| The 1850s were a tumultuous time in the
United States. Even moderate Northerners came to oppose the expansion
of slavery into the territories west of the Mississippi River, prompting
Southerners to exhibit increasing militancy in defending their "peculiar
institution, " not to mention the economic prosperity and genteel
lifestyle it supported. As extremists on both sides of the issue squeezed
compromise out of the American political system, the white inhabitants
of Dixie seemed to be preparing for armed conflict. Military academies
sprang up in placid, pastoral settings, and militia companies formed
and drilled throughout the South.
Even Virginia, one of the last states to leave the Union, succumbed
to the martial mania. Since colonial times, Virginians had taken
great pride in their blue-blooded thoroughbreds and magnificent
horsemanship. On the eve of disunion, many young men in the Old
Dominion banded together to form mounted units. They called their
outfits by such names as the "Valley Rangers," "Howard
Dragoons," and "Loudon Light Horse." They also designed
fantastic uniforms for themselves, attempting to combine contemporary
European military fashion with the grace and romance of seventeenth
century England.
Once the Civil War finally broke out, some of these troops of horse
coalesced into a single regiment. Eventually, this 1st Virginia
Cavalry numbered ten companies. Command of the new unit went to
Lieutenant Colonel James Ewell Brown ("Jeb") Stuart. Young,
dashing, and flamboyant, Stuart was a West Point graduate who had
proved his valor before the war fighting Indians with the 1st U.S.
Cavalry. When Virginia seceded from the Union, Stuart resigned his
commission in the U.S. Army and offered his sword to his native
state.
Stuart and the 1st Virginia proved their worth to the Confederacy
on July 21, 1861, at the First Battle of Bull Run. When green Union
infantry began to retreat, Stuart and his troopers pursued them
a short way with such zest that panic swept the Federal ranks. From
that point on, Yankee soldiers spoke of Rebel horsemen with dread.
The 1st Virginia Cavalry became the nucleus around which Stuart
built a formidable brigade - followed by a division and eventually
a corps. For nearly two years, Confederate troopers rode circles
around their Union counterparts in northern Virginia. Thus the 1st
Virginia laid the foundation for the myth of Southern mounted supremacy.
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