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The 1st Maryland Infantry Regiment was a regiment of the Confederate army, formed shortly after the commencement of the American Civil War in April 1861. The unit was made up of volunteers from Maryland who, despite their home state remaining in the Union during the war, chose instead to fight for the Confederacy.
The battle is notable in that the Union 1st Maryland had been attacked by their fellow Marylanders, the Confederate 1st Maryland Infantry, CSA. [3] After hours of desperate fighting the Southerners emerged victorious. When the prisoners were taken, many men recognized former friends and family.
1st Lieutenant USA, Colonel CSA; Mexican–American War and Indian Wars; original commander of the 1st Maryland Infantry, relieved, killed at the First Battle of Bull Run while serving as Johnston's Chief of Ordnance Simon Bolivar Buckner: 1844
Maryland Zouaves, Zarvona's Zouaves; Maryland Guard, Co. B, 21st Virginia Infantry; Maryland Guerilla Zouaves, 2nd Co. C, Nelligan's Louisiana Infantry; The Lanier Guard, Company G, 13th Virginia Infantry; Company D, 54th Virginia Infantry; Howard Dragoons, 1st Company B, 7th Virginia Cavalry; Mason Rangers, Company G, 7th Virginia Cavalry
On October 22, 1863 the 1st Maryland Infantry Battalion was detached from the brigade of General George H. Steuart and assigned to the newly formed Maryland Line, travelling by rail to Hanover Junction, Virginia, where they met the 1st Maryland Cavalry, CSA, the Baltimore Light Artillery, CSA, the 1st Maryland Artillery, CSA, and the 4th ...
The 1st Maryland Infantry, Potomac Home Brigade was organized at Frederick, Maryland, beginning August 15, 1861, and mustered in on December 13, 1861, for three years under the command of Colonel William P. Maulsby.
The list of Maryland Confederate Civil War units is shown separately. Infantry. 1st Regiment Maryland Volunteer Infantry; 1st Maryland Infantry, Potomac Home Brigade;
On 7 May 1886, it became Company G of the 1st Regiment, Maryland Infantry. The company was mustered into Federal service at Pimlico on 17 May 1898 for the Spanish–American War as a unit of the 1st Maryland Volunteer Infantry. It trained with the regiment at Fort Monroe but did not complete training before the armistice went into effect on 12 ...