CHAPTER VIII.
THE SECTIONAL
ISSUE.
INDENTURED servants in the early years of the province were
common, and few well-to-do Friends came to this country without
more or less of this class of laborers. These servants were at
first considered in the same social scale with the ordinary farm
laborer of England, and many of them reached positions of
affluence and became leading characters in the community.
Indeed, as Smith writes in his History of New Jersey, "many that
came as servants succeeded better than some that brought
estates; the first, inured to industry and the ways of the
country, became wealthy, while others obliged to spend what they
had in the difficulties of first improvement, and others living
too much on their original stock for want of sufficient care to
improve their estates have, in many instances, dwindled to
indigency and want." The great German immigration, which
subsequently supplied so large a proportion of this class of
laborers, degraded the character of the service to something
nearly akin to slavery. Gangs of these victims of unscrupulous
shipmasters and agents passed through the country in quest of
purchasers, driven by men who were appropriately termed
"soul-drivers." As late as 1759, it is said, "the labor of the
plantations was performed chiefly by indented servants brought
from Great Britain, Ireland, and Germany; nor because of the
high price it bears can it be performed any other way." Such
persons were sold to a term of five years’ service for ten
pounds, and during this period were the legal property of their
master. They were sold, bequeathed, and like other chattels were
seized for debt. In 1683 an act prohibited the selling of
servants out of the province, and in 1700 it was provided "that
every servant that shall faithfully serve four years, or more,
shall, at the expiration of their servitude, have a discharge,
and shall be duly clothed with two complete suits of apparel,
whereof one shall be new, and shall also be furnished with one
new axe, one grubbing-hoe, and one weeding-hoe at the charge of
their master or mistress." The ease with which such persons
escaped from their masters, and the more profitable character of
negro slavery, led to its gradual substitution for the less
repulsive form of service.
Negro slavery was introduced into the river colony by the
Dutch at a very early date, and it continued to thrive here
until abolished by legislative act after the revolution. After
the founding of Philadelphia this city became the general port
of entry for the cargoes of slaves, which came principally from
the Barbadoes, and were usually landed in the months of May,
June, and July. Numerous legal restrictions to the traffic were
attempted by the provincial government, but without avail until
after the achievement of independence. Shortly after 1700 an
effort was made to discourage the importation of blacks by the
imposition of a tariff, but this was annulled by the home
government, which declared through the lower house of parliament
"that the trade was important and ought to be free." A law with
more moderate provisions was enacted in 1715, and similar laws
were passed in 1722, 1761, and 1773, all of which shared the
fate of the first attempt.
The police regulation of this class of the community was not
unusually nor unnecessarily severe. In 1693 a law was passed
against the "tumultuous gatherings of negroes of the town of
Philadelphia the first day of the week." The constables or any
other persons were authorized "to take up negroes, male or
female, whom they should find gadding abroad on the first day of
the week, without a ticket from their master or mistress, or not
in their company, or to carry them to jail, there to remain that
night, and that without meat or drink, or to cause them to be
publicly whipped." For the latter service the owners were to pay
fifteen pence to the wielder of the lash. A general law for the
"trial and punishment of negroes" was passed in 1700, but this
was repealed five years later, when a more stringent measure was
adopted. By this the lash was prescribed for petty offenses and
capital punishment for graver misdeeds. The carrying of a gun
without permit, the meeting together of more than four, and
being abroad after nine o’clock at night were declared
punishable offenses.
Public agitation against the system began as early as 1688,
when a number of Mennonites entered a formal protest at the
Friends’ yearly meeting against the common practice of the
latter in holding slaves. On Penn’s return to the province in
1700 he laid before the Philadelphia yearly meeting his concern
for the instruction of negroes in Christianity, and a meeting
was appointed for them every month. In 1706 the white laborers
presented to the assembly a petition, in which they asked for
such restraint upon slave-owners as would prevent the hiring of
slaves by the day, the scarcity of work and the lowness of wages
moving them to this action. The chief opposition, however, was
based on moral grounds, and Anthony Benezet and Ralph Sandiford
as early as 1729 published labored arguments against the crime
of slavery.
There are many allusions to slaves in the early records of
Bucks county, and about the time of the revolution but few of
the wealthy Friends were without more or less of them. In a
letter to his steward William Penn wrote from England in 1685,
referring to the difficulty of retaining laborers: "It were
better they were blacks, for then we might have them for life."
Again, later in the year, he wrote: "The blacks of Captain Allen
I have as good as bought, so part not with them without my
order." In Penn’s will he freed his slaves and to "Old Sam" gave
one hundred acres, "to be his children’s after he and his wife
are dead." In 1742 Jeremiah Langhorne died possessed of thirty
or forty slaves to whom he gave their freedom in his will, after
they should arrive at the age of twenty-four, and ten pounds
apiece in money. The institution was found here in its mildest
form, and the general sentiment favored its final extinction. In
1780 there were five hundred and fourteen listed in the county,
and in 1790 there were two hundred and sixty-one. The great
proportion of these were in the lower portion of the county,
only twenty-five being found in ten of the upper townships. The
revolutionary war interrupted the importation of slaves, and its
result left the province untrammeled to follow its own course in
putting a stop to the traffic. The number of these chattels
accordingly rapidly decreased, and in 1780 there was very little
determined opposition to the act providing for their eventual
emancipation.
While the Friends were accessible to humanitarian influences
and accepted emancipation without strong opposition they felt
some repulsion to the race and declined to be closely associated
with it even in the grave. In the record of the Friends of
Middletown, in 1703, it is declared that the "Friends are not
satisfied with having negroes buried in the Friends’
burying-ground, therefore Robert Heaton and Thomas Stackhouse
are appointed to fence off a portion for such uses." In 1738, in
the same record," negroes are forbidden to be buried within the
walls of the graveyard belonging to this meeting." In many cases
the bodies of deceased negroes were buried in unmarked graves in
the orchards or other parts of the plantations of the owners.
The humanitarian sentiment of the Friends, however, kept pace in
subsequent years with the most enlightened development of public
thought. The change was gradual, but from a slave-holding
community the people of Bucks county had become, to a very large
degree, in favor of universal freedom at the time of Lincoln’s
inauguration as president.
As elsewhere throughout the land the questions which led up
to the civil war of 1861—5 enlisted the active interest of the
people here. Slaves fleeing from their masters found here an
asylum from their pursuers and assistance to reach Canada or
other places of safety. A line of the "underground railway" was
early established in the county and was well patronized. In 1826
an escaped slave from Maryland came to Bucks county and found
work among the farmers of the central part of the county. For
eleven years he remained here unmolested, but in 1837 he was
discovered by his master, and after a stout resistance on his
part was captured while at work. He was subsequently purchased
of his master for five hundred and thirty dollars by Jonathan
Bowman and George Chapman and, set at liberty. Similar cases
kept the subject of slavery and its evils prominently before the
people and the cause of freedom gradually grew stronger in the
community. The "Intelligencer," supplied with such topics as the
Passmore Williamson case in 1855, the Kansas trouble, the speech
of Sumner, and the Brooks assault in 1856, the Dred Scott
decision, and the campaign literature of 1857, devoted the
larger part of its space to the discussion of this matter, and
the general interest in the subject is evinced by the numerous
local contributions which found utterance in the exponent of
free-soil and republican principles.
The fall of Fort Sumter aroused the intensest excitement
throughout the county. With few exceptions all joined in
expressions of enthusiastic loyalty to the national government.
Flags were everywhere displayed. The old streamer that had
previously done service on the "Intelligencer" office was
replaced by a new flag, and that with the colors of the
Doylestown Union Club was subsequently hoisted at the old
court-house. Thursday evening, April 18, 1861, a public meeting
was held in the court-room, over which Judge Chapman presided.
He assumed the chair with a stirring speech which excited the
enthusiasm of the audience to the highest pitch, and when
opportunity was offered for the enrolment of those who wished to
join the Doylestown guards, a militia company whose services had
been accepted by the governor, a considerable number promptly
subscribed their names. Similar meetings were held in other
parts of the county, and in a fortnight more than a dozen
companies were in the various stages of organization for the
war.
The militia of Pennsylvania, as generally throughout the
country, was practically to be found only on paper. Bucks,
Montgomery, and Delaware counties formed a division of the state
militia, under the command of Major. General Paul Applebach. In
March, 1860, there were fourteen militia organizations in this
county, which were known at least upon the muster-roll, but they
proved of only small account in the actual emergency of war.
They were organized for the purposes of parade and incidental
police duty, and in the presence of the emergency now presented
depended for their efficiency upon the volunteers which filled
the places of those not at first ready to do active duty. The
"Doylestown Guards" were the first of the county organizations
to offer their services, and left for Harrisburg on the 29th of
April. The company subsequently became company I of the
Twenty-fifth regiment of the Pennsylvania line.
On the afternoon of the 15th of April, 1861, the president’s
proclamation, with the summons of the state executive, was sent
throughout the commonwealth, and the state’s quota of sixteen
regiments was immediately filled by the tender of the militia,
which had a more or less efficient organization. By the first of
May the full complement of Pennsylvania was mustered, and a part
already in Washington, or at other threatened points.
The first volunteers to report at Washington in April, 1861,
were five independent companies, viz: Logan Guards, of Lewiston;
Ringgold Light Artillery, of Easton; Washington Artillery, of
Pottsville; Allen Rifles, of Allentown and National Light
Infantry, of Pottsville. These troops were the first to go
through Baltimore, and though assailed by the mob, escaped the
scenes of violence and bloodshed enacted next day on the passage
of the famous Massachusetts "Sixth." These companies were kept
on special duty at the national capital for some time. Being
largely in excess of regulation numbers, seven companies were
formed of them, and three companies were added, forming the
Twenty-fifth regiment. One of the added companies, company I,
was the "Doylestown Guards." The regiment was mustered April 28,
1861.
After some time spent in drilling they were attached to
Colonel Stone’s command, and a few days later assigned to
General Patterson’s army. It went to Charlestown July 17th, and
thence to Harper’s Ferry, where it remained until its term
expired. Returning home it was mustered out at Harrisburg July
26th. Company I consisted of W.W.H. Davis, captain; Jacob
Swartzlander, first lieutenant; George T. Harvey, second
lieutenant four sergeants, four corporals, two musicians, and
sixty-four privates.
On the 15th of May the governor was authorized to organize a
military corps, to be called the "Reserve Volunteer Corps of the
Commonwealth," consisting of thirteen regiments of infantry, one
regiment of cavalry, and one regiment of light artillery. They
were to be organized and equipped as similar troops in the
service of the United States, and to be enlisted in the service
of the state for a period of three years or for the war, but
liable to be mustered into the service of the United States to
fill any quota under a call from the president. Under this law
the governor established camps of instruction at Easton, West
Chester, Pittsburgh, and Harrisburg; each county was assigned
its quota, and the enthusiastic response everywhere made to the
governor’s call soon placed the full force in the course of
preparation for active duties.
One of these regiments, the "Third Reserve," was recruited
largely in Bucks county for the three months’ service, but was
not accepted, the state quota having previously been filled.
They tendered their services for the Reserve corps, and became
companies C, H, I, and K of the Thirty-second regiment of the
line ("Third Reserve").
On the arrival of the different companies in camp at Easton,
the regimental organization was completed by electing the
following officers: Horatio G. Sickel, then of Philadelphia,
formerly of Bucks county, who was captain of company K, raised
in Bucks county, was elected colonel, and served until mustered
out with his regiment in June, 1864. The lieutenant-colonel was
William S. Thompson, also of Bucks county; the major, Richard H.
Woolworth, of Philadelphia; and the adjutant, Albert H. Jamison.
Colonel Sickel had been a commissioned officer in the state
militia for twenty years, and by the thorough drill and
soldierly qualities which he imparted to the Thirty-second made
it noticeable as one of the best regiments in the "Reserves." On
July 22d the regiment was mustered into the United States
service as the "Third Reserve," and ordered to Washington, and
on August 2d to Tenallytown, where the "Reserve" regiments had
all been ordered. When the corps was organized the Third was
assigned to the Second brigade, under general George G. Meade.
The regiment was in reserve at the battle of Drainsville, on
December 20th of the same year, having been incorporated into
the army of the Potomac. On March 10th, 1862, the regiment
participated in the general advance of the army of the Potomac.
On reaching Hunter’s Mills and receiving news of the evacuation
of Manassas by the enemy, the division to which the Third
belonged was countermarched to Alexandria, where it remained
until ordered to the Peninsula. On May 2d the regiment arrived
opposite Fredericksburg and participated in the movement across
the river into the city and the advance toward Richmond. On the
11th the Second brigade, including the Third Reserve,
opportunely arrived at White House in time to repulse the attack
of the enemy’s cavalry on the train of the Reserves, and two
days later the Third joined its division at Dispatch Station.
On the Peninsula the regiment saw severe service and covered
itself with glory. On the Chickahominy the Reserves were the
first to feel the terrific onslaught of the combined rebel
armies, reinforced by Jackson’s troops from the army of the
Shenandoah. Here they held the right of the line, repulsing the
most desperate assaults. The Third was in support of Kern’s
battery, and was not relieved until two o’clock of the next
morning. The next day the regiment bore the rebel attack at
Gaines’ Mills, where it lost in killed, wounded, and missing
over one hundred men. For its gallant conduct the regiment was
highly praised on the battlefield by General Meade.
The Third participated in the subsequent movements on the
Peninsula, and on the 30th of June was on picket duty when it
was attacked by a vastly superior force, which it received at
fifty paces with such a torrent of fire as to drive it back,
leaving the greater part on the bloody field. An unfortunate
mistake here occurred, the Third being mistaken for a rebel
regiment by one of its supports and fired upon, occasioning,
however, but slight loss. General Meade being wounded, the
command of the brigade devolved upon Colonel Sickel, while
Lieutenant-colonel Thompson took command of the regiment. On the
following day, at Malvern Hill, the Third was in reserve.
The army of the Potomac being ordered to reinforce Pope’s
army of Virginia, the Third was moved to Acquia creek, from
there by rail to Falmouth, and thence to Rappahannock station.
They participated in the marches of that army, but were not
actively engaged until the 29th, when a severe skirmish occurred
in which the regiment lost considerably. The next day the second
battle of Bull run was fought, in which the reserves took a
prominent part, and although finally driven back, succeeded in
defeating the enemy’s purpose of dividing our army, holding him
in check until reinforced by a brigade of regulars, and securing
the safe retreat of the army. In this engagement Captain H. Clay
Beatty, of company I, was killed, and the regiment lost heavily.
In the battle of Chantilly, next day, the Third was in
reserve, and thence it went to Antietam, where it was engaged
and suffered considerable loss.
General Burnside having been placed in command of the army
began a movement against Fredericksburg, his objective point
being Richmond. On December 13th was fought the battle at the
former place, and again the Third was in the hottest of the
fight, losing in killed, wounded, and missing one hundred and
twenty-eight. It took part in no other battles at this time, and
was ordered back to Washington to rest and recruit its shattered
ranks. It remained there until January, 1864, when with the
fourth, both commanded by General H.G. Sickel, it was ordered to
West Virginia, where it encountered much severe labor and
suffered from forced marches in pursuit of the flying foe, who
made stand at what is known as Cloyd mountain, where the Third
again distinguished itself and suffered much loss, among others
losing three color-bearers in the charge on the enemy’s works,
which they carried in gallant style. This battle was fought on
May 9, 1864. From this time until May 30th the regiment was
continually on the march. Their term of enlistment having
expired they were ordered home, and on June 17th were mustered
out at Philadelphia, with a record not surpassed by any regiment
which took the field.
The Eighty-ninth regiment (Third cavalry) was first intended
to be a rifle regiment, but was subsequently changed to cavalry.
It was raised mainly in Philadelphia, but Bucks county
contributed many men to its ranks, noticeably in company M, in
which they were in a majority. The regiment was mustered into
the service for three years on July 23, 1861. Until March of the
following year the regiment was engaged in drill and camp duty
with an occasional scouting expedition. It was engaged in some
slight skirmishes, but met its first losses in battle at
Garnett’s, in front of the Union lines. In the campaign on the
Peninsula the Eighty-ninth was actively engaged, and was part of
the rear-guard on the retrograde movement from Harrison’s
Landing to Yorktown. From this time forward the regiment was
actively engaged in skirmishing without much loss until the
battle of Antietam, where it lost several men. In the latter
part of October, and until winter rendered movement impossible,
the Eighty-ninth was constantly in motion, and suffered severe
losses. In April, 1863, it was in the van on the march to
Chancellorsville, and on its way two squadrons successively
surprised and captured two of the enemy’s picket-guards. From
this time until the fight opened at Chancellorsville on May 18th
the regiment was constantly engaged with small bodies of the
enemy, and was the first to engage in battle on the field of
Chancellorsville, where they kept the advance of the enemy in
check until relieved by Sykes’s division of regulars, losing
heavily in killed and wounded. On the evening of the following
day, when Stonewall Jackson’s troops were driving back the
Eleventh corps in much disorder, General Pleasonton was asked to
try and check the enemy long enough to give the shattered line
time to re-form and bring some guns to bear on the enemy.
Knowing that it was almost certain death, he told Major Keenan,
in command of the Eighty-ninth, what he wished. The brave Major
replied, "General, I will do it," and at once started in with
his regiment, numbering between four and five hundred men. It
was a dreadful sacrifice by brave men who knew the danger and
freely offered their lives to save the rest of the army. The
movement was entirely successful, but at a cost of the lives of
the brave Major and nearly half of his force. From this time on
the regiment was mainly under Sheridan’s command, and
participated in all of his operations until the winter of 1864,
when it numbered only two hundred men. Its ranks were still
further depleted by the numerous and brilliant actions in 1865,
losing heavily in every engagement, until, on the surrender of
Lee, but a handful was left of the once full regiment, and they
were incorporated into the Sixteenth cavalry, with which they
were mustered out in August, 1865.
The First New Jersey Cavalry (Sixteenth New Jersey
Volunteers) was raised under authority granted to Hon. William
Halsted, of New Jersey, by the secretary of war, in August,
1861. In the following month ten companies were filled and were
in Washington, and were known as "Halsted’s Horse," but were not
then recognized by the state of New Jersey. Its first
experiences in camp were disheartening, but a reorganization of
the regiment and the appointment of Percy Wyndham as colonel, an
English soldier with a brilliant war record, and the recognition
of the regiment by the state, set things straight, and the
regiment spent the winter and spring months in drilling and camp
duty.
A large number of the men of this regiment were from Bucks
county, including the captain of company A, James H. hart, who
was afterward promoted to the position of major, and was killed
at Stony Creek. His body was brought home and interred in the
old church-yard in Southampton township, and over his tomb is a
handsome monument on which are inscribed the names of the
principal engagements in which he participated.
The history of the regiment written by its chaplain, Rev.
Henry R. Pyre, gives a list of ninety-seven skirmishes and
battles in which the regiment took part, beginning with Pohick
Church, Virginia, on December 29, 1861, and ending with
Appomattox Court-House on April 9, 1865.
Many of the members of the regiment were mustered out at the
end of their term of enlistment on September 1, 1864, but there
remained enough of the veterans, with new recruits, to keep up
the reputation of the Fifteenth New Jersey Cavalry until the
close of the war, and among them were to be found no better
soldiers than those who joined its ranks from Bucks county.
Independent Battery D (Durrell’s) was made up of men
recruited in Bucks and Berks counties, and was organized at
Doylestown on September 24, 1861, with George W. Durell as
captain. It was in the advance on Manassas in March, 1862, and
afterward was with the corps that followed Jackson to
Thoroughfare Gap, but was first in action on August 21st, when
it was with the troops sent to the assistance of Pope. here it
was in action for a considerable time, but lost no men. At the
second Bull run battle it was in action again, where one of its
guns was dismounted, and one man wounded.
In the battle of Chantilly, on September 1st, but two
batteries were in action, this being one of them. In the
campaign in Maryland, late in the month, the battery did good
service, and met with but slight loss. At Sulphur Springs,
Virginia, on November 15, 1862, it had a hot engagement with the
rebel artillery, firing over three hundred rounds. In this
engagement Lieutenant McIlvaine was mortally wounded.
In March, 1863, the battery was transferred to the southwest,
and was in the rear of Vicksburg during the siege of that place,
to resist any attempt of Johnston to relieve Pemberton. The
principal loss suffered by the organization was from sickness—
ten of its number dying, and most of the rest being on the sick
list. In consequence, the battery was ordered to Kentucky, and
remained at Covington until April, 1864, when, after a few days
spent at Johnson’s Island, Lake Erie, where an attempt to rescue
the rebel prisoners was feared, it was sent to Washington. Here
it was recruited and furnished with a new battery of Parrott
guns, and thereafter was attached to the Army of the Potomac. It
participated in many of the operations in the final campaigns,
was in action at the springing of the mine at Petersburg, and at
the capture of that place on April 2, 1865, where it rendered
efficient service, not only with its own guns, but by turning
those of the fleeing enemy upon his own columns. It was mustered
out at Philadelphia on June 13, 1865.
The One Hundredth and Fourth regiment was enlisted almost
entirely in Bucks county, under authority given to W.W.H. Davis,
of Doylestown, already mentioned as captain of company I,
Twenty-fifth regiment, of the three months’ service. He was
given authority to raise men for a six-gun battery also. A camp
was established on the exhibition ground in Doylestown, and
recruiting actively pushed forward. The first company was formed
in September, 1861, and early in November the regiment was ready
for duty, mustering eleven hundred and thirty-five officers and
men. The regiment was ordered to Washington, and remained in
camp near there until March 29th, when it was ordered to
Fortress Monroe. Other than slight skirmishing and
reconnoissances, the regiment saw no particularly active duty
until May 31, 1862, when it was hotly engaged in the battle of
Fair Oaks, having in the early part of the fight the most
exposed position in the line, in advance of all the other
troops. It held its position until forced to retire before
overwhelming numbers. It was here that Major Gries was killed
while rescuing a flag that had been left on the advanced line.
Company E, on picket duty, was surrounded and captured by the
enemy. The loss of the regiment in this battle was about two
hundred and forty in killed, wounded, and prisoners. Colonel
Davis was one of the wounded. On the retreat to the James river,
the regiment, as part of Nagle’s brigade, was engaged in holding
in check the advance of the enemy, until Malvern Hill was
reached. At the battle at this place it was not called into
action. On reaching Harrison’s Landing the regiment mustered
four hundred and fifty-three officers and men.
In December of 1862, the regiment was ordered on the
expedition to Beaufort, N.C., thence to Hilton Head, S.C., where
it remained until the attack upon Morris island, under General
Terry. At this time Colonel Davis was in command of the brigade,
which was part of a detachment sent to James island to make a
demonstration against Charleston by way of Secessionville. The
brigade finally returned to Folly island, and on August 22d
following was ordered to the trenches on Morris island, and
details were made for battery and boat duty. In the subsequent
movements against Charleston, the regiment was actively engaged,
but the attack on that city failing, it was returned to its camp
at Hilton Head, and in July following was sent to Florida. A
month later it was sent to the fortifications at Washington,
where it remained until mustered out in September. In March of
the year following, their colonel, W.W.H. Davis, was brevetted
brigadier-general.
A considerable number of the men composing the Fifteenth
Cavalry regiment (Anderson’s Cavalry) were enlisted from Bucks
county. It was intended to have this body composed of the flower
of the state. They were all young men, from almost every county,
and were before being accepted put through a rigid examination
as to intelligence and character, as well as physical fitness,
and the result was an exceptionally fine body of men. Those from
Bucks county were principally from the lower part. The regiment
was at first commanded by Colonel William J. Palmer, of a Bucks
county family, and was assigned for special service under the
immediate command of General William S. Rosecrans in the
department of the Cumberland, having first participated in the
battle of Antietam before going to the western army. From the
fall of 1862 until the close of the war the fifteenth
participated in all the campaigns of the army of the Cumberland,
and took part in the battles of Stone river and Chickamauga, and
saw much hard fighting in engagements in Tennessee, Georgia,
Alabama, Mississippi, Virginia, North and South Carolina. Among
the Bucks county men in the regiment was Charles M. Betts, a
native of Warminster township, a gallant soldier, who was
wounded in a fight with Cherokee Indians in North Carolina. He
enlisted as a private and afterward became colonel of the
regiment. Anthony Taylor, from Bristol township, who also
enlisted as a private, became first lieutenant in command of
company A, and was commissioned captain of company G.
Lieutenants John Burton, George Headley, Edward W. Johnson, and
----- Patterson were also from Bristol; James Paxson and John
Harrison from Bensalem township; Sergeants William Du Bree and
Hough from Doylestown.
The One Hundred and Twenty-eighth regiment was raised in
response to Governor Curtin’s call of July 21, 1862, for nine
months’ troops. Two companies, C and F, were raised in Bucks
county, the former by Captain Samuel Croasdale, who became
colonel, and who was killed at Antietam on September 17th, a
month after the regiment had been mustered into service, which
was done on August 15, 1862. The day following the regiment was
ordered to Washington and was in camp at Arlington Heights for a
week, moving on August 21st to Fairfax Seminary, and on the 29th
to Fort Woodbury, where they were employed during the fierce
fighting of Bull run and Chantilly in erecting fortifications.
From there the regiment was ordered to Maryland, and on the 16th
of September was at Antietam creek. General Hooker had already
offered battle, and the regiment was led across the stream,
where it rested for the night. Early the next morning it made a
gallant charge on the enemy’s lines, in which the brave
Croasdale was instantly killed and Lieutenant-Colonel Hammersly
severely wounded. This somewhat disheartened the new troops, but
they rallied again and held their ground until relieved. The
regiment’s loss was terribly severe, having thirty-four killed
and eighty-five wounded, six mortally.
After this battle the regiment was in camp, drilling, and
also in erecting fortifications, until December 10th, when it
was ordered to Fredericksburg, which Burnside was making
preparations to attack. This campaign ended fruitlessly,
however, and the regiment did little but camp duty and marching,
with some picket and guard duty, until the following May. On the
night of the 2d of that month, when near Chancellorsville, it
was ordered out to the front, and next day was in a fight.
Retiring at night to its camp, it fell into the hands of the
enemy, who captured the colonel, lieutenant-colonel, five
captains and two lieutenants, and two hundred and twenty-five
men. The rest succeeded in reaching the Union lines, and were
hotly engaged, losing several more out of their depleted ranks,
which were now reduced to one hundred and seventy-two men. Its
term of service expired on May 12th, and on the 19th it was
mustered out at Harrisburg.
Of the One Hundred and Thirty-eighth regiment one company (H)
was recruited in Bucks county. It was originally raised for the
nine months’ service, but no more troops being wanted for that
length of service its term was changed to three years. Company H
was commanded by Captain Lazarus C. Andress, who died on
November 12, 1863, of wounds received at Brandy Station four
days previously. On August 26, 1862, the regiment was mustered
into the service, and was ordered to Maryland.
In June, 1863, the regiment was ordered into active duty,
having previously been engaged in guarding railroads and in
garrison duty. It was now assigned to guard the ammunition
trains and ambulances until the latter part of October, when it
was returned to its brigade. In the pursuit of Lee by Meade the
regiment saw its first real fighting. It was here that Captain
Andress was mortally wounded and several others of his company
wounded by the same shell. In the Mine Run campaign the regiment
was engaged at Locust Grove on November 27th, where it lost
seven killed, forty-five wounded, and three missing. Its next
encounter with the enemy was in "the Wilderness" in May, 1864,
where in its first two engagements it lost twenty-nine killed,
ninety-four wounded, and thirty-five missing.
From this time forward the regiment was constantly under
fire, during that fierce summer campaign, but fortunately its
losses were slight. Lieutenant Lewis of company I published a
history of the campaigns of the regiment shortly after the close
of the war, in which he gives an account of its gallant charge
at Cold Harbor on June 1st, where it and the Sixth Maryland of
the same brigade stormed the rebel works in face of a heavy fire
and captured more men than were in their own ranks. In this and
succeeding actions to the 11th instant the regiment lost
sixty-eight men in killed, wounded, and missing.
The next encounter with the enemy was on July 9th at Monocacy,
where Rickett’s division was opposed to a vastly superior force
under Early, and was compelled to retreat with some loss. The
division, including the Thirty-eighth, was now assigned to the
new department created for General Sheridan, and in the
skirmishes at and about Fisher’s Hill lost forty-six in killed,
wounded, and missing. At Cedar creek, on October 19th, the
regiment manfully held its place when others were falling back,
and was instrumental in winning the great victory which was won
on that day. In all the subsequent operations in Virginia
culminating in the surrender of Lee the One Hundred and
Thirty-eighth did its full share of duty and participated in all
its glorious results. The regiment was mustered out at
Washington on June 23, 1865.
The One Hundred and Sixty-third regiment (Eighteenth cavalry)
was recruited in many parts of the state, a good many coming
from Bucks, but having no separate organization. Early in 1863
the regiment was sent into Virginia, picketing the line,
guarding the defences of Washington, and watching Mosby’s
guerrillas. Their first encounter with rebel cavalry was when
they with the rest of Kilpatrick’s bold riders attacked Stuart,
and kept him from joining Lee, who at that time was in sore need
of his services on the historic field of Gettysburg. Kilpatrick
by forced marches reached Gettysburg on the night of the 2d of
July, and next day the Eighteenth was in hot strife, and
rendered valiant service. Next evening it struck Ewell’s
wagon-train, capturing it, with a thousand prisoners and some
artillery. Two companies of the Eighteenth the next day charged
into Hagerstown to test the enemy’s strength, but they being in
full force in the side streets, and surrounding the little band,
few ever returned. This regiment made for itself an enviable
record, taking part, always in the most gallant manner, in all
the movements of the Army of the Potomac until the close of the
war.
The One Hundred and Seventy-fourth regiment (drafted) was
composed of drafted men, eight companies almost entirely from
Bucks county and two from Northampton county. Its term of
service was for nine months. It was organized at Philadelphia in
the beginning of November, 1862, and was ordered to Washington,
thence to Suffolk. From there it was ordered to Newbern, North
Carolina, where it arrived on January 6, 1863. The regiment was
included in the forces ordered to support the army operating
against Charleston, and reached Hilton Head on February 5th. It
was put into camp on Helena island, and remained there until the
27th, when it was ordered to Beaufort, and later to Hilton Head,
where it stayed until its term expired. It was mustered out on
August 7, 1863.
The One Hundred and Eighty-first regiment (Twentieth cavalry)
was recruited in June and July, 1863, in pursuance of an order
of the war department to raise men for six months’ service, at
the time when Lee was making his demonstration against
Pennsylvania, which ended with his disastrous defeat at
Gettysburg. A large number of its men were from Bucks county,
but they preserved no independent organization, being found in
every company in the regiment, which was composed of seven
companies enlisted for six months, and five companies of
"emergency men."
Even prior to the organization of the regiment the different
companies were called into active service, doing scouting and
guard duty at and near Harrisburg, and on the road between that
city and the places threatened by the enemy. When Lee was
finally driven out of the state the regiment was organized and
joined in the pursuit of the retreating rebels, capturing some
prisoners and horses near Hagerstown. Shortly afterward the
emergency men returned home, and some more six months’ men were
enlisted. The regiment was now stationed at different places,
and but insignificant actions took place until the expiration of
their term. Many of the men desired to remain in the service
until the end of the war, and the regiment was reorganized,
recruited with men from different places, again some going from
Bucks county.
They were sent to Sigel’s command in the Shenandoah, and
actively participated in all the movements of that commander,
who was shortly after succeeded by General Hunter, who was in
turn superseded by General Crook.
In the almost daily skirmishes which took place, the regiment
lost a few men every day. At Snicker’s Gap, on July 18, 1864,
they lost fourteen men. At Winchester a few days later, in
making a daring charge on the turnpike, Captain John C. Henry
was killed. A few days later the eighteenth attacked Early at
Ashby’s Gap, and a fierce engagement ensued, in which the loss
was one hundred and eight killed, wounded, and missing.
In August, 1864, Sheridan was placed in command in the
valley, and in all the brilliant after operations of that
energetic commander the Eighteenth bore an honorable part. As
Sheridan said of the division to which the Eighteenth was
attached: "The courage displayed by the cavalry officers and men
was superb." Down to the final surrender the cavalry was in
constant motion, marching and fighting daily, and losing a large
number of their men and officers in passing through this fiery
ordeal. The regiment, sadly depleted, was mustered out on July
13th.
The Two Hundred and Thirteenth regiment was recruited mainly
in Philadelphia, but contained, as did many others, men from
Bucks county. It was organized on March 2d, 1865, and was at
once sent to guard Camp Parole, at Annapolis, Maryland. Part of
it was afterward assigned to guard a portion of the Baltimore &
Ohio railroad. In April it was assigned to the fortifications
north of Washington, and was mustered out on November 18, 1865.
The Two Hundred and Fifteenth regiment was the last one
raised in the state. It was mustered into service in April,
1865, and was sent to do guard duty at various places on the
Eastern Shore. In June it was doing garrison duty at Fort
Delaware, and was mustered out on July 31st. Though a
Philadelphia regiment, many of the men were recruited in Bucks
county.
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