MAPS OF HISTORY · ON THIS DAY · July 16 · 1863
ON THIS DAY · 16 JULY 1863
New York draft riots

13–16 Jul 1863 — Rioters against a draft the rich can buy out of ($300) turn on the city’s Black residents: at least 105 dead and a Colored Orphan Asylum burned before troops from Gettysburg restore order. The war’s hatreds did not stop at the front line. Remember.
THE MOMENT IN CONTEXT
The year opens with Lee’s masterpiece and its price. At Chancellorsville in May, outnumbered two to one, he splits his army twice and routs the Union flank at dusk — and Stonewall Jackson, scouting ahead in the dark, is shot by his own men and dies eight days later. Emboldened, Lee takes 75,000 men north (the long red arrow) — one more invasion to feed Virginia’s exhausted farms, wreck a Union army on its own soil, and hand the North’s peace party a case before the 1864 season. The armies collide by accident at a Pennsylvania crossroads town. Three days at Gettysburg: the Union fishhook line bends and holds — Little Round Top by minutes on day two — and on day three Pickett’s 12,000 walk a mile of open field into massed artillery. Do the arithmetic Lee did not: half of them do not come back. 51,000 casualties in three days, and the Army of Northern Virginia never mounts a strategic offensive again.
From Chapter 7 — The Twin Turning of The American Civil War, 1861–1865 (JUL 1863).
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TEACH THIS IN 5 MINUTES
- Why it happened — Why Lee rolled the dice again. He told Davis the choice was stark: stand still and starve slowly behind the Rappahannock, or invade and force a decision while the army still had…
- The turn — Vicksburg, 4 July 1863. Gettysburg is the war’s most famous battle; Vicksburg is its more decisive one. Gettysburg repelled — the Army of Northern Virginia escaped to fight…
- What it changed — The Confederacy is halved. Scrub the map forward and watch the trans-Mississippi (Texas, Arkansas, west Louisiana) fade from the war: still charcoal, but strategically an…
Then ask the room: Pickett’s Charge has become the war’s emblem of doomed valor. Was it a blunder, or a calculated risk that failed? The argued answer is on the chapter page →
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