Gettysburg National Military ParkVirtual Tour The Council of War |
![]() The home of Lydia Leister near Gettysburg. National Archives |
Stamping the mud from their boots on the porch, the officers entered the small room lit only by several flickering candles. Seated at the table to make notes was Maj. General Daniel Butterfield, Meade's chief of staff who had served General Hooker in that capacity and remained on the staff at Meade's request. Taking seats around the room was a host of generals: John Newton, newly assigned to command the First Corps after the end of the fighting on July 1; John Gibbon, in charge of the Second Corps; David B. Birney, in command of the Third Corps after the wounding of General Sickles; George Sykes, whose Fifth Corps had seen so much of the fighting that day; John Sedgwick, the bright eyed commander of the newly arrived Sixth Corps; O.O. Howard, who's battered Eleventh Corps had settled on Cemetery Hill; Alpheus Williams, temporary commander of the Twelfth Corps; Henry Slocum, a bitterly honest and dedicated officer who believed in standing one's ground; and Winfield S. Hancock, the reliable corps commander whose battlefield expertise and command decisions had saved the day on the Union left. Also among the group was an exhausted General Warren, the "savior of Round Top", who slumped to the floor and rapidly fell asleep as the meeting began. General Mead listened intently as his corps commanders reported the conditions of their respective fronts and expressed opinions on what the Confederates may be devising for another day of battle.
![]() Gen. Gibbon Generals in Blue |
![]() The Council of War in the Leister House. National Archives |
With the decisions made, the council of war ended. The generals paid their respects as they prepared to return to their troops, each striding out the door into a yard filled with horses and orderlies. General Gibbon was about to leave when he was suddenly confronted by the army commander:
"Before I left the house Meade made a remark to me which surprised me a good deal, especially when I look back upon the occurrence of the next day. By a reference to the votes in the council... the majority of the members were in favor of acting on the defensive and awaiting the action of Lee. In referring to the matter, just as the council broke up, Meade said to me, 'If Lee attacks to-morrow, it will be on your front.' I asked why he thought so and he replied, 'Because he has made attacks on both our flanks and failed, and if he concludes to try it again it will be on our center.' I expressed the hope that he would, and told General Meade, with confidence, that if he did we would defeat him."*
Meade's words were prophetic. Lee would indeed attack on July 3rd, but not as the Confederate commander had planned that same evening in his own council. The next great blow would fall against the Union center in what has become known as the greatest charge of the war.
![]() The Leister House soon after the battle had ended. Library of Congress |
![]() The Leister House today. Gettysburg NMP |
*(General Gibbon's account was written in 1887 and first published in the "Philadelphia Weekly Press" and later reprinted in the monumental series, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War.)

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National Park Service
Gettysburg National Military Park
1195 Baltimore Pike, Suite 100
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania 17325
Author: John Heiser, GETT
Date: September 2000
www.nps.gov/gett