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10th Connecticut Infantry Regiment

The 10th Connecticut Infantry Regiment was one of Connecticut's most successful civil war regiments, compiling an exemplary record of service in the Union Army.[1] The 10th Regiment saw action in the coastal campaign during the early years of the war, which culminated with the siege of Charleston. The 10th went on to fight the trench battles of Richmond, earning praise from Union generals and Ulysses S. Grant. The 10th was active at the war's very end, when they blocked Robert E. Lee's attempt to escape from Virginia. And, the 10th was present at Appomattox Court House when Lee surrendered to Grant. All told, the 10th regiment fought in twenty three battles and at least as many skirmishes.[2]

Formation of the Regiment edit

The 10th Connecticut Infantry Regiment was originally formed from the 10th Connecticut Volunteers. After the Union loss at the first Battle of Bull Run, in the summer of 1861, volunteers poured into the Union army ranks. In September, members of the 10th regiment started arriving at Camp Buckingham in Hartford.[3] Members of the 10th regiment came from Connecticut towns large and small, including, Hartford, New Haven, Derby, Manchester, Sprague, New London, Stamford and Greenwich. After a few months at Camp Buckingham, the 10th regiment headed down to Annapolis, M.D. for additional training before joining General Burnside's North Carolina Expedition to blockade vital Confederate ports.

Commanders edit

Major Edwin S. Greely

Combat record edit

Battle of Roanoke Island (February 1862) edit

 
Map of Roanoke Island, showing forts and fleet dispositions, February 7, 1862, on the left, and on the right, the battlefield where opposing armies met on February 8. Prepared by Lt. Andrews, 9th N.Y. Regiment.

One of the first objectives for Burnside's expeditionary force was to capture Roanoke Island in North Carolina.[4] After a harrowing sea voyage through a violent storm, during which hundreds of Connecticut soldiers perished due to illness, the Tenth was put ashore on the North Carolina coast.[5]

The two-day battle for Roanoke Island started with Union gunboats bombarding the Confederate positions. The Tenth faced a daunting task trying to dislodge the 3,000 enemy defenders.[6] Captain Pardee of the Tenth wrote, "They had three pieces of artillery fronting and commanding this clearing; and large numbers of riflemen perched in trees, behind the turfed walls and under all possible covers."[7]

The Tenth along with the other Connecticut units made a determined advance and completely routed the Confederates.[6] After the victory, the Tenth was recognized for their bravery and excellent soldierly actions by commanding General John G. Foster. The Tenth also won praise from their comrades in the 8th Connecticut Volunteers, being written about as "the gallant Connecticut Tenth".[8]

The Tenth sustained the heaviest losses in the Battle of Roanoke Island in North Carolina by any regiment engaged, with 56 soldiers killed or wounded.[9]

Battle of Newbern (March 1862) edit

 
Battle of New Bern as illustrated in Harper's Weekly. 5 April 1862

After taking Roanoke Island, the next Union objective was to move up the Neuse River and attack a Confederate position at Newbern, North Carolina, a strategic coastal town, west of the Outer Banks.[10]

On the morning of March 13, General Burnside ordered the entire brigade to advance on the Confederate position. The Confederates had established a long line of impressive defensive fortifications manned by 7,000 soldiers and a large number of heavy artillery.[11]

Here, a heavy and sustained rifle fire from the Tenth Connecticut weakened parts of the Confederate line. This allowed the 8th Connecticut and 4th Rhode Island troops to charge and begin the rout of the enemy forces. Newbern was soon under Union control.[12]

In his report, General Foster praised the men of the Tenth, writing, "...(the Tenth) advanced..., in line of battle, fired with the most remarkable steadiness,..., giving and taking the most severe fire."[13]

Action at Rawls Mills (November 1862) edit

The Tenth remained in Newbern all throughout the summer of 1862. The next action for the Tenth came in November 1862, when the regiment was ordered to attack a rebel supply route near Rawls Mills, N.C. The Tenth was out in front of the Union troops, the first to take fire in leading the advance. Rebel troops were pushed back repeatedly as the Union troops marched through Williamston and continued on to capture Rainbow Fort on the Roanoke River. Two weeks later, the Tenth was back in Newbern having accomplished their mission.[14]

Battle at Kinston (December 1862) edit

In December 1862, the Tenth moved out of Newbern to support General McClellan's attack on the Confederate capital of Richmond and to cut off the Wilmington Railroad.[15] The first encounter with the Confederate forces was near the Kinston Bridge over the Neuse River.

The advance of the first two lines of Union troops was halted by the Confederate resistance and swamp terrain. Here, General Foster called on the Tenth to make a breakthrough. The Tenth pressed the attack through a hailstorm of bullets. They charged the Confederate positions, and, after half an hour of murderous, close-range, rifle-exchanges, the Tenth gained the upper hand.[16]

The Confederate lines collapsed. As they retreated, the Confederate troops set fire to the strategic Kinston bridge. Undeterred, the Tenth managed to douse the flames, capture the bridge and drive off the enemy forces. In this battle, the Tenth captured 100 Confederate soldiers and all of the Confederate artillery.[17]

This had been the most difficult fighting that the Tenth had experienced, thus far. The losses were large, both in officers and enlisted ranks. Of the three hundred and sixty officers and men sent into action, over a third were killed in action or died within four days of the battle.[18] General Foster again hailed the Tenth as the "bravest among the brave".[17]

Battle of Goldsboro Bridge (December 1862) edit

The Tenth was given no time to rest. The regiment moved on toward the town of Goldsboro, North Carolina Again the Tenth was at the front of the Union force. At Goldsboro the regiment destroyed Confederate railroad tracks and a burned a railroad bridge. With the mission accomplished, the Tenth returned to Newbern, having absorbed one fourth of all Union losses in this expedition.[19]

Assault on Fort Wagner (July 1863) edit

 
Plan of Fort Wagner, with overlay showing armament

During 1862, despite the Union Army advances along the Carolina coast, the Confederacy had largely succeeded in defending its territory, beating back the stronger Union forces with superior battlefield leadership. At the beginning of 1863, the Union Army was still in search of a major, morale-boosting victory.

The Tenth finally moved out of Newbern, North Carolina, in January 1863.[20] The regiment was ordered to St. Helena Island, South Carolina, near Charleston. The Union blockade of Charleston harbor was effective, but the city remained in Confederate hands.

In early July, the Tenth was ordered to join a large-scale assault on Fort Wagner, situated on nearby Morris Island.[21]This was part of the second Union attempt to capture Charleston. The Tenth's main role in the assault was a successful diversionary action. The main attack force consisted of the African American troops of the 54th Massachusetts and the 6th Connecticut (as depicted in the motion picture Glory).

The attack on Fort Wagner did not initially succeed, although Union forces did breach the fort's defenses. After the attack, Union soldiers spent months digging trenches parallel to the Confederate lines.[18] This tactic eventually proved a successful strategy as the Confederate troops abandoned Fort Wagner in early September.

Down the Atlantic coast to St. Augustine, Florida edit

In late October 1863, the Tenth was ordered down the Atlantic coast for rest and recuperation in St. Augustine, Florida. The men of the Tenth were able to regain their strength at St. Augustine, but the enemy was always nearby. In fact, twenty two soldiers of the regiment were captured and one soldier was killed during a Confederate ambush. The men of the 10th were escorting a wood chopping detail near the base when the Confederates attacked.[22]

On the James River, City Point and Bermuda Hundred (May 1864) edit

As 1864 began, the Union Armies of the Potomac and the James were methodically pushing General Lee's Army to the strong defenses of the Confederate capital of Richmond.

During February 1864, Connecticut veterans of the war were given furloughs. Veterans of the Tenth arrived in New Haven on February 19 and then travelled to Hartford. They were warmly received and praised by town and state leaders. Veterans of the Tenth re-enlisted for another three years and new recruits joined the regiment.[23]

In May 1864, men of the Tenth Connecticut were back on the front line.[24] The regiment was assigned to the Tenth Corps in the Army of the James. Their first mission was to take the strategic riverfronts at City Point and Bermuda Hundred in Virginia. The 10th regiment and accompanying Union troops accomplished this mission by moving quickly up the James River, surprising the Confederate forces, and landing unopposed.[23]

City Point, situated on the confluence of the James and Appomattox Rivers, would later become General Grant's main headquarters and the Union's staging area for the siege of Petersburg and Richmond.

Battle of Fort Darling (Drewry's Bluff) (May 1864) edit

 
Confederate gun at Battery Dantzler, Drewry's Bluff.

The next objective of the Union force was a march toward Richmond to encircle the Confederate capital.[25] In their path stood Fort Darling, a strong defensive position on the James River, near Drewry's Bluff and just south of Richmond.

The assault on Fort Darling did not succeed. However, the Tenth fought bravely, mainly in rearguard action, protecting other Union regiments. Despite this setback, Union troops continued on toward Richmond.[26]

Repelling an attack on the march to Richmond edit

In early October, the advancing Union army was suddenly counterattacked by Confederate cavalry and infantry units.[27] The Tenth fended off the attack despite fighting with an exposed flank, as an adjacent New York regiment turned and ran when the Confederates charged.

General H.M. Plaisted, commander of the Tenth Army Corps, wrote of the Tenth Connecticut, "In my opinion, the conduct of the Tenth Regiment, when the troops on its right broke and fled, saved the Army of the James."[28]

Battle for Fort Gregg (April 1865) edit

By early April 1865, Union forces were at the outer defenses of Petersburg. The Tenth was now poised to attack Fort Gregg, an intimidating defensive position, consisting of well constructed trenches and earthworks, backed up by many artillery pieces. On April 2 the Tenth, supported by the 100th New York Infantry, advanced toward Fort Gregg, facing murderous cannon and rifle fire.[29] Many of the Tenth fell far short of their objective. But, the main body of the regiment reached the fort, and there began fierce hand-to-hand combat. The Connecticut flag was first to be placed on the parapet of the fort, and after the brutal struggle, the Tenth Connecticut emerged victorious.[30] Victory came at a high cost; half of the Tenth's assault force were either killed or wounded. After the battle, Major General John Gibbon, presented to the Tenth Connecticut, an ornate bronze eagle, resting on a globe to place atop the Connecticut state flag. This distinction went to the men of the Tenth for "...for gallant conduct in the assault on Fort Gregg...".[31]

Appomattox Court House (April 1865) edit

 
Federal soldiers at the courthouse, April 1865

The men of the Tenth were pressed into action once again in pursuit of the retreating Robert E. Lee.[30] Lee withdrew from Richmond to Danville, Virginia and looked to link up with General Johnston's army in North Carolina. At dawn, on April 9, Lee tried to break through Union lines near Appomattox Station, 100 miles west of Richmond. After an initial surge forward by the Confederate troops, the Tenth and First Connecticut Cavalry blocked Lee's escape.[32] The war lost, Lee signed the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia, just hours later, at Appomattox Court House. The 10th Connecticut was present.

Record and legacy edit

The Tenth Connecticut was mustered out of the Union Army on August 25, 1865. During the four-year war, the Tenth Connecticut saw service from 2,124 men. These men fought in 23 battles and at least as many skirmishes. Fifty seven men were killed in action. Fifty nine died of wounds and one hundred fifty two died of disease.[2] The Tenth was one of the top 300 Union regiments in the Civil War (out of over 1,700), according to historian William F. Fox.

See also edit

External links edit

  • Greenwich for the Union!, Part 1 - Documentary video on Greenwich and Connecticut regiments in the Civil War, 1861 to 1864
  • Greenwich for the Union!, Part 2 - Documentary video on Greenwich and Connecticut regiments in the Civil War, 1864 to 1865

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 126.
  2. ^ a b Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 824.
  3. ^ Mead 1990, p. 80.
  4. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 163–164.
  5. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 165.
  6. ^ a b Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 166–167.
  7. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 166.
  8. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 167.
  9. ^ Mead 1919, p. 227.
  10. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 170–173.
  11. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 172.
  12. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 173.
  13. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 174.
  14. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 342.
  15. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 343–344.
  16. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 343.
  17. ^ a b Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 344.
  18. ^ a b Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 345.
  19. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 345–346.
  20. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 347.
  21. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 342–348.
  22. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 513.
  23. ^ a b Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 523.
  24. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 528.
  25. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 541–552.
  26. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 548–549.
  27. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 670–671.
  28. ^ Mead 1919, p. 236.
  29. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 786–789.
  30. ^ a b Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 787.
  31. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, pp. 792–795.
  32. ^ Croffut & Morris 1869, p. 784.
Sources
  • Camp, Henry Ward. The Knightly Soldier: A Biography of Major Henry Ward Camp 10th Conn. Vols. Boston, Mass.: Nichols and Noyes, 1865.
  • Croffut, William Augustus & Morris, John M. (1869). The Military and Civil History of Connecticut during the war of 1861-1865. New York: Ledyard Bill.
  • Mead, Edgar T. (1990). Greenwich Grows Up. Historical Society of the Town of Greenwich. ISBN 978-0-9612540-5-6.
  • Mead, Spencer P. (1919). Ye Historie of ye Town of Greenwich, County of Fairfield, State of Connecticut. New York: The Knickerbocker Press.

10th, connecticut, infantry, regiment, connecticut, most, successful, civil, regiments, compiling, exemplary, record, service, union, army, 10th, regiment, action, coastal, campaign, during, early, years, which, culminated, with, siege, charleston, 10th, went,. The 10th Connecticut Infantry Regiment was one of Connecticut s most successful civil war regiments compiling an exemplary record of service in the Union Army 1 The 10th Regiment saw action in the coastal campaign during the early years of the war which culminated with the siege of Charleston The 10th went on to fight the trench battles of Richmond earning praise from Union generals and Ulysses S Grant The 10th was active at the war s very end when they blocked Robert E Lee s attempt to escape from Virginia And the 10th was present at Appomattox Court House when Lee surrendered to Grant All told the 10th regiment fought in twenty three battles and at least as many skirmishes 2 10th Connecticut Infantry RegimentActiveSeptember 1861 August 1865DisbandedAugust 25 1865CountryUnited StatesAllegianceUnionBranchUnited States ArmyTypeInfantrySize1 728EngagementsBattle of Roanoke IslandBattle of New BernBattle of KinstonBattle of Goldsborough BridgeBattle of Fort WagnerBattle of Drewry s BluffBattle of Deep BottomSiege of Petersburg Contents 1 Formation of the Regiment 2 Commanders 3 Combat record 3 1 Battle of Roanoke Island February 1862 3 2 Battle of Newbern March 1862 3 3 Action at Rawls Mills November 1862 3 4 Battle at Kinston December 1862 3 5 Battle of Goldsboro Bridge December 1862 3 6 Assault on Fort Wagner July 1863 3 7 Down the Atlantic coast to St Augustine Florida 3 8 On the James River City Point and Bermuda Hundred May 1864 3 9 Battle of Fort Darling Drewry s Bluff May 1864 3 10 Repelling an attack on the march to Richmond 3 11 Battle for Fort Gregg April 1865 3 12 Appomattox Court House April 1865 4 Record and legacy 5 See also 6 External links 7 ReferencesFormation of the Regiment editThe 10th Connecticut Infantry Regiment was originally formed from the 10th Connecticut Volunteers After the Union loss at the first Battle of Bull Run in the summer of 1861 volunteers poured into the Union army ranks In September members of the 10th regiment started arriving at Camp Buckingham in Hartford 3 Members of the 10th regiment came from Connecticut towns large and small including Hartford New Haven Derby Manchester Sprague New London Stamford and Greenwich After a few months at Camp Buckingham the 10th regiment headed down to Annapolis M D for additional training before joining General Burnside s North Carolina Expedition to blockade vital Confederate ports Commanders editMajor Edwin S GreelyCombat record editBattle of Roanoke Island February 1862 edit Main article Battle of Roanoke Island nbsp Map of Roanoke Island showing forts and fleet dispositions February 7 1862 on the left and on the right the battlefield where opposing armies met on February 8 Prepared by Lt Andrews 9th N Y Regiment One of the first objectives for Burnside s expeditionary force was to capture Roanoke Island in North Carolina 4 After a harrowing sea voyage through a violent storm during which hundreds of Connecticut soldiers perished due to illness the Tenth was put ashore on the North Carolina coast 5 The two day battle for Roanoke Island started with Union gunboats bombarding the Confederate positions The Tenth faced a daunting task trying to dislodge the 3 000 enemy defenders 6 Captain Pardee of the Tenth wrote They had three pieces of artillery fronting and commanding this clearing and large numbers of riflemen perched in trees behind the turfed walls and under all possible covers 7 The Tenth along with the other Connecticut units made a determined advance and completely routed the Confederates 6 After the victory the Tenth was recognized for their bravery and excellent soldierly actions by commanding General John G Foster The Tenth also won praise from their comrades in the 8th Connecticut Volunteers being written about as the gallant Connecticut Tenth 8 The Tenth sustained the heaviest losses in the Battle of Roanoke Island in North Carolina by any regiment engaged with 56 soldiers killed or wounded 9 Battle of Newbern March 1862 edit Main article Battle of New Bern 1862 nbsp Battle of New Bern as illustrated in Harper s Weekly 5 April 1862After taking Roanoke Island the next Union objective was to move up the Neuse River and attack a Confederate position at Newbern North Carolina a strategic coastal town west of the Outer Banks 10 On the morning of March 13 General Burnside ordered the entire brigade to advance on the Confederate position The Confederates had established a long line of impressive defensive fortifications manned by 7 000 soldiers and a large number of heavy artillery 11 Here a heavy and sustained rifle fire from the Tenth Connecticut weakened parts of the Confederate line This allowed the 8th Connecticut and 4th Rhode Island troops to charge and begin the rout of the enemy forces Newbern was soon under Union control 12 In his report General Foster praised the men of the Tenth writing the Tenth advanced in line of battle fired with the most remarkable steadiness giving and taking the most severe fire 13 Action at Rawls Mills November 1862 edit The Tenth remained in Newbern all throughout the summer of 1862 The next action for the Tenth came in November 1862 when the regiment was ordered to attack a rebel supply route near Rawls Mills N C The Tenth was out in front of the Union troops the first to take fire in leading the advance Rebel troops were pushed back repeatedly as the Union troops marched through Williamston and continued on to capture Rainbow Fort on the Roanoke River Two weeks later the Tenth was back in Newbern having accomplished their mission 14 Battle at Kinston December 1862 edit Main article Battle of Kinston In December 1862 the Tenth moved out of Newbern to support General McClellan s attack on the Confederate capital of Richmond and to cut off the Wilmington Railroad 15 The first encounter with the Confederate forces was near the Kinston Bridge over the Neuse River The advance of the first two lines of Union troops was halted by the Confederate resistance and swamp terrain Here General Foster called on the Tenth to make a breakthrough The Tenth pressed the attack through a hailstorm of bullets They charged the Confederate positions and after half an hour of murderous close range rifle exchanges the Tenth gained the upper hand 16 The Confederate lines collapsed As they retreated the Confederate troops set fire to the strategic Kinston bridge Undeterred the Tenth managed to douse the flames capture the bridge and drive off the enemy forces In this battle the Tenth captured 100 Confederate soldiers and all of the Confederate artillery 17 This had been the most difficult fighting that the Tenth had experienced thus far The losses were large both in officers and enlisted ranks Of the three hundred and sixty officers and men sent into action over a third were killed in action or died within four days of the battle 18 General Foster again hailed the Tenth as the bravest among the brave 17 Battle of Goldsboro Bridge December 1862 edit Main article Battle of Goldsboro Bridge The Tenth was given no time to rest The regiment moved on toward the town of Goldsboro North Carolina Again the Tenth was at the front of the Union force At Goldsboro the regiment destroyed Confederate railroad tracks and a burned a railroad bridge With the mission accomplished the Tenth returned to Newbern having absorbed one fourth of all Union losses in this expedition 19 Assault on Fort Wagner July 1863 edit Main article Second Battle of Fort Wagner nbsp Plan of Fort Wagner with overlay showing armamentDuring 1862 despite the Union Army advances along the Carolina coast the Confederacy had largely succeeded in defending its territory beating back the stronger Union forces with superior battlefield leadership At the beginning of 1863 the Union Army was still in search of a major morale boosting victory The Tenth finally moved out of Newbern North Carolina in January 1863 20 The regiment was ordered to St Helena Island South Carolina near Charleston The Union blockade of Charleston harbor was effective but the city remained in Confederate hands In early July the Tenth was ordered to join a large scale assault on Fort Wagner situated on nearby Morris Island 21 This was part of the second Union attempt to capture Charleston The Tenth s main role in the assault was a successful diversionary action The main attack force consisted of the African American troops of the 54th Massachusetts and the 6th Connecticut as depicted in the motion picture Glory The attack on Fort Wagner did not initially succeed although Union forces did breach the fort s defenses After the attack Union soldiers spent months digging trenches parallel to the Confederate lines 18 This tactic eventually proved a successful strategy as the Confederate troops abandoned Fort Wagner in early September Down the Atlantic coast to St Augustine Florida edit In late October 1863 the Tenth was ordered down the Atlantic coast for rest and recuperation in St Augustine Florida The men of the Tenth were able to regain their strength at St Augustine but the enemy was always nearby In fact twenty two soldiers of the regiment were captured and one soldier was killed during a Confederate ambush The men of the 10th were escorting a wood chopping detail near the base when the Confederates attacked 22 On the James River City Point and Bermuda Hundred May 1864 edit As 1864 began the Union Armies of the Potomac and the James were methodically pushing General Lee s Army to the strong defenses of the Confederate capital of Richmond During February 1864 Connecticut veterans of the war were given furloughs Veterans of the Tenth arrived in New Haven on February 19 and then travelled to Hartford They were warmly received and praised by town and state leaders Veterans of the Tenth re enlisted for another three years and new recruits joined the regiment 23 In May 1864 men of the Tenth Connecticut were back on the front line 24 The regiment was assigned to the Tenth Corps in the Army of the James Their first mission was to take the strategic riverfronts at City Point and Bermuda Hundred in Virginia The 10th regiment and accompanying Union troops accomplished this mission by moving quickly up the James River surprising the Confederate forces and landing unopposed 23 City Point situated on the confluence of the James and Appomattox Rivers would later become General Grant s main headquarters and the Union s staging area for the siege of Petersburg and Richmond Battle of Fort Darling Drewry s Bluff May 1864 edit nbsp Confederate gun at Battery Dantzler Drewry s Bluff The next objective of the Union force was a march toward Richmond to encircle the Confederate capital 25 In their path stood Fort Darling a strong defensive position on the James River near Drewry s Bluff and just south of Richmond The assault on Fort Darling did not succeed However the Tenth fought bravely mainly in rearguard action protecting other Union regiments Despite this setback Union troops continued on toward Richmond 26 Repelling an attack on the march to Richmond edit In early October the advancing Union army was suddenly counterattacked by Confederate cavalry and infantry units 27 The Tenth fended off the attack despite fighting with an exposed flank as an adjacent New York regiment turned and ran when the Confederates charged General H M Plaisted commander of the Tenth Army Corps wrote of the Tenth Connecticut In my opinion the conduct of the Tenth Regiment when the troops on its right broke and fled saved the Army of the James 28 Battle for Fort Gregg April 1865 edit By early April 1865 Union forces were at the outer defenses of Petersburg The Tenth was now poised to attack Fort Gregg an intimidating defensive position consisting of well constructed trenches and earthworks backed up by many artillery pieces On April 2 the Tenth supported by the 100th New York Infantry advanced toward Fort Gregg facing murderous cannon and rifle fire 29 Many of the Tenth fell far short of their objective But the main body of the regiment reached the fort and there began fierce hand to hand combat The Connecticut flag was first to be placed on the parapet of the fort and after the brutal struggle the Tenth Connecticut emerged victorious 30 Victory came at a high cost half of the Tenth s assault force were either killed or wounded After the battle Major General John Gibbon presented to the Tenth Connecticut an ornate bronze eagle resting on a globe to place atop the Connecticut state flag This distinction went to the men of the Tenth for for gallant conduct in the assault on Fort Gregg 31 Appomattox Court House April 1865 edit nbsp Federal soldiers at the courthouse April 1865The men of the Tenth were pressed into action once again in pursuit of the retreating Robert E Lee 30 Lee withdrew from Richmond to Danville Virginia and looked to link up with General Johnston s army in North Carolina At dawn on April 9 Lee tried to break through Union lines near Appomattox Station 100 miles west of Richmond After an initial surge forward by the Confederate troops the Tenth and First Connecticut Cavalry blocked Lee s escape 32 The war lost Lee signed the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia just hours later at Appomattox Court House The 10th Connecticut was present Record and legacy editThe Tenth Connecticut was mustered out of the Union Army on August 25 1865 During the four year war the Tenth Connecticut saw service from 2 124 men These men fought in 23 battles and at least as many skirmishes Fifty seven men were killed in action Fifty nine died of wounds and one hundred fifty two died of disease 2 The Tenth was one of the top 300 Union regiments in the Civil War out of over 1 700 according to historian William F Fox See also editCategory People of Connecticut in the American Civil War Connecticut in the American Civil War List of Connecticut Civil War units Greenwich in the American Civil WarExternal links editGreenwich for the Union Part 1 Documentary video on Greenwich and Connecticut regiments in the Civil War 1861 to 1864 Greenwich for the Union Part 2 Documentary video on Greenwich and Connecticut regiments in the Civil War 1864 to 1865References editNotes Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 126 a b Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 824 Mead 1990 p 80 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 163 164 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 165 a b Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 166 167 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 166 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 167 Mead 1919 p 227 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 170 173 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 172 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 173 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 174 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 342 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 343 344 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 343 a b Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 344 a b Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 345 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 345 346 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 347 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 342 348 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 513 a b Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 523 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 528 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 541 552 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 548 549 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 670 671 Mead 1919 p 236 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 786 789 a b Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 787 Croffut amp Morris 1869 pp 792 795 Croffut amp Morris 1869 p 784 SourcesCamp Henry Ward The Knightly Soldier A Biography of Major Henry Ward Camp 10th Conn Vols Boston Mass Nichols and Noyes 1865 Croffut William Augustus amp Morris John M 1869 The Military and Civil History of Connecticut during the war of 1861 1865 New York Ledyard Bill Mead Edgar T 1990 Greenwich Grows Up Historical Society of the Town of Greenwich ISBN 978 0 9612540 5 6 Mead Spencer P 1919 Ye Historie of ye Town of Greenwich County of Fairfield State of Connecticut New York The Knickerbocker Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 10th Connecticut Infantry Regiment amp oldid 1197654403, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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