22nd Virginia Cavalry The 2nd New York Veteran Cavalry Regiment, often called the Empire Light Cavalry was officially known as the 2nd Regiment, New York Veteran Volunteer Cavalry. Cobb's Legion (Georgia)- Col. Pierce B. M. Young Virginia Home Guards . Company K (Charlotte Rifles) - many men from Charlotte County, mustered in February 1861. 7th Virginia Cavalry- Lt. Col. Thomas Marshall The enemy came up rapidly, and we advanced a short distance to meet them. E. B. Brunson, Crenshaw's (Virginia) Battery- Capt. 13th Virginia Infantry Company K (Charlotte Rifles) - many men from Charlotte County, mustered in February 1861. 7th Virginia Infantry- Col. Waller T. Patton (mw), Lt. Col. Charles C. Flowerree 12th North Carolina Infantry- Lt. Col. William S. Davis Special correspondence is arranged at the rear of this series. Grimes, Grandys & Hugers Virginia Artillery Carrington B Donnelly, Ralph W . These last regiments came up upon the left of the regiments already engaged with us, and extended their line perpendicularly to the rear, and opened a severe oblique fire, which was directed principally upon the 18thand 8thVirginia Regiments. James G. Harris 4th Virginia Cavalry 22nd Virginia Infantry Battalion- Maj. John S. Bowles, Brig. 16th Virginia Cavalry 15th Alabama Infantry- Col. William C. Oates, Capt. There are lists of infantry battalions, local defense units, militia units, the "Stonewall" Brigade, and unassigned companies. Col. Gottfried Becker 116th Ohio InfantryCol. Henry H. Carlton (w), Lt. Columbus W. Motes, Brig. Subseries 7: Virginia State Line Reached the field at noon and retired with the supply trains at night. The Individual Service Records include a small collection of both official and unofficial service records for 70 Confederate veterans gathered by the Adjutant General, the Secretary of Virginia Military Records, and later, the Virginia State Library between 1884 and 1934. On this Wikipedia the language links are at the top of the page across from the article title. M. Jones (w), Lt. Col. Robert H. Dungan, 21st Virginia Infantry- Capt. Roster of Confederate Soldiers, 1861-1865, shows: Logan, Richard, Jr. VA 14th Inf. Amherst (Virginia) Artillery- Capt. Reorganized April 1862 with Captains Thomas J. Spencer, Mathew Lyle, Robert Morton Shepperson, Martin Luther Covington, William Henry Smith. 42nd Mississippi Infantry- Col. Hugh R. Miller (mw/c) 2nd Company- Capt. German (South Carolina) Artillery- Capt. Robert M. Stribling 41st Virginia Infantry- Col. William A. Parham 47th North Carolina Infantry- Col. George H. Faribault (w), Lt. Col. John A. Graves (w/c). 61st Virginia Infantry- Col. Virginius D. Groner, 2nd Florida Infantry- Maj. Walter R. Moore Commanded by Colonel R.E. Joseph Thoburn. michelle brown rumson nj obituary Gen. James H. Lane, 1st South Carolina Infantry (Provisional Army)- Maj. Charles W. McCreary T. Andersons Brigade in support of the Washington Artillery. 8th South Carolina Infantry- Col. John W. Henagan Scope and Content Information . 25th Virginia Cavalry James F. Hart 1926. Spent the day in reorganization and during the night began the march to Hagerstown. 61st Georgia Infantry- Col. John H. Lamar, Charlottesville (Virginia) Artillery- Capt. Gen. Joseph E. Johnston and Col. Thomas J. Jackson. 36th Battalion Virginia Cavalry The 18th Georgia Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. Botetourt Virginia Artillery Leroy W. Stowe 25th Virginia Infantry- Col. John C. Higginbotham (w), Lt. Col. J. Alleghany (Virginia) Artillery- Capt. 7th Louisiana Regiment: Litt Roden's 7th Louisiana Website. The Certificates Issued by the Secretary of Virginia Military Records consist of typescript copies of correspondence certifying the military service records of Confederate veterans between 1910 & 1917. 2nd Virginia Cavalry 10th Virginia Cavalry Charlottesville, Lee Lynchburg & Johnsons Bedford Virginia Artillery 4th Alabama Cavalry, Co. F (Dismounted/Mounted) - Located in West Central Alabama and members of the 1st Division of Southern Reenactors. The Virginia 21st Cavalry Regiment was organized in August, 1862, with companies which had served in the Virginia State Line. Ashland Virginia Artillery Occasionally there is additional information about the soldier's service such as furloughs, discharges, paroles, etc. 10th Virginia Cavalry- Col. J. Lucius Davis Here it was captured in the fight at Fort Donelson in February, 1862. This advance was made in good order under a storm of shells and grape and a deadly fire of musketry after passing the Emmitsburg Road. Thomas R. Buckner Before Sharpsburg. Joseph G. Blount, Maj. Gen. John B. These rolls are for Confederate units formed in Alabama during the Civil Warthough many operated outside of the state over the course of the war. 62nd Virginia Infantry, Mounted- Col. George H. Smith A more comprehensive inventory of Virginia soldiers, dead or alive, who fought for the Confederacy was still in want. The regiment was commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Henry A. Carrington and brought 312 men to the field. 16th Mississippi Infantry- Col. Samuel E. Baker 9th Virginia Cavalry The Transcripts of General and Special Orders from the Adjutant & Inspector General's Office from 1862 to 1865 were transcribed by the Secretary of Virginia Military Records. 20th Virginia Cavalry Benjamin C. McCurry Gen. Lewis A. Armistead (mw/c), Col. William R. Aylett (w), 9th Virginia Infantry- Maj. John C. Owens (mw) 20th North Carolina Infantry- Lt. Col. Nelson Slough (w), Capt. 34th Virginia Battalion- Lt. Col. Vincent A. Witcher Preferred citation: Jackson's Brigade and after the participating in the Gettysburg Campaign, skirmished the . 8th Virginia Infantry Gen. Albert G. Jenkins (w), Col. Milton J. Ferguson, 14th Virginia Cavalry- Maj. Benjamin F. Eakle Chews Ashby Virginia Artillery About this time the brigades of Generals Kemper and Drayton fell back, and a large force opposed to them swung round toward Sharpsburg and were already getting in our rear, when General Garnett, from sheer necessity, ordered his brigade to retire. , Beauregard, and other miscellaneous lists of soldiers. Georgia Battery- Capt. See the National Archives Compiled Service Records for more detailed service record information. Branch, Harrington & Staunton Hill Virginia Artillery Transferred from the Adjutant General's Office, Dept. 26th Georgia Infantry- Col. Edmund N. Atkinson This is a prison notebook maintained by Confederate Captain John Peter Jones (1838-1910), Company, D, 56th Virginia Infantry Regiment, contains the signatures of ca. 19th Virginia Cavalry Assigned to Floyd's Brigade, the unit fought at Kessler's Cross Lanes and Carnifex Ferry in western Virginia, then moved to Tennessee. 57th Virginia Infantry A 22 year old carpenter in Appomattox County, he mustered as Private, Company H, 18th Virginia Infantry on 7 May 1861. . Undaunted, the vigorous commander immediately embarked upon a 400-mile tour of his district to assess the situation for himself. 11th Virginia Cavalry- Col. Lunsford L. Lomax, 2nd North Carolina Cavalry- Lt. Col. William Payne (c), Capt. Subseries 1: Artillery They typically include: Name; Ranks; Locations; Unit; Commanding officer 30th North Carolina Infantry- Col. Francis M. Parker (w), Maj. W. W. Sillers, Col. Edward A. O'Neal Military Secretary, Acting Asst. Jeff Davis Legion (Mississippi)- Col. Joseph F. Waring Benjamin F. Winfield, Breathed's (Virginia) Battery- Capt. Jackson's (Virginia) Battery- Capt. Operations in Belgium and France, 1917-1919. Thomas H. Biscoe 55th North Carolina Infantry- Col. John Kerr Connally, Donaldsville (Louisiana) Artillery- Capt. 269 Confederate officers captured between February 1863 and August 1864 and held at Johnson's Island, Sandusky, Ohio. 14th Virginia Infantry- Col. James G. Hodges (k), Lt. Col. William White Gen. William N. Pendleton Aide de camp, Asst. 44th Alabama Infantry- Col. William F. Perry Reorganized Aptil 1862 with Captains Thomas J. Spencer, Mathew Lyle, Robert Morton Shepperson, Martin Luther Covington, William Henry Smith. David Watson R. Sidney Rice Lieutenant Colonel Carrington was wounded. The "Calhoun Mountaineers" were organized and enrolled at Fair Play near Pendleton in Pickens District, South Carolina, on April 14th, 1861, for the term of twelve months service.They were mustered into Confederate States service as Company E of the 4th South Carolina Volunteer Infantry Regiment on June 7th, 1861, at Columbia, South Carolina, by then Lieutenant Colonel Barnard E. Bee. Includes correspondence, certificates issued by the U.S. War Dept. 14th Tennessee Infantry- Capt. 5th Maine Artillery. 52nd Virginia Infantry- Lt. Col. James H. Skinner, Col. Isaac E. Avery (mw), Col. Archibald C. Godwin, 6th North Carolina Infantry- Maj. Samuel D. McD. Rejoined Lees main army on the Rappahannock. 57th North Carolina Infantry- Col. Archibald C. Godwin, 13th Georgia Infantry- Col. James L. Smith Cobb's (Georgia) Legion Infantry- Lt. Col. Luther J. Glenn Each paymaster was responsible for the detachments for various units. Included are newspaper clippings, typescript and handwritten lists, correspondence, and pamphlets. These lists are undated, but were created sometime between 1904 and 1918. Inspector General: Maj. Charles S. Venable 47th Virginia Infantry Charles I. Raine (mw), Lt. William M. Hardwicke, 2nd Richmond (Virginia) Howitzers- Capt. Kershaw's Brigade (Army of Northern Virginia, CSA) 1st South Carolina (Martin's) Mounted Militia, CSA. 1st Battalion Virginia Infantry Madison (Louisiana) Artillery- Capt. The majority of the lists, however, document the deaths of Confederate soldiers in over thirty Union prisons in twelve states. Returned north of the James river and rejoined the Army of Northern Virginia attached to the 1st Corps under Major General Richard Anderson. compiled by Thomas M. Spratt. Giles, Alleghany & Jackson Virginia Artillery These rolls contain lists of soldiers who did not receive pay. Gen. George Crook. Note that some materials have been added to the collection since it was deposited at the State Library in 1918. In fact, the 19th Virginia is mentioned . There is another published pamphlet of veterans from Greenbrier County in 1906. West, Capt. Aide de Camp, Asst. Army of Northern Virginia Stuart's Cavalry Division Imboden's Brigade 18th Virginia Cavalry 62nd Virginia Infantry Virginia Partisan Rangers and McClanahan's Virginia Battery. Companies A, C, and E enrolled at Ironton, Ohio on April 22, 1861. Adjutant General: Lt. Col. Walter H. Taylor Stuart Horse Artillery Major Robert F. Beckham strength: 400 men, 19 guns casualties: 5 killed, 22 wounded, 27 total. William A. Graham (w), Lt. Joseph Baker 8x11 All six volumes in the above as a set, with a savings of $32 off the price of individually purchased volumes. This is the concluding volume of a work which seeks to record all of the casualties incurred by the men in Virginia regiments during the Civil War in a single source. The Library of Virginia 5th Virginia Infantry- Col. John H. S. Funk William P. Carter 5th Florida Infantry- Capt. Samuel H. Saunders 41st Virginia Infantry 19th Virginia Infantry- Col. Henry Gantt (w), Lt. Col. John T. Ellis (mw) Artillery. Gen. Paul J. Semmes (mw), Col. Goode Bryan, 10th Georgia Infantry- Col. John B. Weems It nevertheless did good and effective fighting, and, had it been supported on the left, would have maintained its ground throughout the entire fight. However, the 8th Virginia suffered its fair share of losses, including its newly-elected Major, James Thrift, mortally wounded while leading a charge. Finding Aids: Sarah Powell and Randall Roots, comps., "Preliminary Inventory of the Records of United States Regular Army Mobile Units, 1821-1942," NM 93 (1970); supplement in National Archives microfiche edition of preliminary inventories. William H. Mitchell Infantry - 12th-17th. See Stewart Sifakis, Compendium of the Confederate Armies: Virginia (New York, Oxford: Facts on File, 1992), p. 221. 44th Virginia Infantry- Maj. Norval Cobb (w), Capt. Alabama. 16th North Carolina Infantry- Capt. Asher W. Garber, 32nd North Carolina Infantry- Col. Edmund C. Brabble 5th Virginia Cavalry 17325, Download the official NPS app before your next visit. 12th Virginia Cavalry Company C - Capt. Includes correspondence, muster rolls, payrolls, clippings, descriptive rolls of pay & clothing, powers of attorney, rosters, printed material, scrapbooks, letter books, general & special . Branch (North Carolina) Artillery- Capt. The volumes contain an unofficial roster of soldiers from Virginia who served in the Confederate States of America during the Civil War. Volume six includes the following units: Gen. Evander M. Law, Brig. The unit was assigned to Imboden's and W.L. CS Navy Marcellus M. Moorman, 18th Virginia Cavalry- Col. George W. Imboden) The Scrapbooks include two volumes of clippings from "Our Confederate Column" between 1904 to 1909 and two volumes of obituaries of Confederate veterans who died between 1910 and 1917. 45th Georgia Infantry- Col. Thomas J. Simmons 51st Virginia Infantry 3rd Virginia Cavalry Interest in memorializing Confederate veterans prompted the General Assembly to pass an act on March 13, 1884, directing the adjutant general to compile a roster of all those who served from Virginia in the Confederate armed forces. Lieutenant Colonel Carrington was promoted to colonel, Major George Cabell was promoted to lieutenant colonel and Captain Edwin G. Wall of Company D was promoted to major. In response to Congress' passage of an act on February 25, 1903, providing for the assembling of muster rolls for all Union and Confederate soldiers, Virginia created the Office of the Secretary of Virginia Military Records on March 7, 1904, to assist the Secretary of War and the U.S. War Department with a complete roster of Confederate soldiers from Virginia. 60th Virginia Infantry compiled by Thomas M. Spratt. These records are particularly useful because they often contain the personal recollections of veterans and their families. 5th Louisiana Reigment. 37th Battalion Virginia Cavalry ex-Confederate soldiers and sailors arranged by locality. Nadenbousch Military Units Participating in 1865 Mobile Campaign. Robert Lewis Dabney briefly served as chaplain for the regiment, before becoming chief of staff for Stonewall Jackson. Individuals wrote Bidgood for information about soldiers for pensions, genealogical & historical research, and other purposes. Related Records: Records of U.S. Army Commands, 1784-1821, RG 98. Norfolk Blues Light Artillery (Virginia)- Capt. 14th South Carolina Infantry- Lt. Col. Joseph N. Brown, Brig. Madison (Mississippi) Light Artillery- Capt. The 18th Virginia Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment raised in Virginia for service in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War.It fought mostly with the Army of Northern Virginia.. The regiment was then drawn off with the remainder of the brigade. These special orders were issued by Jonathan Withers and George Deas, Assistant Adjutant Generals, by the command of the Secretary of War. 17th Georgia Infantry- Col. Wesley C. Hodges Hardaway (Alabama) Artillery- Capt. Richmond Howitzers Virginia Artillery Montague, and William Hodges Mann; John Hart, editor of "Our Confederate Column" in the Richmond Times-Dispatch; and Adjutant Generals James McDonald & W.W. Sale. We had moved back some 50 yards when it was discovered that a battery ([A. S.] Cutts, I think) would be endangered by our falling back. It lost 6 killed and 13 wounded at First Manassas and in April 1862 had 700 men fit for duty. 24th Virginia Infantry- Col. William R. Terry, Brig. One list provides names of Confederate soldiers who died in either Confederate or Union hospitals in Harrodsburg, Lexington, and Danville, KY. Another list provides the names of Confederate soldiers who died in a railroad accident near Shohola, Pa. 9th Virginia Infantry Most of its members had served in the 1st Regiment Virginia Partisan Rangers (subsequently the 62nd Regiment Virginia Infantry). One other unit, the 45th Virginia Infantry, was at Saltville, but at first was not under Breckinridge's jurisdiction. Civil War Genealogy Database. 18th Georgia Infantry- Lieut. Took part in Longstreets Suffolk Expedition, missing the Battle of Chancellorsville. 23rd North Carolina Infantry- Col. Daniel H. Christie (mw), Capt. Thomas A. Brander 32nd Battalion Virginia Cavalry This work seeks to record all of the casualties incurred by the men in Virginia regiments during the Civil War in a single source. . The unit fought at First Manassas under General Cocke, then was assigned to General Pickett's, Garnett's, and Hunton's Brigade. Campbell was killed in April 1865 at the Battle of Sayler's Creek -ironically next to Nottoway County in Prince Edward County, Nine more officers of Company "G" 18th Va Infantry, Private John G. Lee of Company H, 18th Virginia Infantry Regiment. Its members were recruited at Danville and Farmville, and in the counties of Nottoway, Cumberland, Prince Edward, Appomattox, Pittsylvania, and Charlotte. William W. Parke 4th Texas Infantry- Col. John C. G. Key (w), Maj. John P. Bane Alabama Regiments, Rosters and Muster Rolls. It took part in Picketts Charge on July 3, sustaining heavy casualties. VIRGINIA'S CIVIL WAR CASUALTIES: A ROSTER, VOLUME 2 compiled by Thomas M. Spratt. Blanton A. Hill Fort Blakeley, AL -The Last Battle of the Civil War. William G. Crenshaw James McD. The 18th Virginia Volunteer Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment raised in Virginia for service in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War.It fought mostly with the Army of Northern Virginia.. 16th Virginia Cavalry- Col. Milton J. Ferguson 1st Texas Infantry- Col. Phillip A. Five of his books cover the Regiments that were in General Lewis A. Armistead's Brigade at the Battle of Gettysburg (the 9th, 14th, 38th, 53rd, and 57th Virginia Infantries), namely: "9th Virginia Infantry: Finding the Men in the 1860 Census", "14th Virginia Infantry . J. Lowrance, 13th North Carolina Infantry- Col. Joseph H. Hyman (w), Lt. Col. Henry A. Rogers Six enlisted men were killed, Captain Matthews and 23 enlisted men were wounded and one enlisted man was missing. 6th Louisiana Regiment: - From Irish Rebels, Confederate Tigers by James Gannon. Louisiana Guard Artillery- Capt. Merritt B. Miller Fredericksburg Virginia Artillery This work seeks to record all of the casualties incurred by the men in Virginia regiments during the Civil War in a single source. 1 Service and other details from James I. Robertson's 18th Virginia Infantry (roster, 1984) via the Historical Data Systems . However if you are unsure which company your ancestor was in, try the company recruited in his county first. 38th North Carolina Infantry- Col. William J. Hoke (w), Lt. Col. John Ashford, Albemarle (Virginia) Artillery- Capt. 14th Louisiana Infantry- Lt. Col. David Zable 47th Alabama Infantry- Col. James W. Jackson, Lt. Col. J. M. Bulger (w/c), Maj. James M. Campbell R. S. Jones, acting adjutant, and [W. H.] Smith, of Company K, and Sergeant Muses, Company G, were particularly active in the discharge of their duties. These payrolls provide the names of the soldiers and to whom paid. Hunter noted in this report the completion of various lists of officers, surgeons, chaplains, battles in Virginia and West Virginia, and the collection of rolls and rosters, both original and secondary, of Virginia companies calendared in books of the office according to branch, regiment or battalion, and company. 24th Battalion Virginia Partisan Rangers Hurt 2nd North Carolina Infantry Battalion- Lt. Col. Hezekiah L. Andrews (w), Capt. 8th Florida Infantry- Lt. Col. William Baya, 12th Mississippi Infantry- Col. Walter H. Taylor Bruce L. Phillips, 2nd Mississippi Infantry- Col. John M. Stone of Confederate Military Records. Orange (Virginia) Artillery- Capt. Cohoons Virginia Infantry Battalion Lastly, there is a catalog of muster rolls from the Richmond Circuit Court related to the court case between the Commonwealth and Joseph F. Wren in 1910. Work M. Arss--Suppose to be listed in the 22nd Virginia Infantry Regiment. Many were captured at Sayler's Creek and only 2 officers and 32 men surrendered. Colonel Withers retired. The information above is from 18th Virginia Infantry, by James I. Robertson, 18th Regiment, Virginia Infantry (Confederate), Companies in this Regiment with the Counties of Origin, Beginning United States Civil War Research, The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System, https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/index.php?title=18th_Regiment,_Virginia_Infantry_(Confederate)&oldid=5036900. Tyler C. Jordan Gen. R. B. Garnett fell dead from his saddle in front of the stone wall. Copyright 2023 Iberian Publishing Company. 36th Virginia Infantry, formerly known as the 2nd Kanawha Regiment, was organized in July, 1861. 12th Alabama Infantry- Col. Samuel B. Pickens 6th Alabama Infantry- Col. James N. Lightfoot (w), Capt. Extent: 68.19 cu. Mathews, Penicks Pittsylvania, Youngs Halifax & Johnsons Jackson VA Artillery Miles C. Macon Van Brown, 5th North Carolina Infantry- Capt. James Washburn 123d Ohio InfantryMaj. These include lists of Confederate veterans at the Gettysburg encampment in 1913, veterans admitted to the Lee Camp Soldiers' Home in 1915, Virginia military organizations mentioned in official war records, and Virginia soldiers mentioned in special orders. compiled by Thomas M. Spratt. Chief of Commissary: Lt. Col. Robert G. Cole Chief of Artillery: Brig. The Adjutant General distributed blank roster sheets to former company commanders and other individuals, however, most of the sheets were never returned and the project was left unfinished. 15th South Carolina Infantry- Col. William DeSaussure (k), Maj. William M. Gist [1] Company A (Danville Blues) - Danville Virginia Company B (Danville Grays . The Roster of Company A thru K is now divided into two sections with the Officers, Men with surnames A thru L being listed on the first page while Men with surnames M thru Z will be listed on the second page. The Department of Confederate Military Records, under the Office of the Adjutant General, continued the work of the Secretary of Virginia Military Records of assembling muster rolls and other documents related to Virginians in the Civil War. I halted my little regiment, faced it about, and waited until the battery limbered up and moved off. Fire was soon opened along the entire front of the Eighteenth Regiment, when the skirmishers retired, and soon the main body of the enemy fell back a short distance, sheltered themselves behind trees, rocks, &c., and opened a heavy fire upon us, which was replied to with spirit and vigor for some time. Withers. Subseries 9: Miscellaneous. A Weaver, Jeffrey C.The Virginia Home Guards.Lynchburg, VA: H. E. Howard, Inc., 1996. Here the regiment was reformed. William K. Bachman 13th Virginia Cavalry- Capt. Captains [T. D.] Claiborne, [J. 38th Virginia Infantry requesting the service records of Confederate veterans for pension applications. Phillips' Legion (Georgia)- Lt. Col. Jefferson C. Phillips, 1st Maryland Battalion Cavalry- Maj. Harry Gilmore, Maj. Ridgely Brown The 24th Georgia Volunteer Infantry was an infantry regiment in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. Ohio Volunteer Infantry, 7th Regiment, USA. Virginia. Richmond Fayette Artillery- Capt.

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