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Chapter 4
Detached
Duty and the Suffolk Campaign
Following the retreat from Maryland, on November 8, 1862,
Special Order 236 directed that the 2nd and 11th
Mississippi Infantry Regiments be detached from the army and report
to Richmond. There, the two veteran regiments were joined by the
42nd Mississippi and 55th North Carolina,
two recently organized (May 1862) “green” regiments that had not
yet seen combat.
[74] These four regiments formed a new brigade under
the command of Brigadier General Joseph R. Davis, a Mississippian
and Jefferson Davis’ nephew. Davis’ Brigade was sent to Goldsborough,
North Carolina where the 2nd Mississippi spent a relatively
pleasant winter, missing the battle of Fredericksburg, and recovering
from some of its campaign losses. Wounded and sick recovered and
returned to the ranks, and those taken prisoner were exchanged.
However, unlike the previous winter, only a handful of new recruits
joined the regiment.
[75]
With the Federals gaining a beachhead on the Virginia coast
south of the James River in February 1863, Lee dispatched two divisions,
Hood’s and Pickett’s, to guard the southern approaches to Richmond
and Petersburg. Micah Jenkins’ and Davis’ brigades were ordered
up from Goldsborough to southern Virginia, where they formed a division
under the command of Major General Samuel G. French. Lee ordered
Longstreet, on February 18th, to take command of the
Southern forces concentrating along the Blackwater River. His orders
were to defend Richmond while holding his men ready to return to
the main army if needed. Longstreet was also directed to forage
for provisions for the undernourished Army of Northern Virginia
and, if the opportunity presented itself, to take the offensive
against the Federal forces in his front. [76]
Following weeks of scouting, foraging and skirmishing along
the Blackwater River, the 2nd Mississippi was involved
in Longstreet’s unsuccessful siege of Suffolk, Virginia from April
11th to May 4, 1863. Although actual fighting was light,
the 42nd Mississippi and 55th North Carolina
received their “baptism of fire” during a reconnaissance in force
upon the Confederate lines by the 99th New York on May
1st. [77]
Longstreet had already begun planning the return of his forces
to the main army, even as the Confederates were repulsing the Federal
probe of the 99th New York. The new commander of the
Army of the Potomac, Major General Joseph Hooker, was attempting
to execute a bold plan to destroy Lee’s army. He already had crossed
the Rappahannock River and was threatening Lee’s left flank. Although
the divisions of Hood and Pickett began a hurried departure, they
did not arrive in time to participate in the Battle of Chancellorsville,
often characterized as Lee’s greatest victory, but resulting in
tragic consequences for the South. Stonewall Jackson was accidentally
shot by his own men on May 2nd, losing an arm and dying
of complications from pneumonia a few days later.
[78]
With Jackson’s death and Longstreet’s return, Lee reorganized the
Army of Northern Virginia. From the original two-wing structure,
three infantry corps were created. Longstreet retained the First
Corps, the Second was placed under the command of newly promoted
Lieutenant General Richard Ewell, and the new Third Corps was given
to the also recently promoted Lieutenant General Ambrose Powell
Hill. A new division under Major General Henry Heth, to which Davis’
Brigade was assigned, was also placed in Hill’s Corps. On June
5th the 2nd Mississippi, with the balance
of Davis’ Brigade, left southern Virginia to join the new division.
The regiment would remain within this organizational structure (Davis’
Brigade, Heth’s Division, Hill’s Third Corps, Army of Northern Virginia)
for the remainder of the war.
[79]
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