Alt Text Map of the notable battles of Richmond National Battlefield Park circa 1864. Grant’s movements are shown in blue and Lee’s are shown in red. Battles are represented as yellow-orange sunbursts, dotting the trail at intersections where the two paths meet. Extended Description Rivers and creeks in icy blue carve out areas of the white land on the right half of the map with the Potomac River circling the northeast corner and the James River snaking diagonally from the southeast corner. A set of darker blue lines and a set of red lines both run south from the top left corner of the map near Fredericksburg. The red lines weave south and end in Richmond, about two-thirds of the way down the map. The blue lines weave southeast and end at Petersburg, near the bottom of the map. A blue dashed line labeled Sheridan loops from just north of City Point, up to Fredericksburg and back down. The first battle site is shown at the top left corner of the map with a sunburst and text that reads “The Wilderness, May 5-6.” The lines diverge, running southeast to a sunburst labeled “Spotsylvania Court House, May 8-21.” The lines continue southeast, meeting again at a sunburst labeled “North Anna River, May 23-26.” The lines split again, weaving south, intersecting near a trio of sunbursts. The two smaller battles read “Yellow Tavern, May 11” and “Totopotomoy Creek, May 29-June 1,” near a large one labeled “Cold Harbor, May 31-June 12.” From here, the red line hooks southwest into Richmond. The blue lines travel south and east. A third blue path runs east from Cold Harbor to West Point and then southeast down the York River to exit the map. Next, a trio of small battles sits away from the paths, in a patch of land just south of Richmond. From left to right, they read “Drewry’s Bluff, May 16,” “Fort Harrison, September 29-30,” and “New Market Heights, September 29.” The blue paths then weave west past Bermuda Hundred and City Point. They run to Petersburg from each side, landing at a sunburst that reads “Petersburg, June 15-18.” Just below, at the bottom of the map, is a note that reads “Siege of Petersburg, June 18, 1864-April 2, 1865.” Legend A scale in the bottom left corner of the map measures distances of 10 kilometers and 10 miles.