|
|
|
| Village of Hunterstown from the Tate/Felty Ridge |
Hunterstown: North Cavalry
Field of Gettysburg
By Troy Harman, National Park Ranger and Historian
Gettysburg National Parks Service
Hunterstown
Cavalry Battlefield, also known as North Cavalry Field, is a National Shrine waiting to
be fully appreciated and brought into the fold of sacred places visited regularly by patrons of Gettysburg National Military
Park. Fields and barns to either side of the Hunterstown road, just to the south of old town square mark the site of
a significant cavalry fight waged there after 4:00 PM on July 2, 1863. Union participants involved were Michigan Troopers
under Brigadier General George Armstrong Custer versus the Confederacy’s famous Cobb’s Georgia Legion, with support
from Phillips Georgia Legion, the 2nd South Carolina Cavalry and 1st North Carolina Cavalry. They were under the overall direction
of the capable Brigadier General Wade Hampton, who latter replaced J.E.B. Stuart as Robert E. Lee’s cavalry chieftain.
Lines of battle were established a mile apart with Custer’s men establishing their
artillery at Felty-Tate Ridge on the northern end, to oppose Hampton’s
rebel guns atop Brinkerhoff’s Ridge directly south. In the valley between, a fierce hand-to-hand fight would ensue across
the J.G. Gilbert and J. Felty Farms, intact to the present day. It began with Custer ordering elements of the 6th and 7th
Michigan cavalry to dismount and move south on foot beyond and below the ridge, along both sides of the Hunterstown Road.
Concealed by fields carpeted with ripe golden wheat, the Michigan troopers waded inconspicuously forward to the Felty Farm
where some of their best marksmen found excellent cover and elevated fields of fire within the enormous Pennsylvania bank
barn west of the road. Felty’s barn was even large enough to conceal Lieutenant A.C.M. Pennington’s 2nd U.S. Battery
M, 250 yards to the north along the Felty-Tate ridge. Meanwhile, to complete the deployment, dismounted men of the 7th Michigan
formed undetected in the tall wheat east of the Hunterstown Road, to form a cross fire with the 6th Michigan.
Custer had
arranged the perfect trap, but how to lure Confederate cavalrymen into it required another step. To achieve this and complete
the perfect ambush, he would personally lead around sixty mounted men of Company A, 6th Michigan on a daring charge toward
the Confederate position. Because the Hunterstown Road was tightly flanked on both sides with post and rail fences, it was
impossible for more than one company to move at a gallop. Recognizing this, Custer would use Company A as a small shock force
to establish contact with southern troopers. After hitting them hard to get their ire up, he retreated intentionally drawing
them back north to the prepared ambush waiting east and west of the Hunterstown Road at Felty’s barn. Custer, a new
brigadier nearly lost his life in the initial charge in front of the Gilbert farm, where Confederates resisted. If it had
not been for Norville Churchill’s timely rescue of Custer, whisking him out of harm’s way and onto his horse,
later Indian Wars on Western Plains may have taken on a different complexion.
In Kentucky Derby fashion, the horses of Cobb’s Legion raced
in the summer air nose to tail with Company A, for a quarter mile up the narrow Hunterstown Road, all-the-while bouncing
between the fences which hemmed them in like a bowling alley. So caught up in the chase were the Georgians, that they fell
like a hungry mouse right into the trap which was released on them as soon as Union cavalry cleared the waiting crossfire.
Not being able to stop their horses in time, several Confederates raced beyond the barn where Pennington’s artillery
opened at close range, killing five rebel officers. Between the two sides, eleven officers were killed or wounded, indicating the
short struggle was vicious. Although statistics vary, the total losses at Hunterstown range from eighty to one hundred men.
Confederate survivors withdrew south down the Hunterstown Road to the Gilbert Farm and subsequently Brinkerhoff’s Ridge.
With both sides monitoring the other from a mile’s distance, only long range artillery was exchanged the rest of the
evening. At 11:00 PM, Judson Kilpatrick withdrew Custer’s men and the rest of the division with new orders to the Baltimore
Pike.
The significance of this action far exceeds the fight itself, and the ramifications were greater than many realize.
The first of these has to do with Culp’s Hill being saved for the Union on July 2. When Custer enticed Hampton’s
Georgia and South Carolina Cavalrymen into a fight, he prevented them from reaching the left flank of the Army of Northern
Virginia by way of the Hunterstown Road. Jeb Stuart had ordered them there to protect Richard Ewell’s left, while the
latter assaulted Culp’s Hill. When Stuart learned of Union Cavalry at Hunterstown, he countermanded his original order,
to permit Hampton to stay and fight. Ewell has been criticized greatly for not beginning his attack at Culp’s Hill earlier
on July 2, but his delay in part was related to Hampton’s cavalry not arriving to protect him from David Gregg’s
division of Union cavalry sitting squarely on his flank along the Hanover Road. To compensate, Ewell had to reassign 3,000
officers and infantrymen to the Hanover Road. This weakened his main assault upon Culp’s and Cemetery Hills. Indirectly
then, the episode at Hunterstown helped to save the Army of the Potomac's main position at Gettysburg.
Another great consequence of
Hunterstown is that Daniel Sickles Union Third Corps, representing the left flank of that army near the Round Tops, was largely
unprotected by cavalry. Outside of one or two cavalry units doing spot duty there, the Federal flank was vulnerable. This
is so because the Signal Station at Little Round Top incorrectly reported between 1:30 PM and 1:45 PM on July 2, to have spotted
a column of 10,000 Confederates with trains to be marching towards the extreme Union right. What they actually saw was James
Longstreet’s countermarch moving northeast before turning due south. Union Army Headquarters responded by giving David
Gregg orders to take some of his cavalry north from Hanover Road towards Hunterstown and Heidlersburg to ascertain whether
the large Confederate column was coming through by way of modern Route 394 to assault Culp’s Hill and Meade’s
lines of communication and supply below on the Baltimore Pike. Judson Kilpatrick’s Cavalry division was given this assignment
by Gregg. When Custer struck Hampton at Hunterstown, he was actually trying to ascertain whether a column of 10,000 Confederate
Infantry lay beyond.
Had the Round Top Signal Station not crossed its signals, Kilpatrick’s division with
Custer most likely would have moved to protect Sickles’ left. Such a result should have erased the Meade-Sickles controversy,
because Kilpatrick’s men naturally would have discovered, harassed, and delayed Longstreet’s men until Commanding
Union General Meade rectified Sickles’ line. Because Longstreet’s Corps was without cavalry on July 2, Sickles
with Kilpatrick’s help promised a decided advantage for the federals on July 2. Circumstances in Hunterstown sidetracked
this logical scenario. There are many other historical points to make about Hunterstown such as its early status as a rival
with Gettysburg for the county seat, a stopping point for President George Washington during the Whiskey Rebellion of 1794,
an important early crossroads town, and site of a substantial Confederate hospital.
Regarding the hospital connection,
the old town is still filled with the charm of a late 1700’s hamlet, untouched thus far by modern development. Quaint
homes and settings undisturbed, harkening back to another time include Kilpatrick’s Headquarters at the Grass Hotel,
the John Tate House, Barn & Blacksmith Shop where George Washington shod his horse’s shoes in October 1794. One
of the Tate sheds even bears artillery shell marks left from the cavalry battle in 1863. The Great Conewago Presbyterian Church
is another impressive structure from the period, made of stone, and documented as a Confederate Hospital. Each of these dwellings
adds so much to the historic time capsule that is Hunterstown, Pennsylvania.
With that said, every effort
must be made to preserve the principle battlefield at Hunterstown along with the charm and richness of the old town sitting
directly north of it. As development comes to Hunterstown, it must tastefully build around the two and save both. Doing so
is not only imperative with respect to its National Register of Historic Places status, but it is also wise. If developed
right, all Hunterstown property owners can boast a preserved national shrine in the heart of their town that will only increase
in monetary and cultural value.
Finally, as the July 3 cavalry fight, three miles east of Gettysburg, is widely known today
as East Cavalry Field; and as the ill-fated cavalry charge led by Elon Farnsworth on July 3, two miles south of town,
is commonly called South Cavalry Field; so too should the Hunterstown clash, only four miles north of Gettysburg be regarded
as North Cavalry Field. In this same vein, Buford’s cavalry fight one mile west of town on July 1 might be called West
Cavalry Field. In all of these actions, Union cavalry buffered key Union positions in four directions of the compass.
Each site is equally essential to accurately portraying Gettysburg as the most famous battle for human freedom in American
History.
|
|
| 1st Battle Painting by Jared Frederick |
Artist, Jared Frederick
"Beyond those stirring images of flashing sabers and pounding
hooves, are the men who endured the struggle in the wake of incredible hardship. Men who had to rise above the exhaustion,
numbness, and stupor of hard campaigning and respond to the call to arms when it appeared that there was nothing more to give... In spite of all the uncertainties of meeting the enemy, they went forward willingly and gave their all.... It
was not only a test of wills but a triumph of the human spirit, and above all else it is the spirit that endures."
"The Battle of Hunterstown" by Paul Shevchuk
"The day before this happened, when we returned to the vicinity of Gettysburg, near a place
called Hunterstown, I think, our command had a thrilling experience and while charging a body of cavalry down
a lane leading by a barn, ran into an ambuscade of men posted in the (Felty) barn who dealt death and destruction upon us.
Within five minutes some four or five officers were killed and wounded and about fifteen men were slain or wounded. "
Sketch of Cobb Legion Cavalry And Some Incidents and Scenes Remembered.BY WILEY C. HOWARD, OF COMPANY C.
| "The Felty Farm, North Cavalry Battlefield" |
|
|
| Painting by Edwin L. Green, Williamsburg, VA |
"The paintings will have served their purpose if
they encourage others to work toward preserving what is so easily lost forever. Recently a local farmer demolished the barn
which hid Union troops in the ambush George Custer so cleverly contrived for General Hampton's cavalry. Today it is the developers
who threaten to ride roughshod over this town and her surrounding fields. Every effort must be made to prevent that misfortune." Edwin L. Green, Williamsburg, VA
North Cavalry Battlefield Giclees...
|
|
| The Felty Barn, before being taken down |
"Too often, places that matter to us can be lost in a heartbeat
— sometimes even before we realize they will be missed. The best way to save a place that matters is to call attention
to it and value it before it is endangered."
National Trust for Historic Places
To learn more about Barn Preservation...
To aid in the preservation efforts in Hunterstown,
Panoramic Photo Artist, James O. Phelps, Lexington, Va, has offered to donate a portion of all sales
of the Hunterstown panoramics to the Hunterstown Historical Society.
Individual
prints may be ordered through The Historic Tate Farm.

|
| Great Conewago Presbyterian Church |
|
|
Price includes $30 flat-rate shipping. To Pay Online, Click the "Pay-Pal Tab.
|
| 145th Anniversary Monument Dedication |

|
| July 2nd, 2008 / Price $195.00 |
James O. Phelps ...
To Place an Order...
| Battle Flag, at the Custer Museum, Monroe , MI |
|
|
| Photo taken by Jackie Volhken, MI |
"In great deeds something abides. On great fields something stays. Forms change and pass; bodies disappear: But spirits
linger….And reverent men And women from afar, and generations That…we know not of…(are)…drawn To see where…great things were suffered And
done for them…" Maj.
Gen. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain
| First Hunterstown Monument |
|
|
| Dedicated on the 145th Anniversary / July 2nd, 2008 |
Pat Hedgecoth-Stephens,
great grandaughter of Norvell Churchill with Steven Alexander, actor and living historian, George Armstrong Custer. Monument dedication, corner
of RT. 394 and Hunterstown Road, July 2nd, 2008.
Steven Alexander...as George Armstrong Custer
|