15th Alabama Infantry Regiment
The 15th Alabama Infantry Regiment was a Confederate volunteer infantry unit from the state of Alabama during the American Civil War. Recruited from six counties in the southeastern part of the state, it fought mostly with Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, though it also saw brief service with Braxton Bragg and the Army of Tennessee in late 1863 before returning to Virginia in early 1864 for the duration of the war. Out of 1958 men listed on the regimental rolls throughout the conflict, 261 are known to have fallen in battle, with sources listing an additional 416 deaths due to disease. 218 were captured, 66 deserted and 61 were transferred or discharged. By the end of the war, only 170 men remained to be paroled.
The 15th Alabama is most famous for being the regiment that confronted the 20th Maine on Little Round Top during the Battle of Gettysburg on July 2, 1863. Despite several ferocious assaults, the 15th Alabama was ultimately unable to dislodge the Union troops, and was eventually forced to retreat in the face of a desperate bayonet charge led by the 20th Maine's commander, Col. Joshua L. Chamberlain. This assault was recreated in Ronald F. Maxwell's 1993 film Gettysburg.
Recruitment, organization and equipment
Recruitment
The 15th Alabama Infantry Regiment was organized by James Cantey, a planter originally from South Carolina, who was residing in Russell County, Alabama, at the outset of the Civil War. "Cantey's Rifles" formed at Ft. Mitchell, on the Chattahoochee River, in May 1861. Cantey's company was joined by ten other militia companies, all of which were sworn into state service by governor Andrew B. Moore on July 3, 1861, with Cantey as Regimental Commander.One of these companies, from Henry County, was formed by William C. Oates, a lawyer and newspaperman from Abbeville. Oates, who would later command the whole regiment at Little Round Top, put together a company composed mostly of Irishmen recruited from the area, calling them "Henry Pioneers" or "Henry County Pioneers". Other observers, after seeing their colorful uniforms, dubbed them "Oates' Zouaves".
According to one source, the youngest private in the 15th Alabama was only thirteen years old; the oldest, Edmond Shepherd, was seventy.
counties. The 15th Alabama was recruited from counties in the southeastern portion of the state.
Organization
The 15th initially consisted of approximately 900 men; its companies, and their counties of origin, were:- Co. "A", known as "Cantey's Rifles", from Russell County;
- Co. "B", known as the "Midway Southern Guards", from Barbour County;
- Co. "C", no nickname given, from Macon County;
- Co. "D", known as the "Fort Browder Roughs", from Barbour County;
- Co. "E", known as the "Beauregards", from Dale County ;
- Co. "F", known as the "Brundidge Guards", from Pike County;
- Co. "G", known as the "Henry Pioneers", from Henry County ;
- Co. "H", known as the "Glenville Guards", from Barbour and Dale counties;
- Co. "I", "Quitman Guards", from Pike County;
- Co. "K", known as the "Eufaula City Guard", from Barbour County; and
- Co. "L", no nickname given, from Pike County.
Equipment
Companies "A" and "B" of the 15th Alabama were equipped with the M1841 Mississippi Rifle, a.54 caliber percussion rifle that had seen extensive service in the Mexican–American War and was highly regarded for its accuracy and ease of use. The other companies in the regiment were given older "George Law" smoothbore muskets, which had been converted from flintlocks to percussion rifles. Later, the regiment received British Pattern 1853 Enfield rifle-muskets and Springfield Model 1861 rifled muskets. Since the 15th had initially enlisted for three years, it received its arms from the Confederate government, which refused to provide weapons to any regiment enlisting for a lesser period.While details of the specific uniforms worn by other companies of the 15th has not been preserved, Oates' Co. "G" is recorded to have sported, in addition to their red and gray clothing, a "colorful and diverse attire of headgear". Each cap bore an "HP" insignia, which stood for "Henry Pioneers". Each soldier also wore a "secession badge", with the motto: "Liberty, Equality and Fraternity", which had been the motto of the French Revolution.
Early service and campaigns
Valley Campaign
At Camp Toombs, the 15th Alabama was brigaded with the 21st Georgia Volunteer Infantry, the 21st North Carolina Infantry and the 16th Mississippi Infantry regiments in Trimble's Brigade of Ewell's Division, part of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia. After that force moved over toward Yorktown, the 15th was transferred to Maj. Gen. Stonewall Jackson's division, where it participated in his Valley Campaign. During this time, the 15th participated in the following engagements:- Battle of Front Royal on May 23, 1862; negligible losses.
- First Battle of Winchester on May 25, 1862; negligible losses.
- Battle of Cross Keys on June 8, 1862; 9 killed and 33 wounded, out of 426 engaged.
Seven Days Battles
Following the victorious conclusion of Jackson's Valley Campaign, the 15th participated in Jackson's attack on Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan's flank during the Seven Days Battles. During this time, the 15th fought in the following sorties:- Battle of Gaines' Mill on June 27–28, 1862; 34 killed and 110 wounded, out of 412 engaged.
- Battle of Malvern Hill on July 1, 1862; negligible losses.
Northern Virginia Campaign
- Battle of Warrenton Springs Ford on August 12, 1862; losses not given.
- Battle of Hazel River, Virginia, on August 22, 1862; losses not given.
- Battle of Kettle Run on August 30, 1862; 6 killed and 22 wounded.
- Second Battle of Manassas, on August 30, 1862; 21 killed and 91 wounded, out of 440 engaged.
- Battle of Chantilly, on September 1, 1862; 4 killed and 14 wounded.
Maryland Campaign
Next up was Lee's Maryland Campaign, where the 15th Alabama saw action at:- Battle of Harper's Ferry from September 12–15, 1862; negligible losses.
- Battle of Antietam on September 17, 1862; 9 killed and 75 wounded, out of 300 engaged.
- Battle of Shepherdstown on September 19, 1862; losses not given.
Fredericksburg and Suffolk; reassignment
Following the Confederate defeat at Antietam, the 15th Alabama participated with Jackson's corps at the Battle of Fredericksburg on December 15, 1862. Total casualties there were 1 killed and 34 wounded. The regiment was then reassigned in May 1863 to General James Longstreet's corps, which was then participating in the Siege of Suffolk, Virginia. Here it formed part of the newly created "Alabama Brigade" under Evander Law in General Hood's division, The 15th and lost 4 killed and 18 wounded at Suffolk.The Great Snowball Fight
On January 29, 1863, the 15th Alabama participated with several other regiments of the Army of Northern Virginia in what became known as "The Great Snowball Fight of 1863". Over 9000 Confederate soldiers engaged in a spontaneous, day-long free-for-all using snowballs and rocks, in which only two soldiers were seriously injured., commander of the 15th Alabama Infantry from Spring of 1863 to July 1864
Oates takes command
Along with its change in Divisional assignment, the 15th Alabama received a new regimental commander: Lt. Col. William C. Oates, who had originally organized Co. "G" when the regiment first formed in 1861. Oates had lived a drifter's existence in Texas during his early adulthood, participating in numerous street brawls and spending time as a gambler. However, by 1861 he had returned to Alabama, finished his schooling, studied law, and set up a successful practice in Henry County that also included ownership of a weekly newspaper in his hometown. Opposed to Abraham Lincoln's election, Oates cautioned against precipitate secession; however, once Alabama decided to leave the Union, he threw himself wholeheartedly into the Southern cause, raising a company of volunteers that became Co. "G" of the 15th Alabama. After Cantey's promotion and transfer to a new position, Oates assumed command of the regiment as a whole. In later years, Oates would serve as Governor of Alabama, and would also command three U.S. Brigades during the Spanish–American War.While some of his men thought Oates to be too aggressive for his own good and theirs, most admired his courage and affirmed that he was always to be found at the front of his men, in the thick of combat, and that he never asked them to go anywhere that he was not willing to go himself. A political rival, Alexander Lowther, would replace Oates as regimental commander in July 1864 after allegedly engineering Oates' removal from command. It was Oates, however, who led the 15th Alabama into its most noted engagement of the war, at Little Round Top on July 2, 1863, during the second day of the Battle of Gettysburg.
Action at Gettysburg
Little Round Top
During the Battle of Gettysburg, the 15th Alabama and the rest of Law's Brigade formed part of Maj. Gen. John B. Hood's division, which was a part of Lt. Gen. James Longstreet's corps. Arriving on the field late in the evening on July 1, the 15th played no appreciable role in the contest's first day. This changed on the 2nd, as Gen. Robert E. Lee had ordered Longstreet to launch a surprise attack with two of his divisions against the Federal left flank and their positions atop Cemetery Hill. During the course of this engagement, which was launched late in the afternoon of July 2, the 15th Alabama found itself advancing over rough terrain on the eastern side of the Emmitsburg Road, which combined with fire from the 2nd U.S. Sharpshooters at nearby Slyder's Farm to compel Law's brigade to detour around the Devil's Den and over the Big Round Top toward Little Round Top. During this time, the 15th was under constant fire from Federal sharpshooters, and the regiment became temporarily separated from the rest of the Alabama brigade as it made its way over Big Round Top.Little Round Top, which dominated the Union position on Cemetery Ridge, was initially unoccupied by Union troops. Union commander Maj. Gen. George Meade's chief engineer, Brig. Gen Gouverneur K. Warren, had climbed the hill on his superior's orders to assess the situation there; he noticed the glint of Confederate bayonets to the hill's southwest, and realized that a Southern attack was imminent. Warren's frantic cry for reinforcements to occupy the hill was answered by Col. Strong Vincent, commanding the Third Brigade of the First Division of the Union V Corps. Vincent rapidly moved the four regiments of his brigade onto the hill, only ten minutes ahead of the approaching Confederates. Under heavy fire from Southern batteries, Vincent arranged his four regiments atop the hill with the 16th Michigan to the northwest, then proceeding counterclockwise with the 44th New York, the 83rd Pennsylvania, and finally, at the end of the line on the southern slope, the 20th Maine. With only minutes to spare, Vincent told his regiments to take cover and await the inevitable Confederate assault; he specifically ordered Col. Joshua L. Chamberlain, commanding the 20th Maine, to hold his position to the last man, at all costs. Were Chamberlain's regiment to be forced to retreat, the other regiments on the hill would be compelled to follow suit, and the entire left flank of Meade's army would be in serious jeopardy, possibly leading them to retreat and giving the Confederates their desperately needed victory at Gettysburg.
The 15th Alabama attacks
In their attack on Little Round Top, the 15th Alabama would be joined by the 4th and 47th Alabama Infantry, and also by the 4th and 5th Texas Infantry regiments. All of these units were thoroughly exhausted at the time of the assault, having marched in the July heat for over 20 miles prior to the actual attack. Furthermore, the canteens of the Southerners were empty, and Law's command to advance did not give them time to refill them. Approaching the Union line on the crest of the hill, Law's men were thrown back by the first Union volley and withdrew briefly to regroup. The 15th Alabama repositioned itself further to the right, attempting to find the Union left flank which, unbeknownst to it, was held by Chamberlain's 20th Maine.Chamberlain, meanwhile, had detached Company "B" of his regiment and elements of the 2nd U.S. Sharpshooters, ordering them to take a concealed position behind a stone wall 150 yards to his east, hoping to guard against a Confederate envelopment.
Seeing the 15th Alabama shifting around his flank, Chamberlain ordered the remainder of his 385 men to form a single-file line. The 15th Alabama charged the Maine troops, only to be repulsed by furious rifle fire. Chamberlain next ordered the southernmost half of his line to "refuse the line", meaning that they formed a new line at an angle to the original force, to meet the 15th Alabama's flanking maneuver. Though it endured incredible losses, the 20th Maine managed to hold through five more charges by the 15th over a ninety-minute period.
Col. Oates, commanding the regiment, described the action in his memoirs, forty years later:
Chamberlain's desperate charge
Out of ammunition, and facing what he was sure would be yet another determined assault by the Alabamians, Col. Chamberlain decided upon a most unorthodox response: ordering his men to fix bayonets, he led what was left of his outfit in a pell-mell charge down the hill, executing a combined frontal assault and flanking maneuver that caught the 15th Alabama completely by surprise. Unbeknownst to Chamberlain, Oates had already decided to retreat, realizing that his ammunition was running low, and worried about a possible Union attack on his own flank or rear. His younger brother lay dying on the field, and the blood from his regiment's dead and wounded "was standing in puddles on some of the rocks". Hardly had Oates ordered the withdrawal than Chamberlain began his charge, which combined with fire from "B" company and the hidden sharpshooters to cause the 15th to rush madly down the hill to escape. Oates later admitted that "we ran like a herd of wild cattle" during the retreat, which took those surviving members of the 15th who weren't captured by Chamberlain's men up the slopes of Big Round Top and toward Confederate lines.In later years, Oates would assert that the 15th Alabama's assault had failed because no other Confederate regiment appeared in support of his unit during the attack. He insisted that if but one other regiment had joined his attack on the far left of the Union army, they would have swept the 20th Maine from the hill and turned the Union flank, "which would have forced Meade's whole left wing to retire".
However, Oates also paid tribute to the courage and tenacity of his enemy when he wrote: "There never were harder fighters than the Twentieth Maine men and their gallant Colonel. His skill and persistency and the great bravery of his men saved Little Round Top and the Army of the Potomac from defeat." Chamberlain in turn extolled the bravery of his Alabama foes when he later wrote: "these were manly men, whom we could befriend and by no means kill, if they came our way in peace and good will".
The 15th Alabama spent the remainder of the Battle of Gettysburg on the Confederate right flank, helping to secure it against Union cavalry and sharpshooters. It took no part in Pickett's Charge on July 3.
Out of 644 men engaged from the 15th Alabama at the Battle of Gettysburg, the regiment lost 72 men killed, 190 wounded, and 81 missing.
From Gettysburg to Appomattox
Immediate aftermath
Following the action at Gettysburg, the 15th Alabama was briefly engaged at Battle Mountain, Virginia, on July 17, reporting negligible losses. It then spent time recuperating and refitting in Virginia with the rest of Longstreet's corps, until being ordered west to bolster the Confederate Army of Tennessee under Braxton Bragg, which was operating in eastern Tennessee and northwestern Georgia.,'' by Kurz and Allison, 1890
In Tennessee
During its time with Longstreet in the Army of Tennessee, the 15th Alabama participated in the following engagements:- Battle of Chickamauga on September 19–20, 1863; 19 killed and 123 wounded, out of 425 engaged.
- Battle of Moccasin Point, Tennessee, on September 30, 1863; no losses given.
- Battles of Browns Ferry and Lookout Valley on October 28–29, 1863; 15 killed and 40 wounded.
- Battle of Campbell's Station on November 25, 1863; no losses given.
- Knoxville Campaign from November 17 to December 4, 1863; 6 killed and 21 wounded.
- Battle of Bean's Station on December 14, 1863; negligible losses.
- Battle of Danridge on January 24, 1864; no losses given.
For its actions during the Battle of Chickamauga, the 15th was once again mentioned in dispatches, this time by Brig. Gen. Zachariah C. Deas, who wrote that the "regiment behaved with great gallantry" during the battle.
,'' painted by Thure De Thulstrup
at the Battle of Cold Harbor, 1864
Return to Virginia
Having quarrelled with Bragg during his time in Tennessee, Longstreet decided to return to Virginia with his corps in the spring of 1864. Here, the 15th participated in the following engagements:- Battle of the Wilderness from May 5 to 7, 1864; 4 killed and 27 wounded, with 11 captured.
- Battle of Spotsylvania Court House from May 8 to 21, 1864; 18 killed and 48 wounded, with 2 captured.
- Battle of North Anna on May 24, 1864; 1 wounded.
- Battle of Ashland on May 31, 1864; 1 killed.
- Battle of Cold Harbor on July 1, 1864; 5 killed and 12 wounded.
- Battle of Chester Station on July 17, 1864; no losses given.
- Siege of Petersburg from June 18–26 of 1864, July 19 to 25, 1864, and April 2, 1865; total losses 3 killed and 2 wounded.
- Battle of New Market Heights on August 14 and 15, 1864; no losses given.
- Battle of Fussell's Mill on August 14, 1864; 13 killed and 90 wounded.
- Battle of Ft. Gilmer on September 29, 1864; 1 wounded.
- Battle of Ft. Harrison on September 30, 1864; 6 killed and 6 wounded.
- Battle of Darbytown Road on October 7 and 13, 1864; 2 killed and 36 wounded.
- Battle of Williamsburg Road on October 27, 1864; no losses given.
- Appomattox Campaign from March 29 to April 9, 1865; no losses given.
The regimental commander at the time of surrender was Capt. Francis Key Schaff, formerly of Co. "A".
Roll of Honor
The Confederate government named twenty-two members of the 15th Alabama to the Confederate Roll of Honor during the Civil War:- Charles E. Averett, Company "A" ;
- Brantley G. Barnett, Company "I";
- J. F. Bean, Company "L";
- David C. Cannon, Company "G";
- T. R. Collins, Company "L";
- William H. Cooper, Company "C";
- James R. Edwards, Company "E";
- Clark J. Fauk, Company "K";
- H. V. Glenn, Company "F";
- Evan Grice, Company "K";
- M. L. Harper, Company "B";
- Woodruff F. Hill, Company "K";
- A. Jackson, Company "F";
- John Jackson, Company "F";
- William W. Johnson, Company "D";
- R. Sam Jones, Company "D";
- Lee Lloyd, Company "L".
- B. J. Martin, Company "E";
- Abraham Powell, Company "E";
- W. H. Quattlebaum, Company "D";
- Joseph T. Rushing, Company "I";
- Herrin F. Satcher, Company "G".
One last battle
Modern re-enactment groups
The 15th Alabama has proven popular with modern historical reenactors. One such group is headquartered in Bellingham, Washington, while another is located in Enterprise, Alabama. Other units are found in Farmington, Maine and in Ocala, Florida.Works cited
- Cozzens, Peter, The Shipwreck of Their Hopes: The Battles for Chattanooga, Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1994,.
- Desjardin, Thomas A.: Stand Firm Ye Boys from Maine: The 20th Maine and the Gettysburg Campaign, Thomas Publications, 1995,.
- Eicher, David J., The Longest Night: A Military History of the Civil War, Simon & Schuster, 2001,.
- Harman, Troy D., Lee's Real Plan at Gettysburg, Stackpole Books, 2003,.
- Oates, William C. Washington and New York: The Neal Publishing Company, 1905..
- Pfanz, Harry W., Gettysburg: The Second Day, University of North Carolina Press, 1987,.
Reenactment group websites
- . 15th Alabama historical reenactment group based in Ocala, Florida.
- . 15th Alabama historical reenactment group based in Bellingham, Washington.
- . 15th Alabama historical reenactment group based in Holly Hill, Florida.
- 15th Alabama historical reenactment group based in Farmington, Maine.