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Morning of the Third Day
Gettysburg, July 3, 1863 It was a morning of high hopes. Confident and capable, General
Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia had come North. Fresh from another
dramatic victory, this one at Chancellorsville. Lee had led his hard-fighting
Confederates to Pennsylvania. His strike into enemy country shifted the war from
Virginia to the North, supplied his army with abundant provisions from the rich
Pennsylvania countryside, and raised the likelihood of official recognition from
the British government. More importantly, Lee hoped to win a mighty victory on
Northern soil that would end the bloody war and secure nationhood for the
Confederacy. Two days earlier his army had collided with Northern forces from
the Army of the Potomac outside the crossroads community of Gettysburg. After
bitter, touch-and-go fighting, his troops had swept the field sending their
blue-uniformed opponents reeling in retreat to a strong defensive line along
Cemetery Ridge. On the battle's second day, Lee's legions had tried to break
both Federal flanks and had failed. Now, on this third day, Lee would attempt to
crack the center of the enemy line. In one grand and glorious assault, he would
hopefully shatter General George Meade's Federal army and end the war in a
Southern victory. Lee arose early this morning. Accompanied by General James
Longstreet, his "Old War Horse", he rode the entire length of the Confederate
line, adjusting his artillery and preparing his infantry. After a brief daybreak
drizzle, the morning sun cast gentle shadows through a thin strand of timber on
the lower end of Seminary Ridge. In the early light of this summer day, the
dream of Southern Independence still seemed bright and hopeful. It was morning
of the third day at Gettysburg. 950 Limited Edition Numbered and Signed
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E-mail: perfectframes@earthlink.net Phone: 800-959-1865 This site consists mostly of military art. Limited edition prints, statues and collectibles related to the French and Indian War, Revolutionary War, Civil War, World War I, World War II, Korea, Vietnam though the War in Iraq. Visit our other web site at www.perfectframesgallery.com for more G. Harvey, Tom DuBois, Larry Dyke, Nancy Glazier and many more. Subjects include wildlife, golf, inspirational, western, children, landscapes and others in both limited editions and open editions. |