“我告诉他已经太晚了”:罗伯特·罗兹少将对墓地山的夜袭失败

Robert J. Wynstra
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1863年7月1日清晨,罗伯特·罗兹少将的部队正从海德堡向附近的葛底斯堡进发。该师是理查德·s·尤厄尔中将新近改组的第二军团的一部分,第二军团还包括由少将指挥的部队。Jubal A. Early和Edward " Old Allegheny " Johnson。罗兹在钱瑟勒斯维尔战役中成为罗伯特·e·李将军麾下最伟大的英雄之一,并因此晋升为该师的永久团长。他的指挥包括由准将率领的旅。Dodson Ramseur, Alfred Iverson, George Doles, Junius Daniel和Edward O 'Neal上校。厄尔利的部队紧跟在罗德的师后面,而约翰逊的部队则留在靠近苏格兰村的南山西侧。当天早些时候,葛底斯堡周围的战斗开始了,安布罗斯·鲍威尔·希尔的第三军亨利·赫斯的师在葛底斯堡西北部遇到了一些敌军。这些人最初被认为只不过是一支小型民兵部队。取而代之的是约翰·布福德准将(John Buford)师的老兵,这是波托马克军团的一部分。布福德下马的骑兵使用拖延战术,拖慢了赫斯的前进速度,让联邦第一军团的步兵有足够的时间到达战场。在很短的时间内,亨利·赫斯和多尔西·彭德两师的士兵就在钱伯斯堡通往城镇的收费公路两侧展开了激烈而日益激烈的战斗
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“I Told Him It Was Then Too Late”: Maj. Gen. Robert Rodes’s Failed Night Attack on Cemetery Hill
By early in the morning on July 1, 1863, Maj. Gen. Robert Rodes’s troops were on the move from Heidlersburg toward the nearby town of Gettysburg. Th at division formed part of Lt. Gen. Richard S. Ewell’s newly reorganized Second Corps, which also included the troops commanded by Maj. Gens. Jubal A. Early and Edward “Old Allegheny” Johnson. Rodes had emerged at Chancellorsville as one of the biggest heroes in Robert E. Lee’s army, earning him promotion as permanent head of the division. His command included the brigades led by Brig. Gens. Dodson Ramseur, Alfred Iverson, George Doles, Junius Daniel, and Col. Edward O’Neal. Early’s troops trailed closely behind Rodes’s division, while Johnson’s troops remained on the western side of South Mountain near Scotland village. Th e action around Gettysburg began earlier that day, when Henry Heth’s division from Ambrose Powell Hill’s Th ird Corps encountered some enemy troops just northwest of town. Th ose men were fi rst thought to be nothing more than a small militia force. Th ey instead were veteran troopers from Brig. Gen. John Buford’s division, part of the Army of the Potomac. Using delaying tactics, Buford’s dismounted cavalrymen slowed down Heth’s advance long enough for the infantry from the Federal First Corps to arrive on the fi eld. Within a short time, the men from Henry Heth’s and Dorsey Pender’s divisions were engaged in a fi erce and growing battle along both sides of the turnpike leading into town from Chambersburg.1
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