Little Round Top from the northwest. Brady
photograph.
The Second Day (continued)
WARREN SAVES LITTLE ROUND TOP. Gen. G. K. Warren,
Meade's Chief of Engineers, after reviewing Sickles' line with Meade,
rode to the crest of Little Round Top and found the hill, "the key to
the Union position," unoccupied except by a signal station. Warren was
informed by the signalmen that they believed Confederate troops
lay concealed on the wooded ridge a mile to the west. Smith's New York
battery, emplaced at Devil's Den, immediately was ordered to fire a shot
into these woods. The missile, crashing through the trees, caused a
sudden stir of the Confederates "which by the gleam of the reflected
sunlight on their bayonets, revealed their long lines outflanking the
position." Warren realized Longstreet would strike first at Little Round
Top and he observed, too, the difficulty of shifting Sickles' position
from Devil's Den to the hill.
At this very moment, Sykes' Fifth Corps, marching
from its reserve position, began streaming across Cemetery Ridge toward
the front. Warren sought aid from this corps. In answer to his plea for
troops, the brigades of Vincent and Weed sprinted to Little Round Top.
Law's Alabama troops were starting to scale the south slope of the hill
when Vincent's men rushed to the attack. Weed's brigade, following
closely, drove over the crest and engaged Robertson's Texans on the west
slope. The arrival of Hazlett's battery on the summit of the hill is
thus described by an eyewitness: "The passage of the six guns through
the roadless woods and amongst the rocks was marvelous. Under ordinary
circumstances it would have been considered an impossible fear, but the
eagerness of the men . . . brought them without delay to the very summit
where they went immediately into battle." A desperate hand-to-hand
struggle ensued. Weed and Hazlett were killed, and Vincent was mortally
woundedall young soldiers of great promise.
Dead Confederate sharpshooter at Devil's Den.
Gardner photograph.
While Law and Robertson fought on Little Round Top,
their comrades struggled in the fields below. The Confederate drive was
taken up in turn by the brigades of Benning, Anderson, Kershaw, Semmes,
Barksdale, Wofford, Wilcox, Perry, and Wright against the divisions of
three Federal corps in the Wheatfield, the Peach Orchard, and along the
Emmitsburg Road. Four hours of desperate fighting broke the Peach
Orchard salient, an angle in the Union line which was struck from the
south and the west. It left the Wheatfield strewn with dead and wounded,
and the base of Little Round Top a shambles. Sickles' men had been
driven back, and Longstreet was now in possession of the west slope of
Big Round Top, of Devil's Den, and the Peach Orchard. Little Round Top,
that commanding landmark which, in Confederate hands would have unhinged
the Union line on Cemetery Ridge, still remained in Union
possession.
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