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The 1st Maine Volunteer Cavalry Regiment mustered into federal service at Augusta on November 5, 1861, as a three-year volunteer cavalry regiment. [12] It was commanded by COL John Goddard from Cape Elizabeth. A Regular Army cavalry officer, LTC Thomas Hight, was the second-in-command.
0–9. 1st Maine Sharpshooters Battalion; 1st Maine Light Artillery Battery; 1st Maine Cavalry Regiment; 1st Maine Heavy Artillery Regiment; 1st Maine Infantry Regiment
89th Cavalry Regiment. 1st Squadron is the cavalry squadron assigned to the 2nd Infantry BCT, 10th Mountain Division, stationed at Fort Drum, New York; 3rd is the cavalry squadron assigned to the 3rd Infantry BCT, 10th Mountain Division, stationed at Fort Polk, Louisiana; 94th Cavalry Regiment
The 1st Maine Cavalry Regiment, armed with 16-shot Henry repeating rifles, led the attack on the Confederate rear guard and the Union forces drove them toward Farmville. [27] Wilcox led his division back across the river to protect the rear guard and the trains with rations just before they moved out toward Pamplin Station. [27]
25th Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment; 26th Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment; 27th Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment; 28th Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment; 29th Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment; 30th Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment; 31st Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment; 32nd Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment; 1st Maine Veteran ...
0–9. 1st Maine Cavalry Regiment; 1st Maine Infantry Regiment; 2nd Maine Infantry Regiment; 2nd Maine Light Artillery Battery; 3rd Maine Infantry Regiment
Goddard Mansion, a prominent ruin inside Fort Williams Park, was built in 1853–59 for Colonel John Goddard. Colonel Goddard was a businessman who commanded the 1st Maine Volunteer Cavalry Regiment for three months during the American Civil War. The mansion was purchased in 1898 by Judge Joseph W. Symond.
1st Maine Volunteer Cavalry's monument, Gettysburg National Battlefield, 1898. In 1889, he wrote a poem and history sketch about the 1st Maine Cavalry to celebrate the placement of a monument to his former Civil War regiment on at the Gettysburg National Battlefield. He then read both at that monument's dedication ceremony on October 3, 1889.