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The one civilian casualty |
It is an unusually warm and sunny day, a perfect time to be outdoors. There are two tours here to describe the details of two battles-the north called it The 1st and 2nd Battle of Bull Run named for the shallow creek that was crossed by the Union soldiers. The south called it The 1st and 2nd Battles of Manassas.
Best to defer to the southern armies on this one. They whipped the north in both battles. But not without cost. In the second battle alone there were 23,000 casualties, filling the surrounding farmhouses and distant Arlington churches with the wounded. Most of the dead were never buried and even today, on a occasion, remnants and artifacts surface.

Indeed, politicians came down to Centreville about 6 miles away to experience this battle that they thought would be a decisive snup to Rebel insurgency. They couldn't see the fighting itself, but could follow the action as the cheers and yelps volleyed back and forth, smoke rising from the plateau on Henry Hill.
This was no picnic for anyone on the field or off. The innocent eager northern men who went onto the fields in their various uniforms mimicking the French colonials of Northern Africa
finished this day in utter disbelief, beaten as much by the sight of their comrades mowed down as the defeat itself.
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General B. E. Bee in an attempt to rally his fearful southern recruits calls out "Form, form, there stands Jackson like a Stone Wall. Rally behind the Virginians" And those Virginians were to become known as the vaunted Stonewall Brigade loyal to their leader "Stonewall" Jackson.