The Second Battle of Kernstown-Mulligan’s Final Stand - Winchester VA
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Don.Morfe
N 39° 08.586 W 078° 11.803
17S E 742271 N 4336399
Late in the afternoon on July 24, 1864, 1,800 Union soldiers led by Colonel James A. Mulligan fell back to this lane. Major General John B. Gordon’s Confederate force attacked from the ground beyond Opequon Church.
Waymark Code: WM13C29
Location: Virginia, United States
Date Posted: 11/04/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Turtle3863
Views: 0

The Second Battle of Kernstown-Mulligan’s Final Stand--Late in the afternoon on July 24, 1864, 1,800 Union soldiers led by Colonel James A. Mulligan fell back to this lane. Major General John B. Gordon’s Confederate force attacked from the ground beyond Opequon Church. Mulligan held off Gordon briefly, but Confederate Major General John C. Breckinridge’s devastating flank attack struck the Irishman from the east side of the Valley Pike. Breckinridge, a former U.S. Vice President, personally led his men forward. One soldier deemed him, “the bravest man I ever saw.” To the west, sharpshooters from Major General Stephen D. Ramseur’s Confederate command attacked Mulligan’s right flank, a short distance beyond the wheelwright shop.

As the Union battle line crumbled, Mulligan rode up behind his old Irish Brigade, the 23rd Illinois Infantry, “Never did he look better,” recalled one of the soldiers, “his penetrating eyes flashing as he beheld his brigade, the last in yielding to the pressure of the enemy.” With Confederates closing in from all sides, Mulligan ordered a fighting withdrawal. When he rose up in his saddle to cheer his men on, Confederate sharpshooters concealed in the streambed hit Mulligan. As his dedicated soldiers rushed to his side, two more bullets struck him in rapid succession. The sharpshooters also killed Lt. James Nugent, Mulligan’s 19-year-old brother-in-law, who had been holding the regimental colors.

Mulligan’s soldiers attempted to carry him from the field, but many fell under the blistering Confederate musketry. Mulligan saw the heavy losses his men were enduring and ordered “Lay me down and save the flag.” Mulligan’s men complied. Confederate soldiers later carried the mortally wounded Mulligan into the Pritchard House where he died two days later.

The victorious Confederates swept up Pritchard’s Hill and through Winchester, driving back the entire Union army in confusion to Bunker Hill, West Virginia. The Union army lost 1,200 men, while Early suffered only 200 casualties. A Virginia veteran summed up the Second Battle of Kernstown as “the most easily won battle of the war.”

(Left Sidebar, with portrait of Major General John C. Breckinridge): Considered a reluctant Confederate, Breckinridge served as the U.S. Vice President from 1857 to 1861 and was a presidential candidate in 1860. In the turbulent summer of 1861, he retained a seat in Congress as Senator from Kentucky, attempting to reconcile the fractured nation. Only when Kentucky Unionists plotted Breckinridge’s arrest in the fall of 1861, did he join the Confederate army.

(Right Sidebar, with portrait of Colonel James A. Mulligan): Mulligan was a charismatic Irish-American attorney from Chicago, Illinois, who raised “Mulligan’s Irish Brigade” for the Union cause in 1861. While he fought in the Valley in 1864, his pregnant wife and their two young daughters remained in Cumberland, Maryland, waiting for his return. Upon learning of Mulligan’s wounding at Kernstown, his wife hurried to Winchester to care for her husband, but he died before she arrived.

LOCATION: Marker is in Winchester, Virginia, in Frederick County. Marker can be reached from Battle Park Drive, on the right when traveling west. Located along the stone wall mentioned on the marker. Marker is at or near this postal address: 610 Battle Park Drive, Winchester VA 22601, United States of America.
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Don.Morfe visited The Second Battle of Kernstown-Mulligan’s Final Stand - Winchester VA 09/30/2021 Don.Morfe visited it