0 ADDRESS DELIVERED AT P4T74108W, - ON TELIC 2-1!' NINETEENTH OF NOVEISTETIii AT THE CONSECRATION OF THE CEMETERY PREPARED ,FOR TRR •iNTIRME.Nt OF'THE REMAINS OF THOSE - Y l • holell on The Ist, .2ntl, and and of July I • t THE BATTLE.% AT THAT PLACE. BY EDWARD EVER ETT , ---;11 was appointed by law, in Athens, that *Alke Obsequies of the citizens who fell in bat- Ate , should be performed at the public ex .oense, and in the most honorable manner. !Their bones_werecarefully gathered up from the funeral pyre, where .their _bodies were ognsumed, and brought licene to the city. "Were, for three days_bethre the interment, llerlay in state, beneath ' tents of honor, to +deceive the, votive offerings of friends and; ;,,-dowers,—flowers, weapons, p precious orna• - s tneots, painted vases (wonders of art, which after two thousand years, adorn the museums lintodern Europe,) the last tributes of sur 'ilirfvhig affection. 'ten cops of funeral cy &press received the honorable deposit, .one for lof the tribes of the city, and an, elev , . i c ti in memory of the unrecogised, but not,. unhonored„dead, and of those Orliose remains could not berecovered. .Ou kthe fourth' day the mournfcl procession was formed ; mothers, ivives,•sisters, daughters, the way, and to them it was permitted, 4 Ty'ihe simplicity of ancient manners, to ut 4er aloud their lamentations -for the beloved ilind the lost. The.male relatives of the de ++Ned followed ; citizens and strangers (dos- - as * iid the train. Thus marshalled they moved *ln' the place of interment in that famous iVeramicus,. the most beautiful suburb 'of -413bens. which had been adorned by Cimon, ,Itlr son of Miltiades, with walks -and foun tains and columns ; whose groves were filled * iiith altars, shrines, and. temples ; whose fltitisdens were over green with streams fr the neighborinm e' hills, and shaded wi ' trees sacred to Minerve, and eoev - fourniation'of the city, when ' r "the olive grov f Academe Plato's retirement, where e tluelt-trarb noto CM the mutineer big," -2110los e pathwaids gleamed with the . monu av ments of the illustrious dead, the work of c x.,• most consumate ;masters that ever gave • life to marble. There beneath the 'pverarch4 Aqg plane trees, upoii a lofty stage erected tr the purpose, it was ordainony law that 'funeral oration shoal be pronounced by some citizen of Athens,. in the presence of 4 - , t ike'assembred multitude. - . ,:fuch were the tokens of respect required 11cr law to be paid at. Athens to the memory hilt. those who had fallen in the cause of their pikinntry. To those'alone who fell at Mara • thon a peculiar honor was reserved. As the battle fought upon that immortal field vies '-Itistinguished from - all others in Grecian his '•'V ry for its 'influence over the fortunes of liellas; as it depended upon thd event .of N ithat day whether Greece should live a glory f,iid a light to all coming time, or should piie like the meteor of a moment; so the --A-Jtoners awarded to its' martyr-heroes were us were bestowed by Athens on no other occasion. They alone of all he , r sans were liattombed upon the spot, which they had for : er' rendered famous. Their nanie:s were, —inscribed upon ten pillars erected upon the monumental tumulus which covered -their ashes. (where; after six hundred years, they ' l, lotarelread by the; traveller Pauaanias;) and [Although the columns, beneath the. hand of jsarbaric violence and time,-have long since tappeared, the venerable mound still marks spot where they fought and fell: "I‘ "That battle-field, where Persia's victim horde. First bowed beneath the brunt of Rolla,' sword:" And shall I fellow-citizens, who, after an ;taterval - of twenty-three centuries, n'youth .4ll.ll pilgrim from a world unknown to ancient 14reece, have wandered over that illustrious : , q„Oain, ready to put the shoes from 'off my . 1 -;et, a one that stands on holy ground have •'igaze4l with respectful emotion on the mound '• ifhich still protects the remains of those who .'h tilled back the, tide of Persian invasion, and '-rescued the land of popular liberty, of-letters • and arts from the ruthleis foe,fstand unniov 7 to* over the graves of our f dear - bretheren, cx‘rho but yesterday—on three of those all •Omportantdays which decide a nation's hi - ~ .lory--days on - Whose issues: is depen6d,- - "Orliether this august republican Union, fonn :lled by some of the wisest statesmen that trAiirsz lived, cemented with the blood of some ' isff; the purest. patriots that ever died, should ierish or endure, rolled back the tide of an :Invasion. not less unprovoked, not less ruth less, than that which came to plant the dark - "fanner of -Asiatic deSpotism and slavery on ' Atli free soil of Greece ? Heaven forbid ! 7." And could "I prove ao insensible `to every 'prompting of patriotic duty and affection, s'Atot.only would you, fellow citizens, gather - ,44, many of- you, from distant States, wile .. have Come to take part in there pious offices it gratitude—you-xespeeted fathers, brethern; 84 kiatroris, sisters, who surround me, cry out c.itihr slutrne, but the forms of brave and patri otic men who fillilese honoredgraves Vould ~- heave with indignation beneath the sod. "' -° -We haVe assembled, friends, fellow-citi- Aens,At the invitation of the Executive of 5 'Abe great Central State of Pennsylvania, nded by the Governors of eighteen other, - Q. States of the Union, to pay the last ,r . bate of respect to the brave men Who, in grille hardfought battles of theist, 2d, and 8d &Alleys of July last, laid down their lives for si*e country on-these hill-sides and the pl ai 4 21 greed out before us; and.whOse remains have Seen gathered into the cemetery which we ::iltintiecrate this day. Aermy eye ranges over the fields whose sods were so lately moisten -1.,,ed by the blocid of gallant and loyal men, I feel, as never before, how truly it was said 1- it old that it is sweet and becoming to die «Jim' one's country. I fed, Jas never before, I..jkow. justly ; from the dawn of history to the ~,,kresent time, men have . paid the homage, Of tlieir gratitude and admiration to - the mem 'error those who nobly 'sacrifice their lives that their fellow men rmay live in safety. LAind if 'this tribute were ever due, when—to Arhom--could it be more justly paid than to. ,itiose whose last resting clitee we' this day 'isommend to the blessing of Heaven and of f • s:Fur consider, my friends, what would have teen the consequericeslto the,country, to your selves, and, to all you hold denr, if those who ,eleep beneath onr feet, a their gallant coin; who survive tto serve their bountry on " ii#h*r fields of danger, hadtailed in their fluty / I - in, -those memorable .days: , - 1 -Consider whit:, h itihis moment, would be , the condition of "'theNnited Siite, if fthat - noble Army,of the ' ' PtitOmac, instead of gallantly' and for the #- - wicond time beating back the tide of invasion - ;:from Mar:7land and Pennsylvania,had been • "Itsfelf driven from 'thine well contested Neighs; `ilditoWn back in confitsion on Baltimore; :or diseonaitted r sesitteredtothe boar winds. What andeithevirctunitances, would not wave bin the fate ,of the Idonu wntal Gitkof,Tfarrieb , ,of Philadelphia, e r lat NVashington-- - th'e Gil al .ef`lhe'llniolt—; eacitand every One of w la valid have lain • a$ theirnerei:of the en ,- - aecordingly as it 'flight hairer pleaied hir, spurred. „only by. passion; fLushed'with viCtory; , . and confident of continued success, tci direct his course? For this;'we must bear in mind, it is one of the greateSt lea ' ns Of the war. indeed of ,revery war) that it is iMpossible •for a people without military organization, inhabiting the cities, town, and - villages of an open country' including t of course, th natural_ propprtion, of 'non-combatants of ..e the!. sex and Of every, 1 age, to witlistind the - linroad of - a veteran' army. What defence can be Made by ihe inhihitantslof villages mostly bui i lt of 'iood . , of 'cities Unprotected by ivalls,'nay,_by, a pop; ulation of men, hqweyqriliighttoned and =' olute, whose aged parents demand their care; whose wives and chi en. are clusteringabout them, against th charge of the War horse whose neck is cl thed with thunder, against flying artillery, andlatteries of rifled cannon planted on eve y aimumnding emi nenee, against thd onset of pained veterans led‘,hy skilful chiefs ? No, My friends, army mint be met by army ; !battery by battery - ; squalion by squadron, end ;the shock of or garized thousands niult be encountered by the firm breasts and valiant arms of other thousands, as well organized and as skilfully led. Itis no reproach, therefore, to the un armed population of the country to suy , that we owe it to, the brave rlen who sleep in their beds 'of honor before us and their gallant sur viving associates, not merely that your fer tile flelds,_my friends f Pennsylvania and Maryland, were rode i ed from the presence, of the invader, but tha your beautiful capi tals were not given up t threatened plunder ) , perhaps laid in ashes Washington se"z6d by the enemy, and a blow strucl it= .the heart of the nation. Who that hears me h. fo •of of joy that ran through 4th of July—auspici..s rl tidings, and Ten • i simultaneon: "al' telegrapl 1 r lance r • t'' ,dtten the thrill .. country _on the „,..4Alday for the glorious red st 11 more so by The 1(11 of Vi ksbur . , !---when the ached throng the land the assur _*u the President f the United States ,,Art the , Army of the li)tomac, under Gen. Meade, had again smttten the invader ? Sure I am that, with the ascriptions of praise that rose to-Heaven froth twenty, millions of . freemen„ -with the tic iowledgments , that breathed from patrioticlips throughout - the , i 1 length and-breadth of . merica to the' sur viving officers and men who had rendered the-countrY-this - inesti ble _service, there beat in every loyal boson& a .throb of tender and sorrowful gratitude t the martyrs who had fallen on the sternly contested field. Let, a nation'a fervent_thank - simake some amends for the toils and sufferings of thoae who sur vive. _Would that the h artfelt tribute could penetrate these. honored, raves ! In order that we may omprehend, to their full extent,: our obligations to the martyrs and surviving heroes df the Array of tho Potomac, let us - contem late for a few mo ments, my friends,-the t ain of events, which culminated in the buttl ~ o f the Ist, 2nd, and, witli the 4Suit - enclos- 3d of July. Of this s I planned, as itkoriginato i thirty years ago,' maul. during an entire generat i cc,td because, for the first Lion of the Constitution, ident had been effected IA the South (which reta control of the two of -,.er - Govnment,)' the occup capital; with the' seizure and of the treaties with an essential feattirili within my personal_knol the winter Of 186 U-1, bY fluential leaders of the fondly thought that this object could be of 7 r l fected by a bold and s dden movement on. the 4th of March,' MI. There is abundant proof also.that a darker moject,_was contem plated. if not by the res onsible chief of the rebellion, yet by namele s ruffians, willing to play a subsidiary and m irderous part in the treasonable drama. It w s accordingly main tained by the rebel emisAaries abroad, in the circles to which they found access, that the nets American minister i r Light not, when, he arrived, to be received exilic envoy of :the United States, inasmuch] as - before that time WashingtOn would be captured, and the Capital of the Nation und the archives and muniments of the Govermnt;nt - would be in the possession - of the C( nfederates. In full accordance also, with th S threat; it was 'de,. dared by the rebel S cretary of War; ht, Ilmigomery, in the pre once of his ehiefand of his colleagues, and o five thousand hear ers, while the tidings of the assault of Sumter were travelling over the wires on that fatal 12th of April, 1861, th i at before the end of May "the flag, which now flaunted -in the breeze (as he expressed it) would Roar over the,doihe of the Capitol at Washington." At the time this threat was made the re hellion was confined to, the cotton growing States, and it was well understood ,by them that the only hope o r drawing any of the other slavel4olding States into the conspiracy was by bringing . üboUt, a conflict of arms, and "firing the heart of the-South" by the effusion of blood. This vas declared by the Charleston press to be the object for which Sumter was to be assaulted, and the emissar ies sent from ItichmmWto urge on the uit 7 hallowed work gave th l e liiromise that, with the first drop of blood hat should be shed, Virginia would place illertelf by_ the side Of South Carolina., i • - I I ‘ In pursuance of thig original plan of the leaders of the rebellion the capture of Wash ington has been continhally had in View,inet merely for the sake, oflts public buildingp,as the capital of the ConfederacY, but as the neceSsary preliminary to the absorption of the border States. and for the•moral effect in the eves of Europe of possfressing the metropolis of the Union. , I I allude to these fac , -not perhaps enough , berne - in mind, as a s relent refutation of ,:r. the pretence' on the pat of the'rebels that the war is c.ne of self-d fence, waged for the right of self governrnnt.. It is in reality a war originally levied by ambitious nien in i l, the cotton-growing St test for the purpose of drawing the slavebold' ng border States into the vortex of theleonspiracy,. first brsympasl thy, which, in ;the, 3ase of Southeastern Virginia, north Carolina, part of Tennessee, and Arkansas, spcceeded; and then lip forte, and for the' - purpose of subjtigating Western Virginia,- Kentucky, I Eastern. Tennessee, Missouri, and Marylarld; • and it is a most ei traordinary fact,. consdering the_elarnOis'of the rebel 'chiefs onhe subject' of invasion, that not a soldier of the' United; States has entered the States last; named/ exefilit -to de fend their Union,doving; inhabitants from ',the armies and guerrilla& of' the 'rebels: , ~ 'ln conformity ,with, these designs -on tbe pity of Washington, and totwitlistandingthe disastrous result& of t to invasion' of ,lf-fd4„ 'lt was determined by • he rebel ,cioyermnent last summer to resum the offensive in that direction: Unable ' force -the paimagefof -the Rappahannock wliere,ClenAlooker, not withstanding the reverse at chancellorsville in May, was strongly4orited; -We epnredeiate general resorted to strategy: He hitil 'two objects in view : - 'pie list Was by's ntpill movement n z ortlitiard . tutd;,by manyviVg franklin tlepoitor dee ember 2, 1863. =I With a portion 44-0 famy on the east side of Wire*lige, tie , :tempilloooker from his base prApetatlppsi`thus leading him to uncover -the approaehes:id - Washingtecn, to throw it. , peen to Erraid - by Stuart's cavalry, and-enable' Lee "-himself to cross the Potomac in the ' treighborlidod :of Pciolcaville and thus fall Akin the capital. This plan of operations was wholly frustrated. The design- of the rebel general was promptly - discovered by Gen. Hook eri rind; moving himself with great 'rapidity from : FrederiCksbiarg, 'he-preserved' !unbroken- the inner - find - and stationed the ' various corps of his,army at all the points rproteating the approachth,Washingtorr, frOm - ;Centreville up to Lees Fro gas van tage ground the - rebel general' irivaiii - at temptedl to / draw. hin; Ift.the rii4tntiraer hy Vigoreiti'Opetatiohs Of Pleasonton's cavalry; . the: cavalry - of Stuart; 04orel greatly superior in uurnbers,_ was so crippled as to by disabled ',frOm_Perforrnithe partassignedLit -in the Campaign. In this manner Gen. Lee's , first 'object, viz:4ll6l-clefeitt of Hooker's army on the south of-the Potpmae and a direct march on Washington, was baffled. , The second part of the Confederate plan, and - which ii supposed to have beek under taken in opposition to the views of Gen. Lee, was to turn the demonstration northward into a real invasion of Maryland and P9 -n• sylvania, in the hope that, in this way.{Gen. Hooker would be drawn to a diAnfice from the capital; that some opport y would oc cur of-taking him at disar antage, and,. after defeating his army. o aking a - ileseent upon Baltimore and W-6ihington. This part of Gen. Lee's pl , which was'substaiitiallythe repetition -that of 1862, was not less signal ly del ed, with what honor to the arms of t nion the heights on which we are this ' ay assembled will fotever attest. —Much time had beeau-selcsh; consumed by the rebel general in his :Unavailing attempts tO out manoeuvre Gen. Hooker. Although Gen. Lee broke up, fram Frederick-burg on the 3d. of June, it was not till. the 24th that the main,body of his army entered Maryland, and instead of - crossing the Potomac, as he had intend ed, eat of the, Blue Ridge, he was compelled to do it at ,Shepherdstown and :Williamsport, thus materially deranging his entire plan of campaign north of the river. Stuart, who had,-heen sent with his cavalry to the east of the Blue ridge, to guard the passes of the, mountains, to mark the move ments of Lee, and to harrase the Union Gen eral in crossing the river, having been, very severely handfed by Pleasanton at Beverly Ford, Aldie and Upperville, instead of being able to retard Gen. Hooker's advance, was driiren himself away from his connection with , the army"of - Lee, and cut off for a fortnight ' from all communication-with it; a eireuni stanecto which -Gen. Lee, in his ,report, al ludes more than once, with evident displeas- ' ure: Let us now rapidly glance at the ,in cidents of the eventful campaign. A detachment from Ewell's corps, under Jenkins, had penetrated on the 15th of July as far as bhambersbnrg. This movement E.was intended at first merely as a demonstra- ' tion, and as a marauding expedition for sup plies. It had, however, the salutary effect of alarming the country, and vigoloits prepa- ' rations here in Pennsylvania and inihe sister fates were made to repel the inroad. After two days passed in ChamherSburg, Jenkins, anxious for his communications with Ewell, fell•back with hi's plunder to Hagerstown. Here he remained for several days, and, having swept the recesses of Cumberland Valley, came down upon the eastern flank of the South Mountain, and pushed his maraud ing parties - as - far as Waynesboro. On the -22d the remainder of- Ewell's -corpi crossed the river and moved up, the Valley. They were followedon the 21th by Longstreet and Hill. who crossed at IVilliamsport arid ,Shep herdstown, - awl, pushing up the Valley, en .camped. at Chhtiabersbur,g on thaitfitla. In this .way. the whole rebel arjny, estimated:at 00,000 infantry, upwards of 10,000 cavalry. and 4,000 or 5,0,/0 artillery, making a total of 105,000 of all arms, was concentrated in Pennsylvania. Up to this time no report of Hooker's movementso had been received- by Gen. Lee: .who baying been deprivtd of his cavalry had no means of obtaining information. -Right ly judging, however: that no time would be lost by the Union army in the-pursuit; in or der to detain it on the eastern side of the. Mountain in Maryland and Pennsylvania, and thus preserve his communication by way-of Williamsport, he had, • before hisown arrival 'at: Chumbersburg. directed Ewell to send de tailments• from his corps to Carlisle - and York. The. latter detachment under Early passed through this placeon the 26th of Juries You need not, fellow-citizens of Gettysburg, that I should recall to you those moments of alarm and distresS, precursors as they were of the more trying scenes which were soon to follow. - • upendous rebellion, rs boast, - more than led and prepared for on, finally ccimingii-' 1 . time since tag adop , an election - of Pres-; without tli votes of rued, however, the (lan Or branches of the: I don of the national f the public arcki ves foreign powers, was 1 is was in substance; ledge,admitted; in; , y' pof the most in 4 ebellion; and , it_was 1,3 As soon as Gen. HoOkererceived that the adVance of the Confederates into the Cum berland Valley was not a mere feint to draw him away from Washington, he moved him self rapidly in pursuit. Attenipts, as we have seen, were _made - to harass and retard his .passage acrom the Potoinac. These attempts were not only altogether unsuccessful, but so unskillfully made, as to place the entire 'Federal. army between the cavalry of Stuart and the army of Lee. While the latter was massed in the Cumberland Valley, Stuart wits. east of the mountains, with Hooker's army. between, and Gregg's cavalry in*Se pur ,.uit. Stuart was aceordingty eonVelled to _force a march northward, which was destt lute of all strategical character, and which deprived his chief of all means of obtaining. intelligence. No time, as we have seen, had been lost by .Gen. Hooker in the pursuit of Leo. The day after the rebel army entered Maryland, the Union army crossed the• Potomac at Edward's Ferry and Frederic:l. The force of the ene my on that day waspartly at Chambersburg, and partly moving on the Cashtown road, in the direction of Oettysharg, while the , de tachments from Ewell's corps, of which men tion has been made, had reached the Susque hanna, opposite Harrisburg. and Columbia. That. a great battle must soon be fought, no one could doubt, but in. the apparent and :perhaps real atisende of- plan on the part, of ,Lee, it Ras impo - ssible_to foretell the prebise scene of the encounter. Wherever fought, consequences the most momentous hung upon the result... 1 In this critical and anxious state Of affairs, Gen. Hooker was relieyy ~ dd and Gen. Meade: was summoned to theehief command of ~the army, and it appe to niy untnilitary judg - went to reffectthalighest credit upon him,, upon his ,predecessor, and upon the corps comnianders.of 'the Army of the Potomae,' that, a Change could take place in the chief cornmaiid of splarge a force on the eve of a general.battlei—the various Corps" necessarily moving-on lines some what divergant, and all in ignorance of the enemy's intended point' of concentration, and not an ,hour's hesita tion Should ensue in the advance of any-por tion 'of the_ enemy's . army. -Having &knit ed the chief command on the 28th, Gen. .Meade.directed his left wing un der ,Zeynolds npon Ernmettshurg, and his right wing upon New Windsor, leaving den. 'Freich , With 11,000 men to : protect the Bal tirriore and :Ohio' railroad, and convey the public propertyfrozn Harpekl Ferry t9Wastil‘ ington. ord*navr*Vas then at this tWiover } where n ho, encountered ninidefeatedfthe teat of Stuart% Cavalry, who was roving the country in.search' of the main army of Lee. ibn the rebelside, Hill had reached, • Fayettefille.on the; Cash town road; on the 28th, and was.followed - on the same road by Longstreet on the 29th. The eastern side of the mountain, asseee from Gettysburg, was lighted, up at night by the camp fires of the entnny's advance, and. the cauritrySWarmed with hia foraging parties. 'lt was' now - too evident tote questioned that the thunder cloud, so long gathering black -neSs,*ould*oornbuist On - some part of the devoted vicinity of-14ettysbug. The 30th of June was a day of 'important prepiliarioti At' 111- in- thi3:. morning, Gen. Buford passed through Gettysburg, upon a rd'ecirfitoisanch. forte:With his cavalry u the Chamberabnrg road. The information' ohtained by itiniwas immediatelyprninunita ted to Gen. Reynolds, who was,niconsequenee direeted to occupy Gettysburg. _That gal lant officer aecordin t , with the Ist corps, marched' from_ mettsburg to within_six or seven miles this glace, and encamped on the rigliebank of Marsh's' Creek. • Our right wtug - meantime Was moved tallanchester. On the same day, thecorps of Hill and Long street were pushed still further forward on the Chembersburg road, and distributed in the vicinity of Marsh's Creek, while a recon noisance -was made by the Confederate Gen eral PettigreW up to a very short distance from this place. Thus, at nightfall on the 30th of Juno, the greater part of the rebel force was concentrated in'the in vi cinity of two corps of the Union army, the former. refreshed by two days passed in com parative repose and deliberate preparation for the encounter, the latter, separated by a march of one or two days froth their suppOrt ino• corps, and dot btfnl atwhat precise point teey were to expeot an Attack. And now the momentous day, a day to be forever remembered in the annals of the coun try, arrived. Early in. the morning on the Ist, of July the conflict began. Need I not say that it would • be impossible for me 'to comprise; within the limits of the hour, such a narrative.as would do anything like full justice to the all-important events of these three great day's, or to the merit of the brave 'officers and men.of every rankiof every arm of the service, and - of every loyal State, who bore their part in the trernelidous struggle; —alike those who nobly sacrificed their lives for their country, and those who survive, many of them scarred with honorable wounds -the objects of our admiration and gratitude. The astonishingly minute, accurate, and graphic accounts contained in the journals - of the day, prepared fromTersonal observation by reporters who witnessed the scenes and often shared the perils which' they describe, and the highly valuable " Notes' of Prof. Jacobs of the University in this place, to which I amsreatly indebted, Will abundant ly.supply the deficiency of my necessarily too, condensed statement.* - General Reynolds,. -0 , 1 arriving at Gettys-I, burg in the morning of the Ist, found Bu-' ford with 'his cavalry warmly engaged with the enemy, whom he held most gallantly in check. Hastening himself to the front, Gen- - eral Reynolds directed his men to be moved over the fields from the'Ernmettsburg road, ,in front of McMillan's and Dr. Sehmucker's, 'under cover of the Seminary Ridge, and, without-a moment's,hesitation, attacked the enemy, at the seine - lime sending orders to the 11th corps (General Howard's) to advance as promptly as possible. General Reynolds immediately found. himself engaged with a force which greatly outnumbered his own, and had scarcely made -his dispositions - for the action when he fell, mortally wounded, at the head of his advance. • The command of the'lst corps devolved on General Doub leday and that of the'field on General How ard, Viho arrivedat 11.3Wwith Schurz and Barlow's divisions of the llth corps, the let ter of whom received a severe wound. Thus strengthened, the advantage of the battle was fur some time on our side. The attacks of the rebels were vigorously repulsed by Wadiworth's division of the 11th corps, and largea number of prisoners, including Gen eral Archer, were captured. At length, however, the continuedforcements of the Confederates front thAlain body on • the Cashtowh road, and by the divisions of, 'Rhodes and Early, coming down by separate lines from Heidiersburg and taking post 'on our ext.renie right, turned the ,fortunes of the day. Our army, after conte`eting the ground for five hours; was obliged' to yield to the enemy, whose forces outnumbered, them two to one, and toward the close of the afternoon General Howard deemed it pru dent to withdraw the two corps to the heights where we are now asseinbled. The greater part of the Ist corps passed through-the out skirts of the town, and reached the hill with out serious lose or molestation. The 11th corps and portions of the lstnnbt being aware that the enemy had already entered the town from the north, attempted to force their way through Washington and Baltimore streets, which in the crowd and confusion of the Scene, they did with a heavy loss in prisoners. • General Howard w,as not unprepared for this turn in the fortunes of the day. Early in the morning he had caused Cemetery Hill to be occupied by General Steinwehr, with the 3d division of the 11th corps. About the time of the withdraWal of our troops to the hill General, Hancock, arrived, having been sent by General Meade, on hearing - the death of Reynolds, to assume the command of the field till he himself could reach the front. In conjunction with General How ard, General Hancock immediately proceed ed to post troops and to repel an attack on *Besides the source of informatioti , , mectioned in the text, I have been kindly favored a ith a memorandum of the operations of the three days, drawn up 6m- me by rectum of Mal. Gen. illeadeganticipating the promulga tion of his official report) by one of hie hides, Col. Theo dore Lyman, front whom 'nisei have received other im portant communicatk;ns relative -to the campaign. have received very valuable documents relative to the battle from filsj. Gem Ilaßeck, Commander-in-Chief of the army • and have been much assisted in drawing up the sketeh of the campaign by the detailed reports, kindly tranimitted to me in manuscript from the -Chu tantlleneral's office, of the movements of every corps of the army, for each day, after the breaking up from' PredericksbUrg commenced. I have derived much assis tance from Col. - Jelin B. Baehelder's Ural explanations of -his beautiful and minute drawing (about lobo engraved) of the lield of the three days.' struggle. -• With the infor mation derived frau these sources. I have comp.tred the statements in Gen.,Lee's official report of the campaign, dated 31st. July, 1863; a well written article purporting, -to be an aecutint of the three days' battle, in the Rich mond Enquirer of the 22d of July ; and the article on "The Battle of Gettysburg and the Campaign Of Penn "'sylvania," by an officer, apparently tt Wend, in the British army, in "IllackwoOd's Magazine" for September. The value of the Information cent alined in this last essay may 13C seen by comparinithe remark. under dale 27th of June, that "private property is to be rigidly protect ed,'t with the stat:tnent in the next sentence but one, that "all the cattle and farm horses having been seized by Byron, farm labor had come to a campletp }Land attn.": lie also, under date of 4th July, ;peaks of Lee's retreat being encumbered by" ];well's inuittnte train of pion des." This writer infottnn us that, on,the evening of the 4 th July, helleard "reports coming in from - the dint eat govrals that the enemy (Wade's army) was retiring and had been doing so ail day long." At a consultation ac headquarters on the ,4th between Oen& Lee, Long-, street, 11111 and Wilcox. this vrriter. was told by' F 013113 one,yrboie name he prudently Laves in blank, that the army had no intention at present of retrimi ing for good. and that - same of the - oneuty's dispatches had been inter cepted, in which the following wordsocctir : "The noble but tinfortilnate Army 01 the :Potomac has again been obliged to retreat before tozpotioi ntimberil" I mach regret that ilea. Meade's, official report was,not publish ed season' to enable me to take fall advantage of it in preparing the brief ehetch . .ef the battles of the thtee dri,*B Contained In this addr e ss, It reached .mo bat the -morning Wore these pigei *areaeatao•the Pride. ' • our right Ai*. This attack was feebly re,,ade And- lirim:Ugly. repulsed. At nigh Wall our tro9ps on the:ol, who had so gallantly' snstained:theniselint during the toil and per /ref the 'nay, ..ivere.9heered by the arrival of General Slocum With the 12th corps, and of GeneralSieklea vvithn part of the ' Such was the fortui4of the first day, com mencing with a decided Success - to our arms, followed by a check, but ending in the ()pu pation of this all-important position. To you, fellow-citizens of Gettysburg, I need not Attempt to' portray the anxieties of-the ensuing night. Witnessing , as had done with, sorrow the withdrawal of. our army through your,„' stfeets, with a considerable loss of Pris,_ oners; 'mourning as you did over the brave men who had fallen; shocked with the4ide-spread desolation around- you, of which the wanton burningof the Harmon -house in the - morning had given the signal; igmirant. of the near approachof General Meade, you passed the' weary hours of the night in painful expectation. • Long before the daWn of the 2d.of July, the new 'commander-ih-chief had arrived at the front. Having received intelligence of the'events in progress. and informed by the report:Sof Generals Hancock and_Howard of the .favorable character of the position, he determined to give battle to_the ,enemy at' this point. He accordingly directed the re maining-corps of the army to concentrate. at Gettysburg with all possible expedition, anc. breaking up his headquarters at Taneytowi! 'at 10 P. M., he arrived on the field at one o'clock in the morning of the 2d of July., Few were the moments given to sleep, dur ing the rapid watches, of that brief midsum mer's night, by officers or men, though half of our troops were exhausted by the conflict of the day, and the residue wearied by the forced marches which had brought them to the rescue: The full moon, veiled by thin cloudsJhono down that night on a strangely unwonted scene—the __ silence of the grave yard was broken 'by the heavy tramp of armed men; by the neigh of the war-horse, the harsh rattle - of the wheels of artillery I hurrying to their stations, the voice of the bugle, the rollof the driim, andel' the inde sCribable tumult of preparation s The -Vari ous corps of the army as they arrived were moved to their positions on the spot where we are assembled, and the ridges that extend south=east and south-west; 'batteries -were planted and breastworks thrown up.- - The 2d and sth corps, with the rest of the-3d, had reached the ground* by 7 o'clock, A. M., but it was not till 2 'O'clock in' the afternoon that Sedgwick arrived with the 6th corps. He had marched thirty two miles since 9 o'clock in the morning ~ of the day before.. It Was only on his arrival that the Union army at tained en eqUaßty of numbers with that of the rebels; posted anon the Opposite and par allel ridges distant fr im a mile - tolt mile and a half, and overlapping our position -on ei ther wing. And here I cannot but remark on the pro vidential inaction of the rebel army.' Had the contest been renewed by it nt daylight on the second of July,-with the Ist and 11th corps exhausted by the 'battle and. the re: , treat; the 3d and 'l2th weary from their' forced niarch ; and the 2d, bth, and 6th not yet arrived, nothing but a miracle could have saved the army fromdestruction. In stead of this, the day dawned, the sun rose, the cool hours of the morning passed.'the, forenoon wore away without the slightest aggressive movement on the part of the - en emy. Thus time was giVen for- half of our forces to arrive and take their place in the line, while the rest of the,army enjoyed a. much needed half day's repose. 'At length, between 3 an 4 4 o'clock in the afternoon, the work of death began. A sig nal 'gun from the hostile batteries was fol lowed by a tremendous cannonade along the rebel lines, and this by a heavy advance of infantry, :brigade after bried et; cotiamencing on, the 'enemy's right-against the-left of our army, and so toward the left centre. A for ward movement of Gen. Sickles, to gain a commanding position from which to repel the rebel attack; drew upon him a destruc tive fire from the enemy's batteries,' and a_ furious assault from Longstreet's and Hill's advancing troops. After a brave resistance on the part of-his corps, he was forced back, himself falling severely wounded. - This was the critical moment of the second day; but the sth ned part of the 6th corps, with portions of the I:st and f& were promptly brought to the support of the 3d; the struggle was fierce and murderous, but, by sunset our Rica% s Was 'decisive and ie enemy was driven back in confusion. The most important 'service was rendered toward the close of the day, in the' day, in the, memorable advance, between Round Top and Little Round, Top, by Gen. Crawford's division of the sth corpt, consist ing of two brigades, of the Pennsylvania, Re serves, of which one company Was from the town and neighborhood. .Tbe rebel Gen. Barksdale fell in thrs encounter, and his force was driven back with great loss in killed and prisoners. At 8 ".o'clock in the evening a ;desperate attempt:was made by the enemy, to storm the position_ of the .11th corps, on Cemetery Hill, but here, too, after a terrible conflict, he was repulted with immense loss. Ewell, on our extreme right, which had been weakened by the withdrawal of the troops; sent over to support our left, had succeeded' in gaining a foothold within a portion ofour. lines, near Spangler's Spring. This was the' only advantage obtained by, the rebels to compensate them for the disasters of the day, and of this, as we shall see,:they were soon, deprived. - Such was the result of the second act of this eventful drama; a day hard fought, and at, one moment anxious, and, with the excep tion of the slightreversejnst - narned, crowned. 'with dearly-earned. but - uniform, success to: our arms, auspicious of a glorious termination; of the final struggle. On these' good oniens . the night fell. At dawn of the ad, General Geary return ed to his position on the rigkt; from which he had hastened the daybeforis to strengthen the left. He was immediately attacked by the enemy, whom, howev'er, after a ,sharp and decisive action, be drove out of our lines, , ' recovering the ground; Which had been lost on the preceding day.. A. spirited contest. was kept up all.the morning on this part of thd line, but General Geary,: reinforced by Wheaton's hri e ,vade of Ithe 6th corps, main stainedhispositlon, and, inflicted, very severe 'losses on the enemy, Such was the cheering cormnericanent of the third day's'work, and with .it..9nded, all : seridu,s attempts Of the enemy 'on- our ;right. As on the preceeding day, his ,efforts were now mainly dirededligainit- our leftfeentre ,and left wlng. From eleven till, half-past' one o'clock, all, was still; a solemn pause of: preparation, asif both`-parties were nerving themselves , for iheinpreme effort. .N.t length the awful silence, more terrible than the" wildest tumult of battle, ',was broken by the; roar of 250 pieces of artillery from the oppo-; site ridges joining fri i'eminonade'of unsur passed violenne, the rebel batteries alotig two thirds a their line pouring' their 'lre upon Cemetery .Hill and the:ventre and left wing, of our army. Having attempted in this way for two hours, but with Out success, to shake,: 'the steadiness of ourlinea, the enemy rallied! • his torees for a last- grandl. assault. attack was principally directed against-thi, ,„ positionWelli#d"*PC' Successivelinm of rebeL infantry reetvedllirward with equal - spirit. and - steadiness, frinn their cover on the wooded crest saf Mify Ridge, crossing the =intervening plain, supported right ,and left'by their choicest hrigadm, and charged furiously up to -our. - batteries. Our own = brave troops of the 2d corps, supp or t e d b y Doubleday 's division and Stannard's brieadst, - of the Ist, received the shock with fiinra le i*, the ground on both sides was long and fierce lYcont6ted, and covered with the killed and 'wounded, till after - . ..ratletermlned and gilt. lent struggle," as it is pronounced by 43 ; 0 1 . liee, the rebel advance, consisting of 'two thirds of Hill's corps'and the whole of Louisa street's, including Pickett's division,,theektii of his corps, which had not yet been under fire, and was now depended upon to decide the fortune of this last eventful day, was d& yen' back - with ,prodigious slnj~ghter,,iiisco n, fited,:andfbroken. While' these events Aisle itfprogreSS at our le ft centre, the-enerntwas driven by the Pennsylvania Reservesfrom a strong position on our extreme left, from which he was annoying our force on Little Round Top," his battery taken, and,throa hundred prisoners captured. In the terrilt,* assault on our centre, - Gees. Hancock and Gibbon were wounded.' In the rebel era., • Artnistead, Kemper, Pettigrew, and Tritabfis - were'wounded, the first named mortally, :the latter also made prisoner; while Gen, Gar , nett was killed, and thirty-five hundied'ot - .ficers and men made prisoners.- These were the expiring agonies .of: tiro _three day's conflict,' and with them the bai-. tie ceased. It Was fought by. the Union ar my with courage and skill, from the first. cavalry skirmish on Wednesday morning td the fearful rout of the enemy on Friday a& ternoon: by every arm and every rank of the service=by officers and =men;` by cavalry, . artillery, and infantry. The two armies, after the first day, were numerically *equal; :if the Union force had the advantage of strong position, the Confederates had that ef choosing time ant:. place, the twestige of for me?, victories over the Arniy of the Toto- '41," mar., and of the ./eiccess of the first Victory does not always -fall to tholot of those who deserve it; but 'that so decisive a triumph,. under circumstances' like, theken was gained by our troops, I am inclined to ascribe, under Providence, to the spirit of • exalted patriotism that -animated them, and a consciouness that they were fighting in s. righteous cause. I - - All hope of defeating our army and, _ ring what General Lee calls " - the valuable results" of such an - achievemenfhaving ished, bethought only of resetting from des- truetionfthe remains of, his shattered forcoe, lii killed, wounded, and' missing, lie hid, as far as can be ascertained, suffered a lass of about 37,000 men, rather more than a. third of the army which he is supposed to hail* brought with him into. Pennsylvania,, Pet , - eeiving that his only safety was in rapid pp , : treat, he commenced withdrawing his 'troceps atdaybreak on the 4th throwing-up field= works in front .of onr. left, - which, assuming the appearance of a. now position, wereintendi edprobably to prolog; the rear of his army : in their - retreat That day—sad eelebration • of the 4th of' July for an army of Atnericatdt - 7 -was passed by him in, hurrying; off his trains. The main army was in, full, retreat on the Cashtown and Fairfield at nigh): : fall, and moved with such precipitation thug' short as the nights were, by daylight the. fol:, lowing morning, notwithstanding a heavy - rain„-the rear guard had left pogitim. The struggle of the-twa last days resembled; . in many respects, the battle of Witerhit; and if, in the evening of the -third day."Gers: Meade,Aike the Duke of NVellington; had had the.assistance of a-powerful anailiaryl-:','Y army to take up the pursuit, the rout of,titC rebels would have been as coinplete - of Napoleon. Owing to the circumstances aboveZ 9 , intentions of the enemy were not nppa - Nia the 4th - The moment his retreat wa c_o ered the following morning, he was pursziedtty our cavalry on the Ca shtown ' road and in ebb Emmettsborg and blonterey passes, and Sedgwick's carps on the Fairfield road !lie - rearguard was briskly attacked at Fairfieid,; great nnmher of wagons and ambulances w , se captured in the passes of the mountains ; tM country swarmed with• his trogglers, and hie - wounded were literally emptiedirom the -vehk: cles containing them,,,inte the farm tinuttes do the rrad.. General Lee, in his repoti4l,qeP repeated mention of the Union . prisonete;whom he conveyed into Virginia, somewhiektiersiii tine their number. He states also tbtt "lock of his Wounded as were in a condition to be re moved,7 were forwatded to Williamsport, does nut mention that the number of hitt - wound- _ ed not removed anti left to the Chrietain care - Ot the v'eitstra was 7,540, not one of .whOtn fatted-• of any attention which it was • possitile,- I nuder the. circumstances of the , case, to afford ittterwr not one of whom certainly has been, put upon Libby prison fire-lingering' death by Aterval tier. Heaven forbid, however, that tie iboald 'claim any merit for the exercise common humanity. ' • - Ut.dir the protection of the mountain shop., whose narrow passos are easily hew eeee ,by retre ding army, general Lee reached' Williarer port in safety, and took up a strong , posiriett 4/tip:kite ,to that place. - General Meade Deceit eerily pursued with the main army by !holt movement through Middletown, Tureer'n _pies having been secured by Gen: French - Passing through the South Mountain. the Union-army came up with that of_ the rebels on the 12th. - and found it securely' posted on the heightti, of Mnrsh's run. Ills_ position was - reconnoitered and preparations mad* for nil attack on `the 18 tb. - The depth of the tive; - sitiellen by the,raitte. .euthorised the expectation that ho would be . brought to ,'n general engagement on the foible; : An advance wits accordingly 'Medi -by General Meade on the morning of :tie-14M .but it was noon, found that the rebelt,hip.'il-assai-• ped in the night, with such haste, t et Ewell's corps forded the river where ' the water 'was - breast high; The cavalry whiSh hacireticiered the -most important Bervices 'during:the three days,and in •harrassiug the enemy's. reheat, was now sent in _penult and captured two gun* and a large number of prisoners. In an action which took. plice at' Falling Waters, Gee: Petti • 'ilea was mortally wounded General-Meade, itt further pdi'suit of the enemy, creseed.d. POipilVlC at Berlin Then, again devering the . approaches to _Washington,o be compelled, the enemy to piss the Blue Ridge at one of 'Ws -upper gape,'and in about six "weeks kook -the commencement of the campaign. General Lee found himself again on tit south aide,oi.the Rippahannock with i the less of about.a thtrdid ble army Snob, most inadequately recounted:4S thelsitt .tory of the - ever memorable three dayearni,of the events itimediately preceedi ig and fallfillt ing It has,been pretended, in prder to dimin ish the magnitude of this disaster to the rebid _6nisse, that it wail merely the repoleanf 04 1- ; tack on a strongly defended positiohi-lbeiri .lnendous losses on both :ides are neffipiiiattike ewer to, the misrepresentation, and:al - toot OP Courage and el:lint:lacy With which' the S urer bsitle was *Aged. Few of the ' , Allots of, modern times !twee ce:t vintortredifyitt qm-tied_stygreara sacri doe. Cti, the there fell in' the .whoie campaign cf. Get° 4 e: killed;,d, Reynnlds: Weed and Zook; unit _.. .‘ s red i3enerateterlosi, Barnes, Buttiifitad,li.ofti . ietisy,Gibbda, anthem, Sibklei= and: *Sa il”;