Republican Blues

Republican Blues

Distinctive Unit Insignia: 118 FA
Active 1808–present
Country  United States
Allegiance United States United States of America
Confederate States of America Confederate States of America
Branch  United States Army
 Confederate States Army
United States United States of America
Type Artillery
Size Brigade
Garrison/HQ Savannah, Georgia
Nickname(s) Blues (special designation)[1]
Lightning Brigade (former)
Engagements War of 1812
American Civil War
World War I
World War II
Iraq Campaign
Afghanistan Campaign
Decorations Presidential Unit Citation, Meritorious Unit Commendation, French Croix de Guerre with Palm, Luxembourg Croix de Guerre, Belgian Fourragere
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Robert H. Anderson
John Wayne Anderson
George Wayne Anderson

The Republican Blues were a military company formed in Savannah, Georgia. The Blues were first organized in 1808 and served at Fort Jackson and in Florida during the War of 1812. The Blues, typical of Savannah's old military units, were a fraternal social organization and a well-trained military unit. The Blues defended Georgia's coast from the Union Navy between 1861 and 1864. Unlike most Confederate units formed during the Civil War, the Republican Blues had been an existing militia organization for over fifty years before the war started. They recruited from the most prominent families in and around Savannah. They fought in all the nations wars after The Civil War as part of the Georgia National guard, with the lone exception being The Spanish-American War. Today they remain in service, as a modular artillery brigade of the Georgia Army National Guard, the 118th Field Artillery.

As part of the 48th Infantry Brigade, the 118th FA is of the oldest units in US Army history. It is one of few units in the US military that also saw service as a unit of the Confederate States of America during the US Civil War.

History and lineage

The Republican Blues were originally organized in 1808, at Savannah, Georgia. It mustered into Federal service in June 1812, in Florida.

The unit was brought into Confederate service on 20 April 1861 at Savannah, GA and was reorganized and redesignated on 22 April 1861 as Company C, 1st Battalion, Georgia Infantry. The Blues joined eight other companies of Savannah militias to form the First Volunteer Regiment of Georgia. At the order of Governor Joseph E. Brown to occupy strategic Fort Pulaski, Commander of the Regiment, Colonel Alexander R. Lawton, and his adjutant Charles Olmstead would plan and execute the first act of rebellion in the state of Georgia, On January 3, 1861 a force of 134 men and 6 artillery pieces landed at the deserted fort, and raised the red star of Georgia for the first time. Most of the force was made up from men from the Savannah Volunteer Guards, the Chatham Artillery, Georgia Hussars, and the Oglethorpe Light Infantry. More than three months before Fort Sumter, Georgia took the first action.

Assigned to strategic Fort McAllister in 1862,[2] they repulsed more than seven US Naval attempts to capture Fort McAllister, which protected Savannah. They successfully fought off Union ironclads, winning the praise of Confederate generals and congressmen. In May 1864, the Blues left Fort McAllister to reinforce Confederate Gen. Joseph E. Johnston's army in northern Georgia. After Union Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman's forces captured Atlanta, The Blues went into Tennessee and fought in the Battle of Nashville. It was during this time when the Blues began to show signs of war weariness. The Blues later marched into the Carolinas and surrendered to Sherman's army in the spring of 1865 in North Carolina. The unit was reorganized and federally recognized 29 November 1920 in the Georgia National Guard at Savannah, Georgia.

From 1945 to 1973, the unit underwent a series of redesignations culminating in its current form, as part of the 48th Infantry Brigade. It reorganized and was federally recognized 12 December 1946 as an element of the 48th Infantry Division.

References

  1. "Special Designation Listing". United States Army Center of Military History. 21 April 2010. Archived from the original on 9 June 2010. Retrieved 14 July 2010.
  2. Christman, p. 16
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