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== The Texas Brigade in Action ==
[[File:battlegaines'smilldrawing.jpg|thumbnail|250px|left|Depiction of the Battle of Gaines's Mill.]]
Dismounted, Hood effectively replaced Colonel John Marshal as the leader of the 4th Texas on June 27. Hood led the 500 men of the regiment on a march toward the Union left flank. Initially, Law’s Brigade was on Hood’s right in the battle line, but Hood ordered his men past Law’s on the Confederate right flank. The regiment was under constant fire from the well-positioned Union artillery. As they continued across the open field, the Federal enfilade grew to include sharp-shooters and infantry fire. Colonel Marshal was shot in the neck and fell from his horse. The wound was mortal.<ref>Nicholas A. Davis, ''Chaplain Davis and Hood’s Texas Brigade,'' ed. Donald E. Everett (San Antonio: Principa Press of Trinity University, 1962), 88.</ref>The troops continued forward and obeyed Hood’s order to hold fire until he gave the command. The Federal position allowed for constant shell and shot to be pelted on the Confederate Texans, and “half way across the field, men began to drop, wounded or dead, from the ranks.”<ref>Polley, ''Letters,'' 54.</ref>
When Hood’s men reached the top of a rise in the terrain, approximately 150 yards from Boatswain’s Creek, they came upon numerous troops clinging to the ground who would go no further. It was at this point that Longstreet’s and A.P. Hill’s men were halted. The lieutenants of the companies the 4th encountered, thought to be Virginia troops, urged the Texans not to proceed further. Hood and his men ignored the warning and started down the other side of the rise toward the creek. Once the continued march began, there was an immediate eruption of Union firepower. Hood maintained the order to hold fire and urged his men forward.<ref>Simpson, 118-19.</ref>
[[File:battlegaines'smilldrawing.jpg|thumbnail|300px|Depiction of the Battle of Gaines's Mill.]]
When the 4th Texas got to within one hundred yards of Porter’s line, Hood ordered to fix bayonets while on the move. Once that task was complete, Hood ordered the 4th Texas to charge at the double-quick.<ref>Davis, 88.</ref>With the gleaming steel of the bayonets and a Rebel Yell that rivaled the sound of the artillery, the 4th Texas reached the first Union entrenchment on the hill. It unnerved Porter’s men to the point that they “fled panic-stricken.”<ref>United States War Department, ''War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies,'' 128 vols. (Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1888),series I, vol. 11, part II, 291. Hereinafter cited as ''OR.''</ref>According to Chaplain Davis, “it seemed as if every ball found a victim, so great was the slaughter.”<ref>Davis, 83</ref>

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