10 Facts: Cedar Creek

October 19, 1864

Prof. Jonathan Noyalas, author and editor of several books and articles on the Civil War and chief historian of the Kernstown Battlefield, helped us assemble these 10 facts about the Battle of Cedar Creek.  We hope that these interesting facts will improve your awareness and appreciation for this important 1864 Civil War battle in Virginia.

Noyalas Cedar Creek
Historian Jonathan Noyalas at the Cedar Creek battlefield. Douglas Ullman, Jr.

Fact #1: The Confederate plan to strike the Union left flank was developed by Gen. John B. Gordon and chief topographical engineer Capt. Jedediah Hotchkiss.

Once Gen. Early determined to attack the Army of the Shenandoah in its fortified position on the north bank of Cedar Creek, he needed to determine how to do it. On the night of October 17, Gen. John B. Gordon, Capt. Jedediah Hotchkiss, Maj. Robert W. Hunter, and Gen. Clement Evans scaled Massanutten Mountain to observe the Union position. Gordon and Hotchkiss quickly agreed that the Union left flank afforded the only place an attack could be made due to the absence of Union cavalry guarding the fords along Cedar Creek and the North Fork of the Shenandoah River. Despite the recommendation of Gen. John Pegram鈥攐ne of Early鈥檚 division commanders鈥攖o assault the Union right flank, Early believed in Gordon鈥檚 and Hotchkiss鈥 assertion that the Federal army鈥檚 eastern flank was its weakest point. The estimation proved true as the Union VIII Corps, which guarded the Army of the Shenandoah鈥檚 eastern flank, was driven from its position in approximately twenty minutes.

Fact #2: Contrary to popular belief not every Union soldier was surprised by Gen. Jubal Early's attack.

Although most Union soldiers, by mid-October, believed that Early鈥檚 army no longer posed a threat in the Valley and would not dare attack, Gen. William H. Emory, commander of the XIX Corps, believed a Confederate attack imminent due to information he received about activity of Confederates spying on the Union position. When Emory reported the intelligence to Gen. Horatio G. Wright, the army鈥檚 temporary commander, Wright discounted it. Additionally, Col. Stephen Thomas, a brigade commander in the XIX Corps received intelligence which reported individuals in civilian clothing examining the Union position from the base of Massanutten Mountain. Furthermore, army provost marshal Capt. Benjamin Crowninshield reported that thirteen spies employed by the Army of the Shenandoah delivered information 鈥渢hat some move鈥 by Early against the Union position 鈥渨as contemplated.鈥

Fact #3: The Battle of Cedar Creek produced more than 8,000 casualties.

Although casualty numbers are often suspect, most assessments of the casualties incurred at the Battle of Cedar Creek reveal that the Union army, which entered the battle with an overall strength of 31,610 men, suffered 5,764 casualties, 569 of whom were killed.  The Confederate army which consisted of 14,091 men at the battle鈥檚 outset suffered approximately 3,060 casualties, 1,860 of whom were either reported killed or wounded.

Fact #4: Twenty-one Union soldiers were awarded the Medal of Honor for actions at Cedar Creek.

Ten officers and eleven enlisted men received the nation鈥檚 highest military honor for actions of heroism at the Battle of Cedar Creek. Among the recipients were eight soldiers from New York regiments and five from Vermont units. Among the Vermonters to receive the honor was Col. Stephen Thomas鈥攃ommander of the second brigade, first division, of the XIX Corps. During the early morning phase of the battle Gen. Emory ordered Thomas鈥 command out of its entrenchments to a wooded ridge on the east side of the Valley Pike to slow the Confederate attack. For nearly thirty minutes Thomas鈥 brigade held and allowed Emory to strengthen his line to meet the Confederate attack. Thomas鈥 command suffered catastrophic losses for its efforts.  For example the 8th Vermont鈥攐ne of the brigade鈥檚 four regiments鈥攍ost 106 men out of 159 engaged, including the loss of thirteen of its sixteen field officers.

Masanutten Mountain, drawn by Edwin Forbes Library of Congress

Fact #5: Two future Presidents of the United States fought at the Battle of Cedar Creek.

Col. Rutherford B. Hayes, who commanded the second division of Gen. George Crook鈥檚 VIII Corps was elected the nineteenth President of the United States in 1876. He served one term. Capt. William McKinley, who performed staff duties with the VIII Corps at the battle of Cedar Creek, was elected the twenty-fifth President of the United States in 1896. He was shot on September 6, 1901, at the Pan American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. He died eight days later.

Fact #6: The battle resulted in the death of one of Gen. Early's division commanders.

Out of the five generals who commanded infantry divisions in Early鈥檚 army, only one paid the ultimate price鈥擥en. Stephen D. Ramseur.  Throughout the battle Ramseur, according to those near him, fought with great determination in the hope that a heroic effort in battle and a Confederate victory would earn him a furlough to go home to North Carolina and visit his newborn daughter Mary.  Unfortunately, Ramseur would never set eyes on his daughter.  During the Union counterattack on the afternoon of October 19, 1864, as Ramseur鈥檚 division defended the area around Miller鈥檚 Mill a Union bullet mortally wounded Ramseur when it entered the general鈥檚 right side, pierced both lungs, and lodged in his left side.  Although one of Ramseur鈥檚 staff, Maj. R.R. Hutchinson, and others attempted to get the general safely off the field, Corporal Frederick Lyon of the 1st Vermont Cavalry captured Ramseur鈥檚 ambulance in Strasburg.  Lyon escorted Ramseur to Union headquarters at Belle Grove where on the morning after the battle, at the tender age of twenty-seven, he died.  Lyon received the Medal of Honor for his actions.

Fact #7: The Battle of Cedar Creek emerged as the popular defining moment of Sheridan's military career and made his war horse Rienzi a national sensation.

Although Sheridan had a long and storied military career, the moment which arguably defined him in the popular consciousness of American society was

the Battle of Cedar Creek and specifically his ride from Winchester to Middletown. Individuals such as Thomas Buchanan Read, Thur de Thulstrup, Charles Andrus, and Gutzon Borglum immortalized the event of Sheridan鈥檚 ride in poetry, painting, and sculpture. That episode became one of the most popularly depicted scenes in painting鈥攚ith only renderings of the Battle of Gettysburg and the battle between the ironclads USS Monitor and CSS Virginia being more popular subjects. During Sheridan鈥檚 funeral in 1888 Cardinal Gibbon, who presided over the Catholic funeral rite at St. Matthew鈥檚 Cathedral in Washington, D.C., noted during the eulogy that 鈥渙ne incident鈥 revealed Sheridan鈥檚 greatness as a general 鈥渉is famous ride in the Valley of Virginia.鈥

The ride also made a national sensation of his horse Rienzi鈥攔enamed Winchester after the battle. Today, Rienzi鈥檚 stuffed remains can be seen on display at the Smithsonian Museum of American History in Washington, D.C.

Fact #8: Gen. Early shouldered none of the blame for the Confederate defeat.

Although some of Early鈥檚 subordinates, most notably Gen. Gordon, believed that Early鈥檚 decision to stop the offensive by late morning doomed the Confederate army to disaster, Early believed all of his decisions prudent. After the battle he accepted none of the responsibility for the disastrous loss. Early informed Gen. Robert E. Lee that the reversal of fortunes at Cedar Creek 鈥渁re due to no want of effort on my part.鈥 Some Confederates supported Early鈥檚 assertion. Capt. Samuel Buck of the 13th Virginia noted: 鈥淕en. Early deserved great credit for this battle; won a victory second to none in the war and lost all by no fault of his own.鈥

Fact #9: The Union victory at Cedar Creek greatly boosted President Abraham Lincoln's chances for reelection in November 1864.

Along with the successes of Gen. William T. Sherman in Georgia, Sheridan鈥檚 success at Cedar Creek greatly bolstered Lincoln鈥檚 bid for reelection in November. Two days after the battle, Lincoln supporters held a torchlight parade where they cheered Sheridan鈥檚 victory at Cedar Creek. The display of support for Sheridan ended at the Executive Mansion where the crowd cheered for Lincoln to make an impromptu address. 鈥淚 propose that you give three hearty cheers for Sheridan鈥 we may as well consider how fortunate it was for the Secesh that Sheridan was a very little man. If he had been a large man, there is no knowing what he would have done to them,鈥 Lincoln told the onlookers. After Lincoln defeated the Democratic candidate George B. McClellan, Lincoln issued General Orders No. 282 on November 14, 1864, which announced Sheridan鈥檚 promotion to major general in the regular army. Lincoln specifically cited Sheridan鈥檚 鈥減ersonal gallantry鈥 and 鈥渕ilitary skill鈥 at Cedar Creek as the justification for the promotion.

Fact #10: The Cedar Creek battlefield contains three monuments dedicated by survivors of the fight.

Veterans of the 8th Vermont dedicated the first permanent monument on September 21, 1885. The veterans positioned the monument on the ridge where the regiment suffered such fearful carnage on the morning of October 19, 1864. On October 15, 1907, survivors of the 128th New York dedicated their monument to the regiment鈥檚 service. The veterans placed the monument at the left end of the XIX Corps鈥 trench line. On September 16, 1920, the North Carolina Historical Commission and the United Daughters of the Confederacy dedicated a monument to the memory of Gen. Stephen D. Ramseur, mortally wounded at the battle. Ramseur鈥檚 daughter Mary unveiled the monument before a crowd of Confederate and Union veterans.

Learn More: Battle of Cedar Creek

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Related Battles

Frederick County, Shenandoah County and Warren County, VA | October 19, 1864
Result: Union Victory
Estimated Casualties
8,824
Union
5,764
Confed.
3,060