First
Kentucky "Orphan" Brigade
BATTLE FLAGS OF THE ORPHAN
BRIGADE
Part 2
Geoff Walden
When Gen. Joseph Johnston took command of the Army of
Tennessee in December 1863, he attempted to standardize the many different flag styles
into one type, as was the norm in the Army of Northern Virginia. He chose a style based on
the Virginia theatre battle flag: a St. Andrew's Cross pattern of blue bars on a red
field, with white fimbrations (bar borders) and stars. The flags were actually made
rectangular, as opposed to the square flags used in Virginia. These flags were
probably made at depot facilities in Augusta, Georgia (and possibly other locations), and
issued to the army at Dalton, Georgia. The Orphan Brigade regiments were each issued one
flag and one flag staff on 26 January 1864.
(Quartermaster Records, 1st Kentucky Brigade, Chapter VIII, Vol. 72, Record Group 109,
National Archives)
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The battle flag of the 6th Kentucky
Infantry was captured during the battle of Jonesboro on 1 September 1864, when the left
wing of the Brigade was surrounded and overrun. The 10th Michigan Infantry captured the
6th's flag, and the 2nd Kentucky tore their colors to pieces to save them from the same
fate. The flag of the 6th Kentucky was returned to Kentucky on 25 March 1905, and it is
carefully preserved today in the collections of the Kentucky Military History Museum in
Frankfort.
(Official Records, Ser. I, Vol. 38, Pt. 1, p. 674)
Left:
Battleflag of the 6th Kentucky Infantry, 1864 (restored)
(courtesy Kentucky Historical Society / Military History Museum) |
The 6th
Kentucky's flag shows some characteristics common to other Army of Tennessee flags.
Ideally, all battle flags (Federal and Confederate) were to be marked with the designation
of the owning unit, in order to identify lost and captured colors. While this practice was
certainly not universal, most units did identify their colors in some manner. The 6th
Kentucky's flag is marked with an abbreviation of the unit's official complete
designation: 6th Regiment, Kentucky Volunteer Infantry. Battle honors were added to
Confederate colors in the Western Theatre beginning in late 1862. These were only supposed
to indicate victorious actions in which the unit had participated, but most units listed
all of their battles. Those for the 6th Kentucky included
Shiloh, Vicksburgh [sic], Baton Rouge, Murfreesboro, and Chickamauga. A flag honor unique
to the Army of Tennessee was the "crossed cannons inverted." This decoration was
authorized for units that had captured enemy artillery in battle (the 6th Kentucky overran
and captured a section of Bridges' Illinois Battery at Chickamauga). |
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Above:
Close up of the inverted crossed cannons award,
Battle flag of the 6th Kentucky Infantry
(courtesy Kentucky Historical Society / Military History Museum) |
Rather than surrender their remaining flags at the
end of the war, the Orphans cut them up and distributed the pieces among the men as
mementos. Mrs. Bettie Phillips, wife of Capt. William Phillips of the 4th Kentucky,
performed this service for the men. Pieces of the flags of the 4th and 9th regiments have
been identified in private collections (the flags of the 2nd and 6th being lost at
Jonesboro, and the flag of the 5th being lost at Atlanta on 22 July 1864).
(Thompson (1898), p. 322; 4th Kentucky Infantry files,
collection of G.R. Walden; Filson Club Collections, Louisville, KY; Kentucky Adjutant General's Report, Vol. I, p. 286)
Crossed
cannons inverted, cut from the flag of the 9th Kentucky Infantry
during the surrender at Washington, Georgia, 6 May 1865.
This piece was kept by the last color-bearer, Ensign James
G. Foulks
(the lettering was probably not on the original flag, but added later to this piece).
(Photo reproduced here by the kind permission of Matt Grubb)
Pvt Richard Kidder Woodson 2nd Ky. Inf. |
Several color-bearers of the Brigade earned
distinction during the War Between the States. Private Richard
Kidder Woodson carried the flag of the 2nd Kentucky during the disastrous charge at
Murfreesboro, where he was mortally wounded. The 2nd Kentucky lost another color-bearer
when Sgt. Robert Clinton Anderson was killed as he advanced through the storm of fire to
plant his colors on the enemy's works at Chickamauga. Ensign
Robert Henry Lindsay of the 4th Kentucky was twice named to the Confederate Roll of
Honor,
a very rare distinction. He was mortally wounded during the assault of the Orphan Brigade
at Jonesboro on 31 August 1864. His grave lay unmarked and forgotten for years, until
Kentucky members of the Sons of Confederate Veterans and the Fourth Kentucky Infantry
reenactment unit placed a Confederate marker in the Pat Cleburne Cemetery in Jonesboro in
1992. |
Grave of Ensign Robert H. Lindsay, Jonesboro |
(Confederate Veteran Assn. of Kentucky, Directory, 5th Ed. (1895), p. 195; Thompson
(1898), pp. 218, 588, 649; Gregory A. Walden, "Color-Bearers of the 'Orphan
Brigade'," Confederate Veteran, July-August 1993, pp. 34-39)
Further information can be found in:
- Geoffrey R. Walden, "Flags of the Kentucky 'Orphan' Brigade," Journal of
the Confederate Historical Society of Great Britain, Vol. 16, No. 10, Spring 1988,
pp. 20-24.
- H.M. Madaus and R.H. Needham, Battle Flags of the Confederate Army of Tennessee
(Milwaukee: Milwaukee Public Museum, 1976).
- Flags of the Confederacy webpage, http://www.confederateflags.org
Copyright � 1996-2014, Geoffrey R. Walden; all rights reserved.
This page last updated on: October 01, 2014
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