Photo of Joseph Hooker courtesy
of National Archives.
Part I: A New Thrust into Virginia
CHANCELLORSVILLE: AprilMay 1863
Of trees and a quick march
A NEW COMMANDER
AFTER the Fredericksburg disaster President Lincoln
appointed Gen. Joseph ( "Fighting Joe") Hooker to succeed Burnside.
Hooker realized his first job was to restore morale and discipline to
the demoralized Union army, and in this he showed rare administrative
ability that few suspected he possessed. Abandoning Burnside's unwieldy
Grand Divisions, he reorganized the army on the corps level, forming the
cavalry into a separate corps. The quality and quantity of the rations
was increased, camp sanitation and living conditions improved. By spring
of 1863 the Army of the Potomac, numbering about 135,000 men, was
probably the best equipped and supplied army in the world. It was now
becoming evident that the South could win victories and emerge
permanently weakened, and that the North could suffer defeats and emerge
still stronger.
Yet when Lincoln reviewed the army early in April, he
seemed to have a premonition of disaster. What bothered him was Hooker,
who prefaced almost every sentence with the words "When I get to
Richmond. . . ." This led Lincoln to remark that "the hen is the wisest
of all of the animal creation because she never cackles until the egg is
laid." And he gave Hooker and Couch, next in command, some sage advice.
"In your next fight gentlemen," he told them, "put in all of your men."
Unfortunately for the North, the suggestion went unheeded.
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