Arlington Ridge boasts several unique distinctions in the history of the Civil War: • First piece of Confederate-occupied territory captured by the Union Army • Longest-held Confederate territory during the course of the war • Final encampment for much of the Union Army
Seizure of The Ridge Because of its high elevation and close proximity to the national capital of
Washington, D.C., which is a little over three miles from the then-uncompleted
Washington Monument, Arlington Ridge offered a natural strategic point necessary for securing the defense of the capital. If
Confederate Army troops had been able to secure the ridge, mortars would easily be able to shell the capital. On May 23, 1861, Virginia citizens voted three to one in favor of secession. At dawn the next day, May 24, Union troops crossed the Potomac to seize Arlington Heights. To the south of the ridge, leading the 11th New York Zouave regiment, Col.
Elmer Ephraim Ellsworth was charged with seizing
Alexandria, Virginia. Advancing uncontested through the streets, Elssworth ordered some of his men to take the railroad station and a few others to secure the telegraph office. On the way, he espied a Confederate flag flying from the
Marshall House Inn. Ellsworth and a group of others entered the inn and ran up the stairs to remove the flag. Ellsworth cut the flag down, however, on the way down the stairs, he was shot and killed by the owner of the inn,
James W. Jackson. Jackson was subsequently shot and killed by Cpl.
Francis E. Brownell, who was later rewarded for his actions. To the north of the Ridge, Col.
Orlando B. Wilcox led the 1st Michigan Regiment. Landing in what is now the area presently occupied by
Arlington National Cemetery, Wilcox and his men quickly descended upon the
Lee/Custis House, the estate owned by Gen.
Robert E. Lee, who had resigned his commission from the Union Army only a few weeks earlier on April 20. Wilcox next advanced south and met up with Ellsworth's men to secure Arlington heights, completing the first successful campaign to recapture confederate territory during the war. Once under federal control, Union engineers hastily began constructing a series of fortifications to protect the capital. These forts became the first line of defense for Washington, establishing the beginning of the so-called
Arlington Line. At the southern end of this line, a fort was constructed on the highest point of The Ridge. This fort, named
Fort Scott, is now the site of the current park that bears the same name.
Final encampment Near the Civil War's end, May 23 and May 24, 1865, a two-day military parade was held in
Washington, D.C. Nearly all of the major units of the
Union Army participated in the parade, and they bivouacked on Arlington Ridge. Mustering-out commenced once the parade ended, which for many Union Army soldiers meant that the ridge was their last encampment during the war. ==Arlington Ridge Road==