Page:American Boy's Life of William McKinley.djvu/73

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OF WILLIAM McKINLEY
47

CHAPTER VI


McKinley at Antietam—Rations for Fighting Soldiers—Made a Second Lieutenant—Morgan's Raid—Capture of the Noted Raider


The battle of Antietam Creek, or Sharpsburg, followed immediately after that of South Mountain, and lasted two days. The Confederates had taken a strong position near the Potomac, with the creek in front of them, and with General Longstreet on the right wing, and General Hill on the left wing, while General Hood, with two brigades, covered a road running northward.

There was a small skirmish on the 16th of September, but on the 17th the battle opened in earnest. Hooker's force near Keedysville did some hard fighting and was supported by Mansfield's command, the gallant commander losing his life on the field. The divisions of Sedgwick, Richardson, and French were also to the front, and aided by the artillery, helped to make the Confederate position too hot to