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File Details: AIEEm, 400 DPI, TIFF, Original Photograph, 9.4 Mb

Image ID: AIEE

Credit:

by Gardner (Alexander)

Date:

1862.09

Negative Size:

8 in. x 10 in.

Locations & Lines:

Antietam MD; Antietam Creek MD; Maryland; Sharpsburg & Boonsboro Pike

Military Units:

CS Army; US Army

Structures & Establishments:

Burnside’s Bridge (Antietam Creek)

Sources:

Library of Congress; National Archives; University of Maryland (Baltimore County); USAMHI – MOLLUS collection

Gardner’s Photographic Sketch Book Of The War. Vol. 1, No. 20. Burnside Bridge, Across Antietam Creek, Maryland. September, 1862. One mile below Sharpsburg on Antietam Creek, a stone structure, known as the “Burnside Bridge,” crosses the stream. Bold bluffs, crowned with oaks and fringed with tangled bushes, form a most delightful valley, through which the miniature river, broken here and there by tiny cascades, hurries down to the Potomac.
It was at this point that some of the most desperate fighting of the battle of Antietam occurred. The right of the Federal line was several miles above, and with the centre hotly engaged, the Confederates slowly forcing them back, while General Burnside, commanding the Ninth Corps, was ordered to carry this point and turn the enemy’s right. As is partially shown by the photograph, the banks of the stream were very steep, and well defended by rifle pits which were covered by the guns of the Confederates on the ridge in the back-ground. The assaulting column suffered heavily as it approached the bridge, and, in crossing, was exposed to a murderous fire, through which it rapidly pressed, breaking over the lines of the enemy like a resistless wave, and sweeping him from the hillside. Here our troops again formed under a heavy artillery fire, and pushed forward into the standing corn, out of which a second line of Confederates suddenly arose and renewed the contest, which lasted for many hours, finally resulting in our victory. At the close of the fight the dead and wounded on the field here presented seemed countless. The Confederates were buried where they fell, and our own dead carefully interred in groups, which were enclosed with the material of fences overthrown in the struggle. The stone wall extending from the bridge still bears evidences of the battle, and it is the only monument of many gallant men who sleep in the meadow at its side.

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