One of these particular battles was fought at a place called Sunken Road or "Bloody Lane" Antietam Nat'l Battlefield, Maryland.

One of these particular battles was fought at a place called Sunken Road or "Bloody Lane" Antietam Nat'l Battlefield, Maryland. Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Morey Milbradt / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

C5N64B

File size:

34.4 MB (2.1 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?

Dimensions:

2827 x 4256 px | 23.9 x 36 cm | 9.4 x 14.2 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

October 2007

Location:

Antietam National Military Park, Maryland

More information:

One of these particular battles was fought at a place called Sunken Road or "Bloody Lane". The way this road got the name Bloody Lane is very gruesome yet very interesting. Sunken Road (Bloody Lane) was a clay road that had been worn down through the years by rain and wagons. Farmers used it primarily to bypass Sharpsburg. Major General D.H. Hill was the commander of the Confederate division. He positioned all of his soldiers (about 2600 men) along this road waiting for Major General William French and his division of Union soldiers (about 5000 men) to come over the hill so they could attack. The Union soldiers did not realize that Sunken Road had six angles but was all one road. Hill knew this and hid all his men throughout these angles. When French's men came over the rise, Hill's men staggered them with a powerful volley delivered at a range on less than one hundred yards.