Fitzhugh Lee joined the
Confederate States Army as a lieutenant of cavalry and served at first as a staff officer to
Brig. Gen. Richard Stoddert Ewell at the
First Battle of Manassas. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel of the
1st Virginia Cavalry in September 1861, serving under Colonel
"Grumble" Jones. Lee replaced Jones in March 1862, after the
elections held in the regiment in accordance with the
Confederate Conscripion Act of April 16, 1862. He was promoted to
brigadier general on July 24, 1862. During the
Northern Virginia Campaign, Fitzhugh Lee received notoriety by arriving late for a cavalry concentration, allowing U.S. Army cavalry to raid
Jeb Stuart's headquarters and capture his famous plumed hat and cape. However, during the subsequent Confederate raid on Catlett's Station, he captured the headquarters tent and dress uniform of
U.S. Maj. Gen.
John Pope. Fitzhugh Lee gave Pope's coat to Stuart as compensation for the hat he had lost. Fitzhugh Lee performed well in the
Maryland Campaign of 1862, covering the Confederate infantry's withdrawal from
South Mountain, delaying the U.S. Army advance to
Sharpsburg, Maryland, before the
Battle of Sharpsburg around Antietam Creek, and covering his army's recrossing of the
Potomac River into Virginia. Stuart's cavalry made its second ride around the U.S. Army in the
Chambersburg Raid before returning in time to screen Robert E. Lee's movement towards
Fredericksburg, where the cavalry defended the extreme right of the Confederate line. Fitzhugh Lee conducted the cavalry action of
Kelly's Ford (March 17, 1863) with skill and success, where his 400 troopers captured 150 men and horses with a loss of only 14 men. In the
Battle of Chancellorsville in May 1863, Lee's reconnaissance found that the U.S. Army's right flank was "in the air", which allowed the successful flanking attack by Maj. Gen.
Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson, a movement led by Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry. After Chancellorsville, Lee was incapacitated by inflammatory rheumatism, missing a month of action, which included the significant cavalry operations at the
Battle of Brandy Station. He recovered in time to lead a brigade in Jeb Stuart's third ride around the U.S. Army, in the early days of the
Gettysburg campaign, with his most significant contribution being at the
Battle of Carlisle. During the
Battle of Gettysburg, his brigade fought unsuccessfully at
East Cavalry Field. Stuart's report singled out no officer in his command for praise except Fitz Lee, who he said was "one of the finest cavalry leaders on the continent, and richly [entitled] to promotion." During the withdrawal from Gettysburg, Lee's brigade held the fords at Shepherdstown to prevent the U.S. Army from following across the Potomac River. Lee was promoted to major general on August 3, 1863, in
Charles City County and
Fort Powhatan in
Prince George County. After Stuart's death, Lee served under Maj. Gen.
Wade Hampton. Hampton, who had been Lee's peer for much of the war, was promoted to replace Stuart due to his seniority and more significant experience; some observers at the time had cynically expected Robert E. Lee's nephew to receive the command. At the
Battle of Trevilian Station, Hampton's cavalry prevented Gen. Sheridan's cavalry from aiding General
David Hunter's force in western Virginia, where it was sure to have inflicted significant damage on General Robert E. Lee's supply and communication lines. The battle also served to screen
Lt. Gen. Jubal A. Early's move from Richmond to aid Lynchburg, which Hunter was set to besiege. Hampton's cavalry corps shadowed Sheridan's return to Petersburg. Fitzhugh Lee subsequently joined Early for his campaign against Maj. Gen.
Philip Sheridan in the
Shenandoah Valley, and at
Third Winchester (September 19, 1864) three horses were shot under him, and he was severely wounded. When General Hampton was sent to assist General
Joseph E. Johnston in
North Carolina, the command of the whole of Robert E. Lee's cavalry devolved upon Fitzhugh Lee on March 29, 1865, but the surrender at
Appomattox followed quickly upon the opening of the campaign. Fitzhugh Lee himself led the last charge of the Confederates on April 9 that year at
Farmville, Virginia. ==Post-Civil War==