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The Most Devastating Battles of the Civil War

The Most Devastating Battles of the Civil War

MPI / Archive Photos via Getty Images

10. Siege of Vicksburg

Internet Archive Book Images, No restrictions, via Wikimedia Commons

7. Battle of Stones River

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6. Battle of Shiloh

Thure de Thulstrup / Adam Cuerden/Library of Congress/Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons

5. Battle of Chancellorsville

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

4. Battle of the Wilderness

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3. Battle of Spotsylvania Court House

Muhranoff via Wikimedia Commons

2. Battle of Chickamauga

MPI / Archive Photos via Getty Images

1. Battle of Gettysburg

Archive Photos / Archive Photos via Getty Images

10. Siege of Vicksburg
9. Second Battle of Bull Run
8. Battle of Antietam
7. Battle of Stones River
6. Battle of Shiloh
5. Battle of Chancellorsville
4. Battle of the Wilderness
3. Battle of Spotsylvania Court House
2. Battle of Chickamauga
1. Battle of Gettysburg

Ever since its inception, the United States has been involved in wars. Conflicts often see an inordinate amount of death and destruction, some much more than others. But for those wars fought on American soil, nothing was as deadly as the American Civil War. From 1861 to 1865, the brutal internal conflict fought on U.S. land claimed the lives of almost 250,000 combatants on both sides, with a total casualty count of an estimated 620,000.

There were more than 10,000 military engagements fought during the war, of which 50 were major battles and 100 were significant ones. Battles were fought on both Union and Confederate lands, and each inflicted major losses. It should be noted that "casualties" include those killed in battle deaths but also those wounded, captured, or missing in action, as well as those who died away from the battlefield from accident or disease. (These are the states with the most Civil War deaths.)

To determine the deadliest battles in the American Civil War, 24/7 Tempo reviewed statistics on the data site Statista, which in turn obtained its information from the American Battlefield Trust, an organization that preserves America's battlegrounds, and the U.S. Department of Defense.

The Battle of Gettysburg, taking place in the small town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania was the site of the true turning point of the war. Not only was it a decisive battle that paved the way for the Union to eventually win the war, but it was also the deadliest. Over three days in early July 1863, the Union army under George G. Meade and Confederate forces led by Robert E. Lee waged a fierce battle.

In the end, the Union prevailed, but a total on both sides of more than 7,000 soldiers (and as many as 5,000 horses) were killed. By stopping Lee's army from invading the North, the Union crushed the South's hopes of a victory. (These were the largest battles of the Civil War.)

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