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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMX8K_confederate-futility_Henrico-VA.html
The Confederate plan called for dozens of cannon to gather here and on the Poindexter Farm, nearly a mile to the east (your left). Their combined fire, directed at the Union batteries atop Malvern Hill, would clear the way for an infantry assault …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMX8J_the-farthest-advance_Henrico-VA.html
Two small structures used as slave quarters stood in this clearing. Some of the fiercest fighting raged around them in the twilight, as men of Paul J. Semmes' Confederate brigade used the buildings for shelter and exchanged short-range fire with c…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMX8I_infantry-against-infantry_Henrico-VA.html
Federal artillery enjoyed outstanding fields of fire at Malvern Hill. But the terrain here in front of the West House had wrinkles and hollows that could offer protection to attackers. Union General Darius N. Couch of the Fourth Corps, commanding …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVLF_madness_Henrico-VA.html
Around 5:00 p.m. the Confederate attack began when Colonel John B. Gordon's Alabama brigade emerged from the woods behind you. Over the next three hours 15 Confederate brigades marched into a maelstrom of iron and lead. Union artillery blasted the…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVLE_the-gathering-storm_Henrico-VA.html
Atop this knoll Confederate General D. H. Hill had an unobstructed view to the crest of Malvern Hill. In the distance stood the West farm house and fields where Union batteries waited to dispute any Southern advance. By early afternoon Hill's five…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVLD_artillerys-terrible-effect_Henrico-VA.html
Malvern Hill is barely 900 yards wide here at its narrow crest, leaving room for only a small number of the nearly 200 cannon available to the Union army on July 1. The defenders placed between two and three dozen pieces of artillery across the hi…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVLC_a-battlefield-landmark_Henrico-VA.html
The Thomas J. West house stood as a prominent part of the battlefield scene—a goal for attacking Confederates and a landmark along the Union line. Most of the fresh Federal troops marching to the front on July 1 moved past this house, coming…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVLB_fort-hoke-empty-victory_Richmond-VA.html
After capturing Fort Harrison on September 29, 1864, Union General Edward O.C. Ord directed an attack southward down the Confederate line toward forts Hoke and Maury. If these Confederate defenses fell, the direct road to Richmond along the Osborn…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVLA_freedom-fighters_Henrico-VA.html
By November 1864, several thousand African American soldiers, designated as United States Colored Troops or USCT, held Fort Harrison and the nearby earthworks. Many of these men had survived the bloody combat at New Market Heights, Fort Gilmer, an…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVL9_southern-valor-vs-union-firepower_Henrico-VA.html
"The battle, with all its melancholy results, proved, however, that the Confederate infantry and Federal artillery, side by side on the same field need fear no foe on earth." Confederate General D. H. Hill
As dusk approached on July 1, massed C…