Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
4th Alabama Cavalry Regiment (Forrest's) 5th Alabama Cavalry Regiment; 6th Alabama Cavalry Regiment; 7th Alabama Cavalry Regiment; 8th Alabama Cavalry Regiment; 8th Alabama Cavalry Regiment; 9th Alabama Cavalry Regiment; 10th Alabama Cavalry Regiment; 11th Alabama Cavalry Regiment (10th Regiment - Burtwell's) 12th Alabama Cavalry Regiment Col ...
15th Alabama Infantry flag. The 15th Alabama Infantry Regiment was a Confederate volunteer infantry unit from the state of Alabama during the American Civil War.Recruited from six counties in the southeastern part of the state, it fought mostly with Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, though it also saw brief service with Braxton Bragg and the Army of Tennessee in late 1863 before ...
The Alabama Brigade was established on 19 January 1862; consisting of five Alabama infantry regiments that were collected from three different brigades. [2] In November, the 44th Alabama regiment was added to this brigade. The Alabama brigade was reorganized a final time in January 1863; and the 15th, 47th, and 48th Alabama regiments were added.
The Battle of Noonday Creek was a series of combat events in the Atlanta Campaign of the American Civil War that took place between June 10 and July 3 of 1864. [2]Brigadier General Kenner Garrard was ordered by Major General William Tecumseh Sherman to interpose between Major General Joseph Wheeler's Confederate cavalry and detached infantry at Noonday Creek, which was just a few miles from ...
1st Alabama Cavalry Regiment (Confederate) 1st Alabama Infantry Regiment; 2nd Alabama Cavalry Regiment; 3rd Alabama Infantry Regiment; 6th Alabama Cavalry Regiment; 7th Alabama Infantry Regiment; 8th Alabama Infantry Regiment; 9th Alabama Infantry Regiment; 10th Alabama Infantry Regiment; 11th Alabama Infantry Regiment; 14th Alabama Infantry ...
It was organized in Montgomery, Alabama, on June 25 of that year, with a strength of almost 3000 men. [2] The cavalry battalion eventually was detached and assigned to the 10th Confederate Cavalry Regiment; and Company C, 4th Artillery Battalion, was separated as the Barbour Light Artillery .
In 1863 Federal forces secured a foothold in northern Alabama in spite of spirited opposition from Confederate cavalry under General Nathan B. Forrest. A notable Confederate officer from Alabama was Col. William Calvin Oates. He was an instrumental commander during the attack at Little Round Top during the Battle of Gettysburg.
The 11th Alabama Volunteer Regiment in the Civil War. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc., 2008. ISBN 978-0-7864-7158-4. Hoole, William Stanley. History of the Forty–sixth Alabama Regiment Volunteer Infantry, 1862–1865. University, Alabama: Confederate Publishing Company, 1985.