Minor Michigan Infantry Units of the American Civil War
The State of Michigan raised a pair of company-sized infantry units for the American Civil War.
Stanton Guard, Michigan Volunteer Infantry
The Stanton Guard was organized at Detroit, Michigan in April 1862 by Captain Grover S. Wormer and mustered in on May 10, to serve as guards over General William G. Harding, Washington Barrow and Judge Joseph C. Guild, three Confederate sympathizers from Nashville, TN sent as prisoners to the fort on Mackinac Island. Upon the removal of the prisoners, it was mustered out of service on September 25, 1862. Captain Wormer afterward served as lieutenant colonel in the 8th Michigan Cavalry and colonel in the 30th Michigan Infantry.
Independent Company, Michigan Volunteer Infantry (Provost Guard)
The Independent Company was organized at Detroit, Michigan and mustered in on January 3, 1863. The unit served as Provost Guard at the Detroit Barracks until it was mustered out of service on May 9, 1865.
See also
Notes
- Wisconsin Magazine of History. Tennessee Prisoners at Fort Mackinac, p.220
- Robertson, p.744
- http://www.civilwararchive.com/Unreghst/unmiinf3.htm The Civil War Archive website after Dyer, Frederick Henry. A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion. 3 vols. New York: Thomas Yoseloff, 1959. Retrieved June 19, 2007.
- Robertson, pg 486,688
- Robertson, p.745
References
- Robertson, John; Adjutant General (1882). Michigan in the War. Lansing, MI: W.S. George & Co, State Printers.
- The Civil War Archive