History of the 4th Wisconsin Infantry and Cavalry in the American Civil War  
Author(s): Michael J. Martin
Published by Savas Beatie
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781611210163
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ISBN: 9781611210163 Price: INR 960.99
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Michael J. Martin’s A History of the 4th Wisconsin Infantry and Cavalry in the Civil War is a deeply researched and vividly written study of an unheralded Federal combat regiment. Few of the thousands of regiments raised to fight the American Civil War experienced the remarkably diverse history of this little-known organization.

The Wisconsin "Badgers" began the war as foot soldiers in the summer of 1861 as the 4th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry. After service in Maryland guarding railroads, the men sailed to the Gulf of Mexico to join Maj. Gen. Benjamin Butler’s expedition to capture the South’s most important city: New Orleans. From August 1862 to July 1863, the 4th Wisconsin participated as infantry or mounted infantry in a series of bloody battles in Louisiana, including Baton Rouge, Bisland, the siege of Port Hudson, and Clinton. With a desperate need for mounted troops, the Badgers were officially changed to cavalry in September 1863 and became the 4th Wisconsin Cavalry. As troopers, they took part in four mounted expeditions across Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, serving under such notable generals as Albert Lee, John Davidson, and Benjamin Grierson.

The Confederate armies surrendered in the spring of 1865, but the 4th Wisconsin Cavalry joined Maj. Gen. Wesley Merritt’s cavalry division that July on its ride from Louisiana into Texas, where the regiment was broken up and deployed in various outposts along the Rio Grande River. On May 28, 1866, Wisconsin’s last regiment of Civil War volunteers was finally mustered out at Brownsville, Texas. Unfortunately, many of the men would not be going home: 431 had lost their lives to enemy bullets and disease.

Eight years in the making, Martin’s regimental history is based upon scores of previously unused soldier and civilian diaries, letters, reports, contemporary newspapers, and reminiscences. It includes dozens of previously unpublished soldier photos, and a complete roster. Martin’s study is a must-have addition for every serious Civil War reader.
About the Author: A descendant of a Civil War soldier who was wounded at the Wheatfield at Gettysburg, Michael James Martin grew up in Mequon, Wisconsin, and received both an MS and a Ph.D. in Animal science from the University of Missouri-Columbia. He is the author of several published articles on the Civil War. This is his first book.
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Michael J. Martin’s A History of the 4th Wisconsin Infantry and Cavalry in the Civil War is a deeply researched and vividly written study of an unheralded Federal combat regiment. Few of the thousands of regiments raised to fight the American Civil War experienced the remarkably diverse history of this little-known organization.

The Wisconsin "Badgers" began the war as foot soldiers in the summer of 1861 as the 4th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry. After service in Maryland guarding railroads, the men sailed to the Gulf of Mexico to join Maj. Gen. Benjamin Butler’s expedition to capture the South’s most important city: New Orleans. From August 1862 to July 1863, the 4th Wisconsin participated as infantry or mounted infantry in a series of bloody battles in Louisiana, including Baton Rouge, Bisland, the siege of Port Hudson, and Clinton. With a desperate need for mounted troops, the Badgers were officially changed to cavalry in September 1863 and became the 4th Wisconsin Cavalry. As troopers, they took part in four mounted expeditions across Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, serving under such notable generals as Albert Lee, John Davidson, and Benjamin Grierson.

The Confederate armies surrendered in the spring of 1865, but the 4th Wisconsin Cavalry joined Maj. Gen. Wesley Merritt’s cavalry division that July on its ride from Louisiana into Texas, where the regiment was broken up and deployed in various outposts along the Rio Grande River. On May 28, 1866, Wisconsin’s last regiment of Civil War volunteers was finally mustered out at Brownsville, Texas. Unfortunately, many of the men would not be going home: 431 had lost their lives to enemy bullets and disease.

Eight years in the making, Martin’s regimental history is based upon scores of previously unused soldier and civilian diaries, letters, reports, contemporary newspapers, and reminiscences. It includes dozens of previously unpublished soldier photos, and a complete roster. Martin’s study is a must-have addition for every serious Civil War reader.
About the Author: A descendant of a Civil War soldier who was wounded at the Wheatfield at Gettysburg, Michael James Martin grew up in Mequon, Wisconsin, and received both an MS and a Ph.D. in Animal science from the University of Missouri-Columbia. He is the author of several published articles on the Civil War. This is his first book.
Table of contents
  • Cover Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Foreword
  • Chapter 1: Camp Utley
  • Chapter 2: Guarding Railroads in Baltimore
  • Chapter 3: The Eastern Shore Expedition: The Badgers' First Campaign
  • Chapter 4: The First Yankees to Set Foot in the Crescent City
  • Chapter 5: Digging Ben Butler's “Ditch”
  • Chapter 6: The Battle of Baton Rouge and the Capital Sport of Guerrilla Hunting
  • Chapter 7: A Diversion for the Navy: The First Trip to Port Hudson
  • Chapter 8: The Teche Campaign: Fighting as Mounted Infantry
  • Chapter 9: Port Hudson and Clinton: Defeats on Foot and Horseback
  • Chapter 10: The Second Assault on Port Hudson: “Ye living men come view the ground where you must shortly lie.” 1
  • Chapter 11: Cavalry at Last
  • Chapter 12: Gain a Company, Lose a Colonel
  • Chapter 13: The Second Battle of Clinton: Vindication for the Badgers
  • Chapter 14: Three Raids in Three Months: The Badgers Come of Age as Cavalrymen
  • Chapter 15: Marching Across Alabama
  • Chapter 16: Peace Soldiering” in Texas
  • Chapter 17: A History of Earl's Scouts
  • Chapter 18: Aftermath
    • Major General Halbert Eleazar Paine
    • Brigadier General Joseph Bailey
    • Colonel Webster Porter Moore
    • Brevet Major Edwin R. Herren
    • Captain George Wasson Carter, Company B
    • Captain Randolph J. Needham, Company K
    • 2nd Lieutenant George Wilbur Peck, Company E
    • Corporal Knute Nelson, Company B
    • Dr. A. H. Van Norstrand, Surgeon
    • Alfred Constantine Barry, Chaplain
    • Nathaniel J. White, Company D
    • William Dempster Hoard, Fifer, Company E
    • George S. Hays, Company G
    • William S. Jackson, Saddler, Company I
  • Appendix A: 4th Wisconsin Casualties suffered at Port Hudson, Louisiana on May 27, 1863
  • Appendix B: 4th Wisconsin Casualties suffered at Port Hudson, Louisiana on June 14, 1863
  • Appendix C: 4th Wisconsin Soldiers Interred in the National Cemetery at Baton Rouge, Louisiana
  • Appendix D: Lieutenant Isaac Earl's Scouts
  • Appendix E: Roster of officers in the 4th Wisconsin Cavalry at muster out on May 28, 1866
  • Appendix F: Roster of the 4th Wisconsin 1900 Reunion
  • Appendix G: Roster of the 4th Wisconsin Infantry and Cavalry
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
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