By July of 1864, the Union
and Confederate armies had settled into stagnant lines around the railhead of
Petersburg, about 30 miles south of Richmond. In an attempt to break the
stalemate, a plan was developed to tunnel under the Army of Northern Virginia, detonate
a mine and exploit the resulting hole in the line and confusion among the
defenders. The idea was that a break-through would enable them to pour enough
troops through to drive on to Petersburg. And taking Petersburg would cut Richmond’s
lines of communications.
Well, that was the idea,
although George G. Meade, CG of the Army of the Potomac, and Ulysses Grant, general-in-chief,
didn’t rate it much. The miners, from the 4th Pennsylvania began
digging the shaft in late June, but they were operating under the handicaps of
improvised supports and tools.
Our old pal Ambrose
Burnside, now a mere corps commander, had allocated a division of
African-American troops, who were trained pretty well by the standards of the
day for their part in the operation. However, on the day before the attack,
Meade (who lacked confidence in black men’s combat capabilities) ordered
Burnside to use white troops, who had had no training, and weren’t even given
clear objectives and expectations by their commander. Who, as it turns out, was
both drunk and way behind the lines when the battle commenced.
On 30 July, the mine was detonated
after some initial problems, blowing a 200-foot crater in the Rebel line. (The materials for the explosives were as
defective as everything else given the 4th Pennsylvania.) Nearly 280
Confederate soldiers were killed in the initial explosion, and their comrades
were rendered stupefied for some minutes.
But so were the attacking
troops, who had no notion of what they were supposed to be doing, much less how
they should be doing it. They actually rushed into the crater left by the
explosion, thinking to take cover there. Instead they were the fish in a rain barrel,
being decimated by Confederate fire.
Only now did Burnside send in the black
troops, but they were going into a meat grinder and they, too, were cut down. Many of them were bayoneted after surrendering; it was a dangerous business, being a black man in the Union Army.
The end result was 3800
Union casualties (including 504 dead) and 1500 Confederate (with 361 killed).
Oh—and no change in the
lines around Petersburg. The two armies would face each other over the rest of
the summer, fall, winter and early spring of 1865.
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