Civil War Times

DEFENSES ON VIEW

n May 24, 1861, work began on building forts that would protect Washington, D.C., during the war. Meticulous renderings of forts, drawbridges, magazines, bombproofs,, “A glance at the map will show it to be almost a continuous forest. It is not deemed necessary to connect the works by a continuous line of parapet, but the intervening woods should be abatised and open ground traversed by a line of artificial abatis, and infantry parapets, half-sunk batteries, &c., placed so as to protect these obstructions and to see all the irregularities of the ground not now seen from the works.” A member of the 79th New York “Highlander” described the fortification work as “the hardest kind of manual labor; spades were trumps and every man held a full hand.”

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Civil War Times

Civil War Times5 min read
Core Study
THE EXPLORATION OF unusual subjects—anything from flora and fauna to the effect of weather on the fighting—has increased greatly for Civil War audiences in recent years. Scott Hippensteel, professor of earth sciences at the University of North Caroli
Civil War Times4 min read
Words And Meanings
ANYONE WHO EXPLORES Civil War–era history should pay close attention to how people at the time understood and used key words. “Freedom” ranks among the most important of such words. Americans of the 21st century almost always address questions relati
Civil War Times14 min read
Waiting Game
On May 1,1862, the Army of the Potomac’s quest to take Richmond by way of the Peninsula had been stalled for nearly a month, time in which Maj. Gen. George McClellan’s Federals had labored building siege trenches and other works in front of the Confe

Related