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7th Missouri Volunteer Infantry : ウィキペディア英語版
7th Missouri Volunteer Infantry

The 7th Missouri Volunteer Infantry, commonly known as the "Irish Seventh", was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. In 1864 a battalion of veteran volunteers of the "Irish Seventh was consolidated with a sister Irish regiment, the 30th Missouri Volunteer Infantry (the "Shamrock Regiment") and operated as a "demi-brigade" known popularly as the "Missouri Irish Brigade"
==Service==
The 7th Missouri Volunteer Infantry was organized at St. Louis, Missouri in June 1861 and mustered in for three years service. It was often referred to as the "Irish Seventh" given the large number of Irish immigrants who were enlisted in its ranks.〔Enlistment in the "Irish Seventh" was apparently encouraged by Captain Patrick E. Burke, a respected Irish immigrant and veteran St. Louis Militia officer. Burke had been 1st lieutenant of the "Washington Blues" (aka "Captain Kelly's Company) a popular ethnically Irish militia company in ante-bellum St. Louis. He resigned over the issue of secession and joined the Federal 1st Missouri Volunteers. Joseph Ward Tucker, editor of the secessionist ''Missouri State Journal'', publicly criticized any St. Louis Irish who might follow Burke's public call for other Irish to join the expanding Federal forces.〕
The regiment was a special project supported by the Federal commanders in Missouri, Brigadier General William S. Harney and Brigadier General Nathaniel Lyon.〔In a May 15, 1861 letter to Secretary of War Simon Cameron, General Harney wrote: "I think that it is of utmost importance that an additional regiment, consisting exclusively of Irishmen, should be raised in St. Louis. It will at once settle matters in St. Louis and do away with the prejudice against the Government troops (Missouri volunteers in Federal service ), which consist almost exclusively of Germans." ''Missouri Troops in Service During the Civil War'', Dept of War, Record and Pension Office, Washington, 1902 p123〕 Most of the volunteers in Missouri's early regiments were German immigrants, and Lyon supported the creation of a regiment recruited from St. Louis' Irish-American population to demonstrate that the Union cause in Missouri had support beyond the German-American community. Many St. Louis Irish (the second largest immigrant community in the city) were ambivalent about the new Republican Party and Federal military action against seceding states. In addition, Irish Americans were strong participants in the pre-war Missouri Volunteer Militia, and many resented the May 10, 1861 Federal arrest of the Militia for suspected secession activity. The 7th Missouri was intended to attract ethnic-Irish support by focusing on the Irish community's "ownership" of the regiment, and make a public political statement by demonstrating that there were Irish Unionists in Missouri.〔Ironically, a second Celtic influenced regiment was established at the same time by accident. The 8th Missouri Volunteers (also known as the "American Zouaves") was recruited at the same time to demonstrate "native American" support for Unionism beyond the German community in the same way the 7th Missouri was to show Irish support. However, large numbers of Irish joined the "American Zouaves", causing some writers to describe the Eighth Missouri as the "Irish Zouaves".〕
Like other ethnically Irish regiments during the Civil War, the "Irish Seventh" carried a distinctive green regimental color. An article in the July 12, 1862 ''Boston Pilot'' described the flag, stating that on one side the flag featured the: "Irish harp, guarded by a savage-looking wolf dog, surrounded by a wreath of shamrocks, surmounted by an American eagle, and supported on either side by flags and other implements of war. A golden halo shoots out and over the whole. On the other side is a 'sunburst' in all its glory, with the Irish war cry as a motto - 'Faj an Bealac!()"〔Rodgers, Thomas G, ''Irish-American Units in the Civil War'', Oxford, UK, Osprey Publishing, 2008, p10〕〔The motto on the Seventh Missouri's colors is a variant transliteration of the Gaelic war cry Faugh A Ballagh which is usually translated as "Clear the Way!" and was used by numerous Irish-American units on both sides of the Civil War.〕
The regiment was attached to Boonville, Missouri, to September 1861. Fremont's Army of the West to February 1862. Lexington, Missouri, Department of the Missouri, to July 1862. Unattached, Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee, Army of the Tennessee, to September 1862. 4th Brigade, 1st Division, District of JacksonJackson, Tennessee, , to November 1862. 4th Brigade, 3rd Division, Left Wing, XIII Corps, Department of the Tennessee, to December 1862. 3rd Brigade, 3rd Division, XVII Corps, to April 1864. Maltby's Brigade, District of Vicksburg, Mississippi, to June 1864. 1st Brigade, District of Memphis, Tennessee, XVI Corps, to August 1864. 1st Brigade, 2nd Division, XIX Corps, Department of the Gulf, to December 1864.
The 7th Missouri Volunteer Infantry ceased to exist on December 17, 1864 when it was consolidated with the 30th Missouri Infantry.

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