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


The Very Vortex of Hell wayside marker is at Stop 9 of the Manassas Battlefield Driving Tour at the side of the parking area. It is alongside the parking area between the monuments for the 5th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment and the10th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment.

The Very Vortex of Hell wayside marker is at Stop 9 of the Manassas Battlefield Driving Tour

From the wayside marker:

The Very Vortex of Hell 

From their position atop this ridge, the soldiers of the 5th New York Infantry listened to the crash of battle. It appeared the regiment had escaped combat that day. Most of the fighting raged one mile to the north near Deep Cut. Around 4 p.m. an ominous silence took hold. Much of the distant firing had stopped. Suddenly a violent burst of musketry pierced the stillness. Terrified Union skirmishers came running out of the woods, followed by a tremendous crashing of brush and leaves – the sound of a large army approaching.

The 5th New York hurried to form a battle line along the crest of this slope. By then, thousands of Confederates were at the edge of the trees firing volley after volley. The New Yorkers were overrun in less than ten minutes. The unit sustained 123 men killed or mortally wounded – the greatest loss of life in any Union infantry regiment in any single action of the war. Remembering the one-sided slaughter, a veteran compared it to “the very vortex of Hell.”

From the caption on the bottom of the marker:
The grassy slope behind you, covered with the colorful red and blue uniforms of fallen Zouaves, reminded one Southerner of a field of Texas wildflowers.

New York Monuments Tour stop sign

The wayside marker, facing toward the parking area at center, is at the end of New York Avenue.