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Quiz about Battle of New Market
Quiz about Battle of New Market

Battle of New Market Trivia Quiz


The Battle of New Market, VA, is one of the best-known smaller engagements of the Civil War due to the participation of the Corps of Cadets from Virginia Military Institute. It was also one of the last Confederate victories in the Shenandoah Valley.

A multiple-choice quiz by reenactorman. Estimated time: 5 mins.
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Author
reenactorman
Time
5 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
293,369
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
5 / 10
Plays
445
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Question 1 of 10
1. On what date was New Market fought? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. The Confederate commander at New Market was a well-known political figure from the antebellum years. Who was he? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Franz Sigel was not originally intended to lead the Federal force which fought at New Market, but rather was to remain at Departmental headquarters at Cumberland, MD, while a subordinate took actual command of the field army. Who was originally tipped for the field command? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. What was the name of the family who owned the farm where the core of the Battle of New Market occurred? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. The Confederate force at New Market included about 257 cadets from Virginia Military Institute. Most of them fought as infantry, under the Commandant of Cadets, before he was wounded in the battle. What was his name? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. Although the VMI infantry contingent was commanded by their officers and professors, the VMI two-gun artillery section was commanded by the senior cadet captain. He was whom? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. There has been no shortage of writings about New Market over the years. Who authored the first book-length study of the campaign by a non-participant? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. There are two monuments on the battlefield which were erected by veterans of the engagment. What are they? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. There was only one West Pointer on the field in gray at New Market. Who was he? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. Of the following states, which was NOT represented on the field at New Market? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. On what date was New Market fought?

Answer: May 15, 1864

The New Market Campaign officially began April 28, 1864, when Federal forces marched south from Martinsburg, WV, headed southward up the Shenandoah Valley toward Staunton, VA. Contact between Union and Confederate forces first occurred in the vicinity of New Market on May 13, when a Federal cavalry force crossed Massanutten Mountain at New Market Gap and encountered Confederate cavalry under Brigadier General John D. Imboden.
2. The Confederate commander at New Market was a well-known political figure from the antebellum years. Who was he?

Answer: John C. Breckinridge

John Cabell Breckinridge was a Kentucky lawyer turned politician who served as vice-president under President James Buchanan. When the Democratic Party was unable to chose a Presidential candidate for the 1860 election, Breckinridge was nominated by the Southern Democrats for the office. He finished second in the election of 1860 to Abraham Lincoln.
3. Franz Sigel was not originally intended to lead the Federal force which fought at New Market, but rather was to remain at Departmental headquarters at Cumberland, MD, while a subordinate took actual command of the field army. Who was originally tipped for the field command?

Answer: Edward O.C. Ord

Maj. Gen. E.O.C. Ord was a favorite of Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, who had recently been given command of all Union armies. Franz Sigel's ability to command had been called into question throughout the war, but his popularity among the German-American population all but required that he receive a high-profile command under Grant. Grant therefore gave Sigel command of the Department of West Virginia - mainly an administrative desk job - and assigned Ord command of the field force in West Virginia. However, Ord and Sigel came to despise one another and Ord's tenure lasted only a few weeks before he requested reassignment.

At one point he lamented to his wife that he would take a commission as a Lt. Col. in the Engineer Corps if it meant getting out from under Sigel.
4. What was the name of the family who owned the farm where the core of the Battle of New Market occurred?

Answer: Jacob Bushong

The Bushongs came to the Shenandoah Valley in the late 1790s. Jacob Bushong, patriarch of the "battlefield house" family married Sarah Strickler of Page County in the mid-1810s and they built their first home on their 400-acre farm north of New Market ca. 1817.

A second larger home was built beside the older one in the early 1820s and was added onto in the decade before the Civil War. Both homes still stand today, and the newer one was used as a Bed & Breakfast in the first part of the 20th century.

When New Market Battlefield Park first opened in the 1960s, the Bushong House served as the original visitor center.
5. The Confederate force at New Market included about 257 cadets from Virginia Military Institute. Most of them fought as infantry, under the Commandant of Cadets, before he was wounded in the battle. What was his name?

Answer: Scott Ship

Lt. Col. Scott Ship (he changed the spelling of his name after the war to "Shipp") was Commandant of Cadets for VMI. He was an 1859 graduate of the Institute himself and had served briefly in the 4th Virginia Cavalry, Army of Northern Virginia, before returning to Lexington. Shipp later was Superintendent of VMI 1890-1907.

F.H. Smith was VMI Superintendent, and illness prevented him from taking the field with the cadets. William Gilham, author of a much-used training manual for volunteers and militia, accompanied the cadets as acting superintendent but took no role in commanding them. R.L. Madison was the post surgeon.
6. Although the VMI infantry contingent was commanded by their officers and professors, the VMI two-gun artillery section was commanded by the senior cadet captain. He was whom?

Answer: Collier H. Minge

Collier H. Minge, Class of 1864, was senior cadet captain and thus given command of the cadet artillery section. His son, Collier Jr., graduated from VMI in 1900.

Otis A. Glazebrook, Class of 1866, was second in command of the artillery section. He was a founder of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity at VMI.

William C. Hardy, Class of 1864, was 1st Lt. of Company A, of the cadet battalion. He was a maternal uncle of Douglas MacArthur.

Oliver P. Evans, Class of 1865, was color bearer for the cadet battalion. He was a lawyer and judge after the war in California.
7. There has been no shortage of writings about New Market over the years. Who authored the first book-length study of the campaign by a non-participant?

Answer: Edward R. Turner

"The New Market Campaign" by University of Michigan European History professor Edward R. Turner first appeared in 1912. He was aided in his research by many veterans of the battle, including George M. Edgar, commander of the 26th Virginia Battalion, Benjamin A. Colonna, one of the VMI Cadets, and several others. Though Turner proclaimed his work to be an impartial one, it is almost entirely from the Southern point of view and gives much of the credit for the battle's outcome to Edgar's 26th VA Bttn.

It stood as the only book-length study of the battle until William C. Davis released his "Battle of New Market" in 1975. Neither Freeman nor Wittenberg have written about New Market.
8. There are two monuments on the battlefield which were erected by veterans of the engagment. What are they?

Answer: 1st Missouri Cavalry and 54th Pennsylvania Infantry

Although markers have been erected marking the positions of the first Union line on Manor's Hill, the only two monuments erected by veterans of the battle are the 54th Pennsylvania Infantry monument, just west of the old Valley Pike, and Charles Woodson's 1st Missouri Cavalry, Company A, in the Bushong orchard.

Alfred von Kleiser's 30th New York Battery likely wanted to forget New Market, as they lost three of their six guns there. The 34th Massachusetts lost roughly half their number there in the regiment's first engagement. After the war Henry A. DuPont, then a Senator from Delaware, procured Federal funds to repay VMI for damages it incurred when it was burned one month after the battle. The 23rd Virginia Cavalry found a flooded creek between itself and the Federals and played no active role on May 15. The battlefield park today is administered by VMI, but there is no actual monument to the cadets on site.
9. There was only one West Pointer on the field in gray at New Market. Who was he?

Answer: Clarence Derrick

Clarence Derrick, commander of the 23rd Virginia Battalion, was a classmate of George A. Custer in the USMA Class of 1861. Custer was last, Derrick was fifth.
10. Of the following states, which was NOT represented on the field at New Market?

Answer: Illinois

Missouri: Charles Woodson's 1st Missouri Cavalry, Company A.
New York: 30th New York Battery, 21st New York Cavalry, 1st NY Veteran Cavalry, 1st NY (Lincoln) Cavalry.
Connecticut: 18th Connecticut Infantry.
Illinois: none.
Source: Author reenactorman

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor bloomsby before going online.
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