Last weekend was my second trip to Gettysburg. Living in the deep south, some 13 hours away by car, it is sometimes difficult to get to places that we really want to go. That being said, it was my very FIRST time to Culp’s Hill. The first time I went (three years ago), I went with my family who were slightly tired of hearing all my Civil War stories, so my Mom cut our tour short and I never made it to this part of the battlefield.
As my friend Brian and I ascended the observation tower last Thursday (a week ago today), I thought to myself…this is a really steep hill. As we reached the top and looked out over the town of Gettysburg, it became immediately obvious to my why this was the “barb” in the fish hook that was the defensive position at Gettysburg for the Union. Without a doubt, this position commands the entire area.
This is the view looking West towards the town. The hill has a steep slope in this direction towards Rock Creek, but the terrain is not impassable.
So, the question remains, should Ewell have ordered Johnson’s Division to take the hill? Johnson sent a scouting party up the hill late in the afternoon of the first day, where they encountered elements of the 7th Indiana, part of the I Corps, which was digging in. Other Federal units were beginning to head in that direction, but the 7th Indiana, for a time, was all alone at the top of the hill. Johnson’s scouting party got so close, they were almost captured. They ran back down the hill and reported that the Federals were in strength at the top. But WHAT IF…they had reported that there was only one lone Union regiment at the top of the hill?
Johnson had some 6,000 men in four brigades in his division which had not yet been engaged in the fighting of the first day, including the famed “Stonewall brigade”. Could these men have stormed up the slope of Culp’s Hill, dislodged the 7th Indiana, and set up a defensive line to protect Ewell’s flank from new Federal troops that were showing up in the XII Corps under Slocum? Would the Stonewall brigade have gained even more fame and glory on July 1, 1863 for forcing the Federal Army to retreat from Cemetery Hill and take another defensive position further south of Gettysburg?
My best answer is…yes. Ewell was too timid, and Johnson was not aggressive enough. If Trimble had been allowed to lead an assault up the slope of Culp’s Hill as the sun set on July 1, 1863…it is very possible that we would be talking today about the one day battle of Gettysburg as a complete Confederate victory, and after that, it’s anyone’s guess!
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