Description: |
On May 31, Sheridan’s cavalry seized the vital crossroads of Old Cold Harbor. Early on June 1,
relying heavily on their new repeating carbines and shallow entrenchments, Sheridan’s troopers threw back an
attack by Confederate infantry. Confederate reinforcements arrived from Richmond and from the Totopotomoy
Creek lines. Late on June 1, the Union VI and XVIII Corps reached Cold Harbor and assaulted the Confederate
works with some success. By June 2, both armies were on the field, forming on a seven-mile front that extended
from Bethesda Church to the Chickahominy River. At dawn June 3, the II and XVIII Corps, followed later by the
IX Corps, assaulted along the Bethesda Church-Cold Harbor line and were slaughtered at all points. Grant
commented in his memoirs that this was the only attack he wished he had never ordered. The armies confronted
each other on these lines until the night of June 12, when Grant again advanced by his left flank, marching to
James River. On June 14, the II Corps was ferried across the river at Wilcox’s Landing by transports. On June
15, the rest of the army began crossing on a 2,200-foot long pontoon bridge at Weyanoke. Abandoning the
well-defended approaches to Richmond, Grant sought to shift his army quickly south of the river to threaten
Petersburg. |