VA -- Guinea Station -- Jackson Shrine:
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- Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
- SHRINE_970717_01.JPG: Jackson Shrine; TC Chandler's Fairfield Plantation
- SHRINE_970717_02.JPG: Jackson Shrine; Jackson's Bed
- Description of Subject Matter: During the battle of Chancellorsville in May 1863, Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson was wounded on May 2 by his own men. His arm was amputated (buried at the Lacy House) and then he was moved south by carriage for treatment. He was to be put on a railroad train at Guinea Station but Union cavalry had destroyed the lines south of the station and he was put up in the caretaker's house at Fairfield plantation. There, he briefly recovered and then succumbed to pneumonia. He died in this house on May 10.
A year later, Union forces under Grant would move through this area. Gen. Winfield Hancock's Union Second Corps left Spotsylvania Court House after sunset on May 20, 1864. It trudged south along dark roads, headed toward Milford Station on the Richmond, Fredericksburg, and Potomac Railroad. Grant had ordered Hancock to Milford in the hope of luring the Confederate army out of its Spotsylvania trenches to a place where he could attack it and have the advantage.
Hancock reached Guinea Station about dawn, May 21. Pickets of the 9th Virginia Cavalry fired at the Union column, then disappeared to spread the alarm. Hancock continued south. As soon as his troops left Guinea Station, the Confederates began tearing up the Downer's Bridge, less than a mile behind you. A spirited attack by the 114th Pennsylvania Volunteers saved the bridge for the Union, however, enabling Warren's Fifth Corps to cross the river there later in the afternoon.
Grant established his headquarters at Motley House on May 21. Later, he wandered over to Fairfield and spoke to the owner about the death of Jackson. To prevent vandalism from his own men, he posted a Union guard to protect the property.
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