Details
THE GRIM HARVEST OF WAR - THE VALLEY CAMPAIGN
by Bradley Schmehl
Overall Print Size: 20" x 30"
Edition Size: 950
Blazing with the fire of combat, Jackson rode onto the coaling. He congratulated Taylor and promised him the captured guns. The enemy staggered, but did not break. They preserved formation even as they left the field along the road to Conrad's store - pressured all the while by Taliaferro and Winder. Tired after the last few days, the Southerners were not able to pursue rapidly - the infantry pounded out four or five miles and the artillery pushed a few miles farther. The spoils included about 450 prisoners, 800 muskets, one more cannon and some wagons. Ever laconic, Jackson dispatched a one-sentence telegram to Richmond advising, "Through God's blessing the enemy near Port Republic was this day routed with the loss of six (6) pieces of his artillery." Long after the war Richard Taylor recalled, "I have never seen so many dead and wounded in the same limited space." (Southern casualties: 816 killed and wounded; Union losses including prisoners: 800-1000; area of the coaling: less than 1 square mile).
"THE GRIM HARVEST OF WAR" shows Major Wheat in uniform, but not "bloody as a butcher."
Comes with a Certificate of Authenticity.