|
George Pickett Room
|
|
|
|
George Pickett room is located on the second floor and on the south, or back, side of the
Stonewall Jackson Inn with a
beautiful view of the backyard. Pickett is set with a King bed, in-room private bath with a shower, cable TV, phone for local calls and a small refrigerator.
Please
consider this beautiful and comfortable room when making your
Harrisonburg, VA travel plans! |
|
 |

|
|
|
|
Click To Check Room Availability and For On-Line Reservations
George Edward Pickett was a major-general in the army of the
Confederate States of America during the American Civil War.
After graduating last (59th out of 59) in his class at West Point (1846), he
gained distinction during the Mexican-American War when he was the first to
scale the heights during the Battle of Chapultepec. He was also involved in the
Pig War.
Legend has it that Pickett's West Point appointment was secured for him by
Abraham Lincoln, but this is largely believed to be a story circulated by his
widow following his death. Pickett was actually appointed by Illinois
Congressman John T. Stuart, a friend of Pickett's uncle.
He later served on the frontier in Washington Territory, and in 1856 occupied
San Juan Island, where he prevented the landing of British troops and received
the thanks of Congress for his services. In 1861 he resigned from the Federal
army and joined the Confederate forces, becoming major-general in 1862.
During the Civil War Battle of Fredericksburg, Pickett's forces helped
contribute to the overwhelming Confederate victory. He led the disastrous and
foolhardy "Pickett's Charge" against Union lines in the Battle of Gettysburg, in
the process losing almost his entire division. To his dying day, he bitterly
mourned this great loss. After the war, it is said that he met once with General
Lee in a singularly cold meeting. It was said by John S. Mosby that afterward
Pickett said bitterly "That man destroyed my division."
He lost the Battle of Five Forks in 1865, which lead to the fall of
Petersburg and Richmond and to the ultimate capitulation of the Army of Northern
Virginia at Appomattox. Pickett had difficulty obtaining a pardon after the
Civil War due to his execution of a number of North Carolina soldiers who had
deserted from the Confederacy to serve as Union troops, spending several months
with his wife and baby in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
He was born in Richmond, Virginia, in 1825 and died in Norfolk, Virginia, in
1875.
Decades after Pickett's death, his widow LaSalle Corbell Pickett become a
well-known writer and speaker on "her Soldier," eventually leading to the
creation of an idealized Pickett who was the perfect Southern gentleman and
soldier. A considerable amount of controversy attends LaSalle Pickett's
lionizing of her husband, generally involving the probable forgery of letters
from Pickett. As a result, General Pickett has become a figure obscured by "Lost
Cause" mythology.
|
|
Sign up for our monthly newsletter for more current events,
things to do and special discounts for newsletter recipients.
|
547 East Market Street
Harrisonburg, Virginia 22801
(540)
433-8233 (800) 445-5330
Info@StonewallJacksonInn.com

|
Send this website to a friend

|
Stonewall Jackson Inn
547 East Market Street
Harrisonburg, Virginia 22801
(540) 433-8233
(800) 445-5330
Info@StonewallJacksonInn.com

[Home] [Rooms] [Menu] [Reservation Info] [Make Reservations] [Site Map]
Copyright © 2006 The Stonewall Jackson Inn.
www.StonewallJacksonInn.com
Site
Design by Stonewall Web Solutions
|