Lt R. Blackwell 4th Texas
Sergeant
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2014
- Location
- Atlanta
Ned, if I am interpreting the books I have recently read correctly, most of the day he was at his headquarters and he did not venture far from that spot until late in the day. When he did, he was supposedly so shaken by the carnage, that he did, indeed, hesitate to throw in his largely unused reserves late that day or renew the battle the next day. The one book I have at hand is "Hearts in Conflict" by Curt Anders. He covers Antietam on pp. 245-258 where he certainly gives me the impression that McClellan parked himself at the Pry house two miles from the fighting: "None of this , however could the AoP commander see from the lawn...where battle... had been raging since sunrise". "Couriers had come and gone and McClellan read the messages wigwagged by signalmen". "Little Mac turned his attention to the one sector of the battlefield he could see through his telescope...". "Finally McClellan came himself". "Back at his headquarters, through his telescope, Little Mac could see...". "General McClellan saw their blue waves receding through his telescope."
Admittedly this is only from one chapter of the whole book but from what I recall from other books McClellan did not come very close to the actual fighting. Compare this with Lee riding from crisis point to crisis point, back and forth, issuing orders that were based on real time evidence and where he could see if they were being carried out or not. Constantly he rallied his men right at the front and disposed of his men with fine appreciation of what was going on at that moment. (A lapse in this method would cost him dearly at Gettysburg). This is what prevented the Union from triumphing at Antietam. Lee knew what was going on and McClellan, relying on couriers and wigwags and his telescope, did not. This was not the first time either. On the peninsula earlier that year he did the same thing depending on reports (like Pinkerton's) rather than coming up to the front himself to better appreciate the situation.
I go back to what I wrote earlier. One of McClellan's most egregious flaws was not going up closer to the fighting, moving about the battlefield and getting a "feel" for what was happening there.
Sears makes the same charge in To the Gates of Richmond: The Peninsula Campaign. And as far as I know he is correct. I am pretty sure he stayed on the south side of the Chickahominy during the first two battles. After that (per Wikipedia, but I believe accurate):
On Sunday, June 29, the bulk of McClellan's army concentrated around Savage's Station on the Richmond and York River Railroad, a Federal supply depot since just before Seven Pines, preparing for a difficult crossing through and around White Oak Swamp. It did so without centralized direction because McClellan had personally moved south of Malvern Hill after Gaines's Mill without leaving directions for corps movements during the retreat nor naming a second in command.
....
Most elements of the Union Army had been able to cross White Oak Swamp Creek by noon on June 30. About one third of the army had reached the James River, but the remainder was still marching between White Oak Swamp and Glendale. After inspecting the line of march that morning, McClellan rode south and boarded the ironclad USS Galena on the James.
I don't know offhand where he was during Malvern Hill.