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Abraham Lincoln Battle Of Gettysburg July 1-2-3 1863 Steel Medal Die w/ Token For Sale


Abraham Lincoln Battle Of Gettysburg July 1-2-3 1863 Steel Medal Die w/ Token
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Abraham Lincoln Battle Of Gettysburg July 1-2-3 1863 Steel Medal Die w/ Token:
$245.00

Abraham Lincoln Battle of Gettysburg July 1-2-3 1863 Steel Medal Die w/ Medal

OOAK One Of A Kind

Industrial Steel Manufacturing

Token / Medal / Coin Die Hub

Includes Token / Medal/ Coin

STEEL DIE IS OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN SIDE ONLY NOT OBVERSE DIE 

Solid Steel Die Hub

7 lbs. !!!!

3” x 3” x 3”


Token / Medal / Coin

1 1/8” Diameter


Battle of Gettysburg

Part of the Eastern theater of the American Civil War


The Battle of Gettysburg by Thure de Thulstrup

Date July 1–3, 1863

Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, U.S.

Result Union victory

Belligerents

United States United States (Union)

Confederate States of America Confederate States

Commanders and leaders

George Meade

Robert E. Lee

Units involved

Army of the Potomac

Army of Northern artillery pieces

36 cavalry regiments

71,000–75,000, possibly as many as 80,000.

270 artillery pieces

9,500 cavalry

Casualties and />

This 1863 oval-shaped map depicts the Gettysburg Battlefield during July 1–3, 1863, showing troop and artillery positions and movements, relief hachures, drainage, roads, railroads, and houses with the names of residents at the time of the Battle of Gettysburg.


This November 1862 Harper's Magazine illustration shows Confederate Army troops escorting captured African American civilians south into slavery. En route to Gettysburg, the Army of Northern Virginia kidnapped between 40 and nearly 60 Black civilians and sent them south into slavery.

The Battle of Gettysburg was a three-day battle in the American Civil War fought between Union and Confederate forces between July 1 2 3, 1863, in and around Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. The battle, which was won by the Union, was the Civil War's turning point, ending the Confederacy's aspirations to establish an independent nation, and the war's bloodiest battle, claiming some 50,000 combined casualties.


In the Battle of Gettysburg, Union Major General George Meade's Army of the Potomac defeated attacks by Confederate General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, halting Lee's invasion of the North and forcing his retreat.


After his success at Chancellorsville in Virginia in May 1863, Lee led his army through the Shenandoah Valley to begin his second invasion of the North—the Gettysburg Campaign. With his army in high spirits, Lee intended to shift the focus of the summer campaign from war-ravaged northern Virginia and hoped to influence Northern politicians to give up their prosecution of the war by penetrating as far as Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, or even Philadelphia. Prodded by President Abraham Lincoln, Major General Joseph Hooker moved his army in pursuit, but was relieved of command just three days before the battle and replaced by Meade.


Elements of the two armies initially collided at Gettysburg on July 1, 1863, as Lee urgently concentrated his forces there, his objective being to engage the Union army and destroy it. Low ridges to the northwest of town were defended initially by a Union cavalry division under Brigadier General John Buford, and soon reinforced with two corps of Union infantry. However, two large Confederate corps assaulted them from the northwest and north, collapsing the hastily developed Union lines, sending the defenders retreating through the streets of the town to the hills just to the south. On the second day of battle, most of both armies had assembled. The Union line was laid out in a defensive formation resembling a fishhook. In the late afternoon of July 2, Lee launched a heavy assault on the Union left flank, and fierce fighting raged at Little Round Top, the Wheatfield, Devil's Den, and the Peach Orchard. On the Union right, Confederate demonstrations escalated into full-scale assaults on Culp's Hill and Cemetery Hill. All across the battlefield, despite significant losses, the Union defenders held their lines.


On the third day of battle, fighting resumed on Culp's Hill, and cavalry battles raged to the east and south, but the main event was a dramatic infantry assault by around 12,000 Confederates against the center of the Union line on Cemetery Ridge, known as Pickett's Charge. The charge was repelled by Union rifle and artillery fire, at great loss to the Confederate army. Lee led his army on the torturous Retreat from Gettysburg to Virginia. Between 46,000 and 51,000 soldiers from both armies were casualties in the three-day battle, the most costly in US history. On November 19, President Lincoln used the dedication ceremony for the Gettysburg National Cemetery to honor the fallen Union soldiers and redefine the purpose of the war in his historic Gettysburg Address.


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