Battle of New Orleans order of battle: American
| United States Forces, Louisiana | |
|---|---|
Andrew Jackson surrounded by his troops at the Battle of New Orleans, 1815 | |
| Active | 1814–1815 |
| Country | United States of America |
| Branch | United States Army |
| Type | Army |
| Size | 4,698 men on the Left Bank >750 men on the Right Bank |
| Engagements | Battle of New Orleans |
| Commanders | |
| Commander-in-chief (1 December 1814 – 27 January 1815) | Major General Andrew Jackson |
The following units and commanders of the American armed forces under Andrew Jackson fought at the Battle of New Orleans during War of 1812. The British order of battle is shown separately.
Abbreviations used
Military rank
- MG = Major General
- BG = Brigadier General
- Col = Colonel
- Ltc = Lieutenant Colonel
- Maj = Major
- Cpt = Captain
Other
- k = killed
- w = wounded
- m = missing
Forces
7th Military District: MG Andrew Jackson
General Staff
- Advisers to General Jackson: Brigadier General Jean Joseph Amable Humbert,
Governor William C. C. Claiborne[1] - Aides-de-camp: Abner Lawson Duncan, John Randolph Grymes, Edward Livingston
- Aide-de-camp and judge advocate, Major Auguste Davezac
- Volunteer chief of engineers: Arsène Lacarrière-Latour
| Division | Brigade | Regiments and Others | Strength | k[a] | w[a] | m[a] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Left Wing[3] |
Carroll's Brigade[4]
|
|
1100 aggregated[b] |
4 | 8 | 0 |
| Coffee's Brigade[4]
|
|
813 aggregated Tennesseans[b] |
1 | 0 | 0 | |
| Adair's Brigade[7]
|
|
1 | 12 | 0 | ||
|
Right Wing[3]
|
Louisiana Militia and Volunteers[11]
|
|
742 aggregate[b] |
1 | 15 | 0 |
| U.S. Regular Army[11] |
|
2 | 1 | 0 | ||
| Ltc William MacRea[16] | Gunners manning the artillery pieces | 154 aggregate[b] | 3 | 1 | 0 | |
| Reporting directly | Reserves[11] |
|
150 50 30, subtotaling 230 cavalry[b] |
0 | 0 | 0 |
| Battalion, Kentucky Militia: Maj Reuben Harrison | 305[c] | 0 | 0 | 0 | ||
| West Bank[11] BG David B. Morgan |
Naval contingent: Commodore Daniel Patterson | 30[e][f] | 0 | 0 | 0 | |
| 2nd Louisiana Militia Brigade: Maj Paul Arnaud[14] | 640[g] | 1 | 4 | 15 | ||
| Gray's Kentucky Militia Regiment: Ltc John Davis (detached to West Bank from Adair)[14] | 250 & 150[h] |
0 | 0 | 4 | ||
| Additional Reinforcements (400 militiamen) from East Bank: Gen. Humbert[20][21] | 400 reinforcements[21] | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Location | Formation | Constituent vessels | Complements |
|---|---|---|---|
| In the river | Vessels of the Naval Station at New Orleans, reporting to Commodore Daniel Patterson[22][23] | USS Louisiana, 8 x 24 pdr guns on the port side, 8 x 24 pdr guns on the starboard side | >120 crew[i] |
| USS Carolina (lost on December 27, 1814),[25] 3 x 9 pdr guns, 12 x 12 pdr guns | >100 crew [26] | ||
| 2 Jeffersonian gunboats[27] [28] | 2 crews totaling 52 men[j] |
References
Notes
- ^ a b c Reproducing Adjutant General Robert Butler's casualty report to Brigadier General Parker dated January 16, 1815. 13 dead, 39 wounded, 19 missing or captured; total: 71.[2]
- ^ a b c d e f g h A grand total of 4,698 men on the Left Bank[5][6]
- ^ a b Mitchusson on the Left Bank alternatively had a strength of not 462, but 746 officers and enlisted men, according to Quisenberry. From within this, Maj Reuben Harrison was detached. He had a strength of 305 men, according to Smith (1904) p.74 and Quisenberry (1915) p.140, or 306 according to Buell (1904).
- ^ On the Left Bank 'the Seventh regular infantry, 430 strong... and 240 regulars of the Forty-fourth regiment'[15]
- ^ Patterson states this figure of 30 men, in his correspondence about the fighting on the Right Bank.[18] The pseudo "Naval Battalion" of 106 men is an invention of Buell, which does not appear in other sources. The terminology in use for a body of seamen on shore of the Royal Navy was a "Naval Brigade", which may have been the inspiration for Buell.
- ^ "Some myths are manufactured by intent, and no one more assiduously invented material to cement the "western hunter" marksmanship myth at New Orleans than the industrious Augustus Caesar Buell, who actually created forgeries from the 1890s or earlier until his death in 1904... Buell was particularly anxious to bolster the prevailing myth that deadly American rifle marksmanship by Kentuckians and Tennesseans won the battle.... Buell's forgeries as presented in his Jackson biography were unfortunately accepted at face value by some subsequent historians. Stanley C Arthur, admittedly not a trained historian... used much of Buell's fiction in [his book] "New Orleans"."[19]
- ^ Louis Valentin Foelckel's letter has a total strength of 640 Louisiana militiamen[14] on the Right Bank, versus 546 Louisiana militiamen from Roosevelt.[5]
- ^ Louis Valentin Foelckel's letter has LTC John Davis with 400 Kentucky militiamen on the Right Bank.[14] Of these, Roosevelt has 180 with arms, another 70 with arms provided by the Naval Arsenal, for a "rifle" strength of 250, alongside 150 unarmed men.[5]
- ^ The USS Yorktown was a 16-gun sloop-of-war of the United States Navy. This similar vessel had a complement of 150 crewmen[24]
- ^ "It may be best to consider the large ones as having 41, and the small 26 men, which were the complements of the American gunboats of the same sizes."[29]
Citations
- ^ "William Claiborne". Retrieved Feb 8, 2017.
- ^ Latour 1999, pp. 242–243.
- ^ a b Greene, 2004, Chapter VI: Final Preparations
- ^ a b Kanon, Tom. "Regimental Histories of Tennessee Units During the War of 1812". Tennessee State Library and Archives. Archived from the original on December 28, 2015.
- ^ a b c d Roosevelt, p.223
- ^ O'Connor 1817, p. 291.
- ^ Quisenberry, 1915, pp.134-135.
- ^ Smith, 1904, pp.187 to 195, Roll of Field and Staff, Slaughter's Regiment - APPENDIX II
- ^ Smith, 1904, pp.196 to 202, Roll of Field and Staff, Davis's Regiment - APPENDIX III
- ^ Smith, 1904, pp.179 to 186, Roll of Field and Staff, Mitchusson's Regiment - APPENDIX I
- ^ a b c d Pickles, p. 37.
- ^ Harrison, Thomas,THE BATTALIONS OF FREE MEN OF COLOR, page 113 of 198 within Troop Roster
- ^ Hinsdale, Glenn L., American troops in the January 8 battle, page 5 of 198 within Troop Roster
- ^ a b c d e Hughes & Brodine (ed), pp.1014-1015
- ^ Roosevelt 1900, p. 225.
- ^ Greene 2009, pp. 81, 188–195.
- ^ Latour, pp.106-107
- ^ Hughes & Brodine (ed), pp.1015-1019
- ^ Davis 2019, pp. 480–481.
- ^ Latour, pg.lxii
- ^ a b Latour, pp.120-121
- ^ Dudley 2015, pp. 38–45.
- ^ Smith 2008, p. 91.
- ^ "USS Yorktown". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. 2004. Retrieved 13 January 2017.
- ^ Roosevelt 1900, p. 241.
- ^ "Carolina". DANFS.
- ^ Hughes & Brodine 2023, p. 980.
- ^ Reilly 1974, p. 260.
- ^ Roosevelt 1900, p. 114.
Bibliography
- Davis, William C. (2019). The Greatest Fury: The Battle of New Orleans and the Rebirth of America. London, UK: Dutton Caliber, an imprint of Penguin Random House. ISBN 978-0-39-958522-7.
- Dudley, William S (February 2015). "The Pinchpenny Flotilla". Naval History. 29 (1). U.S. Naval Institute: 38–45.
- Greene, Jerome (September 5, 2004) [September 1985], "Chapter VI: Final Preparations", Jean Lafitte National Historic Park Historic Resource Study, National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior,
[Buell says] The breakdown of Jackson's available strength on both sides of the Mississippi was as follows:
- Greene, Jerome (December 28, 2009) [1985], "Part 1 The New Orleans Campaign of 1814-1815 in Relation to the Chalmette Battlefield", The Search for the Lost Riverfront: Historical and Archaeological Investigations at the Chalmette Battlefield, Jean Lafitte National Historical Park and Preserve (PDF), National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior
- Hughes, Christine F.; Brodine, Charles E., eds. (2023). The Naval War of 1812: A Documentary History, Vol. 4. Washington: Naval Historical Center (GPO). ISBN 978-1-943604-36-4.
- Latour, Arsène Lacarrière (1999) [1816], Historical Memoir of the War in West Florida and Louisiana in 1814–15, with an Atlas, Gainesville: University Press of Florida, ISBN 0-8130-1675-4, OCLC 40119875
- O'Connor, Thomas (1817). An impartial and correct history of the war between the United States of America, and Great Britain. New York: John Low.
- Pickles, Tim (1994). New Orleans 1815: Andrew Jackson Crushes the British. Campaign 28. Osprey Publishing. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-85-532360-5.
- Quisenberry, Anderson Chenault (1969) [1915]. "X. The battle of New Orleans". Kentucky in the War of 1812. Genealogical Publishing Company. ISBN 0-8063-0282-8.
- Reilly, Robin (1974). The British at the gates – the New Orleans campaign in the War of 1812. New York: Putnam. OCLC 839952.
- Roosevelt, Theodore (1900). The Naval War of 1812. Vol. II. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press.
- Smith, Gene Allen (2008). "Preventing the "Eggs of Insurrection" from Hatching: The U.S. Navy and Control of the Mississippi River, 1806-1815" (PDF). Northern Mariner. issue Nos. 3-4, (July–October 2008). 18 (3–4). The Canadian Nautical Research Society: 79–91. doi:10.25071/2561-5467.355. S2CID 247349162. Retrieved 19 December 2021.
- Smith, Zachary F. (1904), The battle of New Orleans, Louisville, Kentucky: John P. Morton & Co.
- "Troop Roster" (PDF). January 8 battle of Chalmette. National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. April 17, 2015 [1977]. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 8, 2024. Retrieved April 4, 2024.
External links
- "The Battle of New Orleans Order of Battle and Scenario Rules". February 2016. Image of USS Louisiana – via warof1812wargaming.blogspot.
- "The New Orleans Campaign". February 21, 2016. Images of US troops – via warof1812wargaming.blogspot.