The dead and wounded were now in our front and then in our rear. Forced from our position, we desperately recovered it, and pushed the enemy down to the foot of the slope. The intervals of the struggle were seized to remove our wounded (and those of the enemy also), to gather ammunition from the cartridge-boxes of disabled friend or foe on the field, and even to secure better muskets than the Enfields, which we found did not stand service well. Rude shelters were thrown up of the loose rocks that covered the ground.

Captain Woodward, commanding the Eighty-third Pennsylvania Volunteers, on my right, gallantly maintaining his fight, judiciously and with hearty co-operation made his movements conform to my necessities, so that my right was at no time exposed to a flank attack.

The enemy seemed to have gathered all their energies for their final assault. We had gotten our thin line into as good a shape as possible, when a strong force emerged from the scrub wood in the valley, as well as I could judge, in two lines in echelon by the right, and, opening a heavy fire, the first line came on as if they meant to sweep everything before them. We opened on them as well as we could with our scanty ammunition snatched from the field.

It did not seem possible to withstand another shock like this now coming on. Our loss had been severe. One-half of my left wing had fallen, and a third of my regiment lay just behind us, dead or badly wounded. At this moment my anxiety was increased by a great roar of musketry in my rear, on the farther or northerly slope of Little Round Top, apparently on the flank of the regular brigade, which was in support of Hazlett’s battery on the crest behind us. The bullets from this attack struck into my left rear, and I feared that the enemy might have nearly surrounded the Little Round Top, and only a desperate chance was left for us. My ammunition was soon exhausted. My men were firing their last shot and getting ready to club their muskets.

It was imperative to strike before we were struck by this overwhelming force in a hand-to-hand fight, which we could not probably have withstood or survived. 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. The effect was surprising; many of the enemy’s first line threw down their arms and surrendered. An officer fired his pistol at my head with one hand, while he handed me his sword with the other. Holding fast by our right, and swinging forward our left, we made an extended right wheel, before which the enemy’s second line broke and fell back, fighting from tree to tree, many being captured, until we had swept the valley and cleared the front of nearly our entire brigade.

Meantime Captain Morrill with his skirmishers sent out from my left flank, with some dozen or fifteen of the U.S. Sharpshooters who had put themselves under his direction, fell upon the enemy as they were breaking, and by his demonstrations, as well as his well-directed fire, added much to the effect of the charge.

Having thus cleared the valley and driven the enemy up the western slope of the Great Round Top, not wishing to press so far out as to hazard the ground I was to hold by leaving it exposed to a sudden rush of the enemy, I succeeded (although with some effort to stop my men, who declared they were “on the road to Richmond”) in getting the regiment into good order and resuming our original position.

Four hundred prisoners, including two field and several line officers, were sent to the rear. These were mainly from the Fifteenth and Forty-seventh Alabama Regiments, with some of the Fourth and Fifth Texas. One hundred and fifty of the enemy were found killed and wounded in our front.

 

Chamberlain helped begin the healing of the dreadful wounds to the nation caused by the War  at Appomattox.  He was chosen to oversee the Confederates as they marched out to surrender. As the Confederates passed by, Chamberlain ordered a salute to them by the Union troops. He explained why he did this:

“I resolved to mark it by some token of recognition, which could be no other than a salute of arms. Well aware of the responsibility assumed, and of the criticisms that would follow, as the sequel proved, nothing of that kind could move me in the least. The act could be defended, if needful, by the suggestion that such a salute was not to the cause for which the flag of the Confederacy stood, but to its going down before the flag of the Union. My main reason, however, was one for which I sought no authority nor asked forgiveness. Before us in proud humiliation stood the embodiment of manhood: men whom neither toils and sufferings, nor the fact of death, nor disaster, nor hopelessness could bend from their resolve; standing before us now, thin, worn, and famished, but erect, and with eyes looking level into ours, waking memories that bound us together as no other bond;–was not such manhood to be welcomed back into a Union so tested and assured?”

The wounds he received in the War never fully healed, caused him great pain throughout the remainder of his life, and ultimately led to his death at 85 on February 24, 1914.

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Lee
Lee
Tuesday, July 2, AD 2013 6:00am

The story of 20th Maine and their holding the flank at Little Ropund Top is a great one. They deserve praise. However, they wouldn’t have had a chance to show their heroism if not for the NY 140th. When the Rebels were first attacking Little Round Top, they were making a frontal assault. They were about to take the hill when the NY 140 charged up the hill from the rear (where they had been marching by and were ordered to the top of the hill) and then down on the Rebels – suffering severe casualties (including their commanding officer, Col. Patrick O’Rorke), but they stopped the attack and held the hill. It was then that the Confederates tried to attack on the side where the 20th Maine was. If you go to the battle site there’s a statue of O’Rorke on the top of the hill.

T. Shaw
T. Shaw
Tuesday, July 2, AD 2013 7:21am

Minnesota at Gettysburg:

“The pivot of American history turns on the second day at Gettysburg, and, while thousands of men fought gallantly on both sides that day, there were two points where the fate of the world, really, hung in the balance. The first was at Little Round Top, where Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain’s 20th Maine held off Confederate attacks throughout the day. The second came late in the afternoon, when the Confederates attacked the center of the Union line, which had been stripped almost bare as Union generals sent more and more troops to defend the southern part of the line. It was in the center that the First Minnesota made its famous suicide charge, attacking onrushing Confederates who outnumbered the Minnesotans fifteen to one in a desperate effort to gain time to reinforce the Union line. The regiment suffered a casualty rate exceeding 80 percent, but succeeded beyond General Hancock’s expectations, as they not only purchased with their lives the critical minutes needed to reinforce the Union line, but stopped the Confederate advance in its tracks. No unit of the United States Army has ever exceeded the First Minnesota for gallantry and courage.”

T. Shaw
T. Shaw
Tuesday, July 2, AD 2013 7:26am

Father Corby’s book (I have it), Memoirs of Chaplain Life, does not present possibly his most memorable service when on the second day at Gettysburg he gave the famous General Absolution. He did, however in his book: “And now, the two great armies are confronting each other…. At about four o, set the scene. “at four o’clock the Confederates commenced firing, and one hundred and twenty cannon from their side belched forth from their fiery throats missiles of death into our lines…The proportions of the pending crash seemed so great, as the armies eye each other, that even veterans who had often ‘smelled powder’ quailed at the thought of the final conflict. The Third Corps were pressed back, and at this critical moment I proposed to give a General Absolution.”

Maj. Gen. St. Clair Mulholland sets the scene: “Now help is called for, and Hancock tells Caldwell to have his men ready… The Irish Brigade whose green flag has been unfurled in every battle in which the Army of the Potomac has been engaged from Bull Run to Appomattox, formed a part of this division… The Chaplain of this brigade, Rev. William Corby, proposed to give a General Absolution to all the men before going into the fight. While this is customary in the armies of Catholic countries in Europe, it was perhaps the first time it was ever witnessed on this Continent.”

Father Corby stood on a large rock (famous painting and statues) in center front of the brigade. “The brigade was standing at order arms!’ As he closed his address, every man, Catholic and non-Catholic, fell on his knees with his head bowed down. Then stretching his right hand toward the Brigade, Father Corby pronounced the words of Absolution:’Dominus noster Jesus Christus vos absolvat.”‘

Amy
Amy
Tuesday, July 2, AD 2013 9:09am

Very proud of our former Governor, who besides the charge at Little Round Top, went on to have a very distinguished career in the army for the rest of the war, despite a debilitating wound, which caused him immense pain for the rest of his life. He was wounded 5 other times besides and led a rout of Confederate forces at Five Forks. One of only 2 known battlefield promotions to General on the Union side. Mustered out as a Brevet Major General.

A true Mainer. We will be remembering him and honoring him this year, especially in Brunswick at the Pejebscot Historical Society, when they hold their “Chamberlain Days” celebrations in August. They don’t make many men like him anymore!

Stand Firm Ye Boys From Maine!!

Phillip
Phillip
Tuesday, July 2, AD 2013 12:08pm
Randy Ward
Randy Ward
Tuesday, July 2, AD 2013 1:19pm

Not to take anything away from the men on both sides that bravely fought at little rountop but; Chamberlin lied about his part in the battle and his own men corrected his lie a few years after the war. Chamberlin used his supposed actions to gain a political career, but his men finally got tired of his lies and told the truth; he was less than honorable or brave.

Amy
Amy
Tuesday, July 2, AD 2013 1:55pm

Chamberlain did not lie about his part in the battle. Read his report written a few days after the battle. Where these supposed “lies” come from are some articles that Chamberlain was asked to write for Hearst magazine. The editors embellished most of them without Chamberlain’s permission. He wouldn’t even claim them as his own work after they were published.

To return to battle only 4 months after receiving a wound at Petersburg that should have killed him, even with today’s medical technology is more than brave. And I believe his entire military career as well as the rest of his life serve as more than ample proof of his honor.

As far as I’m concerned, all the men that served at Gettysburg are heros.

Faithful
Faithful
Sunday, July 2, AD 2023 6:24am

In a cemetery near us, one of the 16th Michigan who died on July 2d, is buried. The regiment was just down the line from the 20th Maine. His brother later died at Andersonville and is also buried there.

SouthCoast
SouthCoast
Sunday, July 2, AD 2023 8:20pm

I could watch that portion of “Gettysburg” on a continuous loop. Genius. Heroism. Carried out by a firce that was outnumbered, out if ammo, and, perhaps worst of all, out of coffee. All jesting aside, though, I watch and I cry for awe and joy.

CAM
CAM
Monday, July 3, AD 2023 7:04am

My German immigrant great great grandfather fought at Gettysburg. I think w a PA unit. Family lore is that he saw GEN R. E. Lee astride Traveler at the battle.
Afterwards he went back to MN with wife and 4 children. Six more would be born in MN.

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