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The Historic New Orleans Collection
Sepia-toned portrait of a bearded man in a military uniform with buttons. The background is plain, and there is a handwritten text at the bottom on a slightly worn card.

A Fine Body of Men

The Orleans Light Horse, Louisiana Cavalry, 1861–1865

by Donald Peter Moriarty II

This thoroughly researched Civil War regimental history, follows the Orleans Light Horse from its organization through its muster into active service to the war’s end. 

Book cover featuring a sepia-toned historical photograph of a cavalryman in uniform with a sword. The title reads, A Fine Body of Men: The Orleans Light Horse, Louisiana Cavalry, 1861-1865, by Donald Peter Moriarty II.

A Fine Body of Men: The Orleans Light Horse, Louisiana Cavalry, 1861–1865

HNOC 2014 
softcover • 6" × 9" • 304 pp.
28 b&w images
ISBN 978-0-917860-67-6

$30.00

As armies formed across a splintering United States in early 1861, the call to the colors sounded and volunteer groups began to assemble. One such unit, formed in New Orleans, was the Orleans Light Horse, an independent light-cavalry troop described by the New Orleans Daily Picayune as “a fine body of men all splendidly mounted.”

In this thoroughly researched Civil War regimental history, Donald Peter Moriarty II follows the Orleans Light Horse from its organization in February 1861 through its March 1862 muster into active service with the Confederate States Army to the war’s end, in 1865. As the escort company to Lieutenant General Leonidas Polk and, later, Lieutenant General Alexander P. Stewart, the Orleans Light Horse was an integral part of the Army of Mississippi and the Army of Tennessee.

A Fine Body of Men provides service records and additional biographical information for the company’s 215 cavalrymen, while inviting readers to experience the major campaigns of the Civil War’s Western Theater alongside these brave soldiers.

“A traditional unit history chock-full of well-organized service data and beautiful illustrations”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

A native of Louisiana currently residing in California, Moriarty is a retired lieutenant colonel of the US Army.

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