#: locale=en ## Action ### URL WebFrame_22F9EEFF_0C1A_2293_4165_411D4444EFEA_mobile.url = https://www.google.com/maps/embed?pb=!1m18!1m12!1m3!1d14377.55330038866!2d-73.99492968084243!3d40.75084469078082!2m3!1f0!2f0!3f0!3m2!1i1024!2i768!4f13.1!3m3!1m2!1s0x89c259a9f775f259%3A0x999668d0d7c3fd7d!2s400+5th+Ave%2C+New+York%2C+NY+10018!5e0!3m2!1ses!2sus!4v1467271743182 WebFrame_22F9EEFF_0C1A_2293_4165_411D4444EFEA.url = https://www.google.com/maps/embed?pb=!1m18!1m12!1m3!1d3101.17449009651!2d-78.41954258556247!3d38.988513849174886!2m3!1f0!2f0!3f0!3m2!1i1024!2i768!4f13.1!3m3!1m2!1s0x89b5bb89ba0416d7%3A0xcfa3edbedf5be1df!2sRamseurs%20Hill%20-%20Fishers%20Hill%20Battlefield!5e0!3m2!1sen!2sus!4v1669687053108!5m2!1sen!2sus LinkBehaviour_CB1A983A_D8EC_0E66_4172_275F083290A6.source = https://www.shenandoahatwar.org/ PopupWebFrameBehaviour_D2A45436_C139_94C8_41E0_E974C20202AD.url = https://www.shenandoahatwar.org/ PopupWebFrameBehaviour_C8653212_DC7D_0993_41D9_29101F519952.url = https://youtube.com/clip/Ugkxk_b8ty7wbMgLfb9iBzW2kbYsDyYeixC7 ## E-Learning ### Answer questionOption_FA714B60_DF64_02E2_41E1_6BA988ABBC26.text = Alabama questionOption_C6665C5D_DB24_0622_41C5_44FFC8AC320F.text = Alamo questionOption_C020268F_DB24_023E_41E4_4B2A441B5479.text = Assasination of Union President Lincoln questionOption_C1F5E790_DB24_0222_41E6_0BB919AD52AE.text = Battle at Little Big Horn questionOption_C58688D7_DBEC_0E2E_41D3_01D6F7E3AD9B.text = Bull Pens questionOption_D4682EFF_C12E_B538_41D7_B168D622A433.text = Civil War questionOption_FFDC4A32_DF7C_0267_41E7_4E5B68A742C4.text = Destro on the Right and Shipwreck on the Left questionOption_F8211CA4_DF64_0662_41DC_883507B5B214.text = Donald Trump on the Right and Joe Biden on the Left questionOption_C793B63D_DBEC_0262_41E7_97560AB2387E.text = Earth works questionOption_C7FD47E8_DB24_01E3_41E2_05CBD483C31D.text = False questionOption_C0DC1408_DB24_0622_41E3_7631CF1E3649.text = False questionOption_F814B1EE_DF64_01FE_41CC_50357FD40135.text = Kentucky questionOption_FFE31827_DF64_0E6E_41D5_7B13D9B8C2BC.text = Manassas questionOption_F84506E1_DF64_03E2_41CE_7FE91FD9EE40.text = Mississippi questionOption_D4687EFF_C12E_B538_41E0_2B299A5BEA40.text = Persian Gulf questionOption_C45BC85E_DBEC_0EDE_41DE_58751398B2A8.text = Play Pens questionOption_FFE8F983_DF64_0E26_41DB_1876834B2636.text = Rutherford B. 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Early's beaten and bloodied army filed into position here on September 20, 1864, one day after the disaster at the _______________________? question_D4693EFF_C12E_B538_41DB_068304FACFEC.title = In what war was this battlefield used? question_C4AEAE0B_DBEC_0226_41D2_1752032A5146.title = Make shift structures made of earth covered fence rails are called ___________? question_F854943C_DF24_0662_41E1_18394BBDF2A5.title = Ramseur thought a division of troops looked like ______________? question_C41AFDCC_DB2C_0622_41E7_4C2152B3F041.title = True or False \ Fisher's Hill was seen as one of the worst defensive positions in Virginia. question_C4DB9F4F_DB2C_023E_41D7_1818E08AD9C3.title = True or False \ The Federal divisions at Fisher’s Hill fell like dominoes from west to east, and the Confederacy secured the “Valley’s Gibraltar.” question_FA160993_DF64_0E26_41E7_304DE76DFCC3.title = Where was Battle and his infantry brigade from? question_F857D57D_DF64_06E2_41E6_843F082C5F81.title = Who were the commanders that headed up the divisions? ### Question Screen quizQuestion_C1611F72_D93C_02E6_41D3_9ED19AADA577.ok = OK ### Report Screen quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.title = - SCORE - quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.completion = Completed quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.questionsCorrect = Correct quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.downloadCSV = Download .csv quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.questionsIncorrect = Incorrect quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.items = Items Found quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.questions = Questions quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.repeat = Repeat quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.submitToLMS = Submit quizScore_C163AF72_D93C_02E6_41E7_A70FA3465CA3.elapsedTime = Time ### Score Name score1.label = Score 1 ### Timeout Screen quizTimeout_C1600F72_D93C_02E6_419F_B8449BB9996F.title = - TIMEOUT - quizTimeout_C1600F72_D93C_02E6_419F_B8449BB9996F.repeat = Repeat quizTimeout_C1600F72_D93C_02E6_419F_B8449BB9996F.score = View Score ## Media ### Floorplan ### Image imlevel_D8792117_1C69_9F13_4171_9FFE366CAFB0.url = media/map_C5299895_DB64_0E22_41E9_75D5AAFD479C_en_0.jpg imlevel_D8793118_1C69_9F1D_41A6_FCD840746751.url = media/map_C5299895_DB64_0E22_41E9_75D5AAFD479C_en_1.jpg imlevel_D8795118_1C69_9F1D_4198_72CEDBBA82E0.url = media/map_C5299895_DB64_0E22_41E9_75D5AAFD479C_en_2.jpg imlevel_17360177_1B9A_BF14_4196_5D765FA91588.url = media/popup_CB314D6A_D8E4_06E6_41E4_B1B62F71BD98_en_0_0.jpg imlevel_17363177_1B9A_BF14_4193_AFA9209C06B3.url = media/popup_CB314D6A_D8E4_06E6_41E4_B1B62F71BD98_en_0_1.jpg ### Popup Image ### Title panorama_A2196E83_AFD4_CB72_41D5_C8A1F0A1C3F3.label = 1st Marker panorama_A21925C7_AFD4_D8F2_41E1_80DD280603EA.label = 2nd Marker panorama_A2196D66_AFD4_C9B2_41E1_708481EAB4AB.label = 3rd Marker panorama_A2192516_AFD4_B992_41E1_850DAB0C13B0.label = 4th Marker panorama_A219CC70_AFD5_4FAD_41E4_7ECA0C9F7F35.label = 5th Marker panorama_A2191397_AFD5_7893_41CE_73F298BE6430.label = 6th Marker panorama_A21913C9_AFD5_58FF_41E0_F70985556347.label = 7th Marker panorama_A2198C15_AFD5_4F96_41CA_F42CD113B29A.label = 8th Marker panorama_A219DAAA_AFD5_48B2_41DB_9B33DF1B8F5C.label = 9th Marker panorama_A219E1D9_AFD5_589E_41C8_8425399EDBB2.label = Bridge View panorama_A2195EF5_AFD4_C897_41DF_6C2D61C622DB.label = Park Sign album_D99ED0FE_C95C_DB6B_4176_963C8324E84B.label = Photo Album Sign 7 album_D99ED0FE_C95C_DB6B_4176_963C8324E84B_0.label = Sign 7 panorama_A2196701_AFD4_F96E_41E0_C6962EC09F90.label = Trail Head map_C5299895_DB64_0E22_41E9_75D5AAFD479C.label = battle-of-fishers-hill-925_0_0 ## Popup ### Body htmlText_F975EA13_DF6C_0226_4138_DEB34B2C88A2.html =
As Gen. George Crook’s corps struck the Confederate left flank, Gen. Stephen D. Ramseur responded quickly. He reformed Gen. Cullen A. Battle’s Alabama infantry brigade on the high ground on the opposite side of the ravine in front of you so that it faced west to meet the Union assault. Capt. Thomas J. Kirkpatrick’s Amherst Battery supported Battle’s position by firing double canister into Crook’s infantry. Capt. John Massie’s Fluvanna Artillery also wheeled its guns to the west to support Battle’s efforts to stem the tide of Union infantry.
While Confederate artillery and Battle’s Alabamians fired into the Union attackers, Battle grabbed a cedar stake and rode among his men while waving it over his head and shouting, “Close up! On your life!” Confederate artillerist M.S. Watts, who served in the Amherst Battery, wrote that Battle appeared as a “colossal figure” as he urged his regiments to stand firm against the Union tidal wave.
For a brief moment the Confederate fire stymied Crook’s assault. After the war, he wrote that the combination of fire from the two artillery batteries and Battle’s five regiments made “the ground hot for us.” Col. George D. Wells, who commanded one of Crook’s brigades, agreed “The enemy … with musketry and artillery gave us a heavy fire as we came on.” The Confederate success in slowing the Union assault, however, proved temporary.
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You are standing near the extreme left flank of Confederate Gen. Jubal A. Early’s army’s thinly stretched line of infantry guarded by Gen. Stephen D. Ramseur’s division. Throughout the day on September 22, 1864, Confederate observers utilized the large lookout tree to your left to keep an eye on Union Gen. Philip H. Sheridan’s movements. While many Confederates watched to their front (north) throughout the day, Gen. Bryan Grimes—a brigade commander in Ramseur’s division—looked to the west, toward Little North Mountain.
As Grimes peered through his binoculars, he spied Union Gen. George Crook’s columns moving up the mountain’s eastern face. When he informed Ramseur, the division commander promptly dismissed it and informed Grimes that it was nothing more than a fence row. After Grimes handed Ramseur his binoculars, Ramseur clearly saw the infantry line.
Grimes pleaded with Ramseur to immediately shift troops to strengthen the division’s left. Ramseur informed his subordinate that he would not make any redeployment until he discussed the matter with Early, who subsequently would not allow troops to be shifted. After the war, Early defended his decision and wrote that by the time Ramseur came to him he had already begun preparations for a withdrawal. Early wrote that he believed that moving the troops could increase the chances of a Union assault. Because of his decision, the Confederate left flank remained weak, ultimately unable to repel Crook’s attack.
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To strengthen Fisher’s Hill’s defenses, Confederate skirmishers from Confederate Gen. Stephen D. Ramseur’s division took up positions on the ridge in front of you and constructed “bull pens”— makeshift structures of fence rails covered with earth. At about 1 P.M. on September 22, 1864, to distract Gen. Jubal A. Early’s attention from Gen. George Crook’s flank march, Gen. Philip H. Sheridan ordered Gen. James B. Ricketts’s Third Division, VI Corps, to attack the bull pens.
Col. Joseph W. Keifer’s brigade spear- headed the assault and within an hour forced the Confederate skirmishers back to their main line behind you. Keifer wrote of the attack, “The enemy fought hard to hold possession of this ridge. … I continued by repeated charges to push the enemy along this ridge … until he was forced to abandon it, cross the Run, and take refuge within his works.”
After the Federals occupied the ridge, Ramseur sent troops through a ravine to your left to dislodge Keifer’s brigade. The plan failed.
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As Crook’s corps encountered small-arms fire from Gen. Cullen A. Battle’s brigade and the canister from the Amherst and Fluvanna batteries, a handful of Federals halted for a moment or turned and attempted to run. Enraged, Crook gathered an armful of rocks and pelted them on their heads in an effort to get them to reconsider their decision and resume the attack. While Crook coaxed the men who “tarried,” most of his infantrymen maintained their focus and marched as quickly as possible toward this position.
Crook’s two divisions-—excluding the stragglers—moved so rapidly against the Confederate left flank that all military organization disappeared as the men clambered over the undulating terrain covered with thickets and other obstacles. Nevertheless, the Federals pressed forward toward their objective. One of Crook’s brigade commanders wrote, “The field was so vast and the confusion so great that our officers could do little but encourage the men and set them examples of energetic courage. I feel the success is due, more than in any battle I know, to the splendid individual heroism of each of the men in theranks.”
While Crook’s men charged, Ramseur ordered Gen. William R. Cox’s brigade to support Battle’s command.
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As Ramseur’s division gave way under the weight of the Federal attack, Gen. Jubal A. Early arrived on the high ground in front of you on the opposite side of present-day Interstate 81 to organize a defense. He first decided to redeploy Gen. Gabriel C. Wharton’s division from the extreme Confederate right to the left flank. Because the maneuver would take time, however, Early attempted to slow his line’s disintegration. With Ramseur’s division essentially obliterated, Early ordered the next division in line—Gen. John Pegram’s—to stem the Union assault. Early also ordered the 13th Virginia Infantry, Pegram’s left-most regiment, to slow the rout by shooting any of Ramseur’s men who refused to make a stand. The Virginians declined to obey Early’s order.
Soon, the 13th Virginia as well as Pegram’s other regiments gave way. The collapse resulted not only from the general panic that Crook’s assault created, but also because of Union Gen. George W. Getty’s attack against Pegram’s front. Getty wrote that Pegram’s men “poured in one tremendous volley … then broke and fled in the wildest disorder.” With both Ramseur’s and Pegram’s divisions routed, the remaining Confederate divisions at Fisher’s Hill fell like dominoes from west to east, and the Federals secured the “Valley’s Gibraltar.”
the maneuver would take time, however, Early attempted to slow his line’s disintegration. With Ramseur’s division essentially obliterated, Early ordered the next division in line—Gen. John Pegram’s—to stem the Union assault. Early also ordered the 13th Virginia Infantry, Pegram’s left-most regiment, to slow the rout by shooting any of Ramseur’s men who refused to make a stand. The Virginians declined to obey Early’s order.
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During a council of war on September 20, 1864, Gen. George Crook suggested to Gen. Philip H. Sheridan that the best way to break the Confederate position at Fisher’s Hill would be to attack Early’s western (left) flank. Sheridan agreed.
While Sheridan ordered most of his army through Strasburg toward Fisher’s Hill on September 21, Crook’s corps remained on the north bank of Cedar Creek until sunset. Crook then marched his command to Hupp’s Hill and remained there until the following morning when he began his flanking movement to the west. At about 2 P.M., Crook’s corps reached Back Road near St. Stephen’s Church and began ascending the eastern face of Little North Mountain—the prominent feature in front of you.
By 4:30 P.M., Crook had positioned his two divisions. Col. Rutherford B. Hayes commanded the right flank, while Col. Joseph Thoburn occupied the left. As the attack surged forward from Little North Mountain, the rugged terrain disrupted the organization of the corps, but the men pressed ahead. One veteran recalled that the officers “were here, there, everywhere in the mass, but really were integral parts of a legion of shouting, fighting demons. No orders were given as these veterans knew well what to do.”
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The Union victory at the Third Battle of Winchester on September 19, 1864, affected the moods of both armies as they prepared to face each other at Fisher’s Hill. Union Lt. John M. Gould wrote, “I marched down that road [toward Fisher’s Hill] with a grand consciousness that for once the Shenandoah had not been the ‘Valley of Humiliation.’… I began to feel that my days of retreating before a victorious enemy have ended.” Confederate Gen. Jubal A. Early’s soldiers, in contrast, despaired. Confederate cavalryman John Opie wrote, “What was left of our army had now lost all confidence in General Early as a leader.” The earlier Confederate domination of the Valley and the imposing position of Fisher’s Hill, however, reinvigorated some of Early’s men and gave the Federals pause. “We had, it is true, the prestige of victory, and the Confederates had the discouragement of defeat,” wrote Capt. James F. Fitts (114th New York Infantry), “but their army now occupied one of the best defensive positions in Virginia.”
Early, however, lacked the manpower to cover the nearly four-mile-long front from Little North Mountain on the west to Massanutten Mountain on the east. “Our position was naturally strong but our army was too small to man it,” wrote Confederate Capt. Samuel D. Buck (13th Virginia Infantry). Confederate Capt. Henry Kyd Douglas recalled that “Indications were ominous. … They knew our exact force now, and caution would have looked like cowardice.” On September 22, the Union Army of the Shenandoah took advantage of the position’s inadequacies.
gf gbxg men and gave the Federals pause. “We had, it is true, the prestige of victory, and the Confederates had the discouragement of defeat,” wrote Capt. James F. Fitts (114th New York Infantry), “but their army now occupied one of the best defensive positions in Virginia.”
Early, however, lacked the manpower to cover the nearly four-mile-long front from Little North Mountain on the west to Massanutten
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This is Fisher's Hill, the Shenandoah Valley's "Gibraltar"—a commanding height that offered Confederate forces a superb defensive position.
Confederate Gen. Jubal A. Early's beaten and bloodied army filed into position here on September 20, 1864, one day after the disaster at the Third Battle of Winchester. For the next two days the men strengthened their position, but no amount of digging could make up for Early's lack of men.
Early's defensive line extended along Fisher's Hill for almost three miles. The right flank rested on Massanutten Mountain, but the left fell about one mile short of Little North Mountain, in front of you.
His infantrymen held most of the line—and they were stretched thin—while a small number of cavalrymen occupied the left flank, which was "in the air" (not anchored on a natural feature such as a mountain or river). It was a weakness that the Union commander, Gen. Philip H. Sheridan, was determined to exploit. On the morning of September 22, he sent Gen. George Crook's corps toward Little North Mountain to strike the Confederate left.
The left flank of Early's infantry line stood on this hill. A one-mile loop trail will lead you along this part of the Confederate position—the scene of the decisive fighting at the Battle of Fisher's Hill.
His infantrymen held most of the line—and they were stretched thin—while a small number of cavalrymen occupied the left flank, which was "in the air" (not anchored on a natural feature such as a mountain or river). It was a weakness that the Union commander, Gen. Philip H. Sheridan, was determined to exploit. On the morning of September 22, he sent Gen. George Crook's corps toward Little North Mountain to strike the Confederate left.
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Fisher's Hill Battlefield
About the property:



Something of a geologic anomaly, Fisher’s Hill is actually an east-west ridge running across the northeast-southwest trending Shenandoah Valley. Located approximately two miles south of Strasburg, Virginia, Fisher’s Hill’s eastern boundary is the Shenandoah River just below Massanutten Mountain near Signal Knob, with its western boundary being the foothills of the Allegheny Mountains.


Extending across the Shenandoah Valley at its narrowest point, Fisher’s Hill is still nearly four miles long and fronted by streams including Tumbling Run. Very rocky and imposing when viewed from the north, Fisher’s Hill’s elevation and rockiness decline somewhat going west until reaching the wooded and rugged foothills. Often referred to as the “Gibraltar of the Confederacy,” Fisher’s Hill offered at least some security and even limited comfort to Early’s soldiers, many of whom were from the Valley and had occupied the area’s defensive works earlier in the war.
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Mauris aliquet neque quis libero consequat vestibulum. Donec lacinia consequat dolor viverra sagittis. Praesent consequat porttitor risus, eu condimentum nunc. Proin et velit ac sapien luctus efficitur egestas ac augue. Nunc dictum, augue eget eleifend interdum, quam libero imperdiet lectus, vel scelerisque turpis lectus vel ligula. Duis a porta sem. Maecenas sollicitudin nunc id risus fringilla, a pharetra orci iaculis. Aliquam turpis ligula, tincidunt sit amet consequat ac, imperdiet non dolor.
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___
LOREM IPSUM
DOLOR SIT AMET
HTMLText_062AD830_1140_E215_41B0_321699661E7F_mobile.html =
LOREM IPSUM
DOLOR SIT AME
CONSECTETUR ADIPISCING ELIT. MORBI BIBENDUM PHARETRA LOREM, ACCUMSAN SAN NULLA.


Mauris aliquet neque quis libero consequat vestibulum. Donec lacinia consequat dolor viverra sagittis. Praesent consequat porttitor risus, eu condimentum nunc. Proin et velit ac sapien luctus efficitur egestas ac augue. Nunc dictum, augue eget eleifend interdum, quam libero imperdiet lectus, vel scelerisque turpis lectus vel ligula. Duis a porta sem. Maecenas sollicitudin nunc id risus fringilla, a pharetra orci iaculis. Aliquam turpis ligula, tincidunt sit amet consequat ac, imperdiet non dolor.


Integer gravida dui quis euismod placerat. Maecenas quis accumsan ipsum. Aliquam gravida velit at dolor mollis, quis luctus mauris vulputate. Proin condimentum id nunc sed sollicitudin.


DONEC FEUGIAT:
• Nisl nec mi sollicitudin facilisis
• Nam sed faucibus est.
• Ut eget lorem sed leo.
• Sollicitudin tempor sit amet non urna.
• Aliquam feugiat mauris sit amet.


LOREM IPSUM:
$150,000
HTMLText_0B4B0DC1_11C0_6277_41A4_201A5BB3F7AE_mobile.html =
JOHN DOE
Licensed Real Estate Salesperson


Tlf.: +11 111 111 111
jhondoe@realestate.com
www.loremipsum.com



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www.loremipsum.com
info@loremipsum.com
Tlf.: +11 111 111 111
## Tour ### Description ### Title tour.name = Fisher's Hill Project ## VR Menu ### Text MenuItem_D8DE2734_1C69_A314_41B7_5639D55430F2.label = 1st Marker MenuItem_D8DDD734_1C69_A314_41BA_AE72653BA940.label = 2nd Marker MenuItem_D8DE6734_1C69_A314_41B3_A9D6B48EC259.label = 3rd Marker MenuItem_D8DE3734_1C69_A314_4171_5B8BEE8E6C9E.label = 4th Marker MenuItem_D8DDF734_1C69_A314_41AE_5C1739FA5664.label = 5th Marker MenuItem_D8DDA734_1C69_A314_41AC_1050B002FC45.label = 6th Marker MenuItem_D8DE4734_1C69_A314_41BB_89F5F7FA3A8F.label = 7th Marker MenuItem_D8DDC734_1C69_A314_41A2_5E5F86E17D65.label = 8th Marker MenuItem_D8DE0734_1C69_A314_41BA_A46136EECACE.label = 9th Marker MenuItem_D8DE5734_1C69_A314_41BB_614C3D58F096.label = Bridge View Menu_CED22535_D924_0662_41E2_EC12E3BCC565.label = Media MenuItem_D8DDB734_1C69_A314_4199_3B35E2DBFB87.label = Park Sign MenuItem_D8DE1734_1C69_A314_4196_BEB85C6C972B.label = Trail Head