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・ Battle of Rignano
・ Battle of Rijmenam (1578)
・ Battle of Rimini
・ Battle of Rimini (1944)
・ Battle of Rimito Kramp
・ Battle of Rincón de Valladares
・ Battle of Ringgold Gap
・ Battle of Ringmere
・ Battle of Rinnthal
・ Battle of Rio de Janeiro
・ Battle of Rio de Janeiro (1558)
・ Battle of Rio de Janeiro (1567)
・ Battle of Rio de Janeiro (1710)
・ Battle of Rio de Janeiro (disambiguation)
・ Battle of Rio Grande City
Battle of Rio Hill
・ Battle of Rio Manimani
・ Battle of Rio Nuevo
・ Battle of Rio San Gabriel
・ Battle of Ripple Field
・ Battle of River
・ Battle of River Canard
・ Battle of River Duyon
・ Battle of River Ibicuí (1817)
・ Battle of Rivers' Bridge
・ Battle of Rivoli
・ Battle of Riyadh (1902)
・ Battle of Roan's Tan Yard
・ Battle of Roanoke Island
・ Battle of Roatán


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Battle of Rio Hill : ウィキペディア英語版
Battle of Rio Hill

The Battle of Rio Hill was a skirmish in the American Civil War in which Union cavalry raided a Confederate camp in Albemarle County, Virginia.
In the early afternoon of February 28, 1864, Union Brig. Gen. George A. Custer and 1,500 Union soldiers advanced towards Charlottesville. This raid was an attempt by the Union to divert attention toward Charlottesville while a separate attempt was made to free prisoners of war being held in Richmond.
Custer's orders were to destroy a railroad bridge across the Rivanna River. His only opposition came from Confederate Maj. Gen. J.E.B. Stuart's "Horse Company" stationed in a camp near the Rivanna River at Carrsbrook. Custer's men raided the camp under fire from Confederate forces commanded by Capt. R. Preston Chew and Captain Marcellus N. Moorman. The Federal troopers looted the camp and set fire to it, after capturing two Confederate soldiers. During the raid, one of the Confederate caissons exploded, and Custer became confused believing that the explosion was actually the reopening of enemy artillery fire. His men fired into each other and then fled from the camp. The Confederate troops regrouped and chased Custer out of Albemarle.
Custer and Philip Sheridan returned to Charlottesville in 1865 and occupied the town from March 3 to March 7, a month before the Army of Northern Virginia surrendered at Appomattox.
==Background==

After the Mine Run Campaign, Robert E. Lee's Confederate Army of Northern Virginia withdrew from northern Virginia and set up winter quarters in Orange County. Four batteries of Major General J.E.B. Stuart's horse artillery battalion encamped in nearby Albemarle County. The artillerymen began constructing winter huts just west of the Earlysville Road about north of Charlottesville, just south of the South Fork of the Rivanna River and Rio Mills. After the harsh campaigning of 1863, the Confederate gunners rested easily in their camp through the early weeks of 1864.
Northern forces, however, were busily at work. In early 1864, Union commanders devised a multi-objective raid on the Confederate capital of Richmond. While Judson Kilpatrick led the raid on Richmond (which included the infamous Dahlgren Affair), Brigadier General George A. Custer was tasked with leading a diversionary raid into Albemarle County. Charlottesville had long been a Union target. Custer's mission was twofold: Destroy Confederate supplies stockpiled in Charlottesville and destroy the Virginia Central Railroad bridge just east of town over the Rivanna River (the Railroad had longed served as a pipeline of supplies from the Shenandoah Valley to Lee's army). Custer was detached several regiments from different divisions and set out with his hodgepodge force from Mount Pony at 2:00 PM on February 28.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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