| William Britains and American Artist Dale
Gallon have combined their efforts and have developed a set of Soldiers
depicting figures in the Dale Gallon American Civil War painting titled
"Clubs are Trump."
The "Copse of Trees" on Cemetery Ridge is the setting
for "Clubs Are Trump." After two full days of heavy fighting
in and around the small town of Gettysburg, confederate General
Robert E. Lee was embarking on the final action of the famous engagement
on the afternoon of July 3, 1863. Some 12,000 soldiers, from three
separate confederate divisions, made their way across the one-mile
open field that separated the opposing armies. Despite the frightful
casualties for artillery and small arms fire, a small contingent
of Confederate soldiers reached their objective, a little clump
of oak trees at the center of the Federal Line. Standing just to
the rear of the thin single line of Federal resistance, twenty-year
old Edmund Rice, the major of the 19th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry
Regiment, realized the time to action had arrived. Waiting for his
command officer to order the regiment into the frey, Rice spotted
General Winfield Scott Hancock gesturing to the breakthrough. Considering
Hancock's actions a permission to move forward, Rice ordered the
left wing of the regiment to their feet. Suddenly the rest of the
19th and the nearby 42nd New York Infantry, followed suit and both
commands were quickly moving to seal the penetration. As they neared
the southern edge of the copse, a roar of shouts passed down the
Second Corps line "Clubs are Trump Forwarded the white trefoil."
Major Rice's charges stopped the Southern movement into the rear
of the Union position on Cemetery Ridge, and tipped the balance
in favor the Federal defenders around the famed "Angle"
at Gettysburg.
With this counter-attack, the remnant of Pickett's shattered command
either surrendered to the Union defenders or died where they stood.
In less than three hours, including the two-hour cannon dual, Pickett's
division lost over half its strength, The 14th Virginia lost 248
of 472 men. The Battle of Gettysburg had come to a close. Unable
to field a single fresh division and with the once mighty offensive
capability of the army now gone, Lee decided to withdraw. The war
had turned a crucial corner. While it took two more years to decide
the issue, the Civil War had changed in favor of the North.
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