18th Corps |
19th Corps Department of the Gulf |
20th Corps Army of the Cumberland |
|---|
Eighteenth Army Corps.
December 24, 1862.--The President ordered that the troops in North Carolina should constitute the Eighteenth Army Corps, and assigned Major-General J. G. Foster to the command.
August 1, 1863.--The Seventh Army Corps transferred to this corps.
July 17, 1864.--The troops of the Department of North Carolina and Virginia serving with the Army of the Potomac in the field, to constitute this corps, and Major-General William F. Smith assigned to command.
December 3, 1864.--Discontinued.
Nineteenth Army Corps.
January 5, 1863.--Ordered that the troops in the Department of the Gulf shall constitute this corps, to be commanded by Major-General N. P. Banks.
July 11, 1864.--Major-General Gilmore assigned to temporary command of the part of the corps in the Department of Washington.
July 13, 1864.--Brigadier-General W. H. Emory placed in command of this portion of the corps.
November 7, 1864.--Brevet Major-General Emory appointed to command; headquarters with the army of Sheridan, in the field. The organization in the Military Division of West Mississippi known as the Nineteenth Corps, abolished.
March 20, 1865.--Discontinued.
Twentieth Army Corps.
January 9, 1863.--The Army of the Cumberland divided into three corps: the Fourteenth, Twentieth, and Twenty-first. The Twentieth to be commanded by Major General A. McD. McCook.
September 28, 1863.--Consolidated with the Twenty-first, and constituted the Fourth Corps.
April 4, 1864.--Re-formed of the Eleventh and Twelfth Corps by consolidation, and Major-General J. Hooker placed in command.
June 1, 1865.--Discontinued.
18th Corps |
19th Corps Department of the Gulf |
20th Corps Army of the Cumberland |
|---|