Having once again dissolved at the end of the Trenton and Princeton winter campaign of 1776-77, due to one year enlistments, the American army had to be once more built up in the late winter and early spring of 1777, with a strong request from Washington to Congress to design and create a better army.
Congress responded by changing the enlistment period to a term of three years or the duration of the war, thus ensuring that the army would not disband at the end of the year as had its predecessors. In addition Congress reformed the overall size of the army, setting a new establishment of 110 regiments of infantry, 3 regiments of artillery and 4 regiments of light dragoons, retaining the 'November' style regimental structure of 1775 that established each regiment, on paper, having eight companies of 90 men, all ranks and a headquarters group and staff of 13, thus a regiment of some 733 men.
Of the 110 infantry regiments, 88 would be raised, organised and maintained by the States, hence State Regiments, 16 'Additional' Regiments to be organised and raised outside the state quota, by officers who were responsible only to Washington and the Continental Congress, and 6 'Specialised' Battalions or Regiments which were organised on a territorial or other specialised basis which didn't fit into the other two categories, examples of which included the German Battalion and the 2nd Canadian Regiments, both showcased here on JJ's, and the Maryland and Virginia Rifle Regiment, the latter unit very pertinent to the story of the establishment of the 11th Virginia Continental Regiment.
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| JJ's Wargames: The World Turned Upside Down - The German Battalion (8th Maryland) Continental Regiment. |
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| JJ's Wargames: The World Turned Upside Down - 2nd Canadian Continental Regiment, 'Congress's Own' (Part Two) |
As mentioned, the Maryland and Virginia Rifle Regiment was specialised in that it brought together the assorted non Pennsylvania rifle companies that had served with Washington since 1775 outside Boston, but with most of these companies having been lost at Fort Washington in 1776, the unit was in fact by early 1777 organised on paper only, and Virginians who had evaded capture helped form Daniel Morgan's 11th Virginia Regiment during the winter of 1777, many of whom then later joined Morgan's Provisional Rifle Corps that summer.
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Daniel Morgan, circa 1794 - Charles Willson Peale. Colonel of the 11th Virginia Continental Regiment, seen here as a Brigadier General. |
In June 1775, the Continental Congress authorized an invasion of Canada, and Colonel Benedict Arnold convinced General Washington to start an eastern offensive in support of Montgomery's invasion, for which Washington agreed to dispatch three companies from his forces at Boston, provided they agreed. Every company at Boston volunteered, and a lottery was used to choose who should go. Morgan's company was one of them, with Arnold selecting the then Captain Morgan to lead the three companies as a battalion.
The Arnold Expedition started with about 1,050 men, but by the time they reached Quebec on November 9th, that number had been reduced to 675, and when Montgomery's men arrived, they launched a joint assault, with the Battle of Quebec beginning in a blizzard on the morning of December 31st, as the Patriots attacked in two pincers, commanded by Montgomery and Arnold.
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| Benedict Arnold is escorted away after suffering a leg wound in the attack on Quebec, December 31st 1775 - Adam Hook (Osprey) |
Arnold attacked against the lower city from the north, but he suffered a leg wound early in the battle. Morgan took command of the force, and he successfully overcame the first rampart and entered the city. Montgomery's force initiated their attack as the blizzard became severe, and Montgomery and many of his troops, except for Aaron Burr, were killed or wounded in the first British volley. With Montgomery down, his attack faltered.
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| The Battle of Quebec, December 31st 1775. |
British General Carleton consequently was able to lead hundreds of the Quebec militia in the encirclement of the second attack, and was also able to move his cannons and men to the first barricade, behind Morgan's force. Divided and subject to fire from all sides, Morgan's troops gradually surrendered, with Morgan handing his sword to a French-Canadian priest, refusing to give it to Carleton in formal surrender. Morgan thus became one of the 372 men captured, and he remained a prisoner of war until he was exchanged in January 1777.
The 11th Virginia Regiment, one of the fifteen regiments Congress allotted to Virginia's State quota, was authorised by the Second Continental Congress on the 16th September 1776, and it was organised on the 3rd February 1777, consisting of four companies from the Virginia counties of Loudoun, Frederick, Prince William, and Amelia; surviving members of Captain Daniel Morgan's Independent Rifle Company from Fauquier County; and the five companies from the state's portion of the Maryland and Virginia Rifle Regiment, most of whom had, as mentioned, been captured at the fall of Fort Washington in 1776.
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| The principle counties of Virginia involved in the recruitment of the 11th Virginia Continental Regiment in 1777. |
On the 15th April 1777 Captain George Price's company (organized on 18th January 1777 in the Virginia State Troops with volunteers from Frederick and Augusta Counties) was transferred to the regiment.
On the 11th May 1777 the 11th Virginia Regiment, under the command of Colonel Daniel Morgan was assigned to the 3rd Virginia Brigade of the Main Army under Brigadier General William Woodford.
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| Brigadier General William Woodford, commanding 3rd Virginia Brigade in May 1777 |
However Colonel Morgan’s command of the 11th Virginia was to be short-lived, when on June 13th, 1777, Washington gave Morgan command of the Provisional Rifle Corps, a light infantry force of 500 riflemen chosen from Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia regiments of the Continental Army, that saw him simultaneously in command of the 11th Virginia Regiment, his permanent unit, and this provisional unit.
Washington wrote the following letter to Morgan on August 16th, 1777:
"Sir: After you receive this, you will march, as soon as possible, with the corps under your command, to Peekskill, taking with you all the baggage belonging to it. When you arrive there, you will take directions from General Putnam, who, I expect, will have vessels provided to carry you to Albany. The approach of the enemy in that quarter has made a further reinforcement necessary, and I know of no corps so likely to check their progress, in proportion to its number, as that under your command. I have great dependence on you, your officers and men, and I am persuaded you will do honour to yourselves, and essential service to your country..... I am, sir, your most obedient servant George Washington."
Many of the men in his new command were from his own 11th Regiment, including his friend Captain Gabriel Long, and Long's best snipers, including Corporals John Gassaway, Duncan MacDonald and Private Peter Carland.
Thus Morgan's story with the regiment separates until his return to the Main Army later in 1777 after the defeat Burgoyne at Saratoga on October 17th.
The 11th Virginia Regiment, under Lt. Colonel John Cropper, saw action at the Battle of Brandywine on September 11th 1777, as part of Woodford's 3rd Virginia Brigade, part of Major-General Adam Steven's Division, part of Washington's force detailed to resist the approach of Howe's flanking attack that developed four hours into the battle; and with the 11th Virginia together with the rest of Woodford's brigade, positioned around the Birmingham Meeting House opposing the advance of the British Light Infantry and Hessian Jägers.
3rd Virginia Brigade: Brigadier General William Woodford
- 3rd Virginia Regiment (150)
- 7th Virginia Regiment (472)
- 11th Virginia Regiment (377)
- 15th Virginia Regiment (200)
- 4th Virginia Regiment (314)
- 8th Virginia Regiment (157)
- 12th Virginia Regiment (117)
- Grayson's Additional Continental Regiment (100)
- Patton's Additional Continental Regiment (124)
Following the defeat at Brandywine, and the British occupation of Philadelphia, Washington's reorganised army attacked at Germantown on the 4th October 1777.
As covered in my post looking at the 15th Virginia Regiment, Stephen's men fought in the fog with troops led by General Anthony Wayne, and he was later accused of being drunk during the battle, and after being convicted in a court martial, he was stripped of his command and cashiered out of the army, making him the only Continental Army general court-martialled and immediately dismissed from the service during the war.
By the Battle of Germantown, Woodford's brigade had, according to Greg Novak, been reduced to 800 men allotted to its four regiments and likely with the difficulties the Virginia regiments were having in maintaining strength, the regiment was reorganized to a more standard eight companies on the 1st November 1777.
With Washington's army going into winter quarters in December 1777, the 11th Virginia Regiment entered Valley Forge with 326 men assigned, but only 81 fit for duty, and left Valley Forge with 254 assigned and 152 fit for duty.
It is with the army's entry into Valley Forge that 'the great mystery of Washington's Army for the 1778 campaign', as Novak describes it, concerning Colonel Dan Morgan begins, with Morgan and his Corps of Riflemen now having returned to the Main Army, but unlike the 11th Virginia Regiment not appearing among the units encamped at Valley Forge, leading apparently to some historians determining that the two units were and are one and the same.
Morgan is recorded as being stationed outside the encampment, and there are a number of reminders in Washington's General Orders that the men of Morgan's Corps are not to be ignored when clothing and pay is issued to the parent formations. Indeed Morgan was in communication with Washington about the need to recruit additional riflemen for his Corps, and they were still very active in the 'no-mans-land' between Valley Forge and Philadelphia, as is recorded in the diary of Captain Johann Ewald of the Hesse Kassel Jaeger Corps, who mentions skirmishing with Morgan, referring to him as 'the foxy Morgan'.
During the Monmouth campaign of 1778 Washington's General Orders of June 22nd mentions that each of the Continental Infantry Brigades, save those of McIntosh's North Carolina brigade who were ordered to provide two companies of Light Infantry instead, were ordered to send a detachment of an officer and the best twenty-five marksmen to serve in Morgan's command, during which Morgan's men would be harassing the flanks of the British forces.
It would only be at the end of 1778 when the British were back in New York, that Morgan received in October the order to take command of Woodford's brigade as the senior colonel, and by the end of 1778 with the build up of a standing force of Light Infantry, Morgan's Corps appears to have been disbanded.
On the 18th June 1778, Clinton’s British army, with artillery, supplies and the loyalist populace of the city, left Philadelphia and began the laborious march cross country to the North-East, and hearing that the British were on the move, General Washington marched his army east from Valley Forge, seeking to intercept the slow-moving British column, which he did so at Monmouth Courthouse.
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| Monmouth Maps from the Book "Fatal Sunday" Monmouth Maps from the Book Fatal Sunday - Friends of Monmouth Battlefield |
Charles Lee’s initial attack on the British rear was poorly coordinated, leading to a retreat that Washington personally rallied, later seeing Greene’s division on the right and Stirling’s on the left hold firm against repeated British assaults.
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| Monmouth Maps from the Book "Fatal Sunday" Monmouth Maps from the Book Fatal Sunday - Friends of Monmouth Battlefield |
When the main body reached Tennent's Meeting House, some two miles east of Englishtown, Washington ordered Major General Nathanael Greene to take Woodford's brigade to cover the right flank, with Greene guided to Combs Hill by Lieutenant Colonel David Rhea of the 2nd New Jersey Militia, and the 11th Virginia joined the rest of the brigade supporting the guns of du Plessis.
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| Woodford's brigade including the 11th Virginia occupied Comb's Hill, enfilading the line of the British attack with Du Plessis' guns. Monmouth Maps from the Book "Fatal Sunday" Monmouth Maps from the Book Fatal Sunday - Friends of Monmouth Battlefield |
The battle lasted under extreme heat, with both sides suffering roughly equal casualties, and by evening, the British withdrew under cover of darkness to continue their march to Sandy Hook, New Jersey
The Virginia Continental Line contracted in 1778 and 1779 as recruiting got harder and enlistments expired, following Virginia implementing a draft in 1777 which they grew increasingly dependent on through to the end of the war.
On 22nd July 1778 the 11th Virginia was reassigned to the 2nd Virginia Brigade, and it was reorganized to nine companies and redesignated as the 7th Virginia Regiment on the 12th May 1779.
On the 4th December 1779 it was relieved from the 2nd Virginia Brigade and assigned to the Southern Department.
The numbered regiments were preserved on paper to track officer seniority, but late war field operations were conducted by various “detachments," “battalions," and ad hoc “regiments."
As in many cases when looking to depict specific Continental Regiments, often many choices have to be made, sometimes with specific information to reference, but more often than not, a bit of educated guesswork. I have seen the 11th portrayed by others in all hunting shirts, referencing their connection to Colonel Dan Morgan, but I am of the opinion that the regiment was distinctly separate and wanted a more obvious line regiment look to it to better reflect the more numerous musket armed men in its ranks, particularly after many of the riflemen would have been detached for special duties.
That said Virginia was a state that mixed in rifle companies with its musket companies, and given the inclusion of Morgan's men in the regiment at their inception, I decided to include a couple of rifle-armed- hunting shirt figures, along with the often referenced XI Virginia Regimental Colour, or perhaps a Rifle Company Colour, so beautifully reproduced by GMB, and carried alongside a potential Divisional Colour with the usual thirteen bars in the cantonment.
I have again decided to reference the October 1778 lottery held by General Washington from which he determined which colour coat, blue or brown, would be distributed to state regiments. This lottery saw blue coats assigned to North Carolina, Maryland, New Jersey and New York, whilst brown coats were to be provided to Virginia, Delaware, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and New Hampshire.
This idea of Washington's did not come to fruition, but my 11th Virginia Regiment are depicted as if Washington had had his way with, in their case, a buff shade of brown coat faced in red, together with red turnbacks, and turned up hats, this with the officers in the grey waistcoat and breeches ordered to complete the look of the 1778 regiment. The drummer's red livery is purely speculative and assumes a captured British coat, less the lace, has been rapidly furnished for use.
Work on my American army continues with the focus on the Virginians, as the next Continental Regiment to be showcased will be my interpretation of the 4th Virginia Continental Regiment.
As always, more anon.
JJ

















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