5 February 1865 A.D. PETERSBURG, VA—USA v. CSA in Pitched 3-Day Battle; 3000 Casualties
Editors. “1865 – Union and Confederate forces around Petersburg, Virginia, begin a
three-day battle that produces 3,000 casualties but ends with no significant
advantage for either side.” This Day in U.S. History. N.d.
https://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/02/05/february-5/. Accessed 5 Feb 2015.
1865 – Union and
Confederate forces around Petersburg, Virginia, begin a three-day battle that
produces 3,000 casualties but ends with no significant advantage for either
side. Dabney’s Mill was another attempt by Union General Ulysses S. Grant
to break the siege of Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia. In 1864, Grant and
Confederate General Robert E. Lee pounded each other as they wheeled south
around the cities. After a month of heavy battling that produced the highest
casualty rates of the war, Grant and Lee settled into trenches around
Petersburg. These lines eventually stretched 25 miles to Richmond, and the
stalemate continued for 10 months. Periodically, Grant mounted offensives
either to break through Lee’s lines or envelope the ends. In June, August, and
October, these moves failed to extricate the Confederates from their trenches.
Now, Grant sent cavalry under General David Gregg to capture a road that
carried supplies from Hicksford, Virginia, into Petersburg. On February 5,
Gregg moved and captured a few wagons along his objective, the Boydton Plank
Road. He found little else, so he pulled back toward the rest of the Union army.
Yankee infantry under General Gouverneur K. Warren also moved forward and
probed the area at the end of the Confederate’s Petersburg line. The Rebels
responded by moving troops into the area. Skirmishes erupted that evening and
the fighting continued for two more days as each side maneuvered for an
advantage. The fighting surged back and forth around Dabney’s Mill, but the
Yankees were never able to penetrate the Confederate lines. The Union suffered
2,000 men killed, wounded, or captured, while the Confederates lost about
1,000. The battle did extend the Petersburg line a few miles to further stretch
Lee’s thin lines, but the stalemate continued for six more weeks before Grant’s
forces finally sent Lee racing west with the remnants of his army. The chase
ended in April when Lee surrendered at Appomattox Court House.
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