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  1. 14 de mai. de 2024 · Perhaps more properly known as the 4th Regiment North Carolina State Troops, they were organized at Camp Hill (near Garysburg), NC and mustered into Confederate Service in May 1861. Their first Commanding Officer was Colonel George B. Anderson, who was later their Brigade Commander at Sharpsburg.

  2. Há 2 dias · For example, uniforms for North Carolina regiments often featured a colored strip of cloth on their shoulders to designate what part of the service the soldier was in. Confederate soldiers also frequently suffered from inadequate supplies of shoes, tents, and other gear, and would be forced to innovate and make do with whatever they could scrounge from the local countryside.

  3. 14 de mai. de 2024 · The focus of this website is on the people who participated in the battle of Antietam (or Sharpsburg). We've collected information about many of them over the years. In addition to thousands of individual soldier profiles, we have several ways to look at the battle and the campaign of September 1862: with interactive maps, narratives from the ...

  4. Há 2 dias · The 26th North Carolina (the largest regiment in the army, with 839 men) lost heavily, leaving the first day's fight with around 212 men. By the end of the three-day battle, they had about 152 men standing, the highest casualty percentage for one battle of any regiment, North or South.

  5. Há 5 dias · Search For Your Ancestors in Historical Documents. View, Print & Share: FIRST or LAST NAME

  6. Há 2 dias · For example, the division artillery trained with the units of the 13th Field Artillery Brigade at Fort Bragg, North Carolina; the 307th Engineer Regiment alongside Company A, 4th Engineer Regiment at Fort Benning, Georgia; the 307th Medical Regiment trained at the medical officers training camp at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia; and the ...

  7. 3 de mai. de 2024 · USCT regiments were also present in the final campaigns of the war. In December 1864, the Union army organized the all-Black Twenty-fifth Corps under General Godfrey Weitzel, which took part in the amphibious assault on Fort Fisher off Wilmington, North Carolina, one of the last ports to be seized by Union troops.