Saturday, May 16, 2026

Today in History (general history)/ On This Day in Confederate History/ Confederate General Birthdays, May 16.

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On This Day in Confederate History, May 16.

1862: Maj. Gen. Benjamin "Beast" Butler issues his infamous "Woman's Order" in response to the women of occupied New Orleans insulting Federal occupation troops. His General Order No.28 states, "As the Officers and Soldiers of the United States have been subjected to Repeated Insults from the Women, calling themselves 'Ladies,' of New Orleans, in return for the most scrupulous Non-Interference and Courtesy on our part, it is ordered that hereafter when any female shall by word, gesture, or movement, insult or show contempt for any Officer or Private of the United States she shall be regarded and held liable to be Treated as A Woman of the Town plying her vocation. By command of Maj.-Gen. Butler." Not only was the South outraged by the order, but the House of Lords in London also declared it a "most heinous proclamation...more intolerable tyranny than any civilized country in our day been subjected to." Among the New Orleans women jailed because of the order was Eugenia Levy Phillips who was arrested for "laughing and mocking" at the funeral of an enemy Northern soldier.

New Orleans lady Eugenia Levy Phillips was
among the Southern women arrested by the
Northern occupiers of her city.
(Library of Congress)

Patriotic Southern women in New Orleans castigating 
two of the Northern occupiers.

1863: The Battle of Champion's Hill takes place 20 miles east of Vicksburg, Miss. when Lt. Gen.  John C. Pemberton's 22,000 Confederates clash with Maj. Gen. U.S. Grant's 32,000 Federals. Both sides attacked and counterattacked throughout the day, but when Maj. Gen. William W. Loring at first refused to send reinforcements ordered by Pemberton but decided to obey when it was too late to stop Grant's counterattack, the Confederates then had to fall back to a prepared position along the Big Black River in a disorganized condition. The Federals reported 2,457 total causalities, and the Confederates 3,840.

Lt. Gen. Stephen Dill Lee
Wounded in action at Champion's Hill
(Library of Congres)

1864: At the Battle of Drewry's Bluff, Va. in the Bermuda Hundred Campaign of 1864, Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard's 18,025 Confederates successfully counterattack Maj. Gen. Benjamin "Beast" Butler's 15,800 Federals and bottle them up on the Bermuda Hundred peninsula. Confederate casualties were 2,506 to about a quarter of Butler's men were casualties.

In the Red River Campaign in Louisiana, the Battle of Mansura takes place when Maj. Gen. Richard Taylor's Army of Western Louisiana tries to block the retreat of Maj Gen. Nathaniel Banks' Army of the Gulf. Taylor reported, "At early dawn this morning skirmishing began along our line, of which Mansura was the center, Bagby and Major, with nineteen pieces of artillery, holding the right, and Polignac, re-enforced by two regiments of cavalry under Debray, the left, with thirteen pieces of artillery, including two 30-pounder Parrotts. The broad, open prairie, smooth as a billiard table, afforded an admirable field for artillery practice, and most of our guns were 3-inch rifles and 10-pounder Parrotts captured from the enemy. At about 6 a.m. the action became general, the enemy bringing up masses of infantry with several batteries. Several attempts to turn our right were signally repulsed, as were the efforts to advance on our center. At 10 a.m. long lines of infantry commenced demonstrations on our left, the pivot of the position, our trains being behind that flank near Evergreen. This rendered the position dangerous, as the enemy had probably 16,000 men on the field and perhaps more. Our men withdrew with the steadiness of veterans on parade, and the road to Simsport [Simmesport] was left open to the foe." The Confederates continued to harass Banks' retreat.

Confederate General Birthdays, May 16.

General Edmund Kirby Smith was born on this day in 1824 in St. Augustine, Florida. He graduated from West Point, graduating 25th out of 41 cadets. During the Mexican-American War, he fought in the battles of Palo Alto, Resaca de la Palma, Cero Gordo, Contreras, and Churubusco, and was promoted to captain. In 1859, Smith was wounded in the Battle of Crooked Creek, Kansas with the Comanche. He resigned from the U.S. Army on April 6, 1861. During the War for Southern Independence, he joined the Confederate Army and rose from major to full general and commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department. His battles and campaigns included the First Battle of Manassas, Va. (wounded), Richmond, Ky., the Red River Campaign, and the Camden Expedition. He surrendered the Trans-Mississippi Department on June 2, 1865. Following the war, he worked in the telegraph business, was chancellor of the University of Nashville, a professor at the University of the South, and was the last surviving full Confederate general. General Smith died on March 28, 1893, at Sewanee, Tenn., and was buried there in the University Cemetery.

Gen. E. Kirby Smith

Friday, May 15, 2026

Today in History (general history)/ On This Day in Confederate History/ Confederate General Birthdays, May 15.

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On This Day in Confederate History, May 15.

1862: At the Battle of Drewry's Bluff, Va., Confederate heavy artillery at Fort Darling exchanges fire with the U.S. Navy ironclads Monitor and Galena, the screw gunship Aroostook, side-wheeler Port Royal, and the U.S. Revenue Cutter Service's ironclad Naugatuck. The artillery duel lasted three hours and the Monitor and Galena were damaged and the Naugatuck had little damage. The two wooden gunboats were out of range but the captain of the Port Royal was wounded by a Confederate sharpshooter. Total Federal casualties were 27 killed and wounded to the Confederates' 15 casualties. The fort sustained some damage. The Yankee fleet withdrew.

1863: PRELUDE, BATTLE OF CHAMPION'S HILL: Lt. Gen. John C. Pemberton concentrates 22,000 men at Edward's Station between Jackson and Vicksburg, Mississippi, and leaves 10,000 troops to garrison Vicksburg. His goal is the cut, Maj. Gen. U.S. Grant's supply line. But Grant is approaching 32,000 Federals. A lack of cavalry continued to hamper Pemberton's ability to monitor and disrupt the Yankee movements and supplies.

1864: The Battle of New Market erupts when Maj. Gen. John C. Breckinridge's 4,087 Confederates clash with Maj. Gen. Franz Sigel's 6,275 Federals. This meeting engagement started in the morning and got more intense throughout the day as more troops arrived. The Confederate attacks push the Federals back until Sigel finally retreats behind the Shenandoah River, giving the Confederates the victory. The VMI Cadets engaged in the battle by capturing an enemy artillery piece. Casualties in the battle totaled 841 for the Federals and 531 for the Confederates.

In the Atlanta Campaign, the Battle of Resaca, Georgia continued into its second day ending in a stalemate. Cpl. Sam Watkins wrote of a point in the battle where General William Joseph Hardee exposed himself recklessly to enemy fire. He wrote, "General Hardee passes along the line. 'Steady, boys!' . . . 'Go back, general, go back, go back,' is cried all along the line. He passes through the missiles of death unscathed; stood all through that storm of bullets indifferent to their proximity (we were lying down, you know). The enemy is checked; yonder they fly whipped and driven from the field." But when Gen. Joseph Johnston learned that he had again been outflanked by the Federals, he again ordered a retreat.

Col. Francis Lee Campbell
13th La. Inf. Gibson's Brigade
at the Battle of Resaca.
(Library of Congress)

In the Red River Campaign, Maj. Gen. Richard Taylor reported sharp fighting as the Confederates continue to harass the retreat of Maj. Gen. Nathaniel Banks' Army of the Gulf, even though the Federals outnumber the Confederates 18,000 to 6,000. Taylor said of the day's fighting, "Steele's division pressed the enemy's rear and flank on the river road below Alexandria, while Bagby's division, afterward re-enforced by Major, beat back several times the head of his column as it attempted to debouch on the Marksville Prairie from the Choctaw Swamp." The heavy loss inflicted on the enemy by Bagby was the result of his skillfully masking his artillery and using it at short range. "Late in the evening, the enemy turned the position by bringing up his masses, and we fell back to Mansura, Marksville being occupied by him during the night," Taylor said.

Col., later Gen., Henry Gray
led Mouton's Brigade in the
Red River Campaign.
(Library of Congress)

Confederate General Birthdays, May 15.

Maj. Gen. Isaac Trimble was born on this day in 1802 at Culpepper, Virginia. He graduated from West Point in 1822 ranking 17th in a class of 42 cadets. He left the U.S. Army and went to work as a railroad construction engineer. In April 1861, he led the Maryland State Militia in burning bridges around Baltimore to prevent Federal troops from passing through to Washington. Trimble returned to Virginia and was commissioned a colonel of engineers, then promoted to brigadier general and later to major general. His campaigns included the Valley Campaign under Stonewall Jackson, the Seven Days Battles, the Second Battle of Manassas (wounded), and the Battle of Gettysburg where he was wounded, his leg amputated, and taken prisoner. He spent the rest of the war as a P.O.W. at Johnson's Island, Oh. and Fort Warren, Mass. Following the war returned to work as a railroad construction engineer. He died on Jan. 2, 1888, and was buried in Green Mount Cemetery in Baltimore, Md.

Maj. Gen. Isaac Trimble

Brig. Gen. Laurence Simmons Baker was born on this day in 1830 in Gates County, North Carolina. He graduated from West Point in 1851 ranking the last in his class of 42 cadets. Baker served on the frontier until he resigned in May 1861. He returned to North Carolina where he became lieutenant colonel of the 1st N.C. Cav. and was promoted to brigadier general on July 23, 1863. His battles and campaigns included the Peninsula Campaign, the Seven Days Battles,  Sharpsburg, Brandy Station (wounded), Gettysburg, and Bentonville, N.C. at the end of the war. Following the war, he resided in Norfolk, Va., and worked as a farmer, insurance agent, and railroad agent. Baker died April 10, 1907, in Suffolk, Va., and was buried in Cedar Hill Cemetery there.

Brig. Gen. Laurence S. Baker

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Today in History (general History)/ On This Day in Confederate History/ Confederate General Birthdays, May 14.

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On This Day in Confederate History, May 14.

1864: Heavy fighting erupts in Georgia at the Battle of Resaca in the Atlanta Campaign. Gen. Joseph Johnston and 60,000 men on the hills around Resaca fight Maj. Gen. William Sherman's approximate 100,000. The Yankees attack along the whole line and are repulsed. Cpl. Sam Watkins of Co. H, 1st Tenn. Inf. writes of the battle, "The Yankees have opened the attack; we are going to have a battle; we are ordered to strip for the fight. (That is, to take off our knapsacks and blankets, and to detail Bev. White to guard them. Keep close up, men. The skirmish line is firing like popping firecrackers on a Christmas morning. . .The air is full of deadly missiles. We can see the two lines meet, and hear the deadly crash of battle; we can see the blaze of smoke and fire. The earth trembles."  The battle continues into the next day.

Cpl. Sam Watkins, Co. H. 1st. Tenn. Inf.


PRELUDE TO THE BATTLE OF NEW MARKET: In the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, 4,087 Confederates under Maj. Gen. John C. Breckinridge moves to block 6,275 Federals under Maj. Gen. Franz Sigel, who has been ordered to clear the valley of Confederates and threaten Gen. R.E. Lee's flank at Spotsylvania Court House. The 18th Virginia Cavalry under Col John Imboden slows Sigel down in a delaying action at Rude's Hill. Movements will result in the Battle of New Market the next day.

Confederate General Birthdays, May 14.

Brig. Gen. George Pierce Doles was born on this day in 1830 in Milledgeville, Georgia. Before the war, he was a successful businessman and active in the Georgia militia as captain of the Baldwin Blues. In the War for Southern Independence, Doles was colonel of the 4th Georgia Infantry Regiment and was promoted to brigadier general on Nov. 1, 1862. His battles and campaigns included the Peninsula Campaign, Malvern Hill (wounded), Sharpsburg, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Bristoe and Mine Run Campaigns, the Wilderness, Spotsylvania Court House, and Cold Harbor, where he was killed in action on June 2, 1864, and was buried in Memory Hill Cemetery in Milledgeville, Ga.

Brig. Gen. George P. Doles

Brig. Gen. James Patrick Major was born on this day in 1836 in Fayette, Missouri. He graduated from West Point in 1856 ranking 23rd in his class. During his prewar service, Major participated in the Battle of Wichita Village in 1858 in a fight with the Comanche tribe. He resigned from the U.S. Army on March 21, 1861, and was commissioned a lieutenant colonel in the Missouri State Guard and participated in the Battle of Oak Hill, Mo. During the Siege of Vicksburg, he was in command of the artillery of Maj. Gen. Earl Van Dorn. Major was promoted to brigadier general and led a cavalry division in the Red River Campaign, including the battles of Mansfield, Pleasant Hill, and Monett's Ferry. Following the war, he moved to France and lived in Louisiana and Texas, where he died on May 8, 1877. He was buried in the Ascension of Our Lord Catholic Church Cemetery.

Brig. Gen. James P. Major

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Today in History (general history)/ On This Day in Confederate History/ Confederate General Birthdays, May 13.

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On This Day in Confederate History, May 13.

1861: The government of Great Britain issued a Proclamation of Neutrality in the War for Southern Independence. The British and the French recognized the Confederacy as lawful belligerents, which gave the Confederacy certain rights in international and admiralty laws of the time. "

  • "Lawful combatants – members of the armed forces or organized groups that meet strict criteria (e.g., uniformed, organized, following the laws of war) and are entitled to protections such as prisoner-of-war (POW) status Sites@Duke Express."

1864: RED RIVER CAMPAIGN: The Federal Flotilla gets over the Falls of the Red River at Alexandria, La., and the Army of the Gulf evacuates the town, and on the way out, vindictively burns most of Alexandria. The Confederates harass the retreating Yankees with Hardeman's Texas Brigade skirmishing with the advance column and Steele's Texas Brigade harassing the enemy rearguard flanks. The U.S.S. Choctaw bombards Confederate pickets on the shore of the river and kills one man from Polignac's Texas and Louisiana Infantry Division. Maj. Gen. Richard Taylor reports that the fighting was heavy along the shoreline for two hours, but outnumbered by 4 to 1 in manpower, this is about all he can do until the Federal juggernaut reaches the Mississippi River. He adds that if Polignac's division can be reinforced by Brig. Gen. Allen Thomas's Infantry Brigade of paroled Vicksburg veterans, he believes they can take the Lafourche Bayou district west of New Orleans and keep Banks bottled up in New Orleans. But there are more fighting and battles to come before the end of the Red River Campaign.

Maj. Gen. Camille Armand Jules Marie, Prince de Polignac
Seen here clean-shaven in his Confederate uniform.
 

1865: The second day of the Battle of Palmito Ranch, Texas, takes place and ends in a Confederate victory in the final battle of the war. Federal commander Colonel Theodore Barrett again advances on the Confederates under Colonel John S "Rip" Ford along the Rio Grande River, which is the border with Mexico. Ford attacks the Federal right flank with two companies and Capt. O.G. Jones' 3rd Texas  Artillery, one piece of which was reportedly manned by French troops from across the border. The rest of the gray jackets attacked the front of the Yankee line. The bluecoats and driven back in a retreat that lasted into the next day. Federal casualties total two killed, six wounded, and 102 captured. The Confederate casualties in the battle were five or six wounded and three captured. However, a later report noted that Pvt. Ferdinand Gerring (Gearing, Gering, Garing) of Carter's battalion died of his wounds. Pvt. John J. Williams of the 34th Indiana is reported to be the last man killed in battle in the entire war. Pvt. Gerring may have been the last Confederate killed in battle in the war. With the surrender of the Trans-Mississippi Department on June 2, 1865, Ford and many other Confederates moved to Mexico.

Officers of Col. Santos Benavides 33rd Tex. Cav. at the Battle of Palmito Ranch, Refugio Benavides, Atancio Vidaurri, Cristobal Benavides, and John Z. Leydendecker.

Confederate General Birthdays, May 13. 

None.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Today in History (general history)/ On This Day in Confederate History/ Confederate General Birthdays, May 12.

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On This Day in Confederate History, May 12.

1863: The Battle of Raymond, Mississippi, between Confederate Brig. Gen. John Gregg's 3,000-man infantry brigade, and Federal Maj. Gen. James B. McPherson's 12,000 men in the XVII Corps collide in the Vicksburg Campaign. Gregg has been dispatched to Raymond to help stop Maj. Gen. U.S. Grant's Army of the Tennessee but doesn't know the real strength of the enemy because of a lack of cavalry. He finds he is greatly outnumbered, but rather than retreat and risk destruction, he decides to bluff the enemy and charge. At first, he has great success in heavily wooded terrain where the enemy can't determine his strength, but the outnumbered Confederates are eventually pushed back. But Gregg manages to get the bulk of his brigade away and substantially intact. The Confederates suffered about 515 casualties and the Federals about 446.


In the Vicksburg Campaign, Lt. Gen. John Pemberton is getting his army ready to resist Grant but is greatly hampered by a lack of cavalry to monitor Grant's strength and movements and cut Grant's supply line at Grand Gulf. He has repeatedly asked General Joseph Johnston in Jackson, Mississippi, to release Maj. Gen. Earl Van Dorn's 6,000-man cavalry force to him, but Johnston, misreading the situation, repeatedly refuses.


1864: Maj. Gen. James Ewell Brown Stuart died of the wound he received on May 11 at the Battle of Yellow Tavern, Va. Stuart was the premier Confederate cavalry commander in the Army of Northern Virginia. His last words were, "I am resigned; God's will be done." The 31-year-old left behind his wife, Flora, and three children: a boy and two girls. General Robert E. Lee reportedly said he could hardly think of General Stuart without weeping.

Statue of Maj. Gen. J.E.B. Stuart
R.I.P.😢

At the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, Va., Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia repulses the greatest Federal assault yet, at the Mule Shoe salient, but suffers many casualties and is pushed back to a secondary line, which holds. The Federals capture some 3,000 Confederates and 20 cannons. Among the captured is Maj. Gen. Edward Johnson was one of Lee's best division commanders. 

Maj Gen. Edward Johnson

1865: The Battle of Palmito Ranch east of Brownsville, Texas, is the last battle of the War for Southern Independence, and it is a Confederate victory. Confederate forces, about 300 strong, led by Colonel John "Rip" Ford, clashed with Federal forces numbering about 500 under Colonel Thomas H. Barrett. Barrett started the battle by breaking a truce that probably would have led to a peaceful surrender. The Federals didn't realize Ford had six artillery pieces, probably supplied by the French Army just across the border in Mexico. On this first day of the battle, the Federals captured several Confederates but were driven back by the end of the day.

Col. John S. "Rip" Ford

Confederate General Birthdays, May 12.

None.

Monday, May 11, 2026

Today in History (general history)/ On This Day in Confederate History/ Confederate General Birthdays, May 11.

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On This Day in Confederate History, May 11.

1862: C.S.S. Virginia is destroyed in Virginia by the Confederates to prevent it from falling into Federal hands. It was the first Confederate ironclad in battle and had great success against some of the best Federal Navy wooden warships. However, the North's ironclad U.S.S. Monitor canceled out its advantage.

1864: Maj. Gen. J.E.B. Stuart, commander of the cavalry of the Army of Northern Virginia, is mortally wounded at the Battle of Yellow Tavern, Va. The 4,500 Confederate troopers under Stuart blocked Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan's 12,000 Federal cavalry attempted to raid Richmond, but Stuart was wounded just as the Yankees were retreating. Maj. Gen. Fitzhugh Lee is put in temporary command of the Confederate cavalry. The Federals suffered 635 casualties. The Confederates lost 300 men captured.

Maj. Gen. James E.B. Stuart
R.I.P.

At Rocky Face Ridge, Georgia, in the Atlanta Campaign, Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman withdraws his army and heads for Resaca. General Joseph Johnston moves his Army of Tennessee to block Sherman again at Resaca.

Red River Campaign: In Louisiana,
Maj Gen. Camille Polignac's Texas and Louisiana Infantry Division moves from LeCompte, La., toward Marksville, La., to cut off any attempts by a Federal relief force to save Banks at Alexandria. The Federal gunboats have also been shelling Confederate-reoccupied Fort DeRussy.

Maj. Gen. Camille de Polignac

This regiment, the 18th La. Inf., fought
at the Battle of Shiloh and then in most
of the Louisiana campaigns in late 1862
through the Red River Campaign.

Confederate General Birthdays, May 11.

None.

Today in History (general history)/ On This Day in Confederate History/ Confederate History/ Confederate General Birthdays, May 10.

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On This Day in Confederate History, May 10.

1861:  CAMP JACKSON AFFAIR: Pro-Union Missouri Volunteers and a regiment of U.S. Army  Regulars clashed in St. Louis, Missouri, with the pro-secession Missouri Volunteer Militia at Camp Jackson and took them captive. The Federal soldiers also killed 28 civilians and injured dozens of others. So great was the outrage over this massacre that St. Louis had to be put under martial law. The next day, May 11, 1861, the Missouri General Assembly created the pro-South Missouri State Guard under Major General Sterling Price.

1862: The Naval Battle of Fort Pillow on the Mississippi River takes place when the eight vessels of the Confederate River Defense Fleet take on the Federal Mississippi River Squadron. The Confederate ships rammed and sank the USS Cincinnati and the USS Mound City.

1863: DEATH OF STONEWALL JACKSON: The great Lt.. Gen. Thomas J "Stonewall" Jackson died on this day in Guinea Station, Virginia. He was wounded severely at the Battle of Chancellorsville a week earlier and contracted pneumonia, and died. His death is a severe blow to the Confederacy, and General Robert E. Lee soon discovers he is irreplaceable in skill and competence. General Jackson was 39 years old.

Lt. Gen. Thomas J "Stonewall" Jackson
Rest in Peace
 

1864: At the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, General Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia repulses three Federal army corps that attack the Confederate left and center. The Yankees suffer heavy casualties. 

AFTERMATH OF THE BATTLE OF CALCASIEU PASS: Also on that day at Calcasieu Pass, Louisiana, not knowing about the battle of May 6 in which the blockading gunboats USS Granite City and USS Wave have been captured, the blockader USS New London arrives and sends Ensign Henry Jackson and six bluejackets in a boat to deliver a message to the Granite City. When Jackson sees a Confederate flag flying over the ship, he thinks it is a joke and takes a rifle and fires at the flag. The Confederates on the gunboat return fire, and Jackson is killed. The bluejackets are added to those previously captured.

1865: CAPTURE OF PRESIDENT DAVIS: President Jefferson Davis and his party are taken prisoner near Irwinville, Georgia, by Federal cavalry. The president is imprisoned at Fort Monroe, Virginia, as a political prisoner. 


Confederate General Birthdays, May 10.

Brigadier General Alfred Jefferson Vaughn Jr. was born on this day in 1830 in Dinwiddie County, Virginia. He graduated from the Virginia Military Institute in 1848, ranking 15th out of 29 cadets in the graduating class. Vaughan became a civil engineer in Missouri, California, and Mississippi, where he took up farming. During the War for Southern Independence, he raised a company in Mississippi, the Dixie Rifles, then joined the 13th Tennessee Infantry. Vaughan was slightly wounded at the Battle of Shiloh and in May 1862 was elected a lieutenant colonel. His other battles included the battles of Richmond, Ky., Perryville, Ky., Murfreesboro, Tenn., and Chickamauga, Ga., after which he was promoted to brigadier general. He led his brigade at Chattanooga, Missionary Ridge, Vining's Station, and Marietta, during which he was severely wounded. Vaughan was disabled for the rest of the war and paroled on May 10, 1865, at Gainesville, Ala. Following the war, Vaughan returned to farming in Mississippi and Tennessee. He was elected sheriff of Shelby Co., Tenn. in 1878 and was active in the United Confederate Veterans. He also wrote a history of the 13th Tenn. Inf. Vaughan died Oct. 1, 1899, in Indianapolis, Ind., and was buried in Elmwood Cemetery in Memphis, Tenn.

Brig. Gen. Alfred J. Vaughn Jr.