Maryland Campaign undertook the risky maneuver of splitting his army so that he could continue north into Maryland while simultaneously capturing the Federal garrison and arsenal at Harpers Ferry.
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Maryland Campaign undertook the risky maneuver of splitting his army so that he could continue north into Maryland while simultaneously capturing the Federal garrison and arsenal at Harpers Ferry.
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The Confederate invasion might be able to incite an uprising in Maryland Campaign, especially given that it was a slave-holding state and many of its citizens held a sympathetic stance toward the South.
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Maryland Campaign knew that McClellan was a strong organizer and a skilled trainer of troops, able to recombine the units of Pope's army with the Army of the Potomac faster than anyone.
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Army that McClellan took into Maryland Campaign was not an entirely cohesive or battle-ready fighting force.
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Maryland Campaign spent much of his life trying to rehabilitate himself.
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One of the more unusual aspects of the Maryland campaign was the severely understrength condition of the Army of Northern Virginia.
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Maryland Campaign wrote there was "no design of conquest, " and that the invasions were only an aggressive effort to force the Lincoln government to let the South go in peace.
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In Maryland Campaign, panic was much more widespread than in Pennsylvania, which was not yet immediately threatened.
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Maryland Campaign was a naturally cautious general and assumed he would be facing over 120,000 Confederates.
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Maryland Campaign was maintaining running arguments with the government in Washington, demanding that the forces defending the capital city report to him.
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Maryland Campaign's delay squandered the opportunity to destroy Lee's army.
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Maryland Campaign chose not to abandon his invasion and return to Virginia yet, because Jackson had not completed the capture of Harpers Ferry.
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Maryland Campaign began a fierce artillery barrage from all sides and ordered an infantry assault.
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Maryland Campaign believed that the general's cautious and poorly coordinated actions in the field had forced the battle to a draw rather than a crippling Confederate defeat.
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