[Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant<br> Volume Two by Ulysses S. Grant]@TWC D-Link book
Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant
Volume Two

CHAPTER L
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This disposition was made in time to attack as ordered.

Hancock moved by the left of the Orange Plank Road, and Wadsworth by the right of it.

The fighting was desperate for about an hour, when the enemy began to break up in great confusion.
I believed then, and see no reason to change that opinion now, that if the country had been such that Hancock and his command could have seen the confusion and panic in the lines of the enemy, it would have been taken advantage of so effectually that Lee would not have made another stand outside of his Richmond defences.
Gibbon commanded Hancock's left, and was ordered to attack, but was not able to accomplish much.
On the morning of the 6th Sheridan was sent to connect with Hancock's left and attack the enemy's cavalry who were trying to get on our left and rear.

He met them at the intersection of the Furnace and Brock roads and at Todd's Tavern, and defeated them at both places.

Later he was attacked, and again the enemy was repulsed.
Hancock heard the firing between Sheridan and Stuart, and thinking the enemy coming by that road, still further reinforced his position guarding the entrance to the Brock Road.


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