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23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion

The 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion, often called "Derrick's Battalion", was an infantry battalion in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. It fought mostly in western Virginia (now West Virginia) and the Shenandoah Valley, and was usually part of a brigade commanded by John Echols or George S. Patton. By 1864, the brigade was usually part of a division commanded by Major General John C. Breckinridge or Brigadier General Gabriel C. Wharton.

23rd Battalion, Virginia Infantry
Flag of Virginia, 1861
ActiveJanuary 1862 – Spring 1865
Country Confederate States of America
Allegiance Virginia
Branch Confederate States Army
RoleInfantry
Nickname(s)Derrick's Battalion
EngagementsAmerican Civil War

1862: Fayetteville (Virginia), Charleston (Virginia)
1863: White Sulphur Springs, Droop Mountain

1864: New Market, North Anna, Cold Harbor, Lynchburg, Cool Spring, Second Battle of Kernstown, Third Winchester, Fisher's Hill, Cedar Creek
Commanders
MajorDavid Stuart Hounshell 1862
Lt. ColonelClarence Derrick 1862–1864
MajorWilliam Blessing 1864–1865

From its organization in January 1862 until a reorganization in May of the same year, the battalion was commanded by Major David Stuart Hounshell. Shortly after the reorganization, Lieutenant Colonel Clarence Derrick was commissioned and became battalion commander. Derrick graduated from the United States Military Academy (West Point) in 1861. Most of the battalion's men were from Virginia counties located along the Appalachian Mountains. An additional company was from West Virginia's Mercer County, and another company from North Carolina's Stokes County.

Battles at White Sulphur Springs, Droop Mountain, and Third Winchester were the most significant fighting for the battalion. Major William Blessing temporarily led the battalion in the Battle of Droop Mountain in 1863. After Derrick was captured in the Third Battle of Winchester on September 19, 1864, Captain Edmund S. Read temporarily commanded the battalion until Blessing returned from the hospital. Blessing commanded the battalion until the end of the war.

Formation and organization edit

The 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion, also known as Derrick's Battalion or the 1st Battalion, was organized on January 15, 1862. It originally consisted of five companies commanded by Major David Stuart Hounshell.[1] Several of the companies were originally part of an unsuccessful attempt to organize a regiment.[1] The battalion was reorganized on May 21 of the same year. Clarence Derrick was commissioned lieutenant colonel and assigned command of the battalion on May 25.[2][Note 1] Derrick, who graduated from the United States Military Academy (a.k.a. West Point) in 1861, was previously adjutant to Brigadier General John B. Floyd.[2]

Three more companies were added in the spring of 1863, completing the battalion at eight companies. Most of the men in the battalion were from the Virginia counties of Smyth, Tazewell, and Giles. One company was from Mercer County, which was located in western Virginia and became part of the new state of West Virginia. Another company was from Stokes County, North Carolina, which is located along the border with Virginia.[2] Captains William P. Cecil and William Blessing became majors of the battalion.[1] Cecil resigned in the spring of 1862.[4] Blessing received his promotion on March 5, 1863.[5] After Derrick was captured on September 19, 1864, Blessing commanded the battalion for the remaining portion of the war.[1]

Early service edit

Kanawha campaign of 1862 edit

 
The Kanawha River Valley was important to the Confederacy

Lieutenant Colonel Clarence Derrick commanded the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion.[6] His battalion was also known as Derrick's Battalion or the 1st Battalion.[7] Its first action as a unit came in the Kanawha Valley Campaign of 1862.[2] At that time, the battalion was part of the Army of Southwestern Virginia, which was commanded by Major General William W. Loring.[8] The battalion was in the First Brigade, which was commanded by Brigadier General John Echols.[9][Note 2]

On September 6, Loring began a campaign to remove Union soldiers from the Kanawha Valley.[11] His army moved north to Fayetteville, Virginia, where he attacked a Union brigade on September 10 in the Battle of Fayetteville.[12] Fayetteville was often called "Fayette Court House", and later became part of West Virginia. In this battle, Derrick's Battalion was detached to a flanking force that moved behind the Union fortifications at Fayetteville.[13] The Union force escaped during the night, and Loring's army pursued it to Charleston.[14]

In September 13, the battalion fought the two-brigade Union army commanded by Colonel Joseph Andrew Jackson Lightburn in the Battle of Charleston.[15] In this battle, the battalion was part of the First Brigade, which was temporarily commanded by Colonel John McCausland since Echols was ill. The battalion formed a skirmish line that led the attack on Union forces within the city.[16] The Union army burned a bridge across the Elk River, and escaped to the safety of Ohio.[17][18] During the entire campaign, the battalion had a total of 29 casualties—including two killed.[19]

White Sulphur Springs edit

 
George Patton

During August 26 and 27, 1863, Derrick's Battalion fought in the Battle of White Sulphur Springs, which is also known as the Battle of Dry Creek.[20][Note 3] The battle took place at the intersection of Anthony's Creek Road and the James River and Kanawha Turnpike, which was about one mile (1.6 km) east of the town of White Sulphur Springs.[22] Further west was Lewisburg, the Greenbrier County seat.[23] Derrick's Battalion was part of a brigade normally commanded by John Echols, but temporarily commanded by Colonel George S. Patton.[10] The brigade was part of the Department of East Tennessee, which was commanded by Major General Samuel Jones.[24] Jones called his command the "Department of Western Virginia", and he was headquartered in Sweet Springs, West Virginia.[25] Jones monitored a Union expedition toward Lewisburg that was led by Brigadier General William W. Averell. Jones was concerned for the safety of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, which was used to transport soldiers and supplies for the Confederate army.[26]

Averell's Union brigade consisted of cavalry and mounted infantry, and totaled to about 1,300 men.[27] The Confederate brigade led by Patton consisted of about 2,300 men.[28] Derrick's Battalion, with additional men from the 37th Virginia Infantry Battalion, arrived at the battle after it began. Patton had become concerned about his left, and Derrick's Battalion arrived in time to reinforce that section of the battlefield. While Derrick made position adjustments, Major William Blessing led two companies of the battalion to the line of battle.[29] Blessing's detachment helped repel a charge made by the 2nd West Virginia Mounted Infantry.[30] The Confederate army successfully stopped Averell near White Sulphur Springs, and Averell was pursued back to a Union outpost in Beverly, West Virginia. Casualties for the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion were three killed and 18 wounded for a total of 21 of the 162 reported casualties for Patton's brigade.[31]

Droop Mountain edit

 
Facing south, Union troops used a three-sided attack

The Battle of Droop Mountain occurred in Pocahontas County, West Virginia, on November 6, 1863.[32] In this battle, a Union brigade commanded by Averell defeated a smaller force commanded by Echols.[33] Averell's objective was to move south past Droop Mountain to Lewisburg, West Virginia, where he would join another Union brigade moving from Charleston to Lewisburg, to drive out a Confederate force stationed there. The second part of his objective, which was the principal goal, was to advance further south and destroy a railroad bridge over the New River—which would make it difficult for two Confederate divisions commanded by Lieutenant General James Longstreet to return to Virginia from Tennessee.[34] To protect Lewisburg and the railroad, Echols arrived at Droop Mountain with Patton as his brigade leader. He reinforced a smaller unit already at the top of the mountain.[35] The smaller force was commanded by Colonel William L. "Mudwall" Jackson.[36] As part of Patton's brigade, Derrick's Battalion was temporarily commanded by Major William Blessing.[7] Echols placed Derrick's Battalion on his extreme right, putting the men on the right side of the road to Lewisburg at the summit of the mountain.[36]

Averell placed artillery and one cavalry regiment on his left, and three mounted infantry regiments occupied the center. They needed to get past the mountain to continue toward Lewisburg. Averell planned an attack where a portion of his troops would divert the attention of the Confederates with artillery from the front and left, while a 1,175-man force would covertly flank Echols from the Union right (Confederate left).[37] To counter the flanking maneuver (and pleas for help), Derrick's Battalion (except one company) was shifted to the Confederate left.[38] The Union plan worked well, and eventually Confederate troops fled in panic.[39] Derrick's Battalion had 5 killed, 26 wounded, and 29 captured for a total of 60 casualties. For all Confederate troops, 33 were killed, 121 wounded, and 122 captured for a total of 276 casualties.[40] Echols' men escaped south before the Union brigade from Charleston arrived at Lewisburg, and Averell did not continue south to the railroad because of rumors that heavy Confederate reinforcements were arriving at the New River bridge.[41] Although some historians conclude that Confederate resistance in West Virginia collapsed after this battle, the fighting may have simply shifted to the Shenandoah Valley.[42]

Service 1864 edit

 
John C. Breckinridge

At the beginning of 1864, Echols' Brigade (with Patton listed as commander) continued to be part of the Confederate Department of Western Virginia.[43] The brigade operated as a detached unit in West Virginia, including near the community of Beverly.[44] In March, Major General John C. Breckinridge was assigned command of the department. The territory included Virginia west of the Blue Ridge Mountains and south of Stanton, Virginia, and the southern portion of the new Union state of West Virginia. By that time he had only 5,000 scattered troops to defend nearly 18,000 square miles (47,000 km2) of mountainous terrain.[45]

Breckinridge became concerned about the increasing number of Union troops near his territory, so he began concentrating Confederate troops during early May. Among the troops concentrated near Staunton, Virginia, were Echols' brigade and a second brigade commanded by Brigadier General Gabriel C. Wharton.[46] Derrick's Battalion, along with the 26th Virginia Infantry Battalion and 22nd Virginia Infantry Regiment, comprised Echols' brigade. The 2,150-man brigade was well armed and equipped as of May 6, and described as "soldierly and imposing".[47] Working as a division commanded by Breckinridge, the two brigades moved north to Harrisonburg on May 13. Further north in the valley was a Union army commanded by Major General Franz Sigel.[48]

New Market and east edit

 
Echol's Brigade moved from New Market to Hanover Junction

Breckinridge's Division, with cavalry, fought Sigel in the Battle of New Market on May 15.[49] Derrick's Battalion began the fight near the Valley Pike concealed from Union troops. Derrick was the only Confederate West Point graduate in the battle.[50] Included among the Confederate troops were cadets from the Virginia Military Institute (a.k.a. VMI).[51] Defending from high ground and then taking the offensive, Breckenridge drove Sigel's larger force away.[52] As part of this fight, Derrick's Battalion helped repel an attacking Union cavalry division commanded by Major General Julius Stahel.[53] The battalion was also involved in a flanking maneuver that inflicted 45 percent casualties on the Union's 54th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment.[54] Derrick's Battalion, which consisted of 579 men, had two killed, 75 wounded, and two missing for a total of 79 casualties.[55] The Union defeat led to Sigel being replaced by Major General David Hunter.[49]

After the battle, Breckinridge was ordered out of the valley and moved to Hanover Junction near the North Anna River, where he waited for additional Confederate troops.[56] Breckinridge's assignment was to protect the rail junction.[57] The junction was a vital part of the Army of Northern Virginia's supply lines, and Confederate troops arrived there before Union Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant's Army of the Potomac. Lee and Grant's armies had multiple skirmishes in the area that became known collectively as the Battle of North Anna, but no significant gains were made by either side.[58]

The battalion's next significant fight was during the end of May and early June, at the Battle of Cold Harbor, where Breckinridge's Division reinforced the Army of Northern Virginia commanded by General Robert E. Lee.[59] Here, Lee defeated Grant's Army of the Potomac. Breckinridge's Division repulsed a Union attack during the battle, but Breckinridge was injured when his horse fell on him after being struck by a cannonball. Casualties for the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion were nine killed, 15 wounded, and seven captured, for a total of 31.[60]

Lynchburg edit

 
Patton's Brigade was part of the Lynchburg defense

On June 5, Union Major General Hunter defeated Confederate forces led by Brigadier General William E. "Grumble" Jones in the Battle of Piedmont.[61] When news of the defeat reached Confederate General Robert E. Lee, he decided to send Breckinridge, and his division, back to the Shenandoah Valley.[62] Echols' (including Derrick's Battalion) and Wharton's brigades began moving on June 7, beginning by boarding rail cars in Richmond.[63] Five days later, Lee decided to send Lieutenant General Jubal Early's entire 2nd Corps to the Shenandoah to join Breckenridge.[64] Anticipating an attack on Lynchburg, Breckinridge arrived there ahead of his troops on June 15.[65] Arriving later at the Charlottesville rail station, Early received a message that Lynchburg was the probable point of attack for Hunter. Early used a limited supply of railcars to began sending his troops to Lynchburg.[66] He arrived there with a small portion of his troops on June 17.[67]

Breckinridge's original June 17 defensive fortifications were near College Hill on the western edge of the city, and they were designed to protect the city from incursions via the Salem Turnpike (from the southwest) and Forrest Road (from the west).[68] Echols' Brigade (including Derrick's Battalion) was commanded by Patton, and it was placed on the west side of the city just north of the Salem Turnpike.[69] After an inspection, Early moved all troops further west to protect the city from bombardment. He moved the division commanded by Major General Stephen Dodson Ramseur to a fortification nearly two miles (3.2 km) southwest of the city with two pieces of artillery.[68] Patton's men were repositioned adjacent to, and north of, Ramseur's Division.[69] With additional artillery and troops added to Ramseur's force, the Union attack was repulsed. Further north near Forest Road, another Union advance was stopped. The Battle of Lynchburg became an artillery duel by nightfall.[68]

Early resorted to some trickery during the evening of June 17 and early morning of June 18. He countermarched one regiment all night near the train station, and ran a yard locomotive back and forth on the rails. Although more Confederate troops were moving toward Lynchburg, the locomotive illusion gave the Union soldiers the impression that more Confederate troops were arriving immediately.[70] After sunrise, skirmishing began again near Forest Road and the Salem Turnpike. Around 1:00 pm, Early's men began attacking, and they pushed back the Union soldiers until they were surprised by a brigade hidden behind a hill.[71] Although Early's men were driven back to their original fortifications, Hunter was now convinced he was facing a large Confederate army. That evening Hunter's army began a retreat west.[72]

Early threatens Washington edit

After the Battle of Lynchburg, Early pursued Hunter's army until June 22. After the pursuit, Early and Breckinridge began moving down the Shenandoah Valley to attack Western Maryland. Lee had urged Early to threaten Washington, which would draw Union forces away from Lee's front near Richmond.[73] For the month of July, the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion was part of Patton's (Echols') Brigade, in Breckinridge's Division, in Breckinridge's Corps, in the Army of the Valley District. Breckinridge was corps commander, Wharton was division commander, and Patton was brigade commander.[74]

On July 9, Early's army fought in the Battle of Monocacy near the city of Frederick, Maryland, but Patton's brigade was not engaged.[75] Early's army approached the north side of Washington DC on July 11–12 in the Battle of Fort Stevens, but withdrew and Derrick's Battalion did not engage. Early was pursued as he moved west back toward the Shenandoah Valley. On the morning of July 17, Early and Breckinridge deployed in Clarke County, Virginia.[76] Later in the day, Union pursuers skirmished with Early's troops near Snicker's Ford in what became known as the Battle of Cool Spring.[77] Skirmishers from Patton's Brigade fought on July 18.[78] Union forces withdrew that evening.[79]

Kernstown edit

 
Patton's Brigade was part of Wharton's Division that flanked the Union army

During the last week of July, a Union army led by Brigadier General George Crook occupied Winchester, Virginia. Crook believed Early's army was in full retreat to Richmond despite contrary reports from his cavalry commanders.[80] On July 23, Early received news that Union troops had left the Shenandoah Valley with the exception of George Crook's undersized army. Early's response was to attack.[81] At 4:00 am on July 24, Early's troops began moving from Strasburg north toward Winchester to fight in the Second Battle of Kernstown. Breckinridge's Corps led the way.[82]

By 11:30 am, Breckinridge's Division (commanded by Wharton) was covertly deployed along the east side of the Valley Pike facing west, while Major General John B. Gordon's Division faced north mostly on the west side of the pike.[83] When Breckinridge ordered the men forward, Patton's Brigade (including Derrick's Battalion) was temporarily held back in reserve while the other two battalions, commanded by Colonel Augustus Forsberg and Colonel Thomas A. Smith, advanced.[84] When the Union left flank passed in front of Patton's brigade, the entire division opened fire. The 36th Ohio Infantry Regiment received most of the Confederate fire, and had 136 casualties in only 10 minutes.[85] Casualties for Breckinridge's Division for the entire battle were 75 to 100.[86]

Discovering Confederate soldiers on three sides, Union division commander Colonel James A. Mulligan decided to conduct a fighting withdrawal. Moving back only a short distance, he was wounded in the thigh and forced to dismount.[87] While urging his men to continue the retreat without him, he was shot twice more, including a shot to the chest that would eventually be fatal.[88] Smith's and Patton's brigades chased retreating Union infantry while Forsberg's battalion fought Union cavalry.[89] Crook's men retreated north through Winchester, and the pike became littered with burning wagons. Crook's men eventually retreated across the Potomac River. The Confederate pursuit ended on July 25 in a cold hard rain. Union casualties were about 1,200, while Confederate casualties were about 600.[90] Breckinridge's division would have more casualties from skirmishing in late August, when it fought Union cavalry near Kearneysville.[91] During the month, Major Blessing from Derrick's Battalion was hospitalized in Harrisonburg.[92]

Shenandoah Valley edit

 
Patton's Brigade was part of Wharton's Division on the northeast side of Winchester

The Third Battle of Winchester occurred on September 19. In this battle, Early's Army of the Valley consisted of multiple corps, and Breckinridge commanded one of them. Breckinridge's Division was commanded by Brigadier General Gabriel C. Wharton, and Patton's Brigade was one of three brigades under Wharton's command. Patton's Brigade consisted of the 22nd Virginia Infantry Regiment and the 23rd and 26th Virginia Infantry battalions.[93] Patton's fighting occurred on the north side of the battlefield. During the morning, Wharton's Division held off a Union cavalry division commanded by Brigadier General Wesley Merritt. After noon, another Union cavalry division, led by Brigadier General William W. Averell, threatened Wharton's rear. Wharton withdrew toward Winchester with Patton's Brigade covering.[94] A Confederate infantry captain later noted in his diary that "after the withdrawal of Breckinridge's Division, the disasters began".[95]

After 1:00 pm, Patton's Brigade was detached to assist Major General Fitzhugh Lee and cavalry on the north side of town near Rutherford's Farm along the pike. Late afternoon found Patton's Brigade closer to town near what became known as the "Second Woods". Here the brigade faced an infantry division from Brigadier General George Crook's Army of West Virginia. While Crook's 2nd Infantry Division was facing Patton, Devin's Cavalry Brigade attacked Patton's left using sabers. In fierce fighting, Devin captured 300 men and all three battle flags from the two battalions and one regiment in Patton's Brigade.[96] Derrick received a saber wound, and was run over by Devin's 9th New York Cavalry Regiment.[97] Both of Patton's battalion commanders, Derrick and Edgar, were captured. Confederate artillery located further south fired into the mass of fighters—hitting friend and foe, but stopping Devin.[96][Note 4]

The soldiers from Patton's Brigade that were not captured or killed reformed closer to Winchester behind a stone fence where another division (Gordon) had already reformed perpendicular to the pike. Gordon's Division, Patton's Brigade, and others had all experienced significant losses. Hundreds of men did not rally at the stone fence, but instead retreated into Winchester.[96] Patton was mortally wounded and captured in Winchester while trying to rally remnants of his brigade.[99] For Early, the battle ended with the "combat prowess" of his army "seriously impaired".[100] Further south, fighting began again several days later at the Battle of Fisher's Hill. Early lost another commander as Breckinridge was recalled to duty elsewhere.[101] Early's army was again defeated and fled further south.[102]

After five months of fighting, Patton's Brigade was decimated. On May 6 it had 2,150 men and a full complement of officers. A September 29 inspection report listed only 266 men available for duty. Brigade commander Patton was dead. Battalion commanders Derrick and Edgar were captured. The brigade had no officers ranked higher than captain, and many of the company officers had also been killed, captured, or wounded.[103] The 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion was commanded by Captain John M. Pratt, and Patton's/Echols' Brigade was commanded by Captain Edmund S. Read.[104] The 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion had only 78 enlisted men present for duty plus five staff and officers.[105] The inspection report noted that the brigade "is charged at almost every camp for burning rails", and requested that axes be supplied.[106] For the Battle of Cedar Creek on October 19, the remnants of the brigade were present as part of Wharton's Division.[107] Located on the Confederate right near the Valley Pike, Wharton and Brigadier General John Pegram's divisions were driven back in a Union counterattack that used artillery and cavalry.[108] Major Blessing eventually returned to lead Derrick's Battalion. A November 30, 1864, report for Early's Army of the Valley listed Major William Blessing as commander of the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion. The brigade commander was Lieutenant Colonel John C. McDonald, and Wharton was division commander.[107]

War's end edit

 
John Echols

In the winter of 1865, Derrick's Battalion was part of Echol's Brigade in the Department of West Virginia and East Tennessee. Although the brigade consisted of what was left of the same three units, Breckinridge and Wharton were not part of this department. Echols was the department head, and his headquarters was in Wytheville, Virginia.[109] A report dated February 28, 1865, confirmed the battalion as part of Echols Brigade along with the 22nd Virginia Infantry Regiment and the 26th Virginia Infantry Battalion. The brigade was part of the Department of Western Virginia and East Tennessee, and it was also commanded by Echols.[110]

The February winter quarters for the battalion was about three miles (4.8 km) northeast of Saltville, Virginia.[111] In March, Blessing led a detachment of 300 men that guarded prisoners being sent to Richmond.[112] On April 2, Echols began moving his command east to unite with Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia. He reached Christiansburg, Virginia, on April 10 where he received a dispatch that said Lee had surrendered. Part of the force decided to attempt to unite with General Joseph E. Johnston's army in North Carolina, while many of the men went home.[113] The 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion, also known as Derrick's Battalion, was disbanded in mid-April.[114]

See also edit

Notes edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ A second source, Lowry, says Derrick "was assigned command of the 23rd Battalion Virginia Infantry April 2, 1862".[3]
  2. ^ Echols' health problems often prevented him from commanding in the field, although he was considered a good organizer. When he was unable to go into the field, he usually had George W. Patton take his place as brigade commander.[10]
  3. ^ Although modern historians call the action the Battle of White Sulphur Springs, other names have been used. Union veterans tended to call it the Battle of Rocky Gap, while Confederate veterans called it the Battle of Dry Creek. Others have called it the Battle of Howard's Creek or the Battle of the Law Books.[21]
  4. ^ Clarence Derrick was imprisoned at Fort Delaware. He was released on June 24, 1865, and subsequently practiced law in Alabama.[98]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d Wallace 1986, p. 106
  2. ^ a b c d Wittenberg 2011, p. 60
  3. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 9
  4. ^ Pendleton 1920, p. 642
  5. ^ Lowry 1996, p. 44
  6. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 8
  7. ^ a b Lowry 1996, p. 43
  8. ^ Lowry 2016, p. vii
  9. ^ Evans 1899, p. 65 (WV section)
  10. ^ a b Wittenberg 2011, pp. 55–57
  11. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 78
  12. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 97
  13. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 110
  14. ^ Evans 1899, pp. 65-66 (WV section)
  15. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 192
  16. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 193
  17. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 204
  18. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 208
  19. ^ Lowry 2016, p. 423
  20. ^ Scott 1890, pp. 31–32
  21. ^ Wittenberg 2011, p. 10
  22. ^ Wittenberg 2011, p. 69
  23. ^ Wittenberg 2011, pp. 16–17
  24. ^ Wittenberg 2011, p. 55
  25. ^ Scott 1890, p. 41
  26. ^ Scott 1890, p. 42
  27. ^ Wittenberg 2011, p. 141
  28. ^ Wittenberg 2011, p. 142
  29. ^ Wittenberg 2011, pp. 90–91
  30. ^ Wittenberg 2011, p. 97
  31. ^ Scott 1890, p. 56
  32. ^ Lowry 1996, p. 95
  33. ^ "Droop Mountain". American Battlefield Trust. from the original on 2022-11-29. Retrieved 2022-12-15.
  34. ^ Starr 2007, pp. 160–161
  35. ^ Lowry 1996, p. 42
  36. ^ a b Lowry 1996, p. 106
  37. ^ Lowry 1996, pp. 102–104
  38. ^ Lowry 1996, pp. 129–130
  39. ^ Lowry 1996, p. 165
  40. ^ Lowry 1996, p. 269
  41. ^ Starr 2007, pp. 162–164
  42. ^ Lowry 1996, p. 222
  43. ^ Scott 1891, p. 1136
  44. ^ Scott 1891, p. 719
  45. ^ Whitehorne & Center of Military History, United States Army 1988, p. 1
  46. ^ Whitehorne & Center of Military History, United States Army 1988, p. 5
  47. ^ Davis, Perry & Kirkley 1893, p. 597
  48. ^ Whitehorne & Center of Military History, United States Army 1988, pp. 6–7
  49. ^ a b "New Market - Shenandoah County, VA - May 15, 1864". American Battlefield Trust. from the original on 2022-12-16. Retrieved 2022-12-16.
  50. ^ Knight 2010, p. 121
  51. ^ Knight 2010, p. 122
  52. ^ Shaara 2006, pp. 192–193
  53. ^ Davis 1983, pp. 127–128
  54. ^ Davis 1983, p. 138
  55. ^ Davis 1983, p. 195 & 200
  56. ^ Hogan 2014, p. 50-51
  57. ^ Snell 2012, Ch 7, Loc 2502 of e-book
  58. ^ Shaara 2006, p. 208
  59. ^ Shaara 2006, p. 217
  60. ^ Snell 2012, Ch 7, Loc 2529 of e-book
  61. ^ "Battle of Piedmont, June 5, 1864". National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. from the original on December 29, 2022. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  62. ^ Duncan 1998, p. 249
  63. ^ Duncan 1998, p. 250
  64. ^ Duncan 1998, p. 256
  65. ^ Duncan 1998, p. 252
  66. ^ Duncan 1998, p. 265
  67. ^ Duncan 1998, p. 270
  68. ^ a b c Duncan 1998, pp. 271–272
  69. ^ a b Jedediah Hotchkiss (1864). Report of the Camps, Marches & Engagements, of the Second Corps, A.N.V., and of the Army of the Valley Dist. of the Department of Northern VA., During the Campaign of 1864: [Virginia] No. 9-9a (image 14) (Map). Virginia: Library of Congress. Retrieved May 15, 2023.
  70. ^ Duncan 1998, p. 273
  71. ^ Duncan 1998, p. 281
  72. ^ Duncan 1998, pp. 283–285
  73. ^ Duncan 1998, p. 301
  74. ^ Patchan 2007, App. B of e-book, loc 5781
  75. ^ Scott 1891, p. 199
  76. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.3 of e-book, loc 981
  77. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.3 of e-book, loc 1031
  78. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.4 of e-book, loc 14014
  79. ^ "Cool Spring". American Battlefield Trust. from the original on January 4, 2023. Retrieved January 4, 2023.
  80. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.9 of e-book, loc 3194
  81. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.10 of e-book, loc 3218
  82. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.10 of e-book, loc 3224
  83. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.10 of e-book, loc 3426
  84. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.10 of e-book, loc 3466
  85. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.11 of e-book, loc 3738
  86. ^ Patchan 2007, Notes of e-book, loc 6577
  87. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.11 of e-book, loc 3916
  88. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.11 of e-book, loc 3936
  89. ^ Patchan 2007, Ch.11 of e-book, loc 3829
  90. ^ "Second Battle of Kernstown". American Battlefield Trust. from the original on January 5, 2023. Retrieved January 5, 2023.
  91. ^ Starr 2007, p. 259
  92. ^ Lowry 1996, p. 231
  93. ^ Patchan 2013, Appendix 1 of e-book
  94. ^ Patchan 2013, Ch. 17 of e-book
  95. ^ Wert 2010, p. 77
  96. ^ a b c Patchan 2013, Ch. 18 of e-book
  97. ^ "Col. Clarence Derrick". Confederate Veteran Magazine (page 418). Nashville, Tennessee: S.A. Cunningham. August 1908. from the original on February 4, 2023. Retrieved February 4, 2023.
  98. ^ "Letter, Clarence Derrick to President Andrew Johnson, Fort Delaware, June 17, 1865 (MS2012-014)". Virginia Tech - Special Collections and University Archives Online. 17 June 1865. from the original on January 6, 2023. Retrieved January 6, 2023.
  99. ^ Krick 2006, p. 361
  100. ^ Wert 2010, p. 103
  101. ^ Wert 2010, p. 119
  102. ^ Wert 2010, p. 128
  103. ^ Davis, Perry & Kirkley 1893, pp. 597–598
  104. ^ "Inspection Report of George Patton's Brigade - September 29 1864". U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  105. ^ "Virginia Volunteers Infantry (Page 2 of Inspection Report of George Patton's Brigade - September 29 1864)". U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Retrieved 2022-12-22.
  106. ^ Davis, Perry & Kirkley 1893, p. 598
  107. ^ a b Davis, Perry & Kirkley 1893b, pp. 927–928
  108. ^ Lewis 1997, p. 236
  109. ^ Evans 1899, p. 108 (WV section)
  110. ^ Davis, Perry & Kirkley 1897, p. 1021
  111. ^ Davis, Perry & Kirkley 1897, p. 982
  112. ^ Davis, Perry & Kirkley 1894c, p. 1332
  113. ^ Evans 1899, p. 104 (WV section)
  114. ^ Davis, Perry & Kirkley 1894a, p. 521

References edit

  • Davis, George B.; Perry, Leslie J.; Kirkley, Joseph W., eds. (1893). The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies – Series I Volume XLIII Part I – Reports, Correspondence, etc. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. OCLC 318422190. from the original on December 18, 2022. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
  • Davis, George B.; Perry, Leslie J.; Kirkley, Joseph W., eds. (1893b). The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies – Series I Volume XLIII Part II – Correspondence, etc. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. OCLC 318422190. from the original on December 23, 2022. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
  • Davis, George B.; Perry, Leslie J.; Kirkley, Joseph W., eds. (1894a). The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies – Series I Volume XLVI Part I – Reports. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. ISBN 978-0-91867-807-2. OCLC 427057. from the original on December 29, 2022. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  • Davis, George B.; Perry, Leslie J.; Kirkley, Joseph W., eds. (1894c). The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies – Series I Volume XLVI Part III – Correspondence, etc. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. ISBN 978-0-91867-807-2. OCLC 427057. from the original on December 27, 2022. Retrieved December 27, 2022.
  • Davis, George B.; Perry, Leslie J.; Kirkley, Joseph W., eds. (1897). The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies – Series I Volume XLIX Part I – Reports, Correspondence, etc. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. ISBN 978-0-91867-807-2. OCLC 427057. from the original on December 27, 2022. Retrieved December 27, 2022.
  • Duncan, Richard R. (1998). Lee's Endangered Left: The Civil War in Western Virginia, Spring of 1864. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. OCLC 940541407.
  • Davis, William C. (1983). The Battle of New Market. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-80711-078-2. OCLC 1222884269.
  • Evans, Clement A., ed. (1899). Confederate Military History: A library of Confederate States History.... (Volume II). Atlanta, Georgia: Confederate Publishing Company. OCLC 951143. from the original on May 26, 2022. Retrieved May 26, 2022.
  • Hogan, David W. (2014). The Overland Campaign, 4 May - 15 June 1864. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, United States Army. ISBN 9780160925177. OCLC 883656765. from the original on 9 February 2023. Retrieved July 27, 2021.
  • Knight, Charles R. (2010). Valley Thunder: The Battle of New Market and the Opening of the Shenandoah Valley Campaign, May 1864. New York, New York: Savas Beatie. ISBN 978-1-61121-054-5. OCLC 763157018.
  • Krick, Robert K. (2006). "The Confederate Pattons". In Gallagher, Gary W. (ed.). The Shenandoah Valley Campaign of 1864. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 341–369. ISBN 978-0-80783-005-5. OCLC 62281619.
  • Lewis, Thomas A. (1997). The Guns of Cedar Creek. Strasburg, Virginia: Heritage Associates. OCLC 42688338.
  • Lowry, Terry (1996). Last Sleep: The Battle of Droop Mountain, November 6, 1863. Charleston, West Virginia: Pictorial Histories Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-57510-024-1. OCLC 36488613.
  • Lowry, Terry (2016). The Battle of Charleston and the 1862 Kanawha Valley campaign. Charleston, West Virginia: 35th Star Publishing. ISBN 978-0-96645-348-5. OCLC 981250860.
  • Patchan, Scott C. (2007). Shenandoah Summer: The 1864 Valley Campaign. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-0700-4. OCLC 122563754.
  • Patchan, Scott C. (2013). The Last Battle of Winchester: Phil Sheridan, Jubal Early, and the Shenandoah Valley Campaign, August 7 - September 19, 1864. Havertown, Pennsylvania: Savas Beatie. ISBN 978-1-61121-064-4. OCLC 857365201.
  • Pendleton, William C. (1920). History of Tazewell County and Southwest Virginia : 1748-1920. Richmond, Virginia: W. C. Hill Printing Company. ISBN 9780722266342. OCLC 1029863310. from the original on January 8, 2023. Retrieved January 8, 2023.
  • Scott, Robert N., ed. (1890). The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XXIX Part I. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. OCLC 318422190. from the original on 2023-02-09. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
  • Scott, Robert N., ed. (1891). The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XXXIII Part I. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. OCLC 318422190. from the original on 2022-12-31. Retrieved 2021-12-31.
  • Shaara, Jeff (2006). Jeff Shaara's Civil War Battlefields. New York, New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-34546-488-0. OCLC 1267611677.
  • Snell, Mark A. (2012). West Virginia and the Civil War : Mountaineers are Always Free. Charleston, SC: History Press. ISBN 978-1-61423-390-9. OCLC 829025932.
  • Starr, Stephen Z. (2007). Union Cavalry in the Civil War. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071329-1-3. OCLC 153582839.
  • Wallace, Lee A. (1986). A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865. Lynchburg, Virginia: H.E. Howard, Inc. ISBN 978-0-93091-930-6. OCLC 1003746760.
  • Wert, Jeffry D. (2010). From Winchester to Cedar Creek: The Shenandoah Campaign of 1864. Carbondale, Illinois: Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 978-0-80932-972-4. OCLC 463454602.
  • Whitehorne, Joseph W.A.; Center of Military History, United States Army (1988). The Battle of New Market. Washington, DC: Center of Military History, United States Army. OCLC 1153258627. from the original on December 27, 2022. Retrieved December 27, 2022.
  • Wittenberg, Eric J. (2011). The Battle of White Sulphur Springs: Averell Fails to Secure West Virginia. Charleston, South Carolina: History Press. ISBN 978-1-61423-326-8. OCLC 795566215.

Further reading edit

  • Scott, J. L. (1991). 23rd Battalion Virginia Infantry. Lynchburg, Virginia: H.E. Howard Inc. ISBN 978-1-56190-024-4. OCLC 1048882225.

External links edit

  • White Sulphur Springs and Droop Mountain maps - Library of Congress
  • Map of Third Winchester battlefield - Library of Congress

23rd, virginia, infantry, battalion, often, called, derrick, battalion, infantry, battalion, confederate, army, during, american, civil, fought, mostly, western, virginia, west, virginia, shenandoah, valley, usually, part, brigade, commanded, john, echols, geo. The 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion often called Derrick s Battalion was an infantry battalion in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War It fought mostly in western Virginia now West Virginia and the Shenandoah Valley and was usually part of a brigade commanded by John Echols or George S Patton By 1864 the brigade was usually part of a division commanded by Major General John C Breckinridge or Brigadier General Gabriel C Wharton 23rd Battalion Virginia InfantryFlag of Virginia 1861ActiveJanuary 1862 Spring 1865Country Confederate States of AmericaAllegiance VirginiaBranch Confederate States ArmyRoleInfantryNickname s Derrick s BattalionEngagementsAmerican Civil War1862 Fayetteville Virginia Charleston Virginia 1863 White Sulphur Springs Droop Mountain 1864 New Market North Anna Cold Harbor Lynchburg Cool Spring Second Battle of Kernstown Third Winchester Fisher s Hill Cedar CreekCommandersMajorDavid Stuart Hounshell 1862Lt ColonelClarence Derrick 1862 1864MajorWilliam Blessing 1864 1865 This article is about the battalion that fought mostly in western Virginia For the regiment that fought mostly in eastern Virginia see 23rd Virginia Infantry Regiment From its organization in January 1862 until a reorganization in May of the same year the battalion was commanded by Major David Stuart Hounshell Shortly after the reorganization Lieutenant Colonel Clarence Derrick was commissioned and became battalion commander Derrick graduated from the United States Military Academy West Point in 1861 Most of the battalion s men were from Virginia counties located along the Appalachian Mountains An additional company was from West Virginia s Mercer County and another company from North Carolina s Stokes County Battles at White Sulphur Springs Droop Mountain and Third Winchester were the most significant fighting for the battalion Major William Blessing temporarily led the battalion in the Battle of Droop Mountain in 1863 After Derrick was captured in the Third Battle of Winchester on September 19 1864 Captain Edmund S Read temporarily commanded the battalion until Blessing returned from the hospital Blessing commanded the battalion until the end of the war Contents 1 Formation and organization 2 Early service 2 1 Kanawha campaign of 1862 2 2 White Sulphur Springs 2 3 Droop Mountain 3 Service 1864 3 1 New Market and east 3 2 Lynchburg 3 3 Early threatens Washington 3 4 Kernstown 3 5 Shenandoah Valley 4 War s end 5 See also 6 Notes 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Citations 6 3 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksFormation and organization editThe 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion also known as Derrick s Battalion or the 1st Battalion was organized on January 15 1862 It originally consisted of five companies commanded by Major David Stuart Hounshell 1 Several of the companies were originally part of an unsuccessful attempt to organize a regiment 1 The battalion was reorganized on May 21 of the same year Clarence Derrick was commissioned lieutenant colonel and assigned command of the battalion on May 25 2 Note 1 Derrick who graduated from the United States Military Academy a k a West Point in 1861 was previously adjutant to Brigadier General John B Floyd 2 Three more companies were added in the spring of 1863 completing the battalion at eight companies Most of the men in the battalion were from the Virginia counties of Smyth Tazewell and Giles One company was from Mercer County which was located in western Virginia and became part of the new state of West Virginia Another company was from Stokes County North Carolina which is located along the border with Virginia 2 Captains William P Cecil and William Blessing became majors of the battalion 1 Cecil resigned in the spring of 1862 4 Blessing received his promotion on March 5 1863 5 After Derrick was captured on September 19 1864 Blessing commanded the battalion for the remaining portion of the war 1 Early service editKanawha campaign of 1862 edit nbsp The Kanawha River Valley was important to the ConfederacyLieutenant Colonel Clarence Derrick commanded the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion 6 His battalion was also known as Derrick s Battalion or the 1st Battalion 7 Its first action as a unit came in the Kanawha Valley Campaign of 1862 2 At that time the battalion was part of the Army of Southwestern Virginia which was commanded by Major General William W Loring 8 The battalion was in the First Brigade which was commanded by Brigadier General John Echols 9 Note 2 On September 6 Loring began a campaign to remove Union soldiers from the Kanawha Valley 11 His army moved north to Fayetteville Virginia where he attacked a Union brigade on September 10 in the Battle of Fayetteville 12 Fayetteville was often called Fayette Court House and later became part of West Virginia In this battle Derrick s Battalion was detached to a flanking force that moved behind the Union fortifications at Fayetteville 13 The Union force escaped during the night and Loring s army pursued it to Charleston 14 In September 13 the battalion fought the two brigade Union army commanded by Colonel Joseph Andrew Jackson Lightburn in the Battle of Charleston 15 In this battle the battalion was part of the First Brigade which was temporarily commanded by Colonel John McCausland since Echols was ill The battalion formed a skirmish line that led the attack on Union forces within the city 16 The Union army burned a bridge across the Elk River and escaped to the safety of Ohio 17 18 During the entire campaign the battalion had a total of 29 casualties including two killed 19 White Sulphur Springs edit nbsp George PattonDuring August 26 and 27 1863 Derrick s Battalion fought in the Battle of White Sulphur Springs which is also known as the Battle of Dry Creek 20 Note 3 The battle took place at the intersection of Anthony s Creek Road and the James River and Kanawha Turnpike which was about one mile 1 6 km east of the town of White Sulphur Springs 22 Further west was Lewisburg the Greenbrier County seat 23 Derrick s Battalion was part of a brigade normally commanded by John Echols but temporarily commanded by Colonel George S Patton 10 The brigade was part of the Department of East Tennessee which was commanded by Major General Samuel Jones 24 Jones called his command the Department of Western Virginia and he was headquartered in Sweet Springs West Virginia 25 Jones monitored a Union expedition toward Lewisburg that was led by Brigadier General William W Averell Jones was concerned for the safety of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad which was used to transport soldiers and supplies for the Confederate army 26 Averell s Union brigade consisted of cavalry and mounted infantry and totaled to about 1 300 men 27 The Confederate brigade led by Patton consisted of about 2 300 men 28 Derrick s Battalion with additional men from the 37th Virginia Infantry Battalion arrived at the battle after it began Patton had become concerned about his left and Derrick s Battalion arrived in time to reinforce that section of the battlefield While Derrick made position adjustments Major William Blessing led two companies of the battalion to the line of battle 29 Blessing s detachment helped repel a charge made by the 2nd West Virginia Mounted Infantry 30 The Confederate army successfully stopped Averell near White Sulphur Springs and Averell was pursued back to a Union outpost in Beverly West Virginia Casualties for the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion were three killed and 18 wounded for a total of 21 of the 162 reported casualties for Patton s brigade 31 Droop Mountain edit nbsp Facing south Union troops used a three sided attackThe Battle of Droop Mountain occurred in Pocahontas County West Virginia on November 6 1863 32 In this battle a Union brigade commanded by Averell defeated a smaller force commanded by Echols 33 Averell s objective was to move south past Droop Mountain to Lewisburg West Virginia where he would join another Union brigade moving from Charleston to Lewisburg to drive out a Confederate force stationed there The second part of his objective which was the principal goal was to advance further south and destroy a railroad bridge over the New River which would make it difficult for two Confederate divisions commanded by Lieutenant General James Longstreet to return to Virginia from Tennessee 34 To protect Lewisburg and the railroad Echols arrived at Droop Mountain with Patton as his brigade leader He reinforced a smaller unit already at the top of the mountain 35 The smaller force was commanded by Colonel William L Mudwall Jackson 36 As part of Patton s brigade Derrick s Battalion was temporarily commanded by Major William Blessing 7 Echols placed Derrick s Battalion on his extreme right putting the men on the right side of the road to Lewisburg at the summit of the mountain 36 Averell placed artillery and one cavalry regiment on his left and three mounted infantry regiments occupied the center They needed to get past the mountain to continue toward Lewisburg Averell planned an attack where a portion of his troops would divert the attention of the Confederates with artillery from the front and left while a 1 175 man force would covertly flank Echols from the Union right Confederate left 37 To counter the flanking maneuver and pleas for help Derrick s Battalion except one company was shifted to the Confederate left 38 The Union plan worked well and eventually Confederate troops fled in panic 39 Derrick s Battalion had 5 killed 26 wounded and 29 captured for a total of 60 casualties For all Confederate troops 33 were killed 121 wounded and 122 captured for a total of 276 casualties 40 Echols men escaped south before the Union brigade from Charleston arrived at Lewisburg and Averell did not continue south to the railroad because of rumors that heavy Confederate reinforcements were arriving at the New River bridge 41 Although some historians conclude that Confederate resistance in West Virginia collapsed after this battle the fighting may have simply shifted to the Shenandoah Valley 42 Service 1864 edit nbsp John C BreckinridgeAt the beginning of 1864 Echols Brigade with Patton listed as commander continued to be part of the Confederate Department of Western Virginia 43 The brigade operated as a detached unit in West Virginia including near the community of Beverly 44 In March Major General John C Breckinridge was assigned command of the department The territory included Virginia west of the Blue Ridge Mountains and south of Stanton Virginia and the southern portion of the new Union state of West Virginia By that time he had only 5 000 scattered troops to defend nearly 18 000 square miles 47 000 km2 of mountainous terrain 45 Breckinridge became concerned about the increasing number of Union troops near his territory so he began concentrating Confederate troops during early May Among the troops concentrated near Staunton Virginia were Echols brigade and a second brigade commanded by Brigadier General Gabriel C Wharton 46 Derrick s Battalion along with the 26th Virginia Infantry Battalion and 22nd Virginia Infantry Regiment comprised Echols brigade The 2 150 man brigade was well armed and equipped as of May 6 and described as soldierly and imposing 47 Working as a division commanded by Breckinridge the two brigades moved north to Harrisonburg on May 13 Further north in the valley was a Union army commanded by Major General Franz Sigel 48 New Market and east edit nbsp Echol s Brigade moved from New Market to Hanover JunctionBreckinridge s Division with cavalry fought Sigel in the Battle of New Market on May 15 49 Derrick s Battalion began the fight near the Valley Pike concealed from Union troops Derrick was the only Confederate West Point graduate in the battle 50 Included among the Confederate troops were cadets from the Virginia Military Institute a k a VMI 51 Defending from high ground and then taking the offensive Breckenridge drove Sigel s larger force away 52 As part of this fight Derrick s Battalion helped repel an attacking Union cavalry division commanded by Major General Julius Stahel 53 The battalion was also involved in a flanking maneuver that inflicted 45 percent casualties on the Union s 54th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment 54 Derrick s Battalion which consisted of 579 men had two killed 75 wounded and two missing for a total of 79 casualties 55 The Union defeat led to Sigel being replaced by Major General David Hunter 49 After the battle Breckinridge was ordered out of the valley and moved to Hanover Junction near the North Anna River where he waited for additional Confederate troops 56 Breckinridge s assignment was to protect the rail junction 57 The junction was a vital part of the Army of Northern Virginia s supply lines and Confederate troops arrived there before Union Lieutenant General Ulysses S Grant s Army of the Potomac Lee and Grant s armies had multiple skirmishes in the area that became known collectively as the Battle of North Anna but no significant gains were made by either side 58 The battalion s next significant fight was during the end of May and early June at the Battle of Cold Harbor where Breckinridge s Division reinforced the Army of Northern Virginia commanded by General Robert E Lee 59 Here Lee defeated Grant s Army of the Potomac Breckinridge s Division repulsed a Union attack during the battle but Breckinridge was injured when his horse fell on him after being struck by a cannonball Casualties for the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion were nine killed 15 wounded and seven captured for a total of 31 60 Lynchburg edit nbsp Patton s Brigade was part of the Lynchburg defenseOn June 5 Union Major General Hunter defeated Confederate forces led by Brigadier General William E Grumble Jones in the Battle of Piedmont 61 When news of the defeat reached Confederate General Robert E Lee he decided to send Breckinridge and his division back to the Shenandoah Valley 62 Echols including Derrick s Battalion and Wharton s brigades began moving on June 7 beginning by boarding rail cars in Richmond 63 Five days later Lee decided to send Lieutenant General Jubal Early s entire 2nd Corps to the Shenandoah to join Breckenridge 64 Anticipating an attack on Lynchburg Breckinridge arrived there ahead of his troops on June 15 65 Arriving later at the Charlottesville rail station Early received a message that Lynchburg was the probable point of attack for Hunter Early used a limited supply of railcars to began sending his troops to Lynchburg 66 He arrived there with a small portion of his troops on June 17 67 Breckinridge s original June 17 defensive fortifications were near College Hill on the western edge of the city and they were designed to protect the city from incursions via the Salem Turnpike from the southwest and Forrest Road from the west 68 Echols Brigade including Derrick s Battalion was commanded by Patton and it was placed on the west side of the city just north of the Salem Turnpike 69 After an inspection Early moved all troops further west to protect the city from bombardment He moved the division commanded by Major General Stephen Dodson Ramseur to a fortification nearly two miles 3 2 km southwest of the city with two pieces of artillery 68 Patton s men were repositioned adjacent to and north of Ramseur s Division 69 With additional artillery and troops added to Ramseur s force the Union attack was repulsed Further north near Forest Road another Union advance was stopped The Battle of Lynchburg became an artillery duel by nightfall 68 Early resorted to some trickery during the evening of June 17 and early morning of June 18 He countermarched one regiment all night near the train station and ran a yard locomotive back and forth on the rails Although more Confederate troops were moving toward Lynchburg the locomotive illusion gave the Union soldiers the impression that more Confederate troops were arriving immediately 70 After sunrise skirmishing began again near Forest Road and the Salem Turnpike Around 1 00 pm Early s men began attacking and they pushed back the Union soldiers until they were surprised by a brigade hidden behind a hill 71 Although Early s men were driven back to their original fortifications Hunter was now convinced he was facing a large Confederate army That evening Hunter s army began a retreat west 72 Early threatens Washington edit After the Battle of Lynchburg Early pursued Hunter s army until June 22 After the pursuit Early and Breckinridge began moving down the Shenandoah Valley to attack Western Maryland Lee had urged Early to threaten Washington which would draw Union forces away from Lee s front near Richmond 73 For the month of July the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion was part of Patton s Echols Brigade in Breckinridge s Division in Breckinridge s Corps in the Army of the Valley District Breckinridge was corps commander Wharton was division commander and Patton was brigade commander 74 On July 9 Early s army fought in the Battle of Monocacy near the city of Frederick Maryland but Patton s brigade was not engaged 75 Early s army approached the north side of Washington DC on July 11 12 in the Battle of Fort Stevens but withdrew and Derrick s Battalion did not engage Early was pursued as he moved west back toward the Shenandoah Valley On the morning of July 17 Early and Breckinridge deployed in Clarke County Virginia 76 Later in the day Union pursuers skirmished with Early s troops near Snicker s Ford in what became known as the Battle of Cool Spring 77 Skirmishers from Patton s Brigade fought on July 18 78 Union forces withdrew that evening 79 Kernstown edit nbsp Patton s Brigade was part of Wharton s Division that flanked the Union armyDuring the last week of July a Union army led by Brigadier General George Crook occupied Winchester Virginia Crook believed Early s army was in full retreat to Richmond despite contrary reports from his cavalry commanders 80 On July 23 Early received news that Union troops had left the Shenandoah Valley with the exception of George Crook s undersized army Early s response was to attack 81 At 4 00 am on July 24 Early s troops began moving from Strasburg north toward Winchester to fight in the Second Battle of Kernstown Breckinridge s Corps led the way 82 By 11 30 am Breckinridge s Division commanded by Wharton was covertly deployed along the east side of the Valley Pike facing west while Major General John B Gordon s Division faced north mostly on the west side of the pike 83 When Breckinridge ordered the men forward Patton s Brigade including Derrick s Battalion was temporarily held back in reserve while the other two battalions commanded by Colonel Augustus Forsberg and Colonel Thomas A Smith advanced 84 When the Union left flank passed in front of Patton s brigade the entire division opened fire The 36th Ohio Infantry Regiment received most of the Confederate fire and had 136 casualties in only 10 minutes 85 Casualties for Breckinridge s Division for the entire battle were 75 to 100 86 Discovering Confederate soldiers on three sides Union division commander Colonel James A Mulligan decided to conduct a fighting withdrawal Moving back only a short distance he was wounded in the thigh and forced to dismount 87 While urging his men to continue the retreat without him he was shot twice more including a shot to the chest that would eventually be fatal 88 Smith s and Patton s brigades chased retreating Union infantry while Forsberg s battalion fought Union cavalry 89 Crook s men retreated north through Winchester and the pike became littered with burning wagons Crook s men eventually retreated across the Potomac River The Confederate pursuit ended on July 25 in a cold hard rain Union casualties were about 1 200 while Confederate casualties were about 600 90 Breckinridge s division would have more casualties from skirmishing in late August when it fought Union cavalry near Kearneysville 91 During the month Major Blessing from Derrick s Battalion was hospitalized in Harrisonburg 92 Shenandoah Valley edit nbsp Patton s Brigade was part of Wharton s Division on the northeast side of WinchesterThe Third Battle of Winchester occurred on September 19 In this battle Early s Army of the Valley consisted of multiple corps and Breckinridge commanded one of them Breckinridge s Division was commanded by Brigadier General Gabriel C Wharton and Patton s Brigade was one of three brigades under Wharton s command Patton s Brigade consisted of the 22nd Virginia Infantry Regiment and the 23rd and 26th Virginia Infantry battalions 93 Patton s fighting occurred on the north side of the battlefield During the morning Wharton s Division held off a Union cavalry division commanded by Brigadier General Wesley Merritt After noon another Union cavalry division led by Brigadier General William W Averell threatened Wharton s rear Wharton withdrew toward Winchester with Patton s Brigade covering 94 A Confederate infantry captain later noted in his diary that after the withdrawal of Breckinridge s Division the disasters began 95 After 1 00 pm Patton s Brigade was detached to assist Major General Fitzhugh Lee and cavalry on the north side of town near Rutherford s Farm along the pike Late afternoon found Patton s Brigade closer to town near what became known as the Second Woods Here the brigade faced an infantry division from Brigadier General George Crook s Army of West Virginia While Crook s 2nd Infantry Division was facing Patton Devin s Cavalry Brigade attacked Patton s left using sabers In fierce fighting Devin captured 300 men and all three battle flags from the two battalions and one regiment in Patton s Brigade 96 Derrick received a saber wound and was run over by Devin s 9th New York Cavalry Regiment 97 Both of Patton s battalion commanders Derrick and Edgar were captured Confederate artillery located further south fired into the mass of fighters hitting friend and foe but stopping Devin 96 Note 4 The soldiers from Patton s Brigade that were not captured or killed reformed closer to Winchester behind a stone fence where another division Gordon had already reformed perpendicular to the pike Gordon s Division Patton s Brigade and others had all experienced significant losses Hundreds of men did not rally at the stone fence but instead retreated into Winchester 96 Patton was mortally wounded and captured in Winchester while trying to rally remnants of his brigade 99 For Early the battle ended with the combat prowess of his army seriously impaired 100 Further south fighting began again several days later at the Battle of Fisher s Hill Early lost another commander as Breckinridge was recalled to duty elsewhere 101 Early s army was again defeated and fled further south 102 After five months of fighting Patton s Brigade was decimated On May 6 it had 2 150 men and a full complement of officers A September 29 inspection report listed only 266 men available for duty Brigade commander Patton was dead Battalion commanders Derrick and Edgar were captured The brigade had no officers ranked higher than captain and many of the company officers had also been killed captured or wounded 103 The 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion was commanded by Captain John M Pratt and Patton s Echols Brigade was commanded by Captain Edmund S Read 104 The 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion had only 78 enlisted men present for duty plus five staff and officers 105 The inspection report noted that the brigade is charged at almost every camp for burning rails and requested that axes be supplied 106 For the Battle of Cedar Creek on October 19 the remnants of the brigade were present as part of Wharton s Division 107 Located on the Confederate right near the Valley Pike Wharton and Brigadier General John Pegram s divisions were driven back in a Union counterattack that used artillery and cavalry 108 Major Blessing eventually returned to lead Derrick s Battalion A November 30 1864 report for Early s Army of the Valley listed Major William Blessing as commander of the 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion The brigade commander was Lieutenant Colonel John C McDonald and Wharton was division commander 107 War s end edit nbsp John EcholsIn the winter of 1865 Derrick s Battalion was part of Echol s Brigade in the Department of West Virginia and East Tennessee Although the brigade consisted of what was left of the same three units Breckinridge and Wharton were not part of this department Echols was the department head and his headquarters was in Wytheville Virginia 109 A report dated February 28 1865 confirmed the battalion as part of Echols Brigade along with the 22nd Virginia Infantry Regiment and the 26th Virginia Infantry Battalion The brigade was part of the Department of Western Virginia and East Tennessee and it was also commanded by Echols 110 The February winter quarters for the battalion was about three miles 4 8 km northeast of Saltville Virginia 111 In March Blessing led a detachment of 300 men that guarded prisoners being sent to Richmond 112 On April 2 Echols began moving his command east to unite with Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia He reached Christiansburg Virginia on April 10 where he received a dispatch that said Lee had surrendered Part of the force decided to attempt to unite with General Joseph E Johnston s army in North Carolina while many of the men went home 113 The 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion also known as Derrick s Battalion was disbanded in mid April 114 See also editList of Virginia Civil War units List of West Virginia Civil War Confederate unitsNotes editFootnotes edit A second source Lowry says Derrick was assigned command of the 23rd Battalion Virginia Infantry April 2 1862 3 Echols health problems often prevented him from commanding in the field although he was considered a good organizer When he was unable to go into the field he usually had George W Patton take his place as brigade commander 10 Although modern historians call the action the Battle of White Sulphur Springs other names have been used Union veterans tended to call it the Battle of Rocky Gap while Confederate veterans called it the Battle of Dry Creek Others have called it the Battle of Howard s Creek or the Battle of the Law Books 21 Clarence Derrick was imprisoned at Fort Delaware He was released on June 24 1865 and subsequently practiced law in Alabama 98 Citations edit a b c d Wallace 1986 p 106 a b c d Wittenberg 2011 p 60 Lowry 2016 p 9 Pendleton 1920 p 642 Lowry 1996 p 44 Lowry 2016 p 8 a b Lowry 1996 p 43 Lowry 2016 p vii Evans 1899 p 65 WV section a b Wittenberg 2011 pp 55 57 Lowry 2016 p 78 Lowry 2016 p 97 Lowry 2016 p 110 Evans 1899 pp 65 66 WV section Lowry 2016 p 192 Lowry 2016 p 193 Lowry 2016 p 204 Lowry 2016 p 208 Lowry 2016 p 423 Scott 1890 pp 31 32 Wittenberg 2011 p 10 Wittenberg 2011 p 69 Wittenberg 2011 pp 16 17 Wittenberg 2011 p 55 Scott 1890 p 41 Scott 1890 p 42 Wittenberg 2011 p 141 Wittenberg 2011 p 142 Wittenberg 2011 pp 90 91 Wittenberg 2011 p 97 Scott 1890 p 56 Lowry 1996 p 95 Droop Mountain American Battlefield Trust Archived from the original on 2022 11 29 Retrieved 2022 12 15 Starr 2007 pp 160 161 Lowry 1996 p 42 a b Lowry 1996 p 106 Lowry 1996 pp 102 104 Lowry 1996 pp 129 130 Lowry 1996 p 165 Lowry 1996 p 269 Starr 2007 pp 162 164 Lowry 1996 p 222 Scott 1891 p 1136 Scott 1891 p 719 Whitehorne amp Center of Military History United States Army 1988 p 1 Whitehorne amp Center of Military History United States Army 1988 p 5 Davis Perry amp Kirkley 1893 p 597 Whitehorne amp Center of Military History United States Army 1988 pp 6 7 a b New Market Shenandoah County VA May 15 1864 American Battlefield Trust Archived from the original on 2022 12 16 Retrieved 2022 12 16 Knight 2010 p 121 Knight 2010 p 122 Shaara 2006 pp 192 193 Davis 1983 pp 127 128 Davis 1983 p 138 Davis 1983 p 195 amp 200 Hogan 2014 p 50 51 Snell 2012 Ch 7 Loc 2502 of e book Shaara 2006 p 208 Shaara 2006 p 217 Snell 2012 Ch 7 Loc 2529 of e book Battle of Piedmont June 5 1864 National Park Service U S Department of the Interior Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 Duncan 1998 p 249 Duncan 1998 p 250 Duncan 1998 p 256 Duncan 1998 p 252 Duncan 1998 p 265 Duncan 1998 p 270 a b c Duncan 1998 pp 271 272 a b Jedediah Hotchkiss 1864 Report of the Camps Marches amp Engagements of the Second Corps A N V and of the Army of the Valley Dist of the Department of Northern VA During the Campaign of 1864 Virginia No 9 9a image 14 Map Virginia Library of Congress Retrieved May 15 2023 Duncan 1998 p 273 Duncan 1998 p 281 Duncan 1998 pp 283 285 Duncan 1998 p 301 Patchan 2007 App B of e book loc 5781 Scott 1891 p 199 Patchan 2007 Ch 3 of e book loc 981 Patchan 2007 Ch 3 of e book loc 1031 Patchan 2007 Ch 4 of e book loc 14014 Cool Spring American Battlefield Trust Archived from the original on January 4 2023 Retrieved January 4 2023 Patchan 2007 Ch 9 of e book loc 3194 Patchan 2007 Ch 10 of e book loc 3218 Patchan 2007 Ch 10 of e book loc 3224 Patchan 2007 Ch 10 of e book loc 3426 Patchan 2007 Ch 10 of e book loc 3466 Patchan 2007 Ch 11 of e book loc 3738 Patchan 2007 Notes of e book loc 6577 Patchan 2007 Ch 11 of e book loc 3916 Patchan 2007 Ch 11 of e book loc 3936 Patchan 2007 Ch 11 of e book loc 3829 Second Battle of Kernstown American Battlefield Trust Archived from the original on January 5 2023 Retrieved January 5 2023 Starr 2007 p 259 Lowry 1996 p 231 Patchan 2013 Appendix 1 of e book Patchan 2013 Ch 17 of e book Wert 2010 p 77 a b c Patchan 2013 Ch 18 of e book Col Clarence Derrick Confederate Veteran Magazine page 418 Nashville Tennessee S A Cunningham August 1908 Archived from the original on February 4 2023 Retrieved February 4 2023 Letter Clarence Derrick to President Andrew Johnson Fort Delaware June 17 1865 MS2012 014 Virginia Tech Special Collections and University Archives Online 17 June 1865 Archived from the original on January 6 2023 Retrieved January 6 2023 Krick 2006 p 361 Wert 2010 p 103 Wert 2010 p 119 Wert 2010 p 128 Davis Perry amp Kirkley 1893 pp 597 598 Inspection Report of George Patton s Brigade September 29 1864 U S National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved 2022 12 22 Virginia Volunteers Infantry Page 2 of Inspection Report of George Patton s Brigade September 29 1864 U S National Archives and Records Administration Retrieved 2022 12 22 Davis Perry amp Kirkley 1893 p 598 a b Davis Perry amp Kirkley 1893b pp 927 928 Lewis 1997 p 236 Evans 1899 p 108 WV section Davis Perry amp Kirkley 1897 p 1021 Davis Perry amp Kirkley 1897 p 982 Davis Perry amp Kirkley 1894c p 1332 Evans 1899 p 104 WV section Davis Perry amp Kirkley 1894a p 521 References edit Davis George B Perry Leslie J Kirkley Joseph W eds 1893 The War of the Rebellion a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XLIII Part I Reports Correspondence etc Washington DC Government Printing Office OCLC 318422190 Archived from the original on December 18 2022 Retrieved December 18 2022 Davis George B Perry Leslie J Kirkley Joseph W eds 1893b The War of the Rebellion a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XLIII Part II Correspondence etc Washington DC Government Printing Office OCLC 318422190 Archived from the original on December 23 2022 Retrieved December 18 2022 Davis George B Perry Leslie J Kirkley Joseph W eds 1894a The War of the Rebellion a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XLVI Part I Reports Washington DC Government Printing Office ISBN 978 0 91867 807 2 OCLC 427057 Archived from the original on December 29 2022 Retrieved December 29 2022 Davis George B Perry Leslie J Kirkley Joseph W eds 1894c The War of the Rebellion a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XLVI Part III Correspondence etc Washington DC Government Printing Office ISBN 978 0 91867 807 2 OCLC 427057 Archived from the original on December 27 2022 Retrieved December 27 2022 Davis George B Perry Leslie J Kirkley Joseph W eds 1897 The War of the Rebellion a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XLIX Part I Reports Correspondence etc Washington DC Government Printing Office ISBN 978 0 91867 807 2 OCLC 427057 Archived from the original on December 27 2022 Retrieved December 27 2022 Duncan Richard R 1998 Lee s Endangered Left The Civil War in Western Virginia Spring of 1864 Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press OCLC 940541407 Davis William C 1983 The Battle of New Market Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 80711 078 2 OCLC 1222884269 Evans Clement A ed 1899 Confederate Military History A library of Confederate States History Volume II Atlanta Georgia Confederate Publishing Company OCLC 951143 Archived from the original on May 26 2022 Retrieved May 26 2022 Hogan David W 2014 The Overland Campaign 4 May 15 June 1864 Washington D C Center of Military History United States Army ISBN 9780160925177 OCLC 883656765 Archived from the original on 9 February 2023 Retrieved July 27 2021 Knight Charles R 2010 Valley Thunder The Battle of New Market and the Opening of the Shenandoah Valley Campaign May 1864 New York New York Savas Beatie ISBN 978 1 61121 054 5 OCLC 763157018 Krick Robert K 2006 The Confederate Pattons In Gallagher Gary W ed The Shenandoah Valley Campaign of 1864 Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press pp 341 369 ISBN 978 0 80783 005 5 OCLC 62281619 Lewis Thomas A 1997 The Guns of Cedar Creek Strasburg Virginia Heritage Associates OCLC 42688338 Lowry Terry 1996 Last Sleep The Battle of Droop Mountain November 6 1863 Charleston West Virginia Pictorial Histories Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 57510 024 1 OCLC 36488613 Lowry Terry 2016 The Battle of Charleston and the 1862 Kanawha Valley campaign Charleston West Virginia 35th Star Publishing ISBN 978 0 96645 348 5 OCLC 981250860 Patchan Scott C 2007 Shenandoah Summer The 1864 Valley Campaign Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 0700 4 OCLC 122563754 Patchan Scott C 2013 The Last Battle of Winchester Phil Sheridan Jubal Early and the Shenandoah Valley Campaign August 7 September 19 1864 Havertown Pennsylvania Savas Beatie ISBN 978 1 61121 064 4 OCLC 857365201 Pendleton William C 1920 History of Tazewell County and Southwest Virginia 1748 1920 Richmond Virginia W C Hill Printing Company ISBN 9780722266342 OCLC 1029863310 Archived from the original on January 8 2023 Retrieved January 8 2023 Scott Robert N ed 1890 The War of the Rebellion a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XXIX Part I Washington DC Government Printing Office OCLC 318422190 Archived from the original on 2023 02 09 Retrieved 2021 03 23 Scott Robert N ed 1891 The War of the Rebellion a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XXXIII Part I Washington DC Government Printing Office OCLC 318422190 Archived from the original on 2022 12 31 Retrieved 2021 12 31 Shaara Jeff 2006 Jeff Shaara s Civil War Battlefields New York New York Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0 34546 488 0 OCLC 1267611677 Snell Mark A 2012 West Virginia and the Civil War Mountaineers are Always Free Charleston SC History Press ISBN 978 1 61423 390 9 OCLC 829025932 Starr Stephen Z 2007 Union Cavalry in the Civil War Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071329 1 3 OCLC 153582839 Wallace Lee A 1986 A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861 1865 Lynchburg Virginia H E Howard Inc ISBN 978 0 93091 930 6 OCLC 1003746760 Wert Jeffry D 2010 From Winchester to Cedar Creek The Shenandoah Campaign of 1864 Carbondale Illinois Southern Illinois University Press ISBN 978 0 80932 972 4 OCLC 463454602 Whitehorne Joseph W A Center of Military History United States Army 1988 The Battle of New Market Washington DC Center of Military History United States Army OCLC 1153258627 Archived from the original on December 27 2022 Retrieved December 27 2022 Wittenberg Eric J 2011 The Battle of White Sulphur Springs Averell Fails to Secure West Virginia Charleston South Carolina History Press ISBN 978 1 61423 326 8 OCLC 795566215 Further reading editScott J L 1991 23rd Battalion Virginia Infantry Lynchburg Virginia H E Howard Inc ISBN 978 1 56190 024 4 OCLC 1048882225 External links editWhite Sulphur Springs and Droop Mountain maps Library of Congress Map of Third Winchester battlefield Library of Congress Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 23rd Virginia Infantry Battalion amp oldid 1175322966, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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