yeah the battle really illustrated to all that the Napoleonic school of warfare was completely and suicidally outdated.
All were heroes in their respective rights, but the guy who won the battle was Gen. John Buford. Had he not held the heights until Gen. Reynolds showed up on 1 July, the battle would have turned out very differently...
"Well, it is all over now. The battle is lost, and many of us are prisoners, many are dead, many wounded, bleeding and dying. Your Soldier lives and mourns and but for you, my darling, he would rather, a million times rather, be back there with his dead, to sleep for all time in an unknown grave."
Major General George Pickett, CSA, to his fiancée, July 4, 1863
Uh-oh....War Between the States/War of Northern Aggression/Civil War thread breaking out...
I am humbled by the history of this conflict and the men on both sides who died.
Gettysburg was a very small battlefield. An intense, and accidental, battle. Pickett should have swung around to the left through town and rolled up the ridgeline. Hindsight.