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1907 Battlefield Photo
| A 1907
photograph of the Ox Hill Battlefield looking south from the Confederate
positions. The Confederate battleline stretched south from Rt. 50 and then
turned west across West Ox Road following the woodline to the
western side of the cornfield - over a half mile long! |
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| The above
photograph of the Ox Hill Battlefield is from the book "Industrial
and Historical Sketch Of Fairfax County Virginia" published by the
Fairfax County Board of Supervisors in 1907. It shows what the
Confederate commanders were able to observe looking south from their
positions along the tree line.
On the horizon you can see the low
hill where the Milan house was located and where the Union forces had
started their advance. In the foreground and to the right, is the split
rail fence that divided the grass field from the cornfield. If you
follow the fence to it's end, you can just make out the the
Reid house among the shade trees that surround it. |
| The following
quotes from this
"Historical Sketch", also illustrate how
leaders of our community felt about preserving our heritage nearly a century ago. |
In
speaking of preservation...
"It
is to be sincerely regretted that some one had not a century ago
collected and recorded all the facts connected with the Colonial
homesteads of Fairfax County... Everything now is but the
"Scattered remnant of a vague tradition".
and on the Civil War...
"Survivors of the
Civil War "come on pilgrimage", seeking the places where they
fought and camped, and weep ofttimes at the wrong spot, and delight in
"location assured'. Each year finds these pilgrims fewer in number
and more bent in form, and soon, yea too soon, there will be left none
to come."
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| Although this
great generation of Americans have all been laid to rest, the descendents of those
"survivors", still "come on pilgrimage". In the picture below, John
Proctor follows the
footsteps of his great uncle Henry Brown, who was a private in the 21st Massachusetts
Volunteer Militia. |
| The picture was taken looking south from the
Confederate positions on the east side of West Ox Road. This is exactly
where the 21st Massachusetts ran into the Confederate
battleline and in Private Brown's words, "were murdered"
by a volley fired at point blank range. |
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Note
how the ridge drops off behind where John Proctor is standing. The
Confederate battleline was not visible until the 21st Massachusetts
crested the ridge. Also keep in mind that a fierce storm had
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just let loose and visibility was extremely poor. |
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At the turn of the next century we
hope some future Board of Supervisors will not once again say... "It is to be sincerely regretted that some one had not a century
ago collected and recorded all the facts connected with the Civil War in
Fairfax County". |
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