9th Kentucky, Orphan Brigade - Civil War era Arms & Uniforms

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  • Опубликовано: 13 дек 2022
  • The next installment of the sub-series “Arms & Uniforms” is here! In this series, we look at a particular unit from the Civil War and explore how their arms and uniforms changed throughout the war and look at the impact that this had on the men. Meet the 9th Kentucky Infantry, Confederate. They were part of the famed Orphan Brigade. A few things make this regiment interesting to learn about. Just to start, they switched to being mounted infantry during the war. There are many more interesting facts shared by Andrew Roscoe so enjoy hearing their story and seeing the progression of their arms and uniforms.
    Enjoying the series - please support us on Patreon! / civilwardigitaldigest
    Thank you to the Kentucky Museum at Western Kentucky University for use of the Randolph Jacket. www.wku.edu/kentuckymuseum/
    Thanks to the Kentucky Historical Society for the use of the Woodward Jacket, from the 9th Kentucky. www.kyhistory.com/
    Thanks to The Hardtacks for supporting this video with their music. Find more about them at: www.CivilWarFolkMusic.com
    Want to show off your interest in history and Civil War Digital Digest? Check out the store for shirts, drinking ware, and more: www.cafepress.com/civilwardigi...
    #CWDD #history #dighist #digitalhistory #digitalhistorian #education #research #connection #civilwar #Kentucky #kentuckyhistory #infantry #mounted infantry #csa #horses #soldier #orphanbrigade #braxtonbragg #generalbragg #stonesrivernps #uniforms #civilwardigitaldigest
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Комментарии • 114

  • @danieljosiahcotton
    @danieljosiahcotton Год назад +21

    LOVE THIS SERIES. Appreciate you guys. Best content on RUclips.

  • @redriver6541
    @redriver6541 8 месяцев назад +10

    There's a soldier buried near my house that was part of the orphan brigade. He was KIA at Shiloh. On 6 April 62 I believe. They brought his body home to Hodgenville KY to be buried near the midwife who helped deliver Abraham Lincoln....his brother is buried directly next to him....who was a Union Soldier.....who was wounded at Shiloh on that same day. He died in December of the same year from his wounds. That has always amazed me.

    • @Spacemanpan
      @Spacemanpan 4 месяца назад +1

      God knows which was right. God save them both.

  • @theguywhoasked770
    @theguywhoasked770 9 месяцев назад +3

    “My poor Orphan Brigade - they have cut it to pieces!”

  • @sharingtimeagain
    @sharingtimeagain Год назад +11

    You had me at Kentucky. 😍

  • @nimitz1739
    @nimitz1739 Год назад +21

    I’m meet the living historian in this a at Lookout Mountain last month. Really talented drummer. I hope y’all do more confederate stuff like this.

    • @CivilWarDigitalDigest
      @CivilWarDigitalDigest  Год назад +6

      Our goal is to keep growing quality history from both sides of the story! This was a fun one to do.

    • @WestTNConfed
      @WestTNConfed Год назад +2

      @@CivilWarDigitalDigest Thank you. I had ancestors on both sides, and my direct male lineage 4x great grandfather, James M. Cummins, died from wounds sustained at Chickasaw Bayou serving in the 49th Indiana. Leg was amputated but died a month later. Both sides deserve equal respect!

    • @anon9579
      @anon9579 Год назад

      I wonder what its like playing the bad guys in the civil war

    • @farpointgamingdirect
      @farpointgamingdirect Год назад +2

      @@anon9579 I bet you didn't know the South had black soldiers too...Check out Allan Nevins' 8 volume history of the war

  • @rolandweitbrecht3860
    @rolandweitbrecht3860 Год назад +3

    Have the Diary of John Jackman, 4th Kentucky at home.....also 'Orphan Brigade'.....very good report from Jackman....👍

  • @threefiveseven
    @threefiveseven Год назад +4

    Great video! My 4th great-grandfather was in the 6thKY infantry CSA. Wounded at baton rouge and surrended to sherman in 1865.

  • @coltonregal1797
    @coltonregal1797 Год назад +7

    Great to hear about a unit from my home state! I reenact with the 4th Kentucky, also from the orphan brigade.

    • @NATOArms
      @NATOArms Год назад

      I had an ancestor in the 6th KY and it is sad there are no reenacting groups for them😢

    • @JOSEPHMATTHEWHOLLAND
      @JOSEPHMATTHEWHOLLAND 9 месяцев назад

      Very awesome my friend 💪💯

    • @carywest9256
      @carywest9256 4 месяца назад

      ​@@NATOArmsThen you are the nucleus of starting a group. By using the unit desenation, you and one other person can get the ball rolling.
      I've reenacted with men and their girlfriends/wives to have the numbers you need for even a squad.
      It would do your ancestor(s) proud to look down upon you and know you care enough to honor him from that era.

  • @CaptainChip501
    @CaptainChip501 3 месяца назад

    My regiment, 139th PVI, was one of the few regiments to keep and have their frock coats through out the war.

  • @peterkeen3315
    @peterkeen3315 Год назад +7

    The arms and uniforms series are by far my favorite videos you provide us!

  • @kylercalhoun4438
    @kylercalhoun4438 9 месяцев назад +2

    The Orphan Brigade is what I’ve based my impression on. Very informative, thank you sir

  • @JOSEPHMATTHEWHOLLAND
    @JOSEPHMATTHEWHOLLAND 9 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome from Todd and Caldwell Counties Kentucky 🇺🇲🤘

  • @allanburt5250
    @allanburt5250 Год назад +8

    Fantastic, much appreciate what you guys are doing to bring this important history to us ...

  • @emokellen
    @emokellen Год назад +3

    I love these uniform and weapons videos. I liked your one about the 2nd WIS. This one is great too. I want more of these videos for both North and South!

  • @jonathangomez9548
    @jonathangomez9548 Год назад +6

    Thank you guys for keeping this series going by far some of my favorites. Would love to see wheats special battalion video someday or segiels Germans

  • @WestTNConfed
    @WestTNConfed Год назад +3

    All of this talk about mounted infantry makes me want you guys to do a video on Forrest's brigade! Forrest wasn't a "cavalry" commander in the true sense but more so of a mounted infantry commander. I never could find much information on the units under his command as shown here, which by the way, was a pleasure to watch!! I like the point you made about the supply system crumbling. A lot of people think the Confederacy couldn't produce enough uniforms, but they actually created a rather efficient depot system from where they started. The issue was getting it to the men. Same could also be said for food. IIRC, a lot of it was due to poor management of railroads, and greedy planters/businesses wanting to still focus on transporting their profit goods, which the Confederate government allowed.

  • @CenterPorchNP
    @CenterPorchNP Год назад +1

    my 3rd great grandfather and 3 of his brothers were Orphan Brigade members.

  • @Shpadoinkle0007
    @Shpadoinkle0007 Год назад +4

    Excellent information. Interestingly enough the state of Mississippi stepped in to help equip and arm the Orphan Brigade during their initial organization. At that point of the war the CS central government had little war materiel to supply to recruits, and it was sort of "every state for itself" when it came to arms and uniforms!

    • @CivilWarDigitalDigest
      @CivilWarDigitalDigest  Год назад +1

      Glad to have you in the conversation, Dan!

    • @gregdzialo9998
      @gregdzialo9998 Год назад +1

      It surely makes sense in that after Shiloh & the Confederate withdrawal south to Corinth, resupply would have been available there; although admittedly I can't remember if only improvised logistics were hastened there or if an established depot existed.

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 9 месяцев назад

      That was the base of the confederacy
      States over central government
      Didn’t work when all needed to be United

  • @jameslongstreet9259
    @jameslongstreet9259 8 месяцев назад +1

    I have a suggestion for those two muskets hanging on the wall. Instead of using modern machine produced hooks, it should be possible to get handmade wrought iron hooks to place the muskets on. Would give a more periodic feel...

    • @CivilWarDigitalDigest
      @CivilWarDigitalDigest  8 месяцев назад

      Not that the motion picture strikes are done, that’s a great idea to put on the list, and I know just the blacksmith!! Thanks!

  • @FirstLast-di5sr
    @FirstLast-di5sr Год назад +1

    Quality and informative content! Thank you, thank you!

  • @alwentzel4776
    @alwentzel4776 Год назад +1

    Thanks for the information

  • @baystateplugflipper7061
    @baystateplugflipper7061 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great work!!!!

  • @warskye5686
    @warskye5686 Год назад +1

    Andy thanks great info..

  • @rc59191
    @rc59191 Год назад

    Love this series especially the Bucktail Brigade video. Hope you start to cover some like the 1st New York Light Artillery or General Bufords Cavalry.

  • @dianauhlman56
    @dianauhlman56 Год назад +1

    Another great video!

  • @user-ek5ci2uk7l
    @user-ek5ci2uk7l Год назад +2

    This channel is superb! You deserves thousands of more subscribers!

    • @CivilWarDigitalDigest
      @CivilWarDigitalDigest  Год назад +1

      Thank you! And we also have to give a shout out to our patrons on Patreon, who helped make many of the things we want to do possible.

  • @DippfaceHQ
    @DippfaceHQ Год назад

    Thank you for the history lesson

  • @sirisaacbrock798
    @sirisaacbrock798 Год назад +2

    Just found this channel, and I already love it. You're severely underrated. Awesome work!

    • @CivilWarDigitalDigest
      @CivilWarDigitalDigest  Год назад

      Thank you! Enjoy your time here. We love your RUclips handle as we are out of the Detroit area and Fort Wayne. We know who Sir Brock was and thank you for using his name.

    • @sirisaacbrock798
      @sirisaacbrock798 Год назад

      @@CivilWarDigitalDigest He’s one of my favourite historical figures! I’m from Stoney Creek, Ontario and while Brock didn’t fight at the Battle of Stoney Creek, he did lead many of my relatives in the fight at Queenstown.

  • @Ninthuncle657
    @Ninthuncle657 Год назад +1

    My great great grandfather was attached to the Orphan Brigade, being a member the 41st Alabama

  • @VloggingThroughHistory
    @VloggingThroughHistory Год назад +1

    Awesome stuff. My great great great grandfather was in the Orphan Brigade.

    • @CivilWarDigitalDigest
      @CivilWarDigitalDigest  Год назад

      Thanks! Very cool to see you. Have family on both sides. Happy holidays to you and yours!

    • @justme6924
      @justme6924 10 месяцев назад

      My great great great grandfather was also a member.
      He rests in a cemetery a mile from my home in Oklahoma.

  • @phillipodren8300
    @phillipodren8300 Год назад +1

    Great job on the series. Looking forward to see more in the future. Have you considered 1st and 2nd USSS?

  • @jameswalker6168
    @jameswalker6168 Год назад +1

    Great!

  • @nathangottschalk1049
    @nathangottschalk1049 Год назад +7

    Great video, I would love to see the first Missouri brigade (C.S.A.) covered. Something is really interesting about all of the border/“neutral” states.

  • @ChicagoDB
    @ChicagoDB Год назад +1

    Nice work…

  • @jorgemartinpaez4376
    @jorgemartinpaez4376 Год назад

    Never reckon Ive heard of the 9th KY CSA inf 5th Inf? Very interesting

  • @Kanesconscience
    @Kanesconscience Год назад +3

    Excellent work! Right after Stones River, Charles Semple, Breckinridge's divisional ordnance officer, reported the Orphan Brigade had 1,052 Enfield rifles and 190 .69 caliber smoothbores making them the best-armed brigade in the division.

  • @AlCapone-dl3cd
    @AlCapone-dl3cd Год назад +1

    Part of my ky family went to the south and north. They hated each other. sadly.

  • @bootsontheground3047
    @bootsontheground3047 Год назад

    Could you do one on the 2nd Arkansas Inf?

  • @JubalEarly52
    @JubalEarly52 Год назад +2

    Great video! I'm sure it was just a verbal slip up, but its the Army of Tennessee for the CSA. Army of the Tennessee is a Union army.

  • @cm958
    @cm958 9 месяцев назад

    How about the 1st S.C. Rifles next? I'd say that the early-war uniform is quite an eye-catcher.

  • @doriandoloreofficial
    @doriandoloreofficial Год назад +1

    Heck yes!!!!

  • @dantankboy4155
    @dantankboy4155 Год назад +1

    I love this!

  • @Rhett_Kierbow
    @Rhett_Kierbow Год назад

    Can you please do the 44th georgia

  • @leonardroman6544
    @leonardroman6544 Год назад +1

    Links to the previous videos you referenced? Please and thank you.

  • @lonnieclemens8028
    @lonnieclemens8028 Год назад

    This has been an excellent video. I have always wanted to know how the Orphan BDE was funded. Did the soldiers of the 9th Kentucky get paid? Did the confederacy in Kentucky have a budget?

    • @lonnieclemens8028
      @lonnieclemens8028 Год назад

      @rawcramp7327 That is awesome to hear. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @mickeyholding7970
    @mickeyholding7970 Год назад +1

    Me too.

  • @Mag_Aoidh
    @Mag_Aoidh Год назад

    I have several kinfolk who were in the 9th Ky, they were just wearing blue coats instead.

  • @jamiemckechnie3662
    @jamiemckechnie3662 Год назад +1

    Had an ancestor in the 9th KY Co B

  • @mmcleod8148
    @mmcleod8148 7 месяцев назад

    I’d like to know more about the orphan brigade and border state soldiers.

    • @threefiveseven
      @threefiveseven 6 месяцев назад

      These soldiers thought Kentucky was going to join the rest of the south. And they were going to. Kentucky's neutrailty document even said as much. But before they could they got invaded by the CSA and stayed in the union as a result.

  • @MegaRiffraff
    @MegaRiffraff 10 месяцев назад

    👍🏻

  • @mikedesil23
    @mikedesil23 Год назад

    Winter. In Ken-tuck-ee

  • @Oneeyedhistorian
    @Oneeyedhistorian Год назад

    The 5th/9th is who i reenact. Company b “the Nelson grays”.

  • @michaelmcmurray8422
    @michaelmcmurray8422 Год назад

    It was the Army of Tennessee. The Army of the Tennessee (the river) was a Union army.

  • @sethleger6105
    @sethleger6105 Год назад +4

    Very nice video I always appreciate my state’s history although I do feel like it should be said Kentucky did have a pro confederate government, created at the Russellville convention with Bowling Green as the capital. They petitioned to join the confederacy and was accepted in December 1861, and was represented as the 13th and center star on the confederate flag and it’s battle flags.

    • @herecomesaregular8418
      @herecomesaregular8418 Год назад

      Kentucky was majority unionist amongst its citizenry, and never officially seceded. It's star was honorary, rather than official. It's place in popular memory as a confederate state is a product of the "lost cause" era, and is revisionist in the full. Many Kentuckians who espouse pro confederate sentiments do not realize how betrayed most of their ancestors would likely feel. All one needs to do is look at the number of CSA units born from the state, and how that number is absolutely dwarfed by the number of Union units contributed.

    • @sethleger6105
      @sethleger6105 Год назад +1

      @@herecomesaregular8418 70 kentucky counties formed the confederate government at the Russellville convention then the confederate government of Kentucky declared secession and was accepted into the Confederacy in late 1861. These events happened and can not be ignored. If you did the math of how many counties compared to the counties overall in kentucky that formed the new government was 70 out of 110 counties, a majority.

    • @sethleger6105
      @sethleger6105 Год назад

      @@herecomesaregular8418 and on the official part the confederate government accepted the government’s request to join the country that is as official as it gets.

  • @jorgemartinpaez4376
    @jorgemartinpaez4376 Год назад

    1862 KY CSA looks like a Johnny Reb

  • @jamiemckechnie3662
    @jamiemckechnie3662 Год назад

    Kentucky seceded in Nov of 1861 and was admitted to the Confederacy the following month.

  • @sgtNUKEtroop
    @sgtNUKEtroop Год назад

    tucking your trousers into you socks , authentic OR NOT ? , it serves a practical purpose - keep ticks and other small critters from crawling up your leg , but is it authentic ?

  • @keithmoore5306
    @keithmoore5306 Год назад

    NINTH KENTUCKY??? all the battle flags i've seen say the SIXTH is the orphan brigade!!!

    • @CivilWarDigitalDigest
      @CivilWarDigitalDigest  Год назад

      The sixth is a regiment. A brigade is a collection of regimens. It is the first grouping larger than a single regiment. Both of these regimens belong to that brigade. I hope this helps!

    • @keithmoore5306
      @keithmoore5306 Год назад

      @@CivilWarDigitalDigest yeah i've never heard of the regiment part in it and the 3 flags were all the 6th!

  • @matthewlee9728
    @matthewlee9728 3 месяца назад

    my kentucky nacestors were fine southerners that fought for the CSA may the south rise again

  • @MayoFilms83
    @MayoFilms83 Год назад

    If you were a neutral state should it matter if they still allowed citizens to join either side? Same with Tennessee.

    • @CivilWarDigitalDigest
      @CivilWarDigitalDigest  Год назад

      There is no such thing as neutral. They are border states. They stayed with the union officially.

  • @dontcare537
    @dontcare537 Год назад

    Old forgotten milk brigade

  • @pexxos1
    @pexxos1 Год назад

    There's no such thing as a "Confederate uniform".

  • @corneliussulla9963
    @corneliussulla9963 Год назад +1

    A longrifle without a patch box.
    From what I ve read so far is that it was not uncommon for them to lack one. Maybe an interesting topic for a future video? Or one for the revolutionary gazette?