- Joined
- Jun 24, 2011
- Location
- Middle Tennessee
Berdan's Sharpshooters!
Right!?Haven't made up my mind yet.

Thats pretty neat, the chances of having a member in the Immortal 600 is pretty slim so being a direct descendant is noteworthy. That whole ordeal has always fascinated me.My favorite is the 25th Tennessee Infantry Regiment (Confederate)because my great grandfather was captain of Company K. He was captured at Drewry's (Drury's) Bluff, Virginia in May 1864 and became one of the Immortal 600.
Will
Company D "Oakland Guards" from Rowan CountyWhat company? My 3rd great grandfather was in co. B.
the army of the Tennessee basically for the march to the sea. it really took ball and trust in your commander to make that march that there was no turning back from.
Would you explain why? Where was it raised and where were the men from? Where did they wind up in the war? What happened to them? Thanks!
The 7th Illinois Infantry was also at Bentonville, too bad for the Rebs, and were armed with Henry Repeating Rifles.
In a report dated March 28th, 1865 Major Edward S. Johnson of the Seventh describes their use of the Henry Repeating rifles during the Battle of Bentonville. He writes, "At 3 p.m. I received orders from the brigade commander to relieve the skirmishers of the Fiftieth Illinois Infantry, then occupying the outer works of the enemy, and to hold those rifle pits at all hazards. I accordingly moved with my whole command, seventy men in all, principally armed with the Henry repeating rifle, to the swamp on the farther side of which those pits were located, and found that our skirmishers had withdrawn from them, and that they were reoccupied by the enemy in force. The enemy immediately opened a galling fire upon me, under which I, however deployed my men as skirmishers, and returned his fire. The left of my line succeeded in getting over the swamp, but was afterwards somewhat withdrawn to allow artillery uninterrupted play upon the enemy's position.....My men also threw up detached rifle pits for their own protection. The enemy attempted several times to advance his lines, but was driven back with little trouble. An exceedingly sharp fire was kept up, however, by both sides during the entire night, until 3:00 o'clock on the morning of the 22d, when the enemy's fire entirely ceased. At daylight I ordered a party over the swamp to reconnoiter the rifle pits in my front, which were found deserted; and I immediately advanced my whole line, occupying a second and third line of works, and finding the enemy had disappeared." (39) Seventy men armed with Henry Repeating rifles would be a force to reckon with. Even if each man only carried a hundred cartridges that would equal 7,000 rounds that could be fired stopping any advance by an enemy.
There's a Henry rifle at the Bentonville small museum and
Bookstore combination and perhaps it is a trophy taken from the 7th Illinois by one of the North Carolina Junior Reservist.
"While I am able for service I intend to stand by the cause while a banner floats to tell where freedom's sons still supports her cause."
Major Walter Clark of the North Carolina Junior Reserve Brigade in a letter to his mother.
I have been to Bentonville in 1990, 1991 and the last time in 2010 where we portrayed the 7th Illinois Infantry with Henry rifles, in fact in 2010 we had 23 Henry rifles in our company. I have seen the Henry rifle of which you speak. I think it may have been donated after the war by a member of the 7th Illinois Infantry as a reminder of the firepower that was faced by the Rebs., LOL
Bentonville is always a good time even thought it is a 2200 mile round trip for me. We wil be there in force for 2015 and the 150th.
Hit the enemy where he ain't... old Sherman was following the instructions of Forrest only on a much larger scale. There job was to create the nightmares and they did. After all they still have you wetting your pants 150 years later.Yeah, considering the odds they were up against it must been a real nightmare.
Lieutenant Charles Brown (21st Michigan) describing a Confederate attack on his position at Bentonville: "stood as long as a man could stand and when that was no longer a possibility we run like the duce."
The Battle of Bentonville, 19-21 March 1865
I say pick all that impress you... it's what I did.Do we have to pick one? Or can we have several? What about from both sides? I have favorite regiments from both North and South.
Hit the enemy where he ain't... old Sherman was following the instructions of Forrest only on a much larger scale. There job was to create the nightmares and they did. After all they still have you wetting your pants 150 years later.