HEADQUARTERS SIXTH
CORPS,
March 10, 1864.
Brig. Gen. S. Williams,
Assistant Adjutant-General,
Army of the
Potomac.
GENERAL: My attention has been called to several articles
which have recently appeared in the papers, insinuating or charging the General
commanding the Army of the Potomac with ordering or favoring a retreat of the
army on the evening of July 2, at Gettysburg.
I took no minutes of the council of corps commanders held on
the evening of that day, but my present recollection is that three questions,
viz, of attacking the enemy, of sustaining an attack, or taking up a new
position, were submitted. The council was unanimous – with, I think, one
exception – to sustain the attack in our then present position.
At no time in my presence did the general commanding insist
or advise a withdrawal of the army, for such advice would have great weight
with me, and I know the matter did not engage my serious attention.
I am positive that the general commanding could not have
insisted, much less have given the order, to withdraw the army from its
position. In a council on the evening of the 3d, the two questions of following
the enemy or moving on parallel lines were submitted, and I think the council
were unanimous, and their decision adopted by the general, of moving parallel
to the enemy, and attacking him when possible.
I am, very respectfully,
Your obedient
servant,
JOHN SEDGWICK,
Major-General,
Commanding.
SOURCES: George William Curtis, Correspondence of
John Sedgwick, Major-General, Volume 2, p. 176-7; The War of the
Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate
Armies, Series I, Volume 27, Part 1 (Serial No. 43), p. 125
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