 |
 |
Six Brigadier and Major Generals were killed or mortally wounded
during the Battle of Antietam
on September 17, 1862. Of the six fallen men, three were from the Union
army and three were Confederates. The spot where each of the following six
generals were killed is marked by a "Mortuary Cannon," a cannon
tube, muzzle down in a block of stone.
Incredibly, twelve generals were wounded during the battle - six from each
side. Two other generals were killed at the Battle of South Mountain, three
days earlier - one Union and one Confederate. The total for the two battles
was 20 Generals killed or wounded - 10 from each side. |

|
 |
Brig. Gen. George
B. Anderson
Born near Hillsboro, North Carolina, Anderson was 31 years
old at Antietam. West Point graduate, class of 1852, his brigade of North
Carolinians fought desperately in the Sunken Road. Wounded in the foot,
BGen Anderson was transported to Shepherdstown, then Staunton, Virginia
and eventually to Raleigh, North Carolina were he died October 16. |

|
Brig. Gen. Lawrence O'Brian Branch
Branch was born in Enfield, North Carolina in 1820. He graduated
from Princeton in 1838, studied law and served in Congress from 1855 until
1861. Branch commanded a brigade attached to A.P. Hill's Division who made
the grueling 17 mile march to the battlefield from Harpers Ferry on the
day of the battle. Arriving on the south end of the battlefield, Branch
and the other brigades of Hill's division helped turn back Burnside's attack
at the end of the day. Like George Anderson, Branch was also buried in Raleigh,
North Carolina. |
 |

|
 |
Maj. Gen. Joseph K. F. Mansfield
Joseph King Fenno Mansfield was one of the oldest officers on the field
at age 59. Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Mansfield graduated from West
Point in 1822. A professional soldier, he served in the Army for forty years,
including service in the Mexican War. Just two days before the battle, he
was given command of the XII Corps. MGen Mansfield led his men through the
East Woods towards the Cornfield in support of I Corps already in action.
Wounded in the chest he died the next day. There is a monument and a mortuary
cannon on the battlefield for MGen Mansfield. |

|
Maj. Gen. Israel B. Richardson
This Vermonter was 46 years old when he led his division at Antietam. Another
West Pointer, Richardson graduated from the Academy in 1841 and distinguished
himself during the Mexican War. In 1855 he resigned his commission and moved
to Michigan. Returning to service during the crisis of 1861, Richardson
led a brigade during the First Battle of Bull Run and the Peninsula campaign.
At Antietam he commanded a division in the II Corp that attacked the Sunken
Road. Wounded by artillery while trying to bring up more guns, MGen Richardson
died on November 3, 1862. |
 |

|
 |
Brig. Gen. Isaac P. Rodman
Born in Rhode Island, Rodman served in both houses of the state legislature
before the war. Rodman's middle name was Peace and he was a Quaker. Imagine
his dilemma when war broke out between his religion and service to his county.
Rodman was a Captain at First Bull Run and a division commander here at
Antietam. Crossing at Snavely's Ford on the far south end of the battlefield,
Rodman led his men in the final assault, only to be turned back by the timely
arrival of A.P. Hill and his men. Mortally wounded, this Quaker General
would die on September 30, 1862 at age 40. |

|
Brig. Gen. William E. Starke
Born is Virginia, Starke was a successful cotton planter in New Orleans.
He served as the Colonel of the 60th Virginia, then promoted to Brigadier
on August 6 1862. When BGen John R. Jones was stunned by an artillery shell
and left the field, Starke took command of the Stonewall Division. The onslaught
of the Union I Corps' attack early in the morning began to drive his men
back. Starke would lead a counterattack, only to be wounded three times,
he died within the hour. His body was returned to Richmond where he was
buried in Hollywood Cemetery next to his son who had been killed two months
earlier. |
 |
 |
Wounded at Antietam
September 17, 1862 |
Army of the
Potomac
BGen Samuel W. Crawford
BGen Napoleon J.T. Dana
BGen George L. Hartsuff
MGen Joseph Hooker
BGen John Sedgwick
BGen Max Weber
|
Army of Northern
Virginia
MGen Richard H. Anderson
BGen Maxcy Gregg
BGen John R. Jones
BGen Alexander R. Lawton
BGen Roswell S. Ripley
BGen Ambrose R. Wright |
Killed at South Mountain
September 14, 1862 |
| MGen Jesse L. Reno |
BGen Samuel Garland |

|
|
 |
| Last
updated: 10/1/99, KBS |