TWENTY-SEVENTH REGIMENT IOWA VOLUNTEER INFANTRY.

     The Twenty-seventh Regiment of Iowa Infantry Volunteers was 
organized under the proclamation of President Lincoln dated July 2, 
1862.  The ten companies of which it was composed was ordered into 
quarters by Governor Kirkwood on dated ranging from July 30 to Aug 
26, 1862.  The rendezvous designated in the order was Camp Franklin, 
near Dubuque, Iowa, and there the companies, together with the field and 
staff officers, were mustered into the service of the United States, by 
Captain George S. Pierce, of the Regular Army, on dates ranging from 
September 1 to October 3. 1862.  At the completion of the muster of the 
last company, the regiment had an aggregate strength of 940.
     The regiment remained but a short time at Camp Franklin after the 
completion of its 
muster into the service.  On October 11, 1862, Colonel Gilbert was 
ordered to embark his regiment on transports and proceed to St. Paul, 
Minn., and there report to Major General John Pope, then in command of 
the Department of the Northwest.  After disembarking at St. Paul, the 
regiment marched to Fort Snelling and went into camp near the Fort.  At 
that time there were no hostile Indians in that vicinity.  A few days after 
going into camp, Colonel Gilbert received orders from General Pope to 
march with six companies of his regiment to Mille Lacs, Minn., 125 
miles north-west of St. Paul, for the purpose of superintending the 
payment of annuities to the friendly Indians in that section of the State.  
No hostile Indians were encountered on the march, and the object of the 
expedition was successfully accomplished.  Upon his return to Fort 
Snelling, on November 4th, Colonel Gilbert was ordered by General Pope 
to embark the six companies on transports and proceed to Cairo, Ill., to 
which place the other four companies had been sent during his absence 
on the expedition. Upon arriving at Cairo the regiment was reunited and 
remained in camp until November 20th, on which date it again embarked 
and was conveyer to Memphis, Tenn.
     On November 27th the regiment joined the army under Major General 
Sherman, with which it marched against the rebel army under General 
Price, the occupying a strongly intrenched position on the Tallahatchie 
River, below Waterford, Miss.  This movement was mad to reinforce the 
army under General Grant, then moving down the line of the Mississippi 
Central Railroad, with Vicksburg as the objective point.  General 
Sherman succeeded the crossing the Tallahatchie and, by outflanking 
General Price's army, compelled him to evacuate his formidable works 
and retreat towards the south.  The combined forces under General Grant 
pressed forward in pursuit of the enemy.  His forward movement was 
suddenly checked, however, by the bold and successful raid of a force of 
the enemy's cavalry, under command of the rebel General Van Dorn, 
which succeeded in reaching and capturing General Grant's base of 
supplies at Holly Springs, thus compelling the abandonment of the 
expedition and the falling back of the army to the line of the Memphis 
and Charleston Railroad.  The Twenty-seventh Iowa, while participating 
actively in all the operations of the troops with which it was associated 
on this expedition, did not come into actual conflict with the enemy, and 
suffered no casualties except from sickness, and the capture of eleven of 
its men—who were in hospital—by a band of rebel cavalry.  The men 
were paroled, however, and returned to the regiment the next day. 
      On December 31, 1862, the regiment, with other troops, was making 
a forced march to reinforce the troops under Genera Sullivan at 
Lexington, Tenn.  The men were without tents or shelter of any kind and 
suffered intensely from exposure to the inclement weather.  At the close 
of the year 1862, the regiment had lost 69 men, who had either died or 
been discharged as the result of sickness, while nearly 200 more were 
lying in hospitals, the victims of disease, many of whom subsequently 
died or were discharged on account of disability.  It was the common 
experience of new regiments.  In the first few months of their service 
disease claimed a far greater number of victims than the bullets of the 
enemy.
     On January 1, 1863, the Twenty-seventh Iowa reached Lexington, 
after its long and arduous march, only to find that it was too late to 
participate in the conflict, General Sullivan having succeeded in 
defeating the rebel forces under General Forrest without the aid of 
reinforcements.  The combined Union force immediately marched in 
pursuit of the retreating rebels, but did not succeed in overtaking them, 
the rebel General Forrest having safely effected the crossing of the 
Tennessee Rover at Clifton, and, upon the arrival of the Union troops at 
that place, the pursuit was abandoned.  The Twenty-seventh Iowa then 
returned to Jackson, Tenn., where, for the greater portion of the time, it 
remained, performing the duties of provost, picket and train guards, until 
June 2, 1862.  During this long period there were several short 
expeditions into the surrounding country for the purpose of gathering 
supplies, but there is no record of any portion of the regiment having 
come into contact with the enemy.  The post at Jackson was an important 
one, however, and the regiment was performing important service while 
on duty there.  The most notable event during this period was the moving 
of the regiment by rail to Corinth, Miss., early in February, 1863, which 
place it occupied as a garrison, while the troops which had been stationed 
there mad a successful expedition to Tuscumbia, Ala., under command of 
General Dodge.  The regiment was relieved from this duty and returned 
to Jackson on February 28th.  During the month of May the regiment was 
engaged in guarding the line of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad, 
from one to four of its companies being stationed at different points along 
the line.  When Jackson was evacuated, in the early part of June, the 
regiment was conveyed by rail to Grand Junction, then to LaGrange, 
from which place it marched to Moscow, on June 6th, and again entered 
upon the duty of guarding the line of the Mississippi Central Railroad.  
At this time Lieutenant Colonel Jed Lake was placed in command of the 
important post at LaGrange, which was a distributing point for army 
supplies.  On July 19th, Colonel Gilbert was placed in command of the 
Third Brigade, Third Division, Sixteenth Army Corps, with his 
headquarters at LaGrange, and the command of the Twenty-seventh Iowa 
devolved upon Major Howard.  On August 15th, Colonel James M. True, 
of the Sixty-second Illinois Infantry, returned from leave of absence and 
resumed command of the brigade, relieving Colonel Gilbert, who 
resumed command of his regiment.  
     On August 20th, the Twenty-seventh Iowa, with its brigade, marched 
to Memphis, and, on August 24th, the brigade was detached from its 
division and conveyed by transports to Helena, Ark., from which place it 
marched to Brownsville, where it joined the Army of Arkansas, 
commanded by Major General Steele.  On September 10th, the brigade 
moved with General Steele's army against Little Rock, and assisted in the 
capture of that important post.  As the brigade was held in reserve, and 
only the battery belonging in it becoming engaged, none of its regiments 
sustained any loss.  The regiment was stationed at Little Rock until 
November 15th, performing camp and picket guard duty when it was 
moved by rail to Devall's Bluff, the regiment with its brigade embarked 
on transports, moved down the white River to its mouth and thence up 
the Mississippi to Memphis, where it again went into camp just south of 
the city and remained there until January 28, 1864.  Thus far the Twenty-
seventh Iowa had had a most remarkable experience as compared with 
that of most of the other infantry regiments from its State. It had been in 
the service over fifteen months, had faithfully obeyed ever order and 
performed all the duties to which it had been assigned, but, so far, had 
not come into direct conflict with the enemy; and yet its losses had been 
heavy,--aggregating more than twenty-five per cent of the number borne 
upon its rolls when it first took the field.  Nine of its commissioned 
officers had resigned, while 64 of its enlisted men had died of disease, 
193 had been honorably discharged on account of being disabled by 
sickness for further service, and 4 had deserted.  At the close of the year 
1863, the reports show that the regiment had 22 commissioned officers 
and 486 enlisted men present for duty; total 508.  Some of the absentees 
were at home on furlough, but by far the larger number were sick in 
hospitals.  A good many of these recovered and subsequently rejoined the 
regiment.
     On January 28, 1864, Colonel Gilbert received orders to embark with 
his regiment.  The transport which conveyed the Twenty-seventh Iowa 
was accompanied by a large fleet, all being heavily loaded with troops, 
with orders to report to General Sherman at Vicksburg.  Upon its arrival 
at Vicksburg the Twenty-seventh Iowa was assigned to the Second 
Brigade, Third Division, Sixteenth Army Corps and, on February 3, 
1864, took up the line of march towards the interior of the State of 
Mississippi, upon one of the most notable and successful expeditions of 
the war.  A division of cavalry led the advance of General Sherman's 
army and had frequent engagements with the enemy's cavalry, which 
constituted about all the fighting that was done during the expedition, the 
rebel forces, under the command of General Polk, not being strong 
enough to make a stand and risk a general engagement.  At, Meridan, 
Miss., (the objective point of the expedition,) immense quantities of 
supplies for the rebel army were captured and destroyed, together with 
many locomotives and cars.  Many miles of railroad track were also 
destroyed, and the damage thus inflicted upon the rebel army was very 
great.  During the march the troops lived mainly off the country through 
which they passed, having started with but ten days' rations for the entire 
army.  The army returned to Vicksburg on March 4th, having been gone 
over thirty days, and marched over three hundred miles.  During the 
greater part of the time General Sherman was cut off from 
communication with General Grant and the War Department in 
Washington.  It was a new and bold military experiment, and its complete 
success demonstrated the feasibility of that later splendid achievement of 
General Sherman—the march from Atlanta to the sea.
     In strong contrast with the success which had marked the Meridian 
Expedition, the Twenty-seventh Iowa was now about to enter upon 
another which, notwithstanding the valor and fortitude displayed by the 
regiment and the other troops with which it was associated, was destined 
to prove a failure on account of the incompetency of the General in 
command.  He was provided with a splendidly equipped army and had all 
the elements of success placed at his disposal, but, being totally lacking 
in the essential qualities of a great military leader and unwilling to act 
upon the advice and suggestions of his subordinate officers, several of 
whom were capable of assuming the chief command and successfully 
conducting the campaign, the operations of his army resulted in a series 
of discouraging defeats.
     On March 10, 1864, the Twenty-seventh Iowa, with its brigade and 
division, embarked on transports at Vicksburg and were conveyed to the 
mouth of Red Rover and then to Simsport, on the Atchafalaya River, 
where the troops disembarked.  The Second Brigade was composed as 
follows: The fourteenth, Twenty-seventh and Thirty-second Iowa 
Infantry and the Twenty-fourth Missouri Infantry, and was under the 
command of its senior officer, colonel William T. Shaw, of the fourteenth 
Iowa.  At 6 A. M. on the morning of March 14, 1864, the brigade was 
ordered to take the advance in line of march towards Fort De Russy, 
twenty-eight miles distant.  The March was conducted with great vigor 
and, late in the afternoon, the brigade arrived at the town of Marksville, 
two and one-half miles from the fort.  At that point Colonel Shaw was 
ordered to leave one regiment of his brigade to act as rear guard for the 
army, and the Twenty-seventh Iowa was detailed for that duty.  The 
regiment was thus prevented from participating in the attack upon the fort 
until just previous to the capture.  After describing the fighting which had 
occurred prior to the time the general assault was ordered, Colonel Shaw 
says in his official report:

	A general assault was now determined on, and I was ordered to 
advance my brigade, when I heard heavy firing on the left.  Colonel 
Gilbert, commanding Twenty-seventh Iowa, had now arrived and, as my 
skirmishers of the Fourteenth Iowa had exhausted their ammunition, I 
ordered him to advance with his regiment to the ground occupied by 
them.  The heavy firing at this time commenced on the left and the 
command forward was given, to all the regiments except the Twenty-
fourth Missouri, to which I had already dispatched my Aide-de-camp, 
Lieutenant Berg, with the order, but just before his arrival the regiment 
was ordered forward and led in person by Brigadier General Mower, 
commanding division.  The advance was, however, nearly simultaneous 
with the whole brigade, the different regiments arriving at nearly the 
same time at the works of the enemy.  The Twenty-fourth Missouri, led 
by General Mower in person, had the honor of being the first of my 
brigade to plant their colors upon the walls of the fort, and, as for as my 
observation went, the first that were raised on the works of the enemy.  
At. 6 P. M. the enemy had surrendered.  My command had in twelve 
hours marched twenty-eight miles, been delayed two hours in building a 
bridge, fought two hours, stormed and assisted in capturing Fort-De-
Russy—a good day's work.

	Among the officers to whom Colonel Shaw tenders special thanks, 
for prompt obedience to his orders and efficient service in the action at 
Fort De Russy, are Colonel Gilbert and Captain Granger, of the Twenty-
seventh Iowa, the latter being a member of his personal staff.  Owing to 
the fact that the regiment did not rejoin the brigade until just before the 
surrender of the fort, the only casualty sustained was one man very 
severely wounded, who died a few days later from the effects of the 
wound.
	That part of the Red River campaign, in which the detachments 
from the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Army Corps—acting independently 
under the command of that able and energetic officer, Major General A. 
J. Smith—were engaged, had this commenced with most favorable 
results.  A strong fort with its entire garrison had been captured after a 
brief engagement in which only two brigades of the Sixteenth Corps 
participated, with a total loss of thirty-eight in killed and wounded.  Had 
General smith then succeeded to the chief command of all the troops, 
there is every reason to believe that equally good results would have 
marked the subsequent progress of the campaign.

	After dismantling Fort De Russy and effectually destroying it as a 
work of defense, the troops again, embarked and moved to Alexandria, 
La., which place was quickly evacuated by the rebel forces upon the 
approach of the transports.  General Smith had received orders to land his 
forces at Alexandria and there await the arrival of Major General Banks 
(the Commander-in-Chief of the expedition), with his troops.  Upon the 
arrival of General Banks the combined forces moved forward, General 
Smith's troops taking the advance, and reaching Grand Ecore April 3d.  
On April 7th, General Banks' troops took the advance, on the road 
towards Shreveport leaving General Smith and his troops in the rear of 
the transportation trains of the cavalry and of the Thirteenth and 
Nineteenth Corps.  The roads were bad and the trains moved slowly.  On 
the night of April 8th, General Smith's command went into camp about 
two miles from Pleasant Hill.  During the afternoon of the 8th, heavy 
cannonading had been heard in front, indicating that the troops in 
advance had become engaged with the enemy.  General Smith sent one of 
his staff officers forward, with the request that he be permitted to pass the 
trains, with a portion or all of his command, and join in the engagement, 
but he received no order to do so.  He soon afterwards learned that the 
cavalry and the Thirteenth Army Corps had met a heavy force of the 
enemy, about eight miles beyond Pleasant Hill, and had been defeated, 
with a loss of nearly half of the corps and all their artillery and wagons, 
and that the enemy had only been checked by the coming of night and the 
Nineteenth Corps.
	On the morning of April 9th, by permission of General Banks, 
General Smith moved forward with his command to Pleasant Hill, and 
formed in line of battle to meet the attack of the enemy.  In the meantime, 
the remnant of that portion of General Banks' army which had been 
defeated and driven back by the enemy had been ordered to proceed with 
the trains to Grand Ecore, leaving on the field, to meet the attack of the 
exultant and victorious enemy, only a part of the Nineteenth and two 
divisions of the Sixteenth Corps.  In the hard-fought battle which ensued, 
the Twenty-seventh Iowa bore a conspicuous part and improved the 
opportunity to place itself in the forefront of Iowa's gallant fighting 
regiments.  It had marched and toiled and had endured great hardships, 
but up to this time had never participated in a great battle, and now was 
called upon to go into action against great odds, to meet the enemy 
flushed with victory, and, with its brigade and division, to retrieve the 
disaster of the previous day and save the army from an overwhelming 
defeat.  In his official report of the conduct of his troops in the battle of 
Pleasant Hill, General Smith makes the following statement:  "The 
opinion of Major General Banks, as to the action of the command and its 
results, may be gathered from his own words to me on the field, just after 
the final charge, when, riding up to me, he remarked, shaking me by the 
hand:  "God bless you, General; you have saved the army.'
	The official report of the brigade commander, Colonel William T. 
Shaw, describes, very fully the part taken by the brigade, and by each of 
the regiments of which it was composed, in the battle of Pleasant Hill.  
Limitation of space will permit only the quotation of such portions of the 
report, as have reference to the Twenty-seventh Iowa and the positions 
occupied by the brigade during the battle, which are here given as 
follows:

	At 10 A. M., April 9, 1864, I was ordered to report with my 
brigade, consisting of the Fourteenth, Twenty-seventh, and Thirty-second 
Iowa Infantry, and the Twenty-fourth Missouri Infantry, to Major 
General Banks.  By him I was ordered to proceed with my command to 
the front, and report to Brigadier General Emory, which I did at about 
10:30 A. M.  General Emory ordered me to relieve Brigadier General 
McMillan, who was posted on the left of the Mansfield road and at right 
angles to it, in a dense thicket, with an old field in front, dotted over with 
small pines.  About 100 yards to his front, and on his right, were four 
guns of the Twenty-fifth New York Battery.  Brigadier General Dwight's 
command was posted on McMillan's right and diagonally to his rear.  On 
the right of the New York battery was a ridge, which completely 
commanded McMillan's whole line and the town, and which also 
covered the approach of the enemy.  I therefore deemed it proper to 
occupy this ridge with the Twenty-fourth Missouri Infantry, and relieve 
General McMillan, with the balance of my brigade.  This was 
accordingly done, and General Dwight's support, but, with this 
disadvantage, I considered the position better than the one occupied by 
the troops I had relieved.  At this time General Smith came up, to whom I 
pointed out the position of my forces, which was approved, except that he 
ordered me to move my main line farther to the right, which brought 
three companies of the Fourteenth Iowa in and on the right of the 
Mansfield road: this, consequently, left a greater gap on my left.  General 
Emory was aware of the changes by my brigade, but I cannot learn that 
he gave any orders for a corresponding change of Dwight's brigade.  
General Emory at this time left the front and I saw no more of him till 
after dark that night.  These dispositions had brought Dwight's brigade in 
the rear of my second regiment, and nearly perpendicular to my line of 
battle.  At this time my skirmishers were heavily engaged, and an attack 
appeared imminent.  I deemed it prudent to consult with General Dwight, 
as General Emory had left that part of the field, and I could neither find 
him, or any of his staff.
	Continuing his report, Colonel Shaw states that he went along the 
line until he came to the place where General Dwight's brigade flag was 
located, but failed to find that General or any member of his staff.  In the 
meantime the skirmishers in front of Colonel Shaw's brigade were being 
driven back and he found it necessary to reinforce them.  As yet the main 
line of the enemy had not advanced to the attack, although the skirmish 
line had been engaged for a considerable length of time.  At 3 P. M. the 
enemy's skirmishers had passed to the right of Colonel Shaw's brigade, 
and the situation was becoming critical.  At this juncture Colonel Shaw 
succeeded in finding General Dwight, who appeared to understand the 
danger of the exposed position and the necessity of holding it.  He 
promised to send the necessary support, but, instead of doing so, 
withdrew his troops still farther to the rear.  At about 4 P. M. General 
Stone—Chief of Staff to General Banks—rode to the front to examine 
the positions of the troops.  Colonel Shaw rode with him along his 
brigade line, showing the changes, that he had made since relieving 
General McMillan and the necessity for a corresponding change in 
General Dwight's line, which General Stone approved, saying to Colonel 
Shaw: "Your position is well chosen; it is admirable; it could not be 
better.  I will see that your flanks are properly supported, for this position 
must be held at all hazards."  The General then rode to the rear, 
presumably to give the necessary orders to General Dwight, but, if the 
order was given, it was not obeyed, as no support came and Colonel 
Shaw was left alone with his brigade to hold the most important position 
on the field.  The enemy had been maneuvering all the afternoon behind 
his heavy lines of skirmishers and had succeeded in fully developing the 
positions of the Union forces and finding the best points against which to 
direct his attack.  The desperate conflict which followed is thus described 
by Colonel Shaw, in the continuation of his report:

	A few minutes before 5 o'clock the enemy opened heavily on me 
with artillery, which was replied to feebly, for a few minutes, by the 
Twenty-fifth New York Battery, when they limbered up and 
disgracefully left the field, leaving one caisson and one gun in the road, 
which were drawn off by Lieutenant Buell of my staff.  At the same time 
General Dwight fell entirely out of my sight to the rear.  While my 
battery was leaving, a dash was made by the enemy's cavalry to capture 
it, but they were so well received by the Fourteenth Iowa and Twenty-
fourth Missouri that not a single man escaped, their leader, Colonel 
Buchel, falling dead in the ranks of the Fourteenth Iowa.  This attack was 
followed by their Infantry, which advanced in two lines, extending 
beyond both my right and left.  They advanced steadily and in good order 
across the open field in my front, until they got within easy range; then 
my whole line opened upon them, stopping their advance but not 
preventing them from replying vigorously to my fire, causing heavy loss.  
My men held their ground, keeping up a steady and well-directed fire, 
which soon compelled their first line to fall back in disorder.  In the 
meantime fighting had commenced on my left, and our line to my left 
had fallen back, so as to enable the enemy to pass in rear of my left.  
They had also passed around my right and were firing on my flank, when 
their second line advanced, and I was again engaged along my whole 
front.  At this time I received an order from General Smith to fall back, as 
the enemy was getting in my rear.  My staff officers having all been 
dispatched to different officers for support, and being myself on the right 
of my brigade, I had to ride to the left in rear of my brigade to give the 
order to withdraw. The brush and timber were so thick I could scarcely 
see ten paces as I passed down the line.  I gave the order to Colonel 
Gilbert, Twenty-seventh Iowa, to fall back as soon as the regiment on his 
right should commence retreating.  I then pushed on to give the necessary 
orders to Colonel Scott, Thirty-second Iowa, when I met the enemy's 
forces entirely in his rear, preventing me from communicating with him.  
I was therefore compelled to leave him to act without orders.  Hurrying 
back to the right, I found the Twenty-fourth Missouri had been compelled 
to change its front to receive the attack from the right; also that the 
enemy was pressing my front with overwhelming numbers.  I therefore 
considered it necessary to give the orders to fall back to the three 
regiments with which I could communicate.  My men had fought well, 
holding their ground till ordered to retire, and, although my loss was 
three times that of any other brigade on the field, they were still in such 
condition that the commanding General saw fit to give them the 
responsible post of covering the retreat of the army, which commenced at 
1 o'clock the next morning, and was accomplished in safety.  I cannot 
speak too highly of my regimental commanders.  Of Colonel Gilbert, 
Twenty-seventh Iowa, and his regiment, I can say they did their whole 
duty.  Although they had never been under fire before, they gave their 
fire with the coolness and precision of veterans, and fully sustained the 
reputation of Iowa soldiers.  Colonel Gilbert, although wounded early to 
the action, remained in command of his men until the fighting ceases.  
The long list of killed and wounded amounting to nearly 500, shows the 
desperate valor with which my men fought.
	The official report of Colonel Gilbert, showing the part taken by 
and the conduct of his regiment in the battle of Pleasant Hill, embodies 
substantially the facts stated in the report of the brigade commander, 
from which the fore-going quotations were made.  His description of the 
bold and reckless charge of rebel cavalry, early in the engagement, the 
terrible slaughter which ensued, when the gallant riders and their horses 
went down like grass before the scythe, and the tremendous fire under 
which the first line of the enemy's infantry melted away, coincides with 
that of Colonel Shaw, and its reproduction here would only involve 
repetition.  Colonel Gilbert highly commends the conduct of his regiment 
and, at the close of his report says: "I would like to mention the names of 
some of the officers and soldiers who distinguished themselves, but all 
conducted themselves so bravely and so well that I refrain from 
mentioning any save Captain J. M. Holbrook, Company F, who, after 
having received a severe wound, led his company with distinguished 
gallantry, until a second severe wound was received, and the regiment 
had reformed in the rear of the supporting column."  The loss of the 
regiment in this engagement was 4 enlisted men killed, 65 wounded, 14 
missing in action (either killed or taken prisoners) and 5 commissioned 
officers wounded; total 88.  The loss of the four regiments composing the 
brigade was as follows: Fourteenth Iowa, 89; Twenty-seventh Iowa, 88; 
Thirty-second Iowa, 210; Twenty-fourth Missouri, 96; total 483.  The 
greater loss of the Thirty-second Iowa is accounted for by the fact that it 
did not receive the order to fall back, and, becoming entirely isolated 
from the brigade, was compelled to fight its way through the enemy's 
lines.  The Twenty-seventh Iowa had in this, its first, battle established a 
record for bravery and efficiency commensurate with that of the other 
splendid regiments of its brigade.  Its subsequent history will show how 
well it maintained the honor it had won.
	Early on the morning of April 10, 1864, General Banks ordered a 
retreat to Grand Ecore, during which the Twenty-seventh Iowa with its 
brigade was placed in the position of rear guard.  From Grand Ecore the 
retreat was continued to Natchitoches, and thence to Alexandria.  The 
enemy had followed closely and Colonel Shaw's brigade occupied the 
post of danger in the rear.  From Alexandria the brigade was sent below 
the town and occupied a position near Governor Moore's plantation, 
where it had frequent skirmishes with the enemy.  On May 13th 
Alexandria was evacuated, and the army began its retreat down Red 
River.  On May 18th the Twenty-seventh Iowa, with its brigade, still 
acting as the rear guard of the army, again came into conflict with the 
enemy, at the battle of Old Oaks, La.  In his official report of the part 
taken by his regiment in this battle, Colonel Gilbert, after describing the 
preliminary movements and positions of his regiment says:
	At 3:00 P. M. we were ordered to move by the left flank at a 
double quick about 500 yards, when we formed a line perpendicular to 
our former line, and at this point were subjected to a very heavy fire from 
the small arms of the enemy, but in about fifteen minutes succeeded in 
repulsing him.  We then changed front again by moving by the right flank 
and filing right, and remained in this position nearly half an hour, when 
we were ordered to advance.  We moved forward about 1,000 yards 
through a heavy piece of timber, driving the enemy before us, but, as we 
came out on the open ground, the enemy opened on us with grape and 
canister, forcing us to retire.  We fell back to our former position in good 
order, considering the roughness of the ground and the thickness of the 
underbrush.  We staid in this position about half and hour, when we were 
ordered to fall back by the flank nearly half a mile, where we lay until 
sunset.  We were then ordered back to the position occupied by the 
regiment the night before, where we lay all night.  The loss of the 
regiment was 3 killed and 14 wounded.  Officers and men of my 
command behaved with the greatest coolness and bravery.  Where all did 
so well is useless to particularize.
	In his report of this engagement Colonel Shaw states that his 
brigade captured nearly three hundred prisoners, and that the loss to the 
enemy in killed and wounded was also heavy.  He also states that while 
his brigade and two others-of General smith's command-were fighting 
the enemy in the rear, the balance of the army lay quietly three miles 
distant, leaving these three brigades to fight the battle alone. On May 19th 
the brigade lay in line of battle all day, and until 2 A. M. of the 20th, 
when it again took up the line of march, and, on the 22d, reached the 
mouth of Red River, where it embarked on transports and was conveyed 
to Vicksburg, arriving there May 24, 1864.  The operations of the 
Twenty-seventh Iowa and the troops with which it was associated on the 
Red River campaign will ever stand conspicuous in military history, for 
true devotion to duty and that noble spirit of sacrifice which was shown 
under circumstances of the most discouraging character.  No troops 
displayed greater heroism, in the face of repeated disaster, during the War 
of the Rebellion.
	The regiment remained at Vicksburg until June 5th, when it again 
embarked, with its brigade and division, and proceeded up the river to 
Greenville, Miss., at which point, and on the opposite side of the river at 
Point Chicot, Ark., the rebel  General Marmaduke, with a force of 
infantry and artillery, was endeavoring to blockade the river, and had 
inflicted much damage by his attacks on the federal transports.  
Disembarking his troops on the Arkansas side of the river, on June 6th, 
General a. J. Smith marched rapidly against the main force of the enemy, 
under command of General Maraduke, and, in the engagement which 
ensued at Ditch Bayou, the enemy was defeated and driven from the field 
with heavy loss.  In this engagement Colonel Gilbert was in command of 
the brigade (Colonel Shaw being absent) and Major George W. Howard 
commanded the Twenty-seventh Iowa.  In his official report Major 
Howard states that his regiment occupied a position on the left of the line 
but little exposed to the fire of the enemy, and sustained no casualties.  It 
held its place in the line of battle, however, and, as always, obeyed every 
order and acquitted itself with honor.
	Having fully accomplished the purpose of the expedition, the 
troops marched to Columbia, Ark., and, going aboard transports there, 
were conveyed to Memphis, arriving there June 10th.  The regiment 
remained in camp at Memphis until June 24th, when, with its brigade and 
division, it started on the expedition to Tupelo and Old Town Creek, 
Miss.  During this expedition the brigade was commanded by Colonel 
Gilbert, and the regiment by Captain Amos M. Haslip, of Company A.  
On July 14th the enemy was encountered, and again on July 15th.  The 
first engagement was at Tupelo, the second at Old own Creek.  Captain 
Haslip, in his official report of these engagements, describes the different 
positions occupied by the regiment, the alacrity and good order with 
which it moved against the enemy, and at the close of his report of the 
first day's contest says:  "The men made the fight bravely and well."  Of 
the engagement on the second day Captain Haslip says: "We had 
encamped for the night after a fatiguing march from Tupelo.  The enemy 
approached on the Tupelo road.  At 6 P. M. we were ordered out, and 
participated in the long charge through the woods, across Old Town 
Creek, and still on across an open field to the brow of the hill on which 
the enemy had planted their guns, and from which they had shelled our 
camp.  My position was the left center of the Second Brigade, 
commanded by Colonel James I. Gilbert.  Some of the men were 
overcome and exhausted by the extreme heat.  The loss of the regiment in 
these two engagements was one killed and twenty-five wounded.  Among 
the wounded was Lieutenant William S. Sims, of Company B.  Although 
the regiment had suffered heavy loss from disease and in battle, upon the 
date of the return to Memphis, from this expedition, its losses had been 
partially supplemented by recruits and by those who had recovered from 
wounds or sickness and returned to duty.  Under date of July 23, 1864, 
Colonel Gilbert reports the aggregate strength 800—35 commissioned 
officers and 765 enlisted men.
	During the month of August, 1864, the regiment was most of the 
time on the march with the troops under command of General A. J. 
Smith, on the expedition to Oxford, Miss., returning to Memphis on the 
30th.  There is no record of casualties during the month.  On September 
5th the regiment left Memphis, was conveyed to Cairo, Ill., thence to 
Jefferson Barracks, Mo., thence by rail to Mineral Point, Mo., and 
returned to Jefferson Barracks on the 29th.  On October 2d it marched 
with the army under General a. J. Smith in pursuit of the rebel army 
under General Sterling Price.  This remarkable march extended to the 
Kansas line.  There is no record of the regiment having come into contact 
with the enemy during this march, the strong cavalry force taking the  
advance and doing most of the fighting.  At the close of the month the 
regiment had reached Pleasant Hill, Mo., on the return march, and from 
thence marched to St. Louis, where it arrived November 18th.  On 
November 25th, the regiment, with the army under General Smith, 
embarked on  transports and proceeded to Smithland, Ky., thence up the 
Cumberland River to Nashville, Tenn., where the troops landed on 
December 1st, marched three miles south of the city and went into camp.  
On December 15th the Twenty-seventh Iowa, with its brigade and 
division, advanced with the army under General Thomas to the attack of 
the rebel army under General Hood.  The regiment was under the 
command of Lieutenant Colonel Jed Lake, and the official report of that 
officer describes in detail its movements during the battles of the 15th and 
16th.  At the beginning of the engagement on the 16th, Captain 
Hemenway, with his company (B), was ordered to take position on the 
skirmish line, the regiment following in line of battle on the left of the 
brigade.  The subsequent movements of the regiment, during the 
engagement of the 15th, are thus described by Lieutenant Colonel Lake:
	From 2 to 4 P. M. the cannonading was very severe on our right 
and left, but my regiment was shielded by the woods and hills so that the 
enemy's artillery was not directed at it.  At about 4 P. M. Company B 
joined us, having been relieved as skirmishers.  I received orders from 
Colonel Gilbert, commanding brigade, to wheel my regiment to the right 
and in rear of the right of the Fourth Corps.  At the same time the charges 
commenced on the enemy's works.  We followed close in the rear of the 
Fourth Corps till the works were carried, then moved by the right flank to 
the right, and encamped for the night.  No casualties.
	It will thus be seen that the Twenty-seventh Iowa was in its place 
in the line of battle, ready to engage the enemy, on the first day at 
Nashville, but was fortunately no placed that it suffered no lost.  On the 
next day, however, it had a different experience, and, while it did not 
sustain a heavy loss, in proportion to the number engaged, acquitted itself 
with honor and fully sustained the excellent record it had made in 
previous engagements.  Continuing his report, Lieutenant Colonel Lake 
says:
	On the 16th inst. at daylight we formed in line of battle.  My 
position was on the left center of the brigade.  About sunrise, by orders 
from Colonel Gilbert, we made a half wheel to the right, and moved 
across an open field into the Granny White Pike, and thence across 
another field, under fire of the enemy's guns, in all about one mile.  We 
were then moved by the right flank about half a mile into a ravine in a 
cornfield, where we were ordered to lie down.  Here the fire of the 
artillery was very heavy, the missiles from the enemy's battery and our 
own passing directly over my regiment.  One man of Company I was hit 
in hip by a spent musket ball while in this position.  About 4 P. M. I 
received orders from Colonel Gilbert to prepare for the charge.  At the 
command, "Forward, double quick, march," every man went forward 
with a will.  In passing between a house in our front and some 
outbuildings, both flanks were thrown back and crowded on the center, 
but on reaching the open field, about two hundred yards in front of the 
enemy's works, immediately deployed and went over the parapet in good 
style.  The enemy were doing their best to escape, and we followed them 
through the woods and across an open field to the foot and up the side of 
the mountain, until men from the top hung out the white flag in token of 
surrender.  Every man and officer behaved with the greatest gallantry, 
and it would be unjust to particularize.
	The casualties were thirteen enlisted men wounded, two 
dangerously and most of them severely.
	On December 17th the regiment marched in pursuit of the enemy.  
The pursuit was abandoned at Lawrenceburg, Tenn., on the 30th.  On 
January 1, 1865, the regiment marched to Clifton, on the Tennessee 
River, and, embarking on steamer, proceeded to Eastport, Miss., where it 
arrived on the 5th, disembarked and went into camp.  On February 9th the 
regiment again embarked on steamer, was conveyed to Cairo, Ill., and 
thence to New Orleans, where it landed on the 21st and went into camp 
near the city.
	On March 7, 1865, the regiment embarked at New Orleans, on the 
ocean steamship, Empire City, and was conveyed to Dauphin Island, 
Ala., where it remained until the 20th, and was then conveyed to 
Donelly's Landing, Ala.  On March 25th the regiment, with its brigade 
and division, again took up the line of march, and arrived at Sibley's 
Mills, near Mobile, Ala., on the 26th, and went into camp.  On April 3d 
the troops advanced and joined the forces under General Steele, then 
engaged in the siege of Fort Blakely.  The Twenty-seventh Iowa 
participated in the siege operations from the 4th to the 9th of April, on 
which latter date it took part in the charge which resulted in the capture 
of the fort, sustaining a loss of three men wounded.  On the 10th, the 
Second Brigade, Second Division, Sixteenth Army Corps, occupied Fort 
Blakely.  Major George W. Howard had the honor of commanding the 
Twenty-seventh Iowa during the siege and capture of the fort, and wrote 
the official report, in which he highly commended the conduct of the 
officers and men of his regiment.  On April 13th the regiment marched 
towards Montgomery, Ala., where it arrived on the 27th and went into 
camp, remaining there and at another camp four miles from the city until 
July 15, 1865.  On July 14th, 122 recruits—who had joined the Twenty-
seventh Iowa-were transferred to the Twelfth Iowa.  On the 15th the 
regiment received orders to proceed to Vicksburg, Miss., and there report 
to the commanding officer for muster out and discharge from the service.  
Transportation was provided by steamboat down the Alabama River to 
Selma, thence by rail to Demopolia, Meridian and Jackson, Miss., from 
which point the regiment marched to Black River Bridge and was 
conveyed thence by rail to Vicksburg and, embarking there on steamer 
"Commonwealth," was conveyed to Clinton, Iowa.  On August 8, 1865, 
the regiment was mustered out of the service of the United States at 
Clinton, Iowa, was there disbanded and the officers and men returned to 
their homes.  During its term of service the Twenty-seventh Iowa 
marched over 3, 000 miles and traveled by steamboat and railroad over 
10,000 miles.  In the long line of splendid military organizations which 
the State of Iowa sent into the field during the great War of the Rebellion, 
none have a record of more faithful and honorable service than its 
Twenty-seventh Regiment of Infantry Volunteers.

		SUMMARY OF CASUALTIES.

Total Enrollment                                                      1,172
Killed	                                                                            17
Wounded                                                                     142
Died of wounds                                                             14
Died of disease                                                             165
Discharged for wounds, disease and other causes       224
Buried in National Cemeteries                                      94
Captured                                                                        32
Transferred                                                                    47

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