22nd Virginia Cavalry
The 22nd Virginia Volunteer Cavalry Regiment was a cavalry regiment raised in Virginia for service in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. It fought mostly in southwestern Virginia, East Tennessee, and the Shenandoah Valley.
Virginia's 22nd Cavalry Regiment completed its organization in October, 1863, and was sometimes called "Bowen's Regiment Virginia Mounted Riflemen," having been raised by Col. Henry S. Bowen, formerly of the 188th, and the Shenandoah Valley. During April, 1865, it disbanded. The field officers were Colonel Henry S. Bowen, Lieutenant Colonel John T. Radford, and Major Henry F. Kendrick. A Union soldier, Sergeant Levi Shoemaker, was awarded the Medal of Honor for capturing the regiment's flag during an engagement at Nineveh, Warren County, Virginia on November 12, 1864. Two members would later serve one term each in the Virginia General Assembly, John C. Stanfield who would also serve as superintendent of the Washington Alms House before returning to Washington County and serving in the House of Delegates in 1906, and William Orville Moore representing Wythe County in 1912.
Companies and officers
Company | Nickname | Recruited at | First Commanding Officer |
A | Captain Fuller's Company | Tazewell County | Hiram F. Kendrick Abram Fuller |
B | Company B | Tazewell County | Gordon W. Riffe |
C | Company C | Washington County | John C. Stanfield |
D | Company D | Russell County | Martin Ball |
E | Company E | Washington CountyRussell County | William M. Baldwin Reese M. Baldwin |
F | Company F | Tazewell County | William Washington Brown |
G | Company G | Wythe County Carroll County | William O. Moore |
H | Company H | Tazewell County | Balaam W. Higginbotham |
I | Company I | Russell County Tazewell County | William P. Samples |