Connecticut's
Soldiers in the Civil War
By
James P. Walsh
See
also: A Quaker
Firebrand Swings An Election
From
beginning to end, Connecticut troops fought heroically in the Civil
War. In the first major battle at Bull Run, three regiments from
Connecticut prevented a Union defeat from becoming a rout. When
Richmond, the capital of the Confederacy, fell, the first foot patrols
to enter the city were men of the Connecticut Twenty-Ninth Regiment,
a black unit.
Connecticut
easily raised volunteers in 1861. The first three regiments, approximately
2,500 men, enlisted for three months, and many of them reenlisted
when their terms expired. As the war went on, however, the number
of men needed increased as did the terms of enlistment. In the summer
of 1862, for example, Lincoln asked Connecticut for an additional
7,145 men to serve for three years. By that time, Connecticut already
had about 10,000 in the Army. Eventually, the Union had to resort
to a draft. It is sometimes said that nobody in Connecticut had
to be drafted because there were always enough volunteers to fill
the state's quota, but this is not quite true. Once the draft was
instituted, it made sense to volunteer because being drafted became
a virtual certainty and because volunteers received bounties. By
war's end, about 55,000 men had served in the military, probably
more than half of all the young men in the state.
Connecticut
men served in the Navy, the Marines and the regular Army, but
most
served as infantrymen in State Regiments. These men served in every
theatre of the war, and in virtually every major engagement.
Connecticut
soldiers were at Antietam in Maryland; at Port Hudson in Louisiana;
at Gettysburg in Pennsylvania; at Cedar Creek in the Shenandoah
Valley; and again and again in Virginia—at Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville,
Cold Harbor, and Petersburg. And where they fought, they shed
their
blood. The Fourteenth Regiment lost 1,462 men, the worst losses
of any Connecticut regiment. Altogether, nearly half of all the
men who served were killed, wounded, or taken prisoner.
When
General Grant rode to the McLean House in Appomattox to take Robert
E. Lee's surrender, he was escorted by Connecticut cavalrymen. It
was an honor that the state had truly earned.
For
Further Reading
The
best history of Connecticut's Civil War military effort is John
Niven, Connecticut for the Union (New Haven, Connecticut,
1965).
There
is a fuller, but less readable, treatment in W. A. Croffut and John
M. Morris, The Military and Civil History of Connecticut during
the War of 1861-1865 (New York, 1869).
*
Entry under revision.
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