Special Report

States With the Highest Civil War Death Toll

PamelaPeters / iStock via Getty Images

The Civil War was the bloodiest conflict in American history. An estimated 620,000 men – including an unknown number of women – fighting for the Union and the Confederacy were killed, about 2% of the nation’s population at the time. According to Battlefields.org, if taken as a percentage of today’s population, that toll would be 6 million people today. All told, there were 1.5 million casualties – deaths, wounded, injury, sickness, internment, or missing in action.   

At the time of the Civil War, there were 37 states and all suffered fatalities. However, not all were involved to the same extent, and some states sustained more horrific losses than others. (These are the deadliest battles in U.S. history.)

To determine the states with the most Civil War deaths, 24/7 Tempo compiled death counts from the American Battlefield Trust and historical tabulations by William F. Fox and Frederick H. Dyer shortly after the war. 

Many registries of death, however, had already been destroyed, especially in the South, by the time Fox and Dyer began their work, and many historians suggest Civil War deaths are largely undercounted. Therefore we used the highest measure of deaths for each state. Data on the side each state was on in the conflict also came from the American Battlefield Trust.

New military technology and improved logistics in the Civil War combined with unadapted tactical doctrine to produce a scale of battle casualties unheard of in U.S. history. Most casualties and deaths in the Civil War were the result of non-combat-related disease. For every three soldiers killed in battle, five others died from disease. The rudimentary nature of Civil War medicine meant that many wounds and illnesses were unnecessarily fatal. 

Virtually all of the Civil War was fought on Southern soil, though Union forces suffered more casualties. The Southern states of Virginia, North Carolina, Alabama, and South Carolina sustained most of the fatalities for the Confederacy. New York, Illinois, Ohio, and Pennsylvania suffered the most for the North and the most of all states involved. (These are the most pivotal battles that made America what it is today.)

The number of casualties in at least 10 battles was more than 19,000. More American soldiers were killed or wounded at The Battle of Gettysburg alone than during the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812 combined. Because the South was at full conscription, virtually every household was impacted by the war. It is estimated that one in three Southern households lost at least one family member.

37. Nevada
> Est. Civil War deaths: 33
> Side in the conflict: Union

[in-text-ad]

zrfphoto / iStock via Getty Images

36. Oregon
> Est. Civil War deaths: 46
> Side in the conflict: Union

mtcurado / iStock via Getty Images

35. Colorado
> Est. Civil War deaths: 500
> Side in the conflict: Union

volvob12b / Flickr/Public Domain

34. California
> Est. Civil War deaths: 573
> Side in the conflict: Union

[in-text-ad-2]

gnagel / iStock via Getty Images

33. Florida
> Est. Civil War deaths: 1,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

32. Delaware
> Est. Civil War deaths: 1,000
> Side in the conflict: Border State

[in-text-ad]

31. Rhode Island
> Est. Civil War deaths: 1,321
> Side in the conflict: Union

AdamParent / iStock via Getty Images

30. Maryland
> Est. Civil War deaths: 2,982
> Side in the conflict: Border State

29. Texas
> Est. Civil War deaths: 3,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

[in-text-ad-2]

BCWH / iStock via Getty Images

28. Minnesota
> Est. Civil War deaths: 3,000
> Side in the conflict: Union

PamelaPeters / iStock via Getty Images

27. Kansas
> Est. Civil War deaths: 3,000
> Side in the conflict: Union

[in-text-ad]

26. Louisiana
> Est. Civil War deaths: 4,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

Wilsilver77 / iStock via Getty Images

25. West Virginia
> Est. Civil War deaths: 4,017
> Side in the conflict: Border State

24. New Hampshire
> Est. Civil War deaths: 4,882
> Side in the conflict: Union

[in-text-ad-2]

23. Vermont
> Est. Civil War deaths: 5,224
> Side in the conflict: Union

traveler1116 / iStock via Getty Images

22. Connecticut
> Est. Civil War deaths: 5,354
> Side in the conflict: Union

[in-text-ad]

ChrisBoswell / iStock via Getty Images

21. New Jersey
> Est. Civil War deaths: 5,754
> Side in the conflict: Union

Archive Photos / Archive Photos via Getty Images

20. Tennessee
> Est. Civil War deaths: 6,777
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

stephenallen75 / iStock via Getty Images

19. Georgia
> Est. Civil War deaths: 7,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

[in-text-ad-2]

18. Arkansas
> Est. Civil War deaths: 7,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

Michael Warren / iStock via Getty Images

17. Mississippi
> Est. Civil War deaths: 8,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

[in-text-ad]

Katie Dobies / iStock via Getty Images

16. Maine
> Est. Civil War deaths: 9,393
> Side in the conflict: Union

EJ_Rodriquez / iStock via Getty Images

15. Kentucky
> Est. Civil War deaths: 10,774
> Side in the conflict: Border State

David_Esmond / iStock via Getty Images

14. Wisconsin
> Est. Civil War deaths: 12,301
> Side in the conflict: Union

[in-text-ad-2]

Jacqueline Nix / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

13. Iowa
> Est. Civil War deaths: 13,001
> Side in the conflict: Union

fozzyb / iStock via Getty Images

12. Missouri
> Est. Civil War deaths: 13,885
> Side in the conflict: Border State

[in-text-ad]

APCortizasJr / iStock via Getty Images

11. Massachusetts
> Est. Civil War deaths: 13,942
> Side in the conflict: Union

10. Michigan
> Est. Civil War deaths: 14,753
> Side in the conflict: Union

ovidiuhrubaru / iStock via Getty Images

9. South Carolina
> Est. Civil War deaths: 18,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

[in-text-ad-2]

jhutchin / iStock via Getty Images

8. Indiana
> Est. Civil War deaths: 26,672
> Side in the conflict: Union

Archive Photos / Archive Photos via Getty Images

7. Alabama
> Est. Civil War deaths: 27,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

[in-text-ad]

Sean Pavone / iStock via Getty Images

6. Virginia
> Est. Civil War deaths: 31,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

karenparker2000 / iStock via Getty Images

5. North Carolina
> Est. Civil War deaths: 31,000
> Side in the conflict: Confederacy

Pgiam / iStock Unreleased via Getty Images

4. Pennsylvania
> Est. Civil War deaths: 33,183
> Side in the conflict: Union

[in-text-ad-2]

mariloutrias / iStock via Getty Images

3. Illinois
> Est. Civil War deaths: 34,834
> Side in the conflict: Union

2. Ohio
> Est. Civil War deaths: 35,475
> Side in the conflict: Union

[in-text-ad]

stefko / iStock via Getty Images

1. New York
> Est. Civil War deaths: 46,534
> Side in the conflict: Union

Credit card companies are handing out rewards and benefits to win the best customers. A good cash back card can be worth thousands of dollars a year in free money, not to mention other perks like travel, insurance, and access to fancy lounges. See our top picks for the best credit cards today. You won’t want to miss some of these offers.

Flywheel Publishing has partnered with CardRatings for our coverage of credit card products. Flywheel Publishing and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers.

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.