The Invincible Twelfth: The 12th South Carolina Infantry of the Gregg-McGowan Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia

$34.95
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Author:
Benjamin L. Cwayna
Pub Date:
Spring 2025
ISBN:
978-1-61121-736-0
eISBN:
978-1-61121-737-7
Binding:
Hardcover
Specs:
30 images; 12 maps; 352 pp.

Ebook coming soon!

Click HERE to read the Front Matter and part of Chapter 1. 

About the book

At a regimental reunion in 1880, former Confederate Brigadier General Samuel McGowan lauded the 12th South Carolina Infantry as “The finest of that immortal army,” “foremost in the charge,” and “the invincible Twelfth.” The 12th regiment was part of McGowan’s Brigade from early 1863 through the end of the war. The aging brigadier, wounded four times in combat, was an authority on the regiment’s reputation. “It would be impossible on an occasion of this kind, to give anything like a history of the Twelfth Regiment, or tell half of its gallant deeds. That,” he declared, “would require a volume.” With Benjamin L. Cwayna’s The Invincible Twelfth: The 12th South Carolina Infantry of the Gregg-McGowan Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia, that volume has finally arrived.

The field career of the regiment kicked off with an embarrassing defeat in its first engagement on the South Carolina coast in 1861 at Port Royal Sound. The demoralizing event could have set the regiment on a path of self-fulfilling failure and disaster, but a change in colonels from a perpetually absent political appointee to a scrappy legislator born and bred in the upcountry turned the tide. Dixon Barnes instilled discipline and strong leadership in the unit and began a transformational process that turned the raw recruits into some of the Confederacy’s most reliable soldiers.

The 12th was transferred to what would become Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia and was brigaded with four other regiments from the Palmetto State. Together, they fought in nearly every major engagement of the war in the Eastern Theater. The 12th earned a high reputation within the army for drill and discipline, and was well known for its impetuous, devastating, and sometimes reckless attacks and counterattacks. That penchant for taking the fight to the enemy came at a bloody price. By the end of the war, only 149 of the nearly 1,400 men who served in the ranks of the regiment surrendered at Appomattox Court House.

Author Cwayna based his study on fifteen years of diligent research, mining every available primary source for information to painstakingly construct the 12th South Carolina Volunteer Infantry’s history from its formation in 1861 until its last official reunion in the 1880s and beyond. Through the words of its soldiers and officers, the stories of long and arduous marches, lack of food, horrendous and unimaginable carnage in battle, and a singular focus on continuing the struggle to gain independence at any cost and under innumerable odds takes shape. The Invincible Twelfth is the story of a remarkable regiment which has long deserved to have its story told.

Advance Praise

“McGowan’s Brigade was involved in nearly every campaign of the Army of Northern Virginia, yet very little has been written about it or the five South Carolina regiments comprising it, compared with other units of the ANV. In The Invincible Twelfth, Benjamin Cwayna follows the officers and men of the 12th South Carolina from their creation at Columbia through four years of war to Appomattox and beyond. Cwayna does a masterful job of mining local newspapers for accounts of the 12th, providing more personal glimpses of the regiment in camp and in battle. His biographical sketches of the officers and men give a much more human feel to the regiment than do a lot of unit histories.” — Charles R. Knight, author of From Arlington to Appomattox: Robert E. Lee’s Civil War, Day by Day, 1861–1865

“Benjamin Cwayna has given historiography a good view inside one of the regiments of the famed Gregg-McGowan Brigade. Organized in July 1861, the regiment was active in the Army of Northern Virginia from the Seven Days through their surrender at Appomattox. Highly recommended!” — Michael C. Hardy, author of Feeding Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia

“Drawing from a plethora of primary source materials, Benjamin Cwayna skillfully brings us into the ranks of the hard-fighting 12th South Carolina. But far from being a simple accounting of who did what and when, Cwayna’s work lets us know and understand the men who fought from the first days of the war until the bitter end. The Invincible Twelfth is a highly readable and highly recommended history for anyone interested in the 12th South Carolina, the inner workings of the regiments and brigades that made up the famed Army of Northern Virginia, or anyone interested in understanding the human beings who fought the war within the Southern ranks.” — Allen R. Thompson, author of In the Shadow of the Round Tops: Longstreet’s Countermarch, Johnston’s Reconnaissance, and the Enduring Battles for the Memory of July 2, 1863

 

 

Benjamin L. Cwayna is an attorney in private practice and well-known leader in the Civil War reenacting and living history community. Benjamin commanded the 12th South Carolina/4th Michigan Volunteer Infantry, Inc., a nationally known reenacting organization, for many years. He has appeared on the “Addressing Gettysburg Podcast” with Matt Callery and has devoted his life to preserving the memory of the Civil War through living history demonstrations, presentations, and leading tours on numerous battlefields. A graduate of Michigan State University and Michigan State University College of Law, Benjamin and his son, Grant, reside in Grand Ledge, Michigan, where he is an active member of the community; serving on the Grand Ledge Public Schools Board of Education, a member of the Grand Ledge Rotary Club, and numerous other civic organizations.