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


The Visions of Victory wayside marker is at Stop 3 on the Manassas Battlefield Driving Tour. It is on top of Buck Hill just to the north of the Stone House. It’s a steep climb up the hill, but when you get up there’s a bench so you can rest and enjoy the view.

The Visions of Victory wayside marker is at Stop 3 on the Manassas Battlefield Driving Tour.

From the wayside marker:

Visions of Victory

The opening fight at Brawner Farm revealed Stonewall Jackson’s position north of Groveton. In response, General John Pope ordered his entire force – nearly 65,000 Federal Troops – to converge on the Confederates and bring them to battle. This directive led the army back to the First Manassas battlefield, stirring poignant memories of the previous year’s defeat.

Pope remained confident of victory at daybreak on August 29. The Federal commander assumed Jackson’s outnumbered force was isolated and in retreat. Pope believed his troops were positioned to prevent Jackson’s escape. He fully expected that Jackson would be destroyed before Confederate reinforcements could intervene. Tactical realities were a bit different. Instead of “retreating,” Jackson’s troops had taken a strong defensive position along the embankments of an unfinished railroad. By noon, General James Longstreet had nearly 30,000 men – the rest of Lee’s Confederate army – deploying on the battlefield. Pope, however, discounted all evidence that did not fit his vision of total victory.

Second Battle of Manassas
Day 2
August 29, 1862

From the caption on the bottom right:
Pope arrived on the battlefield and established his headquarters here atop Buck Hill. Federal troops used the surrounding fields as staging areas for assaults on Jackson’s line, one mile to the northwest.

The Visions of Victory wayside marker is at Stop 3 on the Manassas Battlefield Driving Tour.

View of the Stone House from Buck Ridge and the Visions of Victory wayside marker

View of from Buck Ridge and the Visions of Victory wayside marker of the Stone House and Henry House on its hill in the distance.