Battle of Spotsylvania • Tour the Battlefield • Monuments & MarkersThe Armies


TourStop3The Struggle for the Bloody Angle wayside marker is along the walking trail at the Bloody Angle, Stop 3 on the Auto Tour. It is next to the ‘Confederate Earthworks’ wayside marker about 200 yards east of the parking area.
The Struggle for the Bloody Angle and Confederate Earthworks wayside markers on the Spotsylvania battlefield

Struggle for the Bloody Angle

For 22 hours combat raged on the landscape in front of you. Although the fighting extended for half a mile, the battle focused on (and became identified with) a slight bend in the Confederate lines known thereafter as the Bloody Angle. The fighting here consisted of sustained, close-range rifle fire punctuated by Union attempts to storm the Confederate works.

So heavy was the rifle fire that a 22-inch oak tree was felled by the impact of bullets alone. Bodies piled up in the rain-filled trenches, the living sometimes buried beneath the dead. After the battle, men were found torn by dozens of bullets. One man had 11 bullets though the soles of his feet alone. Another was so mutilated that friends could identify him only by the unusual color of his beard. It was carnage on an unimaginable scale.

The question became, pretty plainly, whether one was willing to meet death, not merely to run the chances of it.

Lieutenant James F. J. Caldwell
1st South Carolina Infantry

From the caption to the photo at lower left:
Called by one modem observer the “signature artifact of America’s military experience,” the stump of the Bloody Angle oak is on display at the Smithsonian Institution.

From the caption to the background painting:

“Strike for God and Country,” by Don Stivers. Used with permission.

The Struggle for the Bloody Angle wayside marker on the Spotsylvania battlefield

(go to the main Tour Stop 3 page)
(go to the main Battle of Spotsylvania Auto Tour page)