SOUTHERN STATES | HISTORICAL VISITS
Peninsula is replete with relics of Civil And Revolutionary wars
From the heavy guns of a seacoast fort through battle-scarred Yorktown and the swampy outskirts of
Along this finger of land cut by the York and James rivers and
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The Yankees' defeat at the Battle of Bull Run in 1861 had doused hopes for a quick end to the rebellion, but Union leaders still sought a smashing blow a year later. Gen. George B. McClellan planned to take Richmond with an amphibious assault northward from the tip of the Virginia Peninsula.
So we begin the journey where McClellan and his troops started -- at
Fort Monroe was one of the few federal installations in the South still in Union hands after 1861. Today, the moated fort houses the Casemate Museum, which includes displays on artillery, historic artifacts and a jail cell that held a famous inmate at war's end. Admission and parking are free, but this is still an active U.S. Army base, so be prepared to show a driver's license and registration at the security gate.
The defensive importance of the site had been clear since
Fort Monroe also is important as the place where Union Gen. Benjamin Butler refused to return runaway slaves to their Virginia master. Finding that the slaves were to be used to build Confederate fortifications in the area, Butler told the Southerners that since Virginia had declared itself a foreign country, U.S. law on the return of fugitive slaves did not apply. The Yankee general labeled the runaways "contraband of war" and put them to work for the Union. Word spread among slaves in the area and they soon flocked to the place they called the Freedom Fort.
The man who sought to retain human bondage in a break-away nation -- Confederate
From Fort Monroe, travel a few miles west to
Rebel shipwrights had converted a partially burned frigate by installing iron plating and heavy wooden sheathing atop the hull. The floating rampart was designed to deflect shots, an innovation still seen today in the slanting forms of tanks. Six 9-inch smoothbore cannon protruded from the Virginia's sides, while 6.4-inch rifled cannon protected the bow and stern. In March 1862, the Virginia sank two Union ships off Newport News.
For a few weeks, the rebel ship was the terror of the Union command. The Yankees rushed to answer with the Monitor. Called a "cheese box on a raft," the hastily built ship held a 21-foot-diameter turret protected with eight layers of inch-thick iron plate. The rotating turret held two 11-inch diameter cannon.
Although the Virginia and Monitor pounded each other to a draw in March 1862, the arrival of the ironclads changed nautical warfare forever. Wooden ships with broadside cannon were obsolete.
Mariners' Museum displays include a full-size replica of the Virginia's bow and a complete replica of the Monitor. The original Monitor sank in a storm off Cape
North of Newport News is Yorktown, where the British surrendered to end the Revolutionary War in 1781. Yorktown also figured in the Civil War's Peninsula Campaign. Rebel forces retreating before the Union advance halted here and parts of their defensive works overlap the Revolutionary site. The notoriously cautious McClellan determined to besiege the town, but just as he readied his heavy guns, the Confederates withdrew farther north toward Richmond. Sites to see here include Colonial National Historical Park (nps.gov/york) and the
Also doing Civil/Revolutionary war double duty on the tour is
McClellan's grand plan fell apart in late June only several miles outside Richmond when Gen. Robert E. Lee, the newly named Confederate commander, launched a series of attacks called the Seven Days Campaign. Richmond National Battlefield Park (nps.gov/rich) tells the stories of those battles, which ended on July 1 at Malvern Hill. Both sides had been heavily bloodied, but McClellan was forced to abandon his attack on Richmond, so the victory went to Lee.
The battlefield park's visitor center, housed in the historic
For an overview of the Civil War, visit the
To get to all the Civil War-related sites on the Virginia Peninsula, allow at least two days.
For more information on the Peninsula Campaign, visit peninsulacampaign.org.
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