Confederate Regiments & BatteriesGeorgia


1861
August 31 The 23rd Georgia Infantry Regiment was organized at Camp McDonald at Big Shanty for the duration of the war under the command of Colonel Thomas Hutcherson, Lieutenant Colonel William Barclay and Major Emory F. Best.

  • Company A – “Bartow Yankee Killers” – Bartow County – Captain Benjamin G.P. Pool
  • Company B – Union County – Captain James H. Huggins
  • Company C – “Floyd Spring Guards” – Floyd County – Marcus R. Ballenger
  • Company D –  Gilmer County – Captain J. L. Steele
  • Company E –  “Tate Guards” – Pickens County – Captain Samuel Tate
  • Company F –  Cobb, Coffee, and Spalding counties – Captain Benjamin F. King
  • Company G – “Cherokee Field Guards” – Cherokee Counties  Captain John James Augustus Sharpe
  • Company H – “Walker Bartow Invincibles” – Cobb, Gordon, and Walker counties – Captain Francis M. Young
  • Company I –  Coffee County – Captain M.L Pritchett
  • Company K – “Henry Volunteers” – Clayton and Henry counties – Captain Peter McDaniel
August-November Assigned to the Department of Georgia.
November Assigned to the Department of South Carolina and Georgia.
November 17 Captain Peter McDaniel of Company K resigned.
December 19 Captain Samuel Tate of Company E resigned.
1862
January-February Moved to Virginia and assigned to Rains’ Division, Department of the Peninsula
April-May Assigned to Rains’ Brigade, Rains Division, D.H. Hill’s Command, Department of Northern Virginia. The regiment mustered 370 men.
April 22 Captain Pool of Company A resigned. Lieutenant William J. Boston was elected captain of Company A.
April

Siege of Yorktown

May 5

Battle of Williamsburg

May 28 Captain Francis Young of Company H resigned. Lieutenant Thomas R.A. Hazlerig was elected captain of Company H.
June-September Assigned to Rains’ Brigade, D.H. Hill’s Division, Army of Northern Virginia.
May 31-June 1

Seven Days Battles

Adjutant Charles E. Sanders and Lieutenant Ira Woodruff of Company F were killed. Lieutenant Nathaniel Reinhart of Company G was mortally wounded.

June 12 Colonel Hutcherson resigned due to chronic rheumatism and Lieutenant Colonel Barclay was elected colonel.
June 27

Gaines’ Mill

July 1

Malvern Hill

The regiment lost 4 men killed and 56 wounded. lieutenant John Edge of Company H was wounded and disabled.

July Lieutenant J.P. Patton was elected captain of Company I.
August 16 Major Emory Best was promoted to lieutenant colonel and Captain James Huggins of Company B was elected major. First Lieutenant Robert Graves was promoted to captain of Company B.
September 6 Captain Benjamin King of Company F resigned. Lieutenant Robert M. Mitchell was promoted to captain of Company F.
September-May Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, D.H. Hill’s Division, Jackson’s Command, Army of Northern Virginia.
September 14

Battle of South Mountain

The regiment fought at Turner’s Gap. Colonel Barclay was called out in Colonel Colquitt’s official report for “noble conduct.” Major Huggins was wounded in both legs. First Lieutenant James M. Steele of Company D was killed.

September 17

Battle of Sharpsburg (Antietam)

The regiment was commanded by Colonel William P. Barclay until he was killed. Lieutenant Colonel Emory F. Best took over command until he was wounded and captured. Major James H. Huggins then took command and remained on the field even though he was also wounded. Fourteen men were killed and 64 wounded. Captain Thomas R.A. Hazlerig of Company H was killed and Captain Sharpe of Company G was wounded.

From the War Department marker for Colquitt’s Brigade on the Antietam battlefield:

Colquitt’s Brigade formed line soon after sunrise, southwest of Mumma’s house, in support of Trimble and Ripley. It followed Ripley across the Smoketown Road and formed on his right.

After a severe engagement, involving heavy loss, it retired to the west end of the Bloody Lane and assisted in checking the advance of French’s Division of the Second Corps. Later in the day, portions of the Brigade acted with Evans’ Brigade in checking the Federal advance on the Boonsboro Pike.

From the War Department marker for Colquitt’s and Garland’s Brigades on the Antietam battlefield:

After the repulse of the Confederate line in the East Woods and Cornfield north of the Smoketown Road in the morning of the 17th, parts of the Brigades of Colquitt and Garland rallied in the Sunken Road at this point, their right connecting with Rodes, their left resting on the Hagerstown Pike. They cooperated with Rodes in repelling the advance of French’s Division, Second Corps, and, in cooperation with detachments of McLaws’ and Walker’s Division, crossed this road and attacked the right flank of French’s Division but were repulsed. In the afternoon, parts of the two Brigades were collected at Sharpsburg and moved out on the Boonsboro Pike in support of Evans’ Brigade in its resistance to the advance of a portion of the Fifth Army Corps.

November 21-25 Lieutenant Colonel Emory Best was promoted to colonel. He was 22 years old. Major Huggins was elected lieutenant coloel. Captain Marcus Ballenger of Comany C was elected major. Second Lieutenant Henry T. Kennon was elected captain of Company C.
December 13

Battle of Fredericksburg

1863
April 25 Captain Steele of Company D resigned due to disability. First Lieutenant Andrew J. Glenn was promoted to captain of Company D.
May 1-4

Battle of Chancellorsville

The 23rd Georgia was the tail end of Jackson’s long column on his flank march, and was attacked by Sickles’ Federals as it appeared to be leaving the battlefield. After a desperate rear guard action much of the regiment, 275 men, were captured.  Colonel Best was the only officer who avoided capture, leading to charges of cowardice and his eventual court martial. Most of those captured were paroled before the end of the month.

From the Jackson’s Flank March wayside marker at Catharine Furnace at Chancellorsville:

Shortly after 8 a.m., May 2, “Stonewall” Jackson’s corps marched down the hill behind you and passed Catharine Furnace, bound for the Union Army’s right flank. When the Federals spotted Jackson’s column, they assumed the Confederates were retreating and sent a division in pursuit. A sharp rearguard action here cost Jackson most of the 23rd Georgia Infantry, but the Union efforts did little to disrupt his march.

About noon, green-clad Union sharpshooters attacked the Georgians and drove them back. The Confederates made a brief stand here among the furnace buildings before falling back to the shelter of an unfinished railroad, one-half mile to your left. There, more than 250 of the Georgians surrendered.

As his column passed this point, Jackson detached his leading regiment, Colonel Emory Best’s 23rd Georgia, to guard this intersection. Best’s men deployed in the woods one-half mile to your right, while the rest of Jackson’s column continued on its way.

The marker features a photograph of Privates Daniel, John and Pleasant Chitwood. Daniel and John were captured at Chancellorsville but were exchanged and fought for the remainder of the war.

From the historical marker on the Jackson Flank March Trail at Chancellorsville:

On May 2, 1863, as the tail end of Stonewall Jackson’s flanking column neared the Wellford place, Union infantry launched an attack. They struck Jackson’s rearguard (the 23rd Georgia) a half-mile to the north, at Catharine Furnace. From there, they fought a running battle to the Wellford farm. Confederate artillery unlimbered in the yard of the Wellford house to help repel a Union assault.

Outnumbered, the Georgians fell back to the protection of a railroad embankment, still visible inside the woods ahead of you. But Union sharpshooters outflanked the Georgians’ position and captured most of the regiment. The Federals pushed no farther, though, and Jackson’s march continued. By 5 p.m. his column lay poised opposite the Union army’s unprotected right flank, about three miles northwest of you. Jackson stood on the verge of his greatest success.

From the historical marker for the 23rd Georgia at Chancellorsville:

May 2, 1863. Having lost the furnace, the 23rd Georgia Regiment established a new line here in the bed of the Unfinished Railroad. Other troops reinforced the position. During late afternoon, while Jackson’s front lines were hitting the Federal right, the rearguard Confederates fell back according to his orders. Colonel Best, however, received the word too late. Although he and a few of his men escaped, the bulk of the 23rd Georgia was captured. This railroad then comprised a series of graded sections without tracks. Finished later, from Fredericksburg to Orange Court House, it ceased operation in 1938, except for a spur at Fredericksburg.

May-August Moved to North Carolina and assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, Department of North Carolina.
August – September

Charleston Harbor

Moved to Charleston, South Carolina and assigned to 3rd Sub-Division, 1st Military District of South Carolina, Department of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.

September Assigned to 1st Sub-Division, 1st Military District of South Carolina, Department of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.
October Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, Western Division, 7th Military District of South Carolina, Department of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.
December 15 Captain Sharp of Company G was promoted to major.
December 23 Colonel Emory F. Best was court martialled on charges of deriliction of duty at Chancellorsville. He was found guilty and dismissed from the service. President Davis eventually overturned the ruling, but Best never returned to the regiment. Lieutenant Colonel James H. Huggins was promoted to colonel and Major Ballenger was promoted to lieutenant colonel.
1864
January Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, 7th Military District of South Carolina, Department of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.
February Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, District of East Florida, Department of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.
February-May Assigned to District of Florida, Department of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.
February 20

Battle of Olustee (Ocean Pond)

The regiment lost 2 men killed, 66 wounded, and 2 missing. Lieutenant James R. Pritchatt of Company I was mortally wounded.

May Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, Colquitt’s Division, Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia
May 16

Drewry’s Bluff

May-October Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, Hoke’s Division, Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia
June 1-3

Battle of Cold Harbor

Lieutenant Isaac Beach of Company K was killed.

June

Siege of Petersburg

July 30

The Crater

August 13 Colonel James Huggins resigned to take his seat in the Georgia legislature. Lieutenant Colonel Ballenger was promoted to colonel and Major Sharp was promoted to lieutenant colonel.
August 19

Weldon Railroad

Lieutenant Theodore Moss of Company G was killed

August 20 Captain William J. Boston of Company A was promoted to major
September 29-30

Fort Harrison

October-December Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, Hoke’s Division, 4th Corps, Army of Northern Virginia
December-March Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, Hoke’s Division, Department of North Carolina
1865
January 13-15

Second Battle of Fort Fisher

February-April

Carolinas Campaign

March-April Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, Hoke’s Division, Hardee’s Corps
March 19-21

Battle of Bentonville

Lieutenant Colonel Sharp and Captain Henry Kennon of Company C were wounded.

April Assigned to Colquitt’s Brigade, Hoke’s Division, 1st Corps, Army of Tennessee
April 26

Durham Station

Surrendered with Johnston’s army under the command of Colonel Ballenger.