| Devil's Den by Bradley Schmehl |
| Limited
Edition Sale
Price:
$150.00 Buy It Now add $25.00 Shipping |
| Image
Size: 20"
x 30" Artist Proof Giclee Canvas Size: 20" x 30" |
950 Limited Edition Prints 19 Artist Proof Giclee Canvas |
| July 2nd, 1863 - 4:30 pm Fifth in the Gettysburg - The Inevitable Confrontation Series, a six print series which comprehensively summarizes the key events of July 1, 2 and 3, 1863. As we view the scene before us, we are standing near the bank of Plum Run Creek, which is behind us and looking north-northwest at the Devil's Den. We see an officer urging on the men of the 17th Georgia. They are contending with infantry fire from front (the crest of Little Round Top) and left flanks (Houck's Ridge, where the 99th Pennsylvania has wheeled to their left rear and is raining down heavy fire on the Rebs), as well as canister fire from a two-gun section of Captain James Smith's 4th New York Light Artillery. The 17th Georgia, from Benning's Brigade, Hood's Division, were in the second wave of Confederate troops to sweep through the "Slaughter Pen," the boulder-strewn gorge through which Plum Creek runs, just south of the Den. Along with the 2nd Geroge, they had attempted to reinforce and bolster the attack of the 44th and 48th Alabama of Law's Brigade, which has now stalled completely. The dead Yankees in the painting belong to the 4th Maine, which was pushed out of Devil's Den by the 44th Alabama earlier in the fight. The surviving men of the 4th Maine now huddle several tens of yards in the rear of the Georgians. The green-coated captain in the right foreground is from the 2nd U.S. Sharpshooters, one of two regiments of crack shots raised by Col. Hiram Berdan in 1861. They were deployed as skirmishers this day, before Hood's division began its assault, and part of the regiment has retreated through Devil's Den. In the end, seven Union regiments which had held relatively strong positions in and around the Devil's Den were confronted with overwhelming adds and forces to retreat. Fortunately for the Union, Devil's Den was no longer the left flank of the army. Yankee forces atop Little Round Top had already repelled several Confederate charges and reinforcements were on the way. |
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