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The 40th Infantry Division ("Sunburst Division") [2] is a modular division of the California Army National Guard. Following the Army's modularization in the mid-2000s, the division has become a modular unit consisting of three brigade combat teams , with National Guardsmen from throughout the Pacific and Western United States and Oceania.
The list of North Carolina Union Civil War regiments is shown separately. [1] [2] Group portrait of the 60th North Carolina Infantry Regiment at the home of Lieutenant Colonel James Mitchell Ray for their 1889 reunion. From the Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress
27th-35th-49th Alabama Infantry: Col Samuel S. Ives; 55th Alabama Infantry; 57th Alabama Infantry; 12th Louisiana Infantry; French's Division BG Samuel Gibbs French. Ector's Brigade BG Mathew Ector. 29th North Carolina Infantry: Ltc Bacchus S. Proffitt; 39th North Carolina Infantry: Col David Coleman; 9th Texas Infantry
8th North Carolina Infantry: Ltc Rufus A. Barrier; 31st North Carolina Infantry: Ltc Charles W. Knight; 36th–40th North Carolina Infantry: Lt Selby Hardenburgh; 51st North Carolina Infantry: Capt James W. Lippitt; 61st North Carolina Infantry: Capt Augustus D. Lippitt, Col William L. Devane; Colquitt's Brigade BG Alfred H. Colquitt
The beach at Fort Fisher State Recreation Area, North Carolina. The museum features a map of the 1865 battle with three-dimensional models of Fort Fisher and Battery Buchanan. The map features a narration of the battle and fiber-optic lights to show the troop activities and locations.
The 40th Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment was a three-year infantry regiment of the Union Army that served in the Department of Virginia and North Carolina, the Army of the Potomac, and the Department of the South during the American Civil War. [1]
The Battle of Monroe's Crossroads (also known as the Battle of Fayetteville Road, and colloquially in the North as Kilpatrick's Shirttail Skedaddle [citation needed]) took place during the Carolinas Campaign of the American Civil War in Cumberland County, North Carolina (now in Hoke County), on the grounds of the present day Fort Liberty Military Reservation.
North Carolina Union troops captured and raided cities and towns in western North Carolina, eastern Tennessee, and southwest Virginia, most notably during the Battle of Bull's Gap, Battle of Red Banks and Stoneman's 1864 and 1865 raid. The territory captured remained under Union control for the duration of the war.