- Regularity and due Subordination,
being so essentially necessary, to the good Order and Government of an Army,
and without it, the whole must soon become a Scene of disorder and confusion.
The General finds it indispensably necessary, without waiting any longer for
dispatches from the General Continental Congress, immediately, to form the
Army into three Grand Divisions, and of dividing each of those Grand Divisions
into Brigades.
- General George Washington 1
-
-
- On 22 July 1775, George Washington,
General and Commander in Chief of the American revolutionary forces, ordered
the army at Boston to be organized into three divisions. Each division comprised
two brigades of approximately equal strength. Major generals commanded the
divisions, and most brigades were commanded by brigadiers who were general
officers. The division commanders had no staffs, but the brigade commanders
had brigade majors to assist them. Brigade majors were officers through whom
orders were issued and reports and correspondence transmitted, analogous to
regimental adjutants. Initially, both divisions and brigades were administrative
commands rather than tactical organizations.2
-
- Divisions and brigades soon evolved
into semipermanent tactical, as well as administrative, organizations. Because
regiments could not maintain their authorized strengths, Washington made the
brigade, consisting of several regiments, the basic tactical and administrative
unit for the Continental Army. When organized in 1775 all brigades at Boston
had about 2,500 men each. During the war commanders deliberately balanced
the strength of the brigades for each campaign. For example, Washington employed
brigades of roughly 1,400 officers and enlisted men each at Trenton in December
1776 and at Monmouth in June 1778. At Yorktown in 1781 each of his brigades
had approximately 1,000 officers and enlisted men.3
-
- Although the Continental Army was
reorganized on several occasions, many brigades had the same regiments assigned
over long periods of time. Nevertheless, Washington and other army commanders
had the authority to alter regimental assignments. In 1778 he emphatically
told his subordinate, Maj. Gen. Charles Lee, that he [Washington] could change
it "every day if I choose to do
- [3]
- Soldiers of the American Revolution, Trenton, December 26 1776, by Charles
McBarron
-
- it." But the commander in chief
also believed that frequent changes in regimental assignment without apparent
cause would be ascribed to "caprice and whim" rather than "stability
and judgement [sic]."4
-
- The Continental Army employed a variety
of artillery weapons, including field, siege, and garrison guns, but the use
of infantry and field artillery as combined arms teams was sporadic. During
some campaigns two to four field artillery guns were attached to infantry
brigades, and the brigade commander in turn attached the guns to infantry
battalions. Harnessing the two arms together increased firepower, provided
a means to break up enemy formations, and protected infantry against bayonet
charges, as well as offering a psychological advantage. A major problem for
the field artillery was to keep up with the infantry on the march because
of the rough, broken terrain in colonial America. The key to cross-country
travel was the design of light, mobile artillery carriages, but on the battlefield
guns were manhandled. Unlike European armies, colonial commanders often used
field artillery for siege work because of the shortages of guns, officers,
and trained gun crews.5
-
- With the employment of brigades, Congress
increased their staff officers. The first such officer was added in May 1777
when Congress authorized a brigade chaplain to care for the religious needs
of the men. In January 1778 Washington proposed that an infantry brigade have
a quartermaster, forage master, wagon mas-
- [4]
- ter, and commissary, along with armorers,
a traveling forge, and some artificers. The following May,. however, Congress
authorized only the brigade quartermaster. Although not provided by Congress,
in June 1778 Washington introduced the position of brigade inspector, whose
duties included maintaining unit rosters, regulating details (any special
tasks assigned to the brigade), and caring for the formation and march of
all guards and details. Furthermore, the inspector received the commander's
orders and communicated them to brigade and regimental officers; thus the
position incorporated duties of the brigade major. Although the brigade inspector
assisted in executing brigade maneuvers, he was not in the chain of command.
Congress officially authorized the position in February 1779 and made the
former brigade major an aide-de-camp to the brigadier. At the same time Congress
also provided a second aide for the brigadier.6
-
- In early 1779 Washington directed
the appointment of a conductor of military stores for each brigade. Equipped
with a portable forge, an ammunition wagon, and a wagon with an arms chest
for each regiment in the brigade, the conductor of military stores and his
assistants (the latter being furnished by the regiments) cared for its arms.
Thus, by the end of the war each infantry brigade comprised several semipermanently
assigned infantry regiments and a few attached artillery pieces and their
crews. The brigade commander had a staff consisting of two aides, a brigade
quartermaster, an inspector, a conductor of military stores, and a chaplain.
Infantry brigades were generally known by the names of their commanders, but
the more permanent brigades were often known by numerical designations, such
as the 1st Maryland and 2d Pennsylvania Brigades.7
-
- Washington assigned infantry brigades
to divisions, but the number of brigades assigned to each division varied.
Divisions, nevertheless, became quasi-permanent commands, with the same brigades
serving in the same divisions for extended periods of time. As this organizational
relationship matured, the divisions maneuvered independently and conducted
operations away from the main army.8
-
- Washington occasionally expressed
theories about the proper organization of divisions and brigades. In January
1777, as the army was about to be reorganized, he told Congress that three
full-strength regiments, approximately 700 men each, would be sufficient for
a brigade and that three brigades would be adequate for a division. The following
year, during similar discussions, Washington explained that the division-brigade-regiment
organization was for the sake of order, harmony, and discipline. Each brigade
and division would have a general officer as its commander and would be capable
of moving either jointly or separately like a "great machine" as
the circumstances required. Because of shortages in personnel, at no time
during the war did either divisions or brigades adhere to organizational concepts,
particularly as far as the number of assigned regiments and brigades was concerned.
Nevertheless, both divisions and brigades fulfilled Washington's requirement
of being able to operate either jointly or separately when the need arose.9
-
- The basic fighting team used during
the Revolutionary War consisted of infantry and artillery, but the Continental
Army also used cavalry. Cavalry units
- [5]
- were initially mounted militia commands,
but in late 1776 Congress authorized a regiment of light dragoons for the
Continental Army. That act was soon followed by another, which authorized
3,000 light horsemen to be organized into four regiments. The regiments were
never fully manned because of the expense of their special weapons and equipment,
their horses, and their training. By 1780 the units were converted into "legionary
organizations." In the mid-eighteenth century Europeans had developed
small mixed units of cavalry and infantry, known as legions, to overrun or
hold an area, gather information, and conduct raids away from the main army.
Legions in the Continental Army were to comprise four troops of dragoons and
two companies of infantry. They were not large, independent combined arms
units capable of defeating the enemy such as the divisions and brigades in
the Continental Army.10
-
- Following the British surrender at
Yorktown in 1781, the Continental Army dwindled away, and its divisions and
brigades slowly disappeared. But the doctrine for their organization endured,
and future leaders built upon it in the following century.
-
- Before the new nation ratified the
peace with England, Congress asked Washington for his views on the future
peacetime military establishment. On 2 May 1783, recognizing his countrymen's
fear of standing armies and the expense of maintaining them, he called for
a military establishment consisting of a small active force organized on a
regimental basis and a larger reserve based on the militia arranged by divisions.
His militia division was to consist of two brigades of four infantry regiments
each, with each infantry regiment organized into two four-company battalions.
Furthermore, Washington recommended that two cavalry troops and two artillery
companies be raised for each division. These units were not part of any combined
arms concept for divisions, but merely a formula for calculating the number
of cavalry and artillery units that would be needed by future armies.11
-
- Eventually the legislature created
a military establishment based on standing and reserve forces. In 1784 the
Continental Congress set the strength of the standing army at a mere 700 men,
and the Regular Army, organized on a regimental basis, grew steadily in the
years that followed. In 1792 the new national Congress also provided for a
reserve force based upon the state militia, which the federal government could
employ under certain conditions within the United States. The militia forces
were to consist of all able-bodied white male citizens between the ages of
eighteen and forty-five and were to be organized into companies, battalions,
regiments, brigades, and divisions. The legislation provided that each brigade
consist of four two-battalion infantry regiments. A militia division could
also have an artillery company and a cavalry troop, both of which were to
be formed from volunteers within the brigades at the discretion of the governors.
Major generals and brigadier generals were to command divisions and brigades,
respectively, and the only staff officer authorized was the brigade inspector,
who was also to serve as the brigade major. The strength of the brigade was
to be
- [6]
- approximately 2,500 men. Presumably
divisional strength would vary, for the law prescribed no set number of brigades
in a division.12
-
- As implemented, the militia divisions
and brigades were generally paper organizations. Congress provided neither
federal supervision nor effective support for them. Furthermore, no provision
was made for a militia force that would be available immediately to react
in an emergency. Although ineffectual, the system lasted for over one hundred
years. In practice, when the federal government called upon the militia, the
president asked for a specific number of men from a state and the state organized
them into regiments.
-
- Shortly after Congress passed the
militia law, it authorized the use of volunteers, a third category of soldiers,
for national defense. Volunteers served freely, like soldiers in the Regular
Army, but they were not part of any standing or reserve force. Generally,
the states raised the volunteers that Congress considered necessary on a regimental
basis, and the federal government used the volunteer regiments to form divisions
and brigades. 13
-
- The Regular Army also experimented
with the legion as a combined arms unit in the 1790s. Differing from the legions
employed during the Revolutionary War, the Legion of the United States resembled
the organizations described by Marshal Maurice de Saxe in 1732 and advocated
in the 1780s by Maj. Gen. Frederick Wilhelm von Steuben, formerly the Inspector
General of the Continental Army, and Secretary of War Henry Knox. The legion
was a field army, combining infantry, cavalry, and artillery into one organization,
which totaled 5,120 men. Rather than being subdivided into divisions, brigades,
and regiments, the legion consisted of four sublegions, which some consider
to be the forerunners of the regimental combat teams of the twentieth century.
The Regular Army adopted the legion in 1792, but it was never fully manned.
For the campaigns against the Miami Indians in the Northwest Territory between
January 1790 and August 1795 the Army employed militia and volunteer units
and the Legion of the United States. Its sublegions, however, were not employed
extensively. The Army abandoned the legion in 1796 for regimental organizations.
Henceforth, the regulars were scattered throughout the country, guarding its
frontiers and seacoast and rarely forming organizations above the regimental
level.14
-
-
- When the second war with England began
in 1812, Congress raised forces by expanding the Regular Army, authorizing
the use of volunteers, and calling out the militia. In raising the troops
both the federal and state governments used regimental organizations, and
the Army organized these regiments into ad hoc brigades and divisions, which
varied widely in strength. For example, Brig. Gen. Joseph Bloomfield's New
York militia brigade assigned to Maj. Gen. Henry Dearborn's force in 1813
counted 1,400 strong; Brig. Gen. Winfield Scott's Regular brigade in 1814
before the Battle of Chippewa fielded 1,300 men; and the Pennsylvania vol-
- [7]
- General Scott
-
- unteer brigade that crossed the border
into Upper Canada in 1814 numbered 413. The strength of the divisions fluctuated
just as much. In 1812 the New York quota for militia men was 13,500, which
the state
- organized into two divisions of four
brigades each. At the same time, with a quota of 2,500 men, Tennessee organized
a division of two infantry regiments plus a nondivisional cavalry regiment.
15
-
- While assembling brigades and divisions
in 1813, the question arose as to whether or not Regular Army and militia
units should be "brigaded" together. Because the drill and discipline
of the regulars differed greatly from that of the militia, each state prescribing
its own drill, the general practice was to brigade each category of troops
General Scott separately. Although Regular, militia, and volunteer brigades
served at times in commands that equaled the size of a division, such organizations
were frequently called "armies."16
-
- Raising and maintaining troops during
the War of 1812 proved to be difficult because of the opposition to the war.
As a result, when divisions and brigades took to the field for the various
campaigns, they were temporary organizations. Most of the units assigned to
them had little training and were poorly equipped, creating largely ineffective
fighting forces. One exception was Scott's Regular Army brigade. In the spring
of 1814, after establishing a camp near Buffalo, New York, he used French
drill regulations to train his men. When the brigade later fought at Chippewa
as a well-disciplined force, it prompted the British commander to exclaim,
"Those are Regulars, by God!" 17
-
- During the War of 1812, as in the
Revolution, Army leaders discussed the organization of brigades and divisions,
and their comments sometimes disagreed with the contemporary practice or with
the laws then in effect. The Register of the Army published in 1813
stated that a brigade would consist of two regiments and a division of two
brigades with but a single staff officer, the brigade major, in each. The
laws in force, however, authorized a brigade staff of an inspector, subinspector,
quartermaster, wagon master, and chaplain. When a brigadier general commanded
a brigade, his brigade major and aides were
- [8]
- included in the staff. Major generals
continued to command divisions, and their staffs consisted of a quartermaster,
judge advocate, and two aides. The official handbook for infantry compiled
by William Duane, the Adjutant General, in 1813 called for a brigade in the
peace establishment to consist of any number of battalions, but for field
service it was not to exceed 4,000 men. A division could have from two to
four brigades. During congressional deliberations as to the number of major
and brigadier generals needed in 1813 to conduct the war, Secretary of War
John Armstrong expressed his belief that a brigade should have only two regiments
because the management of 2,000 men in the field was ample duty for a brigadier
general. Also, in his opinion, the direction of 4,000 men was a suitable command
for a major general. But the lack of trained personnel and the short duration
of campaigns in the War of 1812 resulted in ad hoc brigades and divisions
that did not approach the combined arms teams of the Revolutionary War. 18
-
- After the War of 1812 the militia
units were released from federal service, the volunteers were discharged,
and the Regular Army units were eventually reduced to seven infantry and four
artillery regiments. Despite the small size of the Army of the United States,
Maj. Gen. Winfield Scott in 1819 secured congressional approval for the preparation
of a code incorporating the laws, regulations, orders, and practices governing
the Army. Having studied foreign armies, particularly the French, he thought
such regulations would be useful. In them he introduced a new organization-the
army corps. During the Napoleonic wars the French had decentralized their
armies for greater mobility and maneuverability. French field armies had consisted
of several army corps, which in turn were made up of two or three divisions
of infantry or cavalry. Each division comprised two brigades. With this structure,
an army could be dispersed over a wide area, but the command mechanism allowed
it to concentrate quickly to destroy the enemy. 19
-
- Scott's General Regulations for
the United States Army, published in 1821, thus included the new European
concepts. Two regiments constituted a brigade, two brigades a division, and
two divisions an army corps. Infantry and cavalry were to be brigaded separately.
The only staff officer for either the brigade or the division was a "chief
of staff," who acted in a manner similar to a brigade inspector or brigade
major. The divisions and brigades were to be numbered according to the rank
of their commanders. For ease in distinguishing each body of troops in official
reports, units were to be identified by their commanders' names.20
-
- Between the War of 1812 and the Mexican
War these concepts meant little to the Regular Army. The periodic campaigns
against the Indians, using Regular, militia, and volunteer troops, were fought
with small bodies of troops, usually of regimental or smaller size. Such constabulary
tactics neither influenced the formation of large units in the field nor affected
the regulations that governed such organizations. The only alteration in Army
Regulations prior to the Mexican War specified that neither the division nor
the brigade was to have a fixed staff, with their size and composition varying
according to the nature of their service.21
- [9]
-
- In the fall of 1845, just before hostilities
broke out between the United States and Mexico, Brevet Brig. Gen. Zachary
Taylor organized the Regular Army forces that had gathered at Corpus Christi,
Texas, numbering about 3,900 men, into three brigades, each consisting of
two infantry regiments or their equivalent. The 2d Dragoons and Regular Army
field artillery companies supported the brigades. With these forces Taylor
fought and won the Battles of Palo Alto (8 May 1846) and Resaca de Palma (9
May 1846).22
-
- After the declaration of war in the
spring of 1846, Congress called for 50,000 volunteers. Individual states organized
their volunteers into regiments, which the War Department initially planned
to brigade, mixing foot and mounted infantry 23
in the same units. Two or more volunteer brigades, each consisting of three
or more regiments, were to form a division. Under the wartime laws, a brigade
was to be authorized at least 3,000 men and a division 6,000. Since Army Regulations
called for no fixed staffs, the president was to appoint a quartermaster,
commissary, and surgeon for each brigade. Each staff officer was to have an
assistant. Congress further provided that the regimental officers of a brigade
could employ a chaplain.24
-
- In the late summer of 1846 Taylor
organized his army into divisions for a campaign against Monterrey, Mexico.
Using the three brigades he had organized in 1845, plus a new brigade, Taylor
formed two Regular Army divisions of two brigades each. Each brigade had two
infantry regiments; three brigades had a field artillery company attached;
and one division had an additional field artillery company and a regiment
of dragoons assigned. Because the volunteers did not deploy in any prearranged
order, Taylor temporarily brigaded a portion of those who had joined him for
instruction and camp service. Others he organized as a volunteer division
of two brigades, each containing two 500-man infantry regiments. A regiment
of mounted volunteers from Texas completed the division. With these forces
Taylor captured Monterrey in September 1846.25
-
- When Taylor took to the field after
his victory at Monterrey, he had planned to continue to use divisional organizations.
But, since the political leadership in Washington decided to shift the center
of operations more directly toward Mexico City, the bulk of Taylor's troops
were transferred to a new command under Maj. Gen. Winfield Scott and were
replaced by green volunteers. With 5,000 mostly untrained troops, in February
1847 Taylor fought the Battle of Buena Vista, where his inexperienced troops
performed well. Buena Vista was particularly a triumph for American artillery,
whose mobility allowed it to counter enemy thrusts with intense firepower
and close infantry support when and where needed. Infantry and artillery had
formed a more effective combined arms team.26
-
- Scott's command against Mexico City,
a force of about 12,000 men, was initially organized into two Regular Army
infantry brigades and a three-brigade volunteer division. Each brigade was
supported by field artillery. After the siege of
- [10]
- The Battle of Palo Alto
-
- Vera Cruz Scott organized the Regulars
into a division, but before reaching Mexico City he had to reorganize his
army anew due primarily to losses by disease and expiring enlistment terms.
When more volunteers arrived, he formed his infantry into four divisions of
two brigades each, with an artillery company supporting each brigade. He placed
elements of three dragoon regiments in a brigade under Col. William S. Harney.
Satisfied with his field dispositions, Scott attacked and then entered Mexico
City on 13 September. 27
-
- During the course of the war both
Taylor and Scott organized ad hoc divisions as combined arms teams. These
underwent several reorganizations for a variety of reasons, including a lack
of transportation for moving units and supplies, a need to establish and protect
lines of communication, and a shortage of personnel to maintain units at some
semblance of fighting strength. The war, nevertheless, brought about a new
integration of infantry and field artillery within divisions, which operated
as independent, maneuverable commands. The stock-trail gun carriage, adopted
in 1836, was a technological breakthrough that gave US. field artillery in
the Mexican War sufficient mobility and maneuverability for integration of
the arms. 28
-
- The revised Army Regulations published
in 1857 reflected the changes developed during the course of the war for combining
the combat arms. Doctrine called for a division usually to consist of "two
or three brigades, either infantry or
- [11]
- cavalry, and troops of the other corps
in the necessary proportions.."29
Each brigade was to consist of two or more regiments. "The troops of
the other corps" were artillerymen and engineers, but there was no indication
as to what proportion of a division they were to be. A division staff or that
of a detached brigade was still minimal-artillery, engineer, and ordnance
officers. The regulations changed the system for designating divisions and
brigades from being numbered according to the rank of their commanders to
being numbered according to their position on the line, although the names
of the commanders were still to be used in reports. Finally, the regulations
provided that only the War Department could authorize the formation of divisions
and brigades during peacetime. In practice, such units would thus remain only
wartime expedients.30
-
-
- The Civil War brought about the first
large armies in the nation's history, and both Union and Confederate leaders
used brigades, divisions, and army corps as command and control units. After
rebel troops fired on Fort Sumter, South Carolina, President Abraham Lincoln
called for 75,000 militiamen to assist the Regular Army in quelling the rebellion.
Shortly thereafter Congress began to expand the Regular Army and call for
volunteers. Following the rout of the Union forces at Manassas in July 1861
Congress authorized the first large call for men, 500,000 volunteers to serve
three years. To train the new Army Lincoln selected George B. McClellan, a
former West Point officer and president of the Eastern Division of the Ohio
and Mississippi Railroad Company.31
McClellan later described the Union troops at Manassas, who were mostly militia,
as "a collection of undisciplined, ill-officered, and uninstructed men"
instead of an army. The new commander in chief had much to do.32
-
- As the volunteer regiments arrived
in the Washington, D.C., area, McClellan began to organize them into what
became known as the Army of the Potomac. During the course of the war additional
Union armies were formed and served, but the experience of the Army of the
Potomac serves as the model to illustrate the difficulties faced by commanders
on both sides in organizing their forces. As many of the future leaders of
the Army after the war fought with the Army of the Potomac, their experiences
had a profound impact on Army organization in the last half of the nineteenth
century.
-
- In the Army of the Potomac the largest
unit initially was a division, which consisted of three infantry brigades,
one cavalry regiment, and four artillery batteries. The division commander
did not have a staff, except for his three aides and an assistant adjutant
general. The brigade commander, on the other hand, had two aides, a surgeon,
a commissary of subsistence, an adjutant general, and a quartermaster.33
-
- McClellan planned to organize the
volunteers into brigades, divisions, and army corps. Each army corps, about
25,000 men, was to consist of two or more divisions. He hesitated to implement
that organization, however, until his offi-
- [12]
- cers gained experience as division
commanders. He also delayed the organization of army corps for political reasons.
Over one-half of his division commanders were Republicans who were ardent
supporters of Lincoln, while McClellan, a political foe of the president,
was a Democrat. In March 1862, before the Peninsula campaign began in Virginia,
Lincoln, concerned about command and control in combat, directed that McClellan's
forces be organized into army corps. McClellan organized the Army of the Potomac
on the peninsula into four army corps of three divisions each. The Union forces
on the upper Potomac were also placed into an army corps.34
-
- Combat experience brought organizational
changes to the Army of the Potomac. Cavalry assigned to divisions within army
corps were generally unable to perform army-level missions. In July 1862,
after the Peninsula campaign, Brig. Gen. George Stoneman, Chief of Cavalry
of the Army of the Potomac, shifted cavalry units from the infantry divisions
and organized two cavalry brigades for the army, but he left a cavalry squadron
35
in each army corps for picket, scout, and outpost duties. Little improvement
resulted from having separate cavalry brigades, which were used the same as
the cavalry squadrons in the army corps.
-
- In November 1862 Maj. Gen. Ambrose
Burnside took command of the Army of the Potomac and reorganized it into three
"grand divisions." He planned for each grand division to move and
fight as a heavy column of two corps and a cavalry division, which removed
the cavalry from army corps. The grand division commanders, however, were
reluctant to use cavalry as an independent force. In February 1863 Maj. Gen.
Joseph Hooker, the new commander of the Army of the Potomac, abolished the
grand divisions and reverted to the army corps structure. At the same time
the Union cavalry was also reorganized as a separate corps under Stoneman,
with approximately 13,000 men divided into three divisions. Each division
had two brigades, with each brigade having three to five regiments. Artillery
was assigned to the cavalry corps headquarters. The cavalry corps operated
as an independent unit thereafter, but the jest "Whoever saw a dead cavalryman?"
remained within the Army of the Potomac.36
By June 1863 Union cavalry proved equal to the Confederate cavalry. At Brandy
Station the Union cavalry corps excelled under the aggressive leadership of
Maj. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan in 1864.37
-
- Experience also led to the standardization
of field artillery pieces and their massing within the army corps. At Manassas
the Union artillery had been assigned to brigades, but when organizing the
Army of the Potomac McClellan assigned it to divisions, usually one artillery
battalion per division. He also approved a ratio of 2.5 artillery pieces to
1,000 infantrymen, with six artillery pieces of the same caliber, if possible,
forming a battery. One of every four batteries was to be a Regular Army unit,
the commander of which was to assist the division commander in organizing
and training the artillery. Because of the shortage of artillery pieces in
1861, the Union's arsenals were ransacked and guns of various calibers were
sent to the troops in the field, causing ammunition and supply problems. But
eventually the Army of the Potomac achieved
- [13]
- uniformity within its field artillery
batteries by using 3-inch or 12-pounder "Napoleon" guns.38
-
- Although standardization of weapons
eased some field artillery problems, others remained. With the organization
of army corps, half of each corps' divisional artillery was withdrawn to form
an Army of the Potomac artillery reserve of three artillery brigades. The
army corps had no artillery except that in its divisions, and division commanders
were loath to lose control over their guns. By 1863 most commanders recognized
that their heavy losses stemmed from frontal infantry assaults on entrenched
positions. Rifles, with a maximum range of a thousand yards and an effective
range of half that distance in the hands of good marksmen, plus supporting
artillery fire presented formidable obstacles to mass attacks. Field artillery
could break up the infantry's defensive positions, but with the guns scattered
among the corps' divisions the coordination and concentration of artillery
fire was difficult to orchestrate.39
-
- After the Union defeat at Chancellorsville
in 1863 the field artillery batteries were withdrawn from the divisions of
the Army of the Potomac and concentrated in field artillery brigades directly
under the corps headquarters. These brigades, with four to six batteries and
their own officers and staff, rendered efficient service, which resulted in
a reduction in the amount of artillery needed and in the dependence on the
army's artillery reserve without any reduction in fire support. The reserve
gradually became a place for recuperation and reorganization of battered batteries.40
-
- To be successful, armies in the Civil
War needed more than infantry, field artillery, and cavalry. As the Regular
Army had few engineer units, volunteer infantry regiments often served as
engineers. In the Army of the Potomac these regiments eventually formed a
brigade. Army corps in other Union armies also employed infantry as engineers.
As the medical, ordnance, signal, and quartermaster department lacked units,
their field tasks were performed by personnel assigned to the departments
or by soldiers detailed from the line regiments or by hired civilians.41
-
- To coordinate all the activities within
an army corps, supporting staffs grew at each level-corps, division, brigade,
and regiment. Eventually an adjutant, commissaries of muster and subsistence,
and a chief of ordnance comprised the divisional staff. The staff for the
brigade included an adjutant, quartermaster, commissary of subsistence, and,
when the brigade served as an independent command, an ordnance officer. In
addition, general officers continued to have aides as their personal staff.
42
-
- As army corps evolved, the method
by which they were designated changed. Initially each Union army corps was
designated within an army-Le., I Army Corps, Army of the Potomac-but later
the practice of numbering them consecutively without any reference to the
army to which they were assigned was adopted. Divisions within army corps
were numbered consecutively, as were brigades within divisions. 43
- [14]
- Camp Humpheys, Virginia, headquarters of Allaback's Brigade, Pennsylvania
Volunteers, 1863
-
- Basically the Army of the Potomac
served as the model for all Union forces. In the West army corps were introduced
after their organization in the Army of the Potomac. As the war ebbed and
flowed commanders organized, consolidated, and discontinued army corps as
needed. When regiments were reduced because of attrition, theater commanders
added more regiments to the brigades to maintain their strength and that of
divisions within the army corps. When the volunteer system broke down, both
the Union and Confederate governments turned to draftees, substitutes (men
hired to serve in draftees' places), and bounties to maintain their armies.
To relieve manpower problems, the Union Army began using blacks in 1862, while
the Confederate Congress authorized the enrollment of black troops in March
1865. Small numbers of Negroes had served in past wars, both in integrated
and segregated units, but during the Civil War both sides organized segregated
regiments. The Union eventually created the XXV Army Corps with Negro enlisted
personnel from the X and XVIII Army Corps. 44
-
- With the Confederate Army springing
from the same ancestral roots as the Union Army, it was not surprising that
both armies used similar patterns of organization. At Bull Run in July 1861,
the Confederates employed two provisional army corps made up of brigades without
an intervening divisional-level structure. Eventually their army corps consisted
of infantry brigades and divi-
- [15]
- sions. Paralleling the Union armies,
the field artillery batteries were organized as corps-level units, which were
designated battalions rather than brigades. Confederate cavalry employed a
divisional rather than a corps structure, but it functioned as an aggressive
independent force earlier than Union cavalry. Unlike the Union forces, Southerners
rarely numbered their brigades and divisions but used the names of commanders
for identification. Army corps were numbered within their respective armies.
45
-
- To help control and identify units
on the battlefield, armies traditionally used flags, and Union army corps
and their divisions and brigades employed them during the Civil War. The national
colors formed the basis of the flag system. Along with distinctive flags,
Union corps badges were introduced to identify men and foster esprit de corps.
46
-
- Following the Civil War the War Department
disbanded the field armies, along with their army corps, divisions, and brigades.
Militia units returned to their states, the volunteers left service, and most
of the Regular Army troops returned to scattered posts throughout the South
and West. Congress in 1869 set the peacetime Regular establishment at 25 infantry,
10 cavalry, and 5 artillery regiments, but few were ever able to assemble
their far-flung companies, troops, and batteries in one place until the end
of the century. Field operations usually involved less than a regiment or
were conducted by gathering the geographically closest elements of several
regiments on a temporary basis. Army Regulations, nevertheless, continued
to repeat the ideas for organizing army corps, divisions, and brigades, with
the division described as "the fundamental element and basis of organization
of every active army." 47
-
-
- On 25 April 1898, Congress declared
that a state of war existed between the United States and Spain. Even though
the USS Maine had been sunk six weeks before, threatening war, the nation
had taken only minimal steps toward mobilization. One of these steps, however,
was congressional authorization for President William McKinley, when necessary,
to organize a new army consisting of the Regular Army and the Volunteer Army
of the United States. The regiments of the Volunteer Army were to be raised
and officered by the states and eventually included most of their organized
militia units. The regulars and volunteers were to be formed into brigades,
divisions, and army corps. On 23 April the McKinley administration directed
the regulars concentrated at Chickamauga National Park, Georgia, to be organized
as an army corps; those at Mobile, Alabama, as an independent division; and
those at New Orleans, Louisiana, as a separate brigade. 48
-
- After the declaration of war McKinley
revised that arrangement and approved the organization of eight army corps,
each of which was to consist of three or more divisions of three brigades
each. Each brigade was to have approxi-
- [16]
- Staff of the 2d Division, I Army Corps, 1898
-
- mately 3,600 officers and enlisted
men organized into three regiments and, with three such brigades, each division
was to total about 11,000 officers and men. Thus the division was to be about
the same size as the division of 1861, but army corps were to be larger. The
division staff initially was to have an adjutant general, quartermaster, commissary,
surgeon, inspector general, and engineer, with an ordnance officer added later.
The brigade staff was identical except that no inspector general or ordnance
officer was authorized. 49
-
- The Commanding General of the Army,
Maj. Gen. Nelson A. Miles, had planned to expand the Army in an orderly fashion
by holding the volunteers in state camps for sixty days. There they would
be organized, equipped, and trained for field duty. During that period the
War Department was to prepare large training camps and collect the necessary
stores to outfit the new army, while McKinley was to appoint the general officers
who would command the new brigades, divisions, and army corps. Miles' plan
soon went awry. Because of the lack of Regular Army officers to staff state
camps and the need to have volunteers and regulars train together, he quickly
abandoned it. In mid-May the volunteers were moved to a few large unfinished
camps in the South, and when they arrived only seven instead of the eight
projected army corps were organized. Two army
- [17]
- Camp Alger, Virginia, 1898
-
- corps, the IV and V consisted of regulars
and volunteers, while the others were made up of volunteers.50
-
- To facilitate command and control,
corps and division commanders requested permission to use distinctive Civil
War flags and badges for their units. Secretary of War Russell A. Alger, however,
disapproved the request because of pressure from Civil War veterans who had
been permitted by Congress to wear their distinctive unit insignia and guarded
the privilege jealously. The quartermaster general, therefore, had to prepared
an entirely new group of heraldic items for the recently organized army corps
and their divisions and brigades.51
-
- Before the new army completed its
organization and training, it was thrust into combat. About two-thirds of
V Army Corps, one dismounted cavalry and two infantry divisions, sailed for
Cuba in June 1898. Expeditions also were mounted for Puerto Rico and the Philippine
Islands in which partial army corps provided the troops. The war ended in
August 1898, and less than two months later the wartime army began to fade
away. The War Department disbanded the last army corps on 13 April 1900. Following
the war, the Army maintained troops in the Philippines, Cuba, and Puerto Rico,
but those commands did not employ army corps and divisions. 52
- [18]
- During major conflicts of the United
States prior to the twentieth century, Army leaders sought to find the best
command level at which to merge infantry, cavalry, and artillery into effective,
coordinated combat units. Brigades and divisions usually comprised a single
arm, while the army corps was the basic combined arms unit. Within the army
corps itself, little specialization existed beyond the combat arms. Usually
no field units were organized for signal, medical, transportation, military
police, engineers, ordnance, or other combat support services. Hired civilians
or detailed soldiers provided such support in the field. By the beginning
of the twentieth century, however, innovations in warfare, especially technological
developments, required more sophisticated organizations, both to use the new
technology and to integrate it into a larger operational and tactical framework.
- [19]
Endnotes
Next Chapter
page created 29 June 2001
-
Return to the
Table of Contents
-