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I Corps (Union army)

I Corps (Union army)

FieldValue
unit_nameI Corps
imageIcorpsbadge.svg
image_size250px
captionI Corps badge (circle)
dates1862–1864
countryUSA United States of America
branchArmy
typeArmy Corps
sizeCorps
battlesAmerican Civil War
notable_commandersIrvin McDowell
Joseph Hooker
John F. Reynolds
John Newton
identification_symbol[[Image:Icorpsbadge1.png50px]]
identification_symbol_label1st Division
identification_symbol_2[[Image:Icorpsbadge2.png50px]]
identification_symbol_2_label2nd Division
identification_symbol_3[[Image:Icorpsbadge3.png50px]]
identification_symbol_3_label3rd Division
Note

the Union Army unit during the Civil War

Joseph Hooker John F. Reynolds John Newton

There were four formations in the Union Army designated as I Corps (or First Army Corps) during the American Civil War.

Three were short-lived:

  • In the Army of Virginia, a command later known as XI Corps (Army of the Potomac) and (Army of the Cumberland):
    • John C. Frémont (June 26 – June 29, 1862)
    • Franz Sigel (June 29 – September 12, 1862)
  • In the Army of the Ohio and Army of the Cumberland:
    • Alexander M. McCook (September 29 – November 5, 1862)
  • In the Army of the Mississippi:
    • George W. Morgan (January 4 – 12, 1863)

The other, the I Corps, Army of the Potomac, also temporarily known as III Corps, Army of Virginia, is the subject of this article.

The term "First Corps" is also sometimes used to describe the First Veteran Corps from 1864 to 1866.

History

The I Corps was created on March 3, 1862, when President Abraham Lincoln ordered the creation of a five-corps army, then under the command of Major General George B. McClellan. The first commander of the corps was Major General Irvin McDowell. It contained three divisions under the commands of Brigadier Generals William B. Franklin, George A. McCall, and Rufus King.

McClellan originally intended for the I Corps to participate in his Peninsula Campaign with the rest of the army, but after Stonewall Jackson initiated his Valley Campaign on March 23 at the First Battle of Kernstown, President Lincoln decided to keep the corps in northern Virginia to protect Washington.

On April 4, Lincoln created the Department of the Rappahannock, detaching the I Corps from the Army of the Potomac to form the core of the new department, and giving command of the department to I Corps commander, Irvin McDowell.

In May, Franklin’s division was detached and sent south to reinforce McClellan in his Peninsula campaign, uniting with a division of the IV Corps to form the VI Corps.

On June 18, McCall’s division, the “Pennsylvania Reserves”, was also detached and sent to join McClellan’s army on the Virginia Peninsula. Temporarily attached to the V Corps, it saw heavy action at Gaines' Mill and Glendale. Division commander Brig. Gen. George McCall and future I Corps commander Brig. Gen. John Reynolds were both captured and freed in a prisoner exchange that August.

On June 26, Rufus King’s division, James B. Ricketts’ division, and Abner Doubleday’s brigade were transferred from the Department of the Rappahannock to the newly created Army of Virginia, forming its III Corps, under the command of Irvin McDowell.

On August 26, the “Pennsylvania Reserves” were transferred to the III Corps of the Army of Virginia and fought at the Second Battle of Bull Run. Soon after the battle, the corps was transferred to the Army of the Potomac and reclassified as the I Corps of the Army of the Potomac.

Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker

In early September, the I Corps, now under the command of Major General Joseph Hooker, followed Lee through Maryland and fought at South Mountain and Antietam. John Reynolds (who had been elevated to division command of the Reserves) was temporarily detached to train militia troops in his home state of Pennsylvania and did not participate in the Maryland Campaign. At Antietam, the I Corps was the first corps engaged, and suffered enormous losses in the fighting around the cornfield and Dunker Church. Hooker was wounded in the foot during the battle and command of the I Corps devolved on George Meade (the ranking division commander). In October, Reynolds returned and was made commander of the corps.

Having fought three battles in six weeks, the I Corps was severely depleted. An influx of new volunteer regiments (both three year and nine month) arrived to replenish its ranks, and by November it was back up to full strength.

The corps moved southward to fight General Robert E. Lee's army at the Battle of Fredericksburg, commanded by Major General John F. Reynolds, arguably the best Union corps commander in the Eastern Theater. At Fredericksburg, Meade and John Gibbon's divisions fought Stonewall Jackson's corps south of the town while Doubleday's division was held in reserve. The I Corps did not see any significant action in the Chancellorsville Campaign.

"The Fall of Reynolds" – drawing of Reynolds' death at Gettysburg

In its last major battle, the Battle of Gettysburg, General Reynolds was killed just as the first troops arrived on the field, and command was inherited by Major General Abner Doubleday. Although putting up a ferocious fight, the I Corps was overwhelmed by the Confederate Third Corps (A.P. Hill) and Robert E. Rodes's division of Richard S. Ewell's Second Corps. It was forced to retreat through the town of Gettysburg, taking up defensive positions on Cemetery Hill after the 16th Maine's brave stand of which only 39 soldiers returned. The next day (July 2, 1863), the command was given to Major General John Newton, a division commander from the VI Corps. This was a controversial move that deeply offended the more senior Doubleday. Newton led it through the remainder of the battle, including the defense against Pickett's Charge, and through the Mine Run Campaign that fall.

On March 24, 1864, the Civil War career of the I Corps came to an end as it was disbanded and its depleted units were reorganized into two divisions, which were transferred into the V Corps of the Army of the Potomac.

Command history

  • As III Corps, Army of Virginia

References

  • Eicher, John H., & Eicher, David J.: Civil War High Commands, Stanford University Press, 2001,
  • Fox, William F.: Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, Albany Publishing, 1889 (online text of I Corps section)
  • Wipperman, Darin: First for the Union: Life and Death in a Civil War Army Corps from Antietam to Gettysburg, Stackpole, 2020

References

  1. "Army of the Potomac, March 1862".
  2. "Department of the Rappahannock, May 1862".
  3. "Department of the Rappahannock, June 1862".
  4. "3rd Corps, Army of Virginia, September 1862".
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