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Arkansas 15th Gee's Infantry (Confederate)

1/1/62

Organized - Arkansas 15th Gee's Infantry - Arkansas

5/21/63

Leadership Change - Regiment - Colonel Benjamin Johnson

5/21/63

Leadership Change - Brigade - Colonel Isaiah G. W. Steedman

5/21/63

Leadership Change - Division - Major General Franklin Gardner

Major GeneralFranklin Gardner

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

3/30/64

Battle - Mount Elba, Arkansas

4/18/64

Battle - Poison Spring - Ouachita County, Arkansas

Poison Spring
Poison Spring

Poison Spring State Park is a day use park complete with picnic furnishings, a trail and a diorama summarizing the Battle of Poison Spring. This site is dedicated to the battle fought there April 18, 1864, during the Camden expedition of the Red River Campaign. Confederate troops attacked Union soldiers returning from taking supplies from Camden, Arkansas.READ MORE

4/25/64

Battle - Marks' Mills - New Ediburg, Arkansas

Marks' Mills
Marks' Mills

Marks' Mills was one of four battles that defined the limits of Union Gen. Frederick Steele's foray into south Arkansas during the Red River campaign of 1864. Following the crushing Federal defeat, Steele abandoned Camden and retreated to Little Rock.READ MORE

4/29/64

Battle - Jenkins' Ferry - Jenkins' Ferry, Arkansas

Jenkins' Ferry
Jenkins' Ferry

At Jenkins Ferry on April 29 and 30, 1864, Union troops fought off an attack by the Confederates and, using an inflatable pontoon bridge, crossed the flooded Saline River and retreated to Little Rock. The land where this Civil War battle took place was settled by Thomas Jenkins, who started the ferry in 1815. It was run by his sons, William and John DeKalb, until the Civil War circa 1861.READ MORE

5/26/65

Mustered Out - Arkansas 15th Gee's Infantry - Arkansas

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