The Civil War Round Table of the District of Columbia Presents: Rowser’s Ford: Where the South Lost Gettysburg
May 13 @ 5:30 pm - 8:00 pm
| Free – $15Event Navigation
“Rowser’s Ford: Where the South Lost Gettysburg” presentation by Jim Johnson

About the Topic:
Robert E. Lee could not believe it. As he led his army out of the Cashtown gap, there were Yankees in force in front of him at Gettysburg. How could this be? He had specifically ordered cavalry commander J.E.B. Stuart to keep him informed of the Federals’ movements, but the last time Lee heard from Stuart was a week earlier on June 23.
Lee had ordered Stuart to get to the head of General Ewell’s column at Frederick, Maryland, as soon as possible but allowed him to choose the route. The Confederate commander intended to avoid a major battle in Pennsylvania and, hearing nothing from Stuart, felt safe to rest his army in Chambersburg until June 28. But learning the Federals had crossed the Potomac and were in Maryland, he immediately ordered his army, which was dispersed as far north as Carlisle and as far east as York, to concentrate at Gettysburg.
Stuart’s flamboyant “rides” around Union armies had earned him a fan club and the second star of a major general. He interpreted Lee’s order to permit another such ride. But first, he had to cross the Potomac River, and for this, he chose a ford too far. What he called “Rowsers Ford” was 22-miles upriver from Georgetown. As a result, Lee didn’t see or hear from his “eyes and ears” until late on the second day of the battle.
Stuart wrote such a self-aggrandizing after-action report that the historical markers of where he crossed the Potomac are miles away from where he actually crossed and historians have tended to consider his role in the Battle of Gettysburg quite differently from how the Confederate high command did.
About The Speaker:
Jim Johnston is a retired lawyer and a prolific writer with four books, including one on a woman in the Civil War, and more than 150 articles in major publications including the New York Times, Washington Post, White House History, and, importantly for this presentation, Gettysburg Magazine.
Reservations may be made here!
Cost: $10 for members of the Civil War Round Table of the District of Columbia and members of the National Museum of Civil War Medicine, $15 non-members, and free for zoom attendees
If you have any problems making reservations online or would like to know about alternatives to making reservations or payments online, please email admin@cwrtdc.org. Non-CWRTDC members must make reservations and remit payment online.
Unfortunately, cancellations after the due date are non-refundable, as the CWRTDC must pay for the number of dinners ordered regardless of the actual attendance).
Schedule for In-Person Attendees:
5:30 pm ET: Social Period in lobby with light refreshments
6:10 pm ET: Move Upstairs to 3rd Floor (elevator available)
6:30 pm ET: Meeting Starts (Announcements, Speaker Presentation, Q&A)
8:00/8:15 pm ET: Meeting concludes
Schedule for Zoom Attendees:
6:00 pm ET: Social Period (optional)
6:30 pm ET: Meeting Starts (Announcements, Speaker Presentation, Q&A)
8:00/8:15 pm ET: Meeting concludes
Any questions or problems, contact paul.mazzuca@gmail.com
Zoom Meeting URL:
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