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57:
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428:, assaulting the Union left. After the Confederates broke through on the left, the II Corps did the same on the right, securing the Confederate victory. The Corps suffered heavily in the battle however, and was exhausted. Hill, as well as many other officers, wished to pursue the broken enemy, but Bragg declined and in turn relieved Hill, Polk, Wallker, Forrest and other officers from command.
263:'s Union division from their camps. But when Prentiss, Wallace and their divisions dug in at the Hornet's Nest, Bragg assaulted the position from all sides for hours without dislodging them. Suffering heavily, the Second Corps was completely disorganized by the time they forced Prentiss out and was held in reserve for the rest of the battle, briefly fighting on the second day.
537:, Hood went north with his army, but made a few changes. In the II corps, easterner S.D. Lee was still in command, but his division commanders were different. Stevenson was at his usual post, but H.D. Clayton took over Stewart's division, the latter taking command of the III corps. Hindman was relieved and in his place was a newly exchanged former prison-of-war,
373:'s Corps over open ground and a river. Breckinridge, Hardee, Cleburne and the other officers protested, but Bragg didn't listen. Breckinridge drove the first Union division at the river in a suicidal charge, but was bloodied once he attacked the main line. Bragg retreated the next day, with the II Corps as the rear guard.
361:
mismanaged his assaults, and all
Confederate gains by the II Corps were squandered and not exploited. Eventually, it fell to the II Corps to do the work again, and they eventually drove Sheridan's division, who kept Polk stopped all afternoon. The battle otherwise was a Confederate success so far,
447:'s division was transferred to the II from the I, and lastly, on a brighter note, Stewart and his division were returned to the II from Buckner's old corps. All in all between Bate, Stewart, Buckner and Hindman, the Corps numbered close to 28,000 men. Once Buckner left it was down to 23,000 men.
580:
After
Nashville in the early spring of 1865, the Confederate Army was discouraged; there was no hope for the cause. Hood resigned, and the Army went to Joseph Johnston again. The corps was re-organized again, with Stevenson, Clayton and Stovall in command of the divisions, and Johnson had been
357:, Hardee's Corps was the spearhead when McCown's division attacked at 5:30 am. His attack, as well as Cleburne's, threw the entire Union force in flight, pushing both corps back over a mile. Weary and exhausted, they stopped as Polk and his Corps were to finish the job.
409:, and then lost that city. In north Georgia, however, he re-formed for a counterstrike. Troops from Mississippi came under Walker and Forrest, soldiers from east Tennessee under Buckner, troops from Georgia, Kentucky, east Tennessee and
597:, and the II Corps was to lead the spearhead in a flank attack. As a result of the overwhelming Union strength and the heavy casualties his army suffered in the battle, Johnston surrendered to Sherman little more than a month later at
393:
to take command, who proved to be one of the best commanders of that Corps. The Corps was re-organized with divisions under
Stewart, Cleburne and Breckinridge, all in all 20,000 men. McCown's old division was now placed under
512:
Once Hood took command of the Army, there was another reorganization. Stewart took command, but was transferred to the III Corps, then
Stevenson took command, then Cheatham, then Stewart again, then Hindman, and finally
305:, were now attached. Numbering 11,000 men, his division boosted the strength of the corps by 40%. Anderson's division was dispersed between Buckner and the I Corps, but to replace him was a division from
266:
With many line officers killed or wounded, the Corps took months to refit. Fighting in the
Corinth Campaign, the Corps was later re-organized for its next operation in September 1862, the invasion of
458:
attacked the center and broke the II Corps, sending them fleeing in confusion. But with light casualties on both sides, the battle didn't inflict much damage, other than damaging
Confederate morale.
385:. The Confederate Army was idle for the next few months, until Breckinridge returned. When he did, due to arguments with Bragg, Hardee and McCown were relieved and the Corps was again reorganized.
381:
The Corps was reorganized yet again after Stones River. Alexander
Stewart and his division of 6,000 were attached to the II Corps, but Breckinridge and his division were sent to help the
714:
369:
waited a day, then on
January 2 attacked Rosecrans with the reserve of the army, Breckinridge's division from the II corps. Breckinridge was ordered to assault the Union left,
435:, Cleburne's division though, the pride of the II Corps, was transferred to the I Corps. Buckner's division from his old Corps was sent to the II only to be transferred up to
424:
The army was again re-organized; Hill lost
Stewart's division, which was sent to Buckner's Corps, but he still had Cleburne and Breckinridge. The corps was heavily engaged at
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729:
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and the second was under Daniel
Ruggles. The II Corps numbered 22,000 men, making it the largest in the Confederate Army, and was placed under command of Braxton Bragg.
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572:. They were pushed back, and the II corps then was transferred to the right flank. The starving Confederates fled without much defense, and cost Hood another battle.
601:, near Durham Station. Coupled with Gen. Robert E. Lee's surrender on April 9, Johnston's surrender represented the effective end of the war.
719:
325:
After the reorganization in the fall of 1862, the Army of Tennessee was ready for action, as was the Second Corps. This action took place at
317:. The Corps all in all numbered approximately 25,000 men; McCown's division had 5,000, Breckinridge had 11,000 and Cleburne had 9,000.
483:
634:
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431:
At Chattanooga, the Corps was re-organized. Breckinridge took command of the Corps with his old division under
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486:. The corps was the same as it was at Chattanooga, except that Bate and his division were traded in for
517:. All of these changes took place within a time span of three months. The Corps was heavily engaged at
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490:'s division of the I corps. By that time, none of the units originally in the II were still in it.
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campaign, the Corps never advanced on Schofield's rear by seizing his line of retreat on the
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as well as Orchard Knob in a salient. When Orchard Knob was taken, the Union force under
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against Bragg at Murfreesboro. Bragg ordered an assault on the Union right flank, where
290:, and Braxton Bragg was promoted to army command. The Corps was only lightly engaged at
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captured once again. The remnants of the Army were transferred to stop Sherman in the
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The II Corps after Corinth was again reorganized with two divisions, the first under
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mainly due to Hardee and the II corps. The next two days decided the final outcome.
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568:, however, the Corps took the center when they were assaulted by an old nemesis,
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The corps fought in all the engagements of the campaign, and at Resaca and
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After campaigning for a few months in Tennessee, Bragg was driven out to
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The Corps marched north into Tennessee, but missed the bloodbath at
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501:, its soldiers disobeyed orders to attack the flanking columns of
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At the battle itself, the II Corps was stationed in the center on
593:, the Confederates were to assault an isolated Union force under
313:, but his division was then placed under the brilliant commander
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and his division, who had fought at Shiloh but were absent at
549:
107:
474:. Although he had nothing to be blamed for at Chattanooga,
353:'s corps were stationed. In a pre-dawn assault similar to
614:. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996.
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1862 establishments in the Confederate States of America
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At its first battle (Shiloh), the Corps initially drove
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The Corps and the entire Army were re-organized again.
627:
Last Stand in the Carolinas: The Battle of Bentonville
548:, and cost Hood the battle. Like d'Erlon's I Corps at
252:. It contained two divisions; the first one was under
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Bentonville: The Final Battle of Sherman and Johnston
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Military units and formations disestablished in 1865
629:. Campbell, California: Savas Publishing Co., 1995.
320:
294:, however, and the entire Army wasn't even present.
725:Military units and formations established in 1862
466:The Corps was reorganized again in December when
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244:'s Army of Pensacola. The Corps was forming in
673:"Civil War Series: The Battle of Stones River"
585:. In this campaign the corps was commanded by
309:'s Army under John Mcown. Buckner was sent to
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232:The Corps was originally formed before the
509:and drove them back in a decisive manner.
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478:was relieved of command and replaced by
398:, and moved to the reserve Corps under
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413:under Burshod Johnson and troops from
37:Battle Flag under Breckinridge (right)
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365:Rather than following up on victory,
720:Corps of the Confederate States Army
525:, where they suffered heavy losses.
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656:"On This Day On November 20, 1862"
482:; who had come from the east with
470:took command from the incompetent
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321:Stones River and middle Tennessee
248:, when it was made the II Corps,
46:April 1862 – April 26, 1865
658:. Shiloh National Military Park.
216:was a military formation in the
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610:Hughes, Nathaniel Cheairs, Jr.
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19:Second Corps, Army of Tennessee
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35:Battle Flag under Bragg (left)
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63:Confederate States of America
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286:. The Corps was now led by
236:in April 1862 by combining
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497:they played key roles. At
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274:Service and reorganization
391:Army of Northern Virginia
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679:. National Park Service.
333:. The battle began when
377:Chickamauga-Chattanooga
250:Army of the Mississippi
240:' Alabama Division and
98:Confederate States Army
533:After Atlanta fell to
339:Army of the Cumberland
331:Battle of Stones River
698:Bradley, pp. 407–408.
529:Invasion of Tennessee
282:and the second under
246:Corinth, Mississippi
174:John C. Breckinridge
400:William H.T. Walker
341:marched south from
535:William T. Sherman
484:Longstreet's Corps
389:was sent from the
387:Daniel Harvey Hill
383:Siege of Vicksburg
222:American Civil War
146:American Civil War
625:Bradley, Mark L.
499:Kennesaw Mountain
476:John Breckinridge
371:Thomas Crittenden
335:William Rosecrans
299:John Breckinridge
261:Benjamin Prentiss
213:Army of Tennessee
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136:Army of Tennessee
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576:In the Carolinas
541:, an easterner.
507:Army of the Ohio
488:Carter Stevenson
452:Missionary Ridge
441:James Longstreet
419:James Longstreet
396:St. John Liddell
351:Alexander McCook
315:Patrick Cleburne
234:Battle of Shiloh
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327:Murfreesboro
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189:A.P. Stewart
132:Part of
591:Bentonville
554:Quatre Bras
523:Ezra Church
426:Chickamauga
411:Mississippi
407:Chattanooga
307:Kirby Smith
220:during the
142:Engagements
709:Categories
642:References
589:again. At
587:D. H. Hill
562:Cumberland
303:Perryville
292:Perryville
192:Maj. Gen.
172:Maj. Gen.
162:Maj. Gen.
159:commanders
152:Commanders
108:Army Corps
69:Allegiance
583:Carolinas
566:Nashville
437:Knoxville
343:Nashville
329:, in the
311:Knoxville
228:Formation
199:D.H. Hill
197:Lt. Gen.
187:Lt. Gen.
182:Lt. Gen.
177:Lt. Gen.
167:Lt. Gen.
80:Tennessee
558:Waterloo
546:Franklin
415:Virginia
337:and his
268:Kentucky
184:S.D. Lee
118:Infantry
556:in the
521:and at
519:Atlanta
462:Atlanta
157:Notable
51:Country
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595:Slocum
417:under
355:Shiloh
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86:Branch
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43:Active
550:Ligny
439:with
631:ISBN
616:ISBN
552:and
349:and
209:The
124:Size
114:Role
104:Type
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