7th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment

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7th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment
Flag of Wisconsin.svg
ActiveSeptember 2, 1861 July 2, 1865
Country United States
Allegiance Union
Branch Infantry
Size Regiment
Nickname(s)"The Huckleberries" or "The Hungry Seventh"
Engagements
Commanders
Colonel Joseph Van Dor
Colonel William W. Robinson
Lt. Col. John Benton Callis
ColonelMark Finnicum
Lt. Col. Hollon Richardson

The 7th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment was a volunteer infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. It was a component of the famous Iron Brigade in the Army of the Potomac throughout the war, participating in most of the critical battles of the eastern theater of the war, including Antietam, Gettysburg, and Grant's Overland Campaign.

Contents

Service

The 7th Wisconsin was raised at Madison, Wisconsin, and mustered into Federal service September 2, 1861. [1]

The regiment was initially equipped with smoothbore .69 caliber muskets converted from flintlock to percussion; in early 1862, they were replaced with the M1854 Austrian Lorenz rifle. Unlike their sister regiment the 2nd Wisconsin, which had Lorenz rifles in the unmodified .54 caliber, the 7th's were bored out to .58 caliber to fit a standard Minié ball. [2] The regiment saw its first action at Second Bull Run, followed by severe and bloody fighting in the Maryland Campaign which produced a combined casualty rate of 323. [3]

When the 7th Wisconsin marched into Pennsylvania in June 1863, it had not seen any combat action in nine months. During the first day of the Battle of Gettysburg on July 1, 1863, the 7th pushed a part of James J. Archer's Confederate brigade off McPherson's Ridge, and then stubbornly defended the heights later in the day before withdrawing to Seminary Ridge. When the I Corps retreated to Cemetery Hill, the Iron Brigade and the 7th Wisconsin were sent over to nearby Culp's Hill, where they entrenched. They saw comparatively little action the rest of the battle. The Badgers would suffer heavily during the battle, out of 370 effective men, 194 would not return after July 3. The regiment later served that year in the Bristoe and Mine Run Campaigns.

Colonel William W. Robinson COL W. W. Robinson.png
Colonel William W. Robinson
1st Lieutenant Hollon Richardson circa 1862 1LT Hollon Richardson.jpg
1st Lieutenant Hollon Richardson circa 1862

In the spring of 1864, the regiment signed up for another three years of service and thence fought in the Overland Campaign and the Siege of Petersburg. At The Battle of Spotsylvania, Virginia Chippewa/Ojibwa troops of the 7th Wisconsin aided troops of the 6th Wisconsin employing native skirmishing tactics. [4]

The regiment participated in the Grand Review of the Armies on May 23, 1865, and then mustered out at Louisville, Kentucky, on July 2, 1865.

Commanders

Total enlistments and casualties

The 7th Wisconsin Infantry initially mustered 973 men and later recruited an additional 369 men, for a total of 1,342 men. [5] The regiment suffered 10 officers and 271 enlisted men killed in action or who later died of their wounds, plus another 143 enlisted men who died of disease, for a total of 424 fatalities. [6]

7th Wisconsin Infantry, Company Organization
CompanyOriginal MonikerPrimary Place of RecruitmentCaptain(s)
ALodi Guards [7] Columbia County, Lafayette County, Chippewa County and Dane County [8]
  • George Bill (promoted)
  • Hollon Richardson (promoted)
  • James Johnson (wounded)
  • Oley Grasley (mustered out)
BColumbia County Cadets [7] Columbia County [9]
  • James H. Huntington (resigned)
  • George H. Brayton (KIA Gainesville)
  • Martin C. Hobart (promoted)
CPlatteville Guards [7] Grant County [10]
  • Samuel J. Nasmith (promoted)
  • Allen R. Bushnell (resigned)
  • Jefferson Newman (KIAWilderness)
  • Ethan A. Andrews (mustered out)
DStoughton Guards [7] Dane County [11]
  • Emerson F. Giles (resigned)
  • Alexander W. Bean (mustered out)
  • Frederick R. Dearborn (resigned)
EMarquette County Sharp Shooters [7] Marquette County and Waushara County [12]
  • William D. Walker (resigned)
  • Levi E. Pond (wounded)
  • William H. Gildersleeve (mustered out)
FLancaster Union Guards [7] Grant County [13]
  • John Benton Callis (promoted)
  • Henry F. Young (mustered out)
  • Francis A. Boynton (mustered out)
GGrand Rapids Union Guards [7] Wood County, Portage County and Polk County [14]
  • Samuel Stevens (resigned)
  • Homer Drake (resigned)
  • Frederick L. Warner (mustered out)
  • Walter B. Peck (mustered out)
HBadger State Guard [7] Grant County and Vernon County [15]
  • Mark Finnicum (promoted)
  • Robert C. Palmer (resigned)
  • Robert Monteith (mustered out)
  • Charles Fulks (mustered out)
  • Nicholas Heber (mustered out)
INorthern Tigers [7] Waushara County [16]
KBadger Rifles [7] Walworth County [17]
  • Alexander Gordon Jr. (KIAFitzhugh's Crossing)
  • George S. Hoyt (promoted)
  • John M. Hoyt (mustered out)

Notable people

Major John Benton Callis JohnBCallis1860.jpg
Major John Benton Callis
Private Julian C. Lewis of Company B, 7th Regiment - killed in action at the Second Battle of Bull Run Julian Lewis CDV by Fuller, 1860s.png
Private Julian C. Lewis of Company B, 7th Regiment - killed in action at the Second Battle of Bull Run

Nickname

According to veteran of the 2nd Wisconsin Infantry Regiment and Iron Brigade Cullen B. Aubery, the 7th Wisconsin was nicknamed "The Huckleberries" or "Huckleberry Seventh", it is also commonly called the "Hungry Seventh". [18] This nickname was supposedly given to the regiment by Edward S. Bragg, commander of the 6th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment, who said the boys of the 7th were always talking about pies and other hard-to-get delicacies. [18] [19]

See also

Further reading

References

  1. "Battle Unit Details - The Civil War (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2025-05-20.
  2. Coates, Earl J. (1990). An introduction to Civil War small arms. Internet Archive. Gettysburg, PA : Thomas Publications. p. 91. ISBN   978-0-939631-25-4.
  3. "7th Wisconsin Infantry History". Wisconsin Historical Society. 2012-08-27. Retrieved 2025-05-20.
  4. "Service With the Sixth Wisconsin Volunteers," Chapter 12, Dawes, Rufus R., Morningside Bookshop, January 1984, p. 265. Wisconsin Historical Society
  5. 7th Wisconsin Archived March 26, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  6. "Union Regimental Histories - Wisconsin". Civil War Archive. Retrieved November 24, 2021.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Estabrook, Charles E. (1912). Annual Reports of the Adjutant General of the State of Wisconsin: For the Years 1860, 1861, 1862, 1863, 1864. Madison, Wisconsin: Democrat Printing Co. (published 1911). pp. 50–51.
  8. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 540–544.
  9. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 544–547.
  10. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 547–551.
  11. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 551–554.
  12. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 554–557.
  13. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 558–561.
  14. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 561–564.
  15. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 565–568.
  16. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 568–571.
  17. Wisconsin. Adjutant General's Office (1886). Roster of Wisconsin volunteers, war of the rebellion, 1861-1865. The Library of Congress. Madison, Democrat printing co., state printers. pp. 572–575.
  18. 1 2 Aubery, Cullen B (2010). Echoes from the marches of the famous Iron Brigade: unwritten stories of that famous organization. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Wisconsin Historical Society. p. 50.
  19. "Gettysburg". www.secondwi.com. Retrieved 2025-05-22.