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Stonewall Brigade

The Stonewall Brigade of the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, was a famous combat unit in United States military history. It was trained and first led by General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson, a professor from Virginia Military Institute (VMI). His severe training program and ascetic standards of military discipline turned enthusiastic but raw recruits into an effective military organization, which distinguished itself from the First Battle of Bull Run (First Manassas) in 1861 to Spotsylvania Court House in 1864. Its legacy lives on in the 116th Infantry Brigade, which bears the unofficial nickname "Stonewall Brigade," and in several living history reenactment groups.

1861 edit

The brigade was formed by Jackson at Harpers Ferry, April 27, 1861, from the 2nd, 4th, 5th, 27th, and 33rd Virginia Infantry regiments and the Rockbridge Artillery Battery of Rockbridge County, 1 unit recruited in or near the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. Thirteen companies of the brigade were recruited from western counties that would become part of West Virginia.[1] It was officially assigned to the Virginia Provisional Army, then to the Army of the Shenandoah on May 15, and the Valley District on July 20.

The Stonewall Brigade was initially armed with weapons captured from the arsenal at Harpers Ferry; its regiments went to First Bull Run carrying a wide range of muskets from Model 1816/1822 muskets converted to percussion to modern Model 1855 rifles to VMI cadet muskets (a Model 1842 musket downsized to .58 caliber). Company K of the 33rd Virginia, the Shenandoah Sharpshooters, had the misfortune of getting flintlock muskets. In September, Jackson received a request from Virginia governor John Letcher asking for the return of the VMI muskets (carried primarily by Company H of the 4th Virginia, known as the "Rockbridge Grays"). Jackson replied back that the muskets could not be returned until better weapons became available.[2]

Jackson's brigade was referred to informally as "Virginia's First Brigade" until July 21, 1861, when, at First Manassas, both the brigade and its general received the nickname "Stonewall". General Barnard E. Bee of South Carolina is said to have made his immortal remark as he rallied his brigade for the final phase of the battle. Although the exact words were not recorded at the time, he probably said, "There stands Jackson like a stone wall. Rally behind the Virginians!"[3] This is considered the turning point of the first major battle of the American Civil War, and the Union troops were repulsed and sent reeling back toward Washington D.C. in defeat. Jackson was promoted to higher command, but the brigade remained under his overall command until his death. Upon Jackson's promotion, he was replaced as brigade commander by Brig. Gen. Richard B. Garnett that fall.

In the fall of 1861, Jackson was promoted to division command and reassigned to the Shenandoah Valley and Potomac River area, where they overwintered. During this time, a trickle of better weapons reached the Stonewall Brigade as Confederate agents began purchasing rifles from Europe. However, the brigade still had a large number of smoothbore muskets until the Gettysburg Campaign, by which time the majority of its men had .58 caliber rifles.

1862 edit

On March 13, 1862, the Valley District was incorporated into the Army of Northern Virginia, under General Joseph E. Johnston. Jackson and the Stonewall Brigade operated in the Valley as part of the left wing of Johnston's army. During Jackson's Valley Campaign, Jackson's only defeat of the Civil War occurred at the First Battle of Kernstown on March 25, 1862. After receiving faulty intelligence, the brigade was ordered to attack a much larger Union force. Out of ammunition and almost surrounded by the superior force, Garnett ordered a withdrawal. Jackson was infuriated by this action, taken without his explicit permission, and Garnett was relieved of command and subject to court martial (Garnett was later killed during Pickett's Charge in the Battle of Gettysburg, attempting to restore his military honor).

For the remainder of the Valley Campaign, Brig. Gen. Charles S. Winder commanded the brigade and there were no more defeats in store. The brigade marched over 400 miles in four weeks, was victorious in six significant battles, and helped Jackson achieve a strategic victory in the Eastern Theater. The brigade's mobility in the campaign (particularly a 57-mile march in 51 hours) earned it the oxymoronic title "Jackson's foot cavalry".

At the end of the Valley Campaign, the brigade moved to reinforce General Robert E. Lee in the Seven Days Battles on the Virginia Peninsula. In the Battle of Gaines' Mill, the brigade assaulted the Federal right and helped Lee achieve a victory. In the Northern Virginia Campaign, the brigade suffered high casualties at the Battle of Cedar Mountain and General Winder was killed on August 9, 1862. Jackson personally rallied his old brigade and won the battle. The brigade would suffer more casualties in the Second Battle of Bull Run. On August 30, 1862, the Stonewall Brigade repulsed the attack of the Union's Iron Brigade and rallied for a counterattack. Its acting commander, Colonel William S. Baylor, was killed. Colonel Andrew J. Grigsby assumed command and led the brigade through the Maryland Campaign and the Battle of Antietam. The brigade defended the West Woods, where the fighting was so severe and attrition so high that Grigsby was commanding the division ("Jackson's Division") by the end of the day.

Grigsby did not receive permanent command of the brigade, for reasons Jackson did not record. Instead, Brig. Gen. Elisha F. Paxton, former commander of the 27th Virginia Infantry, moved from Jackson's staff to brigade command, which he performed in the Battle of Fredericksburg. There, under the division command of William B. Taliaferro, the brigade was on the right flank of the Confederate defense and counterattacked the encroaching Union division of George G. Meade, but was overall lightly engaged.

In 1862, casualties in the brigade surpassed 1,200.

1863 edit

At Chancellorsville, the brigade was part of Isaac R. Trimble's division and participated in Stonewall Jackson's audacious flanking movement of May 2, 1863. The brigade attacked on the Union right flank along the Orange Plank Road, falling in behind J.E.B. Stuart's cavalry. More than 600 men out of 2,000 were killed or wounded, and among the killed was General Paxton. This was the same night that Stonewall Jackson was mortally wounded. As Jackson and his staff were returning to camp on May 2, they were mistaken for a Union cavalry force by a Confederate North Carolina regiment who shouted, "Halt, who goes there?," but fired before evaluating the reply. Jackson was hit by three bullets, two in the left arm and one in the right hand. The men of the brigade were devastated to learn that their commander had been struck down by friendly fire and they renewed their attacks on May 3 with extra determination. The commander of the 13th Virginia, Colonel James A. Walker, was promoted to brigadier general to replace Paxton.

In the Gettysburg Campaign, the brigade was part of Edward "Allegheny" Johnson's division. At the Second Battle of Winchester, the brigade launched a spirited counterattack at Stephenson's Depot that captured six Union regiments. The brigade arrived in the evening of the first day of the Battle of Gettysburg, July 1, 1863, too late to participate in the day's fighting. Early on July 2, the Stonewall Brigade was assigned to screen the Confederate left flank, sparring with Union skirmishers on Wolf's Hill.[4] Later, they fought Brigadier General David M. Gregg's division of Union cavalry for control of Brinkerhoff's Ridge, east of Gettysburg along the Hanover Pike.[5] Repositioned to the base of Culp's Hill before dawn on July 3, the 4th, 5th, 27th, and 33rd Virginia regiments participated in multiple unsuccessful assaults on Union entrenchments. The 2nd Virginia was dispatched to cover the Confederate flank near Spangler's Spring and on Wolf's Hill, where they fended off probes by the First Potomac Home Brigade, and the Union brigades led by Colonel Silas Colgrove and Brigadier General Thomas Neill.

1864 edit

In the Overland Campaign, at the Battle of the Wilderness, the brigade fought along the Orange Courthouse Turnpike. At Spotsylvania Court House, the brigade was on the left flank of the "Mule Shoe" salient, in the part of the line known as the "Bloody Angle", where Winfield S. Hancock's II Corps launched a massive assault. All but 200 men of the brigade were killed, wounded, or were among the 6,000 captured Confederates following the bloody hand-to-hand fighting. The prisoners included Johnson, the division commander, while Walker was seriously wounded. The Stonewall Brigade was officially dissolved after Spotsylvania and consolidated into a single regiment.[6]

The remaining regiment fought as part of Brig. Gen. William Terry's brigade (which itself was the remnant of the Stonewall Division) in the Valley Campaigns of 1864 under Jubal A. Early. It figured prominently in the Battle of Monocacy on July 9, 1864, routing the Union defenders and opening the road to Washington. Early's army was eventually defeated in the Valley by Philip Sheridan at the Battle of Cedar Creek and they rejoined Robert E. Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia for the Siege of Petersburg and the Appomattox Campaign. Of the 6,000 men who served in the Stonewall brigade during the war, by the time of the surrender at Appomattox Court House, only 219 soldiers were left, none above the rank of captain.

Legacy edit

The military lineage of the brigade has reached modern times in the form of the 116th Infantry Regiment, formerly the 1st Brigade "The Stonewall Brigade" of the 29th Infantry Division (Light), Virginia Army National Guard, which counts historical ties to the 5th Virginia Infantry, one of the five original regiments in the Civil War Stonewall Brigade. As a result of US Army modularization, the 1st Brigade is now the 116th Infantry Brigade Combat Team. The brigade's colors carry battle streamers for the Stonewall Brigade's actions in the Civil War.

A number of living history reenactment organizations also carry on the legacy of the Stonewall Brigade and its component regiments. These include:

  • The Stonewall Brigade: The Stonewall Brigade is an authentic living history association concentrated in Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania dedicated to accurately portraying the common soldier of the Civil War. It currently consists of the 4th Virginia Company A, the 5th Virginia Company A, and the 33rd Virginia Company H.

Command history edit

Brig. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson     April 27, 1861 – October 28, 1861 Died May 10, 1863 after Chancellorsville West Point 1846
Brig. Gen. Richard B. Garnett November 14, 1861 – March 25, 1862 KIA July 3, 1863 at Gettysburg West Point 1841
Brig. Gen. Charles Sidney Winder March 25, 1862 – August 9, 1862 KIA August 9, 1862 at Cedar Mountain West Point 1850
Col. William S. Baylor August 9, 1862 – August 30, 1862 KIA August 30, 1862 at Second Manassas VA Militia
Col. Andrew J. Grigsby August 30, 1862 – November 6, 1862 Survived the war Washington College
Brig. Gen. Elisha F. Paxton November 6, 1862 – May 3, 1863 KIA May 3, 1863 at Chancellorsville Washington College
Brig. Gen. James A. Walker May 14, 1863 – May 12, 1864 Survived the war VMI 1852
Brig. Gen. William Terry May 20, 1864 – April 9, 1865 Survived the war UVA 1848, VA Militia

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Linger, James Carter Confederate Military Units of West Virginia. Tulsa, OK, 2002, pgs. 52-53
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-09-24. Retrieved 2017-09-24.
  3. ^ Douglas Freeman, Lee's Lieutenants: A Study in Command, vol. 1, p. 82
  4. ^ "The Stonewall Brigade at Gettysburg - Part One: In the Shadow of Wolf's Hill". The Stonewall Brigade. 2021-03-07. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  5. ^ "The Stonewall Brigade at Gettysburg - Part Two: Clash on Brinkerhoff's Ridge". The Stonewall Brigade. 2021-03-20. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
  6. ^ "The Death of the Stonewall Brigade". The Stonewall Brigade. 2020-06-02. Retrieved 2021-03-20.

References edit

  • Eicher, John H., & Eicher, David J.: Civil War High Commands, Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3
  • Robertson, James I., Jr. The Stonewall Brigade. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1963, ISBN 0-8071-0717-4
  • Roper, John Herbert. 2001. Repairing the March of Mars: The Civil War Diaries of John Samuel Apperson, Hospital Steward in the Stonewall Brigade, 1861-1865. Macon, GA: Mercer University.
  • Lineage of 116th Infantry

External links edit

  • Stonewall Brigade in Encyclopedia Virginia
  • Stonewall Jackson Resources - VMI Archives
  • Stonewall Brigade Reenactment Group

stonewall, brigade, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, march, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Stonewall Brigade news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Stonewall Brigade of the Confederate Army during the American Civil War was a famous combat unit in United States military history It was trained and first led by General Thomas J Stonewall Jackson a professor from Virginia Military Institute VMI His severe training program and ascetic standards of military discipline turned enthusiastic but raw recruits into an effective military organization which distinguished itself from the First Battle of Bull Run First Manassas in 1861 to Spotsylvania Court House in 1864 Its legacy lives on in the 116th Infantry Brigade which bears the unofficial nickname Stonewall Brigade and in several living history reenactment groups Contents 1 1861 2 1862 3 1863 4 1864 5 Legacy 6 Command history 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External links1861 editThe brigade was formed by Jackson at Harpers Ferry April 27 1861 from the 2nd 4th 5th 27th and 33rd Virginia Infantry regiments and the Rockbridge Artillery Battery of Rockbridge County 1 unit recruited in or near the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia Thirteen companies of the brigade were recruited from western counties that would become part of West Virginia 1 It was officially assigned to the Virginia Provisional Army then to the Army of the Shenandoah on May 15 and the Valley District on July 20 The Stonewall Brigade was initially armed with weapons captured from the arsenal at Harpers Ferry its regiments went to First Bull Run carrying a wide range of muskets from Model 1816 1822 muskets converted to percussion to modern Model 1855 rifles to VMI cadet muskets a Model 1842 musket downsized to 58 caliber Company K of the 33rd Virginia the Shenandoah Sharpshooters had the misfortune of getting flintlock muskets In September Jackson received a request from Virginia governor John Letcher asking for the return of the VMI muskets carried primarily by Company H of the 4th Virginia known as the Rockbridge Grays Jackson replied back that the muskets could not be returned until better weapons became available 2 Jackson s brigade was referred to informally as Virginia s First Brigade until July 21 1861 when at First Manassas both the brigade and its general received the nickname Stonewall General Barnard E Bee of South Carolina is said to have made his immortal remark as he rallied his brigade for the final phase of the battle Although the exact words were not recorded at the time he probably said There stands Jackson like a stone wall Rally behind the Virginians 3 This is considered the turning point of the first major battle of the American Civil War and the Union troops were repulsed and sent reeling back toward Washington D C in defeat Jackson was promoted to higher command but the brigade remained under his overall command until his death Upon Jackson s promotion he was replaced as brigade commander by Brig Gen Richard B Garnett that fall In the fall of 1861 Jackson was promoted to division command and reassigned to the Shenandoah Valley and Potomac River area where they overwintered During this time a trickle of better weapons reached the Stonewall Brigade as Confederate agents began purchasing rifles from Europe However the brigade still had a large number of smoothbore muskets until the Gettysburg Campaign by which time the majority of its men had 58 caliber rifles 1862 editOn March 13 1862 the Valley District was incorporated into the Army of Northern Virginia under General Joseph E Johnston Jackson and the Stonewall Brigade operated in the Valley as part of the left wing of Johnston s army During Jackson s Valley Campaign Jackson s only defeat of the Civil War occurred at the First Battle of Kernstown on March 25 1862 After receiving faulty intelligence the brigade was ordered to attack a much larger Union force Out of ammunition and almost surrounded by the superior force Garnett ordered a withdrawal Jackson was infuriated by this action taken without his explicit permission and Garnett was relieved of command and subject to court martial Garnett was later killed during Pickett s Charge in the Battle of Gettysburg attempting to restore his military honor For the remainder of the Valley Campaign Brig Gen Charles S Winder commanded the brigade and there were no more defeats in store The brigade marched over 400 miles in four weeks was victorious in six significant battles and helped Jackson achieve a strategic victory in the Eastern Theater The brigade s mobility in the campaign particularly a 57 mile march in 51 hours earned it the oxymoronic title Jackson s foot cavalry At the end of the Valley Campaign the brigade moved to reinforce General Robert E Lee in the Seven Days Battles on the Virginia Peninsula In the Battle of Gaines Mill the brigade assaulted the Federal right and helped Lee achieve a victory In the Northern Virginia Campaign the brigade suffered high casualties at the Battle of Cedar Mountain and General Winder was killed on August 9 1862 Jackson personally rallied his old brigade and won the battle The brigade would suffer more casualties in the Second Battle of Bull Run On August 30 1862 the Stonewall Brigade repulsed the attack of the Union s Iron Brigade and rallied for a counterattack Its acting commander Colonel William S Baylor was killed Colonel Andrew J Grigsby assumed command and led the brigade through the Maryland Campaign and the Battle of Antietam The brigade defended the West Woods where the fighting was so severe and attrition so high that Grigsby was commanding the division Jackson s Division by the end of the day Grigsby did not receive permanent command of the brigade for reasons Jackson did not record Instead Brig Gen Elisha F Paxton former commander of the 27th Virginia Infantry moved from Jackson s staff to brigade command which he performed in the Battle of Fredericksburg There under the division command of William B Taliaferro the brigade was on the right flank of the Confederate defense and counterattacked the encroaching Union division of George G Meade but was overall lightly engaged In 1862 casualties in the brigade surpassed 1 200 1863 editAt Chancellorsville the brigade was part of Isaac R Trimble s division and participated in Stonewall Jackson s audacious flanking movement of May 2 1863 The brigade attacked on the Union right flank along the Orange Plank Road falling in behind J E B Stuart s cavalry More than 600 men out of 2 000 were killed or wounded and among the killed was General Paxton This was the same night that Stonewall Jackson was mortally wounded As Jackson and his staff were returning to camp on May 2 they were mistaken for a Union cavalry force by a Confederate North Carolina regiment who shouted Halt who goes there but fired before evaluating the reply Jackson was hit by three bullets two in the left arm and one in the right hand The men of the brigade were devastated to learn that their commander had been struck down by friendly fire and they renewed their attacks on May 3 with extra determination The commander of the 13th Virginia Colonel James A Walker was promoted to brigadier general to replace Paxton In the Gettysburg Campaign the brigade was part of Edward Allegheny Johnson s division At the Second Battle of Winchester the brigade launched a spirited counterattack at Stephenson s Depot that captured six Union regiments The brigade arrived in the evening of the first day of the Battle of Gettysburg July 1 1863 too late to participate in the day s fighting Early on July 2 the Stonewall Brigade was assigned to screen the Confederate left flank sparring with Union skirmishers on Wolf s Hill 4 Later they fought Brigadier General David M Gregg s division of Union cavalry for control of Brinkerhoff s Ridge east of Gettysburg along the Hanover Pike 5 Repositioned to the base of Culp s Hill before dawn on July 3 the 4th 5th 27th and 33rd Virginia regiments participated in multiple unsuccessful assaults on Union entrenchments The 2nd Virginia was dispatched to cover the Confederate flank near Spangler s Spring and on Wolf s Hill where they fended off probes by the First Potomac Home Brigade and the Union brigades led by Colonel Silas Colgrove and Brigadier General Thomas Neill 1864 editIn the Overland Campaign at the Battle of the Wilderness the brigade fought along the Orange Courthouse Turnpike At Spotsylvania Court House the brigade was on the left flank of the Mule Shoe salient in the part of the line known as the Bloody Angle where Winfield S Hancock s II Corps launched a massive assault All but 200 men of the brigade were killed wounded or were among the 6 000 captured Confederates following the bloody hand to hand fighting The prisoners included Johnson the division commander while Walker was seriously wounded The Stonewall Brigade was officially dissolved after Spotsylvania and consolidated into a single regiment 6 The remaining regiment fought as part of Brig Gen William Terry s brigade which itself was the remnant of the Stonewall Division in the Valley Campaigns of 1864 under Jubal A Early It figured prominently in the Battle of Monocacy on July 9 1864 routing the Union defenders and opening the road to Washington Early s army was eventually defeated in the Valley by Philip Sheridan at the Battle of Cedar Creek and they rejoined Robert E Lee and the Army of Northern Virginia for the Siege of Petersburg and the Appomattox Campaign Of the 6 000 men who served in the Stonewall brigade during the war by the time of the surrender at Appomattox Court House only 219 soldiers were left none above the rank of captain Legacy editThe military lineage of the brigade has reached modern times in the form of the 116th Infantry Regiment formerly the 1st Brigade The Stonewall Brigade of the 29th Infantry Division Light Virginia Army National Guard which counts historical ties to the 5th Virginia Infantry one of the five original regiments in the Civil War Stonewall Brigade As a result of US Army modularization the 1st Brigade is now the 116th Infantry Brigade Combat Team The brigade s colors carry battle streamers for the Stonewall Brigade s actions in the Civil War A number of living history reenactment organizations also carry on the legacy of the Stonewall Brigade and its component regiments These include The Stonewall Brigade The Stonewall Brigade is an authentic living history association concentrated in Virginia West Virginia Maryland and Pennsylvania dedicated to accurately portraying the common soldier of the Civil War It currently consists of the 4th Virginia Company A the 5th Virginia Company A and the 33rd Virginia Company H Command history editBrig Gen Thomas J Stonewall Jackson April 27 1861 October 28 1861 Died May 10 1863 after Chancellorsville West Point 1846Brig Gen Richard B Garnett November 14 1861 March 25 1862 KIA July 3 1863 at Gettysburg West Point 1841Brig Gen Charles Sidney Winder March 25 1862 August 9 1862 KIA August 9 1862 at Cedar Mountain West Point 1850Col William S Baylor August 9 1862 August 30 1862 KIA August 30 1862 at Second Manassas VA MilitiaCol Andrew J Grigsby August 30 1862 November 6 1862 Survived the war Washington CollegeBrig Gen Elisha F Paxton November 6 1862 May 3 1863 KIA May 3 1863 at Chancellorsville Washington CollegeBrig Gen James A Walker May 14 1863 May 12 1864 Survived the war VMI 1852Brig Gen William Terry May 20 1864 April 9 1865 Survived the war UVA 1848 VA MilitiaSee also editList of Virginia Civil War units Stonewall Brigade BandNotes edit Linger James Carter Confederate Military Units of West Virginia Tulsa OK 2002 pgs 52 53 Weapons Archived from the original on 2017 09 24 Retrieved 2017 09 24 Douglas Freeman Lee s Lieutenants A Study in Command vol 1 p 82 The Stonewall Brigade at Gettysburg Part One In the Shadow of Wolf s Hill The Stonewall Brigade 2021 03 07 Retrieved 2021 03 12 The Stonewall Brigade at Gettysburg Part Two Clash on Brinkerhoff s Ridge The Stonewall Brigade 2021 03 20 Retrieved 2021 03 20 The Death of the Stonewall Brigade The Stonewall Brigade 2020 06 02 Retrieved 2021 03 20 References editEicher John H amp Eicher David J Civil War High Commands Stanford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 8047 3641 3 Robertson James I Jr The Stonewall Brigade Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1963 ISBN 0 8071 0717 4 Roper John Herbert 2001 Repairing the March of Mars The Civil War Diaries of John Samuel Apperson Hospital Steward in the Stonewall Brigade 1861 1865 Macon GA Mercer University Stonewall Brigade Lineage of 116th InfantryExternal links editStonewall Brigade in Encyclopedia Virginia Stonewall Jackson Resources VMI Archives Stonewall Brigade Reenactment Group Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stonewall Brigade amp oldid 1119554172, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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