- 14th Vermont Infantry
.
History
The 14th Vermont Infantry, a nine months regiment, raised as a result of President Lincoln's call on August 4, 1862, for additional troops due to the disastrous results of the Peninsula Campaign.
It was composed of volunteers from Addison, Rutland and Bennington Counties, as follows:
* Bennington, Co. A
* Wallingford, Co. B
* Manchester, Co. C
* Shoreham, Co. D
* Middlebury, Co. E
* Castleton, Co. F
* Bristol, Co. G
* Rutland, Co. H
* Vergennes, Co. I
* Danby, Co. KThe regiment's commander, Colonel William T. Nichols, of Rutland, had served with the
1st Vermont Infantry . Lieutenant Colonel Charles W. Rose, of Middlebury, had also served in the 1st regiment.The 14th regiment went into camp at Brattleboro on
October 6 ,1862 , and was mustered in to United States service onOctober 21 . It leftVermont onOctober 22 , and arrived inWashington, D.C. onOctober 25 ; the next day it joined the12th Vermont Infantry and some Maine regiments in Camp Chase, inArlington, Virginia , then returned to camp on East Capital Hill, and onOctober 30 became part of the2nd Vermont Brigade .The regiment marched to Munson's Hill on
October 30 , and Hunting Creek on November 5, where it stayed untilNovember 26 . It performed picket duty at Occoquan Creek from November 26, to December 5, when it moved to "Camp Vermont" until December 12. It engaged in further picket duty near Fairfax Courthouse until January 20, 1863, subsequently moving to Fairfax Station until March 24. From March 24 to June 25, it was at Wolf Run Shoals, Union Mills, and on the Occoquan.On
June 25 , the brigade was assigned as the 3rd Brigade, 3rd Division, I Corps, and ordered to form the rear guard of theArmy of the Potomac as it marched north afterRobert E. Lee 'sArmy of Northern Virginia . The 14th marched with the brigade from Wolf Run Shoals onJune 25 , crossed the Potomac river onJune 27 , at Edward's Ferry, and moved north through Frederick City and Creagerstown, Maryland. On the morning ofJuly 1 , it leftWestminster, Maryland , arrived on the battlefield at Gettysburg after dark on the first day of the battle, and camped in a wheat field to the left of Cemetery Hill.Gettysburg
On the afternoon of July 2, the 14th double-quicked to the rescue of a Union battery that was threatened by an attack by Confederate General
A. P. Hill .The 13th, 14th and 16th Vermont regiments played a pivotal role in the Union repulse of
Pickett's Charge on the afternoon ofJuly 3 . The 13th and 16th regiments flankedJames L. Kemper 's brigade as it approached the copse of trees on Cemetery Ridge, then the 16th wheeled about, and joined by the 14th, stopped the advance ofCadmus M. Wilcox 's brigade, capturing hundreds of Virginians. Lieutenant George Benedict, an aide to Brigadier GeneralGeorge J. Stannard , related GeneralAbner Doubleday 's reaction, saying he "waved his hat and shouted: 'Glory to God, glory to God! See the Vermonters go it!'" [Benedict, ii:478]After the battle, the 14th regiment participated in the pursuit of Lee's
Army of Northern Virginia across the Catoctin mountains toMiddletown, Maryland , then back over South Mountain, through Boonesboro, to Williamsport by July 14. The regiment marched to Harper's Ferry, across South Mountain again, and camped near Petersville, near Berlin. On July 18, the regiment was released, took a train from Berlin to Baltimore. It reachedNew York City onJuly 20 . GeneralEdward Canby , who commanded a small number of troops trying to contain theDraft riots that had been raging for four days, asked Colonel Nicholson to hold his regiment in the city for a few days. Colonel Nichols gathered his regiment and made an impassioned plea for them to remain, but the men demurred. The regiment continued its trip home, arrived in Brattleboro on July 21, and mustered out on July 30.Like the other regiments in the
2nd Vermont Brigade , dozens of newly discharged members from the 14th regiment enlisted again, predominantly in the regiments of the 1st Vermont Brigade, and the17th Vermont Infantry .Final statement
ee also
*
Vermont in the Civil War References
* Benedict, G. G., "Vermont in the Civil War. A History of the part taken by the Vermont Soldiers And Sailors in the War For The Union, 1861-5." Burlington, VT.: The Free Press Association, 1888, ii:408-411, 416ff.
* Dyer, Frederick Henry, "A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion." New York: T. Yoseloff, 1908. 3 vol.
* Peck, Theodore S., compiler, "Revised Roster of Vermont Volunteers and lists of Vermonters Who Served in the Army and Navy of the United States During the War of the Rebellion, 1861-66. Montpelier, VT.: Press of the Watchman Publishing Co., 1892, pp. 524-525.
Further reading
* Coffin, Howard, "Full Duty: Vermonters in the Civil War." Woodstock, VT.: Countryman Press, 1995.
* -----. "Nine Months to Gettysburg. The Vermonters Who Broke Pickett's Charge." Woodstock, VT.: Countryman Press, 1997.
* Palmer, Edwin F., "The Second Brigade: or, Camp Life, By a Volunteer," Montpelier: E. P. Walton, 1864.
* Williams, John C. "Life in Camp: A History of the Nine Months' Service of the Fourteenth Vermont Regiment, From October 21, 1862, When It was Mustered into the U.S. Service, to July 21, 1863, Including the Battle of Gettysburg." Claremont, NH: Claremont Mfg Co, 1864.
External links
* [http://vermontcivilwar.org Vermont in the Civil War]
* [http://www.vtguard.com/museum/index.htm Vermont Veterans Militia Museum and Library]
* [http://www.bgs.state.vt.us/gsc/pubrec/referen/military.htm Vermont Military Records Project, Vermont Public Records Division]Notes
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.