Share to: share facebook share twitter share wa share telegram print page

Second Battle of Petersburg

Second Battle of Petersburg
Part of the American Civil War

The war in Virginia – the 18th Army Corps storming a fort on the right of the Rebel line before Petersburg, June 15, sketch by Edwin Forbes (Dunn House at the Confederate Dimmock Line)
DateJune 15, 1864 (1864-06-15) – June 18, 1864 (1864-06-18)
Location37°13′16″N 77°22′41″W / 37.221°N 77.378°W / 37.221; -77.378
Result Confederate victory
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
Ulysses S. Grant
George G. Meade
Benjamin Butler
Robert E. Lee
P. G. T. Beauregard
Units involved
Army of Northern Virginia
Strength
13,700–62,000 (reinforcements arrived over four days)[2] 5,400–38,000[2]
Casualties and losses
11,386 total
(1,688 killed,
8,513 wounded,
1,185 missing or captured)[1][3]
4,000 total
(200 killed,
2,900 wounded,
900 missing or captured)[3]

The Second Battle of Petersburg, also known as the assault on Petersburg, was fought June 15–18, 1864, at the beginning of the Richmond–Petersburg Campaign (popularly known as the Siege of Petersburg). Union forces under Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant and Major General George G. Meade attempted to capture Petersburg, Virginia, before General Robert E. Lee's Confederate Army of Northern Virginia could reinforce the city.

The four days included repeated Union assaults against substantially smaller forces commanded by General P. G. T. Beauregard. Beauregard's strong defensive positions and poorly coordinated actions by the Union generals (notably Major General William F. "Baldy" Smith, who squandered the best opportunity for success on June 15) made up for the disparity in the sizes of the armies. By June 18, the arrival of significant reinforcements from Lee's army made further assaults impractical. The failure of the Union to defeat the Confederates in these actions resulted in the start of the ten-month Siege of Petersburg.

Background

The First Battle of Petersburg occurred on June 9, when Major General Benjamin Butler dispatched 4,500 troops from his Army of the James in the Bermuda Hundred area and assaulted the Dimmock Line, the outer line of earthworks protecting Petersburg. The Confederates, under the overall command of General P. G. T. Beauregard, numbered 2,500, many of whom were teenage boys and elderly men. Timid leadership on the part of Union Major General Quincy A. Gillmore and Brigadier General August Kautz led to the failure of the assault, squandering a prime opportunity to seize lightly defended Petersburg. Butler's men returned to their positions in Bermuda Hundred.[4]

After the Battle of Cold Harbor in Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant's 1864 Overland Campaign, the Union Army of the Potomac slipped away from General Robert E. Lee and began crossing the James River. Although the Overland Campaign's objective had been to defeat Lee's Army of Northern Virginia in a decisive battle, Grant changed his objective to be the city of Petersburg, an important rail junction that controlled the supplies leading to the Confederate capital of Richmond. Grant knew that Lee could not protect Richmond if Petersburg fell and he would be forced to battle Grant in the open. He also knew from the unsuccessful first assaults on June 9 how weak the Petersburg defenses actually were. Speed was essential to Grant's plan, requiring success before Lee realized Grant's objective and could reinforce Petersburg. Lee was not in fact fully cognizant of Grant's moves until June 18, assuming until then that Grant would target Richmond. Beauregard, however, had been loudly warning of the danger to Petersburg since June 9.[5]

Grant selected Butler's Army of the James, which had performed poorly in the Bermuda Hundred Campaign, to lead the expedition toward Petersburg. On June 14 he directed Butler to augment the XVIII Corps, commanded by Brigadier General William F. "Baldy" Smith, to a strength of 16,000 men, including Kautz's cavalry division, and use the same route employed in the unsuccessful attacks of June 9. The II Corps of the Army of the Potomac, commanded by Major General Winfield S. Hancock, would follow Smith. Grant wrote in his post-war memoirs, "I believed then, and still believe, that Petersburg could have been easily captured at that time."[6]

One advantage for the Confederates was the strength of the Dimmock Line, formidable artillery positions connected by earthworks and trenches for over 10 miles (16 km), circling the city and anchored on the Appomattox River to the east and west. Since Beauregard had insufficient men available to defend the entire line, he concentrated 2,200 troops under Brigadier General Henry A. Wise in the northeastern sector, between Redan number 1 on the Appomattox River and Redan number 23, protecting the Norfolk and Petersburg Railroad to the southeast. Even with this concentration, infantrymen were spaced 10 feet (3.0 m) apart. His remaining 3,200 men were facing Butler's army at Bermuda Hundred.[7]

Opposing forces

Opposing commanders

Union

Confederate

Battle

June 15

Siege of Petersburg, assaults on June 15–18, 1864
  Confederate
  Union

Baldy Smith and his men crossed the Appomattox shortly after dawn on June 15. His force consisted of the infantry divisions of Brigadier Generals. William T. H. Brooks, John H. Martindale, and Edward W. Hinks, and the cavalry division of Brigadier General August Kautz. The transport vessels delivered these divisions almost at random to landing sites on the opposite shore, confusing Smith's plans and wasting time reorganizing. Kautz's cavalry division was ordered to clear the line of advance for the infantry, Brooks and Martindale would march down the City Point Railroad, and Hinks's U.S. Colored Troops would approach on the Jordan Point Road.[8]

Delays in the advance continued after the landing. The cavalry encountered an unexpected stronghold at Baylor's farm northeast of Petersburg. Hinks's men launched two attacks on the Confederates and captured a cannon, but the overall advance was delayed until early afternoon. Smith performed a reconnaissance and, despite his sense of nervousness about the strength of the enemy position, planned to carry the defensive works with a strong skirmish line. He was delayed again when his artillery commander allowed all of the horses to be watered simultaneously, making it impossible to bring up his guns until about 7 p.m.[9]

While Smith was delaying, Kautz reached the railroad near Redan number 20 on the right flank of the Confederate line around noon. Approximately 600 Confederates under Brigadier General James Dearing bombarded Kautz with artillery and the Union cavalrymen got no closer than 500 yards (460 m) from the line. In a manner similar to the June 9 battle, Kautz listened for evidence that Smith was attacking to his right and, hearing none, gave up and withdrew.[10]

When Smith finally started his attack, his skirmishers swept over the earthworks on a 3.5-mile (5.6 km) front, capturing Batteries 3 and 5–11, causing the Confederates to retreat to a weaker defensive line on Harrison's Creek. Despite this initial success and the prospect of a virtually undefended city immediately to his front, Smith decided to wait until dawn to resume his attack. By this time Winfield Hancock had arrived at Smith's headquarters. The normally decisive and pugnacious Hancock, who outranked Smith, was uncertain of his orders and the disposition of forces, and uncharacteristically deferred to Smith's judgment to wait. Smith's timid service on June 15 would turn out to be his last combat command. Butler indirectly accused Smith of "dilatoriness" and the dispute escalated to Grant. Although Grant originally contemplated replacing Butler by Smith as commander of the Army of the James, he eventually retained Butler and reassigned Smith to New York to await further orders, which were never issued.[11]

Beauregard wrote later that Petersburg "at that hour was clearly at the mercy of the Federal commander, who had all but captured it." But he used the time he had been granted to good advantage. Receiving no guidance from Richmond in response to his urgent requests, he unilaterally decided to strip his defenses from the Howlett Line, which was bottling up Butler's army in Bermuda Hundred, making the divisions of Major Generals Robert Hoke and Bushrod Johnson available for the new Petersburg defensive line. Butler might have used this opportunity to move his army between Petersburg and Richmond, which would have doomed the Confederate capital, but he once again failed to act.[12]

June 16

By the morning of June 16, Beauregard had concentrated about 14,000 men in his defensive line, but this paled in comparison to the 50,000 Federals that now faced him. Grant had arrived with Major General Ambrose Burnside's IX Corps, addressed the confusion of Hancock's orders, and ordered a reconnaissance for weak points in the defensive line. Hancock, in temporary command of the Army of the Potomac until Major General George G. Meade arrived, prepared Smith's XVIII Corps on the right, his own II Corps in the center, and Burnside's IX Corps on the left.[13]

Hancock's assault began around 5:30 p.m. as all three corps moved slowly forward. Beauregard's men fought fiercely, erecting new breastworks to the rear as breakthroughs occurred. Upon the arrival of General Meade, a second attack was ordered and Brigadier General Francis C. Barlow led his division against Redans 13, 14, and 15. Confederate artillery fire caused significant Union casualties, including the death of Colonel Patrick Kelly, commander of the famous Irish Brigade. Although Barlow's men managed to capture their objectives, a counterattack drove them back, taking numerous Union prisoners. The survivors dug in close to the enemy works.[14]

June 17

June 17 was a day of uncoordinated Union attacks, starting on the left flank where two brigades of Burnside's IX Corps under Brigadier General Robert B. Potter stealthily approached the Confederate line and launched a surprise attack at dawn. Initially successful, it captured nearly a mile of the Confederate fortifications and about 600 prisoners, but the effort eventually failed when Potter's men moved forward to find another line of entrenchments. Their mobility was limited because of tangled logs in a ravine behind them and Confederate guns were able to strike them with enfilade fire.[15]

At 2 p.m., the IX Corps launched a second attack, led by the brigade of Brigadier General John F. Hartranft. They were somehow sent forward at a right angle to the Confederate line, which left them vulnerable to enfilading fire. In the evening, Brigadier General James H. Ledlie's division also failed in its assault, during which Ledlie was observed to be drunk (a behavioral pattern that would repeat itself notoriously at the Battle of the Crater).[16]

We find the enemy, as usual, in a very strong position, defended by earthworks, and it looks very much as if we will have to go through a siege of Petersburg before entering on the siege of Richmond. ... Well, it is all in the cruise, as the sailors say.

Major General George G. Meade, letter to his wife, June 17[17]

During the day, Beauregard's engineers had laid out new defensive positions a mile to the west of the Dimmock Line, running along a creek named Taylor's Branch to the Appomattox. Late that night the Confederates pulled back to their new position. Beauregard expressed his frustration with the lack of support or concern from Robert E. Lee, writing years after the war, "The Army of Northern Virginia was yet far distant, and I had failed to convince its distinguished commander of the fact that I was then fighting Grant's whole army with less than eleven thousand men." Lee had systematically ignored all of Beauregard's pleas and it was not until his own son, cavalry Major General W.H.F. "Rooney" Lee, had verified Grant's movements across the river, that he acknowledged the current perilous situation at Petersburg. He immediately dispatched two divisions of his men, exhausted from the Overland Campaign, to Petersburg, beginning at 3 a.m. on June 18.[18]

June 18

With the arrival of Lee's two divisions, under Major General Joseph B. Kershaw and Charles W. Field, Beauregard had over 20,000 men to defend the city, but Grant's force had been augmented by the arrival of Major General Gouverneur K. Warren's V Corps and 67,000 Federals were present. The first Union attack began at dawn, started by the II and XVIII Corps on the Union right. Hancock began to suffer effects from his lingering Gettysburg wound and he turned over command of the II Corps to Major General David B. Birney. The men of the II Corps were surprised to make rapid progress against the Confederate line, not realizing that Beauregard had moved it back the night before. When they encountered the second line, the attack immediately ground to a halt and the corps suffered under heavy Confederate fire for hours.[19]

By noon, the IX and V Corps, which had a longer distance to march to join the attack, came up alongside the II Corps. Major General Orlando B. Willcox's division of the IX Corps led a renewed attack but it suffered significant losses in the marsh and open fields crossed by Taylor's Branch. Willcox's division emerged with only 1,000 men standing. Warren's V Corps was halted by murderous fire from Rives's Salient (also known as Battery 27, the position where the Dimmock Line crossed the Jerusalem Plank Road, present-day U.S. Route 301), an attack in which Colonel Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, commanding the First Brigade, First Division, V Corps, was severely wounded. His wound was believed to be mortal and Chamberlain was granted a battlefield promotion to brigadier general by General Grant. At 6:30 p.m., Meade ordered a final assault, which also failed with more horrendous losses. One of the leading regiments was the 1st Maine Heavy Artillery Regiment, 900 men that had been converted from essentially garrison duty manning artillery to be infantrymen at the start of the Overland Campaign. The regiment quickly lost 632 men in the assault, the heaviest single-battle loss of any regiment during the entire war.[20]

Aftermath

It is a source of great regret that I am not able to report more success.

Major General George G. Meade, report to Lieutenant General Grant, June 18[21]

Having achieved almost no gains from four days of assaults, Meade ordered his army to dig in. Union casualties were 11,386 (1,688 killed, 8,513 wounded, 1,185 missing or captured), Confederate 4,000 (200 killed, 2,900 wounded, 900 missing or captured).[3] Grant's opportunity to take Petersburg easily had been lost, but Lee, who arrived at Petersburg around noon on June 18, was unable to prevent the Union army from laying siege to the city. The siege would last until April 1865.[22]

Preservation

The Petersburg National Battlefield covers only part of the battlegrounds around Petersburg. The American Battlefield Trust and its partners have preserved 131 additional acres of the Petersburg battlefield through mid-2023.[23]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Further information: Official Records, Series I, Volume XL, Part 1, pages 218-238.
  2. ^ a b Eicher, pp. 689–90; Esposito, text for map 138.
  3. ^ a b c Bonekemper, p. 313. The author presents casualty figures from a wide variety of sources and provides his best estimate. Trudeau, p. 55, agrees with the 4,000 Confederate losses, but cites Union killed and wounded at 8,150, with an additional 1,814 missing. Kennedy, p. 353, cites 9,964–10,600 for the Union, 2,974–4,700 for the Confederates; Salmon, p. 406, cites 8,150 Federal and 3,236 Confederate casualties.
  4. ^ Davis, pp. 27–33; Kennedy, p. 352; Salmon, p. 401-03.
  5. ^ Salmon, p. 395; Davis, pp. 34–36; Eicher, p. 687.
  6. ^ Davis, pp. 37–39.
  7. ^ Trudeau, pp. 38–39; Davis, p. 39.
  8. ^ Davis, pp. 39–40; Trudeau, pp. 37–39; Salmon, pp. 403–05.
  9. ^ Trudeau, pp. 39–40; Salmon, p. 405; Davis, pp. 41–42.
  10. ^ Davis, p. 41.
  11. ^ Trudeau, pp. 44–45, 51; Davis, pp. 43–44; Salmon, p. 405.
  12. ^ Fuller, p. 226; Davis, p. 43.
  13. ^ Davis, pp. 44–45; Trudeau, pp. 47–48.
  14. ^ Davis, p. 45.
  15. ^ Davis, pp. 45–46; Salmon, p. 405; Trudeau, pp. 48–49.
  16. ^ Davis, p. 46.
  17. ^ Trudeau, p. 50.
  18. ^ Davis, pp. 46–48; Trudeau, p. 51.
  19. ^ Davis, pp. 48–50; Salmon, pp. 405–06; Trudeau, pp. 52–53.
  20. ^ Davis, pp. 49–52; Eicher, p. 690; Salmon, p. 406; Trudeau, pp. 53–54; Pullen, John J., Joshua Chamberlain: A Hero's Life and Legacy, Stackpole Books, 1999, ISBN 978-0-8117-0886-9, pp. 12–13.
  21. ^ Trudeau, p. 54.
  22. ^ Salmon, pp. 396–97; Eicher, p. 690.
  23. ^ "Petersburg Battlefield". American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved June 20, 2023.

References

Memoirs and primary sources

Further reading

  • Greene, A. Wilson. A Campaign of Giants: The Battle for Petersburg. Vol. 1: From the Crossing of the James to the Crater. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2018. ISBN 978-1-4696-3857-7.

Read other articles:

PoussayPoussay Lokasi di Region Grand Est Poussay Koordinat: 48°19′17″N 6°07′28″E / 48.3214°N 6.1244°E / 48.3214; 6.1244NegaraPrancisRegionGrand EstDepartemenVosgesArondisemenNeufchâteauKantonMirecourtAntarkomuneAssociation of Mirecourt Country communesPemerintahan • Wali kota (2008–2014) Jean DemardLuas • Land18,69 km2 (336 sq mi) • Populasi2747 • Kepadatan Populasi20,86/km2 (2,2/sq mi)Kod…

Kalkman (1991) Cornelis Kees Kalkman (5 Mei 1928 – 19 Januari 1998) adalah ahli botani Belanda. Ia menuntut ilmu di Universitas Leiden. Dari bulan Februari 1956, ia bergabung dengan Afdeling Boswezen di Hollandia, Nugini Belanda (kini Jayapura, Indonesia). Pada tahun 1958, ia bertempat tinggal di Manokwari. Di Papua, ia memulai sejumlah ekspedisi mengumpulkan tumbuhan. Pada bulan September 1959, ia meninggalkan Papua dan diangkat sebagai anggota staf Rijksherbarium di Leiden. Pad…

Penghargaan Bravo adalah penghargaan tahunan yang diberikan oleh Guerin Sportivo, majalah sepak bola Italia ke pemain sepak bola muda terbaik di Eropa. Digelar sejak 1978, penghargaan ini pertama kali dimenangi oleh Jimmy Case. Pemenang Berkas:Jimmy Case cropped.jpgJimmy Case, pemenang pada tahun 1978 Berkas:Ryan Giggs 2014 cropped.jpgRyan Giggs, pemenang pada tahun 1993 Alessandro Del Piero, pemenang pada tahun 1996 Berkas:Lionel Messi cropped.jpgLionel Messi, pemenang pada tahun 2007 Tahun Pem…

Komando Distrik Militer 1607Lambang Korem 162/Wira BhaktiNegara IndonesiaAliansiKorem 162/WBCabangTNI Angkatan DaratTipe unitKodimPeranSatuan TeritorialBagian dariKodam IX/UdayanaMakodimSumbawaBaret H I J A U TokohKomandanLetkol Czi. Eko Cahyo Setiawan, S.E., M.Han.Kepala StafMayor Inf. Dahlan, S.Sos. Komando Distrik Militer 1607/Sumbawa merupakan satuan kewilayahan yang berada dibawah komando Korem 162/Wirabakti. Kodim 1607/Sumbawa memiliki wilayah teritorial yang meliputi Kabupa…

Don'tSingel oleh Ed Sheerandari album ×Sisi-BFriendsDirilis24 Agustus 2014 (2014-08-24)Direkam2013–14Genre R&B hip-hop Durasi3:42LabelAsylumAtlanticPenciptaEd SheeranBenjamin LevinProduserRick RubinBenny BlancoKronologi singel Ed Sheeran Sing (2014) Don't (2014) Thinking Out Loud (2014) Video musikDon't di YouTube Don't adalah lagu oleh penyanyi-penulis lagu asal Inggris, Ed Sheeran, untuk album studio keduanya, × (2014). Lagu ini ditulis oleh Sheeran dan Benny Blanco serta diprodus…

Artikel ini membutuhkan rujukan tambahan agar kualitasnya dapat dipastikan. Mohon bantu kami mengembangkan artikel ini dengan cara menambahkan rujukan ke sumber tepercaya. Pernyataan tak bersumber bisa saja dipertentangkan dan dihapus.Cari sumber: Jilin – berita · surat kabar · buku · cendekiawan · JSTOR (July 2014)Jilin 吉林省Provinsi TiongkokTranskripsi Name • Tionghoa吉林省 (Kota Jílín Shěng) • SingkatanJL / 吉 (P…

Angkatan Darat Albania Forca TokësoreDibentuk2000; 24 tahun lalu (2000)Negara AlbaniaTipe unitAngkatan DaratPeranPertahanan NasionalJumlah personel8,500 (2015)[1]MotoTanah Air, Kehormatan dan DarmaInsigniaSimbol Angkatan Darat Albania (bahasa Albania: Forca Tokësore të Republikës së Shqipërisë) adalah bagian dari Angkatan Bersenjata Albania. ^ Mesi, Herion. Sulmet nga terrorizmi, Shqipëria do të blejë raketa në një rreze 70 km - Gazeta SHQIP Online. www.gazeta-s…

Oh My Girl Banhana오마이걸 반하나Informasi latar belakangNama lainBANHANAAsalSeoul, Korea SelatanGenreK-popTahun aktif2018 (2018)–sekarangLabelWMAriola Japan[1]Artis terkaitOh My GirlAnggota Hyojung Binnie Arin Oh My Girl Banhana adalah grup wanita beranggotakan tiga orang di Korea Selatan dan merupakan grup unit dari Oh My Girl. Anggotanya terdiri dari Hyojung, Binnie, dan Arin. Mereka memulai debutnya sebagai Banana Allergy Monkey pada tahun 2018. Sejarah Diumumkan bahwa …

Golden MemoriesSenandungkan KemenanganmuPembuatProgramming IndosiarPresenter Irfan Hakim Rina Nose Ramzi Gilang Dirga Arie Untung (2016) Juri Hetty Koes Endang Iis Sugianto Ikang Fawzi Titi DJ (2017) Hedi Yunus (2017) Penggubah lagu temaTerry FatiahLagu pembukaKemesraanPenata musikOni And FriendsNegara asalIndonesiaJmlh. musim2ProduksiDurasi180 menitRumah produksi Tim Produksi Indosiar (2016) Indonesia Entertainmen Produksi (2017) DistributorSurya Citra MediaRilis asliJaringanIndosiarForma…

You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian. (October 2018) Click [show] for important translation instructions. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia. Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-q…

Video game series For other uses, see Valkyrie Profile (disambiguation). Video game seriesValkyrie ProfileLogo of Valkyrie ProfileGenre(s)Role-playingDeveloper(s)tri-AceSoleilPublisher(s)Enix (1999–2000)Square Enix (2006–present)Creator(s)Masaki Norimoto Yoshiharu GotandaArtist(s)Ko YoshinariYoh YoshinariComposer(s)Motoi SakurabaPlatform(s)PlayStation, PlayStation Portable, PlayStation 2, Nintendo DS, PlayStation 3, Android, iOS, Windows, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5First releaseValkyrie Pro…

Japanese comedy manga series Cute Executive OfficerCover of the first tankōbon volume, featuring Mayu Warito (left) and Najimu Mujina (right)幼女社長(Yōjo Shachō)GenreComedy[1] MangaWritten byOdeko FujiiPublished byKadokawa ShotenMagazineCurazy MangaComicWalkerDemographicSeinenOriginal runJanuary 2018 – presentVolumes3 (List of volumes) Original net animationDirected byKazuya IwataWritten bySatoru SugizawaMusic byH Zett MStudioProject No.9Licensed b…

Questa voce o sezione sugli argomenti biologia e linguistica è ritenuta da controllare. Motivo: Voce che tratta quasi solo gli aspetti linguistici. Partecipa alla discussione e/o correggi la voce. Segui i suggerimenti dei progetti di riferimento 1, 2. Questa voce o sezione sugli argomenti riproduzione e linguistica non cita le fonti necessarie o quelle presenti sono insufficienti. Puoi migliorare questa voce aggiungendo citazioni da fonti attendibili secondo le linee guida sull'uso de…

  「俄亥俄」重定向至此。关于其他用法,请见「俄亥俄 (消歧义)」。 俄亥俄州 美國联邦州State of Ohio 州旗州徽綽號:七葉果之州地图中高亮部分为俄亥俄州坐标:38°27'N-41°58'N, 80°32'W-84°49'W国家 美國加入聯邦1803年3月1日,在1953年8月7日追溯頒定(第17个加入联邦)首府哥倫布(及最大城市)政府 • 州长(英语:List of Governors of {{{Name}}}]]) • …

هذه المقالة عن المجموعة العرقية الأتراك وليس عن من يحملون جنسية الجمهورية التركية أتراكTürkler (بالتركية) التعداد الكليالتعداد 70~83 مليون نسمةمناطق الوجود المميزةالبلد  القائمة ... تركياألمانياسورياالعراقبلغارياالولايات المتحدةفرنساالمملكة المتحدةهولنداالنمساأسترالياب…

Video game character from the Drakengard series This article is about the video game character. For people with a similar name, see Kaine. Fictional character KainéDrakengard characterOfficial artwork by Akihiko Yoshida.First gameNier (2010)Created byYoko TaroDesigned byD.KAkihiko Yoshida (2021)Voiced byEN: Laura Bailey[1]JP: Atsuko Tanaka[1] Kainé[a] is a character from the 2010 video game Nier, a spin-off of the Drakengard series developed by Cavia and published by Sq…

American Buddhist abess Jan Chozen BaysTitleRoshiPersonalBorn (1945-08-09) August 9, 1945 (age 78)Chicago, Illinois, U.S.ReligionZen BuddhismSpouseHogen BaysSchoolHarada-YasutaniLineageWhite Plum AsangaEducationM.D. University of California at San DiegoSenior postingBased inOregon, USAPredecessorTaizan MaezumiWebsiteGreat Vow Zen Monastery Heart of Wisdom Zen TempleZen Community of Oregon Part of a series onZen Buddhism Main articles Zen Chinese Chan Japanese Zen Korean Seon Vietnamese…

SumberbaruKecamatanNegara IndonesiaProvinsiJawa TimurKabupatenJemberPemerintahan • Camat-Populasi • Total- jiwaKode Kemendagri35.09.03 Kode BPS3509170 Desa/kelurahan- Sumberbaru adalah kecamatan paling barat di Kabupaten Jember, Provinsi Jawa Timur, Indonesia. Wilayah kecamatan ini merupakan pintu masuk Jember dari arah Lumajang, atau sepanjang jalur tengah Probolinggo-Surabaya. Kecamatan ini juga dikelilingi Kali Bondoyudo. Toko di Sumberbaru Desa Kaliglagah Karangb…

Synthesis of chemical compounds in an electrochemical cell In electrochemistry, electrosynthesis is the synthesis of chemical compounds in an electrochemical cell.[1][2][3][4] Compared to ordinary redox reactions, electrosynthesis sometimes offers improved selectivity and yields. Electrosynthesis is actively studied as a science and also has industrial applications. Electrooxidation has potential for wastewater treatment as well. Experimental setup The basic setup…

List of events ← 1891 1890 1889 1892 in the United States → 1893 1894 1895 Decades: 1870s 1880s 1890s 1900s 1910s See also: History of the United States (1865–1918) Timeline of United States history (1860–1899) List of years in the United States 1892 in the United States1892 in U.S. states States Alabama Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississipp…

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya