Stonewall Jackson Mortally Wounded
Stonewall Jackson Mortally Wounded

On May 2, 1863, Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson was mortally wounded at the battle of Chancellorsville.
The man considered to be one of the most gifted tactical commanders in the nation’s history began life humbly. His great-grandparents arrived in America on a prison ship, indentured for committing larceny in London.
Thomas Jackson’s father and sister died of typhoid fever in 1826, and his mother a few years later. Jackson shuttled between relatives for years, suffering abuse along the way. Jackson educated himself and once taught his uncle’s slave to read in exchange for pine knots. The young slave used his reading skills to escape to Canada. Jackson finished his education at West Point, where classmates recalled he was so poorly trained in social skills he didn’t know which knife or fork to use at a meal. Jackson began at the bottom of his class yet graduated 17th. While serving in the Mexican-American War, he earned more promotions than any other officer.
In 1859, Jackson bought a home in Lexington, where he taught, though he was considered a poor teacher, earning the nickname “Tom Fool.” He also organized Sunday school classes for slaves and free blacks. It was the only home he ever owned, and Jackson would live in it for just two years before leaving his pregnant wife for the Civil War. He would never return.

While an instructor at the Virginia Military Institute, Jackson and his artillery were sent to Harper’s Ferry to stand guard at the execution of John Brown. When the Civil War began, Jackson’s decision mirrored that of most Virginians. He remained loyal to his state. A year and a half later, Jackson relentlessly drilled Confederate troops that would become known as the “Stonewall Brigade” at the same location.
When Confederate troops appeared to be losing the First Battle of Bull Run on July 21, 1861, it was Jackson’s men who reinforced them at Henry House Hill and stopped the Union assault. Another general reportedly urged his overwhelmed men to reform their lines by pointing at Jackson, who was “standing like a stone wall.” Following the Confederate victory, Jackson was promoted to major general and headquartered in Winchester, Virginia, with command of the Valley District.

Jackson emerged as one of the most charismatic generals of the Confederacy – a force of nature that bedeviled Union leaders and struck fear in the nation’s capital. Said Jackson, “Always mystify, mislead and surprise the enemy; and when you strike and overcome him, never let up in the pursuit. Never fight against heavy odds if you can hurl your own force on only a part of your enemy and crush it. A small army may thus destroy a large one, and repeated victory will make you invincible.”

With Stonewall in command, his men defeated the Union Army single-handedly in three different battles even though they were outnumbered 4 to 1. His aggressive strategy kept McDowell guessing throughout the Valley Campaign. Never confident where Jackson might strike – or even where his army was – McDowell was forced to detach significant numbers of troops to guard Washington and other strategic locations.
Unaware Jackson’s orders were only to guard Richmond, Lincoln made his defeat a priority. McDowell and John C. Frémont were ordered to converge forces at Strasburg and cut off his escape route in the Shenandoah Valley. Moving with remarkable speed, the 17,000-member Stonewall Brigade traveled 646 miles in 48 days and won five stunning victories against a combined Union force of 60,000 men.
Jackson’s fame grew in proportion to his stunning successes. At the Second Battle of Bull Run, he captured all the supplies in the Union Army depot. At Fredericksburg, his men held off a strong Union assault that helped lead to Confederate victory. At Chancellorsville, Lee sent Jackson’s men on one of the most daring missions of the war, ending with a significant Confederate victory against a Union army twice its size.

Then, on the night of May 2, as Jackson and his staff were returning to camp, the 18th North Carolina Infantry mistook them for a Union Cavalry force. The North Carolina troops shouted “Halt, who goes there?” To which Jackson’s staff frantically shouted numerous replies. They weren’t convinced, believing it to be a “Yankee trick,” and fired on Jackson and his men. Jackson was hit three times and several of his men and their horses were killed. In the ensuing confusion, Jackson was dropped from his stretcher while his men came under artillery fire. After his arm was amputated, Thomas C. Chandler offered his plantation as a recovery site, but Jackson suggested using his office instead. While his doctors believed he would recover, Jackson had developed pneumonia and eventually died on May 10.
Jackson’s last words were, “Let us cross over the river, and rest under the shade of the trees.” While Robert E. Lee had won his most stunning victory of the war at Chancellorsville, he lost the man he described as his “right arm.” With his death, the South lost its best hope for winning the war.
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I love these daily posts.
An ironic end to a world class warrior. Great article Mystic!
It’s so much fun going back into my collection and looking over the stamps that Mystic talks about in their daily “This day in history” Mystic does so much by informing collectors about our rich history. Thanks again.
A great man as well as superb general and leader. Notice how he empowered blacks in his life.
Amazing fellow!
Another great story! “The good die young” and by his own troops—what irony.
Stonewall Jackson is a timeless inspiration to all. I salute this forgotten liberator today.
I always admired Jackson as a great general and human being
A great general, no doubt, but he fought for a terrible cause. We should never forget that.
“A terrible cause”? As with any cause or historical event, it must be viewed NOT through today’s lens but that of those times. An example: World War II saw the Japanese (among others) being viewed as our mortal enemies. Today, they are our Asian allies and friends in so many ways. It puzzles (and disturbs) me that so much of our Civil War history (flags, monuments, images, etc.) is seen as “evil or “racist” when the people of that era had a totally different point of view. Now, please DON’T misunderstand me; I in no way condone the evils of today’s “political correctness” movement nor do I condone treating any human in a discriminatory way. That is just plain wrong! But we can not and should not erase the remembrances of the past from our history books. These remembrances are the primary way we can learn from the past so that those days of mistreating people solely by their race, religion or ethnicity do not repeat themselves. Therefore, these symbols are not so much a commemoration of past evils as much as a reminder to not repeat history…as it seems we are so prone to do.
Read Alexander Stephens’ “Cornerstone Speech” to understand how the vice-president of the Confederacy thought about the cause.when he gave the speech on March 21, 1861.
My thoughts EXACTLY!
People today who are of the belief that erasing the reminders of our history are surely setting future generations up to repeat it at a different time…
One can only wonder what might our country be today if General Jackson had recovered from his injuries and gone on to lead the South to victory.