The Iron Brigade in Civil War and Memory  
The Black Hats from Bull Run to Appomattox and Thereafter
Author(s): Lance J. Herdegen
Published by Savas Beatie
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781611211078
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ISBN: 9781611211078 Price: INR 677.99
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Why another book on the Iron Brigade? Because this is really the first book on this storied outfit—and it could not have been written without the lifetime of study undertaken by award-winning author Lance J. Herdegen. More than a standard military account, Herdegen’s latest puts flesh and faces on the men who sat around the campfires, marched through mud and snow and dust, fought to put down the rebellion, and recorded much of what they did and witnessed for posterity.

The Iron Brigade is one of the most celebrated military organizations of the American Civil War. Although primarily known and studied because of its remarkable stand on the first bloody day at Gettysburg, its stellar service during the earliest days of the war and from the Wilderness to Appomattox has been routinely slighted. Herdegen has finally rectified this historical anomaly with his The Iron Brigade in Civil War and Memory. Composed originally of the 2nd, 6th, and 7th Wisconsin, 19th Indiana, and Battery B of the 4th U.S. Artillery, the brigade first attracted attention as the only all-Western organization serving in the Eastern Theater. The Regular Army’s distinctive felt dress hat earned them the nickname “Black Hat Brigade.” The Westerners took part in the fighting at Gainesville (Brawner’s Farm), Second Bull Run, South Mountain (where General McClellan claimed he gave them their famous “Iron Brigade” moniker), and Antietam. Reinforced by the 24th Michigan, the Black Hats fought at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville. But it was at Gettysburg on July 1 where the brigade immortalized a railroad cut and helped save the high ground west of town that proved decisive, but was nearly destroyed for its brave stand. Reorganizations, expired enlistments, and different duties split up the famous outfit, but some of the regiments fought on through the Wilderness to Petersburg and finally, Appomattox. Only when the war was ended did the Western boys finally go home.

Herdegen’s magnificent The Iron Brigade in Civil War and Memory, sure to be looked upon as his magnum opus, is based on decades of archival research and includes scores of previously unpublished letters, photos, journals, and other primary accounts. This well researched and written tour de force, which includes reunion and memorial coverage until the final expiration of the last surviving member, will be the last word on the Iron Brigade for the foreseeable future.

When we were young, explained one Black Hat veteran many years after the war, we hardly realized that we “had fought on more fields of battle than the Old Guard of Napoleon, and have stood fire in far greater firmness.” Here, at long last, is the full story of how young farm boys, shopkeepers, river men, and piney camp boys in a brigade forged with iron helped save the Union.

About the Author: Award-winning journalist Lance J. Herdegen is the former director of the Institute of Civil War Studies at Carroll University. He previously worked as a reporter and editor for the United Press International (UPI) news service covering national politics and civil rights and presently works as historical consultant for the Civil War Museum of the Upper Middle West. Herdegen is the author of many articles and is regarded around the world as the authority on the Iron Brigade. His many book credits include Those Damned Black Hats!: The Iron Brigade in the Gettysburg Campaign; Four Years with the Iron Brigade: The Civil War Journal of William R. Ray, Seventh Wisconsin Volunteers; The Men Stood Like Iron: How the Iron Brigade Won its Name, and In the Bloody Railroad Cut at Gettysburg.
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Why another book on the Iron Brigade? Because this is really the first book on this storied outfit—and it could not have been written without the lifetime of study undertaken by award-winning author Lance J. Herdegen. More than a standard military account, Herdegen’s latest puts flesh and faces on the men who sat around the campfires, marched through mud and snow and dust, fought to put down the rebellion, and recorded much of what they did and witnessed for posterity.

The Iron Brigade is one of the most celebrated military organizations of the American Civil War. Although primarily known and studied because of its remarkable stand on the first bloody day at Gettysburg, its stellar service during the earliest days of the war and from the Wilderness to Appomattox has been routinely slighted. Herdegen has finally rectified this historical anomaly with his The Iron Brigade in Civil War and Memory. Composed originally of the 2nd, 6th, and 7th Wisconsin, 19th Indiana, and Battery B of the 4th U.S. Artillery, the brigade first attracted attention as the only all-Western organization serving in the Eastern Theater. The Regular Army’s distinctive felt dress hat earned them the nickname “Black Hat Brigade.” The Westerners took part in the fighting at Gainesville (Brawner’s Farm), Second Bull Run, South Mountain (where General McClellan claimed he gave them their famous “Iron Brigade” moniker), and Antietam. Reinforced by the 24th Michigan, the Black Hats fought at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville. But it was at Gettysburg on July 1 where the brigade immortalized a railroad cut and helped save the high ground west of town that proved decisive, but was nearly destroyed for its brave stand. Reorganizations, expired enlistments, and different duties split up the famous outfit, but some of the regiments fought on through the Wilderness to Petersburg and finally, Appomattox. Only when the war was ended did the Western boys finally go home.

Herdegen’s magnificent The Iron Brigade in Civil War and Memory, sure to be looked upon as his magnum opus, is based on decades of archival research and includes scores of previously unpublished letters, photos, journals, and other primary accounts. This well researched and written tour de force, which includes reunion and memorial coverage until the final expiration of the last surviving member, will be the last word on the Iron Brigade for the foreseeable future.

When we were young, explained one Black Hat veteran many years after the war, we hardly realized that we “had fought on more fields of battle than the Old Guard of Napoleon, and have stood fire in far greater firmness.” Here, at long last, is the full story of how young farm boys, shopkeepers, river men, and piney camp boys in a brigade forged with iron helped save the Union.

About the Author: Award-winning journalist Lance J. Herdegen is the former director of the Institute of Civil War Studies at Carroll University. He previously worked as a reporter and editor for the United Press International (UPI) news service covering national politics and civil rights and presently works as historical consultant for the Civil War Museum of the Upper Middle West. Herdegen is the author of many articles and is regarded around the world as the authority on the Iron Brigade. His many book credits include Those Damned Black Hats!: The Iron Brigade in the Gettysburg Campaign; Four Years with the Iron Brigade: The Civil War Journal of William R. Ray, Seventh Wisconsin Volunteers; The Men Stood Like Iron: How the Iron Brigade Won its Name, and In the Bloody Railroad Cut at Gettysburg.
Table of contents
  • Cover Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Introduction
    • Back to the Iron Brigade
  • 1861 Greenhorn Patriots
    • Part I: War! War! War!
      • The Rebellion Must be Put Down in Blood
      • The Best Fighting Rig Imaginable
      • A Regiment of Badgers Led by a Coon
      • Bull's Run
      • A Story of Bravery and Love Lost
    • Part II: All Had to Learn the Business of War
      • Give Us Good Guns and Respectable Clothing
      • Our Higher Duty to the Constitution
      • We Regarded Them as Heroes and They Were
      • It is a New Life for Us All
      • The Only Casualty of Patterson Park
    • Part III: As a Brigade We Get Along Finely Together
      • A Place They Called Secessiondom
      • Little Mac
      • Put Him in the Band!
  • 1862 Iron Brigade of the West
    • Part I: Black Hat Brigade
      • A Dashing Young Officer and a Maiden Fair
      • Ready to Smell Powder
      • Tied to Granny Lincoln's Apron String
      • They Fight Like Devils
      • It is Admitted We are Not Bad on a March
      • New York and Pennsylvania Monopolize All the Glory
      • Matt Bernard and Kindred Stories
    • Part II: Baptism of Fire
      • A Hard Day for Mother
      • The Woods are Full of ‘Em!
      • Help in the Nick of Time!
      • Wisconsin and Indiana Blood Spilled for Naught
      • Left to Fight the Whole Rebel Army by Himself
      • A Slow Backward Step Under Fire
      • The Country was Shocked and Discouraged
    • Part III: The National Road at South Mountain
      • I Have Seen Enough of the Horrors of War
      • They Must be Made of Iron
      • Who the Thunder is Your Father?
      • The Iron Brigade of the West
      • We Who Got Through Were Happy
      • I Can Whip Lee Without Any Trouble at All
      • We Have Held Our Lives Cheap
      • The Men with Their Tall Hats Looked Ten Feet Tall
      • Steady Infantry Work
    • Part IV: Butchery Along the Hagerstown Turnpike
      • Into the Cornfield
      • What Grim-Looking Fellows They Were
      • The Bloodiest Day of the War
      • A Pile of Arms and Legs as High as a Church Window
      • Equal to the Best Troops in any Army
      • We Love the Old Flags
      • A Sad Good-bye to Johnny, the War Horse
      • A Foul Wrong Done to a Great and Good Man
      • The Iron Brigade is Sound to the Core
      • A Baptism of Fire for a New Regiment
  • 1863 Gettysburg
    • Part I: Worth a Man's Life
      • This Day of Darkness and Peril
      • The Return of Mickey, of Company K
      • To be Shot like Sheep in a Huddle
      • Every Man for Himself and a Rebel
      • The Shooting of a Deserter
      • Tired, Sore, Sleepy, Hungry, Dusty and Dirty as Pigs
      • Buttermilk at 25-cents a Glass
      • The Michigan Boys Get Their Black Hats
      • A Strangely Reticent Man
      • A Show on the Streets of Gettysburg
      • They are Coming, Give it to Them!
      • Those Damned Black Hats!
      • Go Like Hell!
    • Part II: An Unfinished Railroad Cut
      • A Long Line of Yelling Rebels
      • In the Bloody Railroad Cut
      • They Got You Down, Mickey, Have They?
      • We Fight a Little and Run a Little
      • I Both Respected and Feared Him
      • The Flag is Down!
      • A Mule Train Charge of Wagons
      • God Damn ‘Em, Feed it to ‘Em!
      • Yelling at us to Halt and Surrender
      • Mangled Forms of Tall Westerners
      • No Wonder You Men are Called the Iron Brigade
    • Part III: Retreat, Then Victory
      • We Know Nothing about a Cemetery Hill
      • A Confused Rabble of Disorganized Regiments
      • Great Men are Apt to Make Great Mistakes
      • You Have Refused a Kind Act
      • They Meant to Make Trouble Pretty Soon
      • All the Rebs Gone Someplace
      • Vicksburg has Fallen
      • A New Flag and a New Song
      • Home and the Veteran Question
  • 1864 The Overland Campaign to Petersburg
    • Part I: Into the Wilderness
      • Sally had a Baby, and the Baby had Red Hair
      • Going Home on 30-Day Furlough
      • Grant Wants Fighters
      • The Ominous Forebodings of War
      • Your Work this Morning will not be Play
      • A Strange and Terrible Struggle
      • My God, No One Could Stop Him!
      • I am a Prisoner, Sir!
      • It was a Hot Place, I Can Tell You …
    • Part II: Our Once Splendid Brigade
      • A Shout and a War Whoop
      • The Prince of Soldiers
      • A Young Boy Seeking Freedom
      • Whiz, Whiz, the Bullets go Over Our Heads
      • Oh, Lord, Da Dun Shot Massa Big Jake
      • A Perfect Storm of Bullets
      • Grab a Root!
      • All that is Left of the Old First Corps
      • Ripping up Track and Winter Camp
      • He has got a Load on and Going West to Start a Snake Farm
      • Not in Accordance with Civilized Warfare
  • 1865 Victory
    • Part I: They Wish to Remain
      • Kissing the Pine River Belles
      • The General was Too Drunk for Business
      • “De Bes' Man Fat Eber Libed
      • It was Proved the Draft Men Could Fight
      • We Believed a Great Wrong Had Been Done Him
      • Let Them Alone, They are Going Home
      • “You All Kick up a Row with Johnny Bull and We Alls Will Help You.”
      • A Grave Blot on an Otherwise Great Victory
      • Lincoln Dead, and the Assassin Would Have Been Torn Limb from Limb …
      • Old Boo, and Then Home
  • Postscript: Thereafter and Evermore
    • Glorious Remembrance
    • Redemption and Absolution
    • The Dark Shadow of War
    • Was the War Worth its Horrible Cost?
    • Their Fame Cannot be Mustered Out of the Memory of Men
    • Others
  • Appendix A: The Iron Brigade Companies and Counties
  • Appendix B: The Iron Brigade Regiments
  • Bibliography
  • About the Author
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