The First Battle of Bull Run: A Nation’s Wake-Up Call
The air was thick with the heat of a Virginia summer as the morning sun crept over the rolling fields near Manassas Junction. The soldiers, many fresh from their homes in the North and South, had hardly seen battle before. They were eager, almost excited, as they marched toward destiny on that fateful day—July 21, 1861.
A Grand Expectation
In Washington, D.C., government officials, politicians, and even curious civilians packed picnic baskets and rode out to observe what they believed would be a quick Union victory. They thought this would be the battle to end the rebellion and restore the Union.
General Irvin McDowell, commanding the Union forces, led his 35,000 men with confidence, despite knowing they were inexperienced. His plan was to strike the Confederate forces, about 32,000 strong, stationed along Bull Run Creek, crush them, and march on to Richmond, the Confederate capital.
On the other side of the battlefield, Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard stood alongside General Joseph E. Johnston, having quickly reinforced their troops using the railroad—a first in military history. They knew an attack was coming, but the spirit of Southern resistance burned hot in their veins.
The Battle Begins
At dawn, Union cannons roared, shattering the stillness. McDowell’s forces launched a feigned attack on the Confederate right flank while sending a large portion of his army to strike the left, hoping to catch Beauregard off guard.
At first, it worked. Union troops pushed through the Confederate defenses, forcing them to retreat toward Henry House Hill. The Northern men could taste victory.
But then, something happened.
The Turning Point
As the Confederate line wavered, a brigade of Virginians under General Thomas J. Jackson stood firm at the crest of the hill. Cannon fire rained around them, but Jackson’s men held their ground. "There stands Jackson like a stone wall!" cried General Bernard Bee, rallying his troops.
With that, "Stonewall" Jackson was born.
The Confederates regrouped, inspired by Jackson’s unyielding stand. As reinforcements poured in, the tide of battle shifted.
Union Panic and Retreat
McDowell’s soldiers, already exhausted and lacking discipline, began to falter under the Confederate counterattack. The rebel yell—piercing and wild— echoed across the battlefield as Southern troops charged down the hill, pushing the Union forces back toward Bull Run Creek.
What had started as an orderly retreat quickly became chaos. Soldiers threw down their rifles and ran. Artillery wagons overturned, horses panicked, and civilians—who had come to watch a spectacle—now found themselves caught in the frenzied stampede.
As the Union army fled back to Washington, they left behind cannons, weapons, and supplies. The dream of a quick war had shattered.
Aftermath: A Hard Lesson Learned
The Confederates, despite their victory, were too disorganized to pursue. The battle had cost over 4,800 casualties—a grim reminder that this war would not end in a single battle.
In Washington, the shocking defeat sent waves of fear through the government. President Abraham Lincoln, realizing the magnitude of the conflict ahead, called for 500,000 more troops and placed General George B. McClellan in charge of the Union Army.
The First Battle of Bull Run was not just a fight between two armies—it was the moment when America realized that this war would be long, bloody, and unlike anything they had ever seen before.
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