Battle of Chaffin's Farm

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Battle of Chaffin's Farm
Part of American Civil War

Map of Battle of Chaffin's Farm
Date September 29September 30, 1864
Location Chaffin's Farm, Henrico County
Result Union victory
Combatants
United States of America Confederate States of America
Commanders
Benjamin Butler Robert E. Lee
Richard S. Ewell
Strength
Army of the James II Corps
Casualties
Fort Harrison 3,300
New Market Heights 850
Fort Harrison 1,700
New Market Heights 50

The Battle of Chaffin's Farm, also known as New Market Heights and Fort Harrison, was fought September 29September 30, 1864, as part of the Siege of Petersburg in the American Civil War.

Contents

The nature of warfare evolved dramatically during the final ten months of the Civil War. Static warfare in the trenches replaced the freewheeling mass movements of earlier campaigns. This began at Cold Harbor in June 1864 and progressed southward to the series of battles around Petersburg. These affairs occasionally erupted into full-scale battles. The Battle of Chaffin's Farm is a particularly illustrative example of a late war engagement.

From the very beginning of the war, Confederate engineers worked feverishly to build permanent defenses around Richmond. By 1864, they had created a system anchored south of the capital on the James River at Chaffin's Farm, a large open bluff named for a local resident. This outer line was supported by an intermediate and inner system of fortifications much closer to the capital.

The strength of these lines remained untested until September 1864 when Union General Ulysses S. Grant tried to capture Richmond or Petersburg by attacking simultaneously north and south of the James.

The attack north of the river occurred on September 29. Troops under Federal general Benjamin Butler launched attacks on two fronts. The Union X Corps against New Market Heights north of Deep Bottom while the Union XVIII Corps attacked Fort Harrison.

Major General David B. Birney moved the X Corps north from the Deep Bottom bridgehead toward the Confederate works atop New Market Heights manned by Brigadier General John Gregg. A brigade of U.S. Colored Troops attacked the heights but were repulsed. In this attack Christian Fleetwood's actions would later earn him the Medal of Honor. Birney reinforced the assault force and stormed the heights again. Alfred H. Terry's division managed to turn the Confederate left flank thus turning the tide of the battle. At this time word of Union success against Fort Harrison reached Gregg, compelling him to pull Confederate troops back to Forts Gregg, Gilmer and Johnson.

Once Birney's troops had taken New Market Heights, the X Corps turned to the northwest along the New Market Road and moved against a secondary line of works guarding Richmond north of Fort Harrison. Brigadier General Robert S. Foster's X Corps division assaulted a small salient known as Fort Gilmer. David Birney's brother, Brigadier General William Birney, led a brigade of U.S. Colored Troops against Fort Gregg south of Fort Gilmer. These attacks were marked by heroism among the Colored Troops but were ultimately repulsed.

At roughly the same time Birney's first attack moved forward, the Union XVIII Corps under Major General Edward Ord, assaulted Fort Harrison to the west of New Market Heights. Ord's assault was led by Brigadier General George Stannard, a veteran of Gettysburg. Stannard's men rushed across an open field and took cover in a slight depression just in front of the fort and, after a moment's rest, overtook the fort. The Confederate defenders broke to the rear, seeking refuge behind a secondary line. During this attack, Brigadier General Hiram Burnham was killed and the Union troops would rename the captured fort in his honor.

Once inside the fort the Union attackers became disorganized. Stannard was wounded and all three of his brigade commanders were also wounded or killed. A supporting column under Brigadier General Charles Heckman veered far off to the north and was repulsed. Ord personally attempted to rally troops to exploit their success but he too fell with a critical wound. The loss of commanders and Confederate ironclads on the James put an end to the XVIII Corps' drive on Chaffin's Bluff along the James River.

Robert E. Lee realized the severity the loss of Fort Harrison had and personally brought 10,000 reinforcements under Brigadier General Charles Fields north from Petersburg. On September 30, Lee ordered a counter attack aimed at retaking Fort Harrison, now commanded by Major General Godfrey Weitzel, replacing the wounded Ord. The Confederate attacks were uncoordinated and were easily repulsed them.

Just as Grant anticipated the fighting around Chaffin's Farm forced Lee to shift his resources and allowed the Union army south of Petersburg to gain success at the battle of Peebles' Farm. After October, the two armies settled into trench warfare that continued until the end of the war. This fighting around Chaffin's Farm cost the nation nearly 5,000 casualties.

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