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List Of North Carolina Confederate Civil War Units
This is a list of North Carolina Confederate Civil War units. The list of North Carolina Union Civil War regiments is shown separately. Infantry * 1st (Bethel Regiment) Infantry (6 months) * 1st North Carolina Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry * 2nd North Carolina Infantry, 2nd Infantry * 3rd North Carolina Infantry Regiment, CSA, 3rd Infantry * 4th North Carolina Infantry, 4th Infantry * 5th North Carolina Infantry, 5th Infantry * 6th Infantry * 7th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, 7th Infantry * 8th Infantry * 11th (Bethel Regiment) Infantry * 12th North Carolina Infantry, 12th Infantry * 13th Infantry * 14th Infantry * 15th Infantry * 16th Infantry * 17th North Carolina Infantry, 17th Infantry * 18th North Carolina Infantry, 18th Infantry * 20th North Carolina Infantry, 20th Infantry * 21st Infantry * 22nd Infantry * 23rd Infantry * 24th Infantry * 25th Infantry * 26th North Carolina Regiment, 26th Infantry * 27th Infantry * 28th Infantry * 29th Infantry * 30th Infantry * ...
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List Of North Carolina Union Civil War Regiments
{{main, North Carolina in the American Civil War As in almost all Southern states during the American Civil War, a number of units were raised to fight for the Union Army, from pro-Union citizens and former slaves. North Carolina provided four white Union Army regiments, and four black Union Army regiments. Approximately 10,000 white North Carolinians, and 5,000 black North Carolinians, joined Union Army units. Union soldiers from North Carolina included men who served in North Carolina Union regiments, men who left the state to join other Union regiments elsewhere, and Confederate Army deserters who later fought for the Union. The list of North Carolina Confederate Civil War units is shown separately. The first North Carolina Union Volunteer Infantry Regiment was established in the spring of 1862, around the city of New Bern.
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Thomas' Legion
Thomas' Legion, also known as Thomas' Legion of Cherokee Indians and Highlanders, Thomas' Legion of Indians and Highlanders, and the 69th North Carolina Regiment, was a unit of the Confederate Army in the American Civil War. The formation was organized in 1862 by William Holland Thomas and fought in the last skirmish of the war in North Carolina before surrendering in May 1865. The regiment was unusual in several respects. Thomas, the only white chief of the Cherokee Indians, recruited a sizable number of Cherokees. In addition, like a few other Civil War formations, it was a true legion, that is a combined arms unit, consisting of infantry, cavalry, and artillery. William Holland Thomas actively promoted the idea of having Cherokees fight for the Confederacy. In 1862, he organized 200 Cherokee Indians in North Carolina as the Junaluska Zouaves, named after Chief Junaluska; by April, he had raised the North Carolina Cherokee Battalion. His petition to recruit additional Cheroke ...
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56th North Carolina Infantry
The 56th North Carolina Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that served in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. Overview The North Carolina 56th Infantry Regiment was instituted in July, 1862, at Camp Magnum, North Carolina. The infantry recruitment included counties like, Camden, Cumberland, Pasquotank, Northampton, Orange, Cleveland, Alexander, Rutherford, and Mecklenburg. The regiment was assigned to carry out reconnaissance between Goldsboro, Wilmington, and Tarboro. Later, the unit was stationed at Blackwater. The unit in collaboration with M.W. Ransom's Brigade was involved in battle at several places like Gum Swamp Creek, Plymouth, Drewry's Bluff, Petersburg and Appomattox. The regiment lost 149 recruits who were taken as prisoners at the battle of Gum Swamp, suffered 4 fatalities and 84 wounded at Plymouth. Loss of lives at Ware Bottom Church numbered 90. The skirmish at Sailor's Creek resulted in many crippled men. Nine officers and 62 infant ...
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53rd North Carolina Infantry
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50th North Carolina Regiment
The 50th North Carolina Infantry Regiment was a volunteer infantry regiment that served in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War and was organized early in the war near Raleigh, North Carolina. Company Names (Local Designations) * B, (Most soldiers recruited from Robeson County) * D, (Most soldiers were from Johnston County - no specific name) * F, "Moore Sharpshooters" * G, "Rutherford Farmers" * H, (Most soldiers recruited from Harnett County) * I, "Rutherford Regulars" or "Rutherford Regulators" * K, "Green River Rifles" Service 50th Infantry Regiment completed its organization in April 1862, at Camp Mangum, near Raleigh, North Carolina. Men of this unit were raised in the counties of Person, Robeson, Johnston, Wayne, Rutherford, Moore, and Harnett. Ordered to Virginia, it fought under General Daniel at Malvern Cliff, then returned to North Carolina. Here the 50th saw action at New Bern and Washington, transferred to J.G. Martin's Brigade, and for a time served a ...
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49th North Carolina Infantry
The 49th North Carolina Infantry Regiment was a Confederate States Army regiment during the American Civil War attached to the Army of Northern Virginia. Organization and Training The companies of the 49th North Carolina Infantry Regiment were recruited in the following counties: :Company A - McDowell and Rutherford counties :Company B - Cleveland and Davidson counties :Company C - Rowan County :Company D - Moore County :Company E - Iredell County :Company F - Mecklenburg County :Company G - Cleveland County :Company H - Gaston County :Company I - Catawba County :Company K - Lincoln and Gaston counties Many of the recruits were members that had enlisted earlier in the war, but for lack of weapons were not able to be mustered into service. The companies were organized in their home counties and made their way to Camp Mangum in Raleigh, where they were organized as the 49th North Carolina Infantry Regiment. While at Camp Mangum the regimental officers were elected with Steph ...
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46th North Carolina Infantry
The 46th North Carolina Infantry Regiment was a volunteer infantry regiment that served in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. Mustered early in the war near Raleigh, North Carolina, the regiment served in both Walker's Brigade and Cooke's Brigade during the war. Service The 46th was part of the Army of Northern Virginia from its initial muster through the end of the war, seeing action in the major eastern campaigns in Virginia and Maryland in 1862. At Antietam, the 46th was involved in some of the heaviest fighting of the day. They had been ordered to hold West Woods, at "all hazards." According to the Brig. General John George Walker's after-action report, the 46th "did good service." Joined to Ransom's Brigade, the regiment held the Woods "for the greater portion of the day, notwithstanding three determined infantry attacks, which each time were repulsed with great loss to the enemy, and against a most persistent and terrific artillery fire, by which the ...
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45th North Carolina Infantry
The 45th North Carolina Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that served in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. 45th Infantry Regiment was organized at Camp Mangum, near Raleigh, North Carolina, in April, 1862, with men from Rockingham, Caswell, Guilford, and Forsyth counties. It served under the command of Generals Daniel and Grimes. After fighting at the Battle of Malvern Hill in Virginia, it returned to North Carolina and was stationed in the Kinston-New Bern area. During the spring of 1863 the unit moved north and took an active part in the campaigns of the Army of Northern Virginia from Gettysburg to Cold Harbor. It continued the fight with Jubal A. Early in the Shenandoah Valley and ended the war at Appomattox. It reported 2 killed and 14 wounded at Malvern Hill, lost about forty percent of the 570 engaged at Gettysburg, and sustained 2 casualties at Bristoe and 6 at Mine Run. The unit surrendered with 7 officers and 88 men. The field officers wer ...
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44th North Carolina Infantry
The 44th North Carolina Infantry Regiment was a unit of the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. Raised in North Carolina during March 1862, it initially served in the eastern part of the state. The regiment moved north and joined the Army of Northern Virginia, guarding rail junctions during the Battle of Gettysburg. For the rest of the war, the regiment served in the North Carolina brigade successively commanded by Pettigrew, Kirkland, and MacRae. It subsequently fought in the Bristoe Campaign, the Wilderness campaign, and the Siege of Petersburg. In the northern hemisphere spring of 1865 it served with the Army of Northern Virginia in the retreat from Richmond and surrendered at the conclusion of the Appomattox Campaign on 9 April. History The 44th North Carolina Infantry was organized on 28 March 1862 at Camp Magnum, near Raleigh, North Carolina, under the command of elected Colonel George B. Singletary. It included ten companies, which enlisted b ...
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