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Robert E. Lee's Battle: The Battle Of Gettysburg

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On September 16, 1862, Confederate forces attempted an invasion of the North with the intention of capturing our Union's garrison at Harper's Ferry in order to gain both the French and British's recognition of the Confederacy and put us in between a rock and a hard place. However, our Army of Potomac placed under the command of the new Major General George B. McClellan, placed by President Lincoln himself, clashed with the Army of Northern Virginia led by the South's General Robert E. Lee at Sharpsburg, Maryland for one of the bloodiest days of this war.
The battle itself did not begin until the following day our Major General Joseph Hooker's Union corps launched a flank on General Lee's left. Though we pushed their forces further back and having received at …show more content…

Due to the decisions made by McClellan throughout this battle, the Confederate forces were able to shift the odds into their favor. At night, both sides tended to their casualties but in the heat of the war, but their heartless General Lee continued to attack our forces despite the already high casualties and death tolls. After the battle was over, General McClellan respected President Lincoln's placed emphasis on not pursuing the already weakened Confederate troops as General Lee and his Army of Northern Virginia retreated from Maryland.
From a military perspective, the war would have been perceived as a draw, but it was definitely a victory for us-- the Union. This battle definitely ours to take because we drew General Lee and his troops out of our land and allowed our President Lincoln to deliver his proposal of the Emancipation Proclamation which shifted the focus of the war to something far more greater than states' rights and federal authority. With the victory of this war, we can fight for a union without a system of

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