U.S. Army Military History Institute Civil War-Battles-1863-Gettysburg 950 Soldiers Drive Carlisle Barracks, PA 17013-5021 31 Oct 2012

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U.S. Army Military History Institute Civil War-Battles-1863-Gettysburg 950 Soldiers Drive Carlisle Barracks, PA 17013-5021 31 Oct 2012 U.S. Army Military History Institute Civil War-Battles-1863-Gettysburg 950 Soldiers Drive Carlisle Barracks, PA 17013-5021 31 Oct 2012 GETTYSBURG CAMPAIGN & BATTLE, JUN-JUL, 1863 A Working Bibliography of MHI Sources JULY 2ND CONTENTS General Sources.....p.1 Union Left Flank…..p.2 -Morning Reconnaissance(s)…..p.3 -Peach Orchard…..p.3 -Wheatfield…..p.4 -Devil’s Den…..p.5 -Little Round Top…..p.5 -Cemetery Ridge/Emmitsburg Road…..p.7 Union Right Flank…..p.7 GENERAL Bingham, Henry H. The Second and Third Days of the Battle of Gettysburg, July 2d, 3d, 1863. Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilms, 1971 reprint of 1894 edition. 18 p. E475.53.B64. Gallagher, Gary W. “'If the Enemy is There, We Must Attack Him': R.E. Lee and the Second Day at Gettysburg" In The Second Day at Gettysburg: Essays on Confederate and Union Leadership. Kent, OH: Kent State, 1992. pp. 1-32. E475.53.S46; see also his article with a similar title in Lee and his Generals in War and Memory. Baton Rouge: LSU, 1998. pp. 47-76. E467.1.L4.G35; and Three Days at Gettysburg: Essays on Confederate and Union Leadership Kent, OH: Kent State, 1999. pp. 109-29. E475.53.T57. Harts, W.W. "Second Day of the Battle of Gettysburg: Historical Study; Notes for a Discussion of the Movement on the Ground." AWC student paper, 1911. 42 p. Arch. Krick, Robert K. “‘If Longstreet...Says So, It is Most Likely Not True’: James Longstreet and the Second Day at Gettysburg.” In The Second Day at Gettysburg..., cited above, pp. 57-86. E475.53.S46; and in Three Days at Gettysburg: Essays on Confederate and Union Leadership Kent, OH: Kent State, 1999. pp. 147-68. E475.53.T57. Gettysburg-July 2nd p.2 Kross, Gary. "'Rebel Yells' on Both Flanks." Blue & Gray (Mar 1988): pp. 10-12, 14-16, 20-28, 34, 38-40, 42-47, 50 & 53-55. Per. Martin, Samuel J. “Did ‘Baldy’ Ewell Lose Gettysburg?” America’s Civil War (Jul 1997): pp. 34-40. Per. Pindell, Richard. "The True High-Water Mark of the Confederacy." Blue & Gray (Dec/Jan 1983/84): pp. 6-15. Per. (Little Round Top vs. Pickett's Charge as High Water Mark of battle). Ward, David A. “’Sedgwick’s Foot Cavalry’: The March of the Sixth Corps to Gettysburg.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 22: pp. 42-65. E475.53.G482no22. UNION LEFT FLANK Campbell, Eric A. “Death of the III Corps.” Civil War Times (Aug 2009): pp. 34-37. Per. And Campbell’s subsequent article on pp. 38-43, his editing of a personal memoir by Augustus Hesse of the 9th Massachusetts Battery “’We Have Here a Great Fight’” Cooksey, Paul C. “Around the Flank: Longstreet’s July 2 Attack at Gettysburg.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 29: pp. 94-105. E475.53.G482no29. _____. “Up the Emmitsburg Road: Gen. Robert E. Lee’s Plan for the Attack on July 2 on the Union Left Flank.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 26: pp. 45-52. E475.53.G482no26. DeCola, Alphonse. “The Line that Sickles Should Have Built.” Columbiad (Summer 1997): pp. 93-106. Per. Downs, David B. "'His left was worth a glance': Meade and the Union Left on July 2, 1863." Gettysburg Magazine No 7: pp. 29-40. E475.53.G482no7. McDonald, JoAnna M. We’re Going in There: A Guide for the Battles for Little Round Top-Valley of Death-Devil’s Den. Shippensburg, PA: Burd Street, 1999. 75 p. E475.53.M333. Kross, Gary. “To Die Like Soldiers: The Retreat from Sickles’ Front, July 2, 1863.” Blue & Gray 15 (Special Issue): pp. 6-16, 18-26 & 50-65. Per. Long, Roger. “Over the Wall.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 13: pp. 64-74. E475.53.G482no13. Pfanz, Harry W. Gettysburg: The Second Day. Chapel Hill, NC: U NC, 1987. 601 p. E475.53.P48. “Pickett’s and Hood’s Charges at Gettysburg.” Southern Bivouac III (1884/85): pp. 75-78. Per. Rice, Gary R. “Devil Dan Sickles’ Deadly Salients.” America’s Civil War (Nov 1998): pp. 38-45. Per. Gettysburg-July 2nd p.3 Sherry, Jeffrey F. “’The Terrible Impetuosity’: The Pennsylvania Reserves at Gettysburg.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 16: pp. 68-80. E475.53.G482no16. -Morning Reconnaissance(s) Powell, David A. “A Reconnaissance Gone Awry: Capt. Samuel R. Johnston’s Fateful Trip to Little Round Top.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 23: pp. 88-99. E475.53.G482no23. Early morning Confederate reconnaissance to the Union left flank. Sword, Wiley. “Lt. Col. Caspar Trepp’s Colt’s Revolver and the Reconnaissance to Pitzer’s Woods.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 14: pp. 46-51. E475.53.G482no14. -Peach Orchard Barratt, John. “’We fought like hell.” Military Illustrated No. 167: pp. 16-23. Per. Barksdale’s charge. Bigelow, John. The Peach Orchard, Gettysburg, July 2, 1863, Explained by Official Reports and Maps. Minneapolis, MN: Kimball-Storer, 1910. 62 p. E475.53.B59. (Appeal to change the name of a battlefield avenue). Campbell, Eric. "Baptism of Fire: The Ninth Massachusetts Battery at Gettysburg, July 2, 1863." Gettysburg Magazine No. 5: pp. 47-78. E475.53.G482no5. _____. “Hell in a Peach Orchard.” America’s Civil War (Jul 2003): pp. 38-44. Per. Lash, Gary. “‘A Pathetic Story’: The 141st Pennsylvania (Graham’s Brigade) at Gettysburg.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 14: pp. 77-101. E475.53.G482no14. Murray, R.L. “The Artillery Duel in the Peach Orchard, July 2, 1863.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 36: pp. 69-85. E475.53.G482no36. _____. E.P. Alexander and the Artillery Action in the Peach Orchard: A Tactical Overview…. Wolcott, NY: Benedum, 2000. 116 p. E475.53.M873. Richards, David L. “Kershaw and Semmes: Attack at the Rose Farm.” Blue & Gray Magazine (Holiday 2002): pp. 14-17, 18-21 & 24. Per. Robertson, William G. "The Peach Orchard Revisited: Daniel E. Sickles and the Third Corps on July 2, 1863." In The Second Day at Gettysburg..., cited above, pp. 33-56. E475.53.S46; see also same article in Three Days at Gettysburg: Essays on Confederate and Union Leadership Kent, OH: Kent State, 1999. pp. 130-46. E475.53.T57. Winschel, Terrence J. "Their Supreme Moment: Barksdale's Brigade at Gettysburg." Gettysburg: Historical Articles of Lasting Interest No. 1: pp. 70-77. E475.53.G48no1. Gettysburg-July 2nd p.4 Wycoff, Mac. "Kershaw's Brigade at Gettysburg." Gettysburg Magazine No. 5: pp. 35-46. E475.53.G482no5. -Wheatfield Campbell, Eric. "Caldwell Clears the Wheatfield." Gettysburg Magazine No. 3: pp. 27-50. E475.53.G482no3. Dempsey, Stuart R. “A Dreadful Buzzing of Bullets: De Trobriand’s Brigade Defends the Union Left.” Blue & Gray Magazine (Summer 2007): pp. 6-17 & 19-24. Per. Hale, Charles A. "With Colonel Cross at the Wheatfield." Civil War Times Illustrated (Aug 1974): pp. 30-38. Per. Hartwig, D. Scott. "'No troops on the field had done better': John C. Caldwell's Division in the Wheatfield, July 2, 1863." In The Second Day at Gettysburg..., cited above, pp. 136-72. E475.53.S46; see also same article in Three Days at Gettysburg: Essays on Confederate and Union Leadership Kent, OH: Kent State, 1999. pp. 204-32. E475.53.T57. Jordan, William B. Jr. "Gettysburg and the 17th Maine." Gettysburg Magazine No. 8: pp. 43-52. E475.53.G482no8. Jorgensen, Jay. “Anderson Attacks the Wheatfield.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 14: pp. 64-76. E475.53.G482no14. _____. Gettysburg’s Bloody Wheatfield. Shippensburg, PA: White Mane, 2002. 178 p. E475.53.J67. _____. The Wheatfield at Gettysburg: A Walking Tour. Gettysburg, PA: Thomas, 2002. 80 p. E475.56.J67. _____. “Wofford Sweeps the Wheatfield.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 22: pp. 28-41. E475.53.G482no22. O’Brien, Kevin E. “’Hold rhem with the bayonet’: DeTrobriand’s Brigade Defends the Wheatfield.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 21: pp. 74-87. E475.53.G482no21. Sword, Wiley. “Capt. Cyrus Tay’s Battered Sword and the “Lucky’ 32nd Massachusetts’ Fight in the Wheatfield.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 17: pp. 54-61. E475.53.G482no17. _____. “The 10th Georgia and 27th Connecticut in the Wheatfield; Two Captured Swords against their Former Owners.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 12: pp. 24-29. E475.53.G482no12. Whiteford, John B. “’By What Orders I could Never Ascertain’: (Quote from the official report of Col. Regis DeTrobriand, relating to the withdrawal of Brig. Gen. James Barnes’ troops from the Union defensive line in the woods next to the Wheatfield on July 2, 1863).” Gettysburg Magazine No. 47: pp. 38-51. E475.53.G482no47. Gettysburg-July 2nd p.5 -Devil’s Den Adelman, Garry E. “The Fight for and Location of the 4th New York Independent Battery at Gettysburg.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 26: pp. 53-68. E475.53.G482no26. _____, & Smith, Timothy H. Devil’s Den: A History and Guide. Gettysburg, PA: Thomas, 1997. 159 p. E475.53.A33. Georg, Kathleen R. "Our principal loss was in this place": Action at the Slaughter Pen and the South End of Houck's Ridge, 2 July 1863. Gettysburg, PA: NPS, 1984. 33 p. E475.53.G45. Also her article of the same name in Gettysburg: Historical Articles of Lasting Interest No. 1: pp. 45-69. E475.53.G48no1. Joslyn, Mauriel P. “‘For ninety nine years or the war’: The Story of the 3rd Arkansas at Gettysburg.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 14: pp. 52-63. E475.53.G482no14. Lash, Gary. "The March of the 124th New York to Gettysburg." Gettysburg Magazine No. 9: pp. 5-16. E475.53.G482no9. Williams, Don. “Devil’s Den.” Military Heritage (Apr 2002): pp. 68-75. Per. -Little Round Top Adelman, Garry E. “Hazlett’s Battery at Gettysburg.” Gettysburg Magazine No. 21: pp. 64-73. E475.53.G482no21. _____. Little Round Top: A Detailed Tour Guide.
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