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15th Vermont Infantry Regiment | |
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Flag of Vermont, 1837–1923 | |
Active | October 22, 1862 to August 5, 1863 |
Disbanded | August 5, 1863 |
Allegiance | |
Branch | |
Type | Infantry |
Commanders | |
Colonel | Redfield Proctor |
Vermont U.S. Volunteer Infantry Regiments 1861-1865 | ||||
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The 15th Vermont Infantry Regiment was a nine-months' infantry regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War. It served in the eastern theater, predominantly in the Defenses of Washington, from October 1862 to August 1863. It was a member of the 2nd Vermont Brigade.
History
The 15th Vermont Infantry was raised as a result of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln's call on August 4, 1862, for additional troops, due to the disastrous results of the Peninsula Campaign.
It was composed of volunteers from Caledonia, Orleans, Orange and Windsor counties, as follows:
- West Fairlee, Co. A
- Danville, Co. B
- West Randolph, Co. C
- Wait's River, Co. D
- Island Pond, Co. E
- McIndoe's Falls, Co. F
- Lyndon, Co. G
- Frontier Guards of Coventry, Co. H
- Barton, Co. I
- St. Johnsbury, Co. K
Colonel Redfield Proctor, previously of the 3rd and 5th Vermont regiments, was selected to command the regiment. He would later serve as Governor of Vermont. William W. Grout, the regiment's lieutenant colonel, would later serve in the U.S. Congress.
The regiment went into camp at Brattleboro on October 8, 1862, occupying barracks just vacated the day before by the 12th Vermont Infantry, and was mustered into United States service on October 22. It left Vermont on October 23, and arrived in Washington, D.C., on October 26; the next day it joined the 14th Vermont Infantry and some Maine regiments in Camp Chase, in Arlington, Virginia, then returned to camp on East Capitol Hill, and on October 30 became part of the 2nd Vermont Brigade.
The regiment marched to Munson's Hill on October 30, and Hunting Creek the next day, where it stayed until November 26. It performed picket duty at Occoquan Creek from November 26, to December 4, when it moved to "Camp Vermont" until December 12. It engaged in further picket duty near Fairfax Courthouse until December 20, then moved to Fairfax Station until March 24. From March 24 to May 7 it was at Union Mills, followed by nearly two weeks at Bealeton. It returned to Union Mills until mid-June, then for ten days elements of the regiment were stations at Bristoe Station, Catlett's Station and Manassas.
On June 25, the brigade was assigned as the 3rd Brigade, 3rd Division, I Corps, and ordered to form the rear guard of the Army of the Potomac as it marched north after Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. The 15th marched with the brigade from Wolf Run Shoals on June 25, crossed the Potomac River on June 27, at Edward's Ferry, and moved north through Frederick and Creagerstown, Maryland. It was drawing near Gettysburg on July 1, when the 12th and 15th regiments were detached to guard the corps trains. The two regiments accompanied the corps trains to Rock Creek Church, near the battlefield.
After the battle, regiment participated in the pursuit of Lee's Army of Northern Virginia across the Catoctin mountains to Middletown, Maryland, then back over South Mountain, through Boonsboro, to Williamsport by July 14. The regiment marched to Harper's Ferry, across South Mountain again, and camped near Petersville, near Berlin (present-day Brunswick). On July 18, the regiment was released, taking a train from Berlin to Baltimore. It reached New York City on July 20, spent two uneventful days there during the Draft riots, then continued on to Brattleboro, where it mustered out on August 5.
Like the other regiments in the 2nd Vermont Brigade, dozens of newly discharged members from the 15th regiment enlisted again, predominantly in the regiments of the 1st Vermont Brigade, and the 17th Vermont Infantry.
Final statement
FINAL STATEMENT | |
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Original members | 939 |
Gain (recruits and transferes) | 1 |
--- Aggregate | 940 |
--- Losses --- | |
Transfer to other regiments | 1 |
Died of disease | 78 |
Honorably discharged | 66 |
Deserted | 1 |
Died from accident | 1 |
--- Total losses | 147 |
Mustered out at various times | 793 |
See also
References
Citations
- "Battle Unit Details - The Civil War (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2022-07-09.
- "Vermont Civil War, Lest We Forget". vermontcivilwar.org. Retrieved 2022-07-09.
Sources
- Benedict, George Grenville (1886). Vermont in the Civil War: A History of the Part Taken by the Vermont Soldiers and Sailors in the War for the Union, 1861-5. Vol. 2. Free Press Association. pp. 411–413.
- Dyer, Frederick Henry (1908). A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion. Vol. 3. Dyer Publishing Company.
- Peck, Theodore S. (1892). Revised Roster of Vermont Volunteers: And Lists of Vermonters who Served in the Army and Navy of the United States During the War of the Rebellion, 1861-66. Vermont Civil War Enterprises. pp. 524–525.
Further reading
- Coffin, Howard, Full Duty: Vermonters in the Civil War. Woodstock, VT.: Countryman Press, 1995.
- -----. Nine Months to Gettysburg. The Vermonters Who Broke Pickett's Charge. Woodstock, VT.: Countryman Press, 1997.
- Palmer, Edwin F., The Second Brigade: or, Camp Life, By a Volunteer, Montpelier: E. P. Walton, 1864.
External links
- Vermont in the Civil War
- Vermont National Guard Library and Museum
- Vermont Military Records Project, Vermont Public Records Division