- Cavalry Corps (ACW)
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essay = January 2008
unbalanced = January 2008
unreferenced = January 2008Twocorps of theUnion Army were called Cavalry Corps during theAmerican Civil War . One served with theArmy of the Potomac ; the other served in the various armies of the West.Overview
In contrast to the Confederacy, which early on spawned such brilliant cavalry leaders as
J.E.B. Stuart ,Nathan B. Forrest , andJohn S. Mosby , the Union high command initially failed to understand the proper way to use cavalry during the early stages of the war. At the time, cavalry units in the Union armies were generally directly attached to infantry corps, divisions, and "wings" to be used as "shock troops," and essentially played minimal roles in early Civil War campaigns. The Union cavalry was disgraced by Stuart's raids during the Peninsular, Northern Virginia, andMaryland Campaign s, where Stuart was able to ride around the Union Army of the Potomac with feeble resistance from the scant Federal cavalry. The Federals rarely even used cavalry as scouts or raiders in the early days of the war. Only a handful of Union cavalry officers,George Bayard ,Benjamin Grierson , andJohn Buford among them, distinguished themselves in a positive way in the first two years of the war.Cavalry Corps, Army of the Potomac
After the disastrous
Fredericksburg Campaign , Maj. Gen.Joseph Hooker took command of the Army of the Potomac. One of Hooker's positive contributions was in creating a unified cavalry command in April 1863. Other than at Antietam, where the cavalry had been combined into a single division for a planned (but unengaged) attack on Lee's center, the Union cavalry had not been unified to date. To his credit, Hooker organized three previously unrelated divisions into a single corps of cavalry, placing it under the unified command ofGeorge Stoneman . Hooker also began outfitting them with Sharps and Smith breechloading rifles, and, in a couple cases, withSpencer repeating rifle s, giving them an advantage in firepower over the Confederates.Chancellorsville
Despite Hooker's organizational changes, the new Cavalry Corps gave a poor accounting of itself during the Chancellorsville Campaign. Hooker ordered Stoneman to launch a diversionary raid against Richmond to distract Stuart's cavalry, but the raid was unsuccessful, resulting in the debacle at Kelly's Ford—an indecisive battle that forced the raid's premature abortion. Worse, Hooker kept only a single division—under
Alfred Pleasonton —with the main army to use as scouts or screens while traveling through the dense "Wilderness," accounting in part for the success ofStonewall Jackson 's famous flank march onMay 2 .Gettysburg
Stoneman and division commander
William W. Averell were sacked after Chancellorsville, and replaced, respectively, by Pleasonton andDavid McM. Gregg .During the early stages of the
Gettysburg Campaign , the cavalry first gained notice and respect from their Confederate foes at theBattle of Brandy Station , onJune 9 ,1863 —the largest primarily cavalry engagement ever fought on the American continent. Though Pleasonton's men were ultimately defeated, this battle established the Union cavalry as no longer inefficient and overmatched, but a foe to be reckoned with. Numerous other changes were made in brigade command as the campaign progressed, and a number of young officers were promoted to brigade command, includingWesley Merritt ,George Armstrong Custer , andElon J. Farnsworth .Later in the campaign,
Judson Kilpatrick 's division, sent from the XXII Corps, joined up with the army. The cavalry divisions engaged Stuart in a number of fierce, hotly contested battles at Aldie, Middleburg, Upperville, Hanover, and several smaller engagements.It was John Buford's cavalry division which touched off the
Battle of Gettysburg itself, engaging the Confederate division ofHenry Heth to prevent him from occupying Gettysburg onJuly 1 . Buford's troopers played a major part in slowing Heth's initial advance, and, after being relieved by infantry, spent the rest ofJuly 1 screening and scouting. His division was sent to guard the army's supply trains for the remainder of the battle, but the divisions of Gregg and Kilpatrick remained on the field. OnJuly 3 , concurrent withPickett's Charge , Gregg's division (with Custer's brigade of Kilpatrick's division) engaged Stuart east of Gettysburg and checked repeated Confederate advances. However, on the same day south of Gettysburg, Kilpatrick ordered a futile charge by the brigade of Elon J. Farnsworth against Confederate positions onBig Round Top , resulting in Farnsworth's death and heavy casualties among his men.The cavalry continued to perform aggressively in
George Meade 's pursuit of Lee intoVirginia . In an irony, the last battle of the campaign, at Falling Waters, occurred between the remnants of Heth's and Buford's divisions.1864
If any doubts remained as to the Union cavalry's equality with its Southern counterparts, they were dispelled during
Ulysses S. Grant 'sOverland Campaign . The Cavalry Corps, now consisting of four divisions, was placed under command of the fieryPhillip Sheridan . In the early stages of the campaign, they engaged Stuart's cavalry in a series of ferocious, bloody battles, killing General Stuart at Yellow Tavern. Stuart's successor, Wade Hampton, proved to be an eqally formidable foe at the battles of Haw's Shop, Old Church, Trevilian Station, andBattle of Saint Mary's Church . The Union cavalry spent most of thePetersburg Campaign trying to cut rail lines from Petersburg and Richmond. The bulk of the cavalry was sent under Sheridan to join theArmy of the Shenandoah during Sheridan's campaign againstJubal Early in the summer of 1864 (seeValley Campaigns of 1864 ).After Sheridan's highly successful campaign concluded, the cavalry corps—along with the rest of his army—returned to join the Army of the Potomac. For the next several months, they resumed their slow but steady snipping off of Confederate supply and communication lines.
End of the war
The most conspicuous part played by the cavalry during the closing days of the war occurred in the week of
March 25 –April 1 ,1865 , when Lee, in a series of bold but understrength and futile counterattacks, tried to break through the Union lines at Fort Stedman. The XXIV Corps,Army of the James , with help from elements of the VI and IX Corps, repulsed the attack. A week later, at Five Forks, Sheridan's cavalry played a decisive role in repulsingGeorge Pickett 's last desperate attack and routing his division. Sheridan and his men continued to play a major part in harassing Lee's army as it withdrew toAppomattox Court House . In the last battles fought in Virginia, it engaged Confederate cavalry in a desultory skirmish at Appomattox Station onApril 8 , and took part in a small skirmish the following day at theBattle of Appomattox Courthouse , which effectively concluded the war in Virginia.Western Cavalry Corps
As in the East, the various Union commanders in the West generally used cavalry poorly during the first two years of the war; cavalry was again parcelled out to be attached to infantry corps as "shock troops" and scouts. Unlike in the East, where the cavalry proved itself the equal of its foes by the summer of 1863, the Union cavalry in the West struggled to identify an equal to Nathan B. Forrest, and were defeated in most of their major engagements.
Benjamin Grierson 's famous raid during theVicksburg Campaign was an aberration and far from the norm.The first attempt at a unified cavalry command occurred in late 1862/63, when
William S. Rosecrans , commanding theArmy of the Cumberland , organized all of his cavalry into a single division, acting as a separate command from the infantry, under the command ofDavid S. Stanley . This new division fought respectably, if unremarkably, at Stones River and Chickamauga.During the
Atlanta Campaign , GeneralWilliam T. Sherman reorganized the cavalry of the armies of the Cumberland and Tennessee into four "columns", with no overall commander. (These individual columns were commanded by Stoneman, Kilpatrick, Edward McCook, and Israel Garrard.) The cavalry continued to perform in a mediocre-at-best fashion, failing an abortive raid to free Andersonville prison camp and being repeatedly defeated byJoseph Wheeler 's Confederate cavalry in a series of fights in central Georgia. During Sherman'sMarch to the Sea , Kilpatrick's division remained with the army, serving again with a lack of real distinction, while the rest of the cavalry went north with George Thomas to repellJohn B. Hood 's invasion of Tennessee, taking part in the actions at Spring Hill and Murfreesboro.In December 1864, just before the
Battle of Nashville , a formal cavalry corps was finally organized, under Maj. Gen.John H. Wilson . It performed decently at Nashville, but, as before, failed to distinguish itself to any real degree. Wilson led the corps in one of the final battles of the warApril 16 ,1865 , at theBattle of Columbus , where, fighting dismounted against Forrest's troopers, they were able to defeat their enemy–the only time Federal cavalry defeated General Forrest.The rest of the Union armies typically had no unified cavalry commands as such, other than a corps-sized command, under Pleasonton, that was briefly organized by the
Department of Missouri to defend that state againstSterling Price 's expedition in 1864.External links
* [http://www.civilwararchive.com/CORPS/cavaop.htm Cavalry Corps (Army of the Potomac) history]
* [http://www.civilwararchive.com/CORPS/cavuow.htm Cavalry Corps (Armies of the West) history]
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