In the Mumma Barn on a windy Saturday morning, just nine
days before the commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the Battle,
of Antietam 30-40 fortunate people witnessed what I hope is a turn of the page
in the scholarship, and treatment of the Army of the Potomac and its commander
George B. McClellan. Those of us
who attended the Save Historic Antietam Foundation Seminar today witnessed
Antietam Ranger Daniel Vermilya for the first time deliver his findings on the
condition of George McClellan’s Army of the Potomac at the Battle of Antietam. Titled “Perceptions, Not Realities: The Strength, Experience, and Condition of the Army of the Potomac at Antietam," his conclusions which cant be ignored demand
the attention of all serious Maryland Campaign scholars. Once and for all they refute
the typical assumptions made on the condition of the Federal Army and what
exactly McClellan understood the status of that command to be on the eve of
battle.
Antietam Battlefield Ranger Dan Vermilya |
Dan began with some of the usual assertions made about
McClellan and the Union Army at Antietam from such sources as Ken Burn’s Civil War and Stephen W. Sears Landscape Turned Red. As a volunteer and
guide here at the park, I hear variations on this theme all the time. The Army of the Potomac outnumbered the
Army of Virginia 2-1 at the Battle of Antietam. McClellan had 30,000 fresh troops on September 18 and could
have administered the final deathblow to Lee’s Army if only he had attacked on
that day.
Dan’s serious research uncovers a much different story. He looks at the condition of each
corps. He reveals correspondence
from Hooker, Porter and others who describe the serious degradation of readiness
in their commands. We see a total
lack of confidence by Hooker in Abram Duryee, something never known before
today. We see present for duty numbers
from different sources and different dates that are conflicting and
contradictory. We discover that
straggling was just as serious a problem for George McClellan as it is for
Robert E. Lee, and we see what measures he and his generals take to fix the
problem. We see a marked decline
in strength of the Federal Army as the days of September go by.
Dan supported his conclusions with slide after slide of
detailed documented original source material.
What Joseph Harsh does in precisely documenting the
condition of the Confederate Army in his landmark book Sounding the Shallows, Dan does in part for the Union Army in his
research. Like Harsh, he looks at
combat experience, this time for each Federal brigade. He finds that unlike the
Confederate Army where all of the combat brigades have seen action in at least
one but often two or even three campaigns, many Union brigades have never seen
action at all.
Dr. Tom Clemens recognizes Ranger Vermilya |
Dan synthesizes all this information into a portrayal of a
different Army of the Potomac than the stereotype we normally envision. We see a commander with a much more
complex set of circumstances to face as he advances out of Washington toward
Western Maryland than the commander that history has previously portrayed to us.
McClellan faces conflicting orders and direction from Washington, confusing and
contradictory unit strength reports. There is massive straggling, green troops,
dozens of new brigade, division and even corps commanders, heavy combat losses
in men and leaders from the months of heavy fighting on the Peninsula, at Cedar
Mountain and during the Second Manassas campaign. Trusted senior officers face
imminent court martial charges.
It is not so simple or cut and dried now, is it? We must relook at all the unsustainable
and sweeping generalities that were the foundation of the interpretation for a
hundred years.
What about McClellan’s decision not to attack on the 18th? In correspondence not seen in the OR,
we hear the condition of Andrew Humphrey’s division. Virtually all green troops, they made a 26-mile overnight
forced march from Frederick to Sharpsburg and arrive on the morning of the 18th. Are they ready for battle? Dan also revealed
a never before seen handwritten scrap of paper purportedly jotted by McClellan
or one of his staff which listed the strengths of the three divisions of the
Fifth Corps and Couch’s division, and a list of senior officers killed or
wounded in the fighting.
Mistakenly referring to George Hartsuff as mortally wounded, the
document must have been written just after the battle. McClellan appears to be weighing some
of the factors (available units and combat losses among leadership) he is
considering for deciding whether to attack on the 18th.
Antietam Battlefield Superintendent Susan Trail, and Rangers Dan Vermilya, Keith Snyder, Brian Baracz, and John Hoptak |
Why didn’t anyone else see this before? What has Dan done differently? To begin with when not working at the
battlefield, he spent much of he summer in the Library of Congress and National
Archives. He pursued an exhaustive,
comprehensive, methodical review of original records including strength
reports, correspondence, and military orders. He has NOT rehashed the ocean of secondary sources and their
usual tired themes.
The scope of Dan’s study was limited. However, we glimpse
tantalizing details of what else might be learned if this line of investigation
is pursued. We were treated to just a part of Dan’s research in his
presentation today. I know that
much more will be revealed when he distills this fine research effort either
into an article or even better as a chapter in a more comprehensive work that
would be for the Union Army, what Taken
at the Flood was for the Confederates.
Yours Truly and Dan Vermilya |
So in the Mumma Barn on a windy Saturday morning, 30-40
fortunate people witnessed what I hope is a turn of the page in the
scholarship, and treatment of the Army of the Potomac and its commander George
B. McClellan. At the end of Dan’s
talk, Dr. Mark Snell, both a presenter and attendee said as much. I agree with
Dr. Snell. Keep it coming Dan!
Dan’s work marks him as an objective, thorough, and
passionate scholar of the Maryland Campaign. SHAF chose wisely in selecting him as its first Harsh Scholar.
No doubt his great-great-great grandfather, Private Ellwood Rodebaugh, of
Company D, 106th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry who made the ultimate
sacrifice at Antietam would be proud of Dan. His family and we who are his Antietam colleagues and
friends sure are!
Thanks for the kind words, Jim. You are a good friend and a great historian of the campaign. See you at the park tomorrow! The 150th is almost here!
ReplyDeleteIs the keynote slide presentation available?
ReplyDeleteI dont know. Dan is preparing a paper on his research and he may be offering the powerpoint. I will ask him and let you know.
DeleteJim and Dan, thanks to you both for an excellent Saturday.
ReplyDeleteDan, really an outstanding bit of research. I'm looking forward to your turning the talk/slides into an article... and as Jim hinted, later, into a chapter in a full study... maybe "Damming the Flood" to take off on Dr. Harsh's theme.
Jim, and for your support to Dan and the SHAF organization that made it possible for the enjoyable Saturday with friends and first class speakers.
Ron Dickey
Ron,
ReplyDeleteIt is always great to see you. I agree that hopefully this is just the start of a more detailed wider ranging study. I like your suggestion for a title. Maybe we will see you during the 150th commemoration.
Warm Regards
Jim