Battle of Brandy Station • Tour the Battlefield • Historical & Wayside Markers • The Armies
“The 1863-64 Winter Encampment – the Federal Army of the Potomac Rebuilds” wayside marker is at the first trail stop for the St. James Church Walking Trail of the the Battle of Brandy Station. The St. James Church trailhead is at the intersection of Beverly Ford Road (County Route 677) and St. James Church Road (County Route 676).
The next stop on the walking tour is: The 1863-64 Winter Encampment – The Calm Before The Storm

Looking past the marker to the fields that were home to the 100,000 men of the Army of the Potomac during the wnter of 1863-64. The marker is the first stop of the St. James Church Loop Trail.
Text from the marker:
The 1863-64 Winter Encampment
The Federal Army of the Potomac Rebuilds
On the night of December 1, 1863, following its unsuccessful advance against Robert E. Lee’s Confederate Army of Northern Virginia during the Mine Run Campaign, a cold and tired Army of the Potomac withdrew across the Rapidan River and returned to Culpeper County.
On these fields and throughout most of Cupleper and part of Fauquier Counties, 100,000 Union soldiers set up a massive winter encampment that disrupted the lives of local residents.
Union commander Maj. Gen. George G. Meade (right) ordered that the army establish its camps in an enormous oval-shapped configuration. As protection, an outer ring of cavalry pickets stretched around the army, backed up by an inner line of infantry.
Supplies from Alexandria, Virginia rolled down the Orange and Alexandria Railroad into Brandy Station, the army’s principle supply depot, and to Ingalls Station, 1.2 miles to the north.
The encampment, which lasted from December 1, 1863 to May 4, 1864, was described by one soldier as a time “when the shattered regiments regained form and fair; when the new men learned the ways of the old, and caught the spirit of the organization they had entered… and the new body, thus composed, was to be thrown into one of the most furious campaigns of human history.”
“A man could walk for miles and never leave the camps around Brandy Station.”
-Anonymous Union Solder
“A few weeks ago it was a wilderness; now it is a city of log huts, hardly a tree to be seen.”
-126th New York Soldier
Help Preserve Battlefields
Call CWPT at 1-888-606-1400 • www.civilwar.org
The Hallowell Foundation generously contributed toward the interpretation of this site in memory of Carrington Williams.
This material is based upon work assisted by a grant from the Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Any opinion, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Department of the Interior.

Location of the marker
The Federal Army of the Potomac Rebuilds wayside marker is the first stop on the St. James Church Loop Trail. (38°31’18.1″N 77°51’56.1″W)
