Meridian campaign Confederate order of battle

The following Confederate States Army units and commanders fought in the Meridian campaign (3 February – 6 March 1864) during the American Civil War. Order of battle was compiled from the army organization during the campaign. The strength numbers listed in the tables are "present for duty".[2]

Sepia tone photo of a frowning, bearded man wearing a gray military uniform. His arms are folded.
Lt. Gen. Leonidas Polk led the Confederate forces that opposed the Meridian expedition. He withdrew his infantry into Alabama without any major fighting.[1]

Abbreviations used

Military rank

Other

  • w = wounded
  • mw = mortally wounded
  • k = killed

Meridian Expedition: Confederate forces

LTG Leonidas Polk[3]

  • Escort: Louisiana Company: Lt P. M. Kenner[3]
  • General staff and escort: 5 officers, 44 men[4]

Infantry corps

Confederate order of battle for Polk's infantry corps[5]
Division Brigade Unit
Loring's Division
MG William Wing Loring
548 officers
5,375 men
18 guns
Featherston's Brigade
BG Winfield S. Featherston
3rd Mississippi Infantry Regiment: Col T. A. Mellon
22nd Mississippi Infantry Regiment: Ltc H. J. Reid
31st Mississippi Infantry Regiment: Ltc M. D. L. Stephens
33rd Mississippi Infantry Regiment: Ltc J. L. Drake
1st Mississippi Sharpshooters Battalion: Maj James M. Stigler
Charpentier's Alabama Battery: Cpt Stephen Charpentier
Adams' Brigade
BG John Adams
1st Confederate Battalion: Ltc George H. Forney
6th Mississippi Infantry Regiment: Col Robert Lowry
14th Mississippi Infantry Regiment: Ltc W. L. Doss
15th Mississippi Infantry Regiment: Col M. Farrell
20th Mississippi Infantry Regiment: Col William N. Brown
26th Mississippi Infantry Regiment: Col Arthur E. Reynolds
Lookout Tennessee Artillery: Cpt Robert L. Barry
Buford's Brigade
BG Abraham Buford II
27th Alabama Infantry Regiment: Col James Jackson
35th Alabama Infantry Regiment: Col Samuel S. Ives
54th Alabama Infantry Regiment: Col Alpheus Baker
55th Alabama Infantry Regiment: Col John Snodgrass
9th Arkansas Infantry Regiment: Col Isaac L. Dunlop
3rd Kentucky Infantry Regiment: Col A. P. Thompson
7th Kentucky Infantry Regiment: Col Edward Crossland
8th Kentucky Infantry Regiment: Ltc A. R. Shacklett
12th Louisiana Infantry Regiment: Col Thomas M. Scott
Pointe Coupee Artillery: Cpt Alcide Bouanchaud
Artillery[note 1] Cowan's Mississippi Battery: Cpt J. J. Cowan[6]
French's Division
MG Samuel Gibbs French
248 officers
2,442 men
8 guns
Ector's Brigade
BG Mathew Ector
29th North Carolina Infantry Regiment: Cpt W. W. Rollins
9th Texas Infantry Regiment: Col William Hugh Young
10th Texas Cavalry Regiment (dismounted): Col C. R. Earp
14th Texas Cavalry Regiment (dismounted): Col John Lafayette Camp
32nd Texas Cavalry Regiment (dismounted): Cpt Nathan Anderson
Cockrell's Brigade
BG Francis M. Cockrell
1st and 4th Missouri Infantry Regiment: Col A. C. Riley
2nd and 6th Missouri Infantry Regiment: Col P. C. Flournoy
3rd and 5th Missouri Infantry Regiment: Col James McCown
1st and 3rd Missouri Cavalry Regiment (dismounted): Col Elijah Gates
Artillery[note 2] Hoskins' Mississippi Battery: Cpt J. A. Hoskins
Wade's Missouri Battery: Lt Richard Walsh[note 3]

Cavalry corps

MG Stephen D. Lee[7]

  • Escort: Georgia Company: Cpt T. M. Nelson[7]
  • Strength: 652 officers, 7,685 men, no. guns not reported[4]
Confederate order of battle for Lee's cavalry corps[8]
Division Brigade Unit
Jackson's Division
BG William Hicks Jackson
1st Brigade
Col Peter Burwell Starke
1st Mississippi Cavalry Regiment: Col R. A. Pinson
28th Mississippi Cavalry Regiment: Col Peter Burwell Starke
Ballentine's Mississippi Cavalry Regiment: Col John Goff Ballentine
(Escort) Louisiana Company: Cpt Junius Y. Webb
Columbus (Georgia) Light Artillery: Cpt Edward Croft
2nd Brigade
Col Lawrence Sullivan Ross
3rd Texas Cavalry Regiment: Col Hinchie P. Mabry
6th Texas Cavalry Regiment: Col Jack Wharton
9th Texas Cavalry Regiment: Col Dudley W. Jones
27th Texas Cavalry Regiment: Col Edward R. Hawkins
(Escort) Texas Company: Rush L. Elkin
King's Missouri Battery: Cpt Houston King
Adams' Brigade
BG William Wirt Adams
11th Arkansas Cavalry Regiment: Col John Griffith
14th Confederate Cavalry Regiment: Cpt Josephus R. Quin
9th Louisiana Cavalry Battalion: Cpt E. A. Scott
Harris' Mississippi Cavalry Battalion: Maj J. L. Harris
4th Mississippi Cavalry Regiment: Maj T. R. Stockdale
Adams' Mississippi Cavalry Regiment: Col Robert C. Wood Jr.
9th Tennessee Cavalry Battalion: Maj James H. Akin
Roberts' Mississippi Battery: Cpt Calvit Roberts
Ferguson's Brigade
BG Samuel W. Ferguson
2nd Alabama Cavalry Regiment: Col R. G. Earle
56th Alabama Cavalry Regiment: Col William Boyles
12th Mississippi Cavalry Battalion: Maj William M. Inge
2nd Tennessee Cavalry Regiment (Barteau's): Ltc George H. Morton
Waties' South Carolina Battery: Cpt John Waties
Chalmers' Division
BG James R. Chalmers
1st Brigade
Col William F. Slemons
2nd Arkansas Cavalry Regiment (Slemons'): Col W. F. Slemons
3rd Mississippi Cavalry Regiment: Col John McGuirk
5th Mississippi Cavalry Regiment: Col James Z. George
7th Tennessee Cavalry Regiment: Col William L. Duckworth
McLendon's Mississippi Battery: Cpt J. M. McLendon
2nd Brigade
Col Robert McCulloch
1st Mississippi Partisan Rangers: Ltc L. B. Hovis
18th Mississippi Cavalry Battalion: Ltc Alexander H. Chalmers
19th Mississippi Cavalry Battalion: Ltc William L. Duff
2nd Missouri Cavalry Regiment: Col Robert McCulloch
Buckner Mississippi Battery: Lt H. C. Holt

Notes

Footnotes
  1. Loring reported having four batteries, but only specified the names of three. According to the Official Records, the fourth battery was probably Cowan's (Official Records, p. 332).
  2. French's official return omitted the artillery batteries. According to the Official Records, these probably were Hoskins' and Walsh's (Official Records, p. 333).
  3. Cpt Henry Guibor led the Missouri battery during the Atlanta campaign. It was in the same battalion as Hoskins' Battery and Cpt John Ward's Alabama Battery. (Battles & Leaders, p. 292)
Citations
  1. Boatner 1959, pp. 543–544.
  2. Official Records 1891, pp. 332–334.
  3. Official Records 1891, p. 332.
  4. Official Records 1891, p. 334.
  5. Official Records 1891, pp. 332–333.
  6. Battles & Leaders 1987, p. 292.
  7. Official Records 1891, p. 333.
  8. Official Records 1891, pp. 333–334.

References

  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Vol. 4. Secaucus, N.J.: Castle. 1987 [1883]. ISBN 0-89009-572-8.
  • Boatner, Mark M. III (1959). The Civil War Dictionary. New York, N.Y.: David McKay Company Inc. ISBN 0-679-50013-8.
  • Official Records (1891). "A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies: Volume XXXII Part I". Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 332–334. OCLC 1154873253. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
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