128th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment

128th Regiment Illinois Volunteer Infantry
Active November 23, 1862, to April 1, 1863
Country United States
Allegiance Union
Branch Infantry

The 128th Regiment Illinois Volunteer Infantry was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War.

Service

The 128th Illinois was organized at Camp Butler, Illinois, and mustered into Union service on November 4, 1862.[1]

The regiment was assigned to District of Columbus, XVI Corps, Department of Tennessee from November 1862 to April 1863.

Losses

The regiment suffered 1 officer and 34 men killed by disease and 700 men by desertion.[2]

Disbanded

Following the Emancipation Proclamation, the regiment suffered 700 desertions. The regiment was disbanded on April 1, 1863, by order the War Department. Citing "an utter want of discipline" in the regiment, Adjutant General Lorenzo Thomas dismissed the regiment's commanding officer Colonel Robert M. Hundley, 29 other officers, and the regimental chaplain, from Union service on April 4.[3]

The few remaining men of the 128th Illinois were consolidated into a detachment under command of First Lieutenants W. A. Lemma, William M. Cooper, and Assistant Surgeon George W. French and reassigned to 9th Illinois Volunteer Infantry Regiment.[4]

References

  1. "A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion" by Frederick H. Dyer
  2. Civil War Archives, Union Regimental Histories
  3. Adjutant General's Report, Special Order, April 1, 1863, Cario, Ill.
  4. Adjutant General's Report, Special Order, April 1, 1863, Cario, Ill.

External links

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