Those Damned Black Hats!  
The Iron Brigade in the Gettysburg Campaign
Author(s): Lance J. Herdegen
Published by Savas Beatie
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781611210385
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781611210385 Price: INR 564.99
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WINNER FOR OPERATIONAL / BATTLE HISTORY, 2008, ARMY HISTORICAL FOUNDATION DISTINGUISHED BOOK AWARD


The Iron Brigade--an all-Western outfit famously branded as The Iron Brigade of the West--served out their enlistments entirely in the Eastern Theater. Hardy men were these soldiers from Indiana, Wisconsin, and Michigan, who waged war beneath their unique black Hardee Hats on many fields, from Brawner’s Farm during the Second Bull Run Campaign all the way to Appomattox. In between were memorable combats at South Mountain, Antietam, Chancellorsville, Mine Run, the Overland Campaign, and the grueling fighting around Petersburg. None of these battles compared with the “four long hours” of July 1, 1863, at Gettysburg, where the Iron Brigade was all but wrecked.

Lance Herdegen’s Those Damned Black Hats! The Iron Brigade in the Gettysburg Campaign is the first book-length account of their remarkable experiences in Pennsylvania during that fateful summer of 1863. Drawing upon a wealth of sources, including dozens of previously unpublished or unused accounts, Herdegen details for the first time the exploits of the 2nd, 6th, 7th Wisconsin, 19th Indiana, and 24th Michigan regiments during the entire campaign. On July 1, the Western troops stood line-to-line and often face-to-face with their Confederate adversaries, who later referred to them as “those damned Black Hats.” With the help of other stalwart comrades, the Hoosiers, Badgers, and Wolverines shed copious amounts of blood to save the Army of the Potomac’s defensive position west of town. Their heroics above Willoughby Run, along the Chambersburg Pike, and at the Railroad Cut helped define the opposing lines for the rest of the battle and, perhaps, won the battle that helped preserve the Union.

Herdegen’s account is much more than a battle study. The story of the fighting at the “Bloody Railroad Cut” is well known, but the attack and defense of McPherson’s Ridge, the final stand at Seminary Ridge, the occupation of Culp’s Hill, and the final pursuit of the Confederate Army has never been explored in sufficient depth or with such story telling ability. Herdegen completes the journey of the Black Hats with an account of the reconciliation at the 50th Anniversary Reunion and the Iron Brigade’s place in Civil War history.

“Where has the firmness of the Iron Brigade at Gettysburg been surpassed in history?” asked Rufus Dawes of the 6th Wisconsin. Indeed, it was a fair question. The brigade marched to Gettysburg with 1,883 men in ranks and by nightfall on July 1, only 671 men were still to be counted. It would fight on to the end of the Civil War, and do so without its all-Western makeup, but never again was it a major force in battle.

Some 150 years after the last member of the Iron Brigade laid down his life for his country, the complete story of what the Black Hats did at Gettysburg and how they remembered it is finally available.
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WINNER FOR OPERATIONAL / BATTLE HISTORY, 2008, ARMY HISTORICAL FOUNDATION DISTINGUISHED BOOK AWARD


The Iron Brigade--an all-Western outfit famously branded as The Iron Brigade of the West--served out their enlistments entirely in the Eastern Theater. Hardy men were these soldiers from Indiana, Wisconsin, and Michigan, who waged war beneath their unique black Hardee Hats on many fields, from Brawner’s Farm during the Second Bull Run Campaign all the way to Appomattox. In between were memorable combats at South Mountain, Antietam, Chancellorsville, Mine Run, the Overland Campaign, and the grueling fighting around Petersburg. None of these battles compared with the “four long hours” of July 1, 1863, at Gettysburg, where the Iron Brigade was all but wrecked.

Lance Herdegen’s Those Damned Black Hats! The Iron Brigade in the Gettysburg Campaign is the first book-length account of their remarkable experiences in Pennsylvania during that fateful summer of 1863. Drawing upon a wealth of sources, including dozens of previously unpublished or unused accounts, Herdegen details for the first time the exploits of the 2nd, 6th, 7th Wisconsin, 19th Indiana, and 24th Michigan regiments during the entire campaign. On July 1, the Western troops stood line-to-line and often face-to-face with their Confederate adversaries, who later referred to them as “those damned Black Hats.” With the help of other stalwart comrades, the Hoosiers, Badgers, and Wolverines shed copious amounts of blood to save the Army of the Potomac’s defensive position west of town. Their heroics above Willoughby Run, along the Chambersburg Pike, and at the Railroad Cut helped define the opposing lines for the rest of the battle and, perhaps, won the battle that helped preserve the Union.

Herdegen’s account is much more than a battle study. The story of the fighting at the “Bloody Railroad Cut” is well known, but the attack and defense of McPherson’s Ridge, the final stand at Seminary Ridge, the occupation of Culp’s Hill, and the final pursuit of the Confederate Army has never been explored in sufficient depth or with such story telling ability. Herdegen completes the journey of the Black Hats with an account of the reconciliation at the 50th Anniversary Reunion and the Iron Brigade’s place in Civil War history.

“Where has the firmness of the Iron Brigade at Gettysburg been surpassed in history?” asked Rufus Dawes of the 6th Wisconsin. Indeed, it was a fair question. The brigade marched to Gettysburg with 1,883 men in ranks and by nightfall on July 1, only 671 men were still to be counted. It would fight on to the end of the Civil War, and do so without its all-Western makeup, but never again was it a major force in battle.

Some 150 years after the last member of the Iron Brigade laid down his life for his country, the complete story of what the Black Hats did at Gettysburg and how they remembered it is finally available.
Table of contents
  • Coverpage
  • Title
  • Copyrightpage
  • Dedication Page
  • FM
  • Contents
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Acknowledgments
  • Chapter 1: A Black Hat Brigade
  • Chapter 2: I Cannot Stand it to Fight
  • Chapter 3: He has Gone to Stonewall’s Funeral
  • Chapter 4: Greenhorn Patriots
  • Chapter 5: To be Shot Like Sheep in a Huddle
  • Chapter 6: The Iron Brigade of the West
  • Chapter 7: Bad News About the Rebs
  • Chapter 8: A New Regiment and a Veteran Battery
  • Chapter 9: The Black Hats
  • Chapter 10: A Young Lieutenant and a Fair Maid
  • Chapter 11: King’s Pet Babies
  • Chapter 12: I Will Fight Them Inch by Inch
  • Chapter 13: It’s Those Damned Black Hats!
  • Chapter 14: One Sword is All I Need on This Line
  • Chapter 15: Fire by File! Fire by File!
  • Chapter 16: What Became of That Sword I Gave You?
  • Chapter 17: I Can Stand it No Longer
  • Chapter 18: Yelling Like Demons
  • Chapter 19: I Grew About a Foot and a Half
  • Chapter 20: In a Tight Place
  • Chapter 21: We Left Behind the Rebel Flag, That Dearly Bought the Prize
  • Chapter 22: Are you Satisfied With the Twenty-fourth?
  • Chapter 23: Our Best and Bravest
  • Chapter 24: The Finger of God Paralyzed his Brain
  • Chapter 25: This Battle Will go by the Name of Gettysburg
  • Chapter 26: A Shot From a Smoothbore Gun
  • Chapter 27: The Old Army had Come to Itself Again
  • Chapter 28: They Have Played Their Hand Long Enough
  • Chapter 29: I Guess He is All Right on the Fight Question
  • Chapter 30: No Man Can Fight Surrounded by Cowards
  • Chapter 31: The Trust Imposed Upon Them
  • Chapter 32: The Chance of a Lifetime
  • Chapter 33: Glorious Remembrance
  • Epilogue: An Unknown. July 1, 1997
  • Appendices
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • About the Author
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