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10th Virginia Reserves Battalion Infantry

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Note: Formerly known as the 4th Virginia Battalion Valley Reserves.

Muster In: Organized August 23, 1864 with five companies.  Officially designated as the 10th Battalion Virginia Reserves on February 27, 1865.1,2
Muster Out: ?

Commander(s):
Major William W. Byrd
Commander Image

Commander 2
Commander Image

Commander 3
Commander Image

First Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army3

  • Commander: Major William W. Byrd (?)4
  • Unit Strength:
  • Weapons:

Second Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army5

  • Commander: Major William W. Byrd (?)6
  • Unit Strength:
  • Weapons:

Third Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army7

  • Commander: Major William W. Byrd (?)8
  • Unit Strength:
  • Weapons:

Fourth Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army9

  • Commander: Major William W. Byrd (?)10
  • Unit Strength:
  • Weapons:

Fifth Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army11

  • Commander: Major William W. Byrd (?)12
  • Unit Strength:
  • Weapons:

Sixth Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army13

  • Commander: Major William W. Byrd (?)14
  • Unit Strength:
  • Weapons:

Seventh Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army15,16

  • Commander:
    • Major William W. Byrd (?)17
    • None listed. (November & December 1864)18,19
  • Unit Strength:
  • Weapons:

Eighth Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army20,21

  • Commander:
    • None listed. (January 1865)22
    • Major William W. Byrd (February 1865)23,24
  • Unit Strength:
  • Weapons:

Ninth Offensive Order of Battle: Danville, Va. | First Military District | Department of North Carolina and Southern Virginia | Confederate Army25,26

  • Commander: Major William W. Byrd (?)27
  • Unit Strength:
  • Weapons:

Dyer’s/Sifakis’ Compendium Info:
Siege of Petersburg Battles28:

  • None listed.

Bibliography:

    Siege of Petersburg Documents Which Mention This Unit:

    Sources:

    1. Compendium of the Confederate Armies: Virginia by Stewart Sifakis, p. 181
    2. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Four of the five companies which made up the unit were created in April 1864, the fifth in August 1864.
    3. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., p. 116
    4. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Byrd is listed as the unit’s only commander, from “1864-65”.  I am unsure if he was consistently present from the beginning to the end of the unit’s existence, or if he was away at times.  Wallace mentions that this unit was temporarily consolidated into one company, Company E, of a temporary field organization called the 3rd (Chrisman’s) Battalion Virginia Reserves in September 1864.  This temporary battalion was different than the permanent 3rd Battalion Virginia Reserves. More research is needed.
    5. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., p. 116
    6. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Byrd is listed as the unit’s only commander, from “1864-65”.  I am unsure if he was consistently present from the beginning to the end of the unit’s existence, or if he was away at times.  Wallace mentions that this unit was temporarily consolidated into one company, Company E, of a temporary field organization called the 3rd (Chrisman’s) Battalion Virginia Reserves in September 1864.  This temporary battalion was different than the permanent 3rd Battalion Virginia Reserves. More research is needed.
    7. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 125
    8. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Byrd is listed as the unit’s only commander, from “1864-65”.  I am unsure if he was consistently present from the beginning to the end of the unit’s existence, or if he was away at times.  Wallace mentions that this unit was temporarily consolidated into one company, Company E, of a temporary field organization called the 3rd (Chrisman’s) Battalion Virginia Reserves in September 1864.  This temporary battalion was different than the permanent 3rd Battalion Virginia Reserves. More research is needed.
    9. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 135
    10. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Byrd is listed as the unit’s only commander, from “1864-65”.  I am unsure if he was consistently present from the beginning to the end of the unit’s existence, or if he was away at times.  Wallace mentions that this unit was temporarily consolidated into one company, Company E, of a temporary field organization called the 3rd (Chrisman’s) Battalion Virginia Reserves in September 1864.  This temporary battalion was different than the permanent 3rd Battalion Virginia Reserves. More research is needed.
    11. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 143
    12. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Byrd is listed as the unit’s only commander, from “1864-65”.  I am unsure if he was consistently present from the beginning to the end of the unit’s existence, or if he was away at times.  Wallace mentions that this unit was temporarily consolidated into one company, Company E, of a temporary field organization called the 3rd (Chrisman’s) Battalion Virginia Reserves in September 1864.  This temporary battalion was different than the permanent 3rd Battalion Virginia Reserves. More research is needed.
    13. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 152
    14. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Byrd is listed as the unit’s only commander, from “1864-65”.  I am unsure if he was consistently present from the beginning to the end of the unit’s existence, or if he was away at times.  Wallace mentions that this unit was temporarily consolidated into one company, Company E, of a temporary field organization called the 3rd (Chrisman’s) Battalion Virginia Reserves in September 1864.  This temporary battalion was different than the permanent 3rd Battalion Virginia Reserves. More research is needed.
    15. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 160
    16. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 169
    17. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Byrd is listed as the unit’s only commander, from “1864-65”.  I am unsure if he was consistently present from the beginning to the end of the unit’s existence, or if he was away at times.  Wallace mentions that this unit was temporarily consolidated into one company, Company E, of a temporary field organization called the 3rd (Chrisman’s) Battalion Virginia Reserves in September 1864.  This temporary battalion was different than the permanent 3rd Battalion Virginia Reserves. More research is needed.
    18. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 160
    19. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 169
    20. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 178
    21. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 189
    22. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 178
    23. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 189
    24. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Byrd is listed as the unit’s only commander, from “1864-65”.  I am unsure if he was consistently present from the beginning to the end of the unit’s existence, or if he was away at times.  Wallace mentions that this unit was temporarily consolidated into one company, Company E, of a temporary field organization called the 3rd (Chrisman’s) Battalion Virginia Reserves in September 1864.  This temporary battalion was different than the permanent 3rd Battalion Virginia Reserves. More research is needed.
    25. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 198
    26. The Confederate Order of Battle, Volume 1: The Army of Northern Virginia by F. Ray Sibley, Jr., page 208
    27. Wallace, Lee A., Jr. A Guide to Virginia Military Organizations 1861-1865, 2nd Ed. (Lynchburg, Va.: H. E. Howard, 1986), p. 225: Byrd is listed as the unit’s only commander, from “1864-65”.  I am unsure if he was consistently present from the beginning to the end of the unit’s existence, or if he was away at times.  Wallace mentions that this unit was temporarily consolidated into one company, Company E, of a temporary field organization called the 3rd (Chrisman’s) Battalion Virginia Reserves in September 1864.  This temporary battalion was different than the permanent 3rd Battalion Virginia Reserves. More research is needed.
    28. Compendium of the Confederate Armies: Virginia by Stewart Sifakis, p. 181
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