- Cavalry Corps, Army of Northern Virginia
The Cavalry Corps of the
Army of Northern Virginia was the only organizedcavalry corps in the Confederate Army during theAmerican Civil War . Prior to the establishment of a formal corps, cavalry organization in the Confederacy consisted mostly of partisan ranger units and some battalions, a few of which were loosely organized intoregiment s, such as Brig. Gen.Turner Ashby 's regiment, andColonel J.E.B. Stuart 's 1st Virginia Cavalry Regiment.Background
The source and essence of the Cavalry Corps lay in the background of the age of the Virginia Cavaliers, the royal families of the Colony of Virginia who brought the breeding of horses and horsemanship to the colony. Fine horsemanship was an ingrained part of Virginia culture and history, and many Virginians were raised riding and breeding horses, and thus were capable of jumping and military skills on the horse that were unequaled by
Union cavalry during the war.Command under Maj. Gen. J.E.B. Stuart
The rise of the Cavalry Corps can be almost entirely tied to the career and organizational efforts of its first commander, Maj. Gen.
J.E.B. Stuart , and was formally established onAugust 17 ,1862 . Stuart's command increased in size as part of the history of the Cavalry Corps, as he commanded abrigade , and then a division of cavalry, which finally grew in size to a complete corps. Key engagements of the Cavalry Division/Corps under Stuart's leadership included:* The Raid around McClellan's army (
Peninsula Campaign )
* The Raid on General Pope (First Battle of Rappahannock Station)
* Defense of Crampton's Gap (Maryland Campaign )
* The Raid around McClellan's army (following theBattle of Antietam )
* The Raid beyond the Rappahannock River
* TheBattle of Fredericksburg : Check of Franklin's attack
* TheBattle of Chancellorsville (Stuart temporarily commanded Second Corps)
* TheBattle of Brandy Station
* The Raid around Meade's army (Gettysburg Campaign )
* The screen and defense of Lee following theBattle of Gettysburg
* The screen and defense of Lee against Sheridan in the 1864Overland Campaign Following the death of Stuart on
May 11 ,1864 , the essence of the Cavalry Corps organization persisted, as subsequent cavalry commanders continued to manage multiple cavalry divisions until the end of the war.Command under Lt. Gen. Wade Hampton
The second commander, wealthy
South Carolina planterWade Hampton III , had previously been promoted to major general leading a division under J.E.B. Stuart. Hampton then took over the Cavalry Corps after Stuart's death at theBattle of Yellow Tavern . General Hampton first managed the corps beginning with engagements screening GeneralRobert E. Lee 's army along thePamunkey River , in engagements such as theBattle of Haw's Shop (historical Hawe's Shop). Hampton was originally fromCharleston, South Carolina , and continued to use cavalry units from the Carolinas in his corps. Continuing in command through theSiege of Petersburg , General Lee decided to release his Carolina cavalry units, including Hampton, back to the aid and defense of South Carolina under theArmy of Tennessee , as Maj. Gen.William T. Sherman began his march from Georgia to Columbia, South Carolina. Hampton and the Carolina cavalry units were moved by rail to Columbia, and fought delay-and-defense actions against Sherman. Key engagements under Hampton's leadership included:* The
Battle of Haw's Shop
* TheBattle of Trevilian Station
*The Beefsteak Raid
* TheSiege of Petersburg Command under Maj. Gen. Fitzhugh Lee
Upon the departure of General Hampton, Maj. Gen.
Fitzhugh Lee took over the smaller remaining Cavalry Corps in February 1865. He was in command of the corps through the evacuation of Petersburg and Richmond, and through the course of theAppomattox Campaign , until the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia. Key engagements under Lee's leadership included:* Defense of Lee during the Appomattox Campaign
* The last cavalry charge onApril 9 ,1865 , atFarmville, Virginia Key partisan and ranger commanders operating in or with the ANV Cavalry Corps
*
Turner Ashby
*John D. Imboden
* William E. "Grumble" Jones
*John S. Mosby
*Elijah V. White Military navigation
raw_name = Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia
style = wide
title =Army of Northern Virginia Corps
list1 = First Corps· Second Corps· Third Corps· Fourth Corps· Cavalry CorpsReferences
* Anderson, Paul Christopher, "Blood
* Ashby, Thomas A., "The Life of Turner Ashby", Morningside Bookshop, 1995, ISBN 978-0890290590
* Black, Robert W., "Cavalry Raids of the Civil War", Stackpole Books, 2004, ISBN 978-0811731577
* Davis, Burke, "JEB Stuart: The Last Cavalier", Gramercy; Reissue edition, 2000, ISBN 978-0517185971
* McDonald, William N., "A History of the Laurel Brigade: Originally the Ashby Cavalry of the Army of Northern Virginia and Chew's Battery", The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002, ISBN 978-0801869525Notes
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