Limited Edition Prints >> Mort Kunstler
Commanders of Manassas
26" x 33"
1,500 Signed & Numbered
Unframed - $285.00

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On the rolling fields of Manassas the battle unfolded before them. From the crest of Stuart's Hill, Generals Robert E. Lee, James Longstreet and "Stonewall" Jackson watched as Lee's Confederates engaged General John Pope's Federal troops in a distant swirl of dust and smoke. Jackson had opened the battle the day before, stunning Pope's troops with a mighty blow at nearby Groveton. Now Pope had launched the first in a series of uncoordinated Federal assaults that yielded his army nothing but bloody losses.

On August 29th, Lee and Longstreet joined forces with Jackson at Manassas Junction. They joined him on the hill that afternoon, watching as battle again engulfed the country side below, where the war's first major land battle had occurred one summer earlier. Now, on the old battleground, Robert E. Lee's magnificent maneuvering lured General Pope's Federal forces into a tactical contest that Lee would win decisively. The next day, Jackson and his gray-clad veterans would again stand against the enemy at Manassas like a stone wall; Longstreet would launch a shattering attack against Pope's poorly led forces; and the Federal army again would flee this ground in disarray. The Battle of Second Manassas would prove to be one of Robert E. Lee's most masterful victories, stalling the Northern advance on Richmond and clearing the way for Lee's 1862 Northern Invasion. Southern triumph and Northern failure would again cloak the northern Virginia countryside - and Lee; Jackson and Longstreet would be re membered as the commanders of Manassas.