North Carolina 3rd Infantry (Confederate)
16/05/1861
Organized - North Carolina 3rd Infantry - North Carolina
31/05/1862
Battle - Seven Pines - Henrico County, Virginia
Gen. Joseph E. Johnston withdrew his army from the Virginia Peninsula toward the Confederate capital of Richmond as Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan's army pursued him. By the end of May, Johnston held a defensive position seven miles east of the city on the Richmond and York River Railroad. McClellan's army facing Johnston straddled the Chickahominy River and stretched south. Capturing the initiative from his Union foe, Johnston attempted to overwhelm two Federal corps isolated south of the river. The Confed…READ MORE
26/06/1862
Battle - Mechanicsville - Hanover Couunty, Virginia
Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan's Army of the Potomac remained northeast of Richmond for three weeks after the Battle of Seven Pines. The new commander of the Army of Northern Virginia, Gen. Robert E. Lee, took that time to reorganize his defenses of the capital city and receive the reinforcements of Maj. Gen. Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson's division from the Shenandoah Valley. After attacking Lee inconclusively at Oak Grove on June 25th, McClellan remained in place, with four of his five army corps south of…READ MORE
26/06/1862
Battle - Mechanicsville, Virginia
27/06/1862
Battle - Gaines' Mill - Hanover County, Virginia
Despite his victory over the Confederates at Beaver Dam Creek on June 26th, Maj. Gen. Fitz John Porter's Fifth Corps abandoned its position early on June 27th and established a new defensive line along Boatswain's Creek, just north of the Chickahominy River.READ MORE
27/06/1862
Battle - Mechanicsville, Virginia
01/07/1862
Battle - Malvern Hill - Henrico County, Virginia
On June 30th, the retreating Federal Army of the Potomac finally stopped at the James River at the end of seven days of fighting outside of Richmond.READ MORE
28/08/1862
Battle - Second Bull Run - Prince William County, Virginia
After the early summer collapse of the Union Peninsula Campaign offensive to capture Richmond, Robert E. Lee sought to move his army north and threaten Washington DC before Union forces could regroup.READ MORE
12/09/1862
Battle - Frederick, Maryland
14/09/1862
Battle - South Mountain - Frederick County, Maryland; Washington County, Maryland; Boonsboro, Maryland
After his success at Second Manassas, Gen. Robert E. Lee led the Army of Northern Virginia north across the Potomac River on an invasion of Maryland in September of 1862. Lee divided his army, sending a portion of it into western Maryland while Lieut. Gen. Stonewall Jackson's wing attempted to capture the Federal garrison at Harper's Ferry. The bold plan was jeopardized on September 13th when a mislaid copy of Lee's orders revealing the Confederates' plans was given to Union commander Maj. Gen. George B. M…READ MORE
17/09/1862
Leadership Change - Regiment - Colonel William L. De Rosset
ColonelWilliam L. De Rosset
17/09/1862
Leadership Change - Regiment - Major Stephen D. Thruston
MajorStephen D. Thruston
17/09/1862
Leadership Change - Brigade - Brigadier General Roswell S. Ripley
Brigadier GeneralRoswell S. Ripley
13/12/1862
Leadership Change - Regiment - Colonel William L. DeRosset
ColonelWilliam L. DeRosset
13/12/1862
Leadership Change - Brigade - Brigadier General George Doles
Brigadier GeneralGeorge Doles
13/12/1862
Leadership Change - Division - Major General D.H. Hill
Major GeneralD.H. Hill
13/12/1862
Battle - Fredericksburg - Fredericksburg, Virginia
In early November, Maj. Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside took command of the Army of the Potomac, and made immediate plans to move the army once again toward Richmond.READ MORE
14/12/1862
Battle - Kinston - Lenoir County, North Carolina
11/04/1863
Leadership Change - Brigade - Colonel John A. Baker
ColonelJohn A. Baker
11/04/1863
Battle - Siege of Suffolk - Suffolk, Virginia
30/04/1863
Leadership Change - Regiment - Lieutenant Colonel Stephen D. Thruston, and Major William M. Parsley
Lieutenant ColonelStephen D. Thruston
MajorWilliam M. Parsley
30/04/1863
Leadership Change - Brigade - Colonel E. T. H. Warren, Colonel Titus V. Williams, and Lieutenant Colonel Hamilton A. Brown
30/04/1863
Leadership Change - Division - Brigadier General Raleigh E. Colston
Brigadier GeneralRaleigh E. Colston
30/04/1863
Leadership Change - Regiment - Lieutenant Colonel Stephen D. Thruston
Lieutenant ColonelStephen D. Thruston
30/04/1863
Leadership Change - Brigade - Colonel E. T. H. Warren
ColonelE. T. H. Warren
30/04/1863
Leadership Change - Brigade - Colonel Titus V. Williams
ColonelTitus V. Williams
30/04/1863
Battle - Chancellorsville - Spotsylvania County, Virginia
On April 27, 1863, Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker launched a turning movement designed to pry Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia out of its lines at Fredericksburg.READ MORE
03/05/1863
Battle - Second Fredericksburg - Fredericksburg, Virginia
13/06/1863
Leadership Change - Regiment - Major William M. Parsley
MajorWilliam M. Parsley
13/06/1863
Leadership Change - Brigade - Brigadier General George H. Steuart
Brigadier GeneralGeorge H. Steuart
13/06/1863
Leadership Change - Division - Major General Edward "Allegheny" Johnson
Major GeneralEdward "Allegheny" Johnson
13/06/1863
Battle - Second Winchester - Frederick County, Virginia; Winchester County, Virginia
01/07/1863
Leadership Change - Division - Major General Edward Johnson
Major GeneralEdward Johnson
01/07/1863
Battle - Gettysburg - Gettysburg, Pennsylvania
In the summer of 1863, Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee launched his second invasion of the Northern states. Lee sought to capitalize on recent Confederate victories and defeat the Union army on Northern soil, which he hoped would force the Lincoln administration to negotiate for peace. Lee also sought to take the war out of the ravaged Virginia farmland and gather supplies for his Army of Northern Virginia. Using the Shenandoah Valley as cover for his army, Lee was pursued first by Union Maj. Gen. Joseph Ho…READ MORE
27/11/1863
Battle - Mine Run - Orange County, Virginia
After the inconclusive Bristoe Campaign in the fall of 1863, Maj. Gen. George G. Meade planned one more offensive against Gen. Robert E. Lee in northern Virginia before winter weather ended military operations. In late November, Meade attempted to steal a march southeast from Culpeper Courthouse, turn south through the Wilderness and strike the right flank of the Confederate army south of the Rapidan River. On November 27th, Maj. Gen. Jubal A. Early, in command of Ewell's Corps, marched east on the Orange…READ MORE
28/11/1863
Battle - Mine Run, Virginia
30/11/1863
Battle - Mine Run, Virginia
07/04/1864
Battle - Farmville - Farmville, Virginia
05/05/1864
Battle - Wilderness - Spotsylvania County, Virginia; Orange County, Virginia
The first battle between Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and Gen. Robert E. Lee erupted late in the morning of May 5, 1864, as Maj. Gen. Gouverneur K. Warren's Union V Corps attacked Lt. Gen. Richard S. Ewell's Second Corps on the Orange Turnpike southwest of the old Chancellorsville battlefield. Although Federal infantry managed to break through at several points, the Confederate line held. Fighting shifted to the south as Lt. Gen. A.P. Hill's Third Corps engaged Maj. Gen. Winfield S. Hancock's II Corps and ele…READ MORE
08/05/1864
Leadership Change - Brigade - Brigadier General George H. Steuart, and Colonel Titus V. Williams
Brigadier GeneralGeorge H. Steuart
ColonelTitus V. Williams
08/05/1864
Leadership Change - Brigade - Brigadier General George H. Steuart
Brigadier GeneralGeorge H. Steuart
08/05/1864
Leadership Change - Division - Major General Edward Johnson
Major GeneralEdward Johnson
08/05/1864
Battle - Spotsylvania Court House - Spotsylvania County, Virginia
Following the Battle of the Wilderness, Lieut. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant marched the Union army south with the hope of capturing Spotsylvania Court House and preventing Robert E. Lee's army from retreating further. Lee's Confederates, however, managed to get ahead of the Federals and block the road. Fighting began on May 8th, when the Union Fifth Corps under Maj. Gen. Gouverneur K. Warren and the Sixth Corps under Maj. Gen. John Sedgwick engaged Confederate Maj. Gen. Richard Anderson's First Corps at Laurel Hi…READ MORE
23/05/1864
Battle - North Anna - Caroline County, Virginia; Hanover County, Virginia
Following the stalemate at Spotsylvania Court House, Grant was determined to continue his offensive against Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. After a failed attempt to bait Lee out of his earthworks, he found the Confederates entrenched on the south side of the North Anna River, where Lee's "inverted V" defenses forced Grant to divide his army into three parts in order to attack. On May 23rd, one of Maj. Gen. A.P. Hill's divisions assaulted the isolated Fifth Corps on the Union right which had crossed the r…READ MORE
31/05/1864
Leadership Change - Brigade - Colonel R. Tyler Bennett, and Colonel William Ruffin Cox
ColonelR. Tyler Bennett
ColonelWilliam Ruffin Cox
31/05/1864
Leadership Change - Division - Major General Robert E. Rodes
Major GeneralRobert E. Rodes
31/05/1864
Leadership Change - Brigade - Colonel R. Tyler Bennett
ColonelR. Tyler Bennett
31/05/1864
Battle - Cold Harbor - Hanover County; near Mechanicsville, Virginia
After two days of inconclusive fighting along Totopotomoy Creek northeast of Richmond, Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and Gen. Robert E. Lee turned their sights on the crossroads of Cold Harbor. Roads emanating through this critical junction led to Richmond as well as supply and reinforcement sources for the Union army. On May 31, 1864, Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan's cavalry captured Cold Harbor. The next day, Sheridan held the crossroads against a Confederate attack. With reinforcements from both armies arriving…READ MORE
09/07/1864
Leadership Change - Regiment - Colonel S. D. Thurston
ColonelS. D. Thurston
09/07/1864
Leadership Change - Brigade - Brigadier General William Ruffin Cox
Brigadier GeneralWilliam Ruffin Cox
09/07/1864
Battle - Monocacy - Frederick County, Maryland
After marching north down the Shenandoah Valley from Lynchburg, the Confederate army of Lt. Gen. Jubal A. Early side-stepped the Federal garrison at Harpers Ferry and crossed the Potomac River at Shepherdstown into Maryland on July 5-6th, 1864. On July 9th, a makeshift Union force under Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace attempted to stop Early's invading Confederate divisions along the Monocacy River, just east of Frederick. The strategic area was near the junction of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and the Georgetown…READ MORE
11/07/1864
Leadership Change - Regiment - undefined Col. Stephen D. Thruston
11/07/1864
Battle - Fort Stevens - District of Columbia, DC
After his victory over Maj. Gen. Lew Wallace at the Battle of Monocacy in central Maryland on July 9th, Confederate Maj. Gen. Jubal A. Early pressed his advantage and moved south toward the Union capital in Washington, DC. On July 11th, Early's exhausted Confederates reached the outskirts of Washington near Silver Spring. Skirmishers advanced to feel the fortifications that encircled the city, which at the time were manned only by Home Guards, clerks, and convalescent troops. During the night, Union reinfo…READ MORE
19/09/1864
Leadership Change - Brigade - Colonel William R. Cox
ColonelWilliam R. Cox
19/09/1864
Leadership Change - Division - Brigadier General Cullen A. Battle, and Major General Robert E. Rodes
Brigadier GeneralCullen A. Battle
Major GeneralRobert E. Rodes
19/09/1864
Leadership Change - Division - Major General Robert E. Rodes
Major GeneralRobert E. Rodes
19/09/1864
Battle - Third Winchester - Frederick County, Virginia; Winchester, Virginia
To clear the Shenandoah River valley of Confederates, Maj. Gen. Phil Sheridan moved on Winchester in mid-September 1864. Sheridan's force of over 39,000 men was more than twice the size of Maj. Gen. Jubal Early's Confederate army defending the valley. After Brig. Gen. Joseph Kershaw's division left Winchester to rejoin Robert E. Lee's army at Petersburg, Early renewed his raids on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad at Martinsburg in the lower valley, dispersing his four remaining infantry divisions. On Septem…READ MORE
21/09/1864
Battle - Fisher's Hill - Shenandoah County, Virginia
Confederate Maj. Gen. Jubal Early's Army of the Valley, bloodied by its defeat at the Third Battle of Winchester on September 19th, retreated 20 miles up the valley and took a defensive position in an east-west line across Fisher's Hill, southwest of Strasburg. Maj. Gen. Phillip Sheridan's Army of the Shenandoah, in accordance with Lieut. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's orders, aggressively pursued Early. Sheridan, outnumbering Early about three to one, noted that the right of the Confederate line was anchored o…READ MORE
19/10/1864
Leadership Change - Regiment - Captain William H.Thomson
CaptainWilliam H.Thomson
19/10/1864
Leadership Change - Brigade - Brigadier General William Ruffin Cox
Brigadier GeneralWilliam Ruffin Cox
19/10/1864
Leadership Change - Division - Major General S.D. Ramseur
Major GeneralS.D. Ramseur
19/10/1864
Leadership Change - Division - Major General S.D. Ramseur
Major GeneralS.D. Ramseur
19/10/1864
Battle - Cedar Creek - Frederick County, Virginia; Shenandoah County, Virginia; Warren County, Virginia
Also known as: Cedar Creek, Belle GroveREAD MORE
07/12/1864
Battle - First Fort Fisher - New Hanover County, North Carolina
The first assault on Fort Fisher was made in December 1864 by Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, who withdrew when he realized a direct assault on the fort would be costly, and that Confederate reinforcements were only a few miles away.READ MORE
13/01/1865
Battle - Second Fort Fisher - New Hanover County, North Carolina
By January 1865, Fort Fisher on the North Carolina shore was the last coastal stronghold of the Confederacy. The fort protected blockade running vessels entering and departing Wilmington, the South's last open seaport on the Atlantic coast. Maj. Gen. Alfred Terry was placed in command of a Provisional Corps from the Army of the James, and was supported by a Navy and Marine Corps force of nearly 60 vessels under Rear Adm. David D. Porter. Terry's orders were to renew operations against the fort that had fai…READ MORE
07/03/1865
Leadership Change - Brigade - Brigadier General Laurence S. Baker
Brigadier GeneralLaurence S. Baker
07/03/1865
Leadership Change - Division - Major General Robert F. Hoke
Major GeneralRobert F. Hoke
07/03/1865
Battle - Wyse Fork - Kinston, North Carolina
By the end of February 1865, the North Carolina port city of Wilmington, defended by Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg, had fallen to the army of Union Maj. Gen. John Schofield. The port city became a supply base for Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman's army in North Carolina, then beginning to close in on Gen. Joseph E. Johnston's army. To consolidate forces against Johnston, Sherman ordered Schofield's Army of the Ohio to advance inland from Wilmington, at the same time assigning Maj. Gen. Jacob Cox to move the U…READ MORE
19/03/1865
Leadership Change - Brigade - Colonel John H. Nethercutt
ColonelJohn H. Nethercutt
19/03/1865
Leadership Change - Division - Major General Robert F. Hoke
Major GeneralRobert F. Hoke
19/03/1865
Battle - Bentonville - Bentonville, North Carolina
After his march to the sea, Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman headed north in early 1865 to unite with Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's army in Virginia. Only Confederate Gen. Joseph Johnston's army stood between Sherman and Grant. After briefly blocking Sherman's advance at Averasboro, North Carolina on March 16, Johnston struck Maj. Gen. Henry Slocum's wing of Sherman's army near Bentonville on March 19. The Confederates ran into stiff resistance, as Slocum established a defensive position. Johnston's assaults con…READ MORE
25/03/1865
Leadership Change - Regiment - Lieutenant Colonel William M. Parsley
Lieutenant ColonelWilliam M. Parsley
25/03/1865
Leadership Change - Brigade - Brigadier General William Ruffin Cox
Brigadier GeneralWilliam Ruffin Cox
25/03/1865
Leadership Change - Division - Major General Bryan Grimes
Major GeneralBryan Grimes
25/03/1865
Battle - Fort Stedman - Petersburg, Virginia
By March of 1865, Lieut. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's grip on the Confederate lines around Petersburg was having its desired effect. Outnumbered and weakened by disease, desertion and shortage of food and supplies, Gen. Robert E. Lee had few options. After careful study of the Union troops in his sector of the line, Maj. Gen. John B. Gordon suggested to Lee the possibility of a successful offensive strike against Grant. In front of Gordon's men, Union-held Fort Stedman seemed the best target for a Confederate a…READ MORE
06/04/1865
Battle - High Bridge - Prince Edward County, Virginia; Cumberland County, Virginia
Harried mercilessly by Federal troops and continually cut off from turning south to reach Gen. Joseph Johnston's army in North Carolina, General Robert E. Lee and his army headed west along the Appomattox River, eventually arriving in Cumberland County on April 6th. Food and supplies that Lee's men desperately needed were waiting at Farmville, across the river. To get there, Lee needed to use the 2,500-foot long, 130-foot tall High Bridge, which carried the South Side Railroad over the Appomattox. A small…READ MORE
06/04/1865
Battle - High Bridge, Virginia
09/04/1865
Battle - Appomattox Court House - Appomattox Court House, Virginia
Between 26,000 and 28,000 Confederate soldiers surrendered and were paroled.READ MORE
09/04/1865
Mustered Out - North Carolina 3rd Infantry - North Carolina
12/04/1865
Battle - Salisbury, North Carolina
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