Gettysburg The Soldiers' Battle, 2004 Broadcast

1863: A Grim Year

 

It was the pivotal year of the Civil War. By 1863, the war had been raging without any end in sight and the cost in human terms was much larger than anyone could have guessed. By January 1863, the North was war weary. Northern armies had suffered several humiliating defeats in Virginia, blood had been spilled with no positive results, and the issue of slavery and the Emancipation Proclamation had split political sympathies in the North. The South had everything to gain. Though they had lost important sea ports and coastal areas to Union forces, Confederate armies had beaten back every Union attempt to take Richmond or capture key elements of the Southern infrastructure. But the South, too, was becoming war-weary. Despite victories in Virginia by Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, the South had suffered reversals in Louisiana and Mississippi. Politically, Southern leaders had been unable to persuade France and England to recognize the Confederacy as an independent nation, fighting for complete severance from the Union. Without this international support, the South was on its own.

In the spring of 1863, the Union undertook several new campaigns, the most notable being the drive to capture Vicksburg, Mississippi, the last Confederate stronghold on the Mississippi River, and a renewed drive in Virginia to flank Lee out of his position near Fredericksburg, Virginia. General U.S. Grant's Union forces were successful in slowly surrounding Vicksburg, but General Joseph Hooker's Army of the Potomac was soundly defeated at the Battle of Chancellorsville, Virginia, on May 1-5, 1863. This battle was Robert E. Lee's greatest victory, but also his greatest loss when his "right arm", General "Stonewall" Jackson was mortally wounded. Despite the loss of Jackson, Lee knew that to take attention away from Vicksburg and get the war out of Virginia, he had to march his army north into Union territory. By mid-May, Lee had presented his plan to Confederate president Jefferson Davis, who approved it and by June 1, his army was in motion.

It is June 1863 and the Gettysburg Campaign is underway! Take a look at The Yankee Gazette or The Southern Defender once a week until the broadcast. Follow your soldier's march to Gettysburg!

The Yankee Gazette
(Newspaper in the North)

Yankee Gazette, May 1863

Yankee Gazette, June 3, 1863

Yankee Gazette, June 11, 1863

Yankee Gazette, June 19, 1863

Yankee Gazette, June 27, 1863

Yankee Gazette, July 1, 1863

The Southern Defender
(Newspaper in the South)

Southern Defender, May 1863

Southern Defender, June 3, 1863

Southern Defender, June 11, 1863

Southern Defender, June 19, 1863

Southern Defender, June 27, 1863

Southern Defender, July 1, 1863

The Star and Sentinel
(News in Gettysburg)

Gettysburg Star & Sentinel, June 11, 1863

Gettysburg Star & Sentinel June 19, 1863

Gettysburg Star & Sentinel June 27, 1863

Gettysburg Star & Sentinel July 1, 1863

 

 

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Gettysburg National Military Park
97 Taneytown Road
Gettysburg, PA 17325