[214]
Fredericksburg, but at the close of the fight his lines had been very much contracted, and his troops on his right greatly scattered; and early in the night he telegraphed to Sedgwick to cross the river and move up to Chancellorsville on the Plank road, which dispatch found Sedgwick already across.
General Jackson had been entirely disabled by his wound, and General A. P. Hill was so injured as to be unable to command in the field.
Brigadier General Rodes
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