The Battle of Piedmont has long been considered a small battle with
massive consequences. A must-have for Shenandoah Valley and Civil War
enthusiasts.
In 1864, General Grant tasked General David Hunter with raiding the
breadbasket of the Shenandoah Valley and destroying the Confederate
factories and supply lines. General Lee dispatched General William E.
Grumble Jones, and the forces collided up the fertile fields of eastern
Augusta County. It was a bloody day--the Battle of Piedmont saw more men
killed and wounded than in any of Stonewall Jackson's 1862 Valley
encounters. Sweeping on to victory, Federal forces then occupied
Staunton and laid waste to the railroad and Confederate workshops.
Join Civil War historian Scott C. Patchan, a leading authority on the
1864 Shenandoah Valley Campaign and sitting member of Shenandoah Valley
Battlefield Foundation's Resource Protection Committee, as he chronicles
the campaign and sheds light on its place in the war.