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The 10th Tennessee Cavalry was organized August 25, 1863, in Nashville, Tennessee, and mustered in for a three-year enlistment under the command of Lieutenant Colonel George Washington Bridges. The regiment was attached to District of North Central Kentucky, Department of the Ohio , to January 1864.
7th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry (2nd West Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry) 8th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry; 9th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry; 10th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry; 11th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry; 12th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry; 13th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry; 14th ...
4th Consolidated Regiment, Tennessee Infantry (5th Confederate, 3rd-18th-30th, 10th, 15th-37th, 20th, 26th and 32nd Regiments and 45th-23rd Btln) Sharpshooters [ edit ]
6th-10th Texas-15th Texas Cavalry (dismounted): Col Roger Q. Mills, Ltc T. Scott Anderson 17th-18th-24th-25th Texas Cavalry (dismounted): Col F. C. Wilkes, Ltc John T. Coit, Maj William A. Taylor Artillery
15th Tennessee Cavalry; Forrest's (3rd) Tennessee Regiment: Col David C. Kelley; Biffle's Brigade Col Jacob B. Biffle 4th Tennessee Cavalry; 9th Tennessee Cavalry; 10th Tennessee Cavalry; Buford's Division BG Abraham Buford. Bell's Brigade Col Tyree H. Bell. 2nd/22nd Tennessee Cavalry (Barteau's) 19th Tennessee Cavalry; 20th Tennessee Cavalry ...
This is a list of American Civil War legions, legions being defined as combined arms units of infantry and cavalry and, often but not always, artillery. [1] The popularity of this type of unit had declined by the time of the American Civil War owing to the difficulty of organizing and maintaining its disparate elements; nevertheless, the Confederate Congress authorized the raising of at least ...
4th Confederate (34th Tennessee) Infantry: Ltc Oliver A. Bradshaw; 6th-9th Tennessee Infantry; 19th Tennessee Infantry; 50th Tennessee Infantry: Col Stephen H. Colms; 24th Tennessee Infantry Battalion: Ltc Oliver A. Bradshaw; Wright's Brigade BG John C. Carter. 8th Tennessee Infantry: Col John H. Anderson; 16th Tennessee Infantry: Maj Benjamin ...
After suffering a number of casualties, the 2nd New Jersey Cavalry responded with a charge in which it took severe casualties, including 22 dead, and lost 80 horses but captured more than 500 prisoners, among whom were Burke and 254 former Union soldiers from Burke's Battalion of the 10th Tennessee. [38]