The First Battle of Bull Run

Connecticut Troops Stand Firm When the Battle Turns Against Them

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Major General Alfred Howe Terry. Photograph
The Connecticut Historical Society, 1938.35.0. Terry was a lawyer from New Haven and served as commander of the 2nd Connecticut Volunteers at Bull Run.
Brigadier General Daniel Tyler. Photograph
The Connecticut Historical Society, 1949.4.44. Tyler was a West Pointer, class of 1819. He commanded the 1st Division of the Union Army at Bull Run, and his career suffered for his performance there.
Battle of Bull’s Run, Va. Lithograph by E.B. & E.C. Kellogg, 1861
The Connecticut Historical Society, 1950.202.91. In this lithograph by Hartford’s Kellogg brothers, the New York Fire Zouaves charge a rebel cavalry unit.
A Muster Ceremony, New Haven Green. Photograph, 1861
The Connecticut Historical Society, x.2000.46.5. The non-standardized uniforms worn by the early Connecticut regiments are evident in the photograph of a muster ceremony; one company wears blue, the other wears gray.
Battle at Bull’s Run, Va. Lithograph by E.B. & E.C. Kellogg, 1861
The Connecticut Historical Society, 1995.182.175. A second lithograph by the Kellogg brothers depicts Colonel Michael Corcoran leading a charge of the New York 69th Irish Regiment against a rebel battery.

The First Battle of Bull run was fought outside Manassas, Virginia on July 21, 1861. It was the first major battle of the American Civil War, involving over 50,000 participants on both sides, and was a military fiasco for the North. The State of Connecticut did not suffer terribly on this particular field, but men from the State took a prominent role in the events of that critical day.

Three regiments of Connecticut volunteers had signed up to fight the Southern rebels during the spring of 1861. Their term of enlistment was just ninety days, an indication that many believed the war would not last long at all. Prominent citizens were elected to officer these regiments, including several graduates from the Military Academy at West Point.

The three Connecticut regiments were composed of men hailing from all corners of the State, and were formed together into a brigade, along with the Second Maine Regiment, that served under Brigadier General Daniel Tyler, a West Point graduate from Brooklyn, Connecticut.

During the battle, the Connecticut men fought along Bull Run creek near the Stone Bridge, a prominent crossing of the run, but an area of the battlefield not highly contested by the Confederates. The Third Connecticut Regiment and Second Maine took part in a charge up a knoll against a Rebel battery, which was entirely successful in driving it away. As the rest of the Federal Army dissolved in panic, the relatively fresh men from Connecticut stood to the colors and did much to stem the tide of fleeing men in blue.

The day had cost Connecticut just over 50 men in casualties, and the bulk of those were taken prisoner. Only six men from Connecticut were killed in action. Despite this nominal loss, officers from throughout the Army praised the Connecticut men for their poise when the battle turned against them. A remarkable 60% or more reenlisted in three-year regiments when their ninety days of service were up. It was the first of many feats of bravery Connecticut men would act out over the next four years of bloodshed.


  

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