Tag: Antietam National Battlefield

  • Antietam National Battlefield

    Antietam National Battlefield

    ▶ A Note from Ranger PamPaw

    “There are places in this country where the ground itself seems to carry the weight of what happened there. Antietam is one of those places.”

    September 17, 1862. A single day. More than 22,000 soldiers killed, wounded, or missing before the sun went down. The numbers alone are staggering — but the numbers don’t tell you what it felt like to walk those farm fields, to stand at Burnside Bridge and understand what it cost to cross it, or to look out over the Cornfield and try to comprehend what those men endured in less than three hours.

    What makes Antietam different from most Civil War sites is how well it has been preserved. The landscape is remarkably intact. The farm fields, the sunken road, the creek crossings — they are still there, still recognizable. When you walk this ground, you are not imagining a battle. You are standing on it. That kind of connection to history is rare, and it deserves your full attention.

    And then there is the bigger picture. The tactical outcome at Antietam was a draw. But it gave Lincoln the military footing he needed to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. The fate of slavery in America — and with it the soul of the Republic — turned on this one terrible day in a Maryland farm country. Go slowly when you visit. This place has earned it.

    — Ranger PamPaw

    ▶ Quick Facts

    Location5831 Dunker Church Road, Sharpsburg, MD 21782 · Washington County, western Maryland
    Established1890 — one of the first four national military parks established by Congress
    Size3,230 acres of preserved battlefield, farmland, and river corridor
    Admission$10 per person (ages 16+); Annual Pass and America the Beautiful Pass accepted · Free for ages 15 and under
    Visitor CenterOpen daily 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. (extended summer hours) · Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day
    Phone(301) 432-5124
    Park Drive8.5-mile self-guided auto tour with 11 marked stops — audio tour available via the NPS App
    TrailsApproximately 8.5 miles of maintained hiking trails; mostly flat to gently rolling
    PetsLeashed pets permitted on all trails and in picnic areas; not permitted inside buildings
    Nearby ParksHarpers Ferry NHP (15 mi.), Monocacy NB (25 mi.), C&O Canal NHP (adjacent)

    ▶ The Battle

    Maryland Campaign, September 1862

    By the summer of 1862, Robert E. Lee had driven Union forces from the Virginia Peninsula and routed a Federal army at Second Bull Run. Sensing an opportunity to shift the war onto Northern soil — and perhaps earn British and French diplomatic recognition for the Confederacy — Lee led his Army of Northern Virginia across the Potomac into Maryland in early September.

    A stroke of extraordinary luck changed the campaign’s trajectory. Union soldiers discovered a copy of Lee’s operational orders — Special Orders No. 191 — wrapped around three cigars in a Maryland field. The document revealed that Lee had divided his army. General George B. McClellan, commanding the Army of the Potomac, knew exactly where Lee’s forces were scattered. He had the chance to destroy them piecemeal. He moved — but not fast enough.

    Lee managed to reunite most of his army near Sharpsburg, Maryland, with his back to the Potomac River. On September 17, McClellan attacked. The battle that followed was not a model of Federal coordination — attacks came piecemeal across three separate sectors of the field — but the fighting was savage at every point of contact.

    Three Phases, One Day

    The battle unfolded in three overlapping phases across the landscape you can still walk today:

    • The North Woods and the Cornfield (Morning): Fighting began around dawn in the East Woods and the 30-acre cornfield owned by farmer David Miller. Units charged and countercharged across the same ground repeatedly. In roughly two hours, approximately 8,000 men fell in and around that cornfield alone. Union General Joseph Hooker later wrote that the corn was cut as closely as could have been done with a knife — by musket fire.
    • Bloody Lane (Midday): A sunken farm road in the center of the Confederate line — worn down by years of wagon traffic — became a natural rifle trench. Confederate soldiers held it for nearly four hours against wave after wave of Union assaults. When it finally fell, the road was so choked with Confederate dead that witnesses said you could walk its length without stepping on the ground. History named it Bloody Lane.
    • Burnside Bridge (Afternoon): On the Union left, General Ambrose Burnside spent most of the day trying to cross a narrow stone bridge over Antietam Creek — defended by just a few hundred Georgia sharpshooters on the bluffs above. His forces finally crossed in the early afternoon and pushed toward Sharpsburg — only to be driven back by A.P. Hill’s Confederate division, which arrived at the last moment after a 17-mile forced march from Harpers Ferry.

    When darkness fell, both armies held roughly the positions they had started with. More than 22,700 soldiers were killed, wounded, or missing. Lee retreated across the Potomac the following night. McClellan did not pursue.

    ▶ The Larger Meaning

    The Emancipation Proclamation

    Abraham Lincoln had been waiting for a Union military victory. He had drafted the Emancipation Proclamation months earlier but was advised not to issue it after a string of Federal defeats — it would look like an act of desperation. Antietam gave him the opening he needed.

    Five days after the battle — on September 22, 1862 — Lincoln issued the preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, declaring that all enslaved persons in states still in rebellion would be “forever free” as of January 1, 1863. The final proclamation followed on New Year’s Day.

    The political impact was immediate and far-reaching. It reframed the war’s purpose — from a conflict to preserve the Union into a crusade to end slavery. It made it nearly impossible for Britain or France to formally recognize the Confederacy, as both countries had abolished slavery and could not be seen siding with a slaveholders’ rebellion. And it opened the door for nearly 180,000 Black soldiers to serve in the Union Army, a force that would prove decisive in the war’s final years.

    Antietam was not the end of anything. Terrible battles lay ahead. But the direction of the war — and the nation — shifted in those Maryland farm fields on September 17, 1862. That is why this ground matters.

    ▶ Touring the Battlefield

    Start at the Visitor Center

    The Henry Kyd Douglas Visitor Center should be your first stop. The museum inside provides essential context — particularly if you’re not already familiar with the Maryland Campaign. The 26-minute film Antietam Visit is well-produced and highly recommended before you head out onto the field. Rangers are available to answer questions and can help you prioritize based on your available time.

    The 8.5-Mile Auto Tour

    The self-guided driving tour follows the battle’s progression through 11 numbered stops, beginning at the Dunker Church and moving generally from north to south. Allow at least two hours if you plan to get out of your car at the major stops — longer if you want to walk any of the trails. The NPS App includes a free audio tour keyed to each stop.

    • Stop 1 — Dunker Church: The white-washed brick church of the German Baptist Brethren (a pacifist sect) became a landmark for both armies and changed hands several times during the battle. The restored building is a quiet, powerful place to begin.
    • Stop 2 — North Woods / The Cornfield: The open farmland where the battle’s first and most ferocious fighting erupted at dawn. A walking trail crosses the Cornfield and connects to the East and West Woods.
    • Stop 5 — Bloody Lane (Sunken Road): Walk the entire length of the sunken road — about a quarter mile. The observation tower at the east end provides a sweeping view of the central battlefield that is essential for understanding the day’s middle phase.
    • Stop 9 — Burnside Bridge: The three-arched stone bridge over Antietam Creek is one of the most photographed sites in the National Park System. A short loop trail takes you across the bridge and up to the Georgia sharpshooters’ firing positions on the bluffs — an eye-opening perspective on why those few hundred Confederates were able to hold it for hours.
    • Antietam National Cemetery: Located at the north end of the tour, the cemetery holds the remains of more than 4,700 Union soldiers. A solemn and important stop. (Confederate dead were largely buried in local church cemeteries and in Hagerstown’s Rose Hill Cemetery.)

    ▶ Trails & Walking Routes

    Antietam offers approximately 8.5 miles of maintained foot trails. The terrain is mostly flat to gently rolling Maryland farmland — accessible for most visitors. Several trails connect directly to auto tour stops, making it easy to combine driving and walking.

    • Cornfield / North Woods Trail (approx. 1.5 mi.): Loops through the East Woods, the Cornfield, and the North Woods. Interpretive markers throughout. Best done in the morning when the light across the open fields is extraordinary.
    • Bloody Lane Trail (approx. 0.5 mi.): Follows the sunken road from Mumma Farm to the observation tower. Short, flat, and historically dense — don’t skip it.
    • Burnside Bridge Trail (approx. 1.3 mi.): Loops from the bridge parking area across Burnside Bridge, up to the Confederate bluff positions, and returns along Antietam Creek. The creek-side section is particularly pleasant in spring and fall.
    • Final Attack Trail (approx. 1.75 mi.): Traces the route of A.P. Hill’s division and Burnside’s late-afternoon advance. Less visited than the northern trails and a good choice for those who want a quieter walk.

    ▶ Know Before You Go

    • No food or gas inside the park. The town of Sharpsburg (immediately adjacent) is very small. Hagerstown, about 12 miles north, is the best base for dining, lodging, and services. Shepherdstown, WV (just across the Potomac) is a charming alternative with good restaurants and lodging.
    • September 17 is the battle’s anniversary. The park holds commemorative programs each year around the anniversary. It is also one of the busiest days of the year — plan accordingly.
    • Summer heat is real. There is almost no shade on the open battlefield. Bring water, wear sunscreen, and consider an early morning visit in July and August.
    • Ranger-led programs run seasonally. Walking tours of the Cornfield, Bloody Lane, and Burnside Bridge are offered on weekends from spring through fall. Check the park’s website or the NPS App for current schedules.
    • The C&O Canal towpath is adjacent to the park. The Chesapeake & Ohio Canal NHP runs along the Potomac River at the park’s southern edge. A short connector trail links the two sites — a worthwhile add-on for hikers and cyclists.
    • Photography. Dawn and dusk light on the open fields and Burnside Bridge are exceptional. The Cornfield in early morning mist is one of the most evocative landscapes on any Civil War battlefield.

    Why This Place Matters

    September 17, 1862 was the single bloodiest day in American military history — before or since. That fact alone demands our attention. But Antietam’s significance runs deeper than the casualty count.

    Lee’s first invasion of the North failed here. British intervention on behalf of the Confederacy — which had seemed plausible just weeks earlier — became politically untenable. And Lincoln found his moment. Without Antietam, the Emancipation Proclamation may never have been issued — or at least not when it was, in the form it took, with the impact it had.

    The battlefield is also a testament to preservation. Much of what you see today — the fields, the roads, the bridge, the church — survives in something close to its 1862 condition. That kind of landscape integrity is increasingly rare and genuinely fragile. It is worth protecting, and it is worth visiting with the care and attention it deserves.

    ▶ First Encounters

    PLACEHOLDER-YOUTUBE-URL

    ▶ Resources & Further Reading

    Ranger PamPaw Podcast — Tezels on the Road

    Hear the Story on the Ranger PamPaw Podcast

    Parks, perspective, and stories earned from a lifetime in the National Parks — from someone who was actually there. The Ranger PamPaw Podcast goes deeper on the history, the landscape, and the meaning behind the places that define America.

  • Burnside Bridge and Union Advance Trail

    The Burnside Bridge Trail at Antietam National Battlefield is one of the most historically charged short hikes in the National Park System. Starting at the iconic Lower Bridge — forever known as Burnside Bridge — the loop crosses Antietam Creek on the original 1836 stone span, then follows the east bank north along the Union Advance Trail to the remnants of an old mill dam and a quiet waterfall, before climbing back across the open battlefield to the parking area. It is a hike where every step echoes September 17, 1862 — the bloodiest single day in American military history.

    Trail Facts

    • Distance: ~1.5 miles (loop)
    • Elevation Gain: ~80 feet — mostly gentle, one short climb on the return
    • Difficulty: Easy
    • Trail Type: Loop (paved path, gravel, and mowed grass)
    • Typical Hiking Time: 45–60 minutes
    • Accessibility: Paved path from parking area to the bridge is accessible; Union Advance Trail is natural surface
    • Pets: Allowed on leash

    The Burnside Bridge area is one of several trail hubs within Antietam National Battlefield. The short paved path to the bridge alone is worth the stop for visitors of any ability level — the bridge and its overlook are among the most evocative spots on any Civil War battlefield.

    Getting to the Trailhead

    The Burnside Bridge parking area is located off Burnside Bridge Road in Sharpsburg, Maryland, approximately one mile south of the Antietam National Battlefield Visitor Center on Dunker Church Road. The Visitor Center is a highly recommended first stop — the film, museum exhibits, and battlefield maps provide essential context before you walk the ground. From the parking area, a short paved path leads directly down toward the bridge.

    Antietam National Battlefield is located near Sharpsburg, Maryland — about 70 miles west of Baltimore and 70 miles northwest of Washington, D.C. — making it a natural destination for a day trip from either city or a stop along a broader Civil War trail tour through western Maryland.

    Hiking the Trail

    From the parking area, a short descent brings you to the west bank of Antietam Creek and the bridge approach. Before crossing, pause on the hillside. The position of the Confederate sharpshooters — tucked into the woods and bluffs on the west bank — becomes immediately clear from this vantage, and so does the problem facing the Union commanders who spent the better part of a morning trying to take this crossing.

    Crossing the bridge itself is the centerpiece of the hike. The three-arch stone span, built in 1836, stretches about 125 feet over the creek. Walk it slowly — the stonework is original, the width is narrow, and the view downstream along the creek is exactly what soldiers on both sides saw that morning. Once across, the trail turns north onto the Union Advance Trail, a gentle path along the east bank of Antietam Creek in the direction Burnside’s Corps moved after finally securing the crossing. The creek runs alongside for much of the route, and the shaded, quiet character of this section stands in sharp contrast to its bloody history.

    The trail reaches the remnants of an old mill dam — a low stone weir where water spills over in a gentle cascade — before the loop turns back uphill and returns across open ground to the parking area. The return leg crosses the rolling farmland of the battlefield, giving a broader view of the terrain Burnside’s troops were fighting toward after crossing the bridge.

    Highlights Along the Way

    Burnside Bridge

    The Lower Bridge — universally called Burnside Bridge since the battle — was built in 1836 by the county as a simple farm crossing. On the morning of September 17, 1862, it became one of the most contested pieces of ground of the entire Civil War. Roughly 400 Georgian sharpshooters of Brigadier General Robert Toombs’s brigade held the west bank against repeated frontal assaults by Major General Ambrose Burnside’s IX Corps — some 12,000 men. The failed charges cost the Union dearly in time and lives. It took until roughly 1:00 PM for the 51st New York and 51st Pennsylvania regiments to finally force the crossing, having been promised a whiskey ration as inducement. The three-hour delay had consequences that rippled through the entire day’s outcome.

    The Union Advance Trail and the Old Dam

    The Union Advance Trail follows the east bank north from the bridge, retracing the ground over which Burnside’s Corps moved after finally crossing — pushing toward Sharpsburg and the Confederate right flank. The pace of that advance became its own controversy: had Burnside moved faster, he might have rolled up Lee’s right before A.P. Hill arrived. The trail’s most unexpected feature is the old mill dam, a remnant of the agricultural landscape that predated the battle. Water still spills over the stone weir, and the spot has a quietness to it that’s easy to linger over.

    The Return Loop and the Open Fields

    The return leg crosses the open ground above the creek valley — the same rolling farmland over which the afternoon’s fighting unfolded as Burnside’s troops pressed toward Sharpsburg, and then fell back when A.P. Hill’s division arrived from Harpers Ferry and struck the Union left flank. The battlefield landscape here has changed little since 1862, and that continuity gives the walk a particular weight.

    What Makes This Trail Special

    The Burnside Bridge Trail packs an extraordinary amount of history into a short walk. The bridge itself is one of the most recognizable structures in Civil War memory — and crossing it on foot, on the original stonework, gives visitors something no driving tour can replicate. The Union Advance Trail adds a dimension most visitors miss: the quiet creek corridor where a massive Union force reorganized after its costly morning, and the old dam waterfall that has nothing to do with the battle and everything to do with why you keep wanting to come back to places like this. The loop back across open farmland closes the story and leaves you with a full picture of what happened in this small corner of Maryland on September 17, 1862.

    Tips for Visiting

    • Start at the Visitor Center — the museum and film provide context that makes the bridge crossing far more meaningful.
    • Walk across the bridge slowly. Read the interpretive markers. The width and the sightlines tell the story better than any description.
    • Wear sturdy shoes — the Union Advance Trail and the return loop are natural surface and can be muddy after rain.
    • Bring bug spray in warmer months — the creek corridor is prime mosquito territory.
    • Combine this stop with the full Antietam auto tour for the best understanding of the battle’s three phases and overall scope.
    • There is no food or water available at the Burnside Bridge stop; plan accordingly.

    The Bloodiest Day — and What Followed

    The Battle of Antietam on September 17, 1862 was the bloodiest single day in American military history — approximately 22,000 soldiers killed, wounded, or missing in roughly twelve hours of fighting. The battle unfolded in three distinct phases: the dawn assault at the Cornfield and Dunker Church in the north, the catastrophic struggle for the Sunken Road in the center, and the prolonged fight for the Lower Bridge in the south. Despite the staggering losses on both sides, the battle ended in tactical stalemate — but it was a strategic Union victory, turning back Robert E. Lee’s first invasion of the North.

    That strategic outcome gave President Abraham Lincoln the moment he had been waiting for. Just five days after Antietam, on September 22, 1862, Lincoln issued the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation. The bridge you cross on this trail stands at the edge of a day that did not just alter the course of the Civil War — it changed the war’s fundamental meaning.

    Tuesdays on the Trail Video

    This trail guide pairs with our Tuesdays on the Trail video episode, where we walk the Burnside Bridge Trail and explore the history of this remarkable crossing on Antietam Creek.

    Final Thoughts

    The Burnside Bridge Trail does not ask much — a mile and a half, an easy grade, less than an hour. What it gives in return is a direct, physical connection to one of the pivotal moments of the Civil War and of American history. You cross the same stones. You walk the same bank. You see the same creek. Antietam National Battlefield is one of the best-preserved Civil War sites in the country, and the Burnside Bridge Trail is one of the most powerful ways to experience it.

    Helpful Links & Resources


    Tezels on the Road

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