. Vermont in the Civil War (Volume 1): a history of the part taken by the Vermont soldiers and sailors in the war for the Union, 1861-5 . le below the turnpike bridge,by which Wharton crossed. Early says he came in sight ofthe Union picket fires at half-past three oclock, and haltedhis column for an hour, when he ordered Kershaw this time Gordon was crossing the Shenandoah atMclntyres and Bowmans fords, his men wading the stream,which was breast high, and before five oclock he had creptthrough the Union picket line, and deployed his leading divis-ions, unmolested, in the rear of the
. Vermont in the Civil War (Volume 1): a history of the part taken by the Vermont soldiers and sailors in the war for the Union, 1861-5 . le below the turnpike bridge,by which Wharton crossed. Early says he came in sight ofthe Union picket fires at half-past three oclock, and haltedhis column for an hour, when he ordered Kershaw this time Gordon was crossing the Shenandoah atMclntyres and Bowmans fords, his men wading the stream,which was breast high, and before five oclock he had creptthrough the Union picket line, and deployed his leading divis-ions, unmolested, in the rear of the camp of the Eighthcorps. That so large a force should have been able to makeits way undisco vered through the Union line, showed strangeover-confidence and neglect of duty on the part of the picketsat that point. It was said that some of the Union picketsreported hearing a sound as of the tread of many feet, in thenight hours, but no one took or gave alarm. Kershaw crossed Cedar Creek with equal stillness andsuccess, capturing a lieutenant colonel and 18 men of an Ohioregiment, who were on picket, without firing a shot or creating. , CSOOK »!>.M, +▼?«« »*»•>• =?■!» ™£5i 5)- *> \ \ BATTLE FISHERS HllL(SeT2r-»CEDARGREEK(0cU9^l86^ 0 Scale of Miles. it== I THE FIRST BRIGADE. 545 any disturbance. When across, he quickly deployed in frontof Thoburns division of the Eighth corps, which held the leftof the Union position. Up to this hour, about five oclock,the mass of Sheridans army lay wrapped in sleep and utterlyunconscious of the blow about to fall. The first sound of strife that broke the stillness of thatfoggy October morning came from the picket line on the ex-treme Union right, near the Back Boad, under Little NorthMountain. The right of the line of infantry pickets in thatquarter was manned that morning by details from the Sixthcorps, Colonel George P Foster of the Fourth Vermont be-ing in charge, as corps field officer of the day. The line
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