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Antietam 1
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Antietam 2
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Antietam 3
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Antietam 4
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Antietam 5
Antietam
Sharpsburg
September 16 - 18, 1862
Washington County, Maryland
The Army of the Potomac, under the command of George McClellan, mounted a series of powerful assaults against Robert E. Lee’s forces near Sharpsburg, Maryland, on September 17, 1862. The morning assault and vicious Confederate counterattacks swept back and forth through Miller’s Cornfield and the West Woods. Later, towards the center of the battlefield, Union assaults against the Sunken Road pierced the Confederate center after a terrible struggle. Late in the day, the third and final major assault by the Union army pushed over a bullet-strewn stone bridge at Antietam Creek. Just as the Federal forces began to collapse the Confederate right, the timely arrival of A.P. Hill’s division from Harpers Ferry helped to drive the Army of the Potomac back once more. The bloodiest single day in American military history ended in a draw, but the Confederate retreat gave Abraham Lincoln the “victory” he desired before issuing the Emancipation Proclamation.
Antietam News
- Smaller Than 145th, The 150th Antietam Reenactment To Be Held (Civil War Librarian) »
- John Howard, Superintendent, Antietam National Battlefield (2010) (HistoryNet.com) »
- Dunker Church Rising (Walking the West Woods) »
- From Antietam to Saratoga--unknown Civil War soldier returns home (Examiner.com) »
Civil War Trust News Releases
Featured Article
The 1862 Maryland Campaign
Historian Scott Hartwig on the challenges and importance of the 1862 Maryland Campaign - from the Potomac River crossings to Harpers Ferry and the bloody conclusion at Antietam.
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This battlefield was identified in our annual report History Under Siege™ in 2008 »
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