“Broken Ground of Which I Was Entirely Ignorant:” John C. Frémont Outclassed at Cross Keys
Bound Away: The Liberty Journal of
History
Volume 3
Issue 1
Article 4
January 2020
“Broken Ground of Which I Was Entirely Ignorant:” John C.
Frémont Outclassed at Cross Keys
Ethan Zook
Liberty University,
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Recommended Citation
Zook, Ethan (2020) "“Broken Ground of Which I Was Entirely Ignorant:” John C. Frémont Outclassed at
Cross Keys," Bound Away: The Liberty Journal of History: Vol. 3 : Iss. 1 , Article 4.
Available at: https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/ljh/vol3/iss1/4
This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Scholars Crossing. It has been accepted for inclusion in
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“Broken Ground of Which I Was Entirely Ignorant:” John C. Frémont Outclassed at
Cross Keys
Abstract
During the spring and early summer of 1862, Maj. General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson and his Army of
the Valley engaged several larger Union forces during a series of battles and skirmishes in the
Shenandoah Valley. On June 8, 1862 at the Battle of Cross Keys, Major General John C. Frémont attacked
Confederate infantry, commanded by Jackson’s subordinate Maj. General Richard S. Ewell, in an attempt
to capture a strategically valuable bridge at the small town of Port Republic. Frémont was was forced to
retreat when the inexperienced 8th New York Volunteer Infantry was flanked, leading to a collapse of the
entire Federal line of battle. Ultimately, Frémont was defeated at Cross Keys by lack of information after
he did not gather intelligence or learn how Ewell’s force was positioned prior to ordering his command to
advance against Ewell’s strongly placed defensive battle line.
Keywords
Civil War, Valley Campaign, Cross Keys, Ewell, Stonewall Jackson, 8th New York, Port Republic
Cover Page Footnote
Special thanks to Dr. Steven Woodworth for his comments and assistance with this paper.
This article is available in Bound Away: The Liberty Journal of History: https://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/ljh/vol3/
iss1/4
Zook: Frémont at Cross Keys
During the spring and early summer of 1862, Maj. General Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson
and his Army of the Valley engaged larger Union forces in a series of battles and skirmishes in
the Shenandoah Valley. On June 8, 1862 at the Battle of Cross Keys, Major General John C.
Frémont, U.S. Army, attacked Confederate infantry commanded by Jackson’s subordinate Maj.
General Richard S. Ewell in an attempt to capture a strategically valuable bridge at the small
town of Port Republic. Ewell deployed his troops in a strong defensive position, and Frémont
ultimately retreated after being flanked. Frémont advanced against Ewell without gathering
intelligence about Ewell’s deployment; the Federal line collapsed when hidden Confederate
regiments attacked the flank of the 8th New York Volunteers, which ultimately cost Frémont the
Battle of Cross Keys.
In 1862, Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia faced George B. McClellan’s Army
of the Potomac along the James River. Lee realized he would be unable to resist McClellan if he
was reinforced by the Union armies in western Virginia. Therefore, he ordered Maj. General
Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson to the Shenandoah Valley to occupy McClellan’s potential
reinforcements. Throughout May 1862, Jackson and his 17,000 troops fought a series of
engagements between Staunton and Winchester; according to historian Robert S. Rush, “within a
one-month period, [Jackson’s] Confederate Valley Army, never exceeding 17,000 men, marched
more than 200 miles, fought three battles, and neutralized more than 70,000 Union soldiers in a
campaign that caused the Federal focus to shift, at least momentarily, from the peninsula formed
by the York and James Rivers to the Shenandoah Valley.” 1 Noted Civil War historian James
McPherson agrees, writing that “Jackson’s victories in the Valley created an aura of invincibility
1 Robert S. Rush, “Actions and Reactions: The Spring 1862 Shenandoah Valley Campaign Revisited,”
Army History 47 (Spring-Summer 1999): 1.
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Bound Away: The Liberty Journal of History, Vol. 3, Iss. 1 [2020], Art. 4
around him and his foot cavalry,” and adding “they furthered the southern tradition of victory in
the Virginia theater that had begun at Manassas.”2
At the beginning of June two Federal armies stalked Jackson’s army, one in the main
Shenandoah Valley commanded by Maj. General John C. Frémont, the other in the smaller Page
Valley commanded by Brig. General James Shields. James Johnson Kirkpatrick of the 16 th
Mississippi Infantry confided to his diary that the Federals “[Seem] to be pressing on with
unusual courage…General Shields has been marching up the other valley with a detachment
from Fredericksburg, and we are almost between two armies larger than our own.” 3 Despite the
precariousness of his situation, Kirkpatrick added that “All have the most unwavering faith in
our leaders.”4 Jackson knew he would be outnumbered if Frémont and Shields joined forces and
determined to use the flooded Shenandoah River to keep them separated. During “five days of
masterly retreat”5 up the Valley towards Harrisonburg, Jackson burned the bridges across the
Shenandoah at New Market, which “Left Shields with an impassable river between them,
entirely unable to harass his flank or impede his march.” 6 He also took steps to prevent Shields
and Frémont from joining by destroying the bridge at Conrad’s Store, “which afforded the last
chance of a union of his adversaries north of Port Republic.” 7
Frémont followed stubbornly, but inefficiently. William Miller argues that “Federal
plans in the Valley region became ill defined or ill-considered or both.”8 Critically, he was
2 McPherson, James M. McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1988): 460.
3 James Johnson Kirkpatrick, “James Johnson Kirkpatrick Diary, June 6, 1862, Friday,” In The Sixteenth
Mississippi Infantry, R. G. Evans, ed. (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2002): 78.
4 Kirkpatrick 1862, 78.
5 Col. William Allan, Jackson’s Valley Campaign (Richmond: G. W. Gary and Co., Printers, 1878): 22.
6 Allan 1878, 23.
7 Ibid.
8 William J. Miller, “Such Men as Shields, Banks, and Fremont: Federal Command in Western Virginia,
March-June 1862,” in The Shenandoah Valley Campaign of 1862, Gary W. Gallagher, ed. (Chapel Hill: The
University of North Carolina Press, 2003): 951.
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Zook: Frémont at Cross Keys
unable to coordinate his movements with Shields. Miller believes Frémont was out of his depth,
writing “A combination of Fremont’s service in the engineers and his ideology earned him rank
in the Union army beyond his abilities.”9
Elements of Frémont’s command fought the Confederate rearguard on June 6 (...truncated)