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22:
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563:) was adopted by the reorganized corps. The new organization was formed by the consolidation of the XI and XII corps, to which was added some minor commands. This action of the War Department was based on the small sizes of the two corps: the XI had been extremely damaged at Gettysburg and the XII had always been the smallest in the army. Nonetheless, the soldiers of the XII Corps were very upset at the loss of their original corps identity.
348:, it entered the fight early in the morning, and carried a position near, and in front of, the Dunker Church. General Mansfield fell, mortally wounded, while deploying his columns, and the command of the corps during the battle devolved on General Williams. The two divisions lost in this battle, 275 killed, 1,386 wounded, and 85 missing; total, 69 42, out of about 8,000 present in action.
548:
96:
427:, the XII Corps distinguished itself by its gallant defense of Culp's Hill on July 2–3, 1863. General Slocum was in command of the right wing at Gettysburg, which left Alpheus S. Williams, of the 1st Division, in command of the corps; Thomas H. Ruger of the 3rd Brigade, 1st Division, took Williams's place as commander of the division; Geary commanded the 2nd Division.
408:. The corps at this time contained 30 regiments of infantry, with five batteries of light artillery, numbering in all 19,929 present for duty. Its losses at Chancellorsville amounted to 260 killed, 1,436 wounded, and 1,118 missing; total, 2,814. The hardest fighting and heaviest losses fell on the brigades of Brig. Gen.
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out. After a long, hard fight the corps succeeded in re-occupying its works. On no part of the field did the
Confederate dead lie thicker than in front of the XII Corps position. Johnson's Division, containing 22 regiments, lost in this particular action, 229 killed, 1,269 wounded, and
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Division, but his brigade successfully repulsed the attack. A civil engineer, Greene insisted that his men prepare impressive defensive works on the hill. Still, some of
Johnson's troops effected, without opposition, a lodgment in the vacated breastworks of the XII Corps, and upon the return of those
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had succeeded Augur in the command of the 2nd
Division. Its depleted columns had been strengthened by the accession of five new regiments of volunteers fresh from the North, three of which were composed of Pennsylvanians enlisted for nine months only. The corps now numbered 12,300 present for
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and XII Corps; and yet amid all the rout and confusion of that disastrous battle the regiments of the XII Corps moved steadily with unbroken fronts, retiring at the close of the battle without the loss of a color, while the corps artillery, after having been engaged in the close fighting at the
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was also fought by this corps, alone and unassisted; and, although defeated by the overwhelming force of the enemy, the record shows that the two divisions did some of the best fighting of the war there. In that battle the divisions were commanded by
Generals Williams and
442:. Slocum persuaded Meade to leave one brigade behind to hold the critical position: Greene's Brigade, of Geary's Division. While occupying this position on Culp's Hill, with an excessively long line to defend and no other troops in support, Greene was attacked by
508:. Geary pushed on to effect a junction with the beleaguered army at Chattanooga. On the night of October 27, his division bivouacked in Lookout Valley, in an advanced and isolated position, where he was attacked at midnight by a part of
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288:, 107th New York, 28th Pennsylvania, 46th Pennsylvania, 3rd Wisconsin, and others equally famous as crack regiments; all of them with household names in the communities from which they were recruited.
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520:, stated in his official report that "the repulse by Geary's Division of greatly superior numbers who attempted to surprise him, will rank among the most distinguished feats of arms of this war."
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512:'s command. But Geary had taken proper precautions against surprise, and Longstreet was repulsed, Geary receiving in this affair a prompt and gallant support from part of the XI Corps. General
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Upon the discontinuance of the XII Corps, General Slocum was assigned to the command of the
District of Vicksburg, but resumed the corps command—of the XX Corps—during the
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During the
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383:. The XII Corps spent the Battle of Fredericksburg at Harper's Ferry and was not involved in that battle. The corps went into winter quarters at Stafford Court House.
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duty, including the non-combatants; it contained 22 regiments of infantry and three batteries of light artillery. It was the smallest corps in the army.
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559:. Generals Williams and Geary still retained command of their divisions and the men still wore their XII Corps badge. This badge (a five-pointed star, or
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into
Virginia, the XII Corps joining in the pursuit, pushing forward until it reached the Rappahannock. While encamped there, on September 23, 1863, the
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instead of the customary three—but was composed of excellent material. Among its regiments were the 2nd
Massachusetts, 7th Ohio, 5th Connecticut,
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317:; loss, 302 killed, 1,320 wounded, and 594 missing; total, 2,216, out of less than 6,000 engaged. This loss fell on four brigades,
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332:, an old Regular Army veteran with 40 years of service. Its division and brigade organization were the same as at Cedar Mountain; Brig. Gen.
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375 missing; total, 1,873. To this must be added the losses suffered in the 14 regiments from the brigades of
William Smith,
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Chancellor House, withdrew in good order, taking every gun with them. In this campaign Slocum's troops were the first to cross the
273:. On September 12, General Order 129, it was ordered that its designation be changed to that of the XII Corps and that Maj. Gen.
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ordered that "the troops of the
Shenandoah Department, now under General Banks, shall constitute the Second Army Corps" of the
500:. Arriving in Tennessee, Geary's Division moved to the front, while Williams's Division was stationed along the railroad from
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was first created. By that order, five different corps were constituted: one of which, composed of the divisions of
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321:'s Brigade losing 867 men out of 1679, reported by Crawford as "present in engagement". The corps spent the
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The corps had done considerable hard fighting under its former title. Shields's Division won a victory over
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539:. One of Whitaker's regiments, the 8th Kentucky, was the first to plant its flag on the mountain's summit.
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General Order of March 13, 1862, under which the corps organization of the
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After April 18, 1864, the divisions of the XII Corps became part of the
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In April 1864, the designation of the corps was changed to that of the
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359:, February 2024 (located about one mile east of national historic site
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On the afternoon of July 2 the corps was ordered by army commander
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at Bristoe Station and did not participate in that engagement.
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was followed in the next month by the brilliant victory at
496:. The two corps were placed under the command of Maj. Gen.
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Cavalry Corps of the Military Division of the Mississippi
790:, reprinted by Morningside Bookshop, Dayton, Ohio, 1993,
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and XII corps were detached from the army and ordered to
416:. The divisions were commanded by Generals Williams and
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Military units and formations disestablished in 1864
304:on March 23, and Williams' Division fought well at
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1561:Military units and formations established in 1862
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434:to disengage from Culp's Hill and reinforce the
43:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks
729:September 13, 1863 – September 25, 1863
669:September 15, 1862 – September 17, 1862
659:September 12, 1862 – September 15, 1862
447:troops a desperate battle ensued to drive the
258:. These divisions were then operating in the
679:September 17, 1862 – October 20, 1862
787:Regimental Losses in the American Civil War
719:August 31, 1863 – September 13, 1863
1199:District of West Florida and South Alabama
740:September 25, 1863 – April 18, 1864
656:
355:Site of XII Corps Redoubt #3, overlooking
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917:Department of Virginia and North Carolina
74:Learn how and when to remove this message
1566:1862 establishments in the United States
551:Union Army 1st Division Badge, XII Corps
546:
350:
1179:District of Baton Rouge and Port Hudson
769:Eicher, John H., and Eicher, David J.,
641:26 June 1862 – 12 September 1862
308:, May 25, while on Banks' retreat. The
280:The XII Corps was small—only two
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689:October 20, 1862 – July 1, 1863
805:
709:July 4, 1863 – August 31, 1863
438:line on its extreme left flank, near
602:March 13, 1862 – 4 April 1862
379:, and at the successful storming of
15:
773:, Stanford University Press, 2001,
13:
699:July 1, 1863 – July 4, 1863
620:4 April 1862 – 26 June 1862
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14:
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1189:District of Key West and Tortugas
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750:; other entries assigned to the
608:As Department of the Shenandoah
542:
94:
20:
867:District of Southern California
404:, and the last to re-cross the
387:Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
1261:District of Southwest Missouri
910:Northern District (Charleston)
746: * Corps assigned to the
371:, a division commander of the
1:
995:Department of the Susquehanna
990:Department of the Monongahela
763:
298:Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson
100:XII Corps, 1st Division Badge
1241:District of Central Missouri
1158:District of Eastern Arkansas
1111:District of Western Kentucky
1080:District of Northern Alabama
1075:District of Middle Tennessee
1066:Department of the Cumberland
921:District of Eastern Virginia
836:District of Western New York
826:District of Central New York
807:Formations of the Union Army
638:
617:
599:
463:
444:Edward "Allegheny" Johnson's
7:
1279:Department of the Northwest
1028:Department of West Virginia
250:and commanded by Maj. Gen.
10:
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1246:District of North Missouri
1230:District of Upper Arkansas
1096:District of East Tennessee
1085:District of West Tennessee
1032:District of Harper's Ferry
986:Department of Pennsylvania
959:Department of Rappahannock
926:District of North Carolina
900:District of North Carolina
393:Battle of Chancellorsville
176:Battle of Lookout Mountain
164:Battle of Chancellorsville
152:First Battle of Winchester
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979:District of Eastern Shore
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879:Department of the Potomac
843:Department of the Pacific
831:District of Massachusetts
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323:Second Battle of Bull Run
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148:First Battle of Kernstown
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1389:Army of West Mississippi
1268:Department of New Mexico
1225:District of South Kansas
1220:District of North Kansas
1163:District of the Frontier
1011:District of Saint Mary's
1002:Department of Washington
964:Department of Shenandoah
310:Battle of Cedar Mountain
254:, was designated as the
234:The corps was formed by
156:Battle of Cedar Mountain
29:This article includes a
1354:Army of the Mississippi
1256:District of Saint Louis
1168:District of Little Rock
895:District of Hilton Head
886:Department of the South
771:Civil War High Commands
488:as a reinforcement for
357:Aquia Landing, Virginia
292:The Valley and Antietam
58:more precise citations.
1369:Army of the Shenandoah
1324:Army of the Cumberland
1237:Department of Missouri
1194:District of La Fourche
1184:District of Carrollton
1175:Department of the Gulf
1154:Department of Arkansas
1101:Department of Kentucky
1092:Department of the Ohio
1070:District of the Etowah
1016:District of Washington
1006:District of Alexandria
862:District of California
822:Department of the East
748:Army of the Cumberland
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518:Army of the Cumberland
364:
340:It was not engaged at
277:be placed in command.
1394:Army of West Virginia
1379:Army of the Tennessee
1374:Army of the Southwest
1293:District of Wisconsin
1288:District of Minnesota
1021:District of Annapolis
974:District of Baltimore
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1329:Army of the Frontier
1215:District of Nebraska
1210:District of Colorado
1206:Department of Kansas
1132:District of Michigan
1127:District of Illinois
905:District of Savannah
852:District of Humboldt
525:Battle of Wauhatchie
425:Battle of Gettysburg
315:Christopher C. Augur
172:Battle of Wauhatchie
168:Battle of Gettysburg
1364:Army of the Potomac
1272:District of Arizona
1122:District of Indiana
1118:Northern Department
969:Mountain Department
890:District of Florida
847:District of Arizona
752:Army of the Potomac
715:Alpheus S. Williams
695:Alpheus S. Williams
675:Alpheus S. Williams
665:Joseph K. Mansfield
654:Alpheus S. Williams
474:Army of the Potomac
470:Gettysburg Campaign
330:Joseph K. Mansfield
275:Joseph K. Mansfield
244:Alpheus S. Williams
240:Army of the Potomac
236:U.S. War Department
197:Alpheus S. Williams
193:Joseph K. Mansfield
138:Army of the Potomac
1440:Seventh Army Corps
1319:Army of the Border
1298:District of Dakota
857:District of Oregon
636:Nathaniel P. Banks
615:Nathaniel P. Banks
597:Nathaniel P. Banks
580:Carolinas Campaign
553:
535:'s Brigade of the
533:Walter C. Whitaker
406:Rappahannock River
377:Peninsula Campaign
365:
346:Battle of Antietam
319:Samuel W. Crawford
252:Nathaniel P. Banks
229:American Civil War
217:Twelfth Army Corps
160:Battle of Antietam
128:United States Army
31:list of references
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1425:Fourth Army Corps
1415:Second Army Corps
1344:Army of the James
1251:District of Rolla
1142:Military Division
1106:District of Cairo
1047:Military Division
955:Middle Department
784:Fox, William F.,
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516:, commanding the
490:William Rosecrans
391:The brunt of the
260:Shenandoah Valley
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1410:First Army Corps
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1359:Army of the Ohio
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568:Atlanta Campaign
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440:Little Round Top
334:George S. Greene
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1109:
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984:
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977:
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967:
965:
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948:
942:
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927:
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922:
918:
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911:
908:
906:
903:
901:
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896:
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891:
887:
884:
883:
880:
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868:
865:
863:
860:
858:
855:
853:
850:
848:
844:
841:
840:
837:
834:
832:
829:
827:
823:
820:
819:
817:
811:
804:
797:
796:0-685-72194-9
793:
789:
788:
783:
780:
779:0-8047-3641-3
776:
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749:
739:
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733:
732:
728:
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723:
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682:
678:
676:
673:
672:
668:
666:
663:
662:
658:
655:
652:
651:
648:
647:As XII Corps
640:
637:
634:
633:
630:
629:
619:
616:
613:
612:
609:
601:
598:
595:
594:
591:
583:
581:
577:
574:while on the
573:
569:
564:
562:
558:
549:
543:Redesignation
540:
538:
534:
530:
526:
523:The midnight
521:
519:
515:
511:
507:
503:
499:
498:Joseph Hooker
495:
491:
487:
483:
479:
478:Robert E. Lee
475:
471:
461:
459:
455:
454:Junius Daniel
450:
445:
441:
437:
433:
428:
426:
421:
419:
418:John W. Geary
415:
414:Charles Candy
411:
407:
403:
402:Rapidan River
398:
394:
384:
382:
378:
374:
370:
362:
361:Redoubt No. 2
358:
353:
349:
347:
343:
338:
335:
331:
326:
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320:
316:
311:
307:
303:
299:
289:
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283:
278:
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272:
268:
265:
261:
257:
253:
249:
248:James Shields
245:
241:
237:
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230:
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218:
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208:Military unit
202:
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118:United States
116:
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108:
104:
97:
92:
87:
78:
75:
67:
57:
53:
47:
46:
40:
36:
32:
27:
18:
17:
1464:
1307:Field Armies
786:
770:
755:
745:
646:
626:As II Corps
625:
607:
589:
565:
554:
522:
502:Murfreesboro
467:
449:Confederates
429:
422:
395:fell on the
390:
366:
339:
327:
295:
279:
233:
216:
212:
210:
134:Part of
70:
61:
50:Please help
42:
1146:Mississippi
1051:Mississippi
815:Departments
813:Independent
590:As V Corps
578:and in the
494:Chattanooga
227:during the
144:Engagements
56:introducing
1550:Categories
1403:Army Corps
764:References
506:Bridgeport
468:After the
306:Winchester
225:Union Army
189:commanders
182:Commanders
64:April 2009
561:pentagram
486:Tennessee
464:Tennessee
412:and Col.
302:Kernstown
282:divisions
264:President
213:XII Corps
89:XII Corps
947:Division
758:XX Corps
557:XX Corps
537:IV Corps
476:pursued
373:VI Corps
219:) was a
1144:of West
423:At the
256:V Corps
223:of the
187:Notable
114:Country
52:improve
1049:of the
794:
777:
472:, the
456:, and
124:Branch
106:Active
436:Union
221:corps
37:, or
792:ISBN
775:ISBN
246:and
211:The
504:to
300:at
1552::
1281::
1270::
1239::
1208::
1177::
1156::
1120::
1094::
1068::
1030::
1004::
988::
957::
919::
888::
845::
824::
760:.
734:*
582:.
482:XI
420:.
397:XI
363:).
231:.
41:,
33:,
798:.
781:.
215:(
77:)
71:(
66:)
62:(
48:.
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