Skip to content

Louisiana 1st Cavalry (Union)

8/1/62

Organized - Louisiana 1st Cavalry - Louisiana

4/12/63

Battle - Fort Bisland - St. Mary Parish, Louisiana

4/14/63

Battle - Irish Bend - St Mary Parish, Louisiana

4/17/63

Battle - Vermillion Bayou - Lafayette Parish, Louisiana

5/21/63

Battle - Port Hudson - East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana; East Feliciana Parish, Louisiana

Port Hudson
Port Hudson

In cooperation with Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's final offensive against Vicksburg, Maj. Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks's army moved against the Confederate stronghold at Port Hudson on the Mississippi River. Like Vicksburg, Port Hudson was located atop high bluffs at the river bank that commanded the river. On May 11th, Banks learned that some Confederates had been moved from Port Hudson to support the forces defending Vicksburg, so he sought to move upon the garrison before those troops could be replaced. Banks…READ MORE

5/21/63

Battle - Plains Store - East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana

6/20/63

Battle - LaFourche Crossing - Lafourche Parish, Louisiana

11/11/63

Battle - Carrion Crow Bayou, Louisiana

4/8/64

Battle - Mansfield - DeSoto Parish, Louisiana

Mansfield
Mansfield

The Red River Campaign of 1864 was one General-in-Chief Ulysses S. Grant's initiatives to apply simultaneous pressure on Confederate armies along five separate fronts from Louisiana to Virginia. In addition to defeating the defending Confederate army, the campaign sought to confiscate cotton stores from plantations along the river and to give support to pro-Union governments in Louisiana. By early April, Maj. Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks' Union army was about 150 miles up the Red River threatening Shreveport. C…READ MORE

4/9/64

Battle - Pleasant Hill - Desoto Parish, Louisiana; Sabine Parish, Louisiana

5/16/64

Battle - Mansura - Mansura, Louisiana

5/18/64

Battle - Yellow Bayou - Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana

3/27/65

Battle - Spanish Fort - Baldwin, Alabama

4/9/65

Battle - Fort Blakeley - Baldwin County, Alabama

Fort Blakeley
Fort Blakeley

Although the harbor of Mobile Bay had been closed to blockade running traffic since mid-summer 1864 with Admiral David G. Farragut's victory there, the port city of Mobile still remained in Confederate control. In late March 1865, two Federal infantry columns converged on the defenses of the city at Fort Blakeley and Spanish Fort. One force of 13,000 Union soldiers commanded by Gen. Frederick Steele moved west from Pensacola with orders to take Blakely from the rear. Union Gen. Edward R.S. Canby's Sixteent…READ MORE

12/18/65

Mustered Out - Louisiana 1st Cavalry - Louisiana

Related Records

Search for related service records