2nd Virginia Infantry


The 2nd Virginia Volunteer Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment raised in today's western Virginia and what became West Virginia during the American Civil War for service in the Confederate States Army. It would combine with the 4th, 5th, 27th, and 33rd Virginia infantry regiments and the Rockbridge Artillery Battery and fight as part of what became known as the Stonewall Brigade, mostly with the Army of Northern Virginia.

Units

The 2nd Virginia was assembled at Charles Town on April 18, 1861, then moved to Harper's Ferry to seize the armory. Its ten companies were from the counties of Clarke, Frederick, Jefferson, and Berkeley.
CompanyNicknameRecruited atFirst Commanding Officer
AJefferson GuardsJefferson CountyJohn W. Rowan
BHamtramck GuardsShepherdstown, Jefferson CountyVincent Moore Butler
CNelson RiflesMillwood, Clarke CountyWilliam N. Nelson
DBerkeley Border GuardsMartinsburg, Berkeley CountyJohn Q.A. Nadenbousch
EHedgesville BluesHedgesville, Berkeley CountyRaleigh T. Colston
FWinchester RiflemenWinchester, Frederick CountyWilliam L. Clark, Jr
GBotts GreysCharles Town, Jefferson CountyLawson Botts
HLetcher RiflemenDuffields, Jefferson CountyJames H.L. Hunter
IClarke RiflesBerryville, Clarke CountyStrother H. Bowen
KFloyd GuardsHarpers Ferry, Jefferson CountyGeorge W. Chambers

Campaigns

As the volunteer units approached the armory, they heard a roar and saw a flash as Lt. Roger Jones and his U.S. army regulars blew up the arsenal at 10p.m. Capt. John Rowan and the Jefferson Guards led the volunteers into Harpers Ferry three hours later, meeting no opposition and noticing that while 15,000 weapons had been destroyed, townspeople had saved the buildings and weapon-producing machinery inside. That machinery was soon shipped to the Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond, Virginia for Confederate use.
VMI professor Thomas Jonathan Jackson arrived on Monday, April 29 and organized the volunteer craftsmen, laborers and farmers of the ten drilled companies into regiments, revolutionizing their notions of war in a short time. Col. Allen and Lt. Col. Francis Lackland had both graduated in the VMI class of 1849. Captains John W. Rowan, Vincent Moore Butler, William N. Nelson and George W. Chambers had military experience in Mexico. Throughout May, Jackson assiduously drilled the men, 12 hours each day; they learned complex maneuvers and began jelling into a single unit.
The unit became part of the Army of the Shenandoah and evacuated Harpers Ferry on June 14, 1861, upon orders of General Joseph E. Johnston, who considered the location untenable. Troops burned the Shepherdstown bridge and joined Johnston's army four miles south of Charles Town. They would then change camp seven times in 17 days. Their first skirmish was on July 2, 1861, and involved no casualties, but lost the company's tents at what became known as the Battle of Hoke's Run or Falling Water. The 2nd Virginia was accepted into Confederate service in mid-July, then ordered on July 18 to Manassas Junction to reinforce General P. G. T. Beauregard's Army of the Potomac. It gained its nickname at what became the First Battle of Manassas on July 21, 1861. In the previous months, the unit was sometimes known as "Virginia's First Brigade", which caused confusion as the 1st Virginia Infantry was established at Richmond in May 1861 and composed of regular Virginia troops. As part of the Stonewall Brigade, the 2nd Virginia fought under Generals T.J. Jackson, R.B. Garnett, Winder, Paxton, J.A. Walker, and W. Terry.
The 2nd Virginia fought at many famous battles throughout the conflict. In addition to First Manassas, it fought at Second Manassas. It reported 90 casualties at First Kernstown, 25 at Cross Keys and Port Republic, 27 at Gaines' Mill, and 77 at Second Manassas. However, during part of the Maryland Campaign of 1863, it was detached to Martinsburg as provost guards. The regiment lost 2 killed and 19 wounded at Fredericksburg, had 8 killed and 58 wounded at Chancellorsville, and had about eight percent of the 333 men engaged at Gettysburg disabled. Later, the unit was involved in Jubal Early's operations in the Shenandoah Valley and finally surrendered at the end at Appomattox Court House on April 9, 1865, with 9 officers and 62 men. A notable death from the Regiment was that of Private John Wesley Culp, who was killed on his uncle's farm in Gettysburg.

Significant members

Its field officers were Colonels James W. Allen, Lawson Botts, and John Q.A. Nadenbousch ; Lieutenant Colonels Francis Lackland ; Raleigh T. Colston, and William W. Randolph; and Majors Francis B. Jones, Edwin L. Moore, and Charles H. Stewart.
Dr. Hunter McGuire, who eventually would become the Second Corps' Chief Surgeon, initially enlisted as a private in Company F. He became active with the Medical Society of Virginia and a president of the American Medical Association, and later contributed to the First Geneva Convention.