Winchester III

aka Oequon Creek
Frederick and Clarke Counties, Virginia
September 19, 1864

After US Major General William Tecumseh Sherman captured Atlanta on September 2, US General Grant and President Lincoln agreed that US General Sheridan should move against CS General Early. When Grant came from Petersburg to Harpers Ferry to meet with Sheridan, he found that Sheridan was ready with a plan. Sheridan had just learned from Rebecca Wright, a Quaker schoolteacher in Winchester, that he had more than twice as many troops as Early. She reported that on September 15, in response to CS General Robert E. Lee's orders, Early had started CS General Anderson back to Richmond with CS General Kershaw's Division and CS Major Wilfred E. Cutshaw's artillery battalion so that Lee could extend his Richmond-Petersburg line to protect his flanks. Grant had cut the railroad between Petersburg and Weldon, North Carolina, in the battle of Globe Tavern in mid-August. When Sheridan outlined to Grant his strategy to control the Shenandoah Valley, the general responded with the brief order "Go in." Early had further weakened his force by dispatching two infantry divisions to raid the B & O Railroad at Martinsburg and had only two divisions to hold Winchester.

On September 19, Sheridan launched his bold dash for Winchester with 37,000 men. The three Union infantry corps marched along the Berryville Pike, crossed Opequon Creek, and headed west into the two-mile-long Berryville Canyon. US Brigadier General James H. Wilson's cavalry division riding ahead surprised CS General Ramseur's Division at the western entrance to the canyon. While they battled, US Major General Horatio G. Wright's VI Corps moved slowly through the narrow canyon. The wagons and guns held back his infantry as well as that of US Major General William H. Emory's XIX Corps. This "stupid clutter" set Sheridan's timetable back four hours, and he lost the opportunity to strike Early while the Confederate forces were separated. Early had time to concentrate three of his divisions along a wooded ridgeline east of the town. His line extended from Abrams Creek north across the Berryville Pike to Red Bud Run, with artillery batteries on the high ground. CS Major General John C. Breckinridge covered the Valley Pike north of town with CS Brigadier General Gabriel C. Wharton's infantry and CS General Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry.

The Federals attacked just before noon. On their right US Brigadier General Cuvier Grover's XIX Corps division advanced through the woods and attacked across an open field (later known as Middle Field). CS General Gordon's Division hit them with a withering fire, then counterattacked, and inflicted nearly 1,500 Federal casualties in less than an hour. When Emory led his Second Division forward, he was trapped for two hours in "that basin of Hell." On the left the VI Corps was successful against Ramseur until CS General Rodes saw a gap between the two Federal corps, sent his division in, and knocked out a Federal division. US Brigadier General David A. Russell's division counterattacked and halted the Confederate drive. Both Rodes and Russell were killed.

US General Merritt's cavalry division crossed Opequon Creek about two miles north of the Berryville Pike crossing but was slowed by fire from Wharton's infantry, deployed to block the Union advance by Breckinridge, commanding the army's left flank. Fitzhugh Lee's troopers were on the infantry's left. Sheridan extended the Federal line north of Red Bud Run with US General Crook's VIII Corps. While US Captain Henry A. du Pont's eighteen cannons fired from a hill opposite Gordon's flank, the infantry attacked across Redbud Run at the Hackwood house and drove the Confederates back toward Winchester.

Merritt and US Brigadier General William W. Averell attacked Early's compact L-shaped line, which covered the Valley and Berryville Pikes. In one of the largest mounted charges of the war, their five cavalry brigades thundered down the Valley Pike and crumpled the Confederate left. Early ordered a general retreat to Fisher's Hill with the Federals in close pursuit. Sheridan wired Washington that he had sent Early "whirling through Winchester." Early lost one fourth of his men, including 2,000 taken prisoner, in the first of the climactic battles in the Shenandoah Valley campaign.

Result(s): Union victory

Location: Frederick and Clarke Counties, Virginia

Campaign: Sheridan's Shenandoah Valley Campaign (August-December 1864)

Date(s): September 19, 1864

Principal Commanders: Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan [US]; Lt. Gen. Jubal A. Early [CS]

Forces Engaged: Army of the Shenandoah [US 39,240]; Army of the Valley [CS 15,200]

Estimated Casualties: 8,630 total (US 5,020; CS 3,610)

Links: The Battle of Winchester/Opequon Creek -

http://users.erols.com/julie-mike/13wvi/html/opequan_creek.html

 

Third Winchester Battlefield Preservation - http://www.civilwar.org/travelandevents/t_vs_thirdwinchester.htm

Designers:  Luciano Bassotti

Scenario Download:
NOTE:  This is the final version of the game.
  For BGBR 32-bit last version, PBEM only Files
  How to install:

This game is designed for BGBR engine (Talonsoft Battleground Bull Run); this package simply add a new module, and not affect the scenarios provided with the original game. 

The BGBRUnits file is compatible with the original and other BGBR mods.

SET UP

- Copy Units.bitmap file into BGBR main directory;

- Create a new folder into BGBR main directory and name it Winchester III;

- Copy all others files (except Units.bitmap file) into the Winchester III folder.

See Scenario notes below.

 Map Files

  Last updated June 24, 2004
  WN3Main0.zip (711 Kb)

  WN3Main1.zip (1,961 Kb)
  WN3Main2.zip (10,359 Kb)
  WN3Main3.zip (3,885 Kb)

 Other files
  WN3Others.zip (1,108 Kb)

Scenario Files
 WN3Scen.zip (24 Kb)
  

Unit File (update November 2, 2004)
 
BGBRUnits.zip (1,219 Kb)

     
  How to Start Custom BG-Series Battles Or use Wakeman's ACWCO Launcher
     
  For HPS-CC, PBEM only  
  About the files:
These are modifications for the HPS Campaign Corinth
game, using standard HPS rules.
These files are available at ACW Campaign Game Scenario's Web Site

Follow the instructions posted there for installation and play.

 

 

Scenario Information:

Opequon or Third Winchester was the largest and most desperately contested battle of the Civil War in the Shenandoah Valley, resulting in more than 9,000 casualties. The battle was a turning point of the war in the Valley, marking the rise of Sheridan.

September 19, 1864; 36 Turns [Historical]

About 0200 hours Brig. Gen. Wesley Merritt's cavalry division of three brigades (Custer, Devin, Lowell) advanced toward Seiver's and Locke's fords from the vicinity of Berryville. Their crossings were resisted by Brig. Gen. John McCausland's cavalry brigade dismounted behind barricades. The Reserve brigade (Lowell) pushed across at Seiver's Ford against fitful opposition. Custer's brigade met heavier resistance at Locke's Ford and made several mounted charges before securing a foothold on the western bank.

At earliest light, Brig. Gen. James Wilson's cavalry division crossed the Opequon at Spout Spring and advanced through a defile known as Berryville Canyon, followed by the US infantry (VI Corps, XIX Corps, and Crook's corps). At the canyon's mouth the cavalry met the first elements of Maj. Gen. Stephen Ramseur's CS division and drove them back on their supports. Johnston's brigade deployed across the pike and held back the Union advance, while the rest of the division came into line to cover the Berryville Pike and Senseny Road farther to the south. The US cavalry launched several mounted and dismounted charges, driving the CS infantry back about 150 yards to the vicinity of the Dinkle Barn. 

This historical scenarios starts at 8.00 AM, when the Union infantry, still bogged down in the narrow confines of Berryville Canyon, starts to deploy covered by the fatigued federal cavalry.

In this battle the Federals stronlgy outnumbered the Confederates. Only for expert CS officers!

September 19, 1864  36 Turns [Hypothetical]

The background and initial situation is similar to the historical scenario.  This fictional scenarios starts at 8.00 AM, when the Union infantry, still bogged down in the narrow confines of Berryville Canyon, starts to deploy covered by the fatigued federal cavalry. Dense columns of federal infantry start to emerge from the canyon; CS generals pull forward their men to make a first line of defences, waiting the separate  contingents marching in their support from all parts of Virginia’s soil.

CS forces added:

- Breckinridge's command from the Department of West Virginia and East Tennessee;

- Colston's command from Lynchburg;

- Ewell' command from Richmond;

- Mosby's command from Northern Virginia (operating behind the federal lines);

- Anderson's command detached form the ANV.