Knoxville Union order of battle

The following Union Army units and commanders fought in the Knoxville Campaign and subsequent East Tennessee operations during the American Civil War from November 4 to December 23, 1863 under the command of Maj. Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside. Engagements fought during this time included the battles of Campbell's Station and Fort Sanders and the siege of Knoxville. Order of battle compiled from the army organization during the campaign[1] and return of casualties.[2] The Confederate order of battle is shown separately.

Abbreviations used

Military rank

Other

Army of the Ohio

MG Ambrose E. Burnside

General Headquarters

  • Chief of Staff: MG John G. Parke
  • Escort: 6th Indiana Cavalry: Col James Biddle

IX Corps

BG Robert B. Potter

Division Brigade Regiments and Others

First Division
     BG Edward Ferrero

1st Brigade


   Col David Morrison

  • 36th Massachusetts: Maj William E. Draper
  • 8th Michigan: Ltc Ralph Ely
  • 79th New York: Cpt William S. Montgomery
  • 45th Pennsylvania: Ltc Francis M. Hills
2nd Brigade


   Col Benjamin C. Christ

  • 29th Massachusetts: Col Ebenezer W. Pierce
  • 27th Michigan: Maj William B. Wright
  • 46th New York: Cpt Alphons Serieri
  • 50th Pennsylvania: Maj Edward Overton, Jr.
3rd Brigade


   Col William Humphrey

Artillery


  

  • 34th Battery, New York Artillery: Cpt Jacob Roemer
  • Battery D, 1st Rhode Island Artillery: Cpt William W. Buckley

Second Division
     Col John F. Hartranft

1st Brigade


   Col Joshua K. Sigfried

  • 2nd Maryland: Col Thomas B. Allard
  • 21st Massachusetts: Ltc George P. Hawkes
  • 48th Pennsylvania: Maj Joseph A. Gilmour
2nd Brigade


   Ltc Edwin Schall

  • 35th Massachusetts: Maj Nathaniel Wales
  • 11th New Hampshire: Cpt Leander W. Cogswell
  • 51st Pennsylvania: Maj William J. Bolton
Unattached


  

XXIII Corps

BG Mahlon D. Manson

General Headquarters

  • Chief of Engineers: Col Orlando M. Poe[3]
  • McLaughlin's Ohio Cavalry Squadron: Maj Richard Rice
  • Engineer Battalion: Cpt O. S. McClure
Division Brigade Regiments and Others

Second Division
     BG Julius White

1st Brigade


   Col Samuel R. Mott[4][5]

2nd Brigade


   Col Marshall W. Chapin

Third Division
     BG Milo S. Hascall

1st Brigade


   Col James W. Reilly

2nd Brigade


   Col Daniel Cameron

  • 65th Illinois: Ltc William S. Stewart
  • 24th Kentucky: Col John S. Hunt
  • 103rd Ohio: Cpt John T. Philpot
  • Indiana Artillery Battery: Cpt Hubbard T. Thomas
Artillery


  

Provisional Brigade


   Col William A. Haskins

Cavalry Corps

BG James M. Shackelford

Division Brigade Regiments and Others

First Division
     BG William P. Sanders (mw)[6]
     Col Frank Wolford

1st Brigade


   Col Frank Wolford
   Ltc Silas Adams

  • 1st Kentucky Cavalry: Ltc Silas Adams
  • 12th Kentucky Cavalry:
  • Law's Howitzer Battery:
2nd Brigade


   Ltc Emory S. Bond

3rd Brigade


   Col Charles D. Pennebaker

  • 11th Kentucky Cavalry: Col S. Palace Love
  • 27th Kentucky Mounted Infantry: Ltc John H. Ward

Second Division
     Col John W. Foster

1st Brigade


   Col Israel Garrard

2nd Brigade


   Col Felix W. Graham
   Col Horace Capron[7]

Notes

  1. Official Records, Series I, Volume XXXI, Part 1, pages 812-817 (Troops in the Department of the Ohio, Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside, U. S. Army, commanding, October 31, 1864)
  2. Official Records, Series I, Volume XXXI, Part 1,pages 288-293
  3. Eicher p.432
  4. Mott's brigade did not take an active part in the campaign Official Records, Series I, Volume XXXI, Part 1, page 289
  5. Official Records
  6. Sanders was mortally wounded November 18, 1863 at Campbell's Station (Eicher, p. 610).
  7. Eicher p.162
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References

  • Eicher, John H. and David J., Civil War High Commands, Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3
  • U.S. War Department, The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, U.S. Government Printing Office, 18801901.
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