State Troops cavalry units were organized in 1862 & 1863, but they were plagued by the same problems that limited the effectiveness of the organization as a whole. An inspection report of the cavalry force in Mississippi in September, 1863 reported poor discipline and high rates of absenteeism in the State Troops: "This command is generally not in good condition...The
partisan and State troops are not reliable, being in poor discipline and over one-half the number on the rolls being at their homes...In raids of the enemy many of the partisan and State troops disperse...The State troops in their present unsettled state are but harbors for deserters and persons trying to avoid the military service." Several of the 1862 State Troops cavalry units initially mustered for state service were reorganized and mustered into Confederate service in the spring of 1864 with the approval of Mississippi Governor
Charles Clark. Major General Samuel J. Gholson, who had led the State Troops since the spring of 1863, was commissioned into the Confederate Army as a brigadier general at this time. Gholson's Mississippi brigade served under the command of Major General
Nathan Bedford Forrest and participated in many cavalry actions against Union troops in North Mississippi until the close of the war.
First Battalion Cavalry, Col. Green L. Blythe, Lt. Col. A.C. Edmundson. Organized September 1862. Also called the Second Regiment, Partisan Rangers. In the interim, the 2nd State Troops regiment was under the command of General Gholson, who coordinated his efforts with Forrest's Confederate cavalry. In May 1864, the regiment was officially mustered into Confederate service and given the title of 6th Mississippi Cavalry, even though
another unit already had that designation. After joining Confederate service the unit was most often simply called "Lowry's Regiment". At the
Battle of Egypt Station, General Gholson was severely wounded, losing his arm, and his cavalry brigade was consolidated with another State Troops regiment led by Colonel T.C. Ashcraft. After the April 2, 1865
Battle of Selma in Alabama, this consolidated unit surrendered with the remainder of Forrest's Cavalry Corps on May 22, 1865. • Company A, Citizen Guards of
Tippah County • Company B, Johnson Partisans of Chickasaw County • Company C, Monroe County •
Tuscumbia Rangers • Company D,
Rocky Ford • Company E, Mississippi Rangers Elliston • Company F, Monroe County • Company G, Chickasaw City • Company H,
J.V. Harris Guards of
Athens • Company I, Chickasaw County • Company K, Pettus Rangers of Tippah County • Company L, of Tishomingo County
Third Regiment Cavalry, Col. John McGuirk, Lt. Col. James A. Barksdale, Lt. Col. H.H. Barksdale. Organized 1862, 13 companies. Involved in skirmishes in North Mississippi opposing Union cavalry raids, 1863. Transferred to Confederate service April, 1864 as the
3d Mississippi Cavalry Regiment.
Third Battalion, Cavalry Lt. Col. Thomas C. Ashcraft. Organized 1864, transferred to Confederate service May 1, 1864 and consolidated with Harris’ battalion. • Company A • Company B,
Chesterville • Company C,
Marietta • Company D,
Saltillo • Company E,
Richmond • Company F,
Fulton In addition, other cavalry companies formed in 1862 for State Troops service which were later converted to Confederate service include: '''Davenport's Battalion Cavalry''', Maj. Stephen Davenport. Organized summer 1863, later merged into
Sixth Cavalry Regiment. '''Dunn's Battalion''', Mississippi Rangers, Capt. J.B Dunn, organized 18 June 1862. Pettus Partisans, Capt. W.B. Prince, organized 4 August 1862. '''Forrest's Battalion''', also known as Sixth Battalion and First Battalion. Capt.
Aaron H. Forrest, organized 1863. '''Ham's Battalion''', also known as Sixteenth Battalion. Maj. T.W. Ham, organized summer 1863. Involved in skirmishes at
Palo Alto and
Camp Davies. Transferred in May 1864 to Confederate Service. • Company A, Tishomingo Rangers • Company B, Tishomingo County • Company C,
Booneville • Company D, Booneville • Company E, Grenada • Company F, Brown's Mill • Company G,
Booneville • Company H, Camp Creek
Harris’ Battalion, also known as Second Battalion. Maj. Thomas W. Harris, organized fall 1863. Transferred to Confederate service May 1, 1864 and consolidated with Ashcraft's battalion. • Company A,
Pontotoc County Minute Men • Company B, Wood's Company of Pontotoc • Company C, Monroe County '''Perrin's Battalion''', Lt. Col.
Robert O. Perrin, organized 1863, later mustered into Confederate service as the
11th Mississippi Cavalry Regiment. Other State Troop cavalry companies: • Johnson's Cavalry Company • Matthew's Battalion Cavalry • Outlaw's Battalion - Partisan Rangers • Yazoo Battalion, Lt. Col. Charles F. Hamer • Saunder's Battalion, Maj. B.F. Saunders • Street's Battalion. Maj. Solomon G. Street, merged into Fifteenth Tennessee Cavalry. == 1864 organization==