Port Republic | June 9, 1862
Just after 5:00 am on June 9, 1862, Confederate Gen. Thomas 鈥淪tonewall鈥 Jackson ordered his famed 鈥淪tonewall鈥 Brigade to attack Gen. Erastus B. Tyler鈥檚 position along Lewiston Lane. Artillery rounds from the "Coaling" tore into Jackson鈥檚 men advancing across the open plain, driving them back, with Yankee infantry in hot pursuit. Though Jackson outnumbered Tyler on paper, Confederate reinforcements were slowed considerably by a bottleneck at the North Bridge.
The situation east of the River Road was entirely different. Thick woods shielded the Southerners鈥 approach, allowing the 2nd and 4th Virginia to advance directly upon the Union gunners at the Coaling. The Virginians seized control of Tyler鈥檚 artillery platform only to be confronted by an onslaught of Federal infantry. After a vicious hand-to-hand struggle, the Confederates were forced to relinquish control of the guns while they waited for their own reinforcements. When help finally arrived in the form of Gen. Richard Taylor鈥檚 Louisiana brigade, the Southerners again charged the Coaling, this time taking it in the flank. This was too much for Tyler鈥檚 men, who hastily fled down the reverse slope. With the Yankee artillery position firmly in Confederate hands, the whole of Tyler鈥檚 line collapsed and withdrew in confusion.