Price), 24th Tennessee Volunteer Infantry, Co. G., Duck River Rifles (hosted at Duck River Rifles), 37th Tennessee, Co. E (maintained by Richard L. Rick Norton), 40th Tennessee Infantry, Arkansas Companies (hosted at Couch GenWeb), 44th Tennessee (hosted at Tennessee Division of Sons of Confederate Veterans), 55th Tennessee Infantry (hosted at Tennessee Division of Sons of Confederate Veterans), 61st Tennessee Infantry (hosted at TNGenWeb). Hunt in the Sioux Indian and Civil Wars of 1862-1865,[undated]. The 10th Tennessee Infantry mustered out of service at Nashville, Tennessee April 2-May 17, 1865. Brig. By June of 1864, the Tenth had relocated to Memphis, Tennessee. 1st Brigade, 4th Division, District of East Tennessee, to June 1865.[3]. 29 :4 (Winter 1977) 179-181. Frank Maney, (to major) Hugh M. McAdoo, Co. "A". Both of us have been involved with each other for more than a year, and in that way, we have both set our interests on the 10th Tennessee, which was our identity in the ancient . In early 1863, the Tenth occupied posts throughout the state. The regiment remained at Fort Henry until the evacuation of that point on February 6, 1862, but Lieutenant Colonel MacGavock was detached from the regiment and sent to Fort Donelson on October 8, 1861. An inspection report November 1, 1861 spoke of the 10th as being in fine condition, saying it was the only regiment at Fort Henry ready for service. The 10th Tennessee Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. 10th Regiment Michigan Volunteer Infantry 1861-1865 . Hunt in the Civil War:A Narrative of the Military Life of T. J. UNION TENNESSEE VOLUNTEERS. 2 vols. On March 31, 1863 Greggs Brigade was composed of the ~h Louisiana Battalion, 3rd/l0th/30th Tennessee Infantry Regiments, all commanded by Colonel R. W. MacGavock, 41st/50th/51st Regiments and 1st Tennessee Infantry Battalion, all under the command of Lieutenant Colonel T. W. Beaumont, 7th Texas Infantry Regiment, the Brookhaven Artillery and Bledsoes Missouri Battery. It mustered out June 23, 1865. Ord's campaign against Mobile, Alabama. Federal reports of the engagement at Egypt Station, Mississippi, on December 28, 1864, state that among the prisoners taken in that fight, there were 253 men, former Federal soldiers, prisoners of war at Andersonville, Georgia, who had enlisted in the 10th Tennessee Infantry Regiment in order to get out of prison. 2nd Brigade, 3rd Division, Army of the Mississippi, to November, 1862. Diary (January 1-August 19, 1865) of a musician with Company A, Tenth Minnesota, while he was stationed in Mississippi and Alabama and continuing through his journey to and discharge from Fort Snelling. Elisha Chastain, William W. Phillips, James A. Castile, Otto Jacobi, Co. C. [2], The regiment was attached to Post and District of Nashville, Tennessee, Department of the Cumberland, to June 1863. The 10th Tennessee Infantry was organized at Nashville, Tennessee from May until August 1862, and mustered in for a three-year enlistment under the . Colonel MacGavock was killed at Raymond, Mississippi on May 12, 1863; Colonel Grace died of wounds on August 31, 1864; Lieutenant Colonel Thompson was retired to the Invalid Corps on September 17, 1864, and Major Brandon resigned on October 12, 1861. On June 14, 1862, Colonel Stanley Matthews, at Nashville, reported there were no troops in Nashville except the Provost Guard and the unorganized First Middle Tennessee Regiment (Governors Guards).. Alexander Lynch, John Feudge, Michael Fogarty, Co. H. Very few surrendered on April 26, 1865. Jennison took command of the regiment. On October 7, 1863, Colonel James H. Baker and his Tenth Minnesota departed Fort Snelling for St. Louis. Never fully organized. The letters are addressed to Annie in Faribault, Minnesota, whom he married circa 1863. He commanded. It was originally recruited and designated as the 1st Middle Tennessee Infantry, largely from Irish-Americans. His wife Philena writes to him from Minnesota and Wisconsin regarding social events, their children, and family matters. MNHS call number:E83.86 .G53 1988. Company "A" Henry Newton Lee was born December 7, 1826 in Wayne County, Tennessee, the son of Henry Lee who was born in Virginia about 1790 and Dorcas Copeland Lee, born in North Carolina about 1794. On October 19, 1863, two companies were at Camp Rosecrans, with the 2nd U. S. Colored Infantry, guarding the construction of the Nashville and Northwestern Railroad, 30 miles from Nashville. Hutchinson, Matthew. Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders. The Tenth Minnesota Volunteers, 18621865: A History of Action in the Sioux Uprising and the Civil War, with a Regimental Roster. Also called 1st Middle Tennessee Infantry Regiment: Gillem's Regiment. Charles L. Davis Civil War Papers, 1862-1865. It became part of the First Brigade, First Division, Sixteenth Army Corps, commanded by Major General A.J. However, the Tenth suffered more in killed and wounded than the rest of the brigade combined. * * * * The order was promptly executed by the provost marshal in all instances except Major Thurneck and the quartermaster of the same regiment. 10TH TENNESSEE VOLUNTEER. Henry Newton Lee married Polly Ann Morrison in 1846. Lieutenant Colonel MacGavock succeeded him as colonel, William Grace became lieutenant colonel, and Sam Thompson major. Mustered in at Nashville, April 26 to August 27, 1862; On April 9, 1865 the Fourth Consolidated Tennessee Infantry Regiment, commanded by Colonel Anderson Searcy, composed of the 2nd, 3rd Volunteers, 10th, 15th, 18th, 20th, 26th, 30th, 32nd, 37th, and 45th Regiments, and the 23rd Tennessee Infantry Battalion formed one regiment in Brigadier General Joseph B. Palmers Brigade of Major General Cheathams Division which was paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina May 1, 1865. In July and August, President Lincoln called for several hundred thousand additional men to enlist for the Union cause. The regiment, as the 10th Tennessee Infantry, was reported as part of the Post Forces of Nashville on October 8, 1862. John B. Leo Letters, 18631865, 1884 Search the full text of digital finding aids for State Archives and manuscript collections at MNHS. Queen, Middleton L. Moore, William W. Mount, Co. I. Language links are at the top of the page across from the title. P. M. Pryor, James II. ", page 586. The irons have been taken off, but he is still held and cannot learn what charges, if any, there are against him. P1749 See the finding aid in the library (MicrofilmM582: Hart, James R.). On December 31, 1863, it was reported as one of the regiments along the line of the Nashville and Northwestern Railroad. Men from McEwen, Humphreys County. Organized at Fort Henry, May, 1861; Confederate service September 1, 1861; reorganized October 2, 1862; merged into 4th Consolidated Tennessee Infantry Regiment April, 1865; paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina, May 1, 1865. The letters shown in the list below are those used after the reorganization, with former letters indicated. The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors database lists 2,473 men on its roster for this unit. James C. Green, Robert H. Clinton, Co. F. Administered by the Minnesota Historical Society. No further changes in the composition of the brigade were shown until after the Battle of Franklin, November 30, 1864. Military records (personnel returns, muster rolls, special orders, financial accounts, and inventories of effects for enlisted deceased) maintained by Captain Charles L. Davis for the 10th Minnesota Infantry Regiment, Company D. Includes autobiographical information (1872) supplied by Davis while publisher for Red Wing, Minnesotas Argus newspaper. St. Paul: The Minnesota Genealogical Society, 1990. Post and garrison duty at Nashville, Tennessee, until September 1863. * * *Major Thurneck held on to his house by false representations-that his children and wife were so sick that removal would be at the risk of their lives. Hancock, R: "Hancock's Diary: or, A History of the Second Tennessee Cavalry C.S.A. Enrolled at Waynesboro, Wayne County; mustered in April 26, 1862; mustered out at Greeneville, Tennessee, May 25, 1865. At Nashville the 2nd, 10th, 15th, 20th, 30th and 37th Tennessee Regiments, forming one unit, were stationed in the vicinity of Shys Hill in the Granny White Pike section. Also called 1st Middle Tennessee Infantry Regiment: Gillem's Regiment Mustered in at Nashville, April 26 to August 27, 1862; mustered out at Greeneville, Tennessee, May 25, and at Knoxville, June, . Organized at Nashville, Tenn., May to August, 1862. Price) 23rd TN Infantry Co C. 24th Tennessee Volunteer Infantry, Co. G., Duck River Rifles (hosted at Duck River Rifles) 37th Tennessee Infantry Regiment. I finally sent a surgeon to examine. Roster. I finally sent a surgeon to examine. The 10th Tennessee Infantry was organized at Nashville, Tennessee, from May until August 1862, and mustered in for a three-year enlistment under the command of Colonel Alvan Cullem Gillem. The soldiers that did reenlist became the . 1st Brigade, 4th Division, XX Corps, Department of the Cumberland, to April 1865. Contents. Although Tennessee was officially a Confederate state in the conflict, the state would furnish the most units of soldiers for the Union Army than any other state within the Confederacy, totaling . Military Governor of Tennessee. to Richmond, Va., as that city had fallen into the hands of Union troops upon the Surrender of General Lee. Minnesota in the Civil and Indian Wars, 1861-1865. Company C - Men from 3rd District, mainly from. http://www.mnopedia.org/group/tenth-minnesota-volunteer-infantry-regiment (accessed May 1, 2023). They had eight children. The regiment returned to Minnesota in August, 1865 and were mustered out at Fort Snelling. INFANTRY REGIMENT, U.S.A. In response, the Tenth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment formed between August and November of that year. It rejoined the main army in time for the Battle of Nashville December 15-16. Originally I, then K. The brigade remained in Mississippi until September, 1863, when it was ordered to join General Braggs Army of Tennessee, which it reached on September 17, just in time to take part in the Battle of Chickamauga, September 19-20. Photocopies of letters from Henry McConnell, of Red Wing (Minn.), to his wife Delia. On December 31, 1863, it was reported as one of the regiments along the line of the Nashville and Northwestern Railroad. The regiment, as the 10th Tennessee Infantry, was reported as part of the Post Forces of Nashville on October 8, 1862. On January 2, 1864, the regiment was assigned to the 1st Brigade, District of Nashville, of the XII Corps. The 10th Tennessee Infantry mustered out of service at Nashville, Tennessee April 2-May 17, 1865. Reconnoissance to Iuka, Miss., January 9. This is a list of Tennessee Confederate Civil War units. MNHS openings and announcements. Correspondence between Pickett and various relatives and friends during his Civil War and Dakota Conflict of 1862 service with the 10th Minnesota Infantry. The 10th Tennessee Infantry was organized at Nashville, Tennessee, from May until August 1862, and mustered in for a three-year enlistment under the command of Colonel Alvan Cullem Gillem. Formerly F. It was originally recruited and designated as the 1st Middle Tennessee Infantry, largely from Irish-Americans. 10th Regiment, Tennessee Infantry Overview: Organized at Nashville, Tenn., May to August, 1862. of the Cumberland, to April, 1864. John B. Leo Letters 1863-1865. Manuscript Notebooks Collection, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul Made possible by the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund through the vote of Minnesotans on November 4, 2008. The 10th Tennessee Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Smith. MNHS call number:See the finding aid in the library (P1481). On June 6, 1864, Major General George H. Thomas directed the regiment be dropped from the returns of the Army of the Cumberland and transferred to Governor Andrew Johnson as a Governors Guard. Search for books, pamphlets, maps, A/V materials, and archival and manuscript collections in our Library Catalog. 3rd Brigade, 2nd Division, Reserve Corps, Department of the Cumberland, to September 1863. 1st Brigade, 3rd Division, XII Corps, Department of the Cumberland, to April 1864. in 128 parts. View our Privacy Policy. Alexander Lynch, John Feudge, Michael Fogarty, Co. H. Of the field officers, Colonel Heiman died in November 1862. In July, the regiment began its journey home. Defenses of Nashville & Northwestern Railroad to January 1864. Men from Nashville. of the Cumberland, to April, 1865. At Raymond the regiment suffered 52 casualties, including Colonel MacGavock, who was killed. A letter from Captain Oliver D. Greene, Assistant Adjutant General, dated July 17, 1862, gives some indication of the circumstances under which the regiment was organized. See the finding aid in the library (Microfim, 1st Minnesota Battery of Light Artillery "Munch's Battery", 1st Minnesota Regiment of Heavy Artillery. He finally obtained an appointment from the Governor of Tennessee and was enrolled on April 1st, 1862, for three years service, and mustered into service as Lieutenant Colonel of the 10th Tennessee Volunteer Infantry Regiment on June 5th, 1862. The 10th Regiment Ohio Volunteer Infantry mustered into service as a three-year organization at Camp Dennison, near Cincinnati, Ohio on June 3, 1861. He had previously served with the Second Minnesota Infantry and would prove an able leader. 3rd Brigade, 2nd Division, Reserve . In my present location I am able to accomplish something and at the same time protect loyal men of the neighborhood, who are kept harrassed by bands of rebel guerrillas that congregate in the vicinity. Company H - Men mostly from other states, with some from the 3rd District. The Tenth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment begins organizing in response to President Lincoln's calls for more troops to join the Union armies. The regiment was attached to Post and District of Nashville, Tennessee, Department of the Cumberland, to June 1863. MNHS call number:See the finding aid in the library (P2819). Civil War Diary and Miscellaneous Papers, 1864 by Asa Sylvester Haynes. Colonels-Alvan C. Gillem (to brigadier general), James W. Scully, Lieutenant Colonels-Frank T. Foster, James W. Scully, John Feudge, Majors-Alexander Thurneck, Louis Mandazy, Middleton L. Moore. The 10th Tennesse is actually a grouping of two separate regiments from Napoleonic Wars: the Marins de la Garde Impriale and the 4th Regiment of Foot, the King's Own. Ordered to Bridgeport, Alabama, September 24, 1863. It was then ordered to western Virginia June 7 and attached to Rosecrans' Brigade, McClellan's Army of West Virginia where it occupied . Beard, W. E. The Battle of Nashville, Including an Outline of the Stirring Events Occurring in One of the Most Notable Movements of the Civil War-Hood's Invasion of Tennessee. Word, Co. E. The Brigade reported a total of 1415 engaged, with 652 casualties. http://archive.org/details/warrebellionaco17offigoog. The Civil War Diary of a Minnesota Volunteer, Henry Ahsenmacher. Hunt in the Sioux Indian and Civil Wars of 1862-1865,[undated]. This is a list of regiments from the state of Tennessee that fought in the Union Army during the American Civil War (1861-1865). 10th Minnesota national battle flag, c.18611865. Company M - Never fully organized. Military records (personnel returns, muster rolls, special orders, financial accounts, and inventories of effects for enlisted deceased) maintained by Captain Charles L. Davis for the 10th Minnesota Infantry Regiment, Company D. Includes autobiographical information (1872) supplied by Davis while publisher for Red Wing, Minnesotas Argus newspaper. Also includes a receipt for music purchases at the St. Paul firm of Root & Cady. In response, the Tenth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment formed between August and November of that year. Company K - Men from 3rd District and other states. The 10th Tennessee Infantry mustered out of service at Nashville, Tennessee April 2-May 17, 1865. MNHS call number:See the finding aid in the library (McConnell, Henry). Copyrighted 1964 by the Civil War Centennial Commission of Tennessee and is published here with their permission. Last modified: March 4, 2022, Board of Commissioners. The Tenth participates in the campaign against Mobile, Alabama, and its defenses. In February, 1862, Colonel Heiman was in command of a brigade at Fort Henry, composed of the 27th Alabama, 1Oth and 48th (Voorhies) Tennessee Infantry Regiments, Culbertsons Battery, and Gantts Cavalry Battalion. I shall give the requisite orders, but it is my duty to express the apprehension that we shall thus lose the services of a regiment. MNHS call number:See the finding aid in the library (P1749). During my absence Governor Johnson ordered the provost marshal to give the keys to a Major Thurneck, of the First Tennessee Volunteers, then being raised here. Civil War Diary and Miscellaneous Papers, 1864 by Asa Sylvester Haynes. Charles L. Davis Civil War Papers, 1862-1865. 10th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Infantry. Also add the 6th and 10th Louisiana Infantry, which both contained a large number of Irish immigrants. 10th Tennessee Regiment, CO.E; 11th Tennessee Infantry; 11th Tn Cavalry Battalion, 6th (1st) Tn Cavalry Regiment, Giles County ; 12th Tennessee Cavalry Regiment, CSA; 12th Tennessee Infantry Regiment; 13th Tennessee Infantry; 14th Tennessee; 15th Tennessee [Stewart's, Logwood's] Cavalry ; 16th Tennessee Infantry, Co. A and G, DeKalb County, TN . The 10th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Infantry was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. of Kansas to August, 1862. . Comprised of men and women who volunteer their time and efforts at historical events all over the country, the Tenth provides an excellent insight into one of the darkest hours of American . Field and Staff ; A . They were pursuing Confederate forces under General Sterling Price. It was first reported in the Official Records in June 10, 1862, in Brigadier General Ebenezer Dumonts Independent Brigade, District of the Ohio. Welcome to the Col. Randal W. McGavock Camp Home Page. St. Paul: Pioneer Press Company, 1891. [1] The Civil War Archive section, 10th Regiment Infantry (1st Middle Tennessee Infantry), (accessed 5 April 2012. http://archive.org/details/minnesotacivil01minnrich, http://archive.org/details/08697590.3359.emory.edu, http://archive.org/details/warrebellionaco17offigoog, Battle of Birch Coulee, September 23, 1862, First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Second Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Third Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Fourth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Fifth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Sixth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Seventh Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Eighth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Ninth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Eleventh Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, First Battery of Minnesota Light Artillery, Second Battery of Minnesota Light Artillery, Second Company of Minnesota Sharpshooters, Fort Snelling in the Civil and USDakota Wars, 18611866. The Tenth sustains one killed and twenty-one wounded at the battle of Tupelo, Mississippi. Also called 5th East Tennessee Volunteer Regiment. At the Battle of Jonesboro, August 31, 1864, Colonel Grace was mortally wounded, and John G. ONeill became colonel of the 10th in his stead. Also present at Fort Henry in October, 1861 were Captain Jesse Taylors Company of Artillery, and Captains Ham-bricks and Bacots companies of Colonel Nathan B. Forrests Battalion of Cavalry. UNION KANSAS VOLUNTEERS. During my absence Governor Johnson ordered the provost marshal to give the keys to a Major Thurneck, of the First Middle Tennessee Volunteers, then being raised here. 1st Brigade, 4th Division, District of East Tennessee, to June 1865. Description: This collection includes a June 9, 1864 letter from Captain George T. White, Company F, Tenth Minnesota Infantry, to his sister, describing sickness and camp conditions in Columbus, Kentucky. : See the finding aid in the library (P2735). St. Clair M. Morgan, Clarence C. Malone, Co. C. Lewis C. Waggoner, John H. Handy, W. L. McConnico, Co. E. A resource for reliable information about significant people, places, events, and things in Minnesota history. Miles Joyce, Co. B. 3rd Brigade, 2nd Division, Reserve Corps, Department of the Cumberland, to September 1863. 15th-37th Consolidated Tennessee Infantry Regiment (7th Regiment Provisional Army of Tennessee, 1st East Tennessee Rifle Regiment) 17th-23rd Consolidated Tennessee Infantry Regiment. The 10th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Infantry was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. 10th Regiment, Tennessee Infantry (Union), Companies in this Regiment with the Counties of Origin, 10th Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Infantry, Beginning United States Civil War Research, The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System, https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/index.php?title=10th_Regiment,_Tennessee_Infantry_(Union)&oldid=4770998, Tennessee - Military - Civil War, 1861-1865. The regiment was paroled at Vicksburg in September, 1862, reorganized October 2, 1862, and declared exchanged November 10, 1862. This page is not available in other languages. It was originally recruited and designated as the 1st Middle Tennessee Infantry, largely from Irish-Americans. Though the Tenth fired only one volley, it suffered one killed and twenty-one wounded. The company was merged into the 1st Consolidated Tennessee Infantry Regiment on April 9, 1865 and became company H. John M. McAdoo, Co. "C". MNHS call number: See the finding aid in the library (P2735). Entries are scattered and brief, describing weather, health, and troop movements. In January, 1863, in the organization of the XIV Corps, the regiment was reported as unattached to any brigade. On April 24, it was assigned to the 1st Brigade, 4th Division, stationed at Greeneville. Hunt in the Civil War:A Narrative of the Military Life of T. J. MNopedia, Minnesota Historical Society. After spending the next month in a series of marches pursuing General Forrest, Major General Smith's forces returned to Memphis at the end of August. Edward D. R. Bladen, Henry N. Lee, Co. A. The brigade consisted of the 10th, 42nd, 48th (Voorhies) and 53rd Tennessee Infantry Regiments, Maneys Tennessee Battery, and the 27th Alabama Infantry Regiment, totaling about 1600 men. 1st Tennessee National Guard Union Volunteers, Co. A, of 1863, 1st Tennessee Heavy Artillery , Co. A, CSA, 1890 Civil War Veterans Census, Sumner County, Tennessee, Confederate Pension Applications Sumner Co. TN, Confederate Prisoners of War at Alton, IL, Pardons & Petitions, Sumner Co., Tennessee, 5th Tennessee Volunteer Infantry Regiment, Company A, 7th Tennessee Infantry Regiment, Company F, 24th Tennessee Infantry Regiment, Company A, 16th Tennessee Infantry Regiment, Company C, 23rd Tennessee Infantry Regiment, Company K, 50th Tennessee Confederate Infantry, Tennessee Division of Sons of Confederate Veterans, Journal of Rockingham County History and Genealogy 1976-1978, Genealogy of the descendants of John Walker of Wigton, Scotland, Genealogy of John Howe of Sudbury and Marlborough, Massachusetts, Ezekiel Cheever and some of his Descendants, Early Records and Notes of the Brown Family, Company G, 16th Tennessee Infantry Regiment. Hood had erected temporary defenses south of the city. Search MNHS websites, as well as Collections Online, Finding Aids and other resources. Mustered in June 5, 1862; men from Davidson, Bedford, and Rutherford Counties; mustered out at Knoxville, June 10, 1865. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1964. On January 2, 1864, the regiment was assigned to the 1st Brigade, District of Nashville, of the XII Corps. Typescript narrative detailing the activities of this Ellington (Dodge County) farmer during the siege of New Ulm, his service with the 10th Minnesota Infantry, Company B, at the Winnebago Indian Agency and as commander of a platoon of skirmishers on the Sibley Expedition, and his Civil War experiences. Manuscript Notebooks Collection, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul The companies had three sets of company letters: one when organized in state service, another when accepted into Confederate service, a third when reorganized in 1862. No attention was paid, on the grounds that the regiment was not in U.S. Service and not liable to the United States authorities. Nashville, TN: W.E. In the war's aftermath, six companies of the regiment were present at the December 26 hanging of thirty-eight Dakota prisoners in Mankato. Men from Clarksville, Montgomery County. Pursuit of Hood to the Tennessee River December 17-28. United States War Department. 1st Brigade, 4th Division, XX Corps, Department of the Cumberland, to April 1865. Description: Seven letters and one photograph of John B. Leo, an Irish immigrant who enlisted in Company H, Tenth Minnesota Infantry at the start of the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862, and served there and in the Civil War. After reassembling the remnants of the division, Bate reported they crossed the Tennessee River December 25, 1864 on the retreat into Mississippi. 1st Brigade, 4th Division, District of East Tennessee, to June, 1865. The following spring the 10th regiment took part in the campaign against Mobile, Alabama. Charles Johnson, a son of President Andrew Johnson who enlisted as assistant surgeon in the 10th Tennessee Volunteer Infantry in the Fall of 1862 [1] The 10th Tennessee Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported. Command encamped on the west end of Section 30, Northwestern Railroad, and distant from your city 28 with two companies of the First Middle (10th Regiment) Tennessee Infantry, and, so far as our forces are concerned, the advance of Federal troops in this direction. The 10th Regiment had previously organized for three months service, but officials requested that the regiment's members reenlist for three years service. Description: Photocopies of letters from Henry McConnell to his wife, regarding the personnel and movements of Company D, Tenth Minnesota Infantry. Mustered in July 4, 1862. mustered out at Greeneville, Tennessee, May 25, and at Knoxville, June, 1865. 43rd Tennessee Mounted Infantry Organized . Defenses of Nashville & Northwestern Railroad to January 1864. Ordered to Greenville April 24, 1865, and duty in District of East Tennessee till June. The "Tenth Minnesota." On January 3, 1863, the 10th reported 349 effectives, and moved with the brigade to Port Hudson, Louisiana, where it stayed until May 2, 1863. 1st Brigade, 4th Division, 20th Army Corps, Dept. "Tenth Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment." Patrick W. Halloran, John Phillips, Co. C; mustered in April 29, 1862; mustered out at Greeneville, May 25, 1865. The Tenth Minnesota Volunteers, 1862-1865: A History of Action in the Sioux Uprising and the Civil War, With a Regimental Roster,by Michael A. Eggleston. Men from Nashville. Company F - Men mostly from other states; some from first five Tennessee congressional districts. Defenses of Nashville & Northwestern Railroad to January, 1864. On April 14, the XI and XII Corps were consolidated to form the XX Corps, and the regiment assigned to the 1st Brigade, 4th Division, XX Corps, and on April 23, was reported with 775 effectives. That fall, the Tenth experienced hard marching through Arkansas and Missouri. Upon his report of the facts I directed Colonel Campbell to have him ejected as occupying a house in possession of the United States without civil authority. Mustered in August 26, 1862. Cuthbert B. This search does not search in the library catalog. Mustered in July 7, 1862; men mostly from Bedford County; mustered out at Knoxville, June 25, 1865. The following afternoon, Colonel William L. McMillen's brigade, which included the Tenth Minnesota, attacked Confederate fortifications on a prominent hill. The list of Tennessee Union Civil War units is shown separately. 1st Brigade, Defenses of Nashville, Tennessee, January 1864. This page has been viewed 4,924 times (0 via redirect). Also includes a receipt for music purchases at the St. Paul firm of Root & Cady. Mustered out June 23, 1865.
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