Edwin Bearss - The Petersburg Campaign: The Eastern Front Battles, June - August 1864, Volume 1
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Vol I: The Eastern Front Battles,
June - August 1864
Edwin C. Bearss
with Bryce Suderow
2012 by Edwin C. Bearss and Bryce Suderow
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Bearss, Edwin C.
The Petersburg Campaign / Edwin C. Bearss, with Bryce Suderow.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
The Attack on Petersburg, June 9, 1864 The Second Assault on Petersburg, June 15-18, 1864 The Battle of the Jerusalem Plank Road, June 21-24, 1864 The Crater, July 30, 1864 The Battle of the Weldon Railroad, August 18-21, 1864 The Second Battle of Reams Station, August 25, 1864Vol. 1, table of contents.
ISBN 9781611210910 (epub)
1. VirginiaHistoryCivil War, 1861-1865Campaigns. 2. Petersburg (Va.) HistorySiege, 1864-1865. I. Suderow, Bryce A. II. Title.
E476.59.B43 2012
975.503dc23
2012028512
Published by
Savas Beatie LLC
989 Governor Drive, Suite 102
El Dorado Hills, CA 95762
Phone: 916-941-6896
(E-mail)
5 04 03 02 01 5 4 3 2 1
First edition, first printing
Unless otherwise indicated, all photographs are from the Library of Congress.
Savas Beatie titles are available at special discounts for bulk purchases in the United States by corporations, institutions, and other organizations. For more details, please contact Special Sales, P.O. Box 4527, El Dorado Hills, CA 95762, or you may e-mail us at for additional information.
Proudly published, printed, and warehoused in the United States of America.
To Sara Beth Bearss
February 21, 1960 February 13, 2012
Inside Elliotts Salient, east of Petersburg, Virginia
Library of Congress
Photos and illustrations have been placed throughout the book for the convenience of the reader.
Good fortune smiled on my future when I entered on duty with the National Park Service (NPS) on September 28, 1955. It was then I began my forty-year career in the NPS as an historian at Vicksburg National Military Park. It was one of the then 179 significant natural, historical, and recreational areas administered by the NPS, a bureau created by Congress on August 25, 1916.
A short four years before, in December 1951, Conrad L. Wirth had become the services fifth director. On doing so he found the NPS units and their facilities overwhelmed by its admiring public. Rising personal incomes, the 40-hour week, and the family car had fueled a postwar travel boom for families young and old, and the national parks, it seemed, bore the brunt of the surge. Visits to the parks soared from six million in 1942 to thirty-three million in 1950, and to seventy-two million in 1960. Park facilities and roads were overwhelmed.
Wirths response was the MISSION-66 initiative, a 10-year program to upgrade facilities, staffing, and resource management throughout the system by the 50th anniversary of the NPS. President Dwight D. Eisenhower endorsed the program while Congress was likewise enthused, appropriating more than a billion dollars over the next ten years for MISSION-66 improvements.
Coincident with MISSION-66 planning, the NPS was confronted by the approach of the Centennial of the Civil War. Since President Franklin D. Roosevelts Executive Orders of 1933, the NPS had become responsible for the parks and monuments administered by the War Department. These included thirteen Civil War battlefields, forts, and sites.
Encouraged by the burgeoning visitation during the mid-1950s to its flagship Civil War parks, Director Wirth worked with citizen-action groups that successfully lobbied for passage of a federally funded Civil War Centennial Commission (CWCC). This paid off on September 7, 1957, when President Eisenhower signed such a bill into law. In both the legislation and discussions between the CWCC staff headed by Maj. Gen. U. S. Grant III, President Grants grandson, and Director Wirth, the NPS was authorized to undertake as part ofits MISSION-66 program the further preservation and development of such battlefields and sites, at such times and in such manners as will insure that a fitting observation may be held at such battlefields or sites on the centennial of the event commemorated. A linkage between the MISSION-66 planning, implementation, and projects was thus established.
At this time, all the services for Civil War battlefield parks, except Antietam and Gettysburg, were located in the Southeast Region headquartered in Richmond, Virginia. To schedule and implement planning to insure that the SE Region could meet Director Wirths commitment, a meeting of the Washington and Regional managers, planners, and affected park superintendents and historians was held in Rossville, Georgia, at the headquarters of Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park. The meeting took place in the first week of September 1958. These superintendents brought with them the approved MISSION-66 documents to support approved construction, staffing, goals, etc., at their respective parks and to have them in place by the respective centennial dates. Among the key documents needed to guide planners were missing items in the parks Master Plans, i.e., Historical Base Maps, Troop Movement Maps, etc. and supporting documented narratives.
It was agreed that I would prepare drafts of Historical Base Maps and Troop Movement Maps in those SE Region parks that did not have them and forward drafts to the Eastern Office of Design and Construction (EODC), then located in Philadelphia, to finalize and include in the subject parks Master Plans. To accomplish this assignment, my supervisors transferred me to the SE Regional Office, but I continued working out of the Vicksburg park.
The reason I was promoted and given this plum assignment was an earlier detail I accomplished for the Washington Office. In early December 1956, I had joined a high-profile park service planning team representing the Washington and SE Regional Offices and EODC in determining the boundaries of Pea Ridge National Military Park. This Arkansas park had been authorized by Congress on July 20, 1956. The act, signed by President Eisenhower, provided that the NPS would study the area and designate the boundaries, and the state would acquire the land. My work on this study team was commended by my associates, most of whom had joined the NPS in the mid-1930s.
As Regional Research Historian (RRH), in 1959, I completed drafts for Fort Donelson, Stones River, Vicksburg, and the units of Richmond National Battlefield Park associated with the Seven Days Battles. The surveyed TMM and Historical Base Maps, drawn by EODCs cartographers, were approved and incorporated in the subject parks Master Plans. Documented materials in support of the Master Plan drawings were also prepared. Some of these have been published (Fort Donelson, Vicksburg, and Richmond).
In late June of 1960, my horizons expanded. On April 22 of that year, President Eisenhower signed a bill authorizing the establishment of Wilsons Creek National Battlefield Park. Like the earlier Pea Ridge legislation, it mandated that Missouri must first acquire the necessary lands that would be defined by a boundary set by an NPS study team. The Washington Office assigned me to the team study group, which would be carried out by the NPSs Midwest Region headquartered in Omaha.
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