Article

Battle of Front Royal

A highway historical marker and wayside exhibit stand on a courthouse grounds.
A highway historical marker at the Warren County Courthouse commemorates the Battle of Front Royal.

NPS

By late May of 1862, Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson had 17,000 men in his ranks. He moved them north against US Gen. Nathaniel Banks’ main force at Strasburg. Using his knowledge of Valley geography, Jackson side-stepped Banks by marching the bulk of his army across Massanutten Mountain. The Confederates surprised and overwhelmed a small Federal outpost at the Battle of Front Royal, at the northern end of Massanutten, on May 23. Banks, finding Jackson in his rear, had no choice but to order a rapid retreat to Winchester, in hopes of making a stand there.

Front Royal Battlefield

Virginia historical highway marker J-8 commemorates the capture of Front Royal. It is at the Warren County Courthouse, on the southeast corner of South Royal Avenue (US Route 340) and East Main Street.

Jackson in Pursuit

Following his victory at McDowell on May 8, 1862, Confederate Major General Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson pursued his defeated foe, Federal Brigadier General Robert Milroy, towards Franklin, Virginia (now West Virginia). From there, Jackson and his men retraced their steps back to McDowell, and finally to Staunton in the Shenandoah Valley. By this time, Confederate Maj. Gen. Richard Ewell’s division, over 8,000 strong, was biding its time at Swift Run Gap in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Federal Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Banks’s force had already started its withdrawal from Harrisonburg, Virginia, north down the Valley, reaching Strasburg, Virginia, on May 13th.

Part of a series of articles titled If This Valley is Lost, Virginia is Lost.

Cedar Creek & Belle Grove National Historical Park

Last updated: May 13, 2023