John Miller
Emmitsburg Area Historical Society
On July 5, General Meade issued orders
for the Army of the Potomac to begin its removal from the
battlefield at Gettysburg. The First, Sixth, and Third Corps
would march to Emmitsburg, taking the direct road to
Mechanicstown, Lewistown, Hamburg, reaching Middletown. The
Fifth and Eleventh Corps would march on the Taneytown Road,
through Emmitsburg, Creagerstown, Utica, Highknob Pass, to
Middletown. The Twelfth, the Second Corps and the Artillery
Reserve would march toward Taneytown to Middleburg, and
Woodsboro, through Frederick to Middletown.
By July 6, General Meade ordered
General Howard to move one of his Corps to Emmitsburg and the
other Corps to be posted on a road leading to Fairfield.
According to General Meade, after receiving information on the
Confederate Army’s retreat route, all evidence showed that the
principal force was between Fairfield and Hagerstown moving
toward the Potomac River.
By 9:00 a.m., the Confederate
Infantry, numbering about 80,000 men, was reported to have
passed the Fairfield Road. General Meade learned that the
Waynesboro Road was empty when parts of his army arrived.
General Meade advised his Corps Commanders that he would
continue his flanking movement once the main Confederate Army
had retired from the mountain. With this plan, he directed
General Couch’s Cavalry to move down the Cumberland Valley and
threaten the Confederate rear.
General Pleasanton ordered a brigade
of Cavalry, under Colonel McIntosh to communicate the
Confederate troop’s movements as his Cavalry traveled toward
Waynesboro. General George Sykes, commanding the Fifth Corps
wrote to General Howard during the evening, explaining his
position. He was located near the junction of the Emmitsburg
Pike and the Fairfield Road. He had not heard word from
General Sedgwick on troop movements and had not received
orders from General Meade or from his wing commander, General
Howard. A sign of frustration along with the lack of
communication was taking its toll on the Union Army.
By July 7, General Meade rode through
Emmitsburg and briefly stopped to visit the town. The
residents hailed him; thanking him for all that he had done to
protect the town from the main Confederate Army. General Meade
rode out of town traveling down Old Frederick Road. The
commander crossed Loyds Station Covered Bridge and made his
headquarters in the small community of Cooperstown (Creagerstown),
just a few miles east of Mechanicstown for a few hours before
heading into Frederick later that night.
Colonel F. Hecker of the 82nd Illinois
Volunteers recalled his regiment’s march to Emmitsburg. Near
midnight, the road conditions and blinding darkness forced his
regiment to encamp near a small creek north of Emmitsburg that
night. By 3:30 a.m., the line of march continued. His regiment
passed through Emmitsburg in the afternoon where they
encamped. Before sunrise on July 7, the march to Middletown
continued via Creagerstown and Utica Post Office. This was a
distance of 30 miles. The regiment arrived at Middletown
around 10 p.m. that night in a rainstorm.
During the pursuit of the Confederate
Army, the Union Army was slow moving and several of its
officers thought that they had passed up the opportunity to
end this war by destroying what was left of General Lee’s
Army. If it had not been for the mountains, General Meade
would have pursued the Confederates more aggressively.
However, if General Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia had dug
entrenchments and fortified the mountains, the Gettysburg
Campaign could have easily continued for many more days, if
not weeks. General Meade understood that and that is one
reason he did not want to pursue General Lee, and this was the
end of
the Gettysburg Campaign on the Eastern
side of the Catoctin Mountain.