The battery was formed when Captain John C. Landis recruited men from the Missouri State Guard in late 1861 and early 1862. It may have been the last artillery battery to be formed in the United States before the end of the Civil War in 1865. It had a highest reported numerical strength of 62 men, and fielded two 12-pounder Napoleon field guns and two 24-pounders howitzers for much of its existence.
About Landis’s Missouri Battery in brief

It also has been known as Landis’s Company, Missouri Light Artillery, Landis’s Company, and Landis “Landis”“Company,” and “Lands’ Company”, “Missouri Light Art artillery”. It lost its commander, Lieutenant John M. Langan, on June 15, 1863, at the battle of Boonville, Missouri. It later became known as ‘Lands’ Company,’ ‘Land’’ or “Land “” ‘‘”Lands ’, and ”Land” or ““Lans’.” It was disbanded in July 1863, after the Battle of Boon ville, which led to the capture of Colonel Franz Sigel by the Union Army. The last remaining members of the unit were captured on June 14, 1864, and later died in battle at Grand Gulf, Mississippi, on July 5, 1866. It remains the only Confederate artillery battery still in existence today. In the early 19th century, a large cultural divide developed between the Northern States and the Southern States over the issue of slavery. Many southerners decided that secession was the only way to preserve slavery, especially after abolitionist Abraham Lincoln was elected president in 1860. On December 20, 1860, the state of South Carolina seceded and the states of Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas followed suit in early 1861.
You want to know more about Landis’s Missouri Battery?
This page is based on the article Landis’s Missouri Battery published in Wikipedia (as of Dec. 04, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






