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McNaughton
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Confederate named Brigades

Thu May 17, 2007 10:03 pm

I am working on the Unit Names, and am keen on incorporating the named brigades for the Confederate order of battle.

What I need, are a list of brigades, and their names, as well as their histories.

Brigade Name(s):\
Unit Composition: Infantry/Cavalry/Artillery
Primary State of Service:
Service Time: (month/year) to (month/year)

I.E.,

Brigade Name(s): Clayton's / Holtzclaw's Brigade
Unit Composition: Infantry
Primary State of Service: Alabama
Service Time: April 1863-End of War

This gives me the information that this brigade had two names (Clayton and Holtzclaw) and entered service in April 1863, it is an Alabama brigade. I am leaning toward using the name of the brigade originator (i.e., Clayton over Holtzclaw) unless there are other circumstances (the later name was more famous, served under this name for significantly longer, etc.).

As a result, this unit would be...

Clayton's Bde. (An Alabama Bde. that would be near in order after any other Alabama Brigade that appeared in 1861-1863)

So, if anyone could help list off Confederate Brigades under such a format it can easily be modded into the unit names (instead of "1st Georga Bde.", you will end up with a unit like "Anderson's Bde." or "Stovall's Bde."). I don't have the time to research brigade names, so in order for this to be done, I need the help of others!

Thanks in advance!

---THE LIST--- (in sequential order, divided by state, name to be used in bold)

Please point out inconsistencies, missed names, doubles, if in events already, etc.

---INFANTRY BRIGADES---

--ALABAMA--
1) Brigade Name(s): Rodes' Brigade
Service Time: Spring of '62 until end of war
2) Brigade Name(s): Wilcox's Brigade
Service Time: Spring of '62 until end of war
3) Brigade Name(s): Law's Brigade
Service Time: Became a purely Alabama brigade by Spring of '63...until end of war

--GEORGIA--
1) Brigade Name(s): Toomb's (Benning's) Brigade
Service Time: 1861 to April/1865 campaigns in the east, with Longstreet and Hood at Chickamauga...
2) Brigade Name(s): Lawton's (Gordon's, Evans') Brigade
Service Time: May/1861 to April/1865 served in the East first Battle, Seven Days
3) Brigade Name(s): Barton's (Stovall's) Brigade
Service Time: March 1862-July 1863 @ Vicksburg, Payroled fought to 1865
4) Brigade Name(s): Semmes' (Bryan's, Simms') Brigade
Service Time: March 1862-?/?, served in the East, among others Sharpsburg, Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
5) Brigade Name(s): Colquitt's Brigade
Service Time: spring or September/1862 to ?/? served in the East, later the Carolinas and Florida
6) Brigade Name(s): Thomas' Brigade (also known as 3rd Georgia Brigade)
Service Time: November/1862 to /?/

--MISSISSIPPI--
1) *Brigade Name(s): Bee's (Davis') Brigade (also known as 3rd Mississippi Brigade)
Service Time: July/1861 to April/1865, most major battles in the East starting with 1st Manassas
2) Brigade Name(s):Barksdale's (Griffiths, Humphrey's) Brigade (also known as 1st Mississippi Brigade)
Service Time: June/1862 to April/1865 most (all?) the major battles in the east starting with Seven Days
3) Brigade Name(s): Featherstone's (Posey's, Harris') Brigade (also known as 2nd Mississippi Brigade)
Service Time: June/1862 to April/1865, most of the major battles in the east starting with Seven Days

*Via Event

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Stonewall
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Location: Florida, USA

Fri May 18, 2007 3:09 am

Confederate Brigade OOB for Antietam

Infantry

Kershaw's Brigade (4 SC)
Cobb's Brigade (3 GA, 1 NC)
Semmes' Brigade (2 GA, 2 VA)
Barksdale's Brigade (4 MS)
Wilcox's Brigade (4 AL)
Featherston's Brigade (4 MS)
Armistead's Brigade (5 VA)
Pryor's Brigade (3 FL, 1 VA, 1 AL)
Mahone's Brigade (5 VA)
Wright's Brigade (3 GA, 1 AL)
Toombs' Brigade (4 GA)
Drayton's Brigade (2 GA, 2 SC)
Pickett's Brigade (5 VA) - Also Garnett's Brigade
Kemper Brigade (5 VA)
Jenkins' Brigade (6 SC)
G.T. Anderson's Brigade (5 GA)
Walker's Brigade (3 NC, 1 VA, 1 AR, 1 12lb) - Also Manning's Brigade
Ransom's Brigade (4 NC, 1 10lb)
Hood's Brigade...aka Texas Brigade (3 TX, 1 GA, 1 SC) - Also Wofford's Brigade - Also Robertson's Brigade
Law's Brigade (2 MS, 1 NC, 1 AL)
Evans' Brigade (5 SC, 1 10lb)
Lawton's Brigade (6 GA) - Also
Early's Brigade (7 VA)
Trimble's Brigade (2 GA, 2 NC, 1 AL)
Hays' Brigade...aka Louisiana Tigers (5 LA)
Branch's Brigade (5 NC)
Gregg's Brigade (5 SC)
Archer's Brigade (3 TN, 1 AL, 1 GA)
Pender's Brigade (4 NC)
Thomas' Brigade (4 GA)
Field's Brigade (4 VA) - Also Brockenbrough's Brigade
Winder's Brigade...aka Stonewall Brigade (4 VA)
Taliaferro's Brigade (3 VA, 2 AL)
Jones' Brigade (4 VA)
Starke's Brigade (5 LA, 1 LA Zouves)
Ripley's Brigade (2 GA, 2 NC)
Rodes' Brigade (5 AL)
Garland's Brigade (5 NC)
G.B. Anderson's Brigade (4 NC)
Colquitt's Brigade (4 GA, 1 AL)

Cavalry

Hampton's Brigade (1 VA, 1 NC, 2 SC, 1 MS)
Fitz Lee's Brigade (5 VA)
Robertson's Brigade (5 VA) - Also Munford's Brigade

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caranorn
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Fri May 18, 2007 12:24 pm

Take a look at the following link, could be useful.

http://www.tarleton.edu/~kjones/csabrigs.html#Brig-Inf
Marc aka Caran...

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rickd79
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Fri May 18, 2007 1:17 pm

Winder's, Hood's, Hays', and Pickett's brigades should be excluded since they already show up as "flavor" brigades (The Stonewall Brigade, The Texas Brigade, The LA Tigers, and the Gamecock Brigade)

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rickd79
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Location: Connecticut

Fri May 18, 2007 1:43 pm

Alabama (eastern theater)

Brigade Name(s): Rodes' Brigade
Unit Composition: Infantry (3rd AL & 5th AL & 6th AL & 12th AL & 26th AL)
Primary State of Service: Alabama brigade...served in Eastern Theater
Service Time: Spring of '62 until end of war

Brigade Name(s): Wilcox's Brigade
Unit Composition: Infantry (8th AL & 9th AL & 10th AL & 11th AL & 14th AL)
Primary State of Service: Alabama brigade...served in Eastern Theater
Service Time: Spring of '62 until end of war

Brigade Name(s): Law's Brigade
Unit Composition: Infantry (4th AL & 15th AL & 44th AL & 47th AL & 48th AL)
Primary State of Service: Alabama brigade...served in Eastern Theater
Service Time: Became a purely Alabama brigade by Spring of '63...until end of war

veji1
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Fri May 18, 2007 2:35 pm

what would be nice would be to have the brigades recruited in a state have regiment numbers. What I mean is that you have the historical brigades that have numbers for their regiments, while the brigades you recruit in game only have "infantry(conscript)", etc... It would be great to have list of regiments for the different brigades recruited by the player :

Say I recruit in Alabama a 3 elements (2I, 1c) brigade in may 1861, a 5 elements (4I,1A) in october 1861 and a 3 elements (2I,1C) and another (2I,1A) in april 1862 :
- it would be great to have brigades that came up wiht reg numbers... since you have a fixed amount of brigades in the reinforcement pool, wouldn't it be possible to allocate them all regiment names so that I has more flavour ?

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rickd79
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Location: Connecticut

Fri May 18, 2007 2:52 pm

After thinking about this a bit more, there is a bit of an issue.....

What happens in the scenarios other than the 1861 "start from scratch" setup? For instance, lets say you're playing the March 1863 scenario, and you recruit a new Alabama brigade in the first turn. You wouldn't want it to be called "Law's Brigade", since there is already one on the map. There would need to be different databases for different scenarios....

veji1
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Fri May 18, 2007 2:58 pm

Hmmm... yeah that's tricky... too bad though, because it would have been fantastic immersion wise...

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McNaughton
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Fri May 18, 2007 4:24 pm

The game is aware of a pre-existing name, so if there is a Law's Bde. on map in the 1863 scenario, it won't build a second Law's Bde. as it knows one exists.

However, they both have to be named exactly the same. One named "Law's Bde", and the other "Law's Bde." (see period) are completely different according to the computer. This is why the unit files need to be done, then events and scenarios need to be based on these files (otherwize you end up with duplicates).

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McNaughton
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Fri May 18, 2007 4:36 pm

Unfortunately I don't have time to go through websites, but would appreciate it if you could list off a few brigades as rickd79 did as it would speed things up after I create a database of units (even if it is two or three, eventually it will get itself sorted out!).

Stonewall, the list is good, but it is a snapshot in time. I really don't know what happened to the "Kershaw Brigade" before or after Antietam. Slightly more detail would be great (when it was formed is very important as to the order at which these brigades will appear in the unit file, as I want brigades to appear generally in sequential order). Great list, but could we flesh it out a bit with some more detail as to initial mobilization? It is a good start for research, as we can just look up those brigades and then get histories from them via internet searches.

There were only a fixed number of brigades raised, the problem being, some brigades had 2-4 different names. I personally think that a brigade should be represented by one name, with the others totally excluded, as it would not be good to have both "Field's Brigade" and "Brockenbrough's Brigade" on map at the same time (since in reality, they are the same unit).

Thanks again for everyone's help and input!

I will create a master list at my initial post with the brigades so far, where players can provide me input (I can edit them later).

veji1
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Fri May 18, 2007 4:53 pm

Great project, I'll do my best to help.

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caranorn
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Fri May 18, 2007 7:17 pm

Ok a first attempt from the link I gave above.

Brigade Name(s):Barksdale's (Griffiths, Humphrey's) Brigade (also known as 1st Mississippi Brigade)
Unit Composition: 13 MS, 17 MS, 18 MS, 21 MS, all Infantry
Primary State of Service: Mississippi
Service Time: June/1862 to April/1865 most (all?) the major battles in the east starting with Seven Days

Brigade Name(s): Featherstone's (Posey's, Harris') Brigade (also known as 2nd Mississippi Brigade)
Unit Composition: 12 MS, 16 MS, 19 MS, 2/48 MS, all Infantry
Primary State of Service: Mississippi
Service Time: June/1862 to April/1865, most of the major battles in the east starting with Seven Days

Brigade Name(s): Bee's (Davis') Brigade (also known as 3rd Mississippi Brigade)
Unit Composition: 2 MS, 11 MS, 26 MS, 42 MS, 1 CSA Bat., all Infantry
Primary State of Service: Mississippi
Service Time: July/1861 to April/1865, most major battles in the East starting with 1st Manassas

Note, other units might have been attached to these brigades too, just listing those provided on the website. For 1st Manassas I identified the 3rd brigade as Bee's by comparing to units present, website didn't list Bee as commander but gave credit for Manassas...

Edit: Added the 2nd and 3rd brigades to the same post.
Marc aka Caran...

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caranorn
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Fri May 18, 2007 8:08 pm

Brigade Name(s): Barton's (Stovall's) Brigade
Unit Composition: 40 GA, 41 GA, 42 GA, 43 GA, 52 GA, all Infantry
Primary State of Service: Georgia
Service Time: unknown to me

Brigade Name(s): Toomb's (Benning's) Brigade
Unit Composition: 2 GA, 15 GA, 17 GA, 20 GA, all Infantry
Primary State of Service: Georgia
Service Time: 1861 to April/1865 campaigns in the east, with Longstreet and Hood at Chickamauga...

Brigade Name(s): Colquitt's Brigade
Unit Composition: 6 GA, 19 GA, 23 GA, 27 GA, 28 GA, 6 FL Bn. Infantry, Chatham GA By., Gamble's FL By. Artillery
Primary State of Service: Georgia
Service Time: spring or September/1862 to ?/? served in the East, later the Carolinas and Florida

Brigade Name(s): Lawton's (Gordon's, Evans') Brigade
Unit Composition: 13 GA, 26 GA, 31 GA, 38 GA, 60 GA, 61 GA Infantry,
12 GA Lt. Art. Bn. Artillery
Primary State of Service: Georgia
Service Time: May/1861 to April/1865 served in the East first Battle, Seven Days

Brigade Name(s): Semmes' (Bryan's, Simms') Brigade
Unit Composition: 10 GA, 50 GA, 51 GA, 53 GA Infantry
Primary State of Service: Georgia
Service Time: dates unknown to me, served in the East, among others Sharpsburg, Chancellorsville and Gettysburg

Brigade Name(s): Thomas' Brigade
Unit Composition: 14 GA, 35 GA, 45 GA, and 49 GA Infantry
Primary State of Service: Georgia
Service Time: dates unknown to me

Again, data from the link provided above.
Marc aka Caran...

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McNaughton
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Fri May 18, 2007 9:40 pm

Thanks for your help everyone! Updated the list at 5:38 May 18 Eastern Standard Time.

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Montbrun
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Sat May 19, 2007 2:44 am

With all of this discussion of units names and strengths, I dug out my old OoB spreadsheets for Gettysburg. The numbers in brackets are unit strengths:

ARMY OF NORTHERN VIRGINA – General Robert E. Lee
Field and Staff – [17]
Chief of Staff / Inspector General – Col. Robert H. Chilton
Chief of Artillery – BG William M. Pendleton
Chief of Ordnance – LtC. Briscoe G. Baldwin
Chief of Commissary – LtC. Robert G. Cole
Chief Quartermaster – LtC. James L. Corley
Judge Advocate General – Maj. Henry E. Young
Medical Director – Dr. Lafayette Guild
Military Secretary – Col. Armistead L. Long
Engineer Officer – Cpt. Samuel R. Johnston
Aide de Camp – LtC. Walter H. Taylor
Aide de Camp – Maj. Charles Marshall
Aide de Camp – Maj. Charles S. Venable

Co. “A” + ”C” / 39th Battalion, Virginia Cavalry – Maj. John H. Richardson – [91]
Provost Guard Battalion – unknown – [unknown]

I Corps – LtG. James Longstreet
Field and Staff – [16]
McLaw’s Division – MG Lafayette McLaws
Field and Staff – [11]
--Kershaw’s Brigade – BG Joseph B. Kershaw
----Field and Staff – [6]
----2nd South Carolina Volunteer Rgt. – Col. John D. Kennedy – [412]
----3rd South Carolina Volunteer Rgt. – Maj. Robert C. Maffett – [406]
----7th South Carolina Volunteer Rgt. – LtC. Elbert Bland – [408]
----8th South Carolina Volunteer Rgt. – Col. John W. Henagan – [300]
----15th South Carolina Volunteer Rgt. – Col. William D. DeSaussure – [448]
----3rd South Carolina Volunteer Battalion – LtC. William G. Rice – [203]
--Semmes’ Brigade – BG Paul J. Semmes
----Field and Staff – [4]
----10th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. John B. Weems – [303]
----50th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Francis Kearse – [302]
----51st Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Edward Ball – [303]
----53rd Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. James P. Simms – [422]
--Barksdale’s Brigade – BG William Barksdale
----Field and Staff – [4]
----13th Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. James W. Carter – [481]
----17th Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. William B. Holder – [469]
----18th Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Thomas M. Griffin – [242]
----21st Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Benjamin G. Humphreys – [424]
--Woffords’ Brigade – BG William T. Wofford
----Field and Staff – [4]
----16th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Goode Bryan – [303]
----18th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Solon Z. Ruff – [302]
----24th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Robert McMillan – [303]
----Cobb’s Legion (Georgia) – LtC. Luther J. Glenn – [213]
----Phillips’s Legion (Georgia) – LtC. Elihu S. Barclay, Jr. – [273]
----3rd Battalion, Georgia Sharpshooters – LtC. Nathan L. Hutchins, Jr. – [229]
--Cabell’s Artillery Battalion – Col. Henry C. Cabell
----Field and Staff – [4]
----1st Co. / Richmond Howitzers – Cpt. Edward S. McCarthy – [90] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 3” Rifle
----Co. “A” / 1st North Carolina Artillery (“Ellis Artillery”) – Cpt. Basil C. Manley – [131] – 2 x Napoleon, ------2 x 3” Rifle
----Troup County Light Artillery (Georgia) – Cpt. Henry C. Carlton – [90] – 2 x 10# Parrott,
------2 x 12# Howitzer
----Pulaski Artillery (Georgia) – Cpt. John C. Fraser – [63] – 2 x 3” Rifle, 2 x 10# Parrott
Pickett’s Division – MG George E. Pickett - (Corse’s Brigade left in Virginia)
Field and Staff – [11]
--Garnett’s Brigade – BG Richard B. Garnett
----Field and Staff – [6]
----8th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Eppa Hunton – [193]
----18th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Robert E. Withers – [312]
----19th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Henry Gantt – [328]
----28th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Robert C. Allen – [333]
----56th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. William D. Stuart – [289]
--Armistead’s Brigade – BG Lewis A. Armistead
----Field and Staff – [4]
----9th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Maj. John C. Owens – [257]
----14th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. James G. Hodges – [422]
----38th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Edward C. Edmonds – [356]
----53rd Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. William R. Aylett – [435]
----57th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. John B. Magruder – [476]
--Kemper’s Brigade – BG James L. Kemper
----Field and Staff – [4]
----1st Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Lewis B. Williams – [209]
----3rd Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Joseph Mayo, Jr. – [332]
----7th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Waller T. Patton – [335]
----11th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Maj. Kirkwood Otey – [359]
----24th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. William R. Terry – [395]
--38th Virginia Artillery Battalion – Major James Dearing
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Co. “A” (“Fauquier Artillery”)– Cpt. Robert M. Stribling – [134] – 4 x Napoleon, 2 x 20# Parrott
----Co. “B” (“Richmond Fayette Artillery”) – Cpt. Miles C. Macon – [90] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 10# Parrott
----Co. “C” (“Richmond Hampden Artillery”) – Cpt. William H. Caskie – [90] – 2 x Napoleon,
------1 x 3” Rifle, 1 x 10# Parrott
----Co. “D” (“Lynchburg Artillery”) – Cpt. Joseph G. Blount – [96] – 4 x Napoleon
Hood’s Division – MG John B. Hood
Field and Staff – [11]
--Law’s Brigade – BG McIvor Law
----Field and Staff – [4]
----4th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. Pinckney D. Bowles – [346]
----15th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Isaac B. Feagin – [499]
----44th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. William F. Perry – [363]
----47th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Michael J. Bulger – [347]
----48th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. James L. Sheffield – [374]
--Anderson’s Brigade – BG George T. Anderson
----Field and Staff – [10]
----7th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. William W. White – [377]
----8th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. John R. Towers – [312]
----9th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – LtC. John C. Mounger – [340]
----11th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Francis H. Little – [310]
----59th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. W. A. Jackson Brown – [525]
--Robertson’s Brigade – (“The Texas Brigade”) – BG George T. Anderson
----Field and Staff – [5]
----3rd Arkansas Infantry Rgt. – Col. Vannoy H. Manning – [479]
----1st Texas Infantry Rgt. – Maj. Frederick S. Bass – [426]
----4th Texas Infantry Rgt. – Col. John C. G. Key – [415]
----5th Texas Infantry Rgt. – Col. Robert M. Powell – [409]
--Benning’s Brigade – BG Henry L. Benning
----Field and Staff – [4]
----2nd Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – LtC. William T. Harris – [348]
----15th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Dudley Mc. DuBose – [368]
----17th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Wesley C. Hodges – [350]
----20th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. John A. Jones – [350]
--Henry’s Artillery Battalion – Major Mathias W. Henry
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Co. “D” / 1st North Carolina Artillery (“Rowan Artillery”) – Cpt. Alexander C. Latham – [148] –
------2 x Napoleon, 2 x 3” Rifle, 2 x 10# Howitzer
----Co. “F” / 13th North Carolina Artillery (“Branch's Artillery”) – Cpt. Alexander C. Latham – [112] –
------3 x Napoleon, 1 x 6# Field Gun, 1 x 12# Howitzer
----Charleston Light Artillery (“German Artillery”) (South Carolina) – Cpt. William K. Bachman – [71] –
------4 x Napoleon
----Palmetto Light Artillery (South Carolina) – Cpt. Hugh R. Garden – [71] – 2 x Napoleon,
------2 x 10# Howitzer
I Corps Reserve Artillery – Col. James B. Walton
Field and Staff – [4]
--The Washington Artillery of New Orleans – Maj. Benjamin F. Eshleman
----Field and Staff – [9]
----1st Co. – Cpt. Charles W. Squires – 1 x Napoleon
----2nd Co. – Cpt. John B. Richardson – 2 x Napoleon, 1 x 12# Howitzer
----3rd Co. – Cpt. Merritt B. Miller – 3 x Napoleon
----4th Co. – Cpt. Joseph Norcum, Jr. – 2 x Napoleon, 1 x 12# Howitzer
--Alexander’s Artillery Battalion – Col. E. Porter Alexander
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Co. “C” / 12th Virginia Artillery (“Bath Artillery”) – Cpt. Osmond B. Taylor – [90] – 4 x Napoleon
----Madison Artillery (Louisiana) – Cpt. George V. Moody – [135] – 4 x 24# Howitzer
----Brooks Light Artillery (South Carolina) – Cpt. William W. Fickling – [71] – 4 x 12# Howitzer
----Ashland Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Pichegru Woolfolk, Jr. – [103] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 20# Parrott
----Bedford Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Tyler C. Jordan – [78] – 4 x 3” Rifle
----Parker’s Richmond Battery (Virginia) – Cpt. William W. Parker – [90] – 3 x 3” Rifle, 1 x 10# Parrott

II Corps – LtG. Richard S. Ewell
Field and Staff – [16]
Co. “B” / 39th Battalion, Virginia Cavalry – Cpt. William F. Randolph – [31] – (NOTE: Escort)
Co. “A” + “B” / 1st Battalion, North Carolina Sharpshooters – Cpt. Rufus W. Wharton – [94] (NOTE: Attached from Hoke’s Brigade)
1st Maryland Cavalry Battalion – Maj. Harry Gilmor – [310] (NOTE: Attached from Fitzhugh Lee’s Bde.)
35th Battalion Virginia Cavalry – LtC. Elijah V. White – [232] (NOTE: Attached from W.E. Jones’ Bde.)
Early’s Division – MG Jubal A. Early
Field and Staff – [12]
--Hays’ Brigade – (“Louisiana Tigers”) – BG Harry T. Hays
----Field and Staff – [3]
----5th Louisiana Infantry Rgt. – Col. Henry Forno – [196]
----6th Louisiana Infantry Rgt. – Col. William Monaghan – [218]
----7th Louisiana Infantry Rgt. – Col. Davidson B. Penn – [235]
----8th Louisiana Infantry Rgt. – Col. Trevanion D. Lewis – [296]
----9th Louisiana Infantry Rgt. – Col. Leroy A. Stafford – [347]
--Hoke’s Brigade – Col. Isaac E. Avery
----Field and Staff – [2]
----6th North Carolina State Troops Rgt. – LtC. Robert F. Webb – [509]
----21st Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. William K. Kirkland – [436]
----57th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. Archibld C. Godwin – [297]
(NOTE: 54th Rgt., North Carolina Troops; and 1st Battalion, North Carolina Sharpshooters detached)
--Smith’s Brigade – BG William Smith
----Field and Staff – [4]
----31st Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. John S. Hoffman – [267]
----49th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Jonathan C. Gibson – [268]
----52nd Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. James H. Skinner – [254]
(NOTE: 13th Virginia Infantry Rgt.; and 58th Virginia Infantry Rgt. detached)
--Gordon’s Brigade – BG John B. Gordon
----Field and Staff – [6]
----13th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. James M. Smith – [312]
----26th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Edmund N. Atkinson – [315]
----31st Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Clement A. Evans – [252]
----38th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Cpt. William L. McLeod – [341]
----60th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Cpt. Waters B. Jones – [299]
----61st Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. John H. Lamar – [288]
--H.P. Jones’ Artillery Battalion – LtC. Hilary P. Jones
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Louisiana Guard Artillery – Cpt. Charles Thompson – [60] – 2 x 3” Rifle, 2 x 10# Parrott
----Charlottesville Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. James McD. Carrington – [71] – 4 x Napoleon
----Richmond Courtney Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. William A. Tanner – [90] – 4 x 3” Rifle
----Staunton Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Asher W. Garber – [60] – 4 x Napoleon
Johnson’s Division – MG Edward Johnson
Field and Staff – [9]
--Steuart’s Brigade – BG George H. Steuart
----Field and Staff – [5]
----1st Maryland Battalion Infantry – LtC. James R. Herbert – [400]
----1st Rgt., North Carolina Troops – LtC. Hamilton A. Brown – [377]
----3rd Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Maj. William M. Parsley – [548]
----10th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Edward T.H. Warren – [276]
----23rd Virginia Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Simeon T. Walton – [251]
----37th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Maj. Henry C. Wood – [264]
--Nicholls’ Brigade – Col. Jesse M. Williams
----Field and Staff – [3]
----1st Louisiana Infantry Rgt. (“Volunteers,” “Nelligan’s”) – LtC. Michael Nolan – [172]
----2nd Louisiana Infantry Rgt. – Maj. Ross E. Burke – [236]
----10th Louisiana Infantry Rgt. – Maj. Thomas N. Powell – [226]
----14th Louisiana Infantry Rgt. – LtC. David Zable – [281]
----15th Louisiana Infantry Rgt. – Maj. Andrew Brady – [186]
--The “Stonewall” Brigade – BG James A. Walker
----Field and Staff – [4]
----2nd Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. John Q.A. Nadenbousch – [333]
----4th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Maj. William Terry – [257]
----5th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Hazael J. Williams – [345]
----27th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Daniel M. Shriver – [148]
----33rd Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Cpt. Jacob B. Galloday – [236]
--J.M. Jones’ Brigade – BG John M. Jones
---- Field and Staff – [7]
----21st Virginia Infantry Rgt. – LtC. William P. Moseley – [183]
----25th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. John C. Higginbotham – [280]
----42nd Virginia Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Robert W. Withers – [265]
----44th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Maj. Norvell Cobb – [227]
----48th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Robert H. Dungan – [265]
----50th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Logan H.N. Salyer – [240]
--Latimer’s Artillery Battalion – Maj. Joseph W. Latimer
----Field and Staff – [9]
----1st Maryland Battery – Cpt. William F. Dement – [90] – 4 x Napoleon
----4th Maryland Battery (“Chesapeake Artillery “) – Cpt. William D. Brown – [76] – 4 x 10# Parrott
----Alleghany Artillery (“Rough Artillery”) (Virginia) – Cpt. John C. Carpenter – [91] - 2 x Napoleon,
------2 x 3” Rifle
----Lynchburg Artillery (“Lee Artillery”) (Virginia) – Cpt. Charles I. Raine – [90] – 1 x 3” Rifle,
------1 x 10# Parrott, 1 x 20# Parrott
Rodes’ Division – MG Robert E. Rodes
Field and Staff – [14]
--Daniel’s Brigade – BG Junius Daniel
----Field and Staff – [4]
----32nd Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. Edmund C. Brabble – [454]
----43rd Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. Thomas S. Kenan – [572]
----45th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – LtC. Samuel H. Boyd – [460]
----53rd Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. William A. Owens – [322]
----2nd North Carolina Battalion – LtC. Hezekiah L. Andrews – [240]
--Iverson’s Brigade – BG Alfred Iverson
----Field and Staff – [4]
----5th North Carolina State Troops Rgt.. – LtC. John W. Lea – [473]
----12th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – LtC. William S. Davis – [219]
----20th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – LtC. Nelson Slough – [372]
----23rd Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. Daniel H. Christie – [316]
--Doles’ Brigade – BG George P. Doles
----Field and Staff – [4]
----4th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – LtC. David R.E. Winn – [341]
----12th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Edward Willis – [327]
----21st Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. John T. Mercer – [287]
----44th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Samuel P. Lumpkin – [364]
--Ramseur’s Brigade – BG S.D. Ramseur
----Field and Staff – [4]
----2nd North Carolina State Troops Rgt. – Maj. Daniel W. Hurtt – [243]
----4th North Carolina State Troops Rgt. – Col. Bryan Grimes – [196]
----14th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. R. Tyler Bennett – [306]
----30th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. Francis M. Parker – [278]
--O’Neal’s Brigade – Col. Edward A. O’Neal
----Field and Staff – [3]
----3rd Alabama Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Charles Forsyth – [350]
----5th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. Josephus M. Hall – [317]
----6th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. James N. Lightfoot – [382]
----12th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. Samuel B. Pickens – [317]
----26th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – LtC. John C. Goodgame – [319]
--Carter’s Artillery Battalion – LtC. Thomas H. Carter
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Jeff Davis Artillery (Alabama) – Cpt. William J. Reese – [79] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 3” Rifle***
----King William Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. William P. Carter – [103] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 10# Parrott
----Louisa Artillery (“Morris’ Artillery”) (Virginia) – Cpt. Richard C.M. Page – [114] – 4 x Napoleon
----Richmond Orange Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Charles W. Fry – [80] – 2 x 3” Rifle, 2 x 10# Parrott
II Corps Reserve Artillery – Col. J. Thompson Brown
Field and Staff – [4]
--1st Virginia Artillery Battalion – Cpt. William J. Dance
----Field and Staff – [9]
----2nd Co. / Richmond Howitzers (Co. “K” / 1st Virginia Artillery) – Cpt. David Watson – [64] –
------4 x 10# Parrott
----3rd Co. / Richmond Howitzers (Co. “D” / 1st Virginia Artillery) – Cpt. Benjamin H. Smith, Jr. – [62] –
------4 x 3” Rifle
----1st Rockbridge Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Archibald Graham – [85] – 4 x 20# Parrott
----Powhatan Artillery (Virginia) – Lt. John M. Cunningham – [78] – 4 x 3” Rifle
----Salem “Flying Artillery” (Virginia) – Lt. Charles B. Griffin – [69] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 3” Rifle
--Nelson’s Artillery Battalion – LtC. William Nelson
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Georgia Regular Battery (Co. "A" / 31st Virginia Artillery) – Cpt. John Milledge, Jr. – [73] –
------2 x 3” Rifle, 1 x 10# Parrott
----Amherst Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Thomas J. Kirkpatrick – [105] – 3 x Napoleon, 1 x 3” Rifle
----Fluvanna Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. John L. Massie – [90] – 3 x Napoleon, 1 x 3” Rifle

III Corps – LtG. Ambrose P. Hill
Field and Staff – [15]
Anderson’s Division – MG R.H. Anderson
Field and Staff – [7]
--Wilcox’s Brigade – BG Cadmus M. Wilcox
----Field and Staff – [5]
----8th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Hilary A. Herbert – [477]
----9th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. J. Horace King – [306]
----10th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. William H. Forney – [311]
----11th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. John C.C. Sanders – [311]
----14th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Lucius Pinckard – [316]
--Mahone’s Brigade – BG William Mahone
----Field and Staff – [4]
----6th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. George T. Rogers – [288]
----12th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. David A. Weisiger – [348]
----16th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Joseph H. Ham – [270]
----41st Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. William A. Parham – [276]
----61st Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Virginius D. Groner – [356]
--Wright’s Brigade – BG Ambrose R. Wright
----Field and Staff – [4]
----3rd Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Edward J. Walker – [441]
----22nd Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Joseph Wasden – [400]
----48th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. William Gibson – [395]
----2nd Battalion, Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Maj. George W. Ross – [173]
--Perry’s Brigade – Col. David Lang
----Field and Staff – [3]
----2nd Florida Infantry Rgt. – Col. William D. Ballantine – [242]
----5th Florida Infantry Rgt. – Cpt. Richmond N. Gardner – [321]
----8th Florida Infantry Rgt. – LtC. William Baya – [176]
--Posey’s Brigade – BG Carnot Posey
----Field and Staff – [4]
----12th Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. William H. Taylor – [305]
----16th Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Samuel E. Baker – [385]
----19th Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Nathaniel H. Harris – [372]
----48th Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Joseph McA. Jayne – [256]
--11th Georgia Artillery Battalion (“Sumter Artillery”) – Maj. John Lane
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Co. “A” – Cpt. Hugh M. Ross – [130] – 1 x Napoleon, 2 x 3” Navy Rifle, 3 x 10# Parrott,
------1 x 12# Howitzer
----Co. “B” – Cpt. George M. Patterson – [124] – 2 x Napoleon, 4 x 12# Howitzer
----Co. “C” – Cpt. John T. Wingfield – [121] – 3 x 3” Navy Rifle, 2 x 10# Parrott
Heth’s Division – MG Henry Heth
Field and Staff – [8]
--First Brigade – BG James J. Pettigrew
----Field and Staff – [4]
----11th Rgt., North Carolina Troops (“Bethel Regiment”) – Col. Collett Leventhorpe – [617]
----26th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. Henry K. Burgwyn – [840]
----47th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. George H. Faribault – [567]
----52nd Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. James K. Marshall – [553]
--Second Brigade – Col. John M. Brockenbrough
----Field and Staff – [4]
----40th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Cpt. T. Edwin Betts – [253]
----47th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. Robert M. Mayo – [209]
----55th Virginia Infantry Rgt. – Col. William S. Christian – [268]
----22nd Virginia Infantry Battalion – LtC. Edward P. Tayloe – [237]
--Third Brigade – BG James J. Archer
----Field and Staff – [6]
----13th Alabama Infantry Rgt. – Col. Birkett D. Fry – [308]
----5th Alabama Infantry Battalion – Maj. A.S. Van de Graaff – [135]
----1st Tennessee Volunteer Infantry Rgt. (Provisional Army – "Turney's") – LtC. Newton J. George – [281]
----7th Tennessee Infantry Rgt. – Col. John A. Fite – [249]
----14th Tennessee Infantry Rgt. – LtC. James W. Lockert– [220]
--Fourth Brigade – BG Joseph R. Davis
----Field and Staff – [4]
----2nd Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. John M. Stone – [492]
----11th Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Francis M. Green – [592]
----42nd Mississippi Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Hugh R. Miller – [575]
----55th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. John K. Connally – [640]
--Garnett’s Artillery Battalion – LtC. John J. Garnett
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Donaldsonville Artillery (Louisiana) – Cpt. Victor Maurin – [114] – 2 x 3” Rifle, 1 x 10# Parrott
----“Huger’s” Norfolk Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Joeph D. Moore – [77] – 2 x Napoleon, 1 x 3” Rifle,
------1 x 10# Parrott
----Norfolk Light Artillery Blues (Virginia) – Cpt. Charles R. Grandy – [106] – 2 x 3” Rifle,
------2 x 12# Howitzer
----Pittsylvania Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. John W. Lewis – [90] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 3” Rifle
Pender’s Division – MG William D. Pender
Field and Staff – [11]
--McGowan’s Brigade – Col. Abner M. Perrin
----Field and Staff – [4]
----1st South Carolina Rgt. (Provisional Army) – Maj. Comillus W. McCreary – [328]
----1st South Carolina Rifles ("Orr's Regiment of Rifles") – Cpt. William M. Hadden – [366]
----12th South Carolina Volunteer Rgt. – Col. John L. Miller – [366]
----13th South Carolina Volunteer Rgt. – LtC. Benjamin T. Brockman– [390]
----14th South Carolina Volunteer Rgt. – LtC. Joseph T. Brown – [428]
--Lane’s Brigade – BG James H. Lane
----Field and Staff – [4]
----7th North Carolina State Troops Rgt. – Cpt. John McL. Turner – [291]
----18th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. John D. Barry – [346]
----28th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. Samuel D. Lowe – [346]
----33rd Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. Clark M. Avery – [368]
----37th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. William M. Barbour – [379]
--Thomas’ Brigade – BG Edward L. Thomas
----Field and Staff – [4]
----14th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Robert W. Folsom – [331]
----35th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – LtC. William H. McCullohs – [331]
----45th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Washington L. Grice – [331]
----49th Rgt., Georgia Volunteer Infantry – Col. Samuel T. Player – [329]
--Scales’ Brigade – BG Alfred M. Scales
----Field and Staff – [4]
----13th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. Joseph H. Hyman – [232]
----16th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Cpt. Leroy W. Stowe – [321]
----22nd Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. James Conner – [267]
----34th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. William L.J. Lowrance – [311]
----38th Rgt., North Carolina Troops – Col. William J. Hoke – [216]
--Poague’s Artillery Battalion – Maj. William T. Poague
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Co. “C” / 1st North Carolina Artillery (“Charlotte Artillery”) – Cpt. Joseph Graham – [125] –
------2 x Napoleon, 2 x 12# Howitzer
----Madison Light Artillery (Mississippi) – Cpt. George Ward – [91] – 3 x Napoleon, 1 x 12# Howitzer
----Albemarle Artillery (“Everette Artillery”) (Virginia) – Cpt. James W. Wyatt – [94] – 2 x 3” Rifle,
------1 x 10# Parrott, 1 x 12# Howitzer
----Warrenton Artillery (“Brooke Artillery”) (Virginia) – Lt. Addison W. Utterback – [58] – 2 x Napoleon,
------2 x 12# Howitzer
III Corps Reserve Artillery – Col. R. Linsay Walker
Field and Staff – [4]
--McIntosh’s Artillery Battalion – Maj. David G. McIntosh
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Hardaway Artillery (Alabama) – Cpt. William B. Hurt – [71] – 2 x 3” Rifle, 2 x Whitworth Rifle
----Danville Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. R. Sidney Rice – [114] – 4 x Napoleon
----Johnson’s Richmond Battery (Virginia) – Cpt. Marmaduke Johnson – [96] – 4 x 3” Rifle
----2nd Rockbridge Artillery (Virginia) – Lt. Samuel Wallace – [67] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 3” Rifle
--Pegram’s Artillery Battalion – Maj. William J. Pegram
----Field and Staff – [9]
----Pee Dee Artillery (South Carolina) – Cpt. Ervin B. Brunson – [65] – 4 x 3” Rifle
----Fredericksburg Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Edward A. Marye – [71] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 3” Rifle
----Lechter Richmond Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Thomas A. Brander – [65] – 2 x Napoleon,
------2 x 10# Parrott
----Purcell Richmond Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. Joseph McGraw – [89] – 4 x Napoleon
----Crenshaw’s Richmond Battery (Virginia) – Lt. Andrew B. Johnson – [76] – 2 x Napoleon,
------2 x 12# Howitzer

Cavalry Corps – MG J.E.B. Stuart
Field and Staff – [20]
--Fitzhugh Lee’s Brigade – BG Fitzhugh Lee
----Field and Staff – [4]
----1st Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. James H. Drake – [310]
----2nd Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. Thomas T. Munford – [385]
----3rd Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. Thomas H. Owen – [210]
----4th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. Williams C. Wickham – [544]
----5th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. Thomas L. Rosser – [150]
(NOTE: 1st Maryland Cavalry Battalion detached to 2nd Corps)
--Hampton’s Brigade – BG Wade Hampton
----Field and Staff – [5]
----1st South Carolina Regiment of Cavalry – Col. John L. Black – [339]
----2nd South Carolina Regiment of Cavalry – Col. Matthew C. Butler – [186]
----9th North Carolina State Troops Rgt. (1st Cavalry) – Col. Laurence S. Baker – [407]
----Cobb’s Legion (Georgia) – Col. Pierce M.B. Young – [330]
----Phillips’ Legion (Georgia) – LtC. William B. Rich – [238]
----Jeff Davis Legion (Mississippi) – LtC. J. Frederick Waring – [246]
--W.H.F. Lee’s Brigade – Col. John R. Chambliss, Jr.
----Field and Staff – [4]
----9th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. Richard L.T. Beale – [490]
----10th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. J. Lucius Davis – [236]
----13th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – LtC. Jefferson C. Phillips – [298]
----19th North Carolina State Troops Rgt. (2nd Cavalry) – LtC. William H.F. Payne – [145]
(NOTE: 15th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry detached)
--Jenkin’s Brigade – BG Albert G. Jenkins
----Field and Staff – [4]
----14th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. James Cochran – [265]
----16th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. Milton J. Ferguson – [265] (Detached 7/1 to guard prisoners)
----17th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry – Col. William H. French – [241] (Detached 7/1 to guard prisoners)
----34th Battalion, Virginia Cavalry – LtC. Vincent A. Witcher – [172]
----36th Battalion, Virginia Cavalry – Maj. James W. Sweeney – [125]
----Kanawha Artillery (Virginia) (Horse Artillery) – Cpt. Thomas E. Jackson – [107] – 2 x 3” Rifle,
------2 x 12# Howitzer
(NOTE: 8th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry; 9th Rgt., Virginia Cavalry; and 37th Battalion, Virginia Cavalry left in Virginia)
--Beckham’s Horse Artillery Battalion – Maj. Robert F. Beckham
----Field and Staff – [9]
----1st Stuart Horse Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. James Breathed – [106] – 4 x 3” Rifle
----2nd Stuart Horse Artillery (Virginia) – Cpt. William M. McGregor – [106] – 2 x Napoleon, 2 x 3” Rifle
----2nd Baltimore Light Artillery (Maryland) – Cpt. William H. Griffin – [106] – 4 x 10# Parrott
----Washington Artillery (South Carolina) – Cpt. James F. Hart – [107] – 3 x Blakely Rifle
(NOTE: Chew's and Moorman's batteries not present)

Total Engaged Strength – 70,274 men + 283 guns

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Montbrun
Major
Posts: 249
Joined: Sun May 06, 2007 9:27 pm
Location: Raleigh, NC

Sat May 19, 2007 2:48 am

ARMY OF THE POTOMAC – Major General George G. Meade
Field and Staff – [50]
Chief of Staff – MG Daniel Butterfield
Chief of Artillery – BG Henry Hunt
Chief of Engineers – BG Gouverneur K. Warren
Acting Chief of Ordnance – Lt. John R. Eadie
Chief Signal Officer – Cpt. Lemuel B. Norton
Chief Quartermaster – BG Rufus Ingalls
Assistant Adjutant General – BG Seth Williams
Provost Marshall General – BG Marsena R. Patrick
Medical Director – Dr. Jonathan Letterman
Escort / Orderlies
--1 Co. / Oneida, New York Cavalry Rgt. – Cpt. Daniel P. Mann – [45]
Provost Guard
--2nd Pennsylvania Cavalry Rgt. – Col. Richard Butler Price – [489]
--4 Cos. / 93rd Rgt., New York State Volunteers – Col. John S. Crocker – [148]
--Co. “E” + “I” / 6th Pennsylvania Cavalry Rgt. – Cpt. James Starr – [81]
--US Regular Cavalry Detachment – (unknown) – [15]
Engineer Brigade – BG Henry W. Benham (Not Present at Gettysburg)
----15th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (3 Companies) – Maj. Walter L. Cassin
----50th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – Col. William H. Pettes
----“US Battalion” – Capt. George H. Mendell

I Corps – MG John F. Reynolds
Field and Staff – [14]
Co. “L” / 1st Maine Cavalry Rgt. (Escort) – Cpt. Constantine Taylor – [57]
1st Division – BG James S. Wadsworth
Field and Staff – [11]
--1st Brigade (“The Iron Brigade”) – BG Solomon Meredith
----Field and Staff – [15]
----19th Rgt., Indiana Volunteer Infantry – Col. Samuel J. Williams – [308]
----24th Rgt., Michigan Volunteer Infantry – Col. Henry A. Morrow – [496]
----2nd Wisconsin Infantry Rgt. – Col. Lucius Fairchild – [302]
----6th Wisconsin Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Rufus R. Dawes – [344]
----7th Wisconsin Infantry Rgt. – Col. William W. Robinson – [364]
--2nd Brigade – BG Lysander Cutler
----Field and Staff – [17]
----7th Rgt., Indiana Volunteer Infantry – Col. Ira G. Grover – [434]
----56th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. John W. Hoffman – [252]
----76th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Cortland Rgt.”) – Maj. Andrew J. Grover – [375]
----84th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“14th Brooklyn Militia”) – Col. Edward B. Fowler – [318]
----95th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Warren Rifles”) – Col. George H. Biddle – [241]
----147th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Oswego Rgt.”) – LtC. Francis C. Miller – [380]
2nd Division – BG John C. Robinson
Field and Staff – [8]
--1st Brigade – BG Gabriel R. Paul
----Field and Staff – [3]
----13th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. Samuel H. Leonard – [284]
----16th Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry – Col. Charles W. Tilden – [298]
----94th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Sacket’s Harbor Rgt.”) – Col. Adrian R. Root – [411]
----104th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Wadsworth Guards”) – Col. Gilbert G. Prey – [286]
----107th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. James McL. Thompson – [255]
--2nd Brigade – BG Henry Baxter
----Field and Staff – [4]
----12th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. James L. Bates – [261]
----83rd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“9th New York Militia”) – LtC. Joseph A. Moesch – [199]
----97th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“3rd Oneida Rgt.”) – Col. Charles Wheelock – [236]
----11th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“108th Volunteers”) – Col. Richard Coulter – [270]
----88th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. Benezet F. Foust – [274]
----90th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“19th Volunteers”) – Col. Peter Lyle – [208]
3rd Division – MG Abner Doubleday
Field and Staff – [13]
Co. "D" / 149th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (Provost Guard) – (unknown) – [60]
--1st Brigade – BG Thomas A. Rowley
----Field and Staff – [8]
----80th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Ulster Guard”) – Col. Theodore B. Gates – [287]
----121st Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. Alexander Biddle – [263]
----142nd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Robert P. Cummins – [336]
----151st Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. George F. McFarland – [467]
--2nd Brigade (“The Bucktails”) – Col. Roy Stone
----Field and Staff – [2]
----143rd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Edmund L. Dana – [465]
----149th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Walton Dwight – [450]
----150th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Langhorne Wister – [400]
--3rd Brigade – BG George J. Stannard
----Field and Staff – [6]
----13th Rgt., Vermont Volunteers – Col. Francis V. Randall – [636]
----14th Rgt., Vermont Volunteers – Col. William T. Nichols – [647]
----16th Rgt., Vermont Volunteers – Col. Wheelock G. Veazey – [661]
(NOTE: 12th and 15th Rgts., Vermont Volunteers, detached, guarding trains.)
I Corps Artillery Brigade – Col. Charles S. Wainwright
Field and Staff – [7]
Battery “B” / 2nd Maine Artillery – Cpt. James A. Hall – [117] – 6 x 3” Rifle
Battery “E” / 5th Maine Artillery – Cpt. Greenleaf T. Stevens – [119] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “L” / 1st New York Light Artillery – Cpt. Gilbert H. Reynolds – [124] – 6 x 3” Rifle
Battery “B” / 1st Pennsylvania Light Artillery – Cpt. James H. Cooper – [106] – 4 x 3” Rifle
Batteries “A” + “B” / 4th US Artillery – Lt. James Stewart – [123] – 6 x 12# Napoleon

II Corps – MG Winfield S. Hancock
Field and Staff – [6]
Co. “D” + “K” / 6th New York Volunteer Cavalry Rgt. (Escort) – Cpt. Riley Johnson – [64]
1st Division – BG John C. Caldwell
Field and Staff – [7]
Provost Guard
--Co. “B” / 116th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. St. Clair A. Mulholland – [30]
--Co. “A” + “B” + “K” / 53rd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Richards McMichael – [70]
--1st Brigade – Col. Edward E. Cross
----Field and Staff – [3]
----5th Rgt., New Hampshire Volunteers – LtC. Charles E. Hapgood – [179]
----61st Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Clinton Guards”) – LtC. Knut O. Broady – [104]
----81st Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Henry B. McKeen – [175]
----148th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Robert McFarlane– [392]
--2nd Brigade (“The Irish Brigade”) – Col. Parick Kelly
----Field and Staff – [2]
----28th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. Richard Byrnes – [224]
----2 Cos. / 61st Rgt., New York State Volunteers (5th Rgt., The Irish Brigade) – Cpt. Denis F. Burke – [90]
----2 Cos. / 63rd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (3rd Rgt., The Irish Brigade) – LtC. Richard C. Bentley – ------[75]
----2 Cos. / 69th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (1st Rgt., The Irish Brigade) – Cpt. Richard Moroney –
------[75]
----Co. “A” + “C” + “D” / 116th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. St. Clair A. Mulholland –[66]
--3rd Brigade – BG Samuel K. Zook
----Field and Staff – [4]
----52nd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (+ Det / 7th NY – “Sigel Rifles”) – LtC. Charles G. Freudenberg – ------[134]
----57th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Zook's Voltigeurs”) – LtC. Alfred B. Chapman – [175]
----66th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Governor’s Guard”) – Col. Orlando H. Morris – [147]
----140th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – Col. Richard P. Roberts – [515]
--4th Brigade – Col. John R. Brooke
----Field and Staff – [4]
----2nd Rgt., Delaware Volunteers – Col. William P. Bailey – [234]
----27th Rgt., Connecticut Infantry Volunteers – LtC. Henry C. Merwin – [75]
----64th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“1st Cattaraugus Rgt.”) – Col. Daniel G. Bingham – [204]
----53rd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Richards McMichael – [135]
----145th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Hiram L. Brown – [202]
2nd Division – BG John F. Gibbon
Field and Staff – [6]
Provost Guard
--Co. “C” / 1st Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – (unknown) – [42]
--1st Co. Massachusetts Sharpshooters – Cpt. William Plumer – [48]
--1st Brigade – BG William Harrow
----Field and Staff – [3]
----15th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. George H. Ward – [239]
----19th Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry – Col. Francis E. Heath – [439]
----1st Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Rgt. (+2nd Co. Minnesota SSs attached) – Col. William Colvill, Jr. –
------[330]
----82nd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“2nd New York Militia Rgt.”) – LtC. James Huston – [335]
--2nd Brigade (“The Philadelphia Brigade”) – BG Alexander S. Webb
----Field and Staff – [3]
----69th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (See 2nd Brigade / 1st Division) – Col. Dennis O'Kane – [284]
----71st Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Richard P. Smith, Jr. – [261]
----72nd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. DeWitt C. Baxter – [380]
----106th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. William L. Curry – [280]
--3rd Brigade – Col. Norman J. Hall
----Field and Staff – [2]
----7th Rgt., Michigan Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Amos E. Steele, Jr. – [165]
----19th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. Arthur F. Devereaux – [163]
----20th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. Paul J. Revere – [243]
----42nd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“The Tammany Rgt.”) – Col. James E. Mallon – [197]
----59th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Union Guards”) – LtC. Max A. Thoman – [152]
3rd Division – BG Alexander Hays
Field and Staff – [8]
Provost Guard
--10th Battalion, New York State Volunteers – Maj. George F. Hopper – [82]
--1st Brigade – Col. Samuel S. Carroll
----Field and Staff – [7]
----Provost Guard (Regimental Detachments) – Cpt. Alfred Craig – [36]
----14th Rgt., Indiana Volunteer Infantry – Col. John Coons – [191]
----4th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Leonard W. Carpenter – [299]
----8th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Franklin Sawyer – [209]
----7th West Virginia Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Jonathan H. Lockwood – [235]
--2nd Brigade – Col. Thomas A. Smyth
----Field and Staff – [2]
----1st Rgt., Delaware Volunteers – LtC. Edward P. Harris – [251]
----12th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Maj. John T. Hill – [444]
----14th Rgt., Connecticut Infantry Volunteers – Maj. Theodore G. Ellis – [172]
----108th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“The Rochester Rgt.”) – LtC. Francis E. Pierce – [200]
--3rd Brigade – Col. George L. Willard
----Field and Staff – [2]
----39th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“The Garibaldi Guards”) – Maj. Hugo Hildebrandt – [269]
----111th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“The Wayne & Cayuga Rgt.”) – Col. Clinton D. MacDougall – ------[390]
----125th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – LtC. Levin Crandell – [392]
----126th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – Col. Eliakim Sherrill – [455]
II Corps Artillery Brigade – Cpt. John G. Hazard
Field and Staff – [7]
Battery “B” / 1st New York Light Artillery (14th New York Battery attached) – Lt. Albert S. Sheldon –
----[117] – 4 x 10# Parrott
Battery “A” / 1st Rhode Island Artillery – Cpt. William A. Arnold – [117] – 6 x 3” Rifle
Battery “B” / 1st Rhode Island Artillery – Lt. Thomas F. Brown – [129] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “I” / 1st US Artillery – Lt. George A. Woodruff – [112] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “A” / 4th US Artillery – Lt. Alonzo H. Cushing – [126] – 6 x 3” Rifle

III Corps – MG Daniel E. Sickles
Field and Staff – [9]
Co. “A” / 6th New York Volunteer Cavalry Rgt. (Escort) – Maj. William E. Beardsley – [51]
1st Division – MG David B. Birney
Field and Staff – [4]
--1st Brigade – BG Charles J. Graham
----Field and Staff – [1]
----57th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Peter Sides – [207]
----63rd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. John A. Danks – [246]
----68th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Andrew H. Tippin – [320]
----105th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Calvin A. Craig – [274]
----114th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“Collis' Zouaves de Afrique”) – LtC. Frederick F. Cavada
------[259]
----141st Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Henry J. Madill – [209]
--2nd Brigade – BG John H.H. Ward
----Field and Staff – [6]
----3rd Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry – Col. Moses B. Lakeman – [210]
----4th Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry – Col. Elijah Walker – [287]
----20th Rgt., Indiana Volunteer Infantry – Col. John Wheeler – [401]
----99th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. John W. Moore – [277]
----86th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“The Steuben Rangers”) – LtC. Benjamin L. Higgins – [287]
----124th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“The American Guard”) – Col. Augustus Van Horn Ellis –
------[238]
----1st Regiment of US Sharpshooters – Col. Hiram Berdan – [313]
----2nd Regiment of US Sharpshooters (8 Companies) – Maj. Homer R. Stoughton – [169]
(NOTE: 1st and 2nd US Sharpshooters detached under command of Berdan, and operated under divisional control.)
--3rd Brigade – Col. Philippe de Trobriand
----Field and Staff – [1]
----3rd Rgt., Michigan Volunteer Infantry – Col. Byron R. Pierce – [237]
----5th Rgt., Michigan Volunteer Infantry – LtC. John Pulford– [216]
----17th Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry – Col. Charles B. Merrill – [350]
----40th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Constitution Guard”) – Col. Thomas W. Egan – [431]
----110th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (6 Companies) – LtC. David M. Jones– [152]
2nd Division – BG Andrew A. Humphreys
Field and Staff – [4]
--1st Brigade – BG Joseph B. Carr
----Field and Staff – [2]
----1st Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Clark B. Baldwin – [321]
----11th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Porter D. Tripp – [286]
----16th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Waldo Merriam – [245]
----11th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Robert McAllister – [275]
----12th Rgt., New Hampshire Volunteers – Cpt. John F. Langley – [224]
----26th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. Robert L. Bodine – [365]
(NOTE: 84th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry detached, guarding trains)
--2nd Brigade (“The Excelsior Brigade”) – Col. William R. Brewster
----Field and Staff – [3]
----70th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (1st Rgt. / The Excelsior Brigade) – Col. John E. Farnum – [288]
----71st Rgt., New York State Volunteers (2nd Rgt. / The Excelsior Brigade) – Col. Henry L. Potter – [243]
----72nd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (3rd Rgt. / The Excelsior Brigade) – Col. John S. Austin – [305]
----73rd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (4th Rgt. / The Excelsior Brigade) – Maj. Michael W. Burns –
------[349]
----74th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (5th Rgt. / The Excelsior Brigade) – LtC. Thomas Holt – [266]
----120th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“The Washington Guard”) – LtC. Cornelius D. Westbrook –
------[383]
--3rd Brigade (“The New Jersey Brigade”) – Col. Charles C. Burling
----Field and Staff – [2]
----5th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. William J. Sewell – [206]
----6th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Stephen R. Gilkyson – [207]
----7th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Louis R. Francine – [275]
----8th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. John Ramsey – [170]
----2nd Rgt., New Hampshire Volunteers – Col. Edward L. Bailey – [354]
----115th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. John P. Dunne – [151]
III Corps Artillery Brigade – Cpt. George E. Randolph
Field and Staff – [2]
Battery “B” / 2nd New Jersey Light Artillery – Cpt. Adoniram J. Clarke – [131] – 6 x 10# Parrott
Battery “D” / 1st New York Light Artillery – Cpt. George B. Winslow – [116] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
4th New York Light Battery – Cpt. James E. Smith – [126] – 6 x 10# Parrott
Battery “E” / 1st Rhode Island Light Artillery – Lt. John K. Bucklyn – [108] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “K” / 4th US Artillery – Lt. Francis W. Seeley – [113] – 6 x 12# Napoleon

V Corps – MG George Sykes
Field and Staff – [7]
Co. “D” + “H” / 17th Rgt., Pennsylvania Cavalry (Escort) – Cpt. William Thompson – [78]
Co. “D” + “E” / 12th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (Provost Guard) – Cpt. Henry W. Rider – [109]
1st Division – BG James Barnes
Field and Staff – [4]
--1st Brigade – Col. William S. Tilton
----Field and Staff – [1]
----18th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. Joseph Hayes – [139]
----22nd Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Thomas Sherwin, Jr.– [137]
----1st Rgt., Michigan Volunteer Infantry – Col. Ira C. Abbott – [145]
----118th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. James Gwyn – [233]
--2nd Brigade – Col. Jacob B. Sweitzer
----Field and Staff – [1]
----9th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. Patrick R. Guiney – [412]
----32nd Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. George L. Prescott – [242]
----4th Rgt., Michigan Volunteer Infantry – Col. Harrison H. Jeffers – [342]
----62nd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. James C. Hull – [426]
--3rd Brigade – Col. Strong Vincent
----Field and Staff – [1]
----16th Rgt., Michigan Volunteer Infantry – Col. Norval E. Welch – [263]
----20th Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry – Col. Joshua L. Chamberlain – [386]
----44th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – Col. James C. Rice – [391]
----83rd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Cpt. Orpheus S. Woodward – [295]
2nd Division (“The Regular Division”) – BG Romeyn B. Ayres
Field and Staff – [5]
--1st Brigade – Col. Hannibal Day
----Field and Staff – [2]
----3rd Regiment, US Infantry (6 Companies) – Cpt. Henry E. Freedley – [300]
----4th Regiment, US Infantry (4 Companies) – Cpt. Julius W. Adams, Jr. – [173]
----6th Regiment, US Infantry (5 Companies) – Cpt. Levi C. Bootes – [150]
----12th Regiment, US Infantry (8 Companies) – Cpt. Thomas S. Dunn – [415]
----14th Regiment, US Infantry (8 Companies) – Maj. Grotius R. Giddings – [513]
--2nd Brigade – Col. Sidney Burbank
----Field and Staff – [1]
----2nd Regiment, US Infantry (6 Companies) – Maj. Arthur T. Lee – [197]
----7th Regiment, US Infantry (4 Companies) – Cpt. David P. Hancock – [116]
----10th Regiment, US Infantry (3 Companies) – Cpt. William Clinton – [93]
----11th Regiment, US Infantry (6 Companies) – Maj. DeLancey Floyd-Jones – [286]
----17th Regiment, US Infantry (7 Companies) – LtC. J. Durell Greene – [260]
--3rd Brigade – BG Stephen H. Weed
----Field and Staff – [4]
----91st Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Joseph H. Sinex – [220]
----155th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. John H. Cain – [362]
----140th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Monroe County Rgt.”) – Col. Patrick H. O'Rorke – [449]
----146th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Garrard's Tigers”) – Col. Kenner Garrard – [456]
3rd Division – BG Samuel W. Crawford
Field and Staff – [5]
--1st Brigade – Col. William McCandless
----Field and Staff – [2]
----30th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“1st Pennsylvania Reserves”) – Col. William C. Talley –
------[379]
----31st Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“2nd Pennsylvania Reserves”) – LtC. George A. Woodward
------[233]
----35th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“6th Pennsylvania Reserves”) – LtC. Wellington H. Ent –
------[324]
----42nd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“1st Pennsylvania Rifles / 12th Pennsylvania Reserves”) –
------Col. Charles F. Taylor – [298]
--3rd Brigade – Col. Joseph W. Fisher
----Field and Staff – [1]
----34th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“5th Pennsylvania Reserves”) – LtC. George Dare – [285]
----38th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“9th Pennsylvania Reserves”) – LtC. James McK. Snodgrass ------[322]
----39th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“10th Pennsylvania Reserves”) – Col. Adoniram J. Warner –
------[401]
----40th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“11th Pennsylvania Reserves”) – Col. Samuel McC. Jackson
------[327]
----41st Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (“12th Pennsylvania Reserves”) – Col. Martin D. Hardin –
------[273]
V Corps Artillery Brigade – Cpt. Augustus P. Martin
Field and Staff – [3]
Battery “C” / 3rd Massachusetts Light Artillery – Lt. Aaron F. Walcott – [115] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “C” / 1st New York Light Artillery – Cpt. Almont Barnes – [62] – 4 x 3” Rifle
Battery “D” / 5th US Artillery – Lt. Charles E. Hazlett – [68] – 6 x 10# Parrott
Battery “I” / 5th US Artillery – Lt. Malbone F. Watson – [71] – 4 x 3” Rifle

VI Corps – MG John Sedgwick
Field and Staff – [13]
Co. “L” / 1st New Jersey Cavalry Rgt. (Escort) – Cpt. William Thompson – [32]
Co. “H” / 1st Pennsylvania Cavalry Rgt. (Escort) – Cpt. Henry W. Rider – [54]
1st Division – BG Horatio G. Wright
Field and Staff – [4]
Provost Guard
--Co. “A” + “C” + “H” / 4th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Maj. Charles Ewing – [80]
--1st Brigade (“The New Jersey Brigade”) – BG Alfred T.A. Torbert
----Field and Staff – [2]
----1st New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC. William Henry, Jr. – [253]
----2nd New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Charles Wiebecke – [357]
----3rd New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Edward L. Campbell – [282]
----15th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. William H. Penrose – [410]
--2nd Brigade – BG Joseph J. Bartlett
----Field and Staff – [4]
----5th Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry – Col. Clark S. Edwards – [293]
----121st Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Otsego and Herkimer Rgt.”) – Col. Emory Upton – [410]
----95th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Edward Carroll – [309]
----96th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. William H. Lessig – [309]
--3rd Brigade – BG David A. Russell
----Field and Staff – [6]
----5th Wisconsin Infantry Rgt. – Col. Thomas S. Allen – [420]
----6th Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry – Col. Hiram Burnham – [378]
----49th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Thomas M. Hulings – [276]
----119th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Peter C. Ellmaker – [404]
2nd Division – BG Albion P. Howe
Field and Staff – [3]
--2nd Brigade (“The Vermont Brigade”) – Col. Lewis A. Grant
----Field and Staff – [6]
----2nd Rgt., Vermont Volunteers – Col. James H. Walbridge – [444]
----3rd Rgt., Vermont Volunteers – Col. Thomas O. Seaver – [365]
----4th Rgt., Vermont Volunteers – Col. Charles B. Stoughton – [381]
----5th Rgt., Vermont Volunteers – LtC. John R. Lewis – [295]
----6th Rgt., Vermont Volunteers – Col. Elisha L. Barney – [331]
--3rd Brigade – BG Thomas H. Neill
----Field and Staff – [4]
----7th Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry (6 Companies) – LtC. Seldon Connor – [216]
----43rd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Albany and Yates' Rifles”) – LtC. John Wilson – [370]
----49th Rgt., New York State Volunteers ("2nd Buffalo" – 33rd Rgt., New York State Volunteers attached)
------Col. Daniel D. Bidwell – [419]
----77th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Saratoga Regiment”) – LtC. Winsor B. French – [368]
----61st Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. George F. Smith – [386]
3rd Division – MG John Newton
Field and Staff – [6]
--1st Brigade – BG Alexander Shaler
----Field and Staff – [3]
----65th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“1st Grenadier Regiment”) – Col. Joseph E. Hamblin – [277]
----67th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Long Island Regiment”) – Col. Nelson Cross – [349]
----122nd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Onondagas Regiment”) – Col. Silas Titus – [396]
----23rd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. John F. Glenn – [467]
----82nd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Isaac C.M. Bassett – [278]
--2nd Brigade – Col. Henry L. Eustis
----Field and Staff – [1]
----7th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Franklin P. Harlow – [320]
----10th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Joseph B. Parson – [361]
----37th Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. Oliver Edwards – [565]
----2nd Rhode Island Rgt., Volunteer Infantry – Col. Horatio Rogers, Jr. – [348]
--3rd Brigade – BG Frank Wheaton
----Field and Staff – [1]
----62nd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Anderson’s Zouaves”) – Col. David J. Nevin – [237]
----93rd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. John I. Nevin – [234]
----98th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. John B. Kohler – [351]
----102nd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (Detachment – regiment guarding trains) –
------Col. John W. Patterson – [103]
----139th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Frederick H. Collier – [443]
VI Corps Artillery Brigade – Col. Charles H. Tompkins
Field and Staff – [3]
1st Massachusetts Light Battery – Cpt. William H. McCartney – [135] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
1st New York Light Battery – Cpt. Andrew Cowan – [103] – 6 x 3” Rifle
3rd New York Light Battery – Cpt. William A. Harn – [111] – 6 x 10# Parrott
Battery “C” / 1st Rhode Island Light Artillery – Cpt. Richard Waterman – [116] – 6 x 3” Rifle
Battery “G” / 1st Rhode Island Light Artillery – Cpt. George W. Adams – [126] – 6 x 10# Parrott
Battery “D” / 2nd US Artillery – Lt. Edward B. Williston – [126] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “G” / 2nd US Artillery – Lt. John H. Butler – [101] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “F” / 5th US Artillery – Lt. Leonard Martin – [116] – 6 x 10# Parrott

IX Corps – MG Oliver O. Howard
Field and Staff – [11]
Co. / 8th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (HQ Guard (“1st German Rifles”) – Lt. Hermann Foerster – [40]
Co. “I” + “K” / 1st Indiana Cavalry Rgt. (Escort) – Cpt. William Thompson – [50]
Co. “K” / 17th Pennsylvania Cavalry Rgt. (Escort) – Cpt. Henry W. Rider – [36]
1st Division – BG Francis C. Barlow
Field and Staff – [4]
--1st Brigade – Col. Leopold von Gilsa
----Field and Staff – [2]
----41st Rgt., New York State Volunteers (200 men left at Emmitsburg) – LtC. Heinrich D. von
------Einsiedel – [218]
----54th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Barney Black Rifles”) – Maj. Steven Kovacsi – [189]
----68th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“2nd German Rifles”) – Col. Gotthilf v.Bourry d'Ivernois – [230]
----153rd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Maj. John F. Frueauff – [497]
--2nd Brigade – BG Aldelbert Ames
----Field and Staff – [4]
----17th Rgt., Connecticut Infantry Volunteers – LtC. Douglas Fowler – [386]
----25th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Jeremiah Williams – [220]
----75th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Andrew L. Harris – [269]
----107th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Seraphim Meyer – [458]
2nd Division – BG Adolph von Steinwehr
Field and Staff – [4]
HQ Guard
----Co. / 29th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – Lt. Hans von Brandis – [33]
--1st Brigade – Col. Charles R. Coster
----Field and Staff – [5]
----27th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Lorenz Cantador – [283]
----73rd Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Cpt. Daniel F. Kelly – [290]
----134th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – LtC. Allen H. Jackson – [400]
----154th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – LtC. Daniel B. Allen – [239]
--2nd Brigade – Col. Orlando Smith
----Field and Staff – [1]
----55th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Charles B. Gambee – [327]
----73rd Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Richard Long – [338]
----33rd Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – Col. Adin B. Underwood – [491]
----136th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“The Ironclads”) – Col. James Wood, Jr. – [482]
3rd Division – MG Carl Schurz
Field and Staff – [6]
--1st Brigade – BG Alexander von Schimmelfennig
----Field and Staff – [5]
----45th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“5th German Rifles”) – Col. Geo. K.H.W. von Amsberg – [375]
----157th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – Col. Phillip P. Brown, Jr. – [409]
----61st Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Steven J. McGroarty – [247]
----74th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Adolph von Hartung – [333]
----82nd Illinois Infantry Regt. – LtC. Edward S. Salomon – [316]
--2nd Brigade – Col. Wladimir Krzyzanowski
----Field and Staff – [1]
----58th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“The Polish Legion”) – LtC. August Otto – [194]
----119th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – Col. John T. Lockman – [262]
----26th Wisconsin Infantry Rgt. – LtC. Hans Boebell – [443]
----75th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. Francis Mahler – [208]
----82nd Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. James S. Robinson – [312]
IX Corps Artillery Brigade – Maj. Thomas W. Osborn
Field and Staff – [1]
Battery “I” / 1st New York Light Artillery – Cpt. Michael Wiedrich – [141] – 6 x 3” Rifle
13th New York Light Battery – Lt. William Wheeler – [110] – 4 x 3” Rifle
Battery “I” / 1st Ohio Light Artillery – Cpt. Hubert Dilger – [127] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “K” / 1st Ohio Light Artillery – Cpt. Lewis Heckman – [110] – 4 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “G” / 4th US Artillery – Lt. Bayard Wilkeson – [115] – 6 x 12# Napoleon

XII Corps – MG Henry W. Slocum
Field and Staff – [8]
Co. “A” + “B” + “D” / 10th Rgt., Maine Volunteer Infantry (Provost Guard) – Cpt. John D. Beardsley [169]
Co. “D” + “L” / 9th New York Volunteer Cavalry Rgt. (Escort) – (unknown) – [75]
1st Division – MG Alpheus S. Williams
Field and Staff – [5]
--1st Brigade – Col. Archibald L. McDougall
----Field and Staff – [1]
----5th Rgt., Connecticut Infantry Volunteers – Col. Warren W. Packer – [220]
----20th Rgt., Connecticut Infantry Volunteers – LtC. William B. Wooster – [321]
----123rd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Washington County Regiment”) – LtC. James C. Rogers [495]
----145th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Stanton Legion”) – Col. Edward L. Price – [245]
----3rd Maryland Infantry Rgt. (Arrives 7/2) – Col. Joseph M. Sudsburg – [290]
----46th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. James L. Selfridge – [262]
--Lockwood’s Brigade (Later becomes 2/1/XII) – BG Henry H. Lockwood
----Field and Staff – [3]
----1st Maryland Eastern Shore Rgt. (Arrives 7/3) – Col. James Wallace – [532]
----1st Maryland Potomac Home Brigade – Col. William P. Maulsby – [674]
----150th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Dutchess Legion”) – Col. John H. Ketcham – [609]
--3rd Brigade – BG Thomas H. Ruger
----Field and Staff – [1]
----2nd Rgt., Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Charles R. Mudge – [316]
----3rd Wisconsin Infantry Rgt. – Col. William Hawley – [260]
----13th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. Ezra A. Carman – [347]
----27th Rgt., Indiana Volunteer Infantry – Col. Silas Cosgrove – [339]
----107th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Campbell Guards”) – Col. Niron M. Crane – [319]
2nd Division – BG John W. Geary
Field and Staff – [5]
Provost Guard
----Co. “B” / 28th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – (unknown) – [37]
--1st Brigade – Col. Charles Candy
----Field and Staff – [2]
----5th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. John H. Patrick – [302]
----7th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Col. William R. Creighton – [282]
----29th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – Cpt. Wilber F. Stevens – [208]
----66th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Rgt. – LtC Eugene Powell – [303]
----28th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Cpt. John H. Flynn – [303]
----147th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Ario Pardee, Jr.– [298]
--2nd Brigade – Col. George A. Cobham, Jr.
----Field and Staff – [3]
----29th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Col. William Rickards, Jr. – [357]
----109th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – Cpt. Frederick L. Gimber – [149]
----111th Rgt., Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry – LtC. Thomas McC. Walker – [191]
--3rd Brigade – BG George S. Greene
----Field and Staff – [3]
----60th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Ogdenburg’s Regiment”) – Col. Abel Godard – [273]
----78th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“78th Highlanders”) – LtC. Herbert von Hammerstein – [198]
----102nd Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“Van Buren Light Infantry”) – Col. James C. Lane – [230]
----137th Rgt., New York State Volunteers – Col. David Ireland – [423]
----149th Rgt., New York State Volunteers (“4th Onondaga Regiment”) – Col. Henry A. Barnum – [297]
XII Corps Artillery Brigade – Lt. Edward D. Muhlenberg
Field and Staff – [1]
Battery “M” / 1st New York Light Artillery – Lt. Charles E. Winegar – [90] – 4 x 10# Parrott
Battery “E” / Knapp’s Pennsylvania Light Artillery – Lt. Charles A. Atwell – [139] – 6 x 10# Parrott
Battery “F” / 4th US Artillery – Lt. Sylvanus T. Rugg – [89] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
Battery “K” / 5th US Artillery – Lt. David H. Kinzie – [72] – 4 x 12# Napoleon

Cavalry Corps – MG Alfred A. Pleasonton (not present at Gettysburg)
Field and Staff – [27]
6th Rgt., US Cavalry (Escort) – Maj. Samuel H. Starr – [471] (not present at Gettysburg)
1st Division – BG John Buford
Field and Staff – [4]
--1st Brigade – Col. William Gamble
----Field and Staff – [4]
----8th Cavalry Rgt., Illinois Volunteers – Maj. John L. Beveridge – [470]
----12th Cavalry Rgt., Illinois Volunteers – Col. George H. Chapman – [233]
----3rd Rgt., Indiana Cavalry (“45th Volunteers”) – Col. George H. Chapman (commands both regiments) –
------[313]
----8th New York Volunteer Cavalry Rgt. – LtC. William L. Markell – [580]
--2nd Brigade – Col. Thomas C. Devin
----Field and Staff – [5]
----Co. “L” / 6th New York Volunteer Cavalry Rgt. (HQ Guard) – Cpt. William Thompson – [35]
----6th New York Volunteer Cavalry Rgt. – Maj. William E. Beardsley – [218]
----9th New York Volunteer Cavalry Rgt. – Col. William E. Sackett – [367]
----17th Rgt., Pennsylvania Cavalry (“162nd Volunteers”) – Col. Josiah H. Kellog – [464]
----Co. “A” + “C” / 3rd West Virginia Cavalry – Cpt. Seymour B. Conger – [59]
--Reseve Brigade – BG Wesley Merritt
----Field and Staff – [4]
----6th Rgt., Pennsylvania Cavalry – Maj. James H. Haseltine – [242]
----1st Rgt., US Cavalry – Cpt. Richard S.C. Lord – [362]
----2nd Rgt., US Cavalry – Cpt. T.F. Rodenbough – [407]
----5th Rgt., US Cavalry – Cpt. Julius W. Mason – [306]
2nd Division – BG David McM. Gregg (2nd Brigade not present at Gettysburg)
Field and Staff – [4]
Co. “A” / 1st Rgt., Ohio Volunteer Cavalry (HQ Guard) – Cpt. Noah Jones – [37]
--1st Brigade – Col. John B. McIntosh
----Field and Staff – [7]
----Co. “A” / Purnell Legion (Maryland) – Cpt. Robert E. Duvall – [66]
----1st Rgt., Maryland Cavalry – LtC. James M. Deems – [285]
----1st New Jersey Rgt. of Cavalry (“16th Volunteers”) – Maj. Myron H. Beaumont – [199]
----1st Rgt. Pennsylvania Cavalry (“44th Volunteers”) – Col. John P. Taylor – [355]
----3rd Rgt. Pennsylvania Cavalry (“60th Volunteers”) – LtC. Edward S. Jones – [335]
----Section / Battery “H” / 3rd Pennsylvania Heavy Artillery – Cpt. William D. Rank – [52] – 2 x 3” Rifle
--3rd Brigade – Col. J. Irvin Gregg
----Field and Staff – [8]
----1st Maine Cavalry Rgt. – LtC. Charles H. Smith – [315]
----10th New York Volunteer Cavalry Rgt. – Maj. Matthew H. Avery – [333]
----4th Rgt. Pennsylvania Cavalry (“64th Volunteers”) – LtC. William E. Doster – [258]
----16th Rgt. Pennsylvania Cavalry (“161st Volunteers”) – LtC. John K. Robison – [349]
3rd Division – BG Judson Kilpatrick
Field and Staff – [3]
Co. “C” / 1st Rgt., Ohio Volunteer Cavalry (HQ Guard) – Cpt. Samuel N. Stanford – [40]
--1st Brigade – BG Elon J. Farnsworth
----Field and Staff – [1]
----5th New York Volunteer Cavalry Rgt. – Maj. John Hammond – [420]
----18th Rgt. Pennsylvania Cavalry (“163rd Volunteers”) – LtC. William P. Brinton – [509]
----1st Vermont Cavalry Rgt. – LtC. Addison W. Preston – [600]
----1st Rgt., West VirginiaCavalry – Col. Nathaniel P. Richmond – [395]
--2nd Brigade (“The Michigan Brigade”) – BG George A. Custer
----Field and Staff – [1]
----1st Rgt., Michigan Cavalry – Col. Charles H. Town – [427]
----5th Rgt., Michigan Cavalry – Col. Russell A. Alger – [646]
----6th Rgt., Michigan Cavalry – Col. George Gray – [477]
----7th Rgt., Michigan Cavalry – Col. William D'A. Mann – [383]
Cavalry Corps Artillery
--1st Horse Artillery Brigade – Cpt. James M. Robertson
----Field and Staff – [2]
----6th New York Battery – Cpt. Joseph W. Martin – [103] – 6 x 3” Rifle
----9th Michigan Battery – Cpt. Jabez J. Daniels – [111] – 6 x 3” Rifle
----Battery “B” + “L” / 2nd US Artillery – Lt. Edward Heaton – [99] – 6 x 3” Rifle
----Battery “M” / 2nd US Artillery – Lt. Alexander C. McWhorter – [117] – 6 x 3” Rifle
----Battery “E” / 4th US Artillery – Lt. Samuel S. Elder – [61] – 4 x 3” Rifle
--2nd Horse Artillery Brigade – Cpt. John C. Tidball
----Field and Staff – [2]
----Battery “E” + “G” / 1st US Artillery – Cpt. Alanson M. Randol – [85] – 4 x 3” Rifle
----Battery “K” / 1st US Artillery – Cpt. William M. Graham – [114] – 6 x 3” Rifle
----Battery “A” / 2nd US Artillery – Lt. John H. Calef – [75] – 6 x 3” Rifle

Army of the Potomac Artillery Reserve – BG Robert O. Tyler
Field and Staff – [46]
Co. “C” / 32nd Rgt., Massachussetts Volunteer Infantry (HQ Guard) – Cpt. Josiah C. Fuller – [45]
4th New Jersey Volunteer Infantry Rgt. (Train Guard) – Maj. Charles Ewing – [273]
--1st Regular Brigade – Cpt. Dunbar R. Ransom
----Field and Staff – [2]
----Battery “H” / 1st US Artillery – Lt. Chandler P. Eakin – [129] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
----Battery “F” + “K” / 3rd US Artillery – Lt. John G. Turnbull – [115] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
----Battery "C" / 4th US Artillery – Lt. Evan Thomas – [95] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
----Battery "C" / 5th US Artillery – Lt. Gulian V. Weir – [104] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
--1st Volunteer Brigade – LtC. Freeman McGilvery
----Field and Staff – [2]
----5th Massachusetts Light Battery – Cpt. Charles A. Phillips – [104] – 6 x 3” Rifle
----9th Massachusetts Light Battery – Cpt. John Bigelow – [104] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
----15th New York Light Battery – Cpt. Patrick Hart – [70] – 4 x 12# Napoleon
----Batteries"C” + ”F" / Pennsylvania Independent Light Artillery – Cpt. James Thompson – [105] –
------6 x 3” Rifle
--2nd Volunteer Brigade – Cpt. Elijah D. Taft
----Field and Staff – [2]
----2nd Connecticut Light Battery – Cpt. John W. Sterling – [93] – 4 x 6# James Rifle, 2 x 12# Howitzer
----5th New York Light Battery – Cpt. Elijah D. Taft – [146] – 6 x 20# Parrott
--3rd Volunteer Brigade – Cpt. James F. Huntington
----Field and Staff – [2]
----1st New Hampshire Light Battery – Cpt. Frederick M. Edgell – [86] – 4 x 3” Rifle
----Battery "H" / 1st Ohio Light Artillery – Lt. George W. Norton – [99] – 6 x 3” Rifle
----Batteries "F” + ”G" / 1st Pennsylvania Light Artillery – Cpt. Robert B. Ricketts – [144] – 6 x 3” Rifle
----Battery "C" / West Virginia Light Artillery – Cpt. Wallace Hill – [100] – 6 x 10# Parrott
--4th Volunteer Brigade – Cpt. Robert H. Fitzhugh
----Field and Staff – [2]
----Battery "F" / 6th Maine Light Artillery – Lt. Edwin B. Dow – [87] – 4 x 12# Napoleon
----Battery "A" / 1st Maryland Light Artillery – Cpt. James H. Rigby – [106] – 6 x 3” Rifle
----1st New Jersey Light Battery – Lt. Augustin N. Parsons – [98] – 6 x 10# Parrott
----Battery "G" / 1st New York Light Artillery – Cpt. Nelson Ames – [84] – 6 x 12# Napoleon
----Battery "K" / 1st New York Light Artillery – Cpt. Robert H. Fitzhugh – [122] – 6 x 3” Rifle

Total Engaged Strength – 93,534 men + 372 guns

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Carrington
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Sun May 20, 2007 7:35 pm

Hmmm... interesting design question here, especially because the campaign game muddies the waters about what is "historical" or not.

Ideally, I guess what one would want in a Civil War campaign simulation would not be an engine that duplicated the historical OOB at any given time, but rather an engine that duplicated the naming schemes and conventions (after a given start, say April '61). Of course the historical naming 'scheme' was itself kind of goofy:

Was the 20th Maine the 20th regiment raised in Maine? Or was the naming of regiments quirkier? Did they re-raise destroyed regiments -- one of the things that would make the naming scheme quirkier.
(http://www.maine.gov/sos/arc/archives/military/civilwar/20meinf.htm....)
(http://www.maine.gov/sos/arc/archives/military/civilwar/reghis.htm) Hmm, it looks like Maine let a number of regiments lapse and did not replace them; vis the 1st Maine. Of course state govs being what they are, they probably were not consistent...

As to Brigades, they're generally named after their commander, correct? To what extent was it happenstance that the 20th was brigaded under Strom Vincent with the 16th Michigan Infantry (with Brady's independent company of sharpshooters attached), 44th New York Infantry, and the 83rd Pennsylvania Infantry? Did Vincent's Brigade become Chamberlain's Brigade after Joshua Chamberlain got his promotion?

Again, it seems like it tended to be quirky: I notice that Stannard's brigade contains three consecutive Vt regiments, suggesting that it was brigaded in Vermont at the time of muster -- interestingly brigades like this seem to have nicknames (vis. the Union brigade is three consecutive regiments). Interesting that Vermont seems to brigade its units together and in succession, much as did the Southern states. Is this because it was a "state's rights" state in general?

In general, it seems a little absurd to wish that Vincent's brigade always contain the 20th, the 16th, the 44th, and the 83rd -- if the assignments were random historically, no reason to try to replicate a random historical outcome.

OTOH, it'd be a nice feature if Brigade names were generated from a historically accurate list of Colonels and Brigadier generals.

Of course, the fun OOBs are the early-war ones, with the colorfully-named militia units and the like...

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caranorn
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Sun May 20, 2007 8:31 pm

I agree that in most cases what's important is the brigade commander's name (brigade's name), the regiment numbers I believe are indeed usually random. What I'd love to see would be a double system of flavor names, the first naming the brigades (both sides, Union brigades also have to be identified by commander once you remove them from their parent divisions and corps), the second naming the regiments in the brigade.

For example, I order the formation of a new Texas Cavalry Brigade (I believe we have none in the Force Pools, but this is just an example), the first unused name in the Texas Cavalry Brigade list is McCulloch, so it's McCulloch's Texas Cavalry Brigade, the brigade starts out with three Cavalry Regiments, the next free numbers in the Texas Cavalry Regiment list are 3rd 'South Kansas-Texas' Cavalry, 6th Texas Cavalry and 9th Texas Cavalry (this also shows that Regiment numbers need not necessarily be added in sequence to the database, rather in a sequence logical to AACW's forming of brigades).

This way one would have two simple separate lists that the game will draw on.

P.S.: I've been playing the game a bit the past two days, which is why I haven't looked anymore into brigade names. Two I have planned are McCulloch's (McIntosh's, Greer's) Brigade (but I will have to check some things yet) and Sibley's Brigade, two early war examples of Cavalry Brigades (both formed in 1861).
Marc aka Caran...

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McNaughton
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Sun May 20, 2007 9:59 pm

We must work within the system provided. I don't think the issue is enough to warrant a complete revision of brigade naming. Currently, it takes the name from a fixed list, starting with the first, moving to the last. I really don't think that this is that bad of a system to use.

The Confederates used the naming system of their brigades to a greater extent than the Federals, also, there is more evidence out there of Confederate naming system than Federals. So, I plan to retain the current system for the Federals, using a number, then state name, to determine their brigades. I have found that brigades tended to be composed of one state's regiments over a mix for both the North and the South. Some examples to the contrary exist, where you have mixed regiments, but, for the most part, a brigade was uniform to one state.

For the Confederates, I determined the naming priority (whose name to use) above. Pretty much using the first commander's name, then priority based on fame, lastly with duration (although a famous brigade name superseeds a name that may be held by the unit longer).

I really do not have the time or resources to figure out a way to do this for the Federals, as it seems like brigades for the Federals weren't seen in the same way as 'property' of a commander like it was with the Confederates.

I think that this discussion may be moving away from the goal, which is to determine confederate brigade names. Maybe create a new thread, or add some of this to the Wish List?

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Carrington
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Sun May 20, 2007 10:42 pm

I suspect the architecture behind these systems would be similar: my impression is that Union Brigades took on the identity of their brigade leaders as well, though this impression is based on Civil War boardgames.

Meridith's brigade in Wadsworth's division?

The main thing distinguishing them may be that their names tended to be less "sticky."

But the bottom line is that it'd be nice to generate brigade names out of a historical database of leaders names, and, as well, perhaps, generate Generals from these leaders as well.

This would be a useful infrastructure that AGEOD could port over to other systems -- perhaps BOA II/DONF (death of New France?) -- and Napoleonic/Marlburian conflicts.

The question is whether it would be worth it in programming time, etc., to build a more elaborate database of leader names and a promotion structure?

McNaughton wrote:We must work within the system provided. I don't think the issue is enough to warrant a complete revision of brigade naming. Currently, it takes the name from a fixed list, starting with the first, moving to the last. I really don't think that this is that bad of a system to use.

The Confederates used the naming system of their brigades to a greater extent than the Federals, also, there is more evidence out there of Confederate naming system than Federals. So, I plan to retain the current system for the Federals, using a number, then state name, to determine their brigades. I have found that brigades tended to be composed of one state's regiments over a mix for both the North and the South. Some examples to the contrary exist, where you have mixed regiments, but, for the most part, a brigade was uniform to one state.

snip...



Just scanning Montbrun's Union OOB for Meade's army, I don't see this as the case, actually -- only a few brigades are homogeneous.

This is an interesting issue because some of it traces back to replacement strategies: the Confederates tended to feed men into regiments to keep them at full strength, the Union tended to feed regiments into brigades to keep the Brigades at full strength -- interesting because the homogeneous Union brigades may be such because they have just arrived at the front... (is that the case with Stannard's brigade, for example?).

It also, arguably, may relate to combat effectiveness, though difficult to say: certainly one result of the Confederate replacement system was that fewer units were fully "green."


(Interestingly, the Confederate system for replacements was closer to American doctrine in WWII, arguably with very different results... but here I _really_ digress... :p apy :)

Hmm... and I just now noticed that my 1 West Virginia Brigade contains the 16th and 18th New York regiments (and West Virginians). I'm not sure why this happened, but I have a suspicion that the engine doles out names somewhat unsystematically when units are split out of a Division. (Another good reason to go with leader names -- they won't raise eyebrows as much if the the regiments underneath them get shuffled).

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McNaughton
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Mon May 21, 2007 4:52 am

It has been a tad bit less daunting than I thought. I am just about done with the Confederate Brigades. I basically figured out how many brigades a state fielded (i.e., Alabama fielded about 7 different brigades over the war) and found them a commander to be named after (I tracked down the history of brigades and found an appropriate commander).

I figure that beyond the Brigade names the rest will be numeric designations (i.e., 1st Virginia Bde.), or, I could apply some of the notable commander names who replaced existing formations (i.e., James Lane who replaced Lawrence Brance after Antietam), then have the numbered Brigades (to add a greater buffer).

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Stonewall
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Mon May 21, 2007 5:17 am

Carrington wrote:Hmm... and I just now noticed that my 1 West Virginia Brigade contains the 16th and 18th New York regiments (and West Virginians). I'm not sure why this happened, but I have a suspicion that the engine doles out names somewhat unsystematically when units are split out of a Division. (Another good reason to go with leader names -- they won't raise eyebrows as much if the the regiments underneath them get shuffled).


If you are viewing a brigade with actual named elements, then you are looking at a brigade that has been generated in either the scenario file of by an event. Otherwise, element (regiment) names are generic. I.e. Infantry, Conscript, Cavalry, etc.

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caranorn
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Mon May 21, 2007 11:01 am

1) To McNaughton, once you added numbered units, number them after the named ones (if you have 7 named brigades, make the first numbered the 8th...).

2) To Stonewall, Carrington is actually correct, flavour brigades tend to get split when they are removed from divisions. That way you end up with a new mix of regiments, which can also include unamed regiments... It's really rather ugly, but as I understand it all regiments will eventually have flavour names/numbers.
Marc aka Caran...

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McNaughton
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Mon May 21, 2007 12:46 pm

caranorn wrote:1) To McNaughton, once you added numbered units, number them after the named ones (if you have 7 named brigades, make the first numbered the 8th...).

2) To Stonewall, Carrington is actually correct, flavour brigades tend to get split when they are removed from divisions. That way you end up with a new mix of regiments, which can also include unamed regiments... It's really rather ugly, but as I understand it all regiments will eventually have flavour names/numbers.


Re. 1): Thanks!

Re. 2): It actually does not move around the units, just the names. For whatever reason, it sometimes grabs a name from one regiment and gives it to another in a different brigade. It isn't consistent, but it is the name, rather than the regiment, that gets moved.

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rickd79
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Tue May 22, 2007 12:43 am

Let me know if I can help with this at all....particulary with the western theater brigades (the availability of information for the eastern theater in much greater). Odds are I've already posted quite a bit of this data in the beta forum. My availability will be somewhat limited for the next week or so, but I can help dig up some of the info.

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McNaughton
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Sun May 27, 2007 11:57 pm

Ok, here' s what I have decided.

#1. Priority has been the first brigade name, but I am also incorporating later Brigade names if one should build larger than the historic OOB. For example, there were about 10 (or so) Virginian field brigades operating at one time, and I have all 10 names. However, should the player decide to build 15 Virginian Brigades (and fewer Georgian, for example), having later names in the roster will be used, even if the were actually a renamed existing brigade (i.e., Kemper's Brigade really was just a renamed Bonham's Brigade). I rationalize this by seeing Kemper as a viable commander to be promoted to lead this new brigade (since he did eventually take over brigade command).

#2. That the Union should also have named brigades. Looking around, reading transcripts of battles, and OOBs, it seemed that brigades were named by their commander, but were given a numeric designation in relation to the corps and division they were serving in (which tended to remain stable, or relatively so). Also, even as a part of a division and corps, brigades were often called by their commander in field dispatches (logically it would be easier to say "take this message to Fairchild's Brigade." instead of "take this message to the 1st Brigade of the 3rd Division.").

This is taking me time, I am virtually done the Confederates (I have gathered enough names to match historic unit builds, and am just topping off with later named brigades), but will need some help with the west and far west (for example Texas, Missouri, etc.). For the Union, I am 99% done the East, have pretty much covered the SouthWest, but have a lot to do with the centre (Army of Tennessee, Army of Cumberland/Ohio, Army of Mississippi).

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