The Battle of Chantilly
Ox Hill
September 1, 1862
Making a wide flank march, Jackson hoped to cut off the Union retreat from Bull Run. On September 1, beyond Chantilly Plantation on the Little River Turnpike near Ox Hill, Jackson sent his divisions against two Union divisions under Kearny and Stevens. Confederate attacks were stopped by fierce fighting during a severe thunderstorm. Union generals Stevens and Kearny were both killed. Recognizing that his army was still in danger at Fairfax Courthouse, Maj. Gen. Pope ordered the retreat to continue to Washington. With Pope no longer a threat, Lee turned his army west and north to invade Maryland, initiating the Maryland Campaign and the battles of South Mountain and Antietam. Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan assumed command of Union forces around Washington.
Phillip Kearny at the Battle of Chantilly (web)
Wikipedia: The Battle of Chantilly
Order of Battle: Confederate Forces
Historic Markers: Battle of Chantilly
21st Massachusetts Soldiers at Chantilly
See our Chantilly battlefield photos
Historian Ed Wenzel at the Re-Dedication of the Ox Hill Battlefield Park (2008)
