4th Indiana Volunteers
| 4th Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment | |
|---|---|
Brigadier General Willis A. Gorman c.1861 | |
| Active | April 1847 – July 1848 |
| Country | United States |
| Allegiance | Indiana |
| Branch | United States Volunteers |
| Type | Infantry |
| Engagements | Mexican-American War |
| Commanders | |
| Colonel | Willis A. Gorman |
| Notable commanders | Ebenezer Dumont |
The 4th Indiana Volunteers, also known as the 4th Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment of United States Volunteers from the state of Indiana that participated in the Mexican–American War. The unit was formed and commanded by future Minnesota Territory Governor and Indiana Democrat politician Willis A. Gorman.
Organization
[edit]The regiment began to recruit volunteers for service starting on May 30, 1847. The regiment was mustered into federal service on April 24, 1847, in Jeffersonville, Indiana.[1][2] The election of regimental officers for the regiment took place at Fort Clark, Texas on June 16, 1847, when Willis A. Gorman of Monroe County, Indiana was elected as the regiment's colonel, while Ebenezer Dumont of Dearborn County, Indiana was elected as the regiment's lieutenant colonel. Other officers of the regiment include William Wirt McCoy of La Porte, Indiana who was elected as the regiment's major.[2][3][4]
| Company | Earliest moniker | Primary place of recruitment | Earliest captain |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | Gibson County Volunteers | Primarily Fort Branch and Gibson County, Indiana | John W. Dodd |
| B | Wayne County Volunteers | Gosport, Indiana | Jesse Ianthus Alexander |
| C | Morgan Lewis Payne | ||
| D | Marion County Volunteers | Indianapolis and Marion County | Edward Landers |
| E | Spencer County Volunteers | Spencer County | John W. Crooks |
| F | The Bartholomew Volunteers | Bartholomew County | Michael Fitzgibbon (Fitz Gibbon) |
| G | Monroe County Volunteers or "Rough and Ready Guards" | Monroe County | Daniel Lunderman |
| H | The Clay County Volunteers | Primarily Terre Haute, Vigo County and Clay County | Landon Cochran |
| I | Robert Favell | ||
| K | Alexander L. Mason |
Service
[edit]Under Colonel Gorman, the regiment left New Albany, Indiana on June 28, 1847, aboard the steamboats Saladin, Ben Franklin No. 6, and M.B. Hamer bound for New Orleans. Five companies of the regiment sailed to Brazos Island on July 7, 1847. The five remaining companies left on the 9th on the ships Anna Chase and Sophia Walker. Near the mouth of the Sabine River one of the boilers of Ann Chase burst. No one was killed right away, however, two privates died later in the day from injuries received during the explosion.[2] The schooner Starr was later dispatched to the regiment to get the rest of the troops to Mexico. The Texas newspaper The Galveston Civilian of July 21, 1847 commented upon the departure of the Indiana troops stating "They had been a quiet and orderly body of men when off duty and ventured that if they behaved as well in battle as they did in the city, there would be no more reproaches cast upon Indiana troops".[2]
During the course of the war the regiment fought in Brigadier General Joseph Lane's brigade. The regiment took part in many of the later war engagements of the Mexican-American War including; the Siege of Veracruz, the Siege of Puebla, the Battle of Huamantla, the Action of Atlixco, the Skirmish at Matamoros, and the Affair at Galaxara Pass. From November, 1847 until March, 1848 the regiment was garrisoned at Puebla for the remainder of the war.[8] The regiment was mustered out of federal service by company in July, 1848 in Madison, Indiana.[9]
Commanders
[edit]- Willis A. Gorman: June, 1847 - April, 1848.
Notable people
[edit]Several notable people served in the regiment including the following:
- Willis A. Gorman: Served as the colonel of the regiment throughout its entire deployment to Mexico. Gorman would later work in the field of politics as a Democrat and would eventually become the 2nd Territorial Governor of Minnesota serving from April 1, 1853, to March 13, 1857. Gorman briefly served in the American Civil War colonel of the 1st Minnesota Infantry Regiment in 1861 during the First Battle of Bull Run.[10]
- Ebenezer Dumont: Served as the lieutenant colonel of the regiment. Dumont was a U.S. Representative from Indiana, serving two terms from 1863 to 1867. Dumont served in the American Civil War as the colonel of the 7th Indiana Infantry Regiment before being promoted to the rank of Brigadier General and subsequently resigning.[10]
- Thomas John Lucas: Lucas served in the regiment for 14 months as a second lieutenant. Lucas later served in the American Civil War as the lieutenant colonel of the 16th Indiana Infantry Regiment.[11][10]
- Albert Gallatin Brackett: Originally served as a second lieutenant in the regiment, Brackett would go on to establish a military career and fought in the American Civil War where he commanded the 9th Illinois Cavalry Regiment.[10]
- Isaac Newton Winans: Served as a private in Company B during the war.[12] Winans later served in the American Civil War as the captain of Company B of the 31st Indiana Infantry Regiment.[10] His brother was William Parkhurst Winans.
- Jesse Ianthus Alexander: Served as the captain of Company B during the war. Alexander would go on to become a senator in the Indiana Senate from 1850 to 1852 and again in 1855 and 1857. During the American Civil War Alexander served as the colonel of the 59th Indiana Infantry Regiment.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Indiana; Perry, Oran (1908). Indiana in the Mexican war. Indianapolis: W. B. Burford, contractor for state printing. p. 160.
- ^ a b c d Buley, R. C. (1919). "Indiana In the Mexican War: (Continued)". Indiana Magazine of History. 15 (4): 293–326. ISSN 0019-6673. JSTOR 27785916.
- ^ Indiana. Adjutant General's Office; Perry, Oran (1908). Indiana in the Mexican War. University of California Libraries. Indianapolis : W.B. Burford, contractor for state printing and binding.
- ^ "4th Regiment, Field and Staff Officers". www.ingenweb.org. Archived from the original on 2016-05-06. Retrieved 2025-10-27.
- ^ Brackett, Albert G. (1854). General Lane's Brigade in Central Mexico (PDF). New York: H.W. Derby & Co. pp. 46–47.
- ^ Robarts, William Hugh (1887). Mexican War Veterans: A Complete Roster of the Regular Volunteer Troops in the War Between the United States and Mexico, from 1846 to 1848 (PDF). Washington, D.C.: A.S. Witherbee & Co. p. 49.
- ^ "Indianapolis News 13 September 1899 — Hoosier State Chronicles: Indiana's Digital Historic Newspaper Program". newspapers.library.in.gov. Retrieved 2025-10-27.
- ^ Indiana; Perry, Oran (1908). Indiana in the Mexican war. Indianapolis: W. B. Burford, contractor for state printing.
- ^ "Mexican War Military Muster Records of the State of Indiana" (PDF). in.gov. Retrieved October 28, 2025.
- ^ a b c d e "Soldier Details - The Civil War (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2025-10-27.
- ^ Warner, Ezra J. (1964). Generals in blue : lives of the Union commanders. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "Isaac Newton Winans: Mexican-American War Memoir, ca.1860s" (PDF). Indiana Historical Society. Retrieved October 28, 2025.