"145th Park Anniversary Events" by U.S. National Park Service , public domain
MonocacyBrochure |
Official Brochure of Monocacy National Battlefield (NB) in Maryland. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
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Monocacy
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Battlefield
Maryland
From every point of view it was heroism.
—Union Gen. Lew Wallace on the defense of the Monocacy River bridges
Burning the wooden bridge over the Monocacy.
NPS / KEITH ROCCO
The Battle that Saved Washington, DC
Monocacy National Battlefield preserves the site of a Civil War battle fought on
July 9, 1864, south of Frederick, Maryland, during the third and final Confederate
invasion of the North. The Battle of Monocacy is less famous and smaller than the
battles of Antietam and Gettysburg—during the first and second invasions—but it
also proved crucial. The Battle of Monocacy delayed Confederate forces sent to capture the Nation’s Capital and ultimately forced them to withdraw to Virginia.
Third Confederate Invasion of the North
By mid-1864 the tide of war had turned
against the Confederacy. In the West its
army was being beaten back toward Atlanta,
Georgia. In the East, Gen. Robert E. Lee’s
Army of Northern Virginia was forced to
establish battle lines around Richmond and
Petersburg, Virginia. To bolster Union forces
besieging the cities, Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
removed thousands of troops from the defensive ring of forts around Washington, DC,
leaving the city lightly defended and a
tempting target.
To relieve pressure on his beleaguered
army, Lee sent 15,000 troops under Lt. Gen.
Jubal Early to secure the Shenandoah Valley
and then invade Maryland. Lee hoped to
force Grant to divert troops to protect the
North by threatening—and possibly capturing—Washington. Early headed west to the
Shenandoah Valley, then swept north into
Maryland. His goal was to threaten or capture the Nation’s Capital. Lee also hoped
that this third invasion of the war-weary
North would further erode public support
for the war there.
Early’s army reached Harpers Ferry, West
Virginia, on July 4. Crossing the Potomac
River near Sharpsburg, Maryland, they
headed east toward Frederick and the road
to Washington. Seeing their movements,
railroad agents alerted Baltimore and Ohio
Railroad President John W. Garrett, who notified Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace, the Union
commander in Baltimore. Wallace quickly
assembled 3,200 troops, mostly new or
short-term recruits without experience.
Lt. Gen. Jubal Early
Early, one of Lee’s most
experienced commanders, was ending his
invasion of Maryland,
when he said, “Major,
we haven’t taken Washington, but we scared
Abe Lincoln like hell!”
Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace
Ulysses S. Grant said
that Wallace’s defeat at
Monocacy contributed
“a greater benefit to the
cause than often falls to
the lot of a commander
of equal force to render
by means of a victory.”
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Unsure of Early’s strength or whether the
Confederates were headed to Baltimore or
Washington, Wallace rushed his troops by
railroad to Monocacy Junction, an important trade and transportation center. There,
the Georgetown Pike to Washington and
the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad crossed the
Monocacy, as did the nearby National Road
to Baltimore. Guarding the three bridges
and several fords, Wallace hoped to delay
Early until Washington could be reinforced.
By dawn on July 9, the last of the 3,400
Union veterans that Grant had sent reached
Monocacy Junction, more than doubling
Wallace’s force to 6,600. Early’s army—in
Frederick now—still outnumbered Wallace
more than two to one, although Early had
sent some cavalry to raid the Union prison
at Point Lookout and free the thousands
of Confederates held there.
The Armies Clash at Monocacy
Confederate artillery
on the Best Farm fires
on Union troops at the
Battle of Monocacy,
July 9, 1864.
Wallace determined that Early was headed
toward Washington. He concentrated his
veterans on the east side of the river at
Monocacy Junction, where the road to
Washington crossed. He also placed a line
of skirmishers along the railroad tracks on
the west side. On the morning of July 9,
advancing Confederates attacked Union
troops defending the Monocacy River
bridges.
NPS / KEITH ROCCO
The Confederates brought up artillery and
heavy fighting ensued around the Best
Farm as they tested the Union defense.
Early decided a direct frontal assault would
be too costly. Instead, his cavalry found a
place downstream to ford the river and
attack the Union left flank. Alerted to the
movement, Wallace shifted troops onto
the Thomas Farm to meet the assault.
Early’s cavalry crossed the river at the
Worthington Ford, dismounted, formed
ranks, and advanced across the Worthington Farm fields. Instead of springing a
surprise attack, they marched into a line
of soldiers concealed along a fence on the
Thomas Farm. Union rifle fire raked the
Confederates, forcing them to fall back.
Meanwhile, Wallace ordered his men to
burn the wooden covered bridge on the
Georgetown Pike to keep Confederates on
his right from storming across the river. By
doing so, he also cut off the best route of
retreat for his skirmishers, still stubbornly
holding their ground near the junction.
Wallace bolstered his left flank and shifted
more troops to the Thomas Farm, preparing for a second Confederate assault.
A mid-afternoon Confederate cavalry
attack pushed the Union soldiers back and
captured the Thomas House. Then a Union
counterattack recaptured the house. On
the Worthington Farm, a full Confederate
MONOCACY AND THE Medal of Honor
division forded the river in late afternoon
and launched a three-pronged assault
against the Union line.
The day’s heaviest fighting raged across
the wheat and corn fields of the Thomas
Farm, as the Confederates again pushed
the Union soldiers back. At the junction
they also dislodged the Union skirmishers
and forced them to flee under fire across
the railroad bridge.
Wallace could hold his position no longer.
He ordered what was left of his small army
to fall back past Gambrill Mill and retreat
toward Baltimore. He left behind some
1,300 men—dead, wounded, missing, or
captured.
Significance of the Battle
The exhausted Confederates encamped on
the battlefield that night before resuming
their march toward Washington. The battle
had cost them as many as 900 men killed,
wounded, missing, or captured, as well as a
precious day of time. On July 11, two days
after the Battle of Monocacy, Early’s army
reached Fort Stevens in northwest Washington. By the time his army arrived, the
two divisions Grant rushed to Washington
from Petersburg were moving into Fort
Stevens and other city defenses.
Early’s and Grant’s troops battled on July
12, with President Lincoln watching the
action, but any opportunity to capture the
city had been lost. The Confederate cavalry
sent to liberate prisoners at Point Lookout
was recalled before they could reach their
destination, and on July 12, under the cover
NPS
Lt. George E. Davis
NPS
Corp. Alexander Scott
The Medal of Honor is the highest
decoration for valor awarded by
the US government. It was awarded twice at the Battle of Monocacy,
both times to members of the 10th
Regiment of Vermont Volunteers:
Lt. George E. Davis, for defending
the two bridge approaches at
Monocacy Junction against the
repeated assaults by a larger force;
and Corp. Alexander Scott, for
saving the regiment’s national
NPS
flag from capture.
of darkness, Early started to withdraw his
army back into Virginia, ending the last
Confederate invasion of the North.
At Monocacy, Wallace’s small improvised
army had held its ground against repeated
assaults by a much larger, battle-hardened
Confederate force, delaying their advance
for one critical day. His troops had lost the
battle, but they had saved Washington.
Frederick
Monocacy River
Best Farm
Wooden bridge
Railroad bridge
Worthington Farm
Gambrill Mill
Thomas Farm
NPS / RICHARD SCHLECHT
Monocacy Battlefield Then and Now
Two Other Significant Civil War Events
Lee’s Lost Orders
When General McClellan
received this copy of Lee’s
Special Orders No. 191, he
exclaimed, “Here is a
paper with which, if I
cannot whip Bobby
Lee, I will be willing to
go home.”
On September 13, 1862, Union soldiers
made a surprising find—they discovered
an envelope containing two cigars and a
copy of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee’s
Special Orders No. 191. The orders, detailing movements of the Confederate army
September 10–12, were written a few
days before as the army was camped at
the Best Farm. This information enabled
Union Gen. George B. McClellan to determine Lee’s movements and intentions,
and to move his army quicker and with
more confidence. His clash with Lee at
Antietam on September 17, the bloodiest
day of the war, ended in a draw—a
missed opportunity to destroy the Confederate army. A historical marker on the
Monocacy battlefield identifies Lee’s
headquarters site where Special Orders
No. 191 was prepared.
On August 5, 1864, Union Lt. Gen. Ulysses
S. Grant met with several of his generals
in an upper room at the Thomas House
(known as “Araby”) to devise a plan to
drive Lt. Gen. Jubal Early’s army from
the Shenandoah Valley and then
Touring the Battlefield
systematically lay waste to this “breadbasket of the Confederacy,” therefore deny
ing Lee’s army a dependable source of
food and forage. The next day he placed
Gen. Philip Sheridan in command of the
Union army in the Valley. Sheridan’s
assignment: destroy Early’s forces and
render the Valley so desolate that “even
a crow flying over the place would have
to take his rations with him.”
NPS
McCLELLAN PAPERS, LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
took place on the Monocacy battlefield before and after the battle:
Soldier Encampments on the Battlefield
Both Union and
Confederate armies
camped in the area before and after the battle.
Archeologists have
found many artifacts,
including this inscribed
canteen spout.
Worthington House
Every man tried to do his best against great odds.
—Lt. M.J. Stearns, 106th New York Infantry
Built in 1851, this
house exemplifies the
Federal-style residence
found on many prosperous farms in the
area. The Worthington
family took shelter in
the cellar during the
fighting. Six-year-old
Glenn Worthington
Lt. Ambrose B. Hart
of the 128th New York
Infantry lost the spout
while encamped on the
Best Farm in 1864. See
more artifacts like this
at the visitor center.
witnessed the fighting
through a boarded-up
window and later wrote
a book called Fighting
for Time, encouraging
Congress to establish
a “National Military
Park at the Battlefield of
Monocacy, Maryland.”
NPS / JANICE WHEELER
Best Farm
Turn left on 355 and take the first right.
As Early’s troops advanced south toward
Washington on the morning of July 9, 1864,
along the Georgetown Pike (now MD 355),
they met stiff resistance from Union skirmishers waiting along the railroad at Monocacy
Junction a half mile away. The Confederates
set up artillery at the Best Farm and opened
fire on the junction. Union artillery across the
river responded, eventually igniting a fire in
the Best barn.
Monocacy Junction
Turn right on 355 and take the first right.
About 350 soldiers guarded Monocacy Junction,
where two B&O Railroad tracks converged and
an iron railroad bridge and wooden covered
bridge crossed the Monocacy River. As the battle unfolded, these skirmishers faced the main
Confederate line. The main Union line lay
across the river behind them.
the Worthington House, attacked and drove
the Federals from the field. Wallace’s force
fell back past Gambrill Mill and retreated
toward Baltimore. The Confederates had won
the battle, but they had lost a precious day in
their advance on Washington.
Gambrill Mill
Turn left on Baker Valley Rd, then left on
Araby Church Rd. At the stop sign proceed
straight across 355. Built in 1830, Gambrill
Mill was run by an interior undershot water
wheel. The mill could produce 60 barrels of
flour a day and kept two coopers busy producing barrels for its products. During the
battle Union troops used the mill as a field
hospital. Wallace later noted, “The place appeared well selected for the purpose, its one
inconvenience being that it was under fire.”
NPS / JANICE WHEELER
The self-guiding auto tour begins at the
visitor center and covers about six miles.
Here at the Worthington Ford, Confederate
cavalry crossed the
Monocacy to attack the
Union left flank on the
Thomas Farm. You can
see the ford from the
Ford Loop Trail.
✩GPO:20xx—xxx-xxx/xxxxx Reprint 20xx
Printed on recycled paper.
Early decided to redirect his attack downstream rather than risk a direct frontal assault
against the well-positioned Federals. Later in
the morning, Wallace shifted most of his force
to the left to counter that move and ordered
the wooden covered bridge burned in case the
Confederates broke through the skirmish line.
Although the burning bridge cut off their best
avenue of retreat, the Union skirmishers held
their ground throughout the day. They repulsed
a second attack before a third and final assault
forced them to flee across the open trestles of
the railroad bridge.
Worthington Farm
Turn right on 355 and take the first right on
Araby Church Rd. Turn right on Baker Valley
Rd. and proceed under the I-270 overpass and
make an immediate right on the Worthington
Farm lane. Confederate cavalry crossed the
Monocacy in mid-morning at the Worthington
Ford, then dismounted and formed for attack
on the fields behind the Worthington House.
As they marched toward the Thomas Farm,
they ran into a well-concealed Union line positioned behind a fence on the Thomas Farm.
The Federals opened fire, driving the Confeder
ates back. The Confederates launched a second
attack and took the Thomas House. The outflanked Federals fell back, attacked, and drove
the Confederates back to the Worthington
Farm. The Worthington House and yard were
used as a field hospital.
Thomas Farm
Turn left on Baker Valley Rd. and take the first
left. Caught between the two armies, the
Thomas House became the focal point of the
battle, as Confederates on the Worthington
Farm and Federals on the Thomas Farm faced
off in the most furious fighting of the day.
Confederate artillery pummeled the house
with shells to drive off the Union sharpshooters.
Throughout the afternoon, the house was captured and recaptured as the battle line moved
back and forth across the Thomas Farm.
Late in the day, a division of Confederate
infantry, supported by a battery of artillery at
Enjoy Monocacy Battlefield’s Trails and Auto Tour
Hours and Admission
The battlefield is open
from 7 am to 20 minutes after sunset. The
visitor center is open
8:30 am to 5 pm daily;
closed on Thanksgiving, December 25, and
January 1. Check website for other closures.
Admission is free.
self-guiding auto tour
here.
Visitor Center
The visitor center
provides information,
interpretive exhibits,
trail brochures, and a
museum store. Water
and restrooms are
available only at the
visitor center. Start the
Stay on marked trails.
Beware of wildlife and
poisonous plants.
Safety and Regulations
Railroad tracks, agricultural fields, private
property, and designated administrative
areas are not open to
the public. Please be
respectful.
The following are
prohibited in the
park: bicycles on trails;
relic hunting; pets off
leash; metal detectors;
littering; hunting or
harassing wildlife;
possession of cultural
(bottles, ceramics, etc.)
or natural resources
(flowers, rocks, etc.).
For firearms regulations
check the park website.
Emergencies call 911 or
NPS at 1-866-677-6677.
Accessibility
We strive to make our
facilities, services, and
programs accessible to
all. For information go
to the visitor center,
ask a ranger, call, or
check our website.
More Information
Monocacy
National Battlefield
4632 Araby Church Rd.
Frederick, MD 21704
301-662-3515
www.nps.gov/mono
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Monocacy National
Battlefield is one of
over 400 parks in the
National Park System.
Learn more about
national parks at
www.nps.gov.
THIS BROCHURE IS BASED ON ORIGINAL TEXT BY DAVID ROMANOWSKI.