- 1st Vermont Brigade
The First Vermont Brigade, or "Old Brigade" was an
infantry brigade in the UnionArmy of the Potomac during theAmerican Civil War . It suffered the highest casualty count of any brigade in the history of theUnited States Army , with some 1,172 killed in action.Organization and early battles
The "Old Brigade" served from
1861 to1865 and was one of two brigades fromVermont , both famous in their own right.The First Vermont Brigade was organized in October 1861, primarily through the efforts of Maj. Gen. William F. "Baldy" Smith. It was composed of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th and
6th Vermont Infantry regiment s, which had been individually mustered into service between June and September. Its first commander was Brig. Gen.William T. H. Brooks . In April of1862 , the brigade was incorporated into theArmy of the Potomac as the 2nd Brigade, 2nd Division, VI Corps and first saw action duringGeorge B. McClellan 'sPeninsular Campaign in the battles of Williamsburg and Savage's Station. It later was present at Antietam and Fredericksburg. Under the command ofLewis A. Grant , the Vermonters fought in the campaign culminating in the Chancellorsville. The Vermonters participated in VI Corps' capture of Marye's Heights in theBattle of Fredericksburg II and then was prominent in the fighting at the Salem Church. They held in reserve during the battle of Gettysburg, holding a flank guard position behind Big Round Top, losing only one man wounded. After theGettysburg Campaign , elements of the Vermont Brigade were sent to help quell the draft riots inNew York City .The Overland Campaign
The depleted brigade received reinforcements in May of
1864 when the 11th Vermont Infantry was assigned to the organization. That same month, the Army of The Potomac, under the overall leadership of GeneralUlysses S. Grant , began its spring offensive (theOverland Campaign ) towards Richmond. The Vermont Brigade mustered approximately 2,850 soldiers at the start of the campaign.On the morning of
May 5 , theUnion Army attackedRobert E. Lee 'sArmy of Northern Virginia at theBattle of the Wilderness . While the initial Union attack was successful, rough terrain and stubborn resistance ground down the attack. By midday,A.P. Hill 's Confederate corps had been brought up and was attacking the weak Union center along the Orange Plank Road. GeneralGeorge W. Getty 's brigades were ordered by GeneralWinfield S. Hancock , who was still bringing up most of his corps, to hold the road and counterattack. The Vermont Brigade took the southern flank and charged the advancing Confederates. Ordered to retreat, the 5th Vermont regiment instead launched abayonet charge, buying time for Union troops and the rest of the Vermont Brigade to fall back to their hasty works. The Confederates continued to attack until the Union line was stabilized. Losses by the brigade totaled 1,269 killed, wounded, and missing in less than 12 hours of fighting.After the Wilderness, the Union Army moved south to Spotsylvania Court House, where Lee's army had entrenched. The
11th Vermont Infantry joined the brigade at this point. Early in the battle, elements of the Vermont brigade, defending barricades forward of the rest of the Union Army, were ordered to retreat and spike their supportingartillery field pieces before the Confederates overran them. Disobeying orders, the commander of the brigade ordered the guns to be "spiked with canister," and the brigade was able to defend the guns and works successfully until reinforcements arrived to stabilize the position. The Vermonters suffered heavily during the ensuing assault on the Confederate defenses as The Vermont Brigade led the assault on the "Mule Shoe Salient", a protruding network of trenches in the center of the Confederate lines.The final battle of the Overland Campaign was the
Battle of Cold Harbor . The Vermont Brigade was one of the units selected to charge Confederate earthworks onJune 1 ,1864 . Ulysses Grant's attack failed and he suffered heavy losses. In less than 10 minutes, about 5,000 Union soldiers were killed or wounded, hundreds of them from the Vermont Brigade. The brigade, in less than 1 month of fighting, had been reduced from 2,850 men to less than 1,200.Petersburg and the Valley
While the Army of the Potomac and the Army of Northern Virginia dug in at Petersburg, Confederate General
Jubal A. Early was sent on a mission through theShenandoah Valley to the outskirts ofWashington, D.C. The Vermont Brigade fought in the Valley Campaign against Early, under the overall command ofPhilip Sheridan . At theBattle of Cedar Creek , Early launched a surprise attack against Sheridan's army and the First Vermont Brigade covered the Union army's temporary retreat, prior to Sheridan's counterattack and decisive victory. Lewis Grant commanded the 2nd division VI Corps during the later stages of this action, when Getty became acting corps commander. ColGeorge P. Foster led the brigade while Grant was in command of the division. Foster's brigade held the center of the division's line until the entire formation retreated in good order. When BGDaniel D. Bidwell fell and his brigade, of the Vermonters' left, was in danger of losing heart, LTC Windsor French, who took command, is reported to have told his men not to fall back until the Vermonters did so. SixMedals of Honor were awarded to Vermonters at Cedar Creek, and the brigade captured three regimental colors and much of the 12th North Carolina regiment.Returning to Petersburg, where it was engaged until the end of the war, the First Vermont Brigade led the attack on the earthworks defending the city, successfully breaking through the Confederate lines on the morning of
April 2 ,1865 . Lewis Grant was wounded in this action and briefly relinquished command. Six members of the brigade were awarded the Medal of Honor for valor for this action. After the surrender of Lee's army later that month, the brigade participated in the victory parade in Washington. It returned to Vermont and the men were mustered out. Many former members of the brigade joined fraternal veterans organizations such as theGrand Army of the Republic and theMilitary Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States and held reunions to recount their days in the First Vermont Brigade.ee also
*
Vermont in the Civil War References
* Fox, William F., "Regimental Losses in the American Civil War," Reprinted by Morningside Bookshop, Dayton, Ohio, 1993. ISBN 0-685-72194-9.
* Gottfried, Bradley M., Brigades of Gettysburg: the Union and Confederate Brigades at the Battle of Gettysburg, Cambridge, MA : Da Capo Press, 2002.
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