[2] There were three halts during the march of fourteen miles. Letter from Major Hotchkiss.

[3] Melzi Chancellor’s house; otherwise Dowdall’s Tavern.

[4] Sedgwick had crossed the river on April 29 and 30.

[5] Rodes’ brigades were formed in the following order:

......................................
|| _______ ______ _____ _______ ..........
Iverson O’Neal Doles Colquitt _______
Ramseur ||

[6] Lieutenant-Colonel Hamlin, the latest historian of Chancellorsville, has completely disposed of the legend that these fifty guns repulsed a desperate attack on Hazel Grove.

[7] In the woods west of the Fairview Heights.

[8] Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Army, 1898.

[9] Campaigns of the Army of the Potomac, pp. 241–242.

[10] It is but fair, however, to state that Hooker, during the cannonade which preceded the final assault at Chancellorsville, had been severely bruised by a fall of masonry.