
A Short History of the 61st:
The 61st
Tenn.
Inf. was organized in eastern Tennessee in the fall of 1862. On 10 Nov.
1862, the regiment mustered into Confederate service at Henderson
Mills, Greene County, Tenn. Its first colonel was Fountain E. Pitts and
after he resigned in 1863, James G. Rose. Shortly after mustering, the 61st was brigaded with the 60th and 62nd Tenn. Infantry, and put
under the command of Brigadier General John C. Vaughn.

Then the brigade was ordered to Jackson, Miss. En route, Vaughn received orders from Major General John H. Forney
to proceed without stopping to Meridian, Miss. They arrived there
in early December. On 16 Dec. 1862, Vaughn's brigade of
East-Tennesseans was sent to Grenada, Miss. and placed under the command Major General D. H. Maury, division commander in the Second Corps of Lt. General John C. Pemberton's Army of the Mississippi. On the 23rd of December, the brigade was relieved from Maury's division and placed in Chickasaw Bayou
or Chickasaw Bluffs, where Gen. William
T. Sherman tried in vain to capture Vicksburg. The brigade was
assigned to the left flank and indeed was the end of the line.
Vaughn was ordered to support Gen. S. D. Lee
and later, Gen. S. M. Barton, so he sent the 62nd and 60th Tenn.,
respectively, to those commanders. This left the 61st to guard
the entire left flank. A heavy abatis lied directly in front of
the line and helped to hold the Yankees at bay. For two days the 61st
held their ground and on 29 Dec. 1862, the Union
army withdrew in defeat.
The next
few
months passed in relative peace as the brigade performed garrison duty
in the same lines that they had defended in December. This came
to an end in May of 1863.
At a railroad bridge over the Big Black River
a few miles west of Raymond, Miss., Vaughn's, Green's, and Barton's
brigades made a stand in order to guard the rest of Pemberton's army in
their retreat to Vicksburg
after a defeat at Baker's Creek on the 16th of May. The 61st,
with the 60th and 62nd, formed the right flank in front of a bayou,
having cotton bales for breastworks. A whole Federal division under Gen. Peter Osterhaus
slammed into the Tennesseans here, and the brunt of the action fell
against the 61st, being on the left of the brigade. The 23rd Iowa,
under heavy fire from Vaughn's brigade, charged until they reached the
bayou. Then they were ordered to kneel and fire their only
volley. Upon firing, the 23rd continued the charge across the
bayou and up to the Confederate earthworks. Over half of the 61st
surrendered on the spot, sticking cotton on their ramrods to signal the
Yankees. Due perhaps to a miscalculation, there was a gap in the
line between Vaughn's and Green's brigade. When the 23rd Iowa got into
the hole, they poured an enfilading fire down the Confederate line. The Southerners broke and ran for the river.
As many as could, swam across and stopped only after having made
it to Vicksburg. Lt. Washington Rawlings, of Co. F, 23rd Iowa, was
wounded while wrestling with the color bearer of the 61st for the flag
which he captured. The 61st suffered a 72% casualty rate in killed,
wounded, missing, and captured. Those who got to Vicksburg were
surrendered when that city fell on 4 July 1863. Those captured were
marched to the Yazoo River by a detachment of the 23rd Iowa and put on
a boat bound for Memphis, TN. From there, they were scattered to
prisons in the North.

Kentucky cavalry, was under the command of General John Hunt Morgan
(at right) when he was murdered in Greeneville, TN on 4 September 1864. Afterward, the brigade was put under the command of
Gen. John C. Breckenridge
(at left) and was engaged in the following places: Morristown, Panther Springs, Greeneville, Blue Spring,
Lick Creek and Strawberry Plains, all in eastern Tennessee, Piedmont,
Va., and Monocacy, MD. Upon learning of Lee's surrender, Vaughn's
brigade went to North Carolina to join Joe Johnston's army.
Meeting a wing of that army near Raleigh, NC, they were ordered to
Charlotte, NC where they served as part of President Davis'
escort. When they reached Washington, Georgia, the brigade was
disbanded and Pres. Davis went on to be captured in Irwinville,
Ga. It is interesting to note that most of the other units
present at Washington early that May were surrendered. Not the
old 61st Tenn.!
The P1853 British Enfield Rifle-Musket, Cal. .577. Over 400,000 were imported to the Confederacy.
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| This web site was created by Chris Propes. It is dedicated to the men of the 61st Tennessee Infantry and to all Southern patriots who fought for the right of self-government and in defense of their homes and families. |
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This site was last updated 04/20/2007 09:27 AM
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