PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN

in the American Civil War, the unsuccessful Union attempt (Apr.–July, 1862) to capture Richmond, Va., by way of the peninsula between the York and James rivers.

The Plan

Early in 1862, Gen. George B. McClellan, who had kept the Army of the Potomac inactive through the winter, proposed a plan for transporting his troops by sea to Urbana, near the mouth of the Rappahannock River, and from there advancing on Richmond. This plan was soon rendered unfeasible by the advance of the Confederate army under Joseph E. Johnston to the Rappahannock, so McClellan chose Fort Monroe (at the tip of the peninsula between the York and James rivers) as the debarkation point for his offensive. President Lincoln, who preferred an overland advance, reluctantly agreed to McClellan's plan, provided that a force was left behind to protect Washington. The 1st Corps, under Irvin McDowell, was detached from the Army of the Potomac for that purpose.

Evacuation of Yorktown

Early in Apr., 1862, McClellan had about 100,000 men at Fort Monroe. Instead of trying to break through the Confederate line across the peninsula, he prepared to besiege Yorktown, the strongest point in the line. General Johnston evacuated Yorktown (May 3) just as McClellan had completed his preparations. An indecisive, though severely contested, rear-guard action was fought at Williamsburg (May 5) as the Confederates retired toward Richmond. The evacuation of Yorktown opened up the York River to the Union fleet, and on May 16, McClellan established his base at White House Landing (c.20 mi/32 km east of Richmond) on the Pamunkey River.

Union Advance and Jackson's Diversion

At the same time as Yorktown, the Union advance into the interior forced the Confederates to abandon Norfolk (May 10) and to scuttle their formidable ironclad, the Virginia (see Monitor and Merrimack), thus opening up the James as far as Drewry's Bluff (9 m/14 km south of Richmond), where Confederate batteries repulsed them on May 15. McClellan soon had his army encamped on both sides of the Chickahominy River near Richmond: the 3d and 4th corps were on the south side; the 2d, 5th, and 6th on the north. Irvin McDowell's corps (now called the Army of the Rappahannock) was to march south from its position near Fredericksburg and unite with the right wing north of the Chickahominy. McClellan would then move against the inferior forces of Johnston. However, the brilliant campaign of Thomas (Stonewall) Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley caused the diversion of McDowell's corps from the army threatening Richmond.

The End of the Campaign

Late in May heavy rains swelled the Chickahominy so that communication between the two wings of McClellan's army became precarious. On May 31, Johnston moved against the left wing (on the south side of the river), where the lines extended to Fair Oaks, a railroad station c.6 mi (9 km) east of Richmond. In the ensuing battle of Fair Oaks, or Seven Pines (May 31–June 1, 1862), the Confederate attack, led by James Longstreet, was badly executed. With the help of some divisions of the 2d corps, which managed to cross the river, the Union left wing held its ground. Johnston, severely wounded on May 31, was succeeded on June 1 by Gen. Robert E. Lee, who withdrew the Army of Northern Virginia to Richmond. Lee's subsequent counteroffensive in the Seven Days battles led to McClellan's withdrawal and the close of the campaign. Union forces did not again come so close to Richmond until 1864.

Bibliography

See study by J. P. Cullen (1973).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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George B. McClellan
 

books on: Peninsular Campaign  - 660 results

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...and Grey Press, 1984. McClellan, George. The Peninsular Campaign. In Battles and Leaders o the Civil War, 2...1988. --. To the Gates o f Richmond: The Peninsular Campaign. New York: Ticknor and Fields, 1992. Smith...
...for the availability of the men and means that powered the land expedition which proved so vital in the campaign to the north. The peninsular missions had provided essential supplies, but the Jesuits were gone and need not be acknowledged. The...
...Thomas Sydney Jesup, commander of troops in the Florida campaign. The story of Osceolas capture and eventual death as a prisoner...laconically, "Assin-ya-ho-la is dead" Recollections of a Campaign in Florida 1845-1846:131 . Osceolas power thus waxed and...
...as indifferent as the British Government, who don't care for recording the glorious termination of their Egyptian campaign of 1801. If our country takes the compliment so coolly, surely it would be disloyal upon our parts to be more enthusiastic...
...British Rifle Man: The Journals and Correspondence of Major George Simmons, Rifle Brigade, during the Peninsular War and the Campaign of Waterloo . Edited by Willoughby Verner. London: A. C. Black, 1899. Smith Sir Harry George Wakelyn...
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...Michigan, the Seven Days Campaign had been a costly one. During...that fought in the Peninsula Campaign. During the second year...Peninsula and Seven Days campaigns) from an original roster...battles as the Peninsula Campaign, the Confederates called it the Peninsular Campaign. Long, Civil War...
...world today (Ismail, 1989). A minor group in Malaysia is the Indian. There are mainly found in the Western states of Peninsular Malaysia (Lee, 1993).They are of various religions, such as Hindu, Islam, Buddhist, and Christian and most speak...
...Rhodes concluded: "The Peninsular campaign was a failure, and the...judgment of a "failed campaign," see William Swinton, Campaigns of the Army of the Potomac...McClellan during the Peninsula campaign as a whiner and wrote that...
...differently than it had in earlier campaigns. The policy of transferring...was so extraordinary that a campaign was begun in May 1870 by veterans...Sick and Wounded From the Peninsular of Virginia in the Summer...Richmond: The Peninsular Campaign (New York: Ticknor and fields...
...interchangeably. To refer to the Peninsular Campaign (where 300,000...For example, to assess the Peninsular Campaign without consulting David...Spanish Armys effect during the campaign, the British Royal Navys...so the selected wars, campaigns and actions seem to proceed...
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...owned Dubai Ports World (DPW) had purchased the British firm Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P O). Schumer called...Schumer currently is chairman of the 2006 Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, which raises funds and recruits candidates. Controversy...
...Accompanied Her Husband on a Campaign That Climaxed in Triumph and...William Howe De Lancey, on the campaign against Napoleon in the Austrian...attached in 1809 to the Spanish Peninsular campaign of Sir Arthur Wellesley, later...
...background to the arson campaign is a long-term cultural...Llanbedrog on the Llyn Peninsular, the total was approaching...strength of the arson campaigns symbolic appeal derives...1400, and in a quick campaign, drove out the English...Berth on the Llyn Peninsular. This enterprise...believe that the arson campaign has much effect on...
...victory in the Iberian campaign a fait accompli. All...in his Annals of the Peninsular Campaign. Joseph believed...multivolume A History of the Peninsular War, warns against...mind, but rather the Peninsular Campaign. As he wrote in his...
...commander of the Army of the Potomac during the Peninsular Campaign. McClellans army had been beaten badly by...Potomac. The 12th served in the Second Bull Run Campaign. In the Peninsular Campaign, Butterfield was wounded during the Battle...
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...bid on the purchase of Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co. Britains Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation...turned up no evidence of campaign contributions by DPW or...Worlds proposed takeover of Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation...
...troops train in Arlington for bloody campaign by Mike Schellhammer , Russ Miller Many...Northern Virginia, the weather made a campaign against the Rebels impractical, and...March 1862, McClellan began the first campaign of the war designed to seize Richmond...
...on the battlefield of Fair Oaks during the 1862 Peninsular Campaign. Herbert was born in South Carolina in 1834...8th Alabama Infantry Regiment. During the 1862 Peninsular Campaign, he was at Yorktown and Williamsburg and was promoted...
...to Gen. George B. McClellans Peninsular Campaign in 1862 in Virginia. There...during the subsequent Seven Days Campaign as Lee pushed the Union Army...performance during the Peninsula Campaign and the Seven Days Campaign...
...Gen. George McClellans Peninsular Campaign of 1862. Consisting of...distinguished itself in all major campaigns in the East through the Petersburg Campaign. Unfortunately, these...through the Atlanta Campaign, including the storming...
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encyclopedia articles on: Peninsular Campaign  - 51 results

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PENINSULAR CAMPAIGN in the American Civil War, the unsuccessful...of Johnston. However, the brilliant campaign of Thomas (Stonewall) Jackson in the...threatening Richmond. The End of the Campaign Late in May heavy rains swelled the...
...the first important military campaign of the war untrained Union troops...he nevertheless failed in the Peninsular campaign (Apr. July, 1862), in which...Lee in Maryland (see Antietam campaign ). When McClellan failed to...
...Seven Days battles of the Peninsular campaign (April-July, 1862...and in lesser but related campaigns such as the triumph of Thomas...Lee, but in the Antietam campaign (Sept., 1862) he fared...Grant in the Wilderness campaign (May June, 1864) and...particularly desolate after the campaigns of Confederate Gen. Jubal...
...1862) near Richmond, Va., that ended the Peninsular campaign . After the battle of Fair Oaks the Union general...Harrisons Landing on the James River, and the Peninsular campaign was over. Lee had suffered the heavier losses...
...was wounded at Fair Oaks in the Peninsular campaign , Lee assumed command of the...Northern invasion, the Antietam campaign (Sept.). Advances by Ambrose...Confederate defeat in the Gettysburg campaign (June July). He sorely missed...
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