Save 7.2 Acres, and Lunettes, at Spotsylvania!

Due to a generous land owner, every dollar you give saves two dollars worth of land!

Save 7.2 Acres, and Lunettes, at Spotsylvania! image

This tract saw both fighting and troop movements as the armies transitioned from the fierce confused combat of the Battle of the Wilderness (May 5 & 6, 1864) to the still brutal but more extended struggle at Spotsylvania Court House (May 8-21). As Confederate cavalry grudgingly gave ground along Brock Road on May 7, first to the Federal cavalry, and then on May 8 to leading elements of the Army of the Potomac’s V Corps under Brig. Gen. John C. Robinson’s division, followed by Brig. Gen. Charles Griffin’s division, soldiers from both sides stubbornly fought across and moved over this ground. One Union soldier latter recalled, the “Confederates contesting every inch of the way. . . .” After all, high stakes were involved; either maintaining or taking the strategic crossroads prize of Spotsylvania Court House.

On May 8, 1864, as the Fifth Corps divisions marched down Brock Road, their commander, Maj. Gen. Gouvereur K. Warren, decided to send John C. Robinson’s brigades in as they arrived in hopes of dislodging the Confederates before the southerners dug in too deeply. The Confederate defenders stymied the Union assaults. Undeterred, Warren sent in Griffin’s brigades. They, too, received rough handling by Maj. Gen. Richard Anderson’s entrenching Confederates and fell back.

Brig. Gen. Lysander Cutler, now in charge of the Fourth Division, due to Maj. Gen. James Wadsworth’s mortal wounding on May 6 at the Wilderness, commanded three brigades, those of Brig. Gen. Wiliam W. Robinson, Brig. Gen. James C. Rice, and Col. Edward S. Bragg. Embarking at about 10:30 a.m. from the 3rd Massachusetts Light Artillery tract, William Robinson’s brigade—the renowned “Iron Brigade” pushed forward, while Bragg attacked from CVBT’s previously preserved 5th Corps Brock Road tract, and Rice advanced to Bragg’s left. On Bragg’s left, on the east side of Brock Road, Brig. Gen. Samuel Crawford’s two brigade division advanced.
During the assault by Culter’s and Crawford’s divisions, the right of Cutler’s brigades (Bragg first and then Robinson) were flanked by Alabamians. After gaining their bearings, the Federals pushed the Alabamians back to their main line but eventually withdrew.

When John C. Robinson’s division advanced early in the Union assaults, Capt. Augustus P. Martin’s 3rd Massachusetts Light Artillery battery accompanied it to the front but withdrew with Robinson’s repulses “about half a mile to a small knoll which commanded the valley of a little stream [eventually] emptying into the Po River.” Over the next few days different V Corps artillery batteries occupied the 3rd Massachusetts Light Artillery tract, protecting themselves and guns by constructing earthwork lunettes that remain visible today.

There are several key reasons to make sure these pristine acres are saved forever. First, in doing so it will maintain the current rural condition of this historic greenspace. Second, and as mentioned above, preserving the artillery lunette cultural resources on this ground highlights its importance during the fighting at Spotsylvania. Third, saving the 3rd Massachusetts Light Artillery tract helps add another piece to those tracts already saved by CVBT, the American Battlefield Trust, and the National Park Service in this immediate area, which in turn advances the process of eventually connecting them all. Additionally, this is one of the last tracts along this section of Brock Road without a modern structure on it. No demolition is needed that would otherwise add to the expense of returning this ground to its wartime appearance. Lastly, when purchased, interpreted, and opened, this land will be an invaluable resource for Civil War enthusiasts, as well as the general public, to learn about our nation's shared past and to enjoy its surrounding nature.

We hope you will consider giving to help CVBT save these historic acres. Every donation ensures this land is saved forever!