Brief History of Company C,
24th Michigan Infantry Regiment
By the spring of 1862, the Union army had encountered a number of crushing
defeats in the eastern theatre; much of which can be attributed to poor
leadership qualities. The year of 1862 was tragic for the North. By this time,
the Union had lost the battle of Bull Run, Benjamin Butler was crushed at Big
Bethel, the British were angered over the Trent affair, Stonewall Jackson was
invincible in the Shenandoah Valley, and the North was facing problems with its
attempts at a Peninsular Campaign (hindered by sluggish movement and a difficult
geography).
In early July of 1862, President Lincoln called on the northern states to
furnish an additional 300,000 men to fill the depleted ranks. Governor Blair of
Michigan responded quickly and with great effort. On July 15, 1862, Blair
ordered that one regiment of soldiers be created from each of Michigan's six
congressional districts. These six new regiments were to be assigned the numbers
of eighteen through twenty-three, but because of an embarrassing anti-war rally in Michigan, the
governor allowed for the twenty-fourth Michigan infantry regiment to be
created.
The 24th Michigan was to be assigned to Wayne County, which was part
of the first congressional district. This brought the number of outgoing
regiments to a total of eight. By July 22, patriotic young men were rushing to
fill the ranks, and on this day, a huge war meeting was held in Campus Martius in Detroit. Speeches of patriotism were given by some of the state's
most prominent citizens, including the venerable Lewis Cass who was making one
of his last public appearances.
Support was given to the new regiments, and especially to the
24th,
which was being formed by Wayne County and Detroit men. Prominent citizens of
Detroit soon stepped forward to pledge the payment of bounties to each man from
his ward who enlisted in the 24th Michigan. This was the first time in
Detroit, and perhaps in Michigan, that such inducements were given.
The beckoning cry for help quickly spread everywhere, and before the end of
the month, plans were being made in Plymouth, Michigan, to take an active role.
On August 5, a meeting was held in Plymouth to procure enlistments for a new
company of volunteers that would become part of the 24th
regiment.
During that afternoon, enlistments were gathered at the Village Green, or what
is today known as Kellogg Park. The company was to have one hundred volunteers,
and they quickly stepped forward. As it turned out, sixty-nine men out of the
one hundred in the company were citizens of Plymouth. The others included seven
from Canton, nine from Livonia, six from Nankin, eight from Salem, and one from
Detroit. Another fifteen Plymouth-Canton residents joined other companies of the
24th. So it was on August 5, 1862, that Company C of the
24th
Michigan Infantry Regiment was born.
Shortly after the Battle of Antietam (September 1862), Company C, along with
the rest of the 24th Michigan, joined regiments from Indiana and Wisconsin; thus,
becoming part of the famed "Iron Brigade," which assumed that name when
General McClellan noted how those men "were like iron" in the battle
of South Mountain.
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