Cemetery Ridge
Cemetery Ridge is a low, mostly open ridgeline extending south from Cemetery Hill southeast of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, that formed the core of the Union Army of the Potomac's defensive line during the Battle of Gettysburg on July 2 and 3, 1863.[1]Following the Union retreat to high ground after fighting on July 1, Major General George G. Meade positioned his forces along the ridge, which provided a commanding yet exposed position against Confederate advances from the west.[1][2]
On July 2, Confederate assaults targeted the southern end of Cemetery Ridge near Little Round Top and Devil's Den, but Union reinforcements stabilized the line despite intense combat in adjacent areas like the Wheatfield.[2]
The ridge's defining moment came on July 3, when approximately 12,500 Confederate infantry under General Robert E. Lee advanced in a frontal assault across open fields toward the Union center—a maneuver known as Pickett's Charge—which was repulsed with devastating casualties, marking a critical failure in Lee's invasion of the North and contributing to the overall Union victory.[3][4][5]
Preserved today as part of Gettysburg National Military Park, Cemetery Ridge exemplifies the topographic advantages that favored defensive tactics in Civil War battles and remains a focal point for historical study of the engagement that halted Confederate momentum in the Eastern Theater.[6]