Battles of Manassas • Tour the Battlefield •  Monuments • Facts • The Armies


The Shooting Gallery wayside marker is on the walking trail that begins at Stop One on the Manassas Battlefield Driving Tour.

The Shooting Gallery wayside marker is on the walking trail that begins at Stop One on the Manassas Battlefield Driving Tour. 

From the wayside marker:

Shooting Gallery

From here, Confederate gunners had a clear view of Porter’s attack – the most formidable onslaught of the three days. There were few trees between S.D. Lee’s Battalion and the nearest Union columns a third of a mile away. As thousands of bluecoats swept across the field, Colonel Lee’s men jumped to their guns and opened fire.

The heavy bombardment, a rain of whizzing shell fragments, kept reinforcements from crossing the field, and helped ensure Union defeat at Deep Cut.

Second
Battle of Manassas
Day Three
August 30, 1862 

From the caption to the drawing at upper right:
Confederate Col. Stephen D. Lee’s Artillery Battalion. Eventually S.D. Lee had eighteen cannon along this line during Porter’s attack. Counterfire from Union batteries was ineffective.

From the caption to the map:
When the first group of Federals finally retreated from the railroad grade, Lee’s artillerists fired shell and case shot onto the field with pinpoint accuracy. “The ground,” wrote one survivor, “seemed like a millpond in a shower, so frequently did shells rip the earth.”

The Shooting Gallery wayside marker is on the walking trail that begins at Stop One on the Manassas Battlefield Driving Tour. 

Stephen Lee's guns on the Manassas battlefield