FREDERICKSBURG — On the second floor of the old brick building on Sophia Street, the three Confederate snipers waited for the Yankees.
They had their muskets at the ready, and paper ammunition cartridges were lined up on the window sills.
Video: Reenactors commemorated the 150th anniversary of the Civil War’s Battle of Fredericksburg, a bloody defeat for Union forces. On Saturday, participants re-created the part of the battle that saw northern soldiers cross the Rappahannock River.
FREDERICKSBURG — On the second floor of the old brick building on Sophia Street, the three Confederate snipers waited for the Yankees.
They had their muskets at the ready, and paper ammunition cartridges were lined up on the window sills.
Outside, their comrades were retreating. There were shouts, crashes of gunfire and the sound of approaching drums. “Get ready!” rebel Andrew Prasse said as he leaned out a window. “All right, let ’em have it, boys!”
They refought the Civil War’s Battle of Fredericksburg on Saturday, a few days shy of its 150th anniversary.
There was no bloodshed, of course, but hundreds of reenactors such as Prasse, 26, of Columbia Heights, made it feel as if there were.
Once again, the streets rang with the sound of the bugle and the tramp of marching men. The walls echoed with rifle volleys. And the damp air above the Rappahannock River shook with the concussion of artillery.
There were even “dead” and “wounded” — one of whom cried out to fleeing buddies, “Don’t leave me in the hands of the Yankees!”
The weather cooperated, too, as the day dawned amid eerie fog but with moderate temperatures for the thousands of onlookers who thronged the sidewalks.
It was all part of the nation’s continuing commemoration of the sesquicentennial of the Civil War years, 1861 to 1865.
Prasse and his fellow rebels helped reenact the bitter street fighting that marked the first phase of the battle, and saw the Yankees drive the Confederates out of town in house-to-house combat.
The reenactors also sought to recreate the Union Army’s crossing of the river into Fredericksburg on pontoon bridges.
This time, a modern floating “ribbon bridge” was deployed by the 189th Multirole Bridge Company, of the Army National Guard. It spanned the river, but fell just short of the bank on the Fredericksburg side.
Union soldiers finished their crossing by plunging into knee-deep water with their muskets and equipment. They then had to struggle up the steep, mud-slicked river bank.
Most had to be helped by young National Guardsmen. Several reenactors fell in the slippery mud. Caps tumbled off. Uniforms got muddy. And all got wet.
“Well, that sucked,” said one Yankee after scrambling up the river bank.
Once on solid ground, though, they re-formed and prepared for action.
Most looked like they had stepped out of 19th-century photographs.
Some Union soldiers wore sprigs of greenery in their caps, just as members of the Irish Brigade had here 150 years ago. Many rebels looked authentically scraggly-bearded, in tattered clothing and chewing cigars.
“This is monumental,” said Dave Cornett, 57, a retired firefighter from Roanoke, who commanded the Confederate reenactors and looked like a general.
“This is the first time this river’s been crossed” in this fashion at Fredericksburg since the battle, he said. “This is history.”
“You know the old adage, ‘If you forget your history, you’re doomed to repeat it,’ ’’ he said. “We’re doing this from the history aspect of it, to teach the public on this period of American history, and also to preserve the memory of those who were here 150 years ago.”
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