The state of Rhode Island during the American Civil War remained loyal to the Union, as did the other states of New England. Rhode Island furnished 25,236 fighting men to the Union Army, of which 1,685 died.[1] The state used its industrial capacity to supply the Union Army with the materials needed to win the war. Rhode Island's continued growth and modernization led to the creation of an urban mass transit system and improved health and sanitation programs.[citation needed]
Rhode Island during the war
Fort Adams near Newport was used temporarily as the United States Naval Academy. In May 1861, the Academy was moved to Newport from Annapolis, Maryland due to concerns about the political sympathies of the Marylanders, many of whom were suspected of supporting the Confederate States of America. In September, the Academy moved to the Atlantic House hotel in Newport and remained there for the rest of the war.[2]
In 1862, Fort Adams became the headquarters and recruit depot for the 15th U.S. Infantry Regiment.[2] The USS Rhode Island was a side-wheel steamer commissioned in 1861 for the Union Navy, and it intercepted blockade runners in the West Indies and was a part of the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron.[3]
Notable leaders from Rhode Island
Politics
Senator Henry B. Anthony was born in Coventry, Rhode Island. He was a powerful newspaper owner and staunch advocate of the policies of President Lincoln during the Civil War. Rhode Island Senator Samuel G. Arnold of Providence was also a Republican; he served in the Union Army until 1862, when he was elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of James F. Simmons.[citation needed]
Rhode Island Governor William Sprague IV accompanied troops in the First Battle of Bull Run on July 21, 1861, but he declined a commission as a brigadier general and remained in office. In 1862, he attended the War Governors' Conference in Altoona, Pennsylvania which backed Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation and the Union war effort. He was not re-elected as governor, but he was elected as a Senator to replace Arnold; he took office in 1863 and served into Reconstruction. William C. Cozzens became Governor in 1863; he was succeeded by James Y. Smith who led Rhode Island during the last two years of the war.[4]
Major General Silas Casey of East Greenwich, Rhode Island led a division in the Army of the Potomac during the 1862 Peninsula Campaign that suffered heavy losses at the Battle of Seven Pines facing George Pickett's brigade. He wrote the three-volume System of Infantry Tactics published in August 1862, and Infantry Tactics for Colored Troops published in March 1863. These manuals were used by both sides during the Civil War.[6][7]
^Bliss, Zenas Randall (2007). Thomas T. Smith; et al. (eds.). The Reminiscences of Major General Zenas R. Bliss, 1854-1876: from the Texas frontier to the Civil War and back again. Texas State Historical Association. ISBN978-0-87611-226-7.
Denison, Frederic. Sabres and Spurs: The First Regiment Rhode Island Cavalry in the Civil War (1876) online
Dyer, Frederick H., A Compendium of the War of Rebellion: Compiled and Arranged From Official Records of the Federal and Confederate Armies, Reports of the Adjutant Generals of the Several States, The Army Registers and Other Reliable Documents and Sources, Des Moines, Iowa: Dyer Publishing, 1908 (reprinted by Morningside Books, 1978), ISBN978-0-89029-046-0.
Grandchamp, Robert. Rhode Island and the Civil War: Voices from the Ocean State (2012) excerpt
Gryzb, Frank L. Hidden History of Rhode Island and the Civil War (2013) excerpt
Gryzb, Frank L. Rhode Island's Civil War Hospital: Life and Death at Portsmouth Grove, 1862-1865 (2012) excerpt
Hopkins, William Palmer, and George B. Peck. The Seventh Regiment Rhode Island Volunteers in the Civil War, 1862-1865 (1903) online
Marvel, William. Burnside (U of North Carolina Press, 1991) Scholarly biography of the state's most famous soldier, General Ambrose Burnside.
Miller, Richard F. ed. States at War, Volume 1: A Reference Guide for Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont in the Civil War (2013) excerpt
Rable, George C. Index to The Fourteenth Regiment Rhode Island Heavy Artillery (Colored,) in the War to Preserve the Union, 1861-1865. (2021).
Rhodes, Robert Hunt. All for the Union: The Civil War Diary of Elijah Hunt Rhodes. (Orion Books, 1985), a famous diary of a Rhode Island soldier
Spicer, William Arnold. History of the Ninth and Tenth Regiments Rhode Island Volunteers, and the Tenth Rhode Island Battery, in the Union Army in 1862 (Providence: Snow and Farnham, 1892).
Williams, Frank J. and Patrick T. Conley. The Rhode Island Home Front in the Civil War Era (2013) excerpt