Page:Confederate Military History - 1899 - Volume 4.djvu/168

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

CHAPTER IX.

NORTH CAROLINA IN THE BEGINNING OF 1863—GATHERING FRESH SUPPLIES—DEMONSTRATIONS BY D. H. HILL AGAINST NEW BERN—FIGHTS AT DEEP GULLY AND SANDY RIDGE—SIEGE OF WASHINGTON, N. C.—BLOUNT’S MILLS AND GUM SWAMP.

AT the opening of this year, the troops of North Carolina were disposed, so far as the records show, as follows: Thirty-two regiments and one battalion of infantry, two regiments of cavalry and three batteries were with General Lee; under Gen. Kirby Smith, the Fifty-eighth, Colonel Palmer, the Sixty-fourth, Colonel Allen, and Fifth cavalry battalion, Capt. S. W. English, were stationed at Big Creek gap, Tenn.; the Sixty-second regiment, Colonel Love, was guarding bridges near Knoxville; the Seventh cavalry battalion was in Carter county, Tenn.; Walker s cavalry battalion was in Monroe county, Tenn.; the Twenty-ninth, Colonel Vance, and the Thirty-ninth, Colonel Coleman, were in Bragg s army. In the State, General Whiting was in charge of the defenses of Wilmington, with 9,913 officers and men. Gen. S. D. French, in charge of the department of North Carolina, had his forces stationed as follows: General Pettigrew s brigade at Magnolia; Gen. N. G. Evans South Carolina brigade at Kinston; General Daniel s brigade, General Davis brigade, Maj. J. C. Haskell’s four batteries, Colonel Bradford s four artillery companies, and Capt. J. B. Starr s light battery at Goldsboro; the Forty-second regiment, Col. George C. Gibbs, and Captain Dabney’s heavy battery at Weldon; the Seventeenth regiment, Col. W. F. Martin, at Hamilton; Gen. B. H. Robertson and three regiments of cavalry at Kins-