adjutant general: the chief administrative officer to a
military general.
Wikipedia aid-de-camp:
a member of the personal staff of a general officer, acting as
his confidential assistant.
National Park Service - Presidio of San Francisco
alacrity:
liveliness and eagerness; "he
accepted with alacrity"; "the smartness of the pace soon
exhausted him"
WordNet Search - 3.0
battery: In
military science, a battery is a group of artillery or cannon,
so grouped in order to facilitate battlefield communication and
the organization of barrages.
Wikipedia
brigade: An organization of infantry
regiments that was the basic fighting unit during the Civil War.
It usually numbered approximately 2000 men. Early in the war,
brigades existed with only two regiments. As the war dragged on
and regiments shrank in size from losses due to battle or
disease, the number of regiments in a brigade increased to keep
the number of men about the same.
Illinois
in the Civil War
caisson:
a two-wheeled military vehicle carrying
artillery ammunition; a chest to hold ammunition
WordNet Search - 3.0
celerity:
a rate that is rapid WordNet
Search - 3.0
contravallation:
Contravallation is a standard military
tactic of siege used in ancient and modern warfare. It is the
process of the attacking army building a line of fortifications
around the besieged city facing away from the city (to protect
themselves from attacks by allies of the city's defenders and to
enhance the blockade of the city) and also the resulting
fortifications (known as 'lines of contravallation').
Wikipedia
corps: large
military unit composed of three divisions led by a lieutenant
general (Confederacy) or a major general (Union)
43rd
Pennsylvania
division: A
division is a large military unit or formation usually
consisting of around ten to fifteen thousand soldiers. In most
armies a division is composed of several regiments or brigades,
and in turn several divisions make up a corps.
Wikipedia
dragoon: Col.
Albert Gallatin Brackett, writing during the Civil War, defined
a dragoon in American practice as a sort of hybrid soldier
trained to fight both on horseback and on foot. Until 1846 all
Regular Army mounted regiments were termed dragoons, there being
the 1st and 2d Dragoon Regiments. Congress then created a
"Regiment of Mounted Riflemen," and in 1854 added the 1st and 2d
Cavalry Regiments. In August 1861 Congress redesignated all five
regiments as cavalry
National Park Service - Presidio of San Francisco
eclat: acclaim:
- enthusiastic approval; "the book met
with modest acclaim"; "he acknowledged the plaudits of the
crowd"; "they gave him more eclat than he really deserved";
- pomp: ceremonial elegance and splendor;
"entered with much eclat in a coach drawn by eight white
horses";
- brilliant or conspicuous success or
effect; "the eclat of a great achievement"
WordNet Search - 3.0
enfilade:
gunfire directed along the length rather than the breadth of a
formation; rake or be in a position to rake with gunfire in a
lengthwise direction
WordNet Search - 3.0
exigency:
emergency: a sudden unforeseen crisis (usually involving danger)
that requires immediate action.
WordNet Search - 3.0
fatuity:
absurdity: a ludicrous folly; "the crowd laughed
at the absurdity of the clown's behavior"
WordNet Search - 3.0; Used here in the
older sense meaning imbecility, dementia.
Archaic and Obsolete Terms
flank: the side of military or
naval formation; "they attacked the enemy's right flank"
WordNet Search - 3.0
garrison: a fortified military
post where troops are stationed; the troops who maintain and
guard a fortified place; [verb] station (troops) in a fort or
garrison
WordNet Search - 3.0
instant: in or
of the present month; "your letter of the 10th inst"
WordNet Search - 3.0
lunette: A 2 or
3 sided field fort, its rear open to interior lines, was called
a lunette. Lunettes were often named in honor of battery
commanders or commanding brigadier generals.
civilwarhome.com
picket: An
advance outpost or guard for a large force was called a picket.
Ordered to form a scattered line far in advance of the main
army's encampment, but within supporting distance, a picket
guard was made up of a lieutenant, 2 sergeants, 4 corporals, and
40 privates from each regiment. Picket duty constituted the most
hazardous work of infantrymen in the field. Being the first to
feel any major enemy movement, they were also the first liable
to be killed, wounded, or captured. And he most likely targets
of snipers. Picket duty, by regulation, was rotated regularly in
a regiment.
Definitions of
Civil War Terms
prostration:
extreme exhaustion.
eHistory at Ohio State University
qui vive - condition of
heightened watchfulness or preparation for action.
WordNet Search - 3.0
redoubt:
an outlying fortification or a small
temporary fort that might have been a detached post or a strong
position within a larger fort. It might have had the
characteristics of a fort, parapet, ditch, etc. Often hastily
constructed.
National Park Service - Presidio of San Francisco
retrograde: moving or directed or tending in a
backward direction or contrary to a previous direction ( as in
retrograde movement)
WordNet Search - 3.0
sanguine:
confidently optimistic and
cheerful; a blood-red color; inclined to a healthy reddish color
often associated with outdoor life
WordNet Search - 3.0
sagacity:
the mental ability to understand and
discriminate between relations;
judiciousness: the trait of forming opinions by
distinguishing and evaluating.
WordNet Search - 3.0
skedaddle: run away, as if in a
panic; a hasty flight
WordNet Search - 3.0
taw: a
large marble used for shooting in the game of marbles,
WordNet
Search - 3.0 (I have come across
the term long taw a number of times in various 19th
century sources and in the military context used, along with the
marbles definition, appears to mean long shot or long
range. There is a form of marbles game called Long
Taw which involves shooting marbles at distances of several
feet [reference: Every boy's book: a complete encyclopędia of
sports and amusements, ed. by E. Routledge, pub. 1881]
ultimo: in or of the month preceding
the present one; "your letter received on the 29th ult"
WordNet Search - 3.0
vedette, vidette: 1. forward scout - a mounted soldier
posted forward of a larger force to serve as a scout 2. small
fast scouting boat - a small fast boat posted forward of a
larger seaborne force to serve as a scout
from Encarta Dictionary: English (North
American) |