Showing posts with label Siege of Jackson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Siege of Jackson. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Fifteenth Regiment Iowa Volunteer Infantry

The organization of the Fifteenth Regiment of Iowa Volunteer Infantry began prior to Sept. 5, 1861, but the precise date is not revealed in the report of the Adjutant General of the State. His report for the year 1863, however (Vol. 1, Page 547), shows that company B of this regiment was ordered into quarters Sept. 5, 1861, and the entire ten companies of which the regiment was composed were ordered into quarters by Governor Kirkwood on dates ranging from Sept. 5, 1861, to Feb. 13, 1862. Keokuk, Iowa, was the place designated for the rendezvous of the regiment and, at that place, the ten companies were mustered into the service of the United States, on dates ranging from Nov. 1, 1861, to Feb. 22, 1862, by Capt. Charles C. Smith and Lieut. C. J. Ball, United States Army. The aggregate strength of the regiment at muster in was 1,127, rank and file [see note 1].

The compiler of this historical sketch has adhered to the official reports and returns found in the War of the Rebellion Official Records, published by authority of the Secretary of War, and the official data contained in the military archives of the State of Iowa, covering the period embraced in the service of the regiment. The record of personal service shown opposite the name of each officer and enlisted man in the subjoined roster has also been obtained from the official sources above indicated, supplemented by such information as could be procured from the War Department in Washington and other reliable sources. Some of these records will be found to be incomplete and, no doubt, some are incorrect. This is of course much to be regretted, but every effort has been made to prevent errors and omissions. The reader is referred to the introductory article to this volume, which shows some of the difficulties encountered in obtaining the facts with reference to these individual records. Suffice it to say that as much care has been exercised to secure a correct record for the enlisted man as for that of the officer. The compiler also wishes it understood that only the outlines of history of the long and faithful service of the regiment could be given within the limitations prescribed by the act of the General Assembly of the State of Iowa which authorized the publication of this work.

The short time the regiment remained in rendezvous at Keokuk was utilized to the best advantage by the officers and men, in drilling as best they could without muskets, going through some of the simpler movements of company and battalion drill and applying themselves to the study of tactics and army regulations. Among the officers, Adjutant George Pomutz and Major William W. Belknap had the advantage of having received some military training, but the large majority of both officers and enlisted men were utterly without experience and had to acquire, in the brief time which elapsed before they were called upon to face the enemy in the field, such knowledge of their duties as soldiers as would enable them to acquit themselves with credit and honor to the State that sent them to the front to re-inforce their comrades, who had already met the enemy in several hard fought battles. In this state of unpreparedness the regiment left Keokuk on the 19th day of March, 1862, and was conveyed by steamboat to St. Louis and, upon its arrival there, marched to Benton Barracks, where troops were being concentrated, and given such instruction as was possible before proceeding to join the Army of the Tennessee, then encamped at Pittsburg Landing. At Benton Barracks the regiment received its arms, accoutrements and general equipment.

On the morning of April 1, 1862, the regiment marched to St Louis, where it embarked, with orders to report to General Grant at Savannah, Tenn. Arriving, the night before the commencement of the battle of Shiloh, Col. Hugh T. Reld, commanding the regiment, was ordered to proceed to Pittsburg Landing, and there disembark his command and report to General Prentiss. The regiment arrived at Pittsburg Landing on the morning of April 6, 1862. In his official report Colonel Reid states that, upon reaching Pittsburg Landing, he proceeded at once to report to General Prentiss, and found that officer and the division under his command already under the fire of the enemy. Colonel Reid was ordered to bring his regiment forward as soon as possible. He at once rode back to the landing and ordered his regiment to disembark quickly. As fast as the men reached the shore they formed in line of battle, ammunition was distributed, and guns were loaded for the first time since the men had received them. At this time an order was given by a member of General Grant's staff directing Colonel Reid to hold the position in which he had formed, to prevent stragglers from the battlefield from reaching the landing. The regiment remained in that position for about an hour, when an order came from General Grant to Colonel Reid to advance to the support of General McClernand's division, some two miles to the front. The Sixteenth Iowa Infantry was included in this order, and the two regiments moved promptly forward under the direction of a staff officer of General McClernand. A great many soldiers were met, retreating from the battlefield, while the roar of battle In front indicated that a desperate conflict was in progress, in which the enemy was succeeding in pressing the Union forces toward the river. The situation was such as to test to the utmost the courage of these men who were fresh from their homes, unused to the dreadful scenes transpiring about them, with the boom of cannon and crash of musketry sounding nearer each moment, and with the panic-stricken and wounded streaming to the rear; yet they pressed steadily forward. The following extract from Colonel Reid's official report will show how bravely his regiment conducted itself when it came into action, and while under the fire of the enemy [see note 2].


Our flag staff was shot through and our colors riddled with bullets; for two hours, from 10 to 12 o'clock, we maintained our position, our men fighting like veterans. The undersigned [see note 3] was severely wounded by a musket ball through the neck, which knocked him from his horse, paralyzed for the time, but recovering in a short time, remounted and continued in command throughout the fight. Fifteen of the thirty-two commissioned officers who went on the field had been killed, wounded, or taken prisoners; twenty-two officers and men had been killed, and one hundred and fifty-six wounded. • • • The enemy were attempting to outflank us on the right and left, we were unsupported by artillery or any other regiment except the gallant Sixteenth, which had also suffered severely. It became necessary for the two regiments to retreat or run the risk of being captured, and by order of General McClernand the retreat was made. Portions of the regiments rallied and fought with other divisions later in the day and on Monday. Where nearly all fought with bravery it might seem invidious to particularize, but I hope to do no one injustice by specially pointing out those whose personal valor, during the action, came under my notice. Lieutenant Colonel Dewey had his horse shot under him; Major Belknap was always in the right place, at the right time, directing and encouraging officers and men as coolly as a veteran; he was wounded but not disabled, and had his horse shot under him, but remained on the field performing his duty on foot Adjutant Pomutz distinguished himself during the action for his coolness and courage; he, too, was wounded. Captains Kittle of company A, Smith of company B, Seevers of company C, Madison of company D, Hutchcraft of company E, Cunningham of company G, Day of company I, Hedrick of company K, who was captured in a charge upon the enemy, all distinguished themselves for their gallantry and courage in leading forward and encouraging their men; Captain Blackmar of company F, was wounded in the action and disabled; First Lieutenant Goode of same company also wounded ; Captain Clark, of company H, was not in the engagement, having been left sick in the hospital at St. Louis; Captains Hutchcraft and Day were both severely wounded ; Second Lieutenant Penniman of company A, and Hamilton of company I, were killed while bravely performing their duty. First Lieutenant King and Second Lieutenant Danielson of company H were both severely wounded while acting well their part, thus leaving the company without a commissioned officer. First Lieutenants Studer of company B, Porter of company D, Craig of company B, Hanks of company G, J. Monroe Reid of company I, who, though wounded himself, continued in command of the company after the Captain was disabled and the Second Lieutenant killed, and Eldridge of company K, all deserve special praise for the manner in which they conducted themselves on the field. Second Lieutenants Lanstrum of company B, Brown of company E, Herbert of company C, and Sergeant Major Brown, who was severely wounded, conducted themselves well on the field. The non-commissioned officers generally were at their posts and performed their duty. The Color Sergeant, Newton J. Rogers, who fought in the First Iowa at Springfield, gallantly bore our standard forward and planted It among the enemy where it was bravely maintained and defended by portions of companies C, E, I and K It must be remembered that this regiment had just received its arms and that the men had never had an opportunity of learning the use of them until they came on the battlefield; that they had just landed and were attached to no brigade, and fought the enemy without the support of artillery, in a position from which more experienced troops had been compelled to retire. • • • We have no means of learning the loss of the enemy in this engagement except from what they told some of our wounded men, who were taken prisoners and left behind the next day, when the enemy made their final retreat; but from this source we learned that they had forty men killed In the Immediate vicinity of our colors, and a large number wounded. • • • While we mourn our comrades In arms, the gallant dead, whose lives were sacrificed on the altar of their country, we are solaced with the belief that a grateful people will. In after times, pay a proper tribute to their memory.


At the close of his report Colonel Reid expresses his obligations to Quartermaster Higley, Surgeon Davis, Assistant Surgeon Gibbon and Chaplain Estabrook, for the faithful and efficient manner in which they discharged the duties of their respective offices. Colonel Reid states that the total loss of his regiment at the battle of Shiloh was 186. In the tabulated returns of casualties, as shown by the official records [see note 4], the total loss is given as 185, and this slight discrepancy is readily accounted for, as stated by Loren S. Tyler, who compiled the history of the Fifteenth Iowa Infantry (published In 1887) in which he gives a tabulated statement of losses, by companies, showing an aggregate loss of 213, and says, "Without original lists of casualties, it is impossible to make a list that will agree with the number stated in the reports of battle, as, after the reports have been forwarded to headquarters, other casualties are always found." Adjutant Pomutz states that the number of the regiment engaged was 760, and gives the total loss as 188 [see note 5]. The loss was, therefore, very nearly one-fourth of the number engaged.

The compiler has given more space to the account of this first battle in which the regiment was engaged than he will be able to give to those which followed. With the highest appreciation of its subsequent splendid achievements on other battlefields, he considers the battle of Shiloh as having been the severest test of the courage and fortitude of the officers and men of the regiment to which they were subjected during their long term of service. No regiment ever acquitted itself with greater credit in its first battle.

Soon after the battle the regiment was attached to a temporary brigade, consisting of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Iowa, and Eighteenth Wisconsin, Infantry, of which Colonel Reid of the Fifteenth Iowa was in command, and which took part in the advance upon Corinth, Miss., to which place the defeated rebel army had retreated, and where, behind strong earth-works, it grimly awaited the attack of the Union army. April 27, 1862, marked an important event in the career of the regiment, for upon that date it became a part of the brigade consisting of the Eleventh, Thirteenth, Fifteenth and Sixteenth Regiments of Iowa Infantry, known as Crocker's Iowa Brigade, and which achieved great distinction by its subsequent brilliant achievements in battle. The history of these four Iowa regiments for the remainder of the war is largely identical. They remained together until they were mustered out, their terms of service expiring about the same time.

The Union lines continued to advance upon Corinth, and laid siege to that stronghold. The Brigade, under command of the gallant and gifted Col. M. M. Crocker, of the Thirteenth Iowa, took part in the arduous siege operations which ensued, and which ended on the morning of May 30, 1862, the enemy having evacuated Corinth during the previous night. The army of the Tennessee at once took possession of the abandoned works. During the month of June the regiment and brigade were encamped near Corinth. On June 27th the Fifteenth Iowa moved Inside the works and acted as provost guard for the post, Major Belknap acting as Provost Marshal.

At the end of July the regiment, with its brigade and division, under the command of General Tuttle, was ordered to march to Bolivar, to re-inforce the troops at that important post. Soon after reaching Bolivar, General Tuttle was ordered to another command, and Colonel Crocker succeeded him in command of the division. The command of the brigade now devolved upon Colonel Reid, who detailed Adjutant Pomutz as Assistant Adjutant General. The enemy, in large force, continued in the vicinity of Bolivar for several weeks, and an attack was constantly threatened; but this proved to be a ruse, intended to draw away from Corinth a sufficient number of Union troops to enable the rebel forces to recapture that important post. When the real purpose of the enemy was discovered, by his sudden appearance at Iuka and capture of that place, the Fifteenth Iowa, with its brigade, was ordered to return to Corinth, and thence to Iuka, where it assisted in the operations against the enemy. But only one of the regiments of the Brigade was ordered forward and became engaged in the battle of Iuka; this was the Sixteenth Iowa, which fought bravely and lost heavily in that engagement on Sept. 19, 1862.

The brigade now returned to Corinth, where, on the 3d and 4th of October, 1862, it took part in the hard fought battles in and around that place. The Fifteenth Iowa occupied an advanced position and suffered heavy loss. The following extracts from the official report of Col. M. M. Crocker, brigade commander, will show how well the regiment performed its duty in these battles:

About 5 o'clock on the morning of the 3d Inst., the brigade formed, two regiments (the Eleventh and Thirteenth) in line of battle facing the west, and the Fifteenth and Sixteenth in close column by division in rear of the line. The regiments remained in that position, with skirmishers deployed in front, receiving an occasional cannon shot, until about 3 o'clock, when, the division on the right having fallen back, a change of front was ordered. The Fifteenth and Sixteenth were then formed in line of battle perpendicular to the first line and the Eleventh and Thirteenth in close column by division in the rear.

In this position the brigade remained until about 4 P. M., when orders were received to again change front so as to connect the right of the brigade with the left of General Davies' division, its left to rest in the direction of Battery E. After the execution of this order had been commenced notice was received from General McKean that the division was to move back inside the inner fortifications, and an order received that the Eleventh and Thirteenth Regiments form in line of battle a quarter of a mile in rear of the line formed by the Fifteenth and Sixteenth, in front of and parallel to the road over which the artillery of the division must pass, and the brigade to protect the movements of the rest of the division and the artillery.

The execution of the order to move back had just commenced when the enemy, in greatly superior force, attacked the front line — the Fifteenth and Sixteenth. The officers and men of these regiments, acting with signal determination and bravery, not only held the enemy in check, but drove him back, and held their position until notice was received that the artillery had passed safely to the rear, when they were ordered to fall back and form in line of battle on the right of the second line, which they did in good order, the enemy declining to follow. This engagement lasted three-quarters of an hour; the firing was incessant, and the regiments, especially the Fifteenth, suffered severely.

I deem it my especial duty to particularly mention Lieutenant Colonel Belknap, who commanded the Fifteenth Regiment. This regiment was under the hottest fire, and Colonel Belknap was everywhere along the line, mounted, with sword in hand, encouraging by voice and gesture his men to stand their ground. Lieut Col. Addison H. Sanders, who commanded the Sixteenth, is entitled to great praise. He rode along the line of his regiment amid the storm of bullets, encouraging his brave boys who had so lately suffered at Iuka to remember their duty, and although severely wounded remained with his regiment until it marched off the field. Majors Cunningham, of the Fifteenth, and Purcell, of the Sixteenth, did their whole duty, and conducted themselves with great bravery.

Colonel Crocker then describes the positions occupied by his brigade after passing inside the fortifications at Corinth; the part it performed behind the works during the engagement of October 4th, in which it suffered but few casualties; the pursuit of the retreating enemy, in which his whole brigade participated, and which continued until the evening of October 8th, and the return to Corinth on the 13th; and, near the close of his report, says:

The Brigade, during the protracted movements of the battle and pursuit, encountering every hardship and privation incident to such campaigning, behaved with great fortitude, meeting every danger and hardship cheerfully; and I acknowledge my obligations to all the field officers for their cheerful, hearty and intelligent co-operation. Col. H. T. Reid of the Fifteenth Iowa, though prostrated by illness and unable to be in the field during the first day's engagement, on the second day left his sick bed, joined his command, and, though unable to ride his horse, remained with his regiment, traveling in an ambulance until the pursuit was abandoned. Lieutenant Lanstrum of the Fifteenth Iowa, who acted as aide, deported himself as a good and faithful soldier. The loss of the brigade occurred principally in the engagement on the 3d instant, the Fifteenth suffering most. The killed, wounded and missing are as follows, namely: killed 14, wounded 110, missing 22. Total 146 [see note 6]



The tabulated report of casualties gives the losses of the brigade by regiments, as follows:

Eleventh Iowa, Killed 3, wounded 8, missing 10, Total, 21
Thirteenth Iowa, Killed 1, wounded 14, missing [0], Total, 15
Fifteenth Iowa, Killed 11, wounded 67, missing 8, Total, 86
Sixteenth Iowa, Killed 1, wounded 20, missing 6, Total, 27
Total loss of Brigade l49 [See note 7.]

It will thus be seen that, in the battles of Shiloh and Corinth alone, the regiment had sustained an aggregate loss of 334, not including its smaller losses during the siege and its minor encounters with the enemy around Bolivar, which would considerably increase this aggregate. With less than eight months of its three years' term of service completed, it had made a record as a fighting regiment that would have entitled it to a most prominent place in history, if its service had ended with the battle of Corinth. The record of the long series of campaigns and battles through which the regiment was yet to pass must be condensed into a space not exceeding that already occupied, and to this difficult task the compiler now commits himself.

Upon its return to Corinth the regiment went into camp, where it remained for several weeks. The weather grew cold and the troops were preparing for winter quarters, when, on November 2d, orders came to take up the line of march for Grand Junction, at which place the command arrived on November 5th, and where a part of the troops, that were to participate in the expedition against Vicksburg, were being concentrated. On November 28th the troops were put in motion for the South, the Third Brigade of the Sixth Division of Hamilton's Corps (Crocker's Iowa Brigade) taking the advance. The Fifteenth Iowa, with its brigade, took a prominent part in the operations of that great expedition which penetrated to the interior of Mississippi, and was well on the way towards Vicksburg when a strong force of the enemy's cavalry succeeded in getting in the rear of General Grant's army, captured Holly Springs, where the immense stores of supplies for the use of the army had been accumulated, destroyed the supplies, and thus compelled the retreat of the army towards Memphis. During this retrograde movement the soldiers suffered greatly from exposure to frequent storms and from lack of sufficient food.

The regiment, with its brigade and division, reached Memphis on the 13th of January, 1863. On January 18th, the expedition against Vicksburg was renewed, this time by way of the Mississippi River. The regiments and brigades of the Sixth Division, including Crocker's Iowa Brigade, embarked on a fleet of fifteen steamers and were conveyed down the great river to Milliken's Bend, a short distance above the mouth of the Yazoo River. Here the troops disembarked and went into camp. From this point a detachment from the brigade — consisting of details from the Fifteenth Iowa and the other regiments, under command of Lieutenant Colonel Belknap — was mounted and sent upon a couple of reconnoitering expeditions, in which they came in contact with the enemy and lost one man killed and several wounded.

On the 20th of January, 1863, the Third Brigade and the Sixth Division were transferred to Major General McPherson's Seventeenth Army Corps, Brigadier General McArthur retaining command of the division, and Colonel Crocker of the brigade. On February 8th the command embarked and was conveyed to Providence, on the Louisiana shore, seventy miles north of Vicksburg, where it disembarked and went into camp. Here the cutting of the canal — to connect Lake Providence with the Mississippi — was begun and continued until the 16th of March, when it was completed. It was an arduous undertaking, participated in by all the troops, in which the Fifteenth Iowa bore its full part. During the first days in March, the regiment and brigade were subjected to a rigid inspection by William E. Strong, Inspector General of the Seventeenth Army Corps, who highly commended the officers and men for their soldierly bearing, excellence in drill and the manual of arms, and the correct manner in which the records were kept, and concludes his report as follows: "Once more I say that the Third Brigade, commanded by Col. M. M. Crocker, are an honor to the division and corps to which they are attached, and an honor to the army of the Tennessee, an honor to their friends at home, to their State and to their country, and I know from their record in the field, that they must be a terror to the foe."

On March 10th, Lieutenant Colonel Belknap was detached from the regiment and appointed Provost Marshal of the Seventeenth Corps. The regiment with its brigade left Lake Providence April 21st, and, from that time until the close of the "Vicksburg campaign, was actively engaged in important movements, contributing its full share to the accomplishment of the grand result — the surrender of the rebel stronghold on the 4th of July, 1863.

About the time the command moved from Lake Providence, Colonel Crocker — whose appointment as Brigadier General had been confirmed — was assigned to the command of the Seventh Division of the Seventeenth Army Corps, and was thus separated from the brigade which bore his name and whose splendid conduct, under his command, had been a most important factor in securing his promotion. Col. H. T. Reid, having been promoted to Brigadier General, was assigned to the command of the First Brigade of the division; Colonel Hall of the Eleventh Iowa, who was the senior officer present for duty, became commander of the Third Brigade, and Lieutenant Colonel Belknap — who was soon after promoted to Colonel — returned from staff duty and took command of the regiment.

On the 26th of April the regiment and brigade marched to Holmes' Plantation and remained in camp there until May 11th. On May 13th, marched to Hard Times Landing, and crossed by boat to Grand Gulf, south of Vicksburg. The subsequent movements of the Fifteenth Iowa up to and including July 4th — the date of the surrender of Vicksburg — are described in the official report of Colonel Belknap, showing the numerous positions to which it was assigned during the progress of the siege, and the important service it performed, being part of the time on duty in the trenches and part of the time engaged in guarding against an attack by the rebel General Johnston's army from the rear. At the time of the surrender the regiment occupied a position near Messenger's Ferry, in view of Johnston's army. At the close of his report Colonel Belknap says: "The men of this regiment have endured the hardships of these severe marches and the trials of the campaign without a murmur. Whether at work in the trenches or acting as sharpshooters, they have evinced an alacrity, zeal and courage which deserves full commendation, and in every movement I have had the full co-operation of every officer of the command."

After the surrender of Vicksburg the regiment with its brigade took part in the expedition against Johnston, which ended with the evacuation of Jackson by the rebel forces on July 16th. The Third Brigade, now under the command of Colonel Chambers of the Sixteenth Iowa, returned towards Vicksburg, halting at Black River until relieved by other troops, when it marched to Vicksburg and went into camp north of the city. Here a considerable number of the men were given a thirty days' furlough and some of the officers were granted leave of absence for the same length of time, Colonel Belknap among the number.

On the 21st of August the regiment, under command of Lieutenant Colonel Hedrick, participated in an expedition against a force of the enemy occupying a fortified position at Monroe, La., on the Washita River. After a toilsome march and considerable skirmishing, by the cavalry which led the advance, the regiment formed in line — with the other Union forces — in front of the enemy's position, but, after a brief skirmish, the rebel forces retreated, abandoning the town and a considerable quantity of military stores. The object of the expedition having been accomplished, the troops returned to Vicksburg, where they arrived Sept. 3, 1863.

Colonel Chambers, of the Sixteenth Iowa, having been promoted to Brigadier General, was assigned to the command of the Sixth Division on September 11th, and Colonel Hall of the Eleventh Iowa again took command of the brigade, which moved to a new camp south of Vicksburg. Here the regiment was engaged in the performance of camp and garrison duty, varied only by participation in several expeditions into the country, in which it did not come into contact with the enemy. From the middle of September, 1863, to the last of January, 1864, the regiment was almost entirely relieved from active operations in the field. This long period was employed to the very best advantage by Colonel Belknap in instructing his officers and men in the proper discharge of their duties in camp, on the march and in battle. This capable and energetic officer felt a just pride in the high state of discipline and efficiency to which his regiment had attained. He had the satisfaction of witnessing the good results of his instruction in the splendid conduct of his regiment in the subsequent campaigns and battles in which it was engaged, and which are all too briefly described in the remainder of this historical sketch.

Near the close of the year 1863, in response to the call of the Government, three-fourths of the men of the Fifteenth Iowa had re-enlisted for three years, or during the war, to date from the expiration of their original term of service. On the 3d of February, 1864, the regiment, with its brigade and division, again took up the line of march and became part of the army, under command of Maj. Gen. W. T. Sherman, which penetrated far into the interior of the State of Mississippi. While the regiment did not come into actual contact with the enemy on this expedition, it sustained its full share of the hardships incident to a long march in winter without tents and often without sufficient rations. The regiment returned to its camp at Vicksburg on the 4th of March. On the 13th, that portion of the regiment which had re-enlisted started on veteran furlough to their homes in Iowa, being conveyed by steamer to Keokuk, which place they reached on March 22d, and each soldier was given a furlough of 30 days from that date; at the expiration of which they returned to Keokuk and were conveyed, by way of Cairo, Ill., and Paducah, Ky., to Clifton, Tenn., where they landed May 6, 1864. From Clifton the command marched to Pulaski, Tenn., and thence to Huntsville, Ala., where the non-veterans of the regiment, under command of Major Pomutz, had previously arrived, and the regiment was reunited. In the meantime. General Crocker had been compelled to relinquish the command of the division, on account of poor health, and Gen. W. Q. Gresham had succeeded him as division commander. Major General McPherson, having been promoted to the command of the Army of the Tennessee, was succeeded by Maj. Gen. Frank P. Blair, Jr., as commander of the Seventeenth Army Corps. It was with deep regret that the regiment and brigade witnessed the departure of their old commander, General Crocker, to whom they had become greatly attached.

And now the great campaign, which was to have such a decisive effect, was about to begin. The regiment, with its brigade, division and corps, marching through the mountainous districts of northern Alabama and Georgia, by way of Rome, Kingston and Allatoona, reached Ackworth June 8th and there joined McPherson's Army of the Tennessee, the Seventeenth Corps occupying the extreme left of Sherman's Grand Army, composed of the Armies of the Cumberland, Tennessee and Ohio.

From Ackworth to Big Shanty, Kenesaw Mountain, Noonday Creek, Brushy Mountain, Nick-a-jack Creek, Turner's Ferry and the Chattahoochee, the regiment with its brigade pushed steadily on, skirmishing with the enemy almost constantly and driving him from one after another of his strongly entrenched positions, all of which were bravely and stubbornly defended. These heavy skirmishes often rose to the dignity of a battle; indeed, it might be said that it was a regular series of battles, in which the Fifteenth Iowa sustained its full share of the fighting. General Sherman made this statement: "It is impossible to state accurately our losses in one separate battle; for the fighting was continuous, almost daily, among trees and bushes, on ground where one could rarely see a hundred yards ahead." Up to the 22d of July the Fifteenth Iowa had lost nearly one hundred in killed and wounded. In the battles of the 21st, 22d and 28th of July, near Atlanta, the regiment lost heavily. The official reports of Col. Wm. W. Belknap show in detail the splendid conduct of his regiment in these engagements. Space will only permit brief quotations from these reports. Of the charge of the regiment on the 21st he says: "At 8 o'clock on the morning of the 21st, skirmishing having been constant after daylight, the order was received from Colonel Shane commanding brigade, to advance on the enemy's works in front. • • • The whole front line advanced rapidly with cheers to the crest of the hill in full view of the rebel works, and fought with valor and determination. • • • In front of the Fifteenth Iowa a battery of several guns, previously masked, opened upon us with grape and canister, and when the line was ordered to retire it did so in good order, notwithstanding the withering fire from the battery. The attack was successful in enabling Force's brigade to hold the hill on our left, and compelling the evacuation of the line by the enemy on the next morning. The officers and men of the regiment did their duty, as they always do." • • •

After describing the different positions occupied by his regiment in that tremendous battle of July 22, 1864, in which the Fifteenth and the other regiments of the Iowa Brigade so greatly distinguished themselves. Colonel Belknap depicts the closing scene of that terrible conflict, as follows:

The enemy fought bravely and obstinately, and many of them were shot down fighting at the muzzles of our guns. The Forty-fifth Alabama, led by Colonel Lampley and Major Freeman, advanced on our line, but was instantly repulsed, every man within view being killed or captured. The Fifteenth Iowa captured two field officers, a captain and many men of this regiment, and the Lieutenant Colonel of the Thirty-eighth Tennessee. The bearer of the regimental battle flag was shot down by Private Crowder of company C, and the commanding officer of the regiment had the satisfaction of personally capturing Colonel Lampley, commanding officer of the Forty-fifth Alabama. • • • The regiment mourns the loss of its gallant dead. Veterans and recruits fought side by side, and testified their bravery and devotion. • • • Lieut. B. M. Gebhart, of company D, was the only officer killed; wounded severely at Shiloh, captured there and a prisoner for months, he returned to his regiment, bravely did his duty, and died a soldier's death. The army has in its ranks no braver man. My thanks are due to Adj. E. H. King and all the officers and men of the regiment for their gallantry that contributed so eminently to the success of the day. We had 380 men in line, 131 of whom were killed, wounded or captured [see note 8]. • • •


After a brief respite, the regiment went into battle on July 28, 1864, and again gloriously sustained the honor of the flag. The combined losses of the regiment in these three days of battle were 190 men and officers out of 428 engaged, making an aggregate loss of forty-five per cent. No regiment that participated in the great Atlanta campaign made a better record.

Col. Wm. W. Belknap was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General July 30th, and was assigned to the command of his old Iowa brigade. Maj. George Pomutz was at the same time — at his own request — relieved from staff duty at corps headquarters, and, returning to his regiment, assumed command, in the absence of Lieutenant Colonel Hedrick [see note 9], who was severely wounded in the battle of July 22d. The regiment and brigade continued in constant and active service to the close of the great campaign, and the list of killed and wounded grew longer. On the 1st of September the enemy evacuated Atlanta. The regiment and brigade took part in the pursuit of Hood's army, and in all the operations of the division and army corps after the fall of Atlanta. In his very complete and carefully detailed history of the regiment [see note 10], from its organization to its final muster out of the service, Lieut. Col. George Pomutz gives a statement showing the remarkable experience of the Fifteenth Iowa Infantry during the campaign and up to the fall of Atlanta. The statement is here quoted as follows:

The Fifteenth Iowa was under fire during the siege of Atlanta, on the following days:

In June, from 10th to 30th inclusive, north of Atlanta, 20 days.
In July, from 1st to 16th inclusive, north of Atlanta, 16 days.
In July, from 20th to 26th inclusive, east of Atlanta, 7 days.
In July, from 27th to 31st inclusive, west of Atlanta, 5 days.
In August, from 1st to 26th inclusive, southwest of Atlanta, 26 days.
In August, from 28th to 31st inclusive, southwest of Atlanta, 2 days.
In September, from 1st to 5th inclusive, southeast of Atlanta, 5 days.
Number of days: 81 days.


Days of battles or advances upon the enemy, or of repulsing the enemy's attacks:

June 15th, 19th, 23d, 27th: 4 days
July 4th, 5th, 20th, 21st, 22d, 28th: 6 days
August 17th, 20th, 28th, 31st: 4 days
September 1st, 2d: 2 days
Total days: 16 days

On the 19th of October, 1864, the non-veterans, whose term of service had expired, were conveyed by rail to Chattanooga, and were there mustered out of the service. These men were entitled to the honor of having faithfully performed their duty and of serving the full term for which they had enlisted. The end of the great war was evidently near, and the soldiers who had reenlisted, together with the recruits constantly joining them, gave the Government an army amply sufficient for the final crushing out of the rebellion.

The veteran regiment, and the recruits which had been assigned to it, now entered upon the closing campaigns of the war. During the long and arduous march from Atlanta to the sea, and from Savannah through the Carolinas to Richmond and on to Washington, the regiment and brigade, Its numbers greatly augmented by recruits which joined it on the way, performed every duty with the same alacrity and fidelity which had characterized it in the past. There was much fighting yet to be done, but there were no great battles fought; the enemy, while stubbornly and bravely resisting the advance of the Union army, not being strong enough to seriously impede its progress. The rebel General Johnston surrendered his army on the 26th of April, 1865, and, from that time, the march towards the North was unobstructed. On the 19th of May the long march was ended, and the regiment went into camp at Alexandria near Washington.

May 24, 1865, General Sherman's army passed in review before the President and Lieutenant General Grant. Conspicuous among the troops in that splendid pageant was the Iowa Brigade whose first commander, the gallant General Crocker, was then in Washington, suffering from the malady which had compelled him to leave the field, and from the effects of which he died soon afterwards. On June 1st the Army of the Tennessee was ordered to Louisville, Ky. The troops were conveyed by rail to Parkersburg, on the Ohio river, and thence by steamboat to Louisville, where the Fifteenth Iowa arrived June 12th, and remained in camp until July 24, 1865, on which date it was mustered out of the service of the United States. It then proceeded by rail to Davenport, Iowa, where it received final payment, was disbanded, and the men returned to their homes. Before disbanding, Lieut. Col. George Pomutz [see note 11] issued a farewell order, in which, after recounting the experience of the regiment amid the trials, dangers and hardships of war, he concludes as follows:

Soldiers of the Fifteenth Iowa: — Your record is a noble one. For three and a half years you have borne the banner of the stars and stripes, the emblem of the power and unity of our Government; at the same time as the exponent of your own determination to assist in upholding that Government and its laws, you have carried and defended that banner through a distance marched, and traveled, of seven thousand eight hundred ninety-eight miles, since March, 1862. Out of the aggregate number of 1,763 men who have been members of the regiment since its organization, 1,051 are out, a fearful proportion of whom comprises those killed, the deceased and those crippled and disabled for life. Proof enough of the devotion of the members of the regiment to our Government and its laws. Then let our actions and deeds show, when we return to our own firesides, that we are the foremost in obeying the laws of the country we have been fighting to uphold, that we are determined to let our future conduct ever be that of peaceful citizens in time of peace, as it has been that of true warriors in time of war [see note 12].

This patriotic injunction has been faithfully observed by the survivors of the Fifteenth Iowa, whose record as citizens has been kept up to the high standard of their military service. Many of them have been important factors in the development and upbuilding of this great commonwealth, which has discharged a high duty in thus endeavoring to honor the memory of the brave men it sent forth to battle for the principles of justice and human liberty, as exemplified by the Government of the United States of America.


SUMMARY OF CASUALTIES.
Total Enrollment 1926
Killed 65
Wounded 416
Died of wounds 80
Died of disease 198
Discharged for wounds, disease and other causes 332
Captured 83
Transferred 32
Buried in National Cemeteries 168


[Note 1.] Report of Adjutant General of Iowa, 1863, Vol. 1, Pages 537 to 582, inclusive, showing original roster of the Regiment.

[Note 2.] Adjutant General of Iowa, 1863, Report, Vol. 2, Page 800.

[Note 3.] Colonel Hugh T. Reid.

[Note 4.] War of the Rebellion Official Records, Series 1, Vol. 10, Page 106.

[Note 5.] Report of Adjutant General of Iowa, 1866, Page 200.

[Note 6.] War of the Rebellion Official Records, Series 1, Vol. 17, Page 358.

[Note 7.] War of the Rebellion Official Records, Series 1, Vol. 17, Page 176. "Revised Statement."

[Note 8.] War of the Rebellion Official Records, Series 1, Vol. 38, Pages 606 to 807, inclusive.

[Note 9.] Col. J. M. Hedrick, who was so severely wounded at Atlanta — July 22, 1864 — as to disable him for active service, was detailed for special duty as a member of a General Court Martial in Washington, D. C, and was retained upon that duty until Aug. 11, 1866, when he was mustered out of the service. He received the brevet rank of Brigadier General March 13, 1865. After the close of the war he made a most honorable record in public and private life. He died at his home in Ottumwa, Iowa, Oct 8, 1886.

[Note 10.] Adjutant General's Report, State of Iowa, 1866, Pages 197 to 267, inclusive.

[Note 11.] Lieut. Col. George Pomutz was a native of Hungary, where he received a military education. He came to America in 1848, and was one of the most loyal defenders of his adopted country. After the close of the war he was appointed Consul General of the United States at St. Petersburg, Russia, and died there Oct. 12, 1882.

[Note 12.] Adjutant General's Report, State of Iowa, 1866, Pages 266-267.


SOURCE: Roster & Record of Iowa Soldiers During the War of the Rebellion, Volume 2, p.883-94

Friday, February 19, 2010

Tenth Regiment Iowa Volunteer Infantry

The Tenth regiment was ordered into quarters by the Governor in the latter part ol August, 1861. Nine full companies had assembled at the designated rendezvous by the 6th of September, and were mustered into the service of the United States by Capt. Alexander Chambers, United States Army, at Camp Fremont, near Iowa City, on the 6th and 7th days of September, 1861. The date of the completed muster of the tenth company (K) appears in the official record as October 11th, which would indicate that the company was not filled to the maximum until after the regiment had taken the field.

The names of its field and staff and company officers at organization will be found in the subjoined roster, and the subsequent changes, on account of death, promotion, resignation, or from whatever cause, will be found in the alphabetically arranged roster which follows, with the personal record of service opposite the name of each officer and enlisted man. These records have been compiled from the official reports of the Adjutant General of Iowa, supplemented by those on file in the War Department at Washington, in so far as access could be obtained to those records. It is more than possible that, with all the care that has been taken to make these records accurate, some errors have been made. When the magnitude of the work and the length of time which has transpired since the close of the war are taken into consideration, it will not be a matter for surprise —however much it is to be regretted — that all the mistakes as well as omissions revealed by these old records could not be discovered and corrected. It is believed that, in the main, these paragraphs will be found to properly represent the facts, briefly stated, connected with the personal service of each soldier of the regiment.

September 24, 1861, the regiment embarked on board transports at Davenport, for St. Louis, arriving there on the 27th. Here it received its arms, uniforms and camp equipments, and on October 1st was ordered to Cape Girardeau to aid in fortifying that place against a threatened attack of the enemy. From Cape Girardeau, the regiment engaged in an expedition which resulted in the dispersion of a rebel force under the command of Gen. Jeff Thompson. November 12th it was ordered to Bird's Point, and from that place engaged in several expeditions, in one of which — near Charleston — it had a sharp encounter with the enemy, resulting in a loss to the Tenth Iowa of 8 killed and 16 wounded [see note 1]. The regiment suffered greatly while at Bird's Point from sickness, the prevailing and most fatal malady being measles, the aggregate loss from November 12, 1861, to March 4, 1862, being 96 by death and by discharge on account of disease. It will thus be seen that in less than six months the regiment had suffered a loss of 120 men in killed and wounded and by death and discharge because of sickness. It was repeating the experience of the Iowa regiments which had preceded it, in the loss of a large number who could not withstand the hard conditions to which they were subjected by the change from the comforts of their home life to the hardships and exposure of the camp and the march during a winter campaign.

Early in March, 1862, the regiment was ordered to New Madrid, Mo., where it participated in the operations that led up to the evacuation of that place by the enemy; and a detachment from the Tenth Iowa, under Major McCalla, was first to enter the rebel works. It also assisted in the capture of Island No. 10, and in the pursuit of the enemy to Tiptonville, where 5,000 of the enemy and a large quantity of military supplies were captured. Following this brilliant achievement, the Tenth Iowa, now a part of the Union Army of the Mississippi, embarked on board transports and, in conjunction with the federal gunboats, made a demonstration against the rebel Fort Wright; but the army was abruptly recalled, just as these operations were fairly under way, to re-inforce the Army of the Tennessee, in its operations against the rebel stronghold at Corinth, Miss., and, proceeding up the Mississippi, Ohio and Tennessee rivers, the transports landed the troops at Hamburg, Tenn., from which point they marched to Corinth, and became part of the investing force in the siege which followed.

In the operations around Corinth, the regiment acquitted itself with great credit and received the warm commendation of its experienced commander, Colonel Perczel, for its gallant conduct in the skirmish with the enemy, May 26, 1862. Corinth was evacuated May 30, 1862, and the Tenth Iowa participated In the pursuit of the enemy until ordered to return, when it went into camp on Clear Creek, near Corinth, on June 15th, where it remained until June 29th, when it was sent on an expedition to Ripley, forty miles distant, and returned to its camp on Clear Creek, July 6th, where it remained until July 29th, when it marched to Jacinto and went into camp near that place, where it remained until September 18th. On that date, the rebel army under Generals Price and Van Dorn was in possession of Iuka, within striking distance of our camp, and General Rosecrans moved his troops (of which the Tenth Iowa formed a part) on the 19th of September, towards Iuka, and on the evening of that day the enemy met him, and the battle of Iuka began.

The Tenth Iowa occupied a most fortunate position in this battle, which enabled it to inflict heavy loss upon the enemy with but slight loss to itself. The manner in which the regiment was handled reflected great credit upon its commander. The following extract from the report of Colonel Perczel will show the great skill with which he executed the orders of his brigade commander, General Sullivan:

Agreeably to your orders, I advanced on September 19th about 5 P. M. with my regiment and a section of the Twelfth Wisconsin Battery, under Lieutenant Immell. After a short survey of our line of battle, I took position with seven companies, a cheval [see note 2] on the Iuka road, about a quarter of a mile ahead of our left wing. I sent three companies to the right into a dense wood; then I put my two pieces into position, and threw a few shells in an oblique direction, where I discovered the rebel lines. My three companies in the woods reported a full brigade of rebels advancing on our left wing, on which I withdrew them, and, leaving only one company for the observation of the enemy, I changed front perpendicular to our line of battle on the Iuka road. I planted my two pieces anew, and thus obtained a dominating flanking position. Being on a ridge, I could watch the enemy's movements, who had to cross a broken open field In order to attack our forces. They soon emerged from the woods, opened a heavy Are, and advanced on our lines. Their fire was returned, and I too opened with musketry and canister. The rebels wavered, fell back a little, but were soon rallied and advanced again, nothing daunted by our fire, which made great havoc in their ranks. They followed our left wing Into the woods, and for a short time there was no enemy In our sight; but suddenly a full regiment marched out from the woods on their side, offering their right flank to my fire, with the evident Intention to advance to the support of their forces already engaged. I opened instantly with canister and musketry, on which they fell back to the woods. • • • They attempted twice to advance but were driven back each time. We had the advantage of the ground. Our fire told fearfully upon them, while we suffered next to nothing. Their fire, up a steep hill, had been altogether too high. • • • Night coming on, I drew a little closer to our main body; but on the report of Company I, which I left to observe the enemy's movements, that a new body of rebels was advancing, I advanced again with three companies. As we approached, the enemy opened upon us, but owing to the darkness, and again to their up-hill firing, not a man was hurt. We returned the fire with great execution, as we found on the morning of the 20th the ground strewn with the bodies of their dead. • • •


At the close of his report, the Colonel thanks his officers and men for the promptness with which they executed his orders, and says, "The Tenth Iowa have proved themselves good soldiers." He further says, "I have to mention efficient services and assistance of our brave Major N. McCalla, and of my Adjutant, Wm. Manning, and also the able and brave manner in which Lieutenant Immell handled his two pieces of artillery."

The entire loss of the regiment in this battle was but 7 men wounded. It is but seldom that such effective service is performed in battle with such slight loss. In all the battles in which it was subsequently engaged, the Tenth Iowa was never so fortunate as to escape with so small a loss in proportion to the magnitude of the engagement and the number of the regiment engaged. Major General Rosecrans, who was the chief in command, says In his official report: “The Tenth Iowa, under Colonel Perczel, deserves honorable mention for covering our left flank from the assault of the Texas Legion."

Brig. Gen. C. S. Hamilton says, "An attempt to turn the left flank of my division by a heavy force of the enemy, moving up the open field and ravine on my left, was most signally repulsed by Colonel Perczel with the Tenth Iowa and a section of Immell's battery. So bravely was this attempt repulsed that the enemy made no more attempts in that direction."

Brig. Gen. J. C. Sullivan, who commanded the brigade to which the Tenth Iowa was attached, says, "The Tenth Iowa, with a section of the Twelfth Wisconsin Battery, was ordered to hold a road leading to our left and rear. The regiment held the position assigned them, and drove back a brigade of rebels which was advancing to take possession of the road. Colonel Perczel gallantly held his position, and by his determined stand led the enemy to believe we were in strong force at that point, and to desist from their attack." The commendations of these generals show that the service of the Tenth Iowa was most important, and that it was fully appreciated.

The next experience of the regiment under fire was in the battle of Corinth, on the 3d and 4th days of October, 1862. The position to which the Tenth Iowa was assigned on the first day of the battle was again a fortunate one, as will be seen by the following extract from the official report of its commanding officer, Major Nathaniel McCalla. After describing the position occupied — a shallow cut on the line of the Memphis & Charleston Railroad — he says:

While In this position the fire from their batteries was kept up, raking the ground, and would have done immense damage but for the fact that at this point where the line was formed on the track, there was a cut which formed a good shelter, their balls passing over our heads, many of them lodging In the opposite bank, so closely had they raked the ground. Seeing an attempt on the part of the enemy to move forward one of their batteries to a point on the railroad to our right, from which they could open upon us an enfilading fire, I ordered the regiment to file Into the dense woods in our rear by the left flank, having cleared the track In time to avoid a raking fire. I again formed a line of battle, and marched to the rear, under the incessant fire of their battery, whose firing had now become too high to do much damage.


The Major conducted his regiment through the woods to the left until he reached the main road leading directly to the front. On this road the enemy's pickets were discovered, and the regiment was immediately deployed as skirmishers, but the enemy did not advance, and the Tenth Iowa remained in line until morning. On the morning of the 4th, in obedience to orders, Major McCalla moved his regiment to a new position to the left and rear of the line he had occupied during the night, and went into line of battle in support of the Sixth Wisconsin Battery. Of the conduct of the regiment in the second day's battle Major McCalla reports as follows:

At about 10 A. M., the firing of the skirmishers In front of us became rapid, and the advancing columns of the enemy soon drove them back; but they rallied to a point directly in front of our line, and until they had retired to our rear, I could not order my regiment to fire; but as soon as the space In front was cleared I gave the order to commence firing, which was kept up with spirit, but without very materially checking the advance of the enemy, who approached us in overwhelming numbers. My men had fired from 15 to 20 rounds, when I perceived that numbers of the enemy were passing around the right and getting in the rear of my line, and also that the battery on my left had been silenced and taken, and the enemy pressing forward to the left of us. I ordered the regiment to fall back, which it did in good order, to a distance of about seventy-five yards, when I made a halt, facing about and again opening fire; but being unable to retain this position. I again ordered the regiment back under cover of the Twelfth Wisconsin, and Powell's batteries. Passing to the rear in line of battle, I halted at a position immediately between these batteries. I then marched forward and occupied the same ground from which we had retired, during the remainder of the battle. The casualties in the regiment were 6 men wounded on the first day, and one commissioned officer [see note 3] and 30 men wounded and 3 killed on the second day.


Major McCalla makes special mention of Capt. N. A. Holson, Acting Lieutenant Colonel, and Capt. Jackson Orr, Acting Major, also Wm. Manning, Adjutant, commending these officers for their assistance to him and for their coolness and courage. He also states that the line officers, without an exception, deported themselves with the greatest gallantry.

The brigade commander, General Sullivan, in his official report, says: "The Tenth Iowa sustained the brunt of the first attack of the enemy, until the regiment on their left gave way, and their flank was exposed, when they slowly fell back fighting."

After the battle of Corinth, the regiment had a short period of rest in camp, but, on November 1st, it was again on the move, participating in expeditions to Grand Junction, Davis Mills, Holly Springs and Moscow. It did not encounter the enemy in any of these movements.

From Moscow, the regiment marched with the army under General Grant down the line of the Mississippi Central Railroad. The objective point of the expedition was Vicksburg, but the capture of Holly Springs by the skillfully executed cavalry raid of the rebel General Van Dorn, and the destruction of the vast stores of supplies which General Grant had accumulated at that point, compelled the abandonment of the expedition and the prompt retreat of the Union army. It became necessary to at once dispatch a train of several hundred wagons to Memphis for supplies, and the Tenth Iowa was one of the regiments selected to guard this immense train over the long road to Memphis and back to meet the retreating army which had become reduced almost to the starving point, before the train met them upon its return with the needed supplies. After performing this important service, the regiment remained for one month in camp at White's Station, and then moved to Memphis, where, on the 4th of March, 1863, it embarked and proceeded down the river, to enter actively upon the greatest campaign thus far attempted during the war. The compiler of this sketch realizes with regret that the limitation of space to which he is restricted will not permit him to go into particularity of detail in describing the operations of the Tenth Iowa Infantry in this great campaign, or in those which followed, down to the close of the war. To do so would require a volume, instead of the few pages which follow.

The regiment accompanied the hazardous expedition through the tortuous windings of the Yazoo Pass, over two hundred miles from the Mississippi, and returned to Helena on the 9th of April, 1863. It now belonged to the Third Brigade of the Seventh Division of General McPherson's Seventeenth Army Corps, with which it participated in the brilliant series of battles at Port Gibson, Raymond, Jackson, Champion Hills and in that sanguinary charge upon the enemy's works at Vicksburg on the 22d of May. In all of these engagements the regiment displayed the same valor and prompt obedience to orders which it had shown in all its preceding encounters with the enemy, but its splendid achievement and heavy loss at Champion Hills on the 16th of May, 1863, is considered by many of the survivors as not only by far the most notable record the regiment made during the Vicksburg campaign but of the entire war. In that hard fought battle the division to which the Tenth Iowa belonged was commanded by the gallant General M. M. Crocker of Iowa [see note 4]. The regiment here stood its ground in an open stand up fight, taking and returning the fire of the enemy at close range until its last round of ammunition was exhausted. On no part of the battlefield was the fighting so severe, persistent or protracted. Iowa was conspicuous in this battle, five of her regiments — the Fifth, Tenth, Seventeenth, Twenty-fourth and Twenty-eighth — being engaged, and all acquitting themselves with great credit. The Tenth lost nearly one-half of its number engaged. Of its officers, Capt. Stephen W. Poage, Lieut. James H. Terry and Lieut, Isaac H. Brown, were killed on the field, and Capt. Robert Lusby, Capt. Nathan A. Holson, Capt. Albert Head, Lieut. John W. Wright, Lieut. A. L. Swallow, Lieut. Elbert J. Kuhn, Lieut. George Gregory and Lieut. William P. Meekins, were wounded. The total loss of the regiment in this battle was 158, 34 killed and 124 wounded.

On the 19th of May the regiment had reached the position to which it was assigned in the rear of Vicksburg, and became part of the investing force in the siege. The regiment participated in the charge on the 22d of May and lost 3 killed and 24 wounded. Here the gallant Captain Head was again severely wounded. The regiment remained on duty, in the trenches as sharpshooters, supporting batteries, and performing its full part in the siege operations until June 22nd, when It was transferred, with its brigade, to the defensive line on Black River to guard against the possible attempt of the rebel General Johnston to raise the siege by attacking the besieging force in the rear.

The regiment remained upon this important duty until after the surrender of Vicksburg, July 4, 1863, when it was immediately sent in pursuit of Johnston's army, which had been withdrawn to the defensive works around Jackson, against which the army under General Sherman promptly began siege operations, which ended on July 16th, upon the evacuation of Jackson by the forces under Johnston, and their retreat into the interior of Mississippi. Thus ended the Vicksburg campaign, with such satisfactory results for the Union army, and such disastrous results for the enemy. The victory had been won, however, at a tremendous cost. On both sides many thousands had been killed and wounded, and thousands more were to share their fate before the final triumph of the Union arms. On the 19th of July the Tenth Iowa returned to Vicksburg, and from there proceeded to Helena, Ark., with its division, where it remained until the last of September, when it was ordered to proceed to Memphis, there to unite with the Fifteenth Army Corps under Maj. Gen. Wm. T. Sherman, and to march across the country to Chattanooga, there to re-inforce the Army of the Cumberland and to deal another crushing blow to the enemies of the Union.

On the 17th of October the long and toilsome march was begun. For thirty-two days the army under Sherman pressed forward and, on the 19th of November, arrived at Chattanooga. There the great struggle was renewed around Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge. The Tenth Iowa participated in the storming of Missionary Ridge, November 25th, and performed its full share in that memorable contest, in which it seemed impossible that human valor could accomplish the task of scaling those formidable heights. The loss of the regiment in this engagement was 11 killed, 35 wounded and 6 captured, out of 250 engaged.

After this battle the Tenth Iowa was moved to Bridgeport, thence to Larkinsville, Ala., and thence to Huntsville, where it went into camp January 9, 1864. Here, in the beginning of February, the requisite number to retain the regimental organization re-enlisted as veterans and were mustered into the service on March 30, 1864.

No better test of patriotism could have been shown by these brave and devoted men. They knew what war meant, had experienced its hardships, privations and horrors on the march and on the battlefield. They longed most earnestly to return to home and loved ones and yet, so long as the supreme object, for which they had first enlisted remained to be accomplished, they were willing to still forego the comforts of home and all its dear associations. To thousands of these brave and true men, who subsequently died in battle or from sickness, the high resolve to serve their country to the end was typical of that most sublime feeling that ever dominated the action of a human being — the feeling of total self-abnegation.

On April 30th the regiment was ordered to Decatur, Ala. During its stay there it was engaged in fortifying the place and, by way of diversion from such hard labor, had occasional skirmishes with the enemy's cavalry. On the 15th of June, the re-enlisted men of the regiment received the long-looked-for and very welcome order to proceed to Iowa on veteran furlough. After a most enjoyable visit of thirty days at their homes, they returned to the field and rejoined their comrades at Kingston, Ga., on the 1st of August. The reunited regiment now took part in various expeditions directed mainly against the rebel General Wheeler's large cavalry force which, by skillful maneuvering, managed to avoid coming in contact with the Union troops, while Inflicting considerable damage by tearing up railroad track and capturing supplies. The regiment returned from the last of these expeditions on the 15th of September, and again went into camp at Kingston. In the meantime, the Union cavalry force had been increased sufficiently to drive the rebel General Wheeler across the Tennessee river, and to relieve the infantry from the duty of guarding the railroad.

On the 28th of September, 1864, the non-veterans (those who had not reenlisted) were mustered out of the service and departed for their homes in Iowa. It must be said here that these men who had honorably and faithfully fulfilled the terms of their full period of service, and who did not feel that it was their duty to make the further sacrifice of remaining to the close of the war, were entitled to the gratitude of every loyal citizen. They were honorably discharged and returned to their homes to receive the commendations of their neighbors and friends for their long period of service and sacrifice. Many of them were broken in health, many bore upon their persons the scars of wounds received in battle, and all had earned the high regard and cordial welcome which was everywhere extended to them upon their return.

Early in October the Tenth Iowa Veteran Infantry received about 150 recruits, a number a little more than equal to that of the non-veterans mustered out. On the 3d of October the regiment moved from Kingston to Cartersville, and thence to Atlanta, where General Sherman had concentrated his army, preparatory to beginning his march to Savannah.

The story of that great march through the State of Georgia, "from Atlanta to the Sea," has been immortalized in song, and has its place in history as one of the most remarkable military expeditions ever undertaken, or accomplished. The Tenth Iowa, as a part of the Third Division of the Fifteenth Army Corps, participated actively in this great march, and in the reduction of the enemy's works around Savannah, the capture of Fort McAllister, the opening of communication with the federal fleet in the harbor, and the occupation of the city, on the 21st day of December, 1864, after which the regiment went into camp a short distance from the city and remained there until January 9, 1865. On the last named date, the concluding campaign of the war began. The regiment with its brigade and division crossed the river and entered the State of South Carolina, and began the long and toilsome march towards the North.

For nearly three months the march was continued, under the most difficult conditions; sometimes over almost impassable roads, wading through swamps, crossing swollen streams, through almost Incessant rains, and frequent skirmishes with the enemy, now rendered desperate by the certainty that their last line of resistance must soon be overcome. At last, after marching nearly five hundred miles, the Fifteenth Corps entered Goldsboro, N. C, on the 22d day of March, 1865, and went into camp for a season of rest and recuperation. Up to this time the troops had been compelled to subsist mainly upon such supplies as could be obtained from the country through which they passed, and which had often been found deficient, both in quantity and quality. Here, however, supplies were obtained in abundance from the seaboard, and the soldiers improved rapidly in health and strength.

The regiment left Goldsboro on the 7th of April. Their next halting place was at Raleigh, N. C, where they witnessed the capitulation of the rebel army under General Johnston and the removal of the last organized resistance to the Union army in its victorious march to Petersburg and Richmond, and on to Washington. Arrived at Washington, the regiment participated in the grand review, and afterwards returned to its camp near the city, where it remained until early In June, when it was ordered to Louisville, Ky., where it remained until the latter part of June, when it was ordered to proceed to Little Rock, Ark., where it arrived early In July. Here it remained until August 15, 1865, on which date it was mustered out of the service, and proceeded to Davenport, Iowa, where it was disbanded, and the men were sent to their homes.

The record of the Tenth Iowa Infantry is absolutely without blemish. In Its long and arduous service in ten of the states that were in rebellion against the Government, its many battles, its weary marches, its patient endurance of hardships, its implicit obedience to orders — in all that goes to make up a history of service well and faithfully performed, the regiment stands in the front rank of Iowa's splendid military organizations. No man who served in its ranks and contributed to its good record could leave a more glorious heritage to his posterity. The State of Iowa has honored itself in making provision for the permanent preservation in its archives of the military history of the men who fought for the maintenance of the Union in the great War of the Rebellion. So long as patriotism is honored among men will these records be perused by the loyal sons and daughters of the heroic men who gave their services to their country in her time of greatest need.


SUMMARY OF CASUALTIES.

Total enrollment 1319
Killed 63
Wounded 277
Died of wounds 35
Died of disease 135
Discharged for disease, wounds or other causes 288
Buried in National Cemeteries 60
Captured 17
Transferred 49


[Note 1.] Report of Lieut. Col. Wm. E. Small, Page 844, Vol. 2, Adjutant General of Iowa, 1863. Also Page 185 — 1866 Report.

[Note 2.] "A cheval." Placed so as to command two roads, or the space between two sides.

[Note 3.] Capt. Albert Head of Company F, wounded severely in the forehead.

[Note 4.] General Crocker entered the service as Captain of Company D, Second Infantry: was promoted to Major of that regiment, was the first Colonel of the Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, and was later promoted to Brigadier General of Volunteers.


SOURCE: Roster & Record of Iowa Soldiers During the War of the Rebellion, Volume 2, p. 145-52

Monday, February 15, 2010

Eighth Regiment Iowa Volunteer Infantry

The Eighth Regiment of Iowa Infantry was organized in compliance with the proclamation of the President, dated July 23, 1861, and the proclamation of the Governor of Iowa, calling for the necessary number of volunteers to fill the quota of the State under that call. Davenport was designated as the place of rendezvous for the companies composing the regiment, and they were there mustered into the service of the United States, between the dates of August 31 and September 4, 1861, by Lieut. Alexander Chambers of the regular army. The names of its first Field and Staff and Company Officers will be found in the subjoined roster. The subsequent changes on account of death, wounds, resignation, or whatever cause, will also be found noted in the roster, in the paragraph opposite the name of each officer, together with his record of personal service. Under the provisions and limitations of the act of the General Assembly of the State of Iowa, by authority of which this compilation is made, the sources from which information has been obtained have been mostly from the records and reports forwarded by the officers of the various regiments, and other organizations, to the Adjutant General of the State and, by his clerical force, recorded in many huge volumes. Many of these reports, muster rolls and returns exhibit evidence of great care and minute attention to details, though a considerable number are very imperfect, and in many cases it has been found impossible to give the complete record of individual service. Only brief historical sketches have been provided for, and, laboring under the disadvantage of such limitation, the compiler of this sketch is painfully aware of his inability to do full justice to this regiment, or to any of the Iowa organizations which had a long record of service in the great War of the Rebellion.

The Eighth regiment had the usual experience of those which had preceded it, in the short time it remained in rendezvous at Davenport. Its officers realized the importance of fitting themselves for the responsible duties which they had been called upon to assume, and the necessity of incessant study, in order that they might become capable of imparting to the men under their command such instruction as would, at the earliest possible moment, enable them to perform the active duties of soldiers in time of war.

The time for such preparation was exceedingly limited, and being without arms or uniforms, and supplied with only the most crude camp equipage, they were in a raw and unprepared condition when, on the night of September 24, 1861, orders were received to be in readiness to embark early the next morning for St. Louis. The order was promptly obeyed, and the regiment was soon on board the steamer "Jenny Whipple" and on its way south.

At Keokuk, arms of poor quality, but the best the government was at that time able to procure for its fast increasing army, were issued, and the regiment proceeded on its way. Arriving at St. Louis, it disembarked and marched to Benton Barracks, where troops were being rapidly concentrated, and instructed and equipped as fast as possible for the arduous work which was before them. The time was utilized to the best advantage, and on October 15th the regiment left St. Louis, on board flat cars, and proceeded to Syracuse, Mo. The regiment was fortunate in having for its first commander a capable and thoroughly trained soldier of the regular army, Col. Frederick Steele*, who insisted upon good discipline, which the men could not at that time appreciate as they did later, when they came to understand more fully the necessity for it.

On the 21st of October, the regiment began the march to Springfield, Mo., with Lieutenant Colonel Geddes** in command, Colonel Steele having been assigned to the command of a brigade. On this march the men suffered greatly, not having become inured to the hardships of a soldier's life, and unable to care for themselves under such conditions, which, at a later period, those who had the physical vigor to enable them to survive these early privations had learned to do. The regiment remained at Springfield until November 4th, when it marched to Sedalia, Mo., again enduring great hardship from exposure. Two companies, E and K, were sent to Fort Leavenworth as guard to a drove of cattle and a wagon train conveying supplies. The other eight companies remained at Sedalia during the winter, to which place the two companies on detached service did not return until about the first of March. This winter campaign in Missouri cost the regiment many valuable lives, while many more were permanently disabled and subsequently discharged. It is a well known fact that, in the first year of the war, more deaths and disabilities resulted from sickness than from conflict with the enemy upon the battlefield. While there may 'have been some exceptions, this statement would apply to most of the early regiments from Iowa. The men who thus suffered and died, and those who were so enfeebled as to be no longer able to serve, are entitled to the same honor as those who were killed and wounded in battle.

March 11, 1862, the regiment was ordered to St. Louis, and from there it was conveyed by boat to Pittsburg Landing, Tenn. On its way up the Tennessee river the boat was fired into by rebels concealed in the woods, and two men were killed and three wounded. Upon its arrival at Pittsburg Landing, the regiment went into camp and was assigned to the Third Brigade of the Second Division, Army of the Tennessee. The brigade was under command of Col. T. W. Sweeny, and the division was commanded by Brig. Gen. W. H. L. Wallace. In this great battle, the Eighth Iowa Infantry rendered such conspicuous and important service, and suffered such great loss, that the compiler of this sketch feels impelled to quote here the complete official report of its commanding officer, notwithstanding the fact that it will necessitate making only brief quotations from later official reports.


VINTON, BENTON COUNTY, IOWA, Nov. 13, 1862.

SIR: In compliance with your request, I have the honor to submit for your information a report of the part taken by the Eighth Iowa Infantry at the battle of Shiloh, fought on April 6, 1862. About 8 o'clock on the morning of the 6th, I ordered the regiment under arms, and formed line of battle in front of my encampment, awaiting orders to proceed to the front. At this time, the firing on our advanced line had become general, and it appeared to me evident that we were being attacked in force by the rebel general. After remaining under arms about half an hour, during which time I had ordered the baggage belonging to the regiment to be loaded on the wagons, and an extra supply of ammunition to be issued to the men, I was ordered by Colonel Sweeny, brigade commander, to proceed to the front. On arriving at our advanced line, I was ordered by Colonel Sweeny to take position on the left of the brigade to which I was attached, for the purpose of protecting a battery immediately in front. Here the regiment remained about one hour, exposed to a severe fire from artillery of shell and grape, killing and wounding several of my men. About 11 A. M., I was ordered by Colonel Sweeny, through his aid, Lieutenant McCullough, of the Eighth Iowa, to leave my position, and take ground to my left and front. This change of position brought my regiment on the extreme right of General Prentiss' division, and left of General Smith's, the latter being the division to which my regiment belonged. I was thus entirely detached from my brigade, nor did I receive any order from my brigade or division commander during the remainder of that day. On arriving at the point I was ordered to defend I formed my regiment in line of battle, with my center resting on a road leading from Corinth to Pittsburg Landing, and at right angles with my line. Here I immediately engaged a battalion of the enemy, and after a severe conflict of nearly an hour's duration, in which I lost many of my men, the enemy were driven back with heavy loss. At this time Captain Hogin, Company F, was killed and Captain Palmer, Company H, severely wounded. About 1 P. M. General Prentiss placed a battery in position immediately in front of my regiment, with instructions to defend it to the last. The precision of its fire, which was directed by the General in person, made great havoc in the advancing columns of the enemy. It therefore became an object of great importance to gain possession of the battery. To this end they concentrated and hurled column after column on my position, charging most gallantly to the very muzzles of the guns. Here a struggle commenced for the retention and possession of the battery, of a terrific character, their concentrated and well directed fire decimating my ranks in a fearful manner. In this desperate struggle my regiment lost 100 men in killed and wounded.

The conspicuous gallantry and coolness of my company commanders, Captains Cleaveland, Stubbs and Benson on the left; Captains McCormick and Bell in the center, and Captains Kelsey and Geddes, and Lieutenant Muhs on the right, by reserving the fire of their respective companies until the proper time for its delivery with effect, and the determined courage of my men, saved the battery from capture, and I had the satisfaction of sending the guns in safety to the rear. In this attack, I was wounded in the leg, and Major Andrews severely in the head, and I do here take pleasure in acknowledging the courage and coolness displayed by my field officers, Lieut. Col. J. C. Ferguson and Major J. Andrews, and the able assistance rendered by them on that occasion. About 3 P. M. all direct communication with the; river ceased, and it became evident to me that the enemy were driving the right and left flanks of our army, and were rapidly closing behind us. At this time, I could have retreated, and most probably would have saved my command from being captured, had I, at this time, been ordered back,, but I received no such order, and I considered it my duty to hold the position I was assigned to defend, at all hazards.

General Prentiss' division having been thrown back from the original line, I changed front by my left flank, conforming to his movement, and at right angles with my former base, which was immediately occupied and retained for some time by the Fourteenth Iowa, Colonel Shaw. In this position, I ordered my regiment, to charge a battalion of the enemy (I think the Fourth Mississippi), which was "done in good order, completely routing them. We were now attacked on three sides by the rebel force, which was closing fast around us. The shells from our gunboats, in their transit, severing the limbs of trees, hurled them on my ranks. It now became absolutely necessary, to prevent annihilation, to leave a position which my regiment had held for nearly ten consecutive hours of severe fighting, successfully resisting and driving back the enemy in every attempt to take the position I was ordered to hold and defend — with a loss of near two hundred in killed and wounded — I ordered my regiment to retire. On retiring about three hundred yards, I found a division of the rebels, under General Polk, thrown completely across my line of retreat. I perceived that further resistance was useless, as we were now completely surrounded. Myself, and the major portion of my command, were captured at 6 P. M. of that day, and I claim the honor for my regiment of being the last to leave the advanced line of our army, on the battlefield of Shiloh, on Sunday, April 6, 1862.

I cannot conclude this report without bearing testimony to the gentlemanly conduct and dignified bearing of my officers and men during their captivity. Our captors had felt the effects, and well knew the courage of my regiment in the field, but had yet to learn they could conduct themselves as well under other and very trying circumstances. Not having received any reliable information as to the true amount of casualties at the battle, and during our imprisonment, I shall forward an official list, as soon as practicable, of killed and wounded, and of such as died in southern prisons, through privation and neglect. I am, very respectfully, your obedient servant,

J. L. GEDDES,
Colonel Eighth Iowa Infantry.

His Excellency,
Samuel J. Kirkwood,
Governor of Iowa.


The morning reports, published officially, show that the Third Brigade of the Second Division had 2,131 present for duty on the morning of April 6th, and the official reports of casualties in the battle show that the brigade suffered a loss of 1,247, or about 60 per cent of the entire number engaged. Of this number, the Eighth Iowa lost 493.

There were six regiments in the brigade and its total loss was about 60 per cent of the entire number engaged, while the loss of the Eighth Iowa Infantry, which fought detached from its brigade, exceeded 80 per cent of its number engaged, in killed, wounded and captured. The highest duty of a soldier is implicit obedience to orders. Colonel Geddes, when confronted with the fact that the troops upon his right and left flanks were being driven back, but receiving no order to retreat, simply changed front at right angles with his former line, conforming to the movements of the remnant of General Prentiss' division, and stubbornly continued to hold his ground. To these troops, then acting under the orders of General Prentiss, is due the credit of delaying the advance of the rebel forces in their front long enough to enable the scattered and disintegrated Union forces in their rear to rally and form the line of last resistance, as night was fast coming on, on that hard fought first day's battle at Shiloh.

The truth of history demands that the credit of saving the day for the Union army at Shiloh be given to those gallant regiments (three of them from Iowa) who so gallantly stood their ground, without hope of reinforcement, and with the full knowledge that it was only a question of time when they would be completely surrounded by overwhelming numbers, and compelled to surrender. To concede this honor is no discredit to the gallant men who, profiting by the delay thus afforded, rallied behind the concentrated Union artillery, and hurled death and destruction upon the advancing columns of the enemy, and at last turned what had seemed certain defeat into victory.

Almost the entire number of the Eighth Iowa Infantry which had gone into action on that Sunday morning, and had escaped being killed, were captured, and entered upon a long and weary term of imprisonment, during which many of them died. Most of those who were wounded before the enemy got in the rear of the regiment had been sent to the field hospitals, but those who were wounded later, and were considered by the enemy able to be moved, were compelled to go along with the prisoners, and many of them died in prison. The few who succeeded in eluding the enemy in the confusion and darkness of that first night, together with those who had been sick in hospital, on detached duty and furlough, when the battle was fought, were afterwards placed in an organization called the "Union Brigade," in which they remained until the captured officers and men were exchanged, when the brigade was disbanded and they rejoined the regiment. A sketch of the operations of the Union Brigade will be found in its appropriate place in this work, in which the history of service of the officers and men of the Eighth Iowa Infantry who served with that organization will be found. The prisoners were paroled October 18th, and exchanged November 10, 1862.

During the winter of 1862-3, the regiment was re-organized at St. Louis, and was sent from there to Rolla, Mo., where it spent the remainder of the winter. In the spring it returned to St. Louis and was sent to Vicksburg, where it arrived about April 1st and was assigned to the Third Brigade of the Third Division, Fifteenth Army Corps, commanded by Gen. W. T. Sherman. Early in May it participated in that brilliant series of movements around Vicksburg ending in the assault upon Jackson, and then marched to Vicksburg and became part of the investing force up to the 22d of June. During this time it participated in the siege operations carried on by its brigade, and took part in the assault on the rebel works on the 22d of May. June 22d it became part of the force, under the command of Gen. W. T. Sherman, constituting a line of circumvallation to guard against the threatened attack of the rebel General Johnston's army and the re-inforcement of the rebel forces under General Pemberton, then defending the formidable forts and earthworks around Vicksburg. The regiment remained on this duty until the surrender of the rebel stronghold on July 4th. Immediately after the surrender, the regiment was ordered, with the other troops under Sherman, to go in pursuit of Johnston, who was retreating towards Jackson. They participated in the operations which led up to the short siege and subsequent evacuation of that place on July 17, 1863. It then became part of a force under General Steele which drove the enemy out of Brandon, Miss., and captured that place. At the conclusion of Colonel Geddes' official report of the operation of this regiment during the Vicksburg campaign, he says: "From the 2d of May to the 25th of July, we marched without tents or transportation, over three hundred miles, engaged the enemy at Vicksburg, twice at Jackson, and at Brandon, and, although during the operations of this ever memorable campaign, both officers and men of the regiment suffered much exposure and hardship of a very trying character, they endured all without a murmur, and with a fortitude which elicited on several occasions the unreserved commendations of the commanding general."

Sherman's army soon after started for Chattanooga, but the Third Division of the Fifteenth Corps was left.to guard the railroad. The Eighth Iowa was stationed at Pocahontas, Tenn., from the last of October, 1863, to the first of January, 1864, on which date three-fourths of the men re-enlisted as veterans.

The following month General Sherman organized the famous Meridian expedition, which penetrated far into the interior of Mississippi and inflicted great damage upon the enemy in the destruction of railroads and immense quantities of supplies which were found stored at Meridian. The Eighth Iowa Infantry participated in this remarkable expedition, marched over three hundred miles and bivouacked in the open air, living upon such provisions as could be gathered from the country through which they marched. Returning to Vicksburg, the re-enlisted veterans were sent to their homes in Iowa on furlough, while the non-veterans participated in the ill-fated Red River expedition, in which they performed good service and suffered great hardships. The veterans returned to Memphis, Tenn., at the close of their thirty days' furlough, and upon their arrival there were assigned to provost guard duty under the command of Lieut. Col. W. B. Bell, Colonel Geddes being at the same time appointed Provost Marshal of the District of West Tennessee. In the discharge of this important duty, the regiment won the commendation of General Marcy, Inspector General United States Army, who pronounced it equal in equipment and discipline to any regiment in the volunteer or regular army. It was while performing this duty that the regiment had a severe engagement with the rebel General Forrest's cavalry which made a daring raid into the city of Memphis on the 21st day of August, 1864, and at 4 o'clock in the morning had made its way into the very center of the city.

The following extracts from the official report of Lieut. Col. W. B. Bell will show how well the troops under his command acquitted themselves in defeating and driving the rebels from the city and pursuing them into the adjacent country:

When the first alarm was given, by the enemy firing on the streets, my command turned out promptly from their several barracks throughout the city, and skirmished with the enemy wherever they found him, killing and wounding several, and taking six prisoners. Lieut. D. W. Stearns, with the headquarters' guards, numbering twenty men, attacked a force of the enemy who were attempting to release the prisoners in Irving Block, and, in connection with the prison guard, drove them off. A few minutes afterwards, I arrived at regimental headquarters. Adjutant Campbell had already ordered Company C and Headquarters' guard to report at regimental headquarters.

In compliance with General Buckland's order, I pursued the enemy with the Headquarters' guard commanded by Lieutenant Stearns, and Company C commanded by Lieutenant Boyer, leaving Major Stubbs and Adjutant Campbell to assemble the balance of the regiment.
On crossing Beal street, I was joined by Company F, commanded by Lieutenant Irwin, which increased my command to seventy men. With this force, I moved briskly forward after the enemy, who were retiring on the Hernando road. On arriving at the mouth of a lane, I sent forward a line of skirmishers under Lieutenant Stearns and advanced in line of battle for some distance, when my skirmishers were driven in.

Sergeant Ostrander and privates A. M. Walling, I. E. Newman, Charles Smith and Peny Clark watched their opportunity, and fired a volley on the flank of the enemy, killing the rebel captain Lundy, and wounding several others. Then by making a circuit they safely joined their command. At this time General Dustan came up and assigned to my command fifty of the One Hundred and Thirteenth Illinois, commanded by Lieutenant Chatfield. I then moved forward some distance, halted, formed line of battle, and moved through the orchard on the left side of the road, and into the woods a short distance beyond, when we met the enemy, and firing commenced on both sides about the same time. A brisk, spirited, and severe engagement ensued. * * *

During the engagement, the troops under my command, one and all, behaved gallantly. Captain Geddes, who was on detached service, joined my command at the first, and throughout the engagement did good service. By the death of Lieutenant Irwin, who fell bravely leading his company, the regiment lost a good soldier, a pleasant companion, and an excellent man. Annexed is a full list of casualties.


In this engagement the regiment's loss was 43, which, considering the fact that only a small portion of the regiment was engaged, was very heavy. Lieutenant Colonel Bell moved promptly with the few men he found to be immediately available, and rendered most important service in promptly moving to the attack without waiting to rally his entire regiment. The regiment remained in Memphis until in January, 1865, when it was ordered to New Orleans, where it was encamped for some time on the old battlefield eight miles below the city. It next took passage for Mobile and, shortly after its arrival there, joined General Canby's army. The regiment was now a part of the Third Brigade, Third Division of the Sixteenth Army Corps, and its brigade was under the command of its colonel, James L. Geddes, while the regiment was commanded by Lieut. Col. W. B. Bell. The maneuvers leading up to the beginning of the siege of Spanish Fort were participated in by the Eighth Iowa; and in the siege operations, lasting from March 27th until April 8, 1865, when the assault was made and the fort captured, the regiment bore a most conspicuous part and suffered heavy loss. Lieutenant Colonel Bell gives a graphic account of the terrific fighting during the assault, and the desperate resistance made by the enemy. After describing in detail the passage of his regiment through an almost impassable swamp, during which it was under a heavy fire from the enemy, he says:

As soon as the regiment gained the crest of the hill, where our skirmishers were, the fight commenced in full force, but of such a character that it is difficult to describe. The regiment moved by the right flank in rear of the enemy's rifle pits, and carried them for a distance of 500 yards, either killing, wounding, or capturing the entire force of the enemy occupying the same. One thing that was very much in our favor was, the enemy's works, from their extreme left for a considerable distance up, consisted of a series of small pits, without direct connection with each other. This enabled us to attack them in detail, and we had carried a considerable portion of their works before their main force was aware that we had turned their left. We here witnessed the spectacle of dying in the last ditch, as quite a number of the rebels refused to surrender, and were shot in their ditches, and on the other hand, quite a number of them who were taken prisoners ought, in justice to our men, to have been killed, as they would first fire at our men after being ordered to surrender, then throw up both hands and surrender. * * * Soon after this, Colonel Geddes came up and directed me to place my command outside the enemy's works, and — facing toward them, and using them for breastworks — to throw out a company as skirmishers to my right and front, which orders were promptly complied with. * * * Soon after this, Captain Kettenring, of my command, in charge of the skirmish line, reported the enemy advancing in heavy column. They advanced within thirty or forty yards of us, calling out, "We surrender," and then fired on us. When they got within twenty-five yards of us, I ordered my command to fire and fix bayonets, which was done with a will. The enemy broke and ran, but soon after rallied and returned, and when within fifty yards of us halted. I ordered two companies to give them a volley, which caused them to break, and we saw them no more. Soon after this Colonel Geddes returned, formed his brigade and marched it through the fort, and to the bay beyond, after which, by his directions, I moved my command to camp. I claim for my regiment the honor of making the attack, and of being the only regiment that engaged the enemy inside of his works, also of capturing three stands of colors, five pieces of artillery, and four hundred and fifty prisoners, seven of them commissioned officers. * * *

Where all do their duty it is a difficult and delicate matter to make any discrimination. The several companies of the regiment were commanded by the following officers: Company A, Captain Muhs; Company B, Captain Kettenring; Company E, Lieutenant Clark; Company F, Lieutenant Harper; Company G, Lieutenant Vineyard; Company H, Lieutenant Bell; Company I, Sergeant Taylor; Company K, Captain Weeks. I would respectfully present to the favorable notice of the Colonel commanding brigade, the following named officers: Capt. Henry Muhs, who was conspicuous for his coolness while in command of the skirmish line; Lieut. Henry Vineyard, commanding Company G, in skirmish line, who was wounded in the arm early in the engagement, but continued in command of his company, until he received a wound which broke his leg, and will probably prove fatal; Captain Weeks, who was conspicuous for his bravery throughout the engagement; Captain Kettenring, who was severely wounded while bravely leading his company; Lieutenant Gardiner, who took command of his company after Captain Kettenring was wounded, and led it through the engagement with ability, and Sergeant Betz, Company G, who took command of his company after Lieutenant Vineyard was wounded, and handled it well. I am under obligations to Adjutant Marsden for valuable assistance rendered me in communicating instructions to the command. In addition to the names above mentioned, many enlisted men deserve honorable mention, but they are so numerous that it would make this report too voluminous.


Then follows the long list of the killed and wounded, another addition to the total record of its losses, that had now grown to an aggregate of fearful proportions. But the fighting days of this gallant regiment were now practically ended. The non-veterans (those who had not re-enlisted) had been mustered out of the service at the expiration of their original three years' term, and the regiment was now designated as the "Eighth Iowa Veteran Infantry Volunteers." And they had fully earned the title of veterans. The remainder of its service was in doing garrison and guard duty at different points in the South. From Mobile it was sent to Montgomery, Alabama, the place in which some of its members had been confined in prison after the battle of Shiloh. Prom Montgomery it was sent to Tuscaloosa and, during the winter of 1866, it was stationed at Selma, another point which many of the survivors had good reason to remember, on account of their experience in prison there.

On the 20th of April, 1866, the regiment was mustered out of the service at Selma, Alabama, after serving a 'little over four years and eight months. It was the last regiment from Iowa to be mustered out of the service. Among all the splendid volunteer organizations which Iowa sent into the field during the great War of the Rebellion, none reflected greater honor upon the State than the Eighth Iowa Infantry. At the time this sketch is written only a small number of the men who once marched and fought with this gallant regiment are living, and, a few years hence, none will be left to tell the story of their long and faithful service to their country, but the compiler of this sketch will hope that he has been able to preserve for their posterity, as well as for all the coming generations of the patriotic sons and daughters of Iowa, the most important events in the history of the regiment, and that in the subjoined roster they will find a record of individual service of progenitors that will be held as a priceless legacy.


SUMMARY OF CASUALTIES.

Total enrollment 1589
Killed 50
Wounded 228
Died of Wounds 45
Died of Disease 141
Discharged for wounds, disease and other causes 340
Buried in National Cemeteries 91
Captured . 394
Transferred 50


* Col. Frederick Steele was promoted to Brigadier General Feb. 1, 1862.

** Lieut. Col. J. L. Geddes was promoted to Colonel Feb. 7, 1862, and succeeded Colonel Steele in command of regiment.


SOUCE: Roster & Record of Iowa Soldiers During the War of the Rebellion, Volume 1, p. 1061-9