Battle of Spotsylvania • Tour the Battlefield • Monuments & Markers • The Armies
The Confederate Earthworks wayside marker is along the walking trail at the Bloody Angle, Stop three on the Auto Tour. It is next to the ‘Struggle for the Bloody Angle’ wayside marker about 200 yards east of the parking area.
The Confederate Earthworks
These modest mounds are all that remain of the Muleshoe Salient’s once-formidable earthworks. Begun by the Confederates on the night of May 8, the works were four feet high, with a two-foot-deep trench. Dirt from the trench was thrown against the outer face of the logs to create a bulletproof barrier. As an added measure of safety, the defenders left a small gap beneath the top log through which they could fire without exposing their heads.
Because of the Salient’s curved shape, Confederates here were exposed not only to bullets coming from the front but also from the sides. To protect themselves from enemy crossfire, they constructed a series of shorter barriers, called traverses, at right angles to the main line. Although the traverses have largely disappeared, evidence of them can still be seen in the rumpled contour of the ground.
They had felled timber and constructed excellent earthworks, somewhat after the style of building a log house with earth well thrown up in front. This line of fortifications was divided off, therefore, like stalls in a stable, the compartments being formed by the timbers which supported the other timbers, which with the earth constituted a splendid protection for the men behind them.
Lieutenant Harvey S. Wells,
84th Pennsylvania Volunteers
Walking on earthworks destroys them. Please help the National Park Service preserve these and other earthworks by remaining on the trail.
(go to the main Tour Stop 3 page)
(go to the main Battle of Spotsylvania Auto Tour page)