Let me rephrase, there is no contemporary evidence that there was an intention for a dawn attack. Captain Johnston was not sent out on his reconnaissance until around dawn and did not return until some time after 9am. Lee wrote, "Under these circumstances, it was decided not to attack until the arrival of Longstreet, two of whose divisions (those of Hood and McLaws) encamped about 4 miles in the rear during the night." If Longstreet was supposed to make a dawn attack, even Lee did not act as if one was being missed. Much of the literature of a dawn attack was in the back and forth between Longstreet and Early, et al. in the years after Lee's death when Longstreet began criticizing Lee and Early was bashing Longstreet.
There are three pieces of
contemporary evidence, at least. One was the order of Longstreet's chief of artillery, who on the 1st wrote his men to be in preparation for a battle. The second is Ewell's report, which stated that Lee had given out plans for him and Longstreet to attack before any reconaissance was sent out, let lone returned, during the morning. Early's report says the same thing.
Longstreet, after the war, simply said that on the 1st he was ordered to attack early the next day. His chief of artillery's order corroborates this.
AL Long wrote the same thing after the war, explaining the conference Longstreet spoke about, and mentioning that AP Hill was there.
Ewell's report, a contemporary source, mentions the same thing.
Early's report, a contemporary source, also mentions it.
Early also wrote a statement after the war, explaining how Lee came to the Second Corps Headquarters to explain his plans to Ewell and others. However, some modern historians have let their Longstreet sympathies get the better of them by throwing out literally everything Early wrote of the war. This is because Early remembered Lee as saying the attack was to be at sunrise, although really the attack was merely supposed to be as early as possible.
Lee did not openly censure others in his reports. When he said he was waiting for Longstreet's arrival, he is leaving it obvious that Longstreet was 4 miles away the night before, but that it took him about 12 hours or more to make that march. He could not attack as planned because Longstreet was taking forever to get to the field. There fore he "had to wait for Longstreet's arrival." At that point the Union troops had Cemetery Ridge defended, and Lee had to draw up a new plan based on his recon. reports.
Where did you get this whole "Lee waited until late the next morning" narrative from? I have asked others, but no one has been able or willing to share.
I disagree that Longstreet held McLaws too long. The whole point was for Hood to launch his assault and draw troops in his direction which may have led to a weak point on McLaws' front. Besides, Kershaw was not really all that far behind Anderson's Brigade with Anderson eventually attacking alongside the Palmetto boys.
I have no idea what Longstreet's tactical intentions were, as I have never seen his orders to Hood and McLaws. I think they were verbal only. In that case, Longstreet ordered Hood to advance. Then, he waited a while. Then, he ordered McLaws to advance.
This is not en echelon, because Longstreet deprived Hood of McLaws' flank support. That much was intentional. Longstreet and McLaws both observed the fighting, and McLaws even grew impatient at Longstreet's delay. By the time Longstreet gave him the ok, it was too late for any tactical formation to take place. It was a piecemeal attack. Maybe he made a mistake in judgement, and wasn't just brooding, but he did not do anything by the book.
Longstreet offered to attack as soon as Pickett was up but when Lee asked how far back he was, it was explained that Pickett was several hours to the rear and simply would not be up much before mid-morning. That was far too late for an early attack and Ewell was already heavily engaged on Culp's Hill so Lee decided that he was going to need a Plan B.
Longstreet doesn't "offer" to attack. That is insubordination. He argued and bickered until Lee's amiability got the better of him, and he decided to make Longstreet feel important by ceding to his desires.
We'll have to agree to disagree here. The plans were all Lee and were very much against Longstreet's wishes. And Lee taking a strong arm simply wasn't his style and I'm not sure that the army would have been any more efficient if he had since it would have been so out of character.
Ryan
I agree that the plans were Lee's, as much as Longstreet stuck by them. But they were not Lee's original plans. Lee's first plan was to attack Cemetery Ridge as early as possible, but he had to change this when Longstreet arrived late. His second plan was to attack the southern end of Cemetery Ridge, but this went to pieces because his recon. was faulty and Longstreet delievered a piecemeal attack (It may have failed even if Longstreet delivered a solid attack). The third plan was to resume the attack on the 3rd, which Longstreet resisted.
They were all Lee's plans. He was polite to a fault.