Article • The War Consumed Everything

Jackson's 1862 Campaign in the Shenandoah Valley

Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

A pencil sketch records mounted troops crossing a river on a pontoon bridge.
"The army of General Fremont crossing the north fork of the Shenandoah at Mt. Jackson--Pursuit of Stonewall Jackson" by Edwin Forbes, 1862

Library of Congress

"If this Valley is lost, Virginia is lost."

Confederate Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson

Strategic Diversion

With U.S. Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan advancing on Richmond with 100,000 soldiers, Confederate Maj. Gen. "Stonewall" Jackson had orders for a strategic distraction in the Shenandoah Valley. In March 1862 he marched his small army of about 3,500 men northward from Mount Jackson, determined to strike the Federals.

Campaign & Battles

Using aggressive tactics and thorough knowledge of the Valley's terrain, Jackson fought and beat several Federal commanders up and down the Valley from late March to early June. The Federal retreat in June let Jackson’s army leave the Valley on June 17 to join Gen. Robert E. Lee's besieged army near the Confederate capital at Richmond.

A map depicts army movements during a Civil War campaign.
Valley Campaign, March through May 1862: A battle map by Hal Jesperson, www.cwmaps.com, shows Jackson's Confederates (red) advancing down the Shenandoah Valley, or north, to fight Shields' Federals (blue) at Kernstown; then Jackson retreating up the Valley, or south, to link with Ewell's troops before moving west into the mountains to fight the Federals at McDowell.

Map by Hal Jespersen, www.cwmaps.com

A map depicts army movements during a Civil War campaign.
Valley Campaign, May through June 1862: A battle map by Hal Jesperson, www.cwmaps.com, shows Jackson's Confederates (red) entering the Valley from the west, advancing north to fight Banks' Federals (blue) at Front Royal and Winchester; then returning south for battles at Cross Keys and Port Republic before leaving the Valley to the east.

Map by Hal Jespersen, www.cwmaps.com

People, Places, & Stories

Showing results 1-10 of 12

  • Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    Engagement at Middletown on May 24, 1862

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park
    An ink illustration depicts mounted soldiers and cannons in battle.

    Although Confederate Maj. Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson was pleased with his May 23, 1862, victory at Front Royal, he was faced with a difficult decision the next day. “In the event of Banks leaving Strasburg he might escape toward the Potomac,” he wrote later, “or if we moved directly to Winchester, he might move via Front Royal toward Washington City.” To determine US Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Banks’s intentions, Jackson sent troops toward both Winchester and Strasburg.

  • Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    Battle of Port Republic

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park
    A historic pencil drawing shows roads, forest, towns, houses, and waterways.

    The Battle of Port Republic was the last in Gen. Stonewall Jackson’s 1862 Shenandoah Valley Campaign. After his victory there the Federal army withdrew farther north. On June 18th, Jackson’s troops marched out of the Valley and across the Blue Ridge Mountains. They joined Gen. Robert E. Lee to defend Richmond against US Gen. George McClellan’s Army of the Potomac.

  • Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    First Battle of Winchester

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park
    A mowed grass hilltop beyond a wire fence is lined with trees.

    Exhausted by their harried evacuation of Strasburg, US Gen. Banks’s soldiers took up positions on the hills south of Winchester. Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson’s morning assault pushed the Federals into a retreat through the hostile population in Winchester. Jackson’s victories at Front Royal and Winchester once again forced the US Army to divert troops from their advance on Richmond to the Shenandoah Valley.

  • Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    Battle of Cross Keys

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park
    An 1800s pencil drawing shows an army gathering for battle.

    The twin battles of Cross Keys and Port Republic closed out Stonewall Jackson’s 1862 Valley Campaign. At Cross Keys, Jackson occupied key bridges to keep US generals Fremont and Shields from joining their armies. Jackson then defeated each general in turn before withdrawing to make his stand at Port Republic.

  • Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    Battle of Front Royal

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park
    A highway historical marker and wayside exhibit stand on a courthouse grounds.

    Using his knowledge of Valley geography, Stonewall Jackson side-stepped Banks' Federals by marching the bulk of his army across Massanutten Mountain. The Confederates surprised and overwhelmed a small Federal outpost at the Battle of Front Royal, at the northern end of Massanutten, on May 23. Banks, finding Jackson in his rear, had no choice but to order a rapid retreat to Winchester, in hopes of making a stand there.

  • Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    Battle of McDowell

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson won his first victory of the 1862 Valley Campaign at McDowell. Jackson’s skillful maneuvers deceived the Federals into thinking he was leaving the Valley, before doubling back to take a strong position on Sitlington’s Hill.

    • Type: Person
    • Locations: Antietam National Battlefield, Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park, Harpers Ferry National Historical Park, Manassas National Battlefield Park
    A bearded man in military dress sits for an engraved 1860s black and white print portrait.

    "Stonewall" Jackson went from being an orphan to one of the most valued generals in the Confederate Army.

  • Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    First Battle of Kernstown

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park
    A yellowed 1800s map show terrain details with battle movements in red.

    The US Army won the First Battle of Kernstown, just south of Winchester, on March 23, 1862, but Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson’s aggressiveness caused great alarm in Washington. Believing Jackson had a larger number of men, Lincoln sent thousands of Federal soldiers back to the Valley. Though this battle was a tactical loss for Jackson, he scored a strategic win by keeping the Federals from Richmond.

  • Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    Jackson's 1862 Campaign in the Shenandoah Valley

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park
    A pencil sketch records mounted troops crossing a river on a pontoon bridge.

    In spring of 1862, Confederate Gen. Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson unleashed a vigorous offensive that diverted thousands of Federal troops from their massive advance against the Confederate capital at Richmond.

  • Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

    Jedediah Hotchkiss' Maps of the Shenandoah Valley

    • Type: Article
    • Locations: Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park
    A yellowed, hand-drawn map from the 1800s shows finely-detailed geography and battle movements.

    Jedediah Hotchkiss's accurate maps played a role in numerous Confederate victories in the Shenandoah Valley and elsewhere. Exhibits showing selected maps are on display at the Visitor Center.

Part of a series of articles titled The War Consumed Everything.

Last updated: August 20, 2023