Try GOLD - Free
ANTIETAM
History of War
|Issue 107, 2022
On September 17 1862 the Union and Confederate armies in the eastern theatre met at Antietam Creek in Maryland. It would be the bloodiest day in American military history

Great Battles
“MORE AMERICANS DIED ON 17 SEPTEMBER 1862, THAN ON D-DAY, 6 JUNE 1944”
ANTIETAM CREEK, MARYLAND 17 SEPTEMBER 1862
The first year of the American Civil War (1861-65) had shown the people of both north and south that it would be a long, bloody conflict. A decades-long feud over states’ rights to own slaves in the south, versus the determination in the north to abolish the evil trade, had culminated in the election of Abraham Lincoln to the presidency in November 1860. Lincoln had won on a platform not to abolish slavery, but to reform it and prevent its spread into the new states being formed in the west of the continent.
To southerners, who had not voted for him, this was a step too far and they openly argued for secession – that is, to leave the Union and set up their own government. Eleven states would form what would become known as the Confederacy. By April 1861, with Lincoln now in office, both sides became belligerent and armed conflict became a distinct possibility, with Americans on both sides of the political divide rushing to join local militias, state units and armies.
This story is from the Issue 107, 2022 edition of History of War.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM History of War

History of War
FLYING INTO HISTORY ENOLA GAY
The first atomic bomb was dropped on Japan by an American B-29 bomber, preceding the country's capitulation in WWII. Here navigator Theodore Van Kirk recalls his experience of the day that changed history
7 mins
Issue 149

History of War
PUTIN'S SUBMARINE FLEET
From the Cold War to modern operations, the threat beneath the waves has been steadily building, and could be about to escalate
4 mins
Issue 149

History of War
ON SILVER WINGS
THIS MOVING BIOGRAPHY OF AN 'UNKNOWN' WWII RAF FIGHTER ACE CHARTS DESMOND IBBOTSON'S CAREER, THE STORY ENDING WITH A TWIST WHEN HIS REMAINS ARE DISCOVERED IN ITALY IN 2005
2 mins
Issue 149

History of War
CAMBODIA vs THAILAND ROOTS OF THE BORDER WAR
July 2025's clashes are the latest in a long frontier conflict that has gone unresolved, from the era of warrior kings to smart bombs
4 mins
Issue 149

History of War
TASK FORCE GREMLIN
At the end of WWII the Japanese Imperial Army Air Force was conscripted into the Royal Air Force in Southeast Asia
7 mins
Issue 149

History of War
RAF RETURNS TO NUCLEAR
Nearly 30 years after giving them up, the RAF is poised to reacquire air-dropped nuclear weapons
3 mins
Issue 149

History of War
NO MORE NAPOLEONS
A MAGISTERIAL SURVEY OF NAVAL POWER AND POLICY
2 mins
Issue 149

History of War
STALIN'S BLITZKRIEG
In the final month of WWII, the Red Army launched a devastating strike into Manchuria, opening a new front with Japan and threatening invasion of the Home Islands
10 mins
Issue 149

History of War
BALACLAVA POCKET WATCH
This William IV silver timepiece and its owner survived the Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava
1 mins
Issue 149

History of War
THE END OF THE SPY?
Human intelligence is a dying art, but it is still crucial for security agencies worldwide
3 mins
Issue 149
Translate
Change font size