Boys you must get out of here! You are surrounded!
– James Negley, Brigadier General, commanding 2nd Division Center Wing
The jumbled rocks you see here sheltered the four Union regiments of Miller’s brigade during a hard two-hour-long fight. Rebel bullets whined and ricocheted, wounding many. Men in blue from Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania grimly held on tight inside this limestone labyrinth.
Then General Sheri-dan’s troops, who had been fighting on our right ran out of bullets, broke ranks, and ran. General Negley called for a retreat as waves of gray-clad soldiers threatened to overwhelm his men on three sides. This stone stronghold turned into an ankle-twisting death trap.
Many of the men who fought here had seen the huge slaughter pens of Chicago’s meatpackers. When they saw so many dead and wounded men stacked here the soldiers called this place “the Slaughter pen.”
SOURCE: Interpretive Marker, Stones River National Battlefield, pictured at right.
1 comment:
Great post and pictures.
Stones River was the scene of some of the worst fighting of the war, yet gets little attention.
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