White’s Ferry

Invasion or Liberation.

The serenity of the Maryland countryside was

shattered on September 4-6, 1862, as 35,000 Confederate soldiers of the Army of Northern Virginia

waded across the Potomac River. Gen. Robert E. Lee, hoping to rally support in the divided

state, sent the bulk of his army across at White’s Ford two miles north of here. The military operations would change the lives of the fighting men and affect local residents and businesses.

The largely indifferent reaction to the Confederates as they entered Montgomery County was described by a Missouri soldier, “Instead of an outburst of overflowing joy, at the sight of their deliverers, not one solitary soul had come to

the River bank to see us cross or welcome us to

the soil.” A resident recalled the veteran troops as “the dirtiest, filthiest, piratical-looking, cutthroat men I ever saw.... Yet there was a dash about them that the Northern men lacked.”

The invaders passed the Chesapeake and

Ohio Canal via road culverts and bridges erected

by their engineers. Walls of the canal were

breached to disrupt commerce and the enemy’s supply lines, but efforts to destroy the Monocacy Aqueduct were unsuccessful.

As the largest part of the Confederate army marched toward Frederick, Gen. J.E.B. Stuart’s cavalry formed a protective screen to the south.

Marker is on the White’s Ferry parking lot near Whites Ferry Road (Maryland Route 107), on the right when traveling west.

Courtesy hmdb.org

Credits and Sources:

HMDB