Question of the Week: What’s your favorite unit nickname?

From the Iron Brigade to the Raccoon Roughs, there were hosts of unit nicknames in the Civil War. What’s your favorite nickname for a company, regiment, brigade, battery, or ship in the conflict?



19 Responses to Question of the Week: What’s your favorite unit nickname?

  1. “The Harper’s Ferry Cowards,” a/k/a 126th New York Volunteer Infantry.

    Not a nickname any unit wants, the slur became affixed to the regiment in 1862 after a portion broke and fled on the Maryland Heights overlooking Harper’s Ferry in its first action (part of Lee’s Maryland Campaign). The Harper’s Ferry garrison surrendered soon after the Heights were taken.

    The 126th redeemed itself at Gettysburg. On July 2 the regiment, part of Col. George Willard’s brigade, took part in a counter-charge against Barksdale’s Mississippi Brigade, helping to preserve the Union center on Cemetery Ridge. Some of its members reportedly shouted “Remember Harper’s Ferry” as they attacked. (Willard died in the attack. His monument, West of the PA Monument, is off the beaten track but worth visiting.) The regiment also performed well on July 3 during Longstreet’s Assault, and went on to good service thereafter. As a result, the regiment erased its earlier nickname. None of its members grieved the loss.

  2. The Gibraltar Brigade of Nathan Kimball and Sam Carroll. The Army of the Potomac’s other all-Western brigade which earned its nickname in the 1862 Maryland Campaign.

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