Brigade, Division, Corps, and Army Assignments for 28th North Carolina Infantry Regiment

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Brigade, Division, Corps, and Army Assignments:
 28th North Carolina Infantry Regiment

From To Brigade Division Corps Army/Department
Oct 1861 Mar 1862 Dist of Cape Fear Dept of North Carolina
Mar 1862 Mar 1862 Dist Pamlico Dept of North Carolina
Mar 1862 Mar 1862 Branch's Dist Pamlico Dept of North Carolina
Apr 1862 May 1862 Branch's Dept of North Carolina
May 1862 May 1862 Branch's Dept of Northern Virginia
May 1862 Jun 1862 Branch's A. P. Hill's Army of Northern Virginia
Jun 1862 Jul 1862 Branch's A. P. Hill's 1st Army of Northern Virginia
Jul 1862 May 1863 Branch's/Lane's A. P. Hill's 2nd Army of Northern Virginia
May 1863 Apr 1865 Lane's Pender's/Wilcox's 3rd Army of Northern Virginia

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28th North Carolina Infantry Regiment

28th North Carolina Infantry Regiment: Statistics

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28th North Carolina Infantry Regiment: Letters, Newspaper Articles, Papers, Diaries, Memoirs

Army of Northern Virginia

 

Recommended Reading: The 28th North Carolina Infantry: A Civil War History and Roster. Description: In April 1861, public opinion in North Carolina was divided between Union and secession supporters. It was only after President Lincoln issued his call to arms to subdue the rebel state of South Carolina that North Carolina seceded, primarily in protest of the order to fight her sister state. Beginning with a look at the prevailing atmosphere in North Carolina in the spring of 1861, this volume provides an in-depth history of one Confederate infantry regiment, the 28th North Carolina, which was comprised primarily of units from the central and southwestern parts of the state. Continued below...

It discusses the various battles in which the 28th North Carolina was involved, including Hanover Court House, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Chapin's Farm and Appomattox. Special emphasis is placed on the thoughts and surviving accounts provided by those soldiers who witnessed firsthand the atrocities of war. Appendices contain (among other items) a chronology of the 28th North Carolina; a list of casualties among officers; a list of casualties in the 28th from 1862 through 1864; and the full text of letters from two members of the 28th, the Harding brothers. About the Author: Retired research assistant from the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, Frances H. Casstevens, is also the author of Clingman's Brigade in the Confederacy, 1862-1865. She is a lifelong resident of Yadkin County, and also an historian, genealogist, and former professor at Wake Forest University.

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