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Historic Battle Flag of the Sixth Regt South Carolina Volunteers

-- Display of Sequential 1862 Battle Honors Sewn Onto Flag --

 
May 5 1862 - Williamsburg - The first pitched battle of the Peninsula Campaign, nearly 41,000 Federals and 32,000 Confederates were engaged. June 27, 1862 - Gaines"s Mill - This was the third of the Seven Days’ Battles. On June 27, 1862, Gen. Robert E. Lee renewed his attacks against Porter’s V Corps, which had established a strong defensive line behind Boatswain’s Swamp north of the Chickahominy River. - There were 34,214 Federals and 57,018 Confedrates engaged here.
May 31 - June 1, 1862 - Peninsula Campaign - Gen. Joseph E. Johnston attempted to overwhelm two Federal corps that appeared isolated south of the Chickahominy River. The Confederate assaults, though not well coordinated, succeeded in driving back the IV Corps and inflicting heavy casualties. - 84,000 Forces Engaged June 30, 1862 - Frazier's Farm - This was the fifth of the Seven Days’ Battles. On June 30, Huger’s, Longstreet’s, and A.P. Hill’s divisions converged on the retreating Union army in the vicinity of  Frayser’s Farm.
July 1, 1862 - Malvern Hill - Peninsula Campaign - This was the sixth and last of the Seven Days’ Battles. Robert E. Lee launched a series of disjointed assaults on the nearly impregnable Union position on Malvern Hill. Aug 28-30, 1862 - 2nd Manassas - In order to draw Pope’s army into battle, Jackson ordered an attack on a Federal column that was passing across his front on the Warrenton Turnpike.

   The 6th Regiment battle flag we use today is only a reproduction of the unit's first Confederate issue, 1861 battle flag, which is on display in the Confederate Relic Room in Columbia. The original is silk, with 12 stars painted gold, a blue St. Andrew's cross, and a yellow border. The field of the flag is now dirty white; the original color of the field is uncertain, but it was clearly not the rich red usually associated with Confederate battle flags. It has faded to approximately the same color as the border, which is known to be yellow. This flag and the other 119 in the first issue were produced by volunteer sewing circles in Richmond. These twelve star flags were issued to regiments in late 1861. All subsequent Confederate battle flags had thirteen stars.

   Being part of General David R. Jones' brigade, the 6th Regiment received it's flag on November 28, 1861, in a ceremony that one soldier recalled as... 

 

"The grandest time we ever had. We were drawn up in a hollow square and several speeches were made. The noise of the men was deafening."

   The flag was one of the first battle flags to be constructed at the direction of General P.T.G. Beauregard after First Manassas, when battlefield confusion was created because from any distance the Confederacy's Star and Bars (First National Flag) looked like the Stars and Stripes. The new battle flags, with a distinctive blue cross, were designed to avoid this confusion, and the pattern became standard for regiments in the Army of Northern Virginia. It was used by other armies of the Confederacy, but not to the exclusion of other battle flags.

 

Download these 6th Regiment SCV Flag Wallpapers to your PC desktop.

   Late in 1861 the Confederate quartermaster ordered 120 flags of this pattern for regiments in the Army of Northern Virginia. They were made of dress silk that was purchased on the open market; red silk was scarce, so various shades of pink and yellow were substituted. This flag and the other 119 in the first issue were produced by volunteer sewing circles in Richmond. These twelve star flags were issued to regiments in late 1861. Kentucky dropped its neutral status in December 1861; all subsequent Confederate battle flags had thirteen stars.

   Lack of silk forced the quartermaster to turn to wool bunting for flags, first from stock available at the captured U.S. navy yard at Norfolk, Virginia, and later by import from England. Those flags were manufactured at the quartermaster's clothing depot in Richmond and began to be issued in 1862. Second and third issue battle flags had orange borders. The final issue, settling into the pattern now accepted by the public as standard, had a thin white border. The quartermaster department was forced to issue some of these flags in cotton.

   The reproduction flag for the 6th Regiment is silk; the cross is blue silk and very close to the original material. The field is rough silk that has been dyed. It is impossible to tell what color the original might have been. A color was chosen that may or may not approximate the original; the key factor in choosing the color was that it is "not red". The stars are painted and are gold, as were the original. Battle flags issued in 1862 and afterward had white cloth stars sewn to the flags.

   Some flags were fitted to their standards (their flag pole) by means of a sleeve. Most of the 1861 battle flags were laced to their standards through holes in the yellow border.

   The original battle flag is partly covered by the names of battles in which the regiment fought. The 1861 battle flag was apparently retired after Second Manassas, with one or more later issue flags being used. Retiring a worn flag in favor of one easier to see was fairly common; visibility and recognizability of a battle flag were crucial to a regiment in the smoke and confusion of a battle. The flags were keys for aligning battle flags, coordinating movement and direction of travel, and vital for rallying and organizing units shattered by either victory or defeat. If the existing color of the 1861 flag is close to its original color, it would have been a candidate for replacement even though it was not particularly tattered: the field is a color easily lost in the white smoke that enveloped battlefields. A bright red field would have been more easily seen and therefore more desirable.

   The U.S. Congress voted in 1905 to return to southern states all the battle flags surrendered at Appomattox. It was intended as a gesture of healing. 

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