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Battle of Wyse Fork (March, 1865), US Civil War

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Profiles

  • Brevet Maj. General Thomas H. Ruger (USA) (1833 - 1907)
    grave Howard Ruger (April 2, 1833 – June 3, 1907) was an American soldier and lawyer who served as a Union general in the American Civil War. After the war, Ruger participated in Reconstruction as the ...
  • Maj.-Gen. Robert Frederick Hoke, (CSA) (1837 - 1912)
    Frederick Hoke (May 27, 1837 – July 3, 1912) was an American businessman, railroad executive, and a Confederate Army general during the American Civil War. Hoke and his division played a decisive role ...
  • Lt. General Daniel Harvey "D.H." Hill (CSA) (1821 - 1889)
    Daniel Harvey Hill (July 12, 1821 – September 24, 1889) was a Confederate general during the American Civil War and a Southern scholar. He was known as an aggressive leader, and as an austere, dee...
  • Major General Samuel Powhatan Carter, (USA) (1819 - 1891)
    Major General & Rear Admiral Samuel Perry 'Powhatan' Carter NOTE : President Lincoln appointed Carter to train the Union Army, with the rank of brevet Brigadier General. By war's end he had been pro...
  • Brevet Maj. Gen. Innis Newton Palmer, USA (1824 - 1900)
    Newton Palmer (March 30, 1824 – September 10, 1900) was a career officer in the United States Army, serving in the Mexican-American War, the Civil War, and on the Western frontier.Palmer was born in Bu...

The Battle of Wyse Fork, also known as the Battle of Kinston], was a battle fought in the Carolinas Campaign of the American Civil War, resulting in a Union Army victory.

On March 7, Federal advance units encountered Bragg's entrenched forces along Southwest Creek east of Kinston. Bragg's position not only blocked Cox's path but threatened a vital cross road and the New Bern-Goldsboro Railroad. Cox saw the importance of this position and moved forward the divisions of Brig. Gen. Innis N. Palmer to protect the railroad and Maj. Gen. Samuel P. Carter to protect the roads. Bragg's forces were also reinforced by veterans from the Army of Tennessee and the North Carolina Junior Reserves, all under the command of General D.H. Hill. Reinforced, Bragg went on the offensive and sent a division under North Carolina native Robert Hoke into the Union left flank. Hoke's attack hit a New England brigade in Carter's division, capturing an entire regiment (the 15th Connecticut Volunteer Infantry). Hill joined the advance with the Junior Reserves but they panicked and refused to go any further. Hill left them behind and moved on with his veterans, hitting the Union brigade and defeating it. Disaster threatened the Union flank when Bragg stopped Hill's advance and sent him far to the north to counterattack a Union threat. When Hill arrived he found no Federals in sight. At this time Cox, who had been away from the front lines, returned and moved up his reserve division under Maj. Gen. Thomas H. Ruger to plug the gap between Palmer and Carter.

Skirmishing continued for the next few days until Hoke tried again to turn the Federal left flank on March 10. The Federal position had been strongly fortified by artillery and repulsed Hoke's attack within an hour. Hill then moved against the Union center but again Federal artillery proved decisive and the attackers were repulsed. The remaining elements from the Federal XXIII Corps, which had just arrived in New Bern from Tennessee, were moving on Kinston. Facing five Union divisions, Bragg withdrew.

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