Union Artillery at the Morris Farm, Four Oaks, NC, USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member NCDaywalker
N 35° 18.502 W 078° 18.565
17S E 744625 N 3910561
One of the stops on the auto auto-tour of the Bentonville Battlefield, this marker assists the reader in understanding the troop movements and timelines.
Waymark Code: WMXF01
Location: North Carolina, United States
Date Posted: 01/04/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member MountainWoods
Views: 0

"A point approximately 400 yards in front of you marks the center of a line of Union cannons positioned on the Morris Farm on March 19, 1865. These massed guns played a significant role in blunting the final Confederate attacks on the first day of fighting at Bentonville. Four batteries (of four guns each) were arrayed on both sides of a ravine, north of the Goldsboro Road. These sixteen guns held commanding angles of fire across the open fields to your right and behind you. An additional four-gun battery in position south of the road was joined by one gun of the 19th Indiana Battery. The 19th Indiana saw dramatic action earlier in the day at Cole’s plantation, where three of its guns were captured during the main Confederate attack. In the most intense artillery barrage of the three-day engagement at Bentonville, Union batteries on the Morris farm punished Confederate troops with spherical case shot and canister rounds at close range.

“The
Marker on the Bentonville Battlefield image. Click for full size.
By Bill Coughlin, August 3, 2010
2. Marker on the Bentonville Battlefield
enemy’s…artillery…concealed in the woods was very deadly….About half of our regiments….had come out into the open, in a field where these was nothing to conceal or protect them….Our men fell rapidly….under what seemed a tremendous concentrated firing upon us.”
Pvt. Robert W. Sanders, 2nd South Carolina Artillery (fighting infantry, Elliot’s Brigade)

'The Rebs…undertook to carry a new line I established, in the angle of which I left a marshy interval commanded at canister distance by twelve pieces of [XX Corps] artillery….They were terribly punished….They left lots of dead officers and men, especially when the canister swept them on the left front.'
Bvt. Gen. Alpheus S. Williams, commanding XX Corps.

'The five batteries were opened at a distance less than seven hundred yards, throwing canister and spherical case into the wavering mass of rebels, the discharges being as rapid for a time as the ticks of a lever watch. Smoke settled down over the guns as it grew dark…and the flashes seen through it seemed like a steady, burning fire, and powder and peach blossoms perfumed the air….Captain Winegar…who ‘drew a good bow’ at Gettysburg and Chancellorsville, says he never witnessed such artillery fire.'


E.D. Westfall, New York Herald correspondent present with the Union XX Corps during the battle for the Morris farm.

'[The artillery was] so loud that we had to yell to make our nearest neighbors understand us…while the ground trembled under our feet.'
William Grunert, Illinois soldier in Case’s brigade."

Source:
Type of site: Battlefield

Phone Number: (910) 594-0789

Admission Charged: No Charge

Website: [Web Link]

Address: Not listed

Driving Directions: Not listed

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dream chaser visited Union Artillery at the Morris Farm, Four Oaks, NC, USA 08/02/2021 dream chaser visited it
NCDaywalker visited Union Artillery at the Morris Farm, Four Oaks, NC, USA 05/20/2018 NCDaywalker visited it

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