Siege of Petersburg

The
Siege of Petersburg (
June 15,
1864 -
April 2,
1865) was a 10-month long
siege of
Petersburg, Virginia during the
American Civil War. It foreshadowed the
trench warfare that would be common in
World War I, earning it a prominent position in military history.
Union General
Ulysses S. Grant made his headquarters in a cabin on the lawn of Appomattox Manor, the home of Dr. Richard Epps and the oldest home (built in
1763) in what was then City Point but is now
Hopewell, Virginia.
In an attempt to break the siege, Union troops mined a tunnel under the Confederate lines and on
July 30,
1864, detonated the explosives creating a crater some 135 feet in diameter — still visible today. Some 280 to 350 Confederate soldiers were instantly killed in the blast. Thus began the
Battle of the Crater.
Category: American Civil War battles