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Battle of Hoke's Run

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Title
Battle of Hoke's Run
Description
The Battle of Falling Waters, also known as the Battle of Hoke’s Run, took place as part of the Manassas Campaign. On July 2, Maj. Gen. Robert Patterson’s division crossed the Potomac River near Williamsport and marched along the main …
Publisher
Date
1861-07-02
Scenario#
18
Scenario Description
The Battle of Falling Waters, also known as the Battle of Hoke’s Run, took place as part of the Manassas Campaign. On July 2, Maj. Gen. Robert Patterson’s division crossed the Potomac River near Williamsport and marched along the main road to Martinsburg. At about 7:30 a.m., Col. Stuart informed Jackson that the Union troops had advanced to within four miles of Camp Stephens. Jackson prepared his force for battle. As Abercrombie’s and Thomas’s Union brigades left the trees, they encountered regiments of Jackson’s brigade, near Hoke’s Run. The Confederates, after delivering a number of volleys, fell back, with the Union following right behind them. The fighting then spread through the wooded areas and farms. While this was happening, Stuart’s cavalry force outflanked the Union left. Stuart found the 15th Pennsylvania Volunteers, Company I, isolated in a clearing and ordered them to surrender, which they did. Stuart then marched the Union prisoners back to the Confederate lines. The intensity of the Confederate fighting withdrawal at Falling Waters, although tactically a Union victory, strategically was a Confederate victory, because not only was the Union advance delayed, it also allowed Jackson to slip away and reinforce the Confederate troops preparing to fight along Bull Run.
Location
Falling Waters, West Virginia
Battle Name
Battle Narrative
The Battle of Hoke's Run, also known as the Battle of Falling Waters or Hainesville, took place on July 2, 1861, in Berkeley County, Virginia as part of the Manassas Campaign of the American Civil War. Notable as an early engagement of Confederate Colonel Thomas J. Jackson and his Brigade of Virginia Volunteers, nineteen days before their famous nickname would originate, this brief skirmish was hailed by both sides as a stern lesson to the other. Acting precisely upon the orders of a superior officer about how to operate in the face of superior numbers, Jackson's forces resisted General Robert Patterson's Union forces briefly and then slowly retreated over several miles.
Narrative Source
Combatants
the Confederacy
the Union
Collection:

Geolocation