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Battle of Fair Oaks and Darbytown Road

October 27-28, 1864

Fought from October 27-28, 1864, during the Petersburg Campaign, the Battle of Fair Oaks and Darbytown Road was the last failed Union attempt to capture Richmond, Virginia in 1864.

On March 10, 1864, President Abraham Lincoln appointed Ulysses S. Grant as General-in-Chief of the Armies of the United States. Grant brought with him, from his successes in the Western Theater of the war, a reputation for the doggedness that Lincoln was seeking in his generals. Unlike previous Union generals, whose leadership was marked by their own timidity, Grant was tenacious. Upon his arrival in Washington, Grant drafted a plan to get the various Union armies in the field to act in concert. He also devised his Overland Campaign to invade east-central Virginia. Unlike previous campaigns into that area, Grant's plan focused upon defeating General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, rather than capturing or occupying geographic locations. Grant instructed General George Meade, who commanded the Army of the Potomac, "Wherever Lee goes, there you will go also." Grant realized that, with the superior resources he had at his disposal, Lee was destined to lose a war of attrition, as long as Northern troops persistently engaged the Confederates.

On May 4, 1864, Grant launched his Overland Campaign, when the Army of the Potomac crossed the Rappahannock and Rapidan Rivers, occupying an area locally known as the Wilderness. For the next eight weeks the two sides engaged in a series of horrific battles that produced unprecedented numbers of casualties. Following a bloody frontal assault at Cold Harbor that cost the Federals an estimated thirteen thousand casualties, Grant abandoned his hope to defeat Lee's army head-on. Instead, Grant decided to isolate the Army of Northern Virginia at Richmond and, then, slowly to starve it into submission by cutting off its supply lines. The key to the plan was capturing Petersburg, Virginia. By early June 1864, Grant's forces were digging in around the east side of Petersburg.

Petersburg, Virginia, is located on the south bank of the Appomattox River, roughly twenty miles below Richmond. During the Civil War, the two cities were connected by the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad, which served as an important conduit for supplies to the Confederate capital. In addition to the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad, two other rail lines converged at Petersburg. The Weldon Railroad (also called the Petersburg and Weldon Railroad) connected Petersburg to the Confederacy's last linkage to overseas markets at Wilmington, North Carolina. Farther to the west, the South Side Railroad joined Petersburg to Lynchburg, Virginia and points west. If Grant could cut these rail lines, Lee would be forced to abandon Richmond.

Although Grant's focus during the summer and fall of 1864 was on cutting off supply routes into Petersburg, he also launched several assaults north of the James River against Richmond. Grant recognized that forcing Lee to defend two fronts would thin the Confederate defenses around Petersburg, thereby enhancing the Northerner’s expectations for success. Most of the action on the outskirts of Richmond during the summer centered on Darbytown and New Market Roads, which ran roughly parallel to each other into the Confederate capital from the southeast.

At the Battle of Chaffin's Farm and New Market Heights (September 29-30, 1864) Union soldiers captured Fort Harrison and other portions of Richmond's outer defenses along Darbytown and New Market Roads. A week later, at the Battle of Battle of Darbytown and New Market Roads (October 7, 1864), Federals forced Lee's soldiers to retreat to Richmond's inner defenses following a failed Confederate attempt to regain the ground lost in September. On October 11, Lee ordered the construction of new breastworks outside of Richmond's inner defenses. At the Battle of Darbytown Road (October 13, 1864), Union forces failed to prevent the Rebels from completing their new fortifications.

On October 27, 1864, Grant launched another two-pronged offensive against Petersburg and Richmond. While Major General Winfield Scott Hancock's Union forces south of Petersburg attempted to secure the Boydton Plank Road, Major General Benjamin Butler's Army of the James once again attacked the Richmond defenses around Darbytown Road. Grant intended Butler's assault to serve as a diversion for Hancock's offensive, but Butler had aspirations of capturing the Confederate capital.

Butler's plan called for Major General Alfred Terry's 10th Corps to demonstrate as far north as the Charles City Road. Meanwhile Major General Godfrey Weitzel's 18th Corps would follow Major General August Kautz's cavalry division around Terry's right and move west over the Williamsburg Road to attack the left flank of the Confederate defenses near Fair Oaks. If the Federals could turn the Rebel line, Butler believed that Kautz's cavalry, followed by Weitzel's infantry, could proceed west on the Williamsburg Road and storm the Confederate capital.

The mission began at approximately 4:30 a.m. on October 27, when Terry's soldiers left their entrenchments near New Market Road and moved north over the same ground that they had covered during the Battle of Darbytown Road two weeks earlier. As planned, Terry advanced to the Charles City Road (which ran roughly parallel to the Darbytown and New Market Roads) and halted.

Confusion between Kautz and Weitzel delayed the arrival of the 18th Corps at the Williamsburg Road until 1 p.m. Weitzel then spent the next two hours performing reconnaissance and positioning of his troops. By that time, General James Longstreet, who had recently assumed command of the Confederate defenses at Richmond, surmised Weitzel's intentions and shifted Major General Charles W. Field's division to reinforce his left flank.

At approximately 3:30 p.m., Weitzel finally launched his assault by sending only two of his seven brigades forward across three hundred yards of open ground. The Confederate defenders greeted the Yankees with a hail of musket and artillery fire that sent their adversaries fleeing. Weitzel quickly decided that he had experienced enough and withdrew. Later, under the cover of darkness, he and Terry returned to the main Union lines at New Market Road.

In his after-action summary, Longstreet reported that "The fruits of these successes, so creditable to the officers and men engaged, and resulting in the complete defeat of a most determined effort to take Richmond on the north side, amounted to (11) eleven stands of colors, captured in the assault of Field’s position, and about (600) six hundred prisoners. . . ."

The Battle of Fair Oaks and Darbytown Road was the last failed Union attempt to threaten Richmond during 1864. The Rebel victory cost the Union over 1,700 casualties compared to only one hundred for the Confederacy.

Ohio units that participated in the Battle of Fair Oaks and Darbytown Road included:

Infantry units:

62nd Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry

67th Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry

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