Rappahannock Station

November 7, 1863
This is a sketch of Union soldiers lined up and ready for battle.

The Battle of Rappahannock Station

After several unsuccessful engagements against Union Major General George G. Meade鈥檚 Army of the Potomac in early October, Confederate General Robert E. Lee鈥檚 Army of Northern Virginia retreated south of the Rappahannock River to maintain a defensive line against Federal troops. After burning the Orange & Alexandria railroad in his army鈥檚 retreat, Lee set up redoubts along the north bank of the Rappahannock River in late October. Lee had hoped his position on the Rappahannock would force Meade to divide his army should the Union general decide to attack. Though Meade divided his forces just as Lee anticipated, much of the subsequent action of the battle did not go as Lee had expected.

With pressure from his superiors in Washington to attack Lee鈥檚 army, Meade ordered an assault on Confederate lines on November 7th, using a two-pronged approach. General William H. French鈥檚 Third Corps would attack Lee at Kelly鈥檚 Ford while General John Sedgwick鈥檚 Sixth Corps struck the Confederate bridgehead at Rappahannock Station. Aware that Meade had divided his army, Lee sent General Robert Rodes to meet the threat at Kelly鈥檚 Ford, leaving General Jubal A. Early to keep Sedgwick at bay.

French鈥檚 men easily overwhelmed the Confederates鈥 meager defenses at Kelly鈥檚 Ford in the early afternoon, capturing around 300 Confederates in the process. Meanwhile at Rappahannock Station, Sedgwick鈥檚 right wing advanced toward Rebel redoubts. Though Early called for reinforcements, Lee only sent one brigade, led by Colonel Archibald Godwin, to assist the hard-pressed Brigadier General Henry T. Hays鈥 brigade of 鈥淟ouisiana Tigers,鈥 regiments appropriately dubbed for their ferocity in battle.

Godwin and Hays鈥 men found themselves in the midst of heavy and rapid enemy fire as Sedgwick worked his way around both rebel flanks and attacked Confederate redoubts. Sedgwick鈥檚 guns and Confederate batteries maintained an active fire until dusk. Lulled by the 鈥渓ateness of the hour鈥 and the quieting of gunfire, Confederates mistakenly believed that no further attacks would be attempted until the morning light.

Suddenly, out of the shadows of the night, Brigadier General David A. Russell鈥檚 division led a brutal bayonet assault on Rebel forces. Unprepared for such an attack, many Southerners simply ran off, but enough came together to fight the enemy in fierce hand-to-hand combat. Russell鈥檚 lead regiment, the 6th Maine, along with their reinforcements, the 5th Wisconsin, resisted the Louisiana Tigers鈥 counterattack. By the end of the fight, Russell鈥檚 men had overrun the Confederate bridgehead at Rappahannock Station and taken more than 1,600 of Early鈥檚 men prisoner.

South of the battle, winds stifled the sounds of the fight, leaving Confederate high command to find out only too late of the severity of the attack. Fear of further defeat and capture prevented their directing aid in repelling Federal troops near the station. On both fronts鈥擪elly鈥檚 Ford and Rappahannock Station鈥擫ee鈥檚 army suffered over 2,000 casualties. Thus miserably defeated, Lee retreated into Orange County south of the Rapidan River to take up another defensive position at Mine Run.