Warning: file_put_contents(/opt/frankenphp/design.onmedianet.com/storage/proxy/cache/9133a9bd6fee2bfce9926fa9e1af6f07.html): Failed to open stream: No space left on device in /opt/frankenphp/design.onmedianet.com/app/src/Arsae/CacheManager.php on line 36

Warning: http_response_code(): Cannot set response code - headers already sent (output started at /opt/frankenphp/design.onmedianet.com/app/src/Arsae/CacheManager.php:36) in /opt/frankenphp/design.onmedianet.com/app/src/Models/Response.php on line 17

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /opt/frankenphp/design.onmedianet.com/app/src/Arsae/CacheManager.php:36) in /opt/frankenphp/design.onmedianet.com/app/src/Models/Response.php on line 20
The Siege of Petersburg Online
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20160308085955/http://www.beyondthecrater.com/

The Siege of Petersburg Online

 

Welcome to The Siege of Petersburg Online, an information compilation site focusing on the Siege of Petersburg during the American Civil War. The Richmond-Petersburg Campaign was, rather than a true siege, a series of nine offensives by the Union forces against the Confederates defending Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia. The campaign for Petersburg lasted from June 15, 1864 until April 2, 1865, claiming 50,000 Union soldiers and 32,000 Confederates. The Siege of Petersburg has been criminally neglected in the study of the Civil War, and this site aims to partially rectify that lack of coverage.

DoVV1Pg391TheCraterJuly301864

Please consider signing up for The Siege of Petersburg Online’s RSS Feed, which will keep you updated on our progress over the years. I say years because the amount of data planned for this site is massive. Check out the Siege of Petersburg Resources link at the top of the page for just a glimpse of what is in store here.

Some of the more complete areas of the site as of July 2015 include:

  • Battle Summaries: Are you interested in a specific battle from the Siege of Petersburg?  Look no further than my battle summary pages.  Each contains a brief description of the battle and gathers together a list of ALL of the posts on this entire site which refer to that specific battle.
  • Units Pages: Explore every regiment, battalion, and battery which participated in the Siege of Petersburg.  These unit pages give you information on a unit, its commanders, how it fit into the army organization over the Nine Offensives, how many men the unit had at a given time, and the types of weapons the unit was using.  Perhaps most importantly, a list of ALL of the posts on this site concerning a given unit appear at the bottom of that unit’s page.  There are a few non-line units and the Confederate Second Corps still to post.  Otherwise all units present at the Siege from June-August 1864 are present and accounted for.
  • Official Records Reports: Every official report from the Siege of Petersburg from the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies in the War of the Rebellion, well over 1,000 reports, are included in this section.  Volume XL covers the period from June 12-July 31, 1864, including the Second Battle of Petersburg and the Crater.  Volume XLII covers the period from August 1-December 31, 1864, from the Fourth through the Seventh Offensives.  Battles include Globe Tavern, Second Ream’s Station, Fort Harrison and New Market Heights, Peebles Farm, the Darbytown Road battles, Boydton Plank Road, and Warren’s Stony Creek Raid.  Volume XLVI covers the action from January 1-April 9, 1865.  Battles include Hatcher’s Run, Dinwiddie Court House, Five Forks, the Breakthrough, Fort Gregg, and the Appomattox Campaign.
  • Maps: I’ve been collecting all of the public domain maps I can find about the Siege of Petersburg.  Maps are grouped by Offensive and then by battle.  Sources include the Ed Bearss NPS Troop Movement Maps, Official Records, the Civil War Trust, Battles and Leaders, and old regimental histories from prior to 1923.
  • Siege of Petersburg Newspaper Articles: I’m amassing new newspaper articles both during and after the war which describe events at the Siege of Petersburg.  The June 1864 section is particularly well represented, but the 150+ articles you see there are just the visible tip of the iceberg.  I have many, many more waiting to be transcribed and posted.  If you are interested in helping me transcribe newspaper articles, Contact me.
  • Southern Historical Society Papers: I’ve only just scratched the surface here too, but the goal is to find, transcribe, and annotate every single article on the Siege of Petersburg from the 52-volume Southern Historical Society Papers.
  • National Tribune: For a Union veteran counterpart to the Southern Historical Society Papers, check out articles from the National Tribune, a postwar Union veterans newspaper filled with first person accounts from the Siege of Petersburg.
  • Letters & Diaries: There are thousands of soldier accounts of the Siege of Petersburg written in their own hand.  I have a very modest but always growing collection of letters and diaries from men who fought at the Siege of Petersburg.  If you know of any others I might be able to use, please Contact me.

For more great information, just left click on the Resources tab at the upper left hand corner of each and every page on the site.

We are always looking for submissions of information pertaining to the Siege of Petersburg. If you are a student of the Petersburg Campaign, please consider contributing as an author here. Use the Contact form at the top of the page if you have information we can use or if you are interested in writing here at The Siege of Petersburg Online.

We Need YOU to Contribute Siege of Petersburg Materials!

Note: If you currently have primary source materials of soldiers who fought in the Siege of Petersburg, we would like to feature those materials at Beyond the Crater.  Don’t be shy!  Many descendants of soldiers who fought around Richmond and Petersburg in 1864-65 have already contributed meaningful materials already published on this site.  Please use the Contact form at the top of the screen to let us know about any materials you would be willing to share.  Proper attribution and copyright protection will always be strictly enforced.  Your materials WILL make The Siege of Petersburg Online a more useful resource for all students of the Civil War.

{ 3 comments }


***



What are your Top 10 Gettysburg Books? See what a panel of bloggers said recently.

Petersburg Medals of Honor: “Lieutenant, What Say You?”

March 7, 2016 Deeds of Valor, Volume 1

“LIEUTENANT, WHAT SAY YOU”1 ——- Fort Stedman, Va., had fallen into the hands of enemy, who cunningly had taken advantage of the order allowing deserters to bring in their arms. In the disguise of such deserters they had approached the Union picket lines in small squads, overpowered and captured the pickets and gained access to […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →

20th New York Cavalry

March 6, 2016 New York Cavalry

Editor’s Note: Do you have information on this unit’s role at the Siege of Petersburg?  Please contact us using the Contact button in the menu at the top of the screen.  We are happy to exchange information with other researchers. Muster In: Organized at Sackett’s Harbor, N.Y., and mustered in Companies “A” to “G” September 3, 1863; Company […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →

Hall’s Michigan Battalion Sharpshooters

March 6, 2016 Michigan Infantry

Editor’s Note: Do you have information on this unit’s role at the Siege of Petersburg?  Please contact us using the Contact button in the menu at the top of the screen.  We are happy to exchange information with other researchers. Muster In: Organized at Marshall, Mich., August 27 to November 2, 1864.1 Muster Out: Attached […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →

1st Maine Battalion Sharpshooters

March 5, 2016 Maine Infantry

Editor’s Note: Do you have information on this unit’s role at the Siege of Petersburg?  Please contact us using the Contact button in the menu at the top of the screen.  We are happy to exchange information with other researchers. Muster In: Organized at Augusta from October 27 to December 29, 1864.1 Muster Out: Transferred […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →

NP: September 6, 1964 Petersburg Progress-Index: Siege Centennial, Part 27: A City of Hospitals

March 4, 2016 Postwar Newspapers

A City Of Hospitals (The following is the twenty-seventh in a series of articles published in observance of the centennial of the 1864-65 campaign for Petersburg.) —– Hospitals played a large part in the life of Petersburg not only during the ten months with which these articles are concerned but throughout the Civil War. Like […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →

Confederate Casualties at the Battle of Jerusalem Plank Road: June 21-23, 1864

March 3, 2016 Casualties

Editor’s Note: Below you will find Bryce Suderow’s original article on Confederate casualties at the Battle of Jerusalem Plank Road from June 21-24, 1864 during the Siege of Petersburg.  This article originally appeared in Kepi Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 5 (Oct-Nov 1985) and appears here with the express written consent of the author. For now, […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →

NP: July 24, 1910 Richmond Times-Dispatch: Crater Anecdotes

March 2, 2016 Postwar Newspapers

Editor’s Note: This article was transcribed by Jackie Martin. OUR CONFEDERATE COLUMN ____________________________ ANECDOTES OF THE ARMY IN BATTLE OF THE CRATER. _______________ Springfield Republican Tells Interesting Stories on Occasion Of Visit of Confederate Veterans There. The Petersburg campaign proper started in May, 1864, when General Grant ordered General Butler, then commanding the Army of the […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →

Maps of the 2nd Battle of Deep Bottom from John Horn’s New Petersburg Book

March 1, 2016 Civil War Books

Editor’s Note: The following post serves three main purposes: It highlights some of the maps of The Second Battle of Deep Bottom from John Horn’s new book The Siege of Petersburg: The Battles for the Weldon Railroad, August 1864, published by Savas Beatie, to help readers see the level of detail in a book which […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →

Petersburg Medals of Honor: Valorous Deeds at Hatcher’s Run

February 29, 2016 Deeds of Valor, Volume 1

VALOROUS DEEDS AT HATCHER’S RUN1 ——- The fierce fighting of Hatcher’s Run and Dabney’s Mills, Va., February 5 and 6, 1865, brought to light numerous examples of individual bravery among officers and men. Valorous deeds are narrated of several men who were rewarded with the Medal of Honor, as follows: The Third Brigade, Third Division […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →

Confederate Casualties June-July 1864 Kepi Articles by Bryce Suderow

February 28, 2016 Casualties

Siege of Petersburg researcher and author Bryce Suderow recently passed along three articles on Confederate casualties he wrote for Kepi Magazine back in the 1980’s.  These articles utilize Southern newspapers and other primary sources to gather Confederate casualty information, often regiment by regiment.  This work is similar to what Alfred C. Young III did in […]

Read the full Siege of Petersburg article →