Contributed by: Don Matthews
THE 1st NORTH CAROLINA HEAVY ARTILLERY BATTALION, CSA (aka the Ninth North Carolina Battalion) PART I GENERAL INFORMATION The officers and men of the 1st North Carolina Heavy Artillery Battalion, CSA hold the distinction of (a) having served in combat as both artillerymen and infantrymen; of (b) having fought six major engagements including three pitched battles (1st and 2nd Ft. Fisher and Bentonville) and three smaller battles (Ft. Anderson, Town Creek, and 2nd Kinston), all within less than 90 days, beginning Dec. 24, 1864 and ending March 21, 1865, and (c) having battled the U.S. Navy, Marines, and three separate Federal armies. In the process, this battalion probably suffered at least 70% casualties during the first three months of 1865. An informative historical sketch of this battalion was written in 1901by Sgt. T.A. McNeil who’d served in Company D of the battalion. Sgt. McNeil’s account was recorded in Volume IV of a five volume work originally entitled THE HISTORIES OF THE SEVERAL REGIMENTS AND BATTALIONS FROM NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GREAT WAR 1861-‘65, edited by Judge Walter Clark and published in 1901. This work was recently (within the past twenty-five years or so) reprinted and re-titled under its common usage name, NORTH CAROLINA REGIMENTS, and it will be referred to that way herein. Sgt. McNeil’s account of the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion was entitled …..well, there’s an interesting story about that… There were many Confederate units called the First this or the First that. The profusion of “Firsts” caused difficulties for Judge Clark in editing NORTH CAROLINA REGIMENTS. Another complication he encountered concerning this particular battalion was that near the end of the war, its members who’s survived the loss of the lower Cape Fear forts (and the loss of their artillery weapons along with those forts) were linked with a small detachment of similar survivors from the 36th N.C. Regiment (aka the 2nd N.C. Artillery) to form a new infantry battalion, although no new numerical unit designation was ever assigned to it. This mixed-unit battalion was simply cobbled together to meet the extengencies of the moment. Presumably, it was always intended that these men would return to the artillery service as soon as cannon could be obtained to re-arm them in their specialty. Judge Clark solved his numerical organizational dilemma (in this case) by simply renaming the 1st North Carolina Heavy Artillery Battalion. He called it the Ninth Battalion, and he published Sgt. McNeils historical sketch of the 1st North Carolina Heavy Artillery Battalion as the history of the Ninth Battalion. (He did this thirty-six years after the Civil War ended). When Judge Clark’s five volume work was published in 1901, survivors of the 1st North Carolina Heavy Artillery Battalion who lived long enough to read it, if any did, probably had trouble finding the account of their service because none of them would have recognized the “Ninth Battalion” designation Judge Clark chose for them. Judge Clark did mention in a footnote to Sgt. McNeil’s historical sketch of “the Ninth Battalion” that the battalion had in reality been called the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion, and he readily admitted that he referred to it as the Ninth Battalion only for his own convenience; however, the genie was already out of the bottle and Judge Clark’s non-existent “Ninth Battalion” took on a life of its own. Despite its flaws, Judge Walter Clark’s NORTH CAROLINA REGIMENTS deservedly achieved public acclaim in North Carolina and elsewhere. For the next seventy-five years it was considered to be the last word concerning this states military participation in the Civil War. However, during those seventy-five years, the 1st North Carolina Heavy Artillery Battalion was almost always referred to as the Ninth Battalion, even on the battlefield memorial gate at Bentonville, the site of the 1st North Carolina Heavy Artillery Battalion’s last and most costly conflict. As a result, many and perhaps most of the descendants of the men who served in this battalion were never aware of their forbears’ service at Bentonville. (Today, this has changed. Bentonville battlefield monuments, signs, etc. now make it clear that the Ninth Battalion and the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion were one and the same.) PART II BATTALION SERVICE HISTORY The 1st North Carolina Heavy Artillery Battalion was formed in March 1863 from three previously independent artillery companies. These previously independent companies became Companies A, B, and C of the battalion upon its formation. In 1864, a fourth company, Company D was formed from volunteer detachments of each of the first three companies. The entire battalion was stationed at Ft. Caswell and/or Ft. Campbell on Oak Island for much of the war. This battalion and several other Confederate Artillery units were charged with preventing a Federal seaborne invasion in that area which might threaten the port of Wilmington, 29 miles upriver, and with keeping the blockading Federal fleet offshore a considerable distance from the entrance of the “old” inlet to Cape Fear River, thereby providing a zone of protection for Confederate blockade runners coming into or going out of the “old” inlet. Company D of this battalion was hurriedly ferried from Ft. Caswell to Smithville and from there over to Ft. Fisher (the huge Confederate which defended the “new” inlet to Cape Fear River) to assist in the defense of that fort during both battles that were fought there in late December 1864 and in mid-January 1865. Company D manned the sea facing guns of Battery Bolles and Battery Roland during the first Federal attack on Ft. Fisher in December 1864, and helped repulse that attack with heavy Federal loss. (There were very few Confederate casualties in that first battle.) When a huge combined Federal land and sea force again attacked Ft. Fisher in January 1865, Company D of this battalion once again was hurriedly ferried to Ft. Fisher from Ft. Caswell (again, via Smithville) but on this occasion Company D helped defend the land face of the fort, not the sea face. Ultimately, the men of Company D and the other defenders of Ft. Fisher were overwhelmed by superior Federal forces on the land side. Company D was almost wiped out in this second battle. All the Company D soldiers who were at Ft. Fisher during the second battle there were killed, wounded and/or captured. However, a handful of Company D men had been detailed elsewhere, or had been on furlough when this second Federal attack occurred in January 1865. Those few men returned to duty with the battalion. The 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion suffered additional casualties in subsequent battles that were fought at Ft. Anderson, at Town Creek, and 2nd Kinston. However, most of the casualties this battalion suffered occurred at Bentonville on March 19, 1865. On that one day, more than half the men who comprised Companies A, B, and C and the remnants of Company D were killed, wounded, and/or captured. That’s many more casualties than the handful who have so far been identified (by various means). No one today knows who all these casualties were, but in all likelihood, many of the Duplin Countians listed on this battalion roster about whom nothing more is known than a name, lie today in a mass grave of several hundred unidentified Confederate dead who are buried on the Bentonville battlefield. What is known is this: In the historical sketch of this battalion that was written in 1901 by Sgt. McNeil, he indicated that the battalion went into the Bentonville battle 257 strong, and lost 152 men killed or wounded. Although he made no reference to a “captured” casualty category, some of this battalion’s soldiers were reported captured at Bentonville. Sgt. McNeil’s “going in” number closely approximated the “going in” number that was independently reported for this same battalion by Col. William Lamb in his account of the 36th N.C. Regiment (Second Artillery), also written for Judge Walter Clark’s NORTH CAROLINA REGIMENTS in 1901. Col. William Lamb was largely responsible for the design of Ft. Fisher and he commanded the 36th N.C. Regiment (2nd N.C. Artillery) there until he was wounded and taken prisoner and his entire command nearly wiped out in the loss of the fort on Jan.15, 1865. The men from his regiment who did survive the fort’s surrender, were, like the survivor’s of the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion’s Company D, either on furlough or detailed somewhere else when the last Ft. Fisher battle was fought. This small group of survivors from the 36th N.C. Regiment (2nd Artillery) included three of the regiment’s officers. Sometime before the Battle of Bentonville was fought these three officers, and a now unknown number of enlisted survivors from their regiment (who probably comprised about a company or company-and-a-half sized detachment), joined with the men of Companies A, B and C (and the remnants of Company D) of the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion, to form a single “Red Infantry” battalion. (“Red Infantry was a term that referred to Confederate Artillery members serving as Infantrymen. Red was the color designation of the Confederate Artillery service; Cavalry yellow.; Infantry Blue. These colors were displayed on uniform braid, shoulder straps, piping, etc. assuring that a soldiers arm of service could be determined on sight.) As luck would have it, the ranking officer of this mixed force battalion came from the smaller force that made up the battalion. He was Lt. Col. John D. Taylor, one of three officers from the 36th N.C. Regiment (2nd Artillery) who’d survived the fall of Ft. Fisher. That was why Col. William Lamb in writing the history of the unit he’d commanded, reported on the service and casualties suffered by the mixed force Red Infantry Battalion – because it was led by his friend and immediate subordinate from the 36th Regiment (2nd Artillery), Lt. Col. Taylor. Col. Lamb concluded that Lt. Col. Taylor’s had led the mixed-unit Red Infantry battalion into the Bentonville battle 267 strong, and that only 115 of the men who went into the battle had escaped unscathed. Although neither Col. Lamb’s “going in” headcount nor his “coming out” headcount agreed exactly with those of Sgt. McNeil in his account of the Ninth Battalion ( 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion), their two independent “going in” and “coming out” counts were reasonably close, and at the bottom line, Col. Lamb and Sgt. McNeil both agreed that exactly 152 casualties were suffered by this mixed unit battalion at Bentonville. Today, the names of most enlisted casualties in this battalion are “known but to God”; however, the names of the battalion’s officer casualties have been preserved. Only one of them was a Duplin Countian. Despite that, all of the officer casualties will be reported fully after the Roster of Duplin Countians shown in Part III, regardless of county of residence, because the officer casualties are startlingly instructive as to the severity of the battles fought by this little battalion. PART III DUPLIN COUNTIANS IN COMPANY “B” OF THE 1ST N.C. HEAVY ARTILLERY BATTALION (aka The Ninth Battalion) NOTE: The following roster identifies all of the Duplin Countians who at present are known to have served in the 1st North Carolina Heavy Artillery Battalion. This roster was compiled from (or abstracted from) Volume I (Artillery) of NORTH CAROLINA TROOPS 1861-1865 A ROSTER, edited by Louis H. Manarin. Only soldiers whose residences were reported to be Duplin County are included on this first roster, along with what little is known about their service. However, the residences of about 20% of the soldiers in this battalion were not provided, and it seems only logical to conclude that at least some of them were from Duplin County too. Therefore, this roster should be considered a partial roster of Duplin Countians who served in this battalion, not a complete roster. OFFICERS, NCO’S AND MUSICIANS Taylor, Jacob W.; 1st Lt.;Captured Bentonville 3/19/65; Confined Pt. Lookout, Md. Bourden, Benjamin C.; 2nd Lt. *** Carr, William D.; 1st Sergeant Southerland, Jerimiah; Corporal Taylor, Felix W.; Corporal Paroled May 9, 1865 Taylor, John F.; Corporal * Discharged April 1, 1865 for disability Newberry, Henry Emmons; Drummer Discharged Nov 1, 1862 for substitute PRIVATES Best, Wm. H. Paroled at Goldsboro May 24, 1865 Bishop, Brantley B. Bishop, Riley M. Wounded at Bentonville. Paroled April 13, 1865 Blanton, Blaney* Brice, John J. Brown, Bryant* Butler, John T. Carr, Wm. D. Carr, Wm. J. Carroll, Benajah V. Paroled at Greensboro May 1, 1865 Carroll, Owen Judson**Survived war; died 1901. See Obituaries, this website. Casteen, Wm. W. Deal, Linton W. Dempsey, George F. Transferred to Company B from 59th N.C. Regt; 7/23/63 Derr, John C. Dixon, Benjamin* Drew, John M. Discharged for disability May 29, 1862 Edwards, Jacob J. Discharged 2/2/1863 when provided a substitute, Linton W. Deal Ezell, Benjamin L. Fussell, Benjamin Fussell, John Admitted to hospital in Greensboro, 3/11/1865 Gillespie, John W.* Gore, Marshall H. Heath, Joseph R. Died 2/10/1863 of disease Henderson, Jerimiah M. Herring, John D. Holland, John W.* Hollingsworth, Jacob* Howard, Lorenzo* Hunter, Marshall Died 9/17/1863 of disease Hunter, Nicholas N. Admitted to hospital, Raleigh 3/1/65; returned to duty 4/17/65 Judge, James H. Judge, Stephen M. Kelley, James Taylor Died 10/11/1862 of disease Kennedy, James D.* Kennedy, Jesse Thomas Kennedy, Levi T.*** Wounded; captured 2/18/65; in hospital at Wilmington 3/5/65; Knowles, James *** Discharged 11/26/1863 for disability Lanier, Bryant ** Discharged 5/31/1862 for disability Linton, John W. Matthews, Benjamin W. *** Paroled Goldsboro, May 29, 1865. Died Duplin 2/15/15 Matthews, James T. Discharged 6/23/1863 for disability Merritt, Benjamin J. Discharged 12/26/1863 for disability Merritt, Kenan ** Enlisted at age 52 on 3/10/1863 Moore, Levi *** Admitted to hospital at Wilmington 1/23/1865; returned 1/27/1865; Murray, James C. Discharged May 16-17 1863 for disability Murray, Wm. H. *** (UDC lists name as William Harvey Murray) Newell, George A. Detailed in Commissary Dept. Kenansville, N.C. on 8/10/1864 Newson, Benjamin J. Parker, Council C. Peterson, Lewis ***Survived War; Head of household Duplin Census of 1880 Pickett, James H. Admitted to hospital at Wilmington, 2/6/1865. Powell, Randall Powell, Wm. Quinn, John T, Reasons, Joseph T.*** Furloughed for 60 days 2/20/1865; Gunshot wound. Register, David Register, Dixon S.; *** Rogers, James M. (***?) UDC lists James M. Rodgers Co, F; 9th Infantry. This man? Rogers, Timothy H.* Strickland, Archibald Died at Lighthouse Battery 8/25/1862 of disease Strickland, Richard James; *** Taylor, John F. Mustered as Corporal; reduced, discharged 1/1/1863 for disability Taylor, Lewis Wounded 3/8/1865; hospitalized 3/11; paroled High Point, NC 5/1/1865 Taylor, Major J. Admitted to hospital, Wilmington 1/23/1865; returned 1/29/1865 Thigpen, Job Waters, John D.; *** West, John Wright* West, Joshua James; *** West, Joshua; *** (UDC lists name as Joshua A. West) Williams, David S. *** (UDC lists name as David Stephen Williams) Williams, George W. Discharged 1/1/1863 for disability Wilson, Amzi R. Wilson, Francis M. Wounded Bentonville, 3/19/1865 Wilson, John Wright* Woodward, David J.* * Denotes Duplin County men who transferred from Company B, 1ST N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion to another company in the same Battalion. **Denotes Duplin County men who transferred from Company B, 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion to a completely different Battalion or Regiment. *** Denotes battalion members who are listed as ancestors of UDC members in the North Carolina Division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy publication entitled North Carolina Historical Roster 1897-1997, published by The Chapel Hill Press: ISBN: 1-880849-11-9 DUPLIN COUNTIANS WHO SERVED IN THE 1ST NORTH CAROLINA HEAVY ARTILLERY BATTALION (aka the Ninth Battalion) IN COMPANIES OTHER THAN COMPANY B. Anderson, Ivy, Pvt. Company A Barden, Wm. E. Pvt. Company A – Wounded; in hospital at Wilmington 2/19/1865 Blanton, Barney, Pvt. Transferred to Company D from Company B Brice, John J., Pvt. Transferred to Company D from Company B Broderick, John, Pvt. Company A Brown, Bryant, Pvt. Transferred to Company D from Company B; Captured Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865; Confined at Elmira, N.Y.; died 4/14/1865; Buried Woodlawn National Cemetery, Elmira, N.Y. Brown, Jesse; Musician, Company D; Captured at Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865; Confined Elmira, N.Y.; Exchanged 3/2/1865 Carr, William J. Pvt.; Transferred to Company D from Company B Carroll, Owen Judson, Pvt. Transferred from Company B to 2nd Regt NC Artillery; then later transferred back to the 1st NC Heavy Artillery Battalion where he was re-assigned to Company D Derr, John C. Pvt.; Transferred to Company D from Company B on 1/13/1864 Dixon, Benjamin Pvt.; Transferred to Company D from Company B on 1/13/1864 Gillespie, John W. Transferred to Company D from Company B; Captured at Bentonville 3/19/1865; Confined at Point Lookout, Md. Hodges, Wm. T., Pvt. Company A***; Admitted to hospital,Greensboro, March 1865; Holland John W., Pvt.; Transferred to Company D from Company B Hollingsworth, Jacob, Pvt.; Transferred to Company D from Company B; Died April 8, 1864 from disease Howard, Lorenzo, Pvt.; Transferred to Company D from Company C; Captured at Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865; Confined at Point Lookout, Md. Howard, William, Pvt. Company D; Captured at Ft. Fisher; Confined at Elmira, N.Y.; Died 5/1/1865; Buried Woodlawn National Cemetery, Elmira, N.Y. Kennedy, James D., Pvt. Transferred to Company D from Company B; Wounded and captured at Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865; Confined at Pt. Lookout, Md. .Miller, Andrew Pvt. Company D – Captured at Ft. Fisher 1/16/1865; Confined at Pt. Lookout, Md. Murray, David, Pvt. Company A Nicholson, Joseph S., Pvt. Company C Quinn, John T.; Transferred to Company D from Company B; Captured at Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865; Confined Elmira, N.Y.; Exchanged 3/2/1865; Admitted to hospital in Richmond, Va. 3/8/1865 with debility. Furloughed for 30 days on 3/9/1865 Rodgers, Timothy H., Pvt.; Transferred to Company D from Company B Sanderson, Ivey, Pvt. Company A Streets, William E. Pvt, Company D; Killed in Action at Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865 West, John Wright, Pvt. Served in both Company B and Company D at different times; Captured at Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865; Confined at Pt. Lookout, Md. West, Daniel James Pvt. Company D; Wounded and captured at Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865 Wilson, John Wright, Pvt. Transferred to Company D from Company B Woodward, David J., Pvt. Transferred to Company D from Company B In addition to the above, Pvt. William J. Sandlin of Duplin County served in one of the four companies of the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion after transferring into the Battalion from the 2nd Regiment of N.C. Artillery, but the company to which he was assigned has not been identified in this work. Also, a Pvt. James M. Mashbourne reputedly served in the “2nd Company” of the “1st Regt. N.C. Artillery”. Whether this designation was intended to mean the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion, or whether it was intended to denote some completely different regiment is not clear. DUPLIN COUNTY MEN WHO SERVED IN THE 1ST NORTH CAROLINA HEAVY ARTILLERY BATTALION (aka the Ninth Battalion) BEFORE TRANSFERRING TO OTHER BATTALIONS OR REGIMENTS Carroll, Owen Judson, Pvt.: Transferred from Company B of this Battalion to the 2nd Regt. of N.C. Artillery; later transferred back to Company D, 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion. Hodges, Wm. T., Pvt.: Transferred from Company B of the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion to a unit of Local Defense Troops. Lanier, Bryant, Pvt.; Transferred from Company B of the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion to the 51st North Carolina Regiment. Merritt, Kenan, Pvt.; Transferred from Company B of the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion to the 51st North Carolina Regiment. Taylor, John F., Corporal; Transferred from Company B of the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion to the 51st North Carolina Regiment PART IV OFFICER CASUALTIES (Regardless of County of Residence) Volume I (Artillery) of the multi-volume compendium North Carolina Troops 1861-1865, A Roster, records the following casualties among the officers who served in the 1st North Carolina Heavy Artillery Battalion (aka the Ninth Battalion). Company A Capt., Rankin, Robert George; killed in action at Bentonville 3/19/1865 Company A 2nd Lt. Robeson, David G.; captured at Piney Grove 3/19/1865 Company B Capt. Taylor, John William***; mortally wounded; Bentonville 3/19/1865 Company B 1st Lt. Ellis, Zacheus ***; killed in action at Bentonville 3/19/1865; Company B 1st. Lt. Taylor, Jacob W.; captured Bentonville 3/19/65 Company C Capt. Brown, William Henry ***; wounded at Bentonville 3/19/1865 Company C 1st Lt. Gilchrist, John A.; wounded at Bentonville 3/19/1865 Company D Capt. McCormic, James L.; killed in action at Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865 Company D 1st Lt. Evans, Henry C.; captured at Ft. Fisher 1/15/1865 Company D 1st Lt. Rankin, John J.; wounded/captured at Town Creek 2/20/1865 Company D 2nd Lt. Argo, Thomas M.; captured at Ft. Fisher; 1/15/1865 In addition to these eleven 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion officer casualties, all three of the 36th N.C. Regiment (2nd Artillery) officers assigned to this battalion before the Bentonville battle were wounded there. According to Col. William Lamb’s historical sketch, these additional officer casualties were: Lt. Col. Taylor, John D. ***; 36th N.C. Regiment (2nd Artillery); wounded (lost his left arm) at Bentonville 3/19/1865; (UDC lists as John D. Taylor; Co. K 36th Regt.) Capt. William Brooks; Company K, 36th N.C. Regiment (2nd Artillery), wounded; (lost his right arm) at Bentonville 3/19/1865; Col. Samuel B. Hunter ***Company F, 36th N.C. Regiment (2nd Artillery): wounded, but not seriously, at Bentonville 3/19/1865; (UDC lists as Co. F Regt. 2nd Artillery) Of the officer casualties shown above, only 1st Lt. Jacob W. Taylor of Company B, 1st. N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion is known to have been from Duplin County. However, Lt. Benjamin C. Bourden was an officer from Duplin County who served in Company B of the 1st N.C Heavy Artillery Battalion. Strangely though, there is no mention of him among the known officer casualties at Bentonville (or elsewhere) recorded in North Carolina Troops 1861-1865 A Roster. This is quite puzzling because Sgt. T.A. McNeil was unequivocal in his assertion in NORTH CAROLINA REGIMENTS that every officer of the battalion who went into the Bentonville battle, but one, was either killed or wounded. Sgt. McNeil identified the surviving unscathed officer as Lt. Allen (2nd. Lt. Richard P. Allen***) of Company C. (UDC lists him as Richard C. Allen; Co. H; Regt 3d N.C. There is no doubt however that Lt. Bourdens service was entirely honorable because the North Carolina Division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy approved one of their members based upon his service. *** Denotes battalion members who are listed as ancestors of UDC members in the North Carolina Division of the United Daughters of the Confederacy publication entitled North Carolina Historical Roster 1897-1997, published by The Chapel Hill Press: ISBN: 1-880849-11-9 PART V IDENTIFYING SURVIVORS AND CASUALTIES There were at least 14 officer casualties in this battalion during the war, and very possibly fifteen since the fate of Lt. Benjamin C. Bourden of Duplin County is uncertain at present. At least ten and possibly eleven (if Lt. Bourden was a casualty) of these officer casualties occurred at Bentonville. If Col. Lamb’s and Sgt. McNeil’s dovetailing reports of total casualties at Bentonville are to be believed (and considering the officer casualties there is little reason not to believe them) there must have been 142 enlisted men in this battalion who were killed, wounded and/or captured at Bentonville in addition to the 10 officer casualties (or 141 enlisted casualties if Lt. Benjamin C. Bourden was among the total 152 total casualties but was missed in the reporting of officer casualties.) Military information that was available from sources other than muster rolls, etc. was used by Louis H. Manarin to help flesh out some of the enlisted records in his North Carolina Troops 1861-’65 A Roster. For example, some enlisted members who were issued paroles after the war have been identified. Obviously, an after-the-war parolee survived the war.; however, being a survivor of the war doesn’t necessarily mean that a parolee wasn’t also a casualty at Bentonville. An after-the-war parolee may have been among the captured, or among the less seriously injured, aka the“walking wounded”. There are some civil records available on-line, courtesy of this website, that may still help a descendant determine a particular soldier’s fate. Census records from after the war may prove that he survived. A will or estate record may prove that he didn’t. Any enlisted soldier whose residence was given as Duplin County but whose name cannot be found listed on any after-the-war Duplin censuses or other county records, may very well have died in the war. Gravestone records available on this website may show the date of death of some of these soldiers. Land records can also in some cases be used to prove that a soldier survived the war, or conversely, some land transfers and estate settlements may prove they didn’t. PART VI PHOTOGRAPHS The only photographs known to exist today of uniformed soldiers in the 1st N.C. Heavy Artillery Battalion are those of Pvt. James Dallas Croom and his cousin, Nathaniel Richardson Croom, Jr., both of New Hanover County (but from the part of New Hanover that later became Pender County). Both of these young men served in Company B of the battalion right alongside the many Duplin Countians in that company who would have worn the same type uniforms they did. Photographs of the Croom cousins were published on pages 33 and 34 of The Wilmington Campaign: Last Rays of Departing Hope by Chris Eugene Fonvielle. These photos show what this battalions uniforms looked like. The dark shoulder straps visible on Pvt. James Dallas Croom’s shoulders were surely red, denoting the Confederate Artillery service. The dark fabric crown of the radically raked forage cap (bummer) worn by Pvt. Nathaniel Richardson Croom, Jr. was probably red too. While these photos are still available to view on line courtesy of Google Books they can be found at the following URL: Fort Anderson: The Battle for Wilmington
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