Place

Thoburn's Redoubt

Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

Cannon on a grassy knoll overlooking fall foliage and a historic farm.
Artillery on Thoburn's Redoubt overlooking fall foliage and the Bowman-Hite Farm.

NPS/A. Mazzucco

Quick Facts
Location:
Middletown, Virginia
Significance:
Part of Cedar Creek Battlefield

Historical/Interpretive Information/Exhibits, Information Kiosk/Bulletin Board, Trailhead

The Confederate surprise attack in the pre-dawn fog of October 19, 1864 struck here against the US Army of West Virginia first, then drove the rest of the Federal troops from their camps around Belle Grove Plantation. 

Army of West Virginia Trenches

Upon taking their position along Cedar Creek in early October, Colonel Joseph Thoburn had his men dig a series of strong entrenchments near modern Bowman’s Mill Road. A Confederate soldier who attacked them during the battle vividly described the defense works:

"The enemy was posted on an almost impregnable position on the bluff overlooking Cedar Creek… The enemy’s breastworks were built of strong timbers, with earth thrown against them, with a deep trench on the inside… In front of this breastwork, and from forty to fifty feet in breadth, was an abattis [tree branches with their ends stripped and sharpened into points and then intertwined]…"

Almost none of these fortifications survive today. The remains of a smaller set of earthworks still exist on the western edge of the property along the bluffs overlooking Cedar Creek. The Army of West Virginia probably constructed them to protect a picket line that covered crossing points in the creek. 

Shenandoah Valley Battlefields Foundation has preserved this 134-acre property since 2003. Trails lead to the earthworks in the woodland to the west.

Visible from the knoll is the historic Bowman-Hite Farm, preserved by the National Park Service. 

Last updated: March 20, 2025