1st California Infantry
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The 1st California Infantry was an infantry regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War. It spent its entire term of service in the western United States.
[edit] History
Most of the 1st California was recruited from August to October 1861, with the exception of Company K, which was organized the following February. James H. Carleton served as colonel, Joseph R. West as lieutenant colonel, and Joseph R. West as major. It came under the command of the Department of the Pacific (later it would come under the Department of New Mexico). After some training near Oakland and Los Angeles, five companies were sent to Fort Yuma on the Colorado River and the others to various posts around southern California.
The regiment was assigned to a force called the California Column, which was commanded by Carleton and composed of one infantry regiment (the 5th) and parts of two cavalry regiments (the 1st and 2nd) of California volunteers and a company of Regular artillery. The Column was formed to drive the Confederate Army of New Mexico out of the eastern part of the New Mexico Territory. Due to supply problems, the force did not move out until February 1862. The 1st Infantry saw fighting at the Battle of Picacho Pass (only Company I) and the Battle of Apache Pass (this battle was against Apache warriors, not Confederates). The regiment continued marching across the New Mexico Territory to Fort Craig.
For the remainder of the war, the 1st was engaged in garrison duty in New Mexico and Texas and fighting Apache and Navajo Indians in these states and in the Utah Territory. Picacho Pass was the only engagement against Confederate forces, since they had retreated back into Texas before the California Column reached eastern New Mexico and they made no attempt to recover the territory they lost. The unit was mustered out on October 21, 1866.
[edit] References
- California Military History Museum
- Military History Online
- Masich, Andrew E., The Civil War in Arizona: the Story of the California Volunteers, 1861-65; University of Oklahoma Press (Norman, 2006).