The
Battle of Antietam, also called the Battle of
Sharpsburg, fought September 17, 1862, was one
of the most crucial events in the American Civil
War. In addition to being the costliest single
day in our nation’s history, with some
23,000 casualties suffered by the Union and
Confederate forces engaged, Antietam marked
the end of Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s
first invasion of the North. The results of
the Battle and the entire 1862 Maryland Campaign
also provided U.S. President Abraham Lincoln
with the strategic Union victory he needed,
giving him the opportunity to issue the famous
Emancipation Proclamation, a document that changed
the whole nature of the Civil War and the history
of our country.
To visit the Battlefield of Antietam
is to step back in time. Considered one of the
most pristine, unspoiled battlefields, visitors
to Antietam often comment how they can practically
hear the din of battle, see the massed ranks
of soldiers in Blue and Gray, and smell the
gunpowder. And that is precisely what the Antietam
Battlefield Guides try to do: paint a vivid
picture of the Battle of Antietam so our clients
walk away having had a taste of what it may
have been like that terrible day of September
17, 1862. |