Alabama Civil War Facts
On January 11, 1861 Alabama became the fourth state to leave the Union, its secession convention calling for a meeting of delegates from all Southern states in Montgomery, the state capital, on February 4. At this meeting the new provisional government of the Confederate States of America was organized, with Montgomery selected as its temporary seat and Jefferson Davis elected president. The Confederacy went to war financed largely by a $500,000 loan from the state of Alabama.
In one section of northern Alabama, where antislavery feeling was strong, there was a movement to form a pro-Union state. State Rep. Hugh Clay feared that an attempt would be made "to excite the people of North Alabama to rebellion vs. the State and we will have a civil war in our midst," but the movement failed.
At the beginning of hostilities Alabama state troops seized forts at the entrance to Mobile Bay and the Union arsenal at Mount Vernon. There was no fighting in the state early in the war, but in 1862 invading Federal forces held sizable areas. To resist the invasion, almost every white Alabamian old enough to carry a gun enlisted in the Confederate forces. Some 2,500 white men and 10,000 blacks had already enlisted in the Union army.
Alabama supplied most of the iron used by the Confederacy, with an average annual output of 40,000 tons during the 4 years of war. Not only did its 16 ironworks steadily produce iron for shot and shell, but the state's munitions plants manufactured the products.
There are no statistics on Alabama's contributions to the Confederate army, but estimates vary between 75,000 and 125,000 fighting men from a population of just above 500,000 whites. Estimates of losses range from 25,000 to 70,000. The state furnished the Confederacy with 60-65 regiments of infantry, 12-15 regiments of cavalry, and over 20 batteries of artillery.
P.O.W. Camps in thew state: Cahaba (Castle Morgan), Mobile, Montgomery , Selma , Talledega, Tuscaloosa .
In 1895, 76 years after being admitted to the Union, the Alabama Legislature authorized the "crimson cross of St. Andrew on a field of white" in the "Acts of Alabama." Reminiscent of the Confederate battle flag, it was designated that the crimson bars must be 6 inches broad and were to extend diagonally across the flag. Because act 383 did not specify a particular format, the flag is depicted sometimes as a square and at other times as a rectangle.
Confederate - 15 States and Territories |
|
Union - 43 States and Territories |
Total number of men recruited |
107,547 |
Total number of men recruited |
7,547 |
Percentage of CSA Army |
2.8% |
Percentage of Union Army |
0.3% |
Percentage of South's Pop. |
? |
Percentage of state's population |
0.8% |
Overall rank |
12 |
Overall rank |
30 |
Number of Actions in State |
336 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Regiments of foreign-born soldiers |
Regiments of foreign-born soldiers |
None |
|
None |
|
Confederate Army Deaths |
Union Army Deaths |
Killed/Mortally Wounded Officers |
? |
Killed/Mortally Wounded |
50 |
Killed/Mortally Wounded Enlisted |
? |
Disease |
228 |
Died of Wounds Officers |
? |
Disease in Prison |
22 |
Died of Wounds Enlisted |
? |
Accidents/Drowning |
5 |
Died of Disease Officers |
? |
Murdered |
? |
Died of Disease Enlisted |
? |
Military Execution |
? |
Total |
? |
Executed By Enemy |
? |
|
|
Known/Not Classified |
2 |
|
|
Unknown |
38 |
|
|
Total |
345 |
State Military Units |
State Military Units |
Artillery |
over 20 batteries |
Artillery |
|
Cavalry |
12-15 regiments |
Cavalry |
|
Infantry |
60-65 Regiments |
Infantry |
|
Civil War Website Links
- Civil War links from fold3.comwith original data from the National Archives:
- Alabama Civil War Soldiers database (http://www.archives.alabama.gov/civilwar/index.cfm)
- Willis Brewer's Brief Historical Sketches of Military Organizations Raised In Alabama During the Civil War(http://www.archives.alabama.gov/referenc/alamilor/mil_org.html)
- Alabama Confederate Military Unit Histories at the ADAH (http://www.archives.alabama.gov/referenc/reghist.html)
- Using Primary Sources in the Classroom: Civil War Unit (http://www.archives.alabama.gov/teacher/civil.html)
- Documenting the Civil War Period Flag Collection at the Alabama Department of Archives and History (http://www.archives.alabama.gov/referenc/flags/intro.html)
- Alabama Civil War Map of Battles (http://americancivilwar.com/statepic/al.html)
- The Alabama Civil War Roots Homepage (http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~alcwroot/)
- Alabama in the Civil War Message Board (http://history-sites.com/cgi-bin/boards/alcwmb/)
- William Lowndes Yancey, a Bibliography (http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Acres/7647/wly.htm)
- William Lowndes Yancey (1814-1863): Famous Orator and Secessionist of the South (http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Acres/7647/wly2.htm)
- Alabama's Ordinance of Secession (http://www.legislature.state.al.us/misc/history/constitutions/1861/1861ord1_20.html#anchor588392)
- Alabama's Consitution of 1861 (http://www.legislature.state.al.us/misc/history/constitutions/1861/1861.html)
- Jefferson Davis' First Inaugural Address (http://jeffersondavis.rice.edu/resources.cfm?doc_id=1508)
- The Papers of Jefferson Davis (http://jeffersondavis.rice.edu/)
- Historic Blakeley State Park (http://new.siteone.com/sites/blakeleypark.com/civilwar.asp)
- The Mobile Campaign/ Battle of Fort Blakeley and Spanish Fort (http://new.siteone.com/sites/blakeleypark.com/battlehistory.htm)
- Hawkins' Division of 6,000 Black Troops (http://new.siteone.com/sites/blakeleypark.com/usct.htm)
- United States Colored Troops in the Mobile Campaign (http://www.coax.net/people/lwf/MO_USCT.HTM)
- CSS Alabama Digital Collection (http://www.lib.ua.edu/libraries/hoole/digital/cssala/main.shtml)
- CSS Alabama -- Naval Historic Center (http://www.history.navy.mil/branches/org12-1.htm)
- The Official Site of the Friends of the Hunley (http://www.hunley.org/)
- The Hunley (http://www.thehunley.com/Artifacts/buttontype.htm)
- Denbigh: Archaeology of a Civil War Blockade Runner (http://ina.tamu.edu/denbigh/)
- The Selma Campaign (http://americancivilwar.com/statepic/al/al007.html)
- Elizabeth Lyle Saxon, 1832-1915: A Southern Woman's War Time Reminiscences (http://docsouth.unc.edu/fpn/saxon/menu.html
- Frances Woolfolk Wallace, b. 1835, Diary, March 19-August 25, 1864 (http://docsouth.unc.edu/imls/wallace/menu.html)
- A Belle of the Fifties: Memoirs of Mrs. Clay, of Alabama, Covering Social and Political Life in Washington and the South, 1853-66. (http://docsouth.unc.edu/fpn/clay/menu.html)
- Shelby Iron Company (http://docsouth.unc.edu/imls/shelby/menu.html)
- Joseph Wheeler: Lt. General, Confederate States General, United States Army, Member of Congress (http://www.arlingtoncemetery.com/jwheeler.htm)
- Pond Spring and the Joe Wheeler Home (http://www.wheelerplantation.org/)
- Fort Gaines (http://andy_bennett.home.mindspring.com/gaines.html)
- Fort Morgan (http://andy_bennett.home.mindspring.com/morgan.html)
- Civil War Battle summaries for Alabama (nps.gov)
- Alabama Confederate Service Cards (archives.state.al.us) On-line database, also available on self-service microfilm. This series contains information about individual soldiers from Alabama and was compiled from original sources such as muster rolls, pension files, and records at the National Archives. Service cards typically include the name of the soldier, his home county, his age at the date of his enlistment, the date and place of enlistment, and the company and regiment. Cards may also include a list of the engagements the soldier took part in; whether he was killed, captured, or wounded; and date of parole. The source of information is often cited. Arranged alphabetically by surname.
- U.S., Confederate Soldiers Compiled Service Records, 1861-1865 - This database contains an index to compiled service records (CSRs) for soldiers who served with units in the Confederate army. Most of the men whose names appear in this index served with units from 15 different states or territories; others were soldiers raised directly by the Confederate government, generals and staff officers, and other enlisted men not associated with a regiment. Compiled service records are files of cards that abstract original military records relating to an individual soldier. A typical CSR will include an envelope that lists a soldier’s name, rank, unit, and card numbers, followed by cards with details extracted from muster rolls, rosters, hospital rolls, Union prison records, payrolls, and other records, with a new card being created each time a soldier’s name appeared on a new document. The CSRs may also include original documents pertaining to the soldier. The CSRs do not constitute an exhaustive list of all men who served in the Confederate army.
- Alabama Civil War Books (amazon.com)