Genral Henry Jackson Hunt - with Lewis Trott: Ask a Guide, Episode 113
2h 24m
Meet General Henry Jackson Hunt — the Union’s brilliant Chief of Artillery at Gettysburg. His tactical genius with massed artillery fire shaped battles from Malvern Hill to Pickett’s Charge. Discover how Hunt’s steady hand and innovative strategies helped secure Union victory in the Civil War.
Born in Detroit in 1819 into a proud military lineage—his grandfather a Revolutionary War veteran and his father a career infantry officer—Hunt graduated West Point in 1839 and quickly distinguished himself in the Mexican–American War, earning brevet promotions to Captain and Major for gallantry at Contreras, Churubusco, and Chapultepec. In the years before the Civil War, he co-authored the seminal Instructions for Field Artillery (published 1861), which became the artillery "bible" for the Union Army. His innovative organizational philosophy—establishing an Artillery Reserve at the army level while still supporting infantry brigades—revolutionized how massed firepower was managed on the battlefield.
As Chief of Artillery, Hunt’s tactical genius shaped the outcome of key battles: * At *Malvern Hill**, his 250 guns repelled repeated Confederate assaults almost single-handedly; * At **Antietam* and **Fredericksburg**, his masterful deployment of artillery; * And at **Gettysburg**, his strategic ammo conservation and deceptive withdrawal tricked Confederate forces into a doomed charge—and played a crucial role in repulsing Pickett’s Charge.
Learn more about his steady command during the *Siege of Petersburg* and his remarkable postwar service—including overseeing Fort Adams, serving on the Artillery Board, and later caring for veterans as Governor of the Soldiers’ Home in Washington, D.C. Join us for an in-depth look at the man who was the "master of the science of gunnery"—how he shaped artillery tactics, altered the course of key Civil War battles, and left an enduring legacy in American military history.