'%%= A' .S^^^ ^f ; ,0-' ' » I A -^ v'^^ „ - ^^ * •) . o ^ .^0 vX^' ,\ s^ -s> ■P; -' A^ '^O'^ ■^oo^ c°- /V*"'^"\>^ •. , f J- \- .^ '•^., >■ -.>.. .0 o. s^-"^ .^% "<>. <^' ''' \V^^"'^ >V . O N r. ^ -/^_ X..,,^ „..* ,v Ci-, ■0- X 0' - * . . u . V _ _ -^_ * ■, vj O ^^ ,0o. '- ^ o^-' ^• ' " r C ^'i^^ ,,^>' -^r. 0- s •^ -A "O A^ , '.x:!;§^\^^ A>' .^:^'•% :?, ".... , V -^ ' '"^A s^'' X^^- .#^ / ■xx^^ \' .^^'■% L-:^ '<- •\ •0- X CO' = "^V AV x-^- A>' ^« ,v A' v\>' -^ I f. ^, .A^ * ■aged in a j?reat Civil War, testing whether I hat nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. We are met on a great battle-lield of that war. We have come to dedicate a portion of that field, as a final resting place for those who here gave their lives that that na- tion might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But, in a lai-ger sense, we cannot dedicate — we cannot con- secrate — we cannot hallow — this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it, far above our poor power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought heie lune thus far so nobly advanced — It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us — that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of de- votion — that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain — that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom — and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth. ABRAHAM LINCOLN (i) BOAKD OF COMMISSIONERS Under the Act approved June 15, 1887 For the erection of Monuments to mark the position of the Pennsylvania Commands engaged in the Battle of Gettysburg. Brevet Brig. -General John P. Taylor President Brevet Lieut. -Colonel John P. Nicholson Secretary Brig. -General J. P. S. Gobin (Died May 1, 1910.) Colonel R. Bbuce Ricp:ktts Brevet Brig. -General Wm. Ross Haetshorne (Died June V2, 1903.) Lieut. Samuel Harper Secretary (Died May 16, 1899.) (ii) PREFACE. I "^ EE Geuenil Assembly of the Commonwealth of Penn- sylvania at tlie session of 1887, passed the follow- iufj: 1. "Be it enacted, dc., That the sum of one hundred and twenty-one thousand five hundred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, lie and is hereby specifically appropriated out of any funds of the State Treasury for the purpose of perpetuating the participation in, and marking, by suitable memorial tablets of bronze or granite, the position of each of the commands of Pennsylvania volunteers engaged in the battle of Gettysburg. »♦»♦»»♦»**♦** 3. "That immediately after the passage of this act the Governor shall appoint five Commissioners, whose duty it shall be to select and decide upon the design and material for monuments of granite or bronze to mark the position of each Pennsylvania command upon the battlefield of Gettys- burg, and the said Commissioners shall serve without compensation, and they shall co-operate with five persons representing the survivors of the several regimental organizations or commands of this State engaged in the said battle, in the location of the said monuments and the selection thereof, and when such monuments shall be completed and properly erected the Auditor-General shall upon proper voucher to be presented by the said Commissioners, draw his warrant upon the State Treasurer for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, which sum is hereby appropriated for the pay- ment of the monument of each Pennsylvania command or organization participating in said battle ; and should the survivors of any of the said commands fail, for a period of twelve months after the passage of this act, to agree upon the location or to co-operate with the said Commis- sioners as provided herein, then the said Commissioners shall have a suit- able monument erected, of the material aforesaid, to mark the position of such Pennsylvania command on the said battlefield, and a warrant for the cost thereof shall be drawn by the Auditor-General in the manner hereinbefore provided." On the 15th clay of June, 1887, the Governor, Hon. James A. Beaver, approved the act, and on the 27th of June, 1887, is- sued commissions to Brevet Brigadier-General John P. Tay- lor, Brevet Brigadier-General J. P. S. Gobin, Brevet Lieuten- (iii) iv Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. ant-Colonel John P. Nicholson, Colonel K. Bruce Eicketts and Lieutenant Samuel Harper as the Commissioners. The Board was organized by the selection of Brevet Briga- dier-General John P. Tajior, President, and Lieutenant Samuel Harper, secretary. Monuments were dedicated under the appropriation during 1887-1888. At a meeting of the Board, in November, 1888, Lieutenant- Colonel Nicholson submitted a resolution providing for a com- mittee to confer with Governor Beaver, having in view the setting apart a day for the dedication of the monuments in 1889, under the auspices of the State and with appropriate ceremonies, to be styled ''Pennsylvania Day." The Governor entered heartily into the suggestion and, at a conference with the Commissioners, May 11-12, 1889, was agreed upon. The Legislature at the session of 1889, in furtherance of the celebration, patriotically passed the following: Whereas J That the act of the Legislature of one thousand eight hun- dred and eighty-seven, provided for the erection of suitable monuments on the battlefield of Gettysburg, to mark the positions held by Pennsylvania organizations in said battle, which monuments are to be dedicated at such time during the present year as may be designated by the Governor of this Commonwealth, at which dedication the presence of all Pennsylvania soldiers who participated in the battle of Gettysburg is greatly desired ; And whereas. The people of this Commonwealth have always venerated the patriotic and heroic deeds of her soldiers and now desire not only to commemorate the sacrifices of the fallen heroes of the Republic, but also to honor the surviving veterans and make their remaining days comfort- able and happy ; therefore. Section 1. Be it enacted, tf-c. That at the time of the dedication of the monuments of the Pennsylvania organizations on the battlefield of Gettys- burg, there shall be provided and furnished, at the expense of the Common- wealth, transportation to all the surviving honorably discharged soldiers now residing in Pennsylvania whose names were borne upon the rolls of such organizations previously to, and at the date, of the battle of Gettys- burg, on July first, second and third, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, such transportation to cover distance from the stations at which such soldiers live or from the railroad stations nearest to their places of residence, by the shortest or most convenient route, to Gettys- burg and return, and shall be so arranged as to terms of ' passage that the said veterans shall have the privilege of remaining at Gettysburg not less than one week and shall have the privil(>ge of stopping oil' at any station en route. Section 4. That the sum of fifty thousand dollars, or so much thereof as maj' be necessary, is hereby npproprintod out of any money in the treasury Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. v not otherwise appropriated, to defray the expense of transportation pro- vided for in this act and expenses of the Gettysburg I5attlefield Commis- sion incurred in making arrangements for uedieation of said monuments; the money to be paid on requisition of the Adjutant-(Jeneral and warrant of Auditor-General, drawn in the usual manner, jtroviding that d\dy verilird vouchers, showing the detailed disbursements under this act, shall be made and filed in the Auditor-General's office. The act was approved by the Governor, ]\[ay 8, 1889. The Commissioners at once proceeded with the details of the progi-ainmo, bnt tlie serious illness of the secretary of the Commission, Lieutenant Samuel Harper, and the impractica- bility of the distribution of the transportation by the Ad- jutant-General in tlie short period of time elapsing between the j)assag;e of the law and the date of the ceremonies agreed upon, induced the Commissioners in conference with the Gov- ernor, to i)ostpone tlie dedication to Se])tember 11-12, 1880. Lieutenant Harper died May 1(5, 1880, and Lieutenant-Colo- nel Nicholson was elected secretary. The details of the ceremonies were at once arranged and the programme for September was announced. The orders for transportation under the law were distrib- uted by Brigadiei"-General D. H. Hastings, Adjutant-General, and the Board expresses its hearty thanks for the faithful per- formance of this duty, which, to a great extent, made the oc- casion a success. On the 5th of June, 1800, a conference with the representa- tives of the Pennsylvania Reserves was held at Harrisburg, having in view a "Pennsylvania Reserve Day" at Gettysburg, upon the occasion of the dedication of the monuments of the Reserve regiments. At this meeting, Tuesday, September 2, 1800. was agi-eed upon and a committee appointed to act in conjunction with the Commissioners. On the day designated a large representation of this gallant corps assembled at Gettysburg and partici])ated in the ceremonies in the National Cemetery. The success of the reunion was largely due to the active co-operation of Colonel John H. Taggart, Eleventh Re- serves; Captain John Taylor, Second Reserves; the President of the Pennsylvania Reserve Association, ex-Governor An- drew G. Curtin, and the secretary of the Association, Sergt. James McCormick. Governor James A. Beaver, in his annual message, January 6, 1891, to the General Assembly of Pennsylvania, said: vi Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. The dedication of those memorials upon Pennsylvania Day and Penn- sylvania Reserve Day has resulted in a large amount of regimental history, covering principally the part taken by the several organizations in the battle of Gettysburg. This mass of material should be systematized, edited and carefully preserved. If published in a single volume, with litho- graph cuts of the several monuments erected by Pennsylvania to her military organizations which participated iu the battle of Gettysburg, it would of itself constitute the most striking monument illustrative of and perpetuating the memory of the part taken by the representa- tives of our Commonwealth upon her own soil in the greatest struggle of the War of Secession. I recommend a liberal appropriation for this purpose, to be expended under the direction of the Commission here-to- fore organized for the erection of monuments, the members of which, in their study of the subject, have qualified themselves for the intelligent and efficient discharge of such a duty. On January 26, 1891, Hon. J. P. S. Gobin, Senator from Lebanon county, introduced the following in the State Senate : AN ACT to provide for the publishing of the report of the proceedings of the dedication of the Pennsylvania monuments upon the battlefield of Gettysburg, providing for the distribution thereof and making an ap- propriation for the same. Section 1. Be it enacted iy the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commomcealth of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the atithority of the same. That there shall be published under the direction of the Gettysburg Battlefield Commission heretofore organized for the erection of monuments, nineteen thousand copies of its report of the proceedings of the dedication ceremonies of the Pennsylvania monuments upon the battlefield of Gettysburg. To be published in one volume not to exceed one thousand pages, to be bound In half morocco, and to contain lithographs or other cuts of the several monuments, and such regimental history as may be necessary to properly perpetuate the memory of the part taken by the several Pennsylvania organizations. Section 2. The distribution of the aforesaid edition shall be as follows: Five hundred copies for the use of the Governor, one hundred and fifty copies for the use of the Lieutenant-Governor, one hundred and fifty copies for the use of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, three hundred copies for the use of the State Librarian, fifty copies each for use of Attorney-Gen- eral, Auditor-General, State Treasurer, Secretary of Internal Affairs, Super- intendent of Public Instruction, Adjutant-General, Commissioner of Insur- ance, and Superintendent of Public Printing and Binding ; one thousand copies for the use of the School Department for distribution to school superintendents, normal schools and school libraries in the Commonwealth, six hundred copies for use of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the State of Pennsylvania, six hundred and fifty copies for use of the Grand Army of the Republic for distribution among the Posts of the De- partment of Pennsylvania, fifty copies for the use of the encampments of the Union Veteran Legion of the State of Pennsylvania, two hundred Pennsylvania at Getty shurg. vii copies for the use of tbo iiu-iul) ts i>f the Ikittlofiold MoiiuiiK'iitiil Commis- sion, five thousand copies for the use of the Senate, and ten thousand copies for the use of the House to be delivered to the members of the present Legislature. Governor liobert E. Pattisou appreciatively approved the act, May 7, 1891. The General Assembly, May 31, 1901, passed the following: AN ACT making an appropriation for the erection of monuments to Major- General Meade, Major-General Reynolds and Major-General Hancock on the battlefield of Gettysburg. Section 1. Be it enacted, &c.. That the sum of one hundred thousand dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, be and is hereby specifi- cally appropriated out of any funds in the State Treasury for the purpose of erecting equestrian statutes in bronze of Major-General Meade, Major- CJeneral Reynolds and Major-General Hancock upon the battlefield of Gettysburg . Section '1. That immediately after the passage of this act the Pennsyl- vania Gettysburg Monument Commission shall select and decide upon de- signs for monuments of bronze or granite to Generals Meade, Reynolds and Hancock upon the battlefield of Gettysburg, locate and have the same placed upon proper and substantial foundations, the locations to be in the vicinities made famous by the presence of the aforesaid ofiicers re- spectively during the battle. The Commissioners shall serve without com- pensation and make a report of their action to the Governor. When such equestrian statues shall be completed and properly erected the Auditor- General shall upon proper voucher to be presented by the said Commission- ers draw his warrant upon the State Treasurers for the amount due thereon not to exceed the sum of one hundred thousand dollars. Governor Daniel H. Hastings approved this law and con- tracts were made for the erection of the equestrian statues at a cost of $30,000 for the statue of General Meade, $22,000 for the statue of General Hancock and $20,000 for the statue of General Keynolds and the three pedestals $23,000, leaving a balance in the State Treasury of $5,000. The ceremonies of the dedication are detailed in the report. The General Assembly in session in 1901, made an appropria- tion for the erection of a monument to John Burns as follows: Section 1. Be it enacted, &c.. That the sum of one thousand five hun- dred dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, be and the same is liereby specifically appropriated to the Board of Commissioners on Gettys- burg Monuments for the erection of a suitable monument to the memory of John Burns, at some appropriate place upon the Gettysburg battlefield to be chosen by said Commissioners. viii Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. Governor Win. A. Stoue approved this act July 18, 1901, and the monument was dedicated with appropriate ceremonies July 1, 1903, forty years after the date of his services to the Commonwealth. At the 3Gth Annual Encampment of the Grand Army of the Kepublic, Department of Pennsylvania, held at Gettysburg, l*a., June 4-5, 1902, Comrade John M. Vanderslice submitted the following Preambles and Eesolutions which were unani- mously adopted : Wheueas, The first publication of "Pennsylvania at Gettysburg" was not sufficient to even supply those who had participated in that important engagement in 1863, And whereas. In that battle the regiments from Pennsylvania bore an important part, and there is a general demand throughout the State for a reprint in order that many of the survivors may be enabled to secure copies ; therefore, be it Resolved, That the forthcoming Legislature be and they are hereby earn- estly requested to enact a law ordering fifteen thousand (15,000) copies of "Pennsylvania at Gettysburg." Resolved, That the incoming Department Commander is hereby directed to have these preambles and resolutions presented to the Legislature, and to urge their passage. In furtherance of the resolutions Department Commander, Comrade K. P. Scott, submitted the request to the Legisla- ture and the General Assembly passed the following : Section 1. Be it enacted, do.. That there shall be published under the direction of the Gettysburg Battlefield Commission heretofore organized for the erection of monuments nineteen thousand copies of its report of the proceedings of the dedicatory ceremonies of the Pennsylvania monu- ments upon the Battlefield of Gettysburg and the ceremonies at the dedi- cation of the Equestrian Statues of GeneraLs Meade, Hancock and Rey- nolds. To be published in two volumes not to exceed fifteen hundred pages and to contain illustrations of the several monuments and statues and such regimental history as may be necessary to properly perpetuate the memory of the part taken by the several Pennsylvania organizations. Section 2. The distribution of the aforesaid edition shall be as follows: Five hundred copies for the use of the Governor, one hundred and fifty copies for the use of the Lieutenant-Governor, one hundred and fifty copies for the use of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, three hundred copies for the use of the State Librarian, fifty copies each for the use of Attorney-General, Auditor-General, Adjutant-General, State Treasurer, Secretary of Internal Affairs, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Com- missioner of Insurance and Superintendent of Public Printing and Bind- ing, one thousand copies for the use of the School Department for distri- bution to school superintendents, normal schools and school libraries in the Pennsylvania at (jcllij.shuiy. ix ("(iiiimoiiwciilth, six hundred and fifty copies for the use of the Graud A liny of the Republic for distribution among the several posts of the 1 )ep;irtmont of Pennsylvania, six hundred copies for the use of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion Conimandery of the State of Pennsylvania, lifty copies for the use of the encampments of the Union Veteran Legion of the State of Pennsylvania, two hundred copies for the use of the members of the Battlefield Monument Comuiission, five thousand copies for the use of the Senate and ten thousand copies for the use of the House of Representatives to be delivered to the members of the pi'esent Legis- lature. Governor Samuel W. Peunvpacker whose services to the ( 'oniiiiomvealth commenced on the field of Gettysburg^ ap- proved the act May 15, 1903. In this abstract of the Commission's work they express iheir thanks to Brevet Major-General David McM. Gregg, chief marshal, and his chief-of-statf, Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel Sylvester Bonnatlon, Jr., for the important part they took in making "Pennsylvania Day" memorable. To Brevet Brigadier-General James A. Beaver, as Governor of the Commonwealth, Pennsylvania owes a debt of gratitude, lor to him it is due in a great measui'e tliat the battlefield of Gettysburg is marked with memorials of Pennsylvania's sacri- tices and the services of her sons recited. The General Assembly 1912-1913, passed the following Act, 778: Section 1. Be it enacted, dc. That the Superintendent of Public Print- ing and Binding is hereby authorized and directed to print and bind, at the expense of this Commonwealth, five thousand five hundred copies of a pub- lication to be entitled "Pennsylvania at Gettysburg," which is to include the rept)rt of the P>oard of Commissioners on Gettysburg Monuments, here- tofore published, and which is to be revised to date; the report of the (Get- tysburg Battlefield Memorial Commission, and the report of the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg Commission. Section 2. The "Pennsylvania at Gettysburg" publication is to be re- vised and edited by Colonel .John P. Nicholson, who shall prepare all ueces- essary copy, read all proofs of the compilation, and index same. Governor John K. Tener ai)})roved the act, July 25, 1913. JOHN PAGE NICHOLSON, BREVET LIEUT. -COLONEL U. S. V. Secretary. t (X) PENNSYLVANIA COMMANDS ENGAGED IN THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG OR PRESENT ON THE FIELD Eleventh Regiment Infantry. Twenty-third Kegiment Infantry. Twenty-sixth Regiment Infantry. Twenty-seventh Regiment Infantry. Twenty-eighth Regiment Infantry. Twenty-ninth Regiment Infantry. Thirtieth Regiment Infantry (First Reserve). Thirty-first Regiment Infantry (Second Reserve). Thirty-fourth Regiment Infantry (Fifth Reserve) . Thirty-fifth Regiment Infantry (Sixth Reserve) . Thirty-eighth Regiment Infantry (Ninth Reserve). Thirty-ninth Regiment Infantry (Tenth Reserve). Fortieth Regiment Infantry (Eleventh Reserve) . Forty-first Regiment Infantry (Twelfth Reserve) . Forty-second Regiment Infantry (Thirteenth Reserve, First Rifles). Forty-sixth Regiment Infantry. Forty-ninth Regiment Infantry. Fifty-third Regiment Infantry. Fifty-Sixth Regiment Infantry. Fifty-seventh Regiment Infantry. Sixty-first Regiment Infantry. Sixty-second Regiment Infantry. Sixty-third Regiment Infantry. Sixty-eighth Regiment Infantry. Sixty-ninth Regiment Infantry. Seventy-first Regiment Infantry. Seventy-second Regiment Infantry. Seventy-third Regiment Infantry. Seventy-fourth Regiment Infantry. Seventy-Fifth Regiment Infantry. Eighty-first Regiment Infantry. Eighty -second Regiment Infantry. Eighty-third Regiment Infantry. Eighty-fourth Regiment Infantry. Eighty-eighth Regiment Infantry. Ninetieth Regiment Infantry. Ninety-first Regiment Infantry. (1) 2 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Ninety-third Regiment Infantry. Ninety-fifth Regiment Infantry. Ninety-sixth Regiment Infantry. Ninety -eighth Regiment Infantry. Ninety-ninth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Second Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Fifth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Sixth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Seventh Regiment Infantiy. One Hundred and Ninth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Tenth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Eleventh Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Fourteenth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Fifteenth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Sixteenth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Eighteenth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Nineteenth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Twenty -first Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Thirty-ninth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Fortieth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Forty-first Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Forty-second Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Forty-third Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Forty-fifth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Forty-seventh Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Forty-eighth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Forty-ninth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Fiftieth Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Fifty-first Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Fifty-third Regiment Infantry. One Hundred and Fifty-fifth Regiment Infantry. Twenty-sixth Emergency Regiment Infantry. First Regiment Cavalry. Second Regiment Cavalry. Third Regiment Cavalry. Fourth Regiment Cavalry. Sixth Regiment Cavalry. Eighth Regiment Cavalry. Sixteenth Regiment Cavalry. Seventeenth Regiment Cavalry. Eighteenth Regiment Cavalry. Twenty-first Regiment Cavalry. Battery B, First Artillery. (Cooper.) Battery F, First Artillery. (RickettS.) Battery G, First Artillery. (Ricketts.) Battery C, Independent Artillery. (Thompson.) Battery E, Independent Artillery. (Knap.) Battery F, Independent Artillery. (Hampton.) Battery H, Third Heavy Artillery. (Rank.) GETTYSBURG PENNSYLVANIA DAY SEPTEMBER 11-1! 1889 (3) PENNSYLVANIA DAY GETTYSBURG, SEPTEMBER 11-12, 1889 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER IITH Dedication of the Monuments of the Pennsylvania Commands engaged in the Battle By the Survivors' Associations. CEREMONIES IN NATIONAL CEMETERY THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12TH, 1.30 P. M. PRESiniNG Brevet Lieut. -Colonel George Meade Staff of Major-General George G. Meade, commanding Arm.v of the Potomac MUSIC The Star-spangled Banner The "Arion Singing Society" Prof. J. C. Frank, Leader PRAYER Reverend John R. Paxton, D. D. Second Lieutenant 140th Penna. Infantry ANTHEM '"Praise the Lord" The "Arion Singing Society" TRANSFER OF THE MONUMENTS TO THE GOVERNOR Honorable J. P. S. Gobin Brevet Brigadier-General: Colonel 47th Penna. Infantry ACCEPTANCE ON BEHALF OF THE COMMONWEALTH Governor James A. Beaver Brevet Brigadier-General; Colonel 148th Penna. Infantry. POEM, "Gettysburg" Isaac R. Pennypacker, Esq. THE FIRST DAY, July 1, 1863 Brevet Captain Joseph G. Rosengarten First Lieutenant 121st Penna. Infantry: Alde-de-Camp Staff of Major-General John F. Reynolds THE SECOND AND THIRD DAYS, July 2-3, 1S63 Brevet Brigadier-General Henry H. Bingham Major and Judge-Advocate Staff of Major-General Wintield S. Hancock MUSIC Dedication Quartette TRANSFER TO B.\TTLEFIELD MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION Governor James A. Beaver ACCEPTANCE ON BEHALF OF THE ASSOCIATION Edward McPherson, Esq. MUSIC Dedication Quartette and Perseverance Band BENEDICTION Reverend David Craft, D. D. Chaplain 141st Penna. Infantry (4) Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. PRAYER. Lieut. John R. Paxton, D. D. ALMIGHTY God, Great Ordainer of all thinj^s, Miii Siiifjiiig Society. T II E Til A N S F !•: II F T 1 1 E MO N F M 10 X T S TO T 111-: GOVEKNOR OF TIIIO COMMONWEALTH. Brevet Brio.-CJenerai, .T. P. S. Gobin / ^OX'ERNOR BEAVER: The Commission appointed by Y J yourself under the provisiou of the act of assembly aj) l)roved June lo, 18S7, desire to jjreseut to the Stale of Penusylvauia, through 30U, as its executive, the result of theii- labor. They were directed to "select aud decide uj)on the de- sigu aud the nuiterial for monumeuts of granite and bronzt? to mark the ])osition of each Pennsylvania command ui»on the baltlelield of Gettysburg," and the object of the erection of these monuments was declared to be "for the purpose of per- petuating the participation in and marking by suitable memo- rial tablets of gi-anite or bronze the position of each of the commands of l*ennsylvania volunteers engaged'' in that battle. From the earliest era of which w^e have historical data, na- tions and individuals have delighted to honor heroic deeds, and euduriugly mark the spot upon which the fate of govern- ments was involved in the shock of battle. Even though the result in many instances, im])eded the onward march of pro- gressive thought and shackled the limbs of advancing free- dom, the natural pride with which was beheld the prowess of her soldierly upon that field, demanded of the nation suitable 8 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. commemoration of the event, and a definite location of the scene. In the memories and traditions of past centuries, the legends of the middle ages, the histories of the ancient rulers, or the struggles of nations for a better civilization, the one place made sacred is that upon which their armies fought and conquered. Every nationality has insisted upon tributes of this character, and many have learned important lessons from them. We remember the story of one of 'the old conquerors of Greece, who, when he had traveled in his boyhood over the battlefield where Miltiades had won victories and set up trophies, upon his return, said, "These trophies of Miltiades will never let me sleep." Each feature of the chiseled granite was an inspiration to him as a soldier, and, doubtless, had an inspiring effect upon his subsequent career. The Romans who placed the busts of their successful leaders upon their coin, the Swiss who employed the genius of Thor- waldsen to boldly hew from the granite face of the Alps a lion to perpetuate the courage of their countrymen in a foreign land, the nations emb(3dying their patriotism or skill at arms by triumphal arch or memorial column, were all actuated by the same motive. Even beyond these, upon the banks of the Nile, as remote as the days when the Pharaohs ruled, and amid the sands of old Assyria, can we find the remains of magnifi- cent specimens of memorial architecture. In how many instances, however, were these but tlie work of hands which had been held aloft with glee as the conqueror passed in triumphal procession through the capital, with his enslaved prisoners bound to his chariot wheels; or, at best, were but the tribute to the ambition of kings, or, still moi-e to be regretted, the result of the superior prowess of disciplined forces over hastily gathered levies defending their homes from ruthless invaders? Happily, upon this field every tablet rep- resents loyalty to country and flag — a sublime devotion to duty never excelled in the world's history. They have been erected in response to the sentiment of the nation, demanding that which should be a patriotic remembrance for all time. Where the men of their state fought and died with the na- tion's life in deadly peril — where rebellion against it reached the noon-tide of its progress, and from thence went reeling out to meet its inevitable sunset at Appomattox — should the granite and bronze arise. They represent a united country I'onisi/lvania at (jcltysburij. 9 cemented by the ordeal of battle — refined, clarilied anil strengthened in the lurnace of war, and the circle of fire in which armies fought aiul navies sailed. lOach block stands for a unity of interest in every part of the land, and a national future one and indivisible. Whatever may have been the opinion of the individual as to the primal cause of the re- bellion, they rest in the graves of the fallen, with the memorial tablets of the various states keejdng watch over the places in which they lie buried forever. Thus the lives of those we rep- resent on this occasion were not lost to their country or their kindred — they are eloquent even in their nameless graves. They crowd about us with all the incentives of honor and pa- triotism. They survive in our admiration of their deeds, in our respect for their sacritices, in love for their patriotism and devotion to country. As the representatives of principles which are eternal, so will their memories remain. Through the efforts of the dead and living but one (lag floats, or dare tloat, in this, our common country. To do justice to them, it should be so ])lanted as to wave above all error, sectionalism injustice or division of sentiment as to the righteousness of the cause for which those we represent yielded up their lives. In this, however, we by no means desire to confine our allu- sions to this immediate vicinity. It is but part of such a line or series of lines of battle as the world never beheld. The right resting at Donelson, it encircles a vast extent of country until the left is reached here in this quiet valley of the Key- stone State, in the vast circle that sweeps down the Missis- sippi to the gulf, diverges to the Eio Grande, and eastward thiough to the Atlantic, coursing along its coast, and, by the familiar Potomac, leaping the wide rivers and high mountains — lines of natural defense — to where we at present stand. Its entire length is marked b}' honored graves — veteran sentinels of liberty — whose challenges will be heard forever and aye by all disturbers of the nation's unity, or conspirators against its honor. They will speak with the authority of the em- battled hosts who fell in that line resisting the advance of error, and with the result that all now sit in ])eace and com- fort. But with reverent respect for all, we are, to-day, desirous of doing honor to the soldier of our own state. These are their monuments. These graves contain the dead of the state who 10 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. fell upon this field. Men of Pennsylvania, they were of your flesh and blood, they went out from your homes, they battled for the preservation of your firesides, and the vacant chairs remain within 3'our households. Their comrades claim them in memory and friendship, and it is a claim as far-reaching as the warm-throbbing heart of the old soldier can make it. With tear-dimmed eyes they range over this field as over no other spot in all the land, and would say to the trespasser, "put olf thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground." This being Pennsylvania's battlefield, what more fitting than to properly commemorate the deeds of Pennsylvania's soldier sons upon her soil? Here, as everywhere, at the call of duty, during the entire period of the rebellion were the men of I'ennsylvania conspicuous. It has been contended that the battle of Gettysburg is of much greater scope than that which the hills around us encompass, vast as that is. Some would even include the entire extent of territory lying be- tween the battle grounds and the fords of the Kappahannock in Virginia. Full of interest and importance as the days pre- ceding were, it culminated in the struggle which began on the 1st and ended on the 3d of July, 18G3, and to this history will confine it. Take a vicAv of whatever portion of the field within the range of youv vision, and you behold Pennsylvania's memorial tablets. Upon the cavalry skirmish-line with Buford, in the column which Keynolds led to its position, and in the line which formed as his prostrate form was carried to the rear — upon the extreme right and left flank of the First Corps wei'e regiments from the Keystone State, and the first infantry fire poiired into the advancing enemy was from another of them. In that cori)s death rea])ed a rich harvest of gallant Pennsjd- vanians. When the Eleventh Corps was hastily thrown into action they were in the advanced line, and the losses recorded altest the manner in which they fought. One of her batteries look possession of east Cemetery Hill, and the first day's fight- ing sullenly ended amid the shotted salutes with which tlie enemy were greeted from these guns. Upon the second day, amid all the figliting on every \m\v{ of tlie field, their record was well maintained. In the volume of battle which began on the left of our line and singed alons the PennsylnniUi at (icltyHhunj. 11 Third Corps, involvin<;' it ;iih1 jcirls (tf otliers, no more heroic deeds were witiies.sed than those which I'ennsylvauia soldiers performed. Cliuging to (he lines at the peach orchard, surg- ing back and forth thiongh the wheat lield, changing front under terrific lire, amid tlie rocky sides of the Kound Tops, were heard the crack of their rilles and their shouts of defi- ance. And at this point the sun of battle went down as the Pennsylvania lieserves charged down the slope and over the valley of death, driving before them the last line of the enemy attacking this position. As they i)lanted the Maltese cross of the Fifth Corps, the men of the Sixth displayed their (Jreek cross in support, and the left was safe. Away on the right was the Twelfth Corps, and its star waved over Culp's and Wolf's Hills. Here the battle raged fiercely, and there, too, were Pennsylvanians and not an inch of ground was yielded, until, under orders, they vacated it to aid another part of the line. As if to fittingly close the second day, it remained for her sons to meet the charge of the enemy upon east Cemetery Hill, and over the guns of her batteries men fought with a courage and desperation never exceeded, and using weajtons unheard of in such warfare. Here, also, nightfall beheld the enemy defeated and disconlited, and the position of regiments and batteries which had fought upon every part of the field could have been marked at that time by the dead, who lay as they had fallen, with their faces to the foe. The morning of the third day was ushered in by the dctei-- mined effort of the Twelfth Corps to re-occupy their vacated lines. Aided b}^ detachments of the Sixth they obscured the sun with their smoke of battle, and after five hours of inces- sant fighting they were back in the entrenchments, and the right of the line was secure. You cannot fail to recognize the Pennsylvanians, wlio. at this part of the field, represented their state and nation. And now, in the quiet which prevailed until after the mid-day hour, batteries, cavalry and infantry gird their loins for the final contest all knew to be impending. "When, from Seminary Ridge, the cannonading of over one hundred guns shook the earth, quickly and elTectively was it respoiuled to. When the enemy sought to move troops from their right to strengthen and reinforce their center they found cavalry there to prevent it, and they did prevent it. Away otf to the right the mounted 12 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. legions seek to turn tliat flank and reach the rear of our line. There, also, were our cavalry, and the Kummel Farm became the scene of one of the most determined and sanguinary con- flicts of man and horse ; and the several lines of infantry, with which this attack co-operated, as they emerged from the woods and swung across the plain, headed directly for the troops of the same old state over whose head floated the well- known trefoil of the Second Corps. In brigade line they awaited the attack. It came, and with their comrades of the east and west they rent the clouds with their shouts of victory as the decimated lines disappeared in the smoke of the con- flict, and the battle of Gettysburg was over. At the headquarters of the army — of corps, division and brigade — were the men born on the soil of our state. In every grade, as well as at every point, Pennsylvania soldiers were in the forefront, and when we have completed the work in hand, and the memory of men in the ranks have been rendered im- mortal to the full extent of our ability, can we not, will we not, all unite in efforts to place "Under the dome of the Union sky The American soldiers' temple of fame in a most prominent place upon this field a just tribute to the valor, ability and devotion to duty of that glorious sou of Pennsylvania whose name is so indelibly associated with Gettysburg and with the Army of the Potomac wherever it fought? Until George Gordon Meade has a fitting monument upon this battle ground Pennsylvania Avill not have entirely performed her duty. Pardon this digression. I have not attempted to picture or describe the battle of Gettj^sburg. I disclaim any such inten- tion. My object has been to present with the monuments which rise at every point of the field brief reasons for their be- ing, and to assure you that each one occupies the position it is entitled to through the valor of the men who followed the flag. " Wherever may be seen the bronze coat-of-arms of the state, there stood and fought at one period or another in the desperate struggle the command represented by the memorial, and the soil has been rendered sacred by the patriotic blood there expended. In honor of the service rendered have these enduring tablets been erected. It is a fit and just tribute. Pennsylvania at Cicttyshurff. 13 The ai-mies have long siiu-o slnicU tlieir tciils and silcnlly merged with the masses in every ]»ar( of IIh- iiiilion. 'I'lic fields upon which they strn,i;«,ded <;le;im tochiy with the ^lory of peace, and deatli no longer gatliers the lich harvest which springs from tlieir fruitful soil. Many have ended life's batth* since then, and tlie lines are fading away swiftly before tin- ravages of time and disease. They stand but iji antici])ation of a speedy reunion with those lile-leaders who have crossed the dark river, and with whom we hope to again fall into raidxs in the great hereafter. Let the gratitude of the nation con tinue to go out toward these men. It should be proportioned to the benefit received, as well as the ]>urity of intention which imparted the benelits. Predicted as an inevitable conflict, the wai- came, and was fought to the bittei- end. The logic of events clearly ])i'oves it to have been an epoch in the nation's life, which, under Di- vine Providence, was to result in either liberty to all or death to the nation. The result could not have been otherwise. It was a tribute to the splendid civilization of the American people, which, by the efforts of a century, had developed the country, educated the nuisses, created a vast internal com- merce, all culminating in placing the nation u])on a plane of greatness never before reached by any government. Thiough the future gleam the possibilities, which, may we not claim, will mantle the earth with such achievements as will make this the undisputed, the eternal ho]»e of liberty. We have learned the true value of nationality. Like our own mountain ranges, we will recognize the ditferent peaks as they ri.se in various altitudes ami claim specitic names, the whole forming an indivisible body conspicuous in its greatness as a whole. These monuments represent this great national- ity, and will stand forever as testimonials of a state and na tion's gratitude to the valor of its citizen soldiers. Let the morning and evening sun, which shall greet, gild and linger on their sides, and play upon them from base to cap- stone, .symbolize the showering benedictions of their country- men, which will stream from age to age in honor of the fame and memory of the dead and living they represent. The duties of your Oommission have almost ended. I dare claim for it a single i»ur])ose to i>erform them fairly, honestly and impartially. One of its members, Major Samuel IIari)er. 14 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. passed away ere the work was completed. He was a true sol- dier, a firm patriot, earnest in his devotion to Ids work, which, upon this field, must ever be recognized. To the people of this great state Ave now present the result of our labors in these memorial tablets. Each one tells its own truthful story, and Avill to future generations. It is a record as complete as it is accurate. As they stand here over- looking these scenes, telling of the silent battalions represent- ed, with yonder green mounds, the perpetual reminder of heroic immolation, may we not hope in all the laud, every- where, loyal devotion to country- and flag shall prevail with a new-born intensity, capable of any sacrifice, and all maj^ realize fully as was said of old, "It is the liigh reward of those who have risked their lives in a just and necessary war, that their names are sweet in the mouths of men, and every age sliall know tlieir actions.-' ACCEPTANCE ON BEHALF OF THE COMMONWEALTH. GOVEKXOR OF THE COMMON WEAXTII, HON . JaMES A. BEAVER. COMIiADES AND FELLOW-CITIZENS: No official duty which has devolved upon the present executive of Penn- sylvania is more significant, and at the same time more pleasant, than the one which he noAv performs on behalf of our goodly Commonwealth. Granite and bronze are not neces- sary, nor can they, in a large sense, perpetuate the memory of the men dead and the heroism of those living, who stood for the Constitution and the enforcement of the laws, upon this field. They have a significance and value, however, as shoAving the ap])i'eciatiou of a grateful CommonAvealth for the service of her sons in defending her soil and in aiding to per- l^etuate the unity of the government of Avliich she is a consti- tuent part. On every ])ortion of tliis historic battlefield Penn- sylvania acted a prominent part. Her sons, as Avas meet, rennsi/IvcDiid at (Ictlj/sburi/. 15 were the licroes of the liehl. Meade cniniuaiMlcd llic aiiiiy, Eeynolds fell in the forefront of battle in the lii-st days lif^ht, and Hancock directed the details of prejtarations for the heroic and stubborn resistence which was made to the dc terniined assaults of the enemy, ujton the second and llilrd days. Pennsylvanians were prominent in the First Corps at the opening of the battle on the first day; I'ennsylvania regi ments plaA'ed a prominent part in Sickles' gallant forward movement; Penns^dvaniaus i)redominated in the First Divi- sion of the Second Corps and constituted the Third Division of the Fifth Corps, which made the impetuous assault through the "wheatfield" and the "devil's den'' upon Hood's Division, in its determined and well-diiected eftorts to turn Sickles' left flank, on the second day, and Pennsylvania received the shock of Pickett's heroic, but ill-fated and foolish charge, on the third da}'. Pennsylvania batteries occupied vital points in oui- defensive line, and Pennsylvania cavalry was conspi- cuous under a gallant Peunsylvanian in their brilliant opera- tions upon our right flank and lear. In every offensive move- ment made by the Army of the Potomac during the Gettys- burg campaign; in every defensive position taken by it; in brilliant skirmish, ip gallant assault, in heroic fighting or in stubborn resistance, Pennsylvania was found everywhere do- ing her duty and bearing her full share of the heat and bur- dens of the day. We do not claim that she did more than her duty or that she performed more than her share of the work to be done. Without the assistance and co-operation of her sister states she would have been utterly powerless to repel the invasion of her soil. We make no invidious distinc- tions in emphasizing I'ennsylvania's share in the campaign which found its climax within her borders. This is Pennsyl- vania Day, and we simply emphasize her part in the work here done without in any way detracting from or minimizing the part taken by others or the credit due to them therefore. The description of the details of I'ennsylvania's share in the glory of this field belongs to the historians of the occasion and I shall not trespass upon their theme or sphere in this di- rection. The Commonwealth does well in recognizing the de- votion of her sons. Slu^ h;is been none too lihoial in her gifts foi- such a purpose. 16 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. In accepting the results of the work of the Commission ap- pointed to supervise the erection of the memorials of the pa- triotism of Pennsylvania's sons, it may be well to say a word as to the manner in which the work has been done and of its characteristic features. Charged with a delicate, a difficult and responsible duty, it is not too much to say that the Penn- sylvania Gettysburg Memorial Commissioners, so far as the results of their work are apparent upon this field, have dis- charged their duty in a manner alike creditable to them and acceptable to the people of the Commonwealth. Few who have not given thought to the subject can realize the difficul- ties under which they labored, or appreciate the value of the work which they have done. This work was characterized, first, by a broad intelligence. The position occupied by each of the eighty-six Pennsylvania organizations participating in the battle of Gettysburg was to be carefully studied and defi- nitely ascertained in order to determine the location of their several monuments. The part taken by each organization must be thoroughly understood in order that the truth of his- tory, and nothing but the truth, should be displayed uj)on these memorials. The materials to be used; the design to be adopted; the details of construction and the perpetuity of re- sults, were all to be considered and right conclusions in regard thereto reached. Those who have carefully and critically fol- lowed the work of the Commission will, I am sure, join with me in commending the rare intelligence which has marked its labors in all these respects. The work of the Commission has been characterized, more- over by unquestioned fidelity. Charged with the execution of a law, with the framing and passage of which its members had little to do; with the expenditure of a sum exceeding an eighth of a million dollars, in such a way as to secure full and satis- factory returns to each regimental organization, and to the (Commonwealth which placed her funds in their hands; Avith the i)i'eservation of the truth of history, and, at the same time, with the vindication of the honor and reputation of Pennsyl- vania organizations, where history had failed to do them jus- tice; with determining the truth as to conflicting claims for position, and antagonistic interests on the part of contractors and committees representing the various organizations Avho contracted with them, it will be seen that the work of the Com- mission required rare discretion and ability. In all these re- Pennsylvania at Gctlyaharg. 17 spects, and others which cannot be mentioned for want of time, the Commission has, in all its work, fully met the de- mands made upon it, and can confidently point to the results which confront us on every hand for the evidence of the fidelity with wliich these demands have been met. The Commonwealth has in every instance had a full return for the money which was appropriated for these memorials, and in most of them has received a large percentage of in- crease from the voluntary contributions of the organizations themselves. So it is safe to say that no state, when the work of the Commission shall be finished, will present more sub- stantial, more enduring and more tasteful memorials of the devotion of her sons, than Pennsylvania. The zeal manifested by each and every member of the Com- mission is also a characteristic of its work. Voluntarily ac- cepting a position to which no pecuniary compensation of any kind was attached, the gentlemen who composed the Commis- sion gave themselves unreservedly to the work before them. They have spared no effort; have stopped at no sacrifice of time or convenience; have assisted in the organization of regi- mental committees; have furnished designs for the adoption of such representatives, and have stimulated their efforts to secure better and more enduring results than could have been obtained through the expenditure of the appropriation made by legislative authority alone. Such energy and zeal are worthy of commendation, and sliould be here and now record- ed and acknowledged. There has been much patient forbear- ance with, and sometimes a judicious yielding to, the demands of zealous and enthusiastic regimental organizations. Such demands were the evidence of a proper interest in the truth of history and in the faithful acknowledgment of the contribu- tions which have been made by tho.se who were thus reijre- sented and the results which history records. They were found, on careful examination, in many instances, to be cor- rect, and official recoids have been thereby corrected through the careful and persistent efforts of the Commissioners. Without dwelling upon other characteristics of the work of the Commission, whidi will suggest themselves to the thought- ful observer, it is safe to say, finally, that success has crowned its work in an eminent degree. The organizations for whose benefit provision was made by the legislature have not, in all 18 Pennsylvania at Getty shiirg. instances, availed themselves of it. Some memorials have not yet been erected. Designs for others have not yet been adopt- ed, and to this extent the work of the Commission is not fin- ished; but so far as the memorials which surround us are the evidence of the woric of the Commission, we join to-day, as the survivors of those whose memory is thereby enshrined, in i^ro- nouncing their work an unqualified success. As already in- timated, the work is not finished. The distinctively Pennsyl- vania organization in which all Pennsylvania, whether con- nected with it or not, takes pride, and which played such a dis- tinguished part upon this field — the Pennsylvania Eeserve Corps — has not yet erected its memorial. It is the desire of the various regimental organizations composing that corps to erect a common memorial. In this desire I personally cor- dially sympathize, and will be glad to co-operate. The origi- nal provisions made for the erection of our memorials did not seem to authorize such a use of the funds appropriated, and an unfortunate misunderstanding as to the bill passed by the last legislature in relation thereto, which gave rise to certain con- stitutional and other dilficulties, made necessary its disap- proval. 1 wish, however, here and now, as a Pennsylvanian, proud of the forethought which organized the Pennsylvania Eeserve Corps, and of the record which it made for Pennsyl- vania, to say that, so far as I am able to do so, officially or per- sonally, I wish to co-operate with the survivors of that distin- guished body of Pennsylvania soldiers in carrying out their wishes. The Vermont Brigade has its magnificent Corinthian column, to be surmounted finally by a statue of Stannard ; New York's Excelsior Brigade has its distinctive monument; the New Jersey Brigade, distinguished alike for its brave deeds and the bravery of its great commander, perpetuates its mem- ory and that of Kearny at the same time, by a monument which combines the memorials of its several regiments; so I would say, speaking for myself, let the Pennsylvania Reserve Corps perpetuate the memory of the part which it took upon this field and elsewheie throughout our great struggle for the pres- ervation of the Union, in a memorial building which shall be distinctive and approjjriate. Consultation and cordial co- operation can bring this about without difficulty, and in har- mony with the requirements of our state constitution and the work of the Commission appointed in accordance with the pro- visions of tlie act of assembly relating thereto. Pennsylvania at (telti/.shiir;/. 19 It only remains for me, gentlemen of the Commission, to ac- cept at your bands, as the representative of the ('omnion- wealtli, the work wliich you liave here and now transferred to me. Pennsylvania is satisfied with what you have done! Penn- sylvania congratulates herself upon the success of your ef- forts. I accept on her behalf these memorials erected under your supervision and control, and in doing so I beg to thaid< you in her name for the intelligence, the fidelity, the zeal and the patience which have crowned your work. 20 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. POEM. GETTYSBURG. Isaac R. Pennypackeu, Esq. 'Twas on the time when Lee Below Potomac's swollen ford. Had beaten down the broken sword Of his baffled enemy. His long line lengthened faster Than the days of June, O'er valleys varied, mountains vaster. By forced marches night and noon ; Any morn might bring him down Captor of the proudest town ; Any one of cities three At noon or night might prostrate be. Then to Meade was the sword of the north Held hUtward for proof of its worth ; O'er the vastness of masses of men All the glorious banners of war. All the battle-flags floated again ; All the bugles blew blithely once more, Sounding the stately advance ; yUlage doorways framed faces of awe At the trains of artillery pressed On earth's reverberant breast. And the sun sought the zenith, and saw All the splendors of war at a glance. How soon the first fierce rain of death In big drops dancing on the trees Withers the foliage I At a breath. Hot as the blasts that dried old seas The clover falls like drops of blood Prom mortal hurts, and stains the sod; The wheat is clipped, but the ripe grain Here long ungarnered shall remain. And many who at the drum's long I'oU Sprang to the charge and swelled the cheer, And sot their flags high on the knoll, Ne'er know how went the fight fought here ; Pennsylvania at (hltijsbiirn. 21 For tlicm a kiicll tumultous shVlls Shook from the cousecrated bells, As here they formed that silent rank, Whose glorious star at twilight sank. And night, which lulls all discords— night, Which stills the folds and vocal wood. And, with the touch of linger light. Quiet the pink-lipped brook's wild mood. Which sends the wind to seek the latch. And seals young eyes while mothers watch— Night stays the battle, but with day Their lives, themselves, foes hurl away. Where the thousands fell, but did not yield, Shall be to-morrow's battlefield. E'er dying died or dead were cold New hosts pressed on the lines to hold. And held them— hold them now in sleep While stars and sentinels go round. And war-worn chargers shrink like sheep Beside their riders on the ground. All through the night— all through the north Speed doubtful tidings back and forth. Through north and south, from dusk till day, A sundered people diverse pray. So gradual sink the deliberate stars, The sun doth run the laggards down. As sleep's still mei\dows burst the bars. And floods with light the steepled town. Blow! bugles of the cavalry, blow! Forward the infantry, row on row! While every battery leaps with life. And swells with tongucless throats the strife ! Where grappled foes, one flushed with joy From triumphs fresh, and come to destroy. And one by blows but tempered fit To keep the torch of freedom lit. The battle-dust from heroes' feet. Brief hiding rally and last retreat, By the free sunlight touched became A golden pillar of lambent flame. Glorified was this field, its white Faces of victors and of slain, And these and Kound Top's luminous h<;ight That glory flashed afar again Around the world for all to see Une nation and one wholly free. 22 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. And branded deep with flaming sword Its primal compact's binding word. 'Neath Freedom's dome that light divine, Borne here from dark defiles of Time, From here upbhized u beacon sign To all the oppressed of every clime ; And dulled eyes glistened ; hope upspruug Where'er ills old when man was young Against awaking thought were set. Where power its tribute wrongly wrung, Or moved on pathways rank even yet With martyr's blood, where'er a tongue Hath words to show, as serf, slave, thrall, How great man's power! how deep man's fall. l^ug will be felt, though hurled in vain. The shock that shook the northern gate. Long heard the shots that dashed amain. But flattened on the rock of fate, Where Lee still strove, but failed to break The barrier down, or fissure make. And never grasped by force the prize Deferred by years of compromise Long will men keep the memory bright Of deeds done here ; how flashed the blade Of Hancock from South Mountain's shade To the sheer heights of unfading light ! That martial morn o'er yonder ridge Reynolds last rode face towards the foe. And onward rides through history so ; For Meade, even as for Joshua, suns The unmindful gulf of Time abridge. While stUl its depths fling back his guns' Victorious echoes. The same wise power Which starts the currents from ocean's heart. And hurls the tides at their due hour. Or holds them with a force unspent, Made him like master, in each part, O'er all his mighty instrument. Chief leaders of the battle great! Three sons of one proud mother state ! These epoch stones she sets stand fast. As on her field her regiments stood ; Their volleys rang the first and last ; They kept with Webb the target-wood. And there for all turned on its track The wild gulf stream of treason back ; Or on the stubborn hill-sidcs trod (Jut harvests sown not on the clod; PcnnsyJviuita at Gcttijshiirf/. 23 Ht'urts shall boat high in days growu tamo, At thoughts of thcin and thoir pi'0"rps, and the Vermont Brigade, were on the ground and in position. ^?urely, then, there was no surprise in the battle, and it was fought just at the time and place where it best ef- fected its object. True np to the 1st of July, the Confederate 32 Pe?insylvania at Gettysburg. Army had met little but militia, aud the people of Pennsyl- vania might well have asked: Why have they dared to march so mauy miles upon her peaceful bosom, frighting her pale-faced vUlages with war, and ostentation of despised ai-ms? Richard II., act 2, sc. 3. But the end to the invasion came when the Army of the Po- tomac and the Army of Northern Virginia met in front of Get- tysburg. It may be true that some of the Confederates ex- pected to encounter only militia, yet the general officers, its leaders, knew that General Meade was looking for the enemy and for a place to fight, and both were found at Gettysburg. There the Army of the Potomac for three days contended for the supremacy which finally crowned the long struggle, and the issue was largely due to the sturdy valor of the small body of troops that on the first day withstood double their number. Both Meade and Lee were manoeuvering for positions on which to deliver battle; General Lee, to gather the fruits of his inva- sion of the north, to mass his forces before the Union Army could be concentrated, and, fighting it in detail, to win a vic- tory which should enable him to exact terms that would give a new lease of life to the Confederacy ; General Meade, to pro- tect Washington and Baltimore, to relieve Harrisburg and Philadelphia, and to drive Lee across the Potomac. Buford, with his cavalry, the eyes of the army, saw at a glance that Gettysburg was the best point for concentration and for a de- cisive battle. Reynolds, its right arm, saw that the time had arrived, and, with his corps, struck the first blow, meaning to follow it up with the help of the Eleventh and Third Corps. Hancock, in turn, seized the position on Cemetery Ridge, and by nightfall secured it, so that at the close of the first day, al- though the enemy had largely outnumbered our force, yet the substantial advantage was ours, for here Lee was brought to bay, and the successful battle of the second and third days were largely the outcome of that of the first day. The hard fighting of the first day is measured by that best test, the casualty list, strikingly alike on both sides, in spite of the contrast of the numbers engaged. Much of the details of this kind will be found in Fox's Book of Regimental Losses, well called Fox's Book of Martja-s, and it deserves close and diligent study on this and on the other great battles of the Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 33 war, for its exhaustivo study. The First Corps took into ac- tion 8,200 and lost 0,025. The Eleventh Corps, out of 9,197, took into action, (}eneral Howard says "hardly 6,000," and lost 3,sni. (^n the Confederate side, in Hill Corps, Heth says he took in 7,000 and lost 2,850, and I'ender lost 1,090 out of 4,200 engaged. Ewell's Corps was 20,000 strong (according to Gen- eral Meade's letter to Colonel Benedict), and Hodes' Division, out of 6,207, lost 2,853, and Early's, 1,188 out of 5,477. The First Corps lost over 70 per cent., the Eleventh Corps over 60 per cent. Of the First Corps, the Iron Brigade lost 01 per cent., 1,153 out of 1,883; the First Division 2,128, and the Sec- ond Division 1,686, out of 2,500, while the smallest, the Third Division, consisting, with the exception of one New York regi- ment, entirely of Pennsylvania regiments, lost 1,748 out of 2,069, over 80 per cent., and the other divisions were little be- hind the same heavy percentage. Biddle's Brigade of the Third Division lost 897 out of 1,287, nearly 70 per cent., leav- ing only 390, a fragment of a regiment. Stone's Brigade, by Colonel Wister's report, Avent in with 1,300 men and lost 852, over 66 per cent. It had but three regiments, the One Hundred and Forty-third, One Hundred and Forty-ninth and One Hun- dred and Fiftieth Pennsylvania, and no command fought more desperately or suffered greater losses. At its head its com- mander. Colonel Eoy Stone, was wounded and his successor, Colonel Langhorne Wister was also wounded. After taking position to the right of Biddle's Brigade, and rendering etfec- tive assistance to Wadsworth's hard-pressed division, Stone's little brigade was made the point of a concentrated attack in force by double its number; against its three small regiments were brought six regiments the average strength being over five hundred each. The Confederate reports lay stress on the severity of their losses. General Heth speaks of losing 2,700 out of 7,000, nearly 40 i)er cent., in twenty-five minutes. Colonel Hopkins of the Forty-fifth North Carolina, says that regiment suffered more than it ever did before in the same time. The Second North Carolina reported a loss of two-thirds. The Twenty-sixth North Carolina lost over 76 per cent, Pender's old brigade over 48 per cent., Daniel's over 43 per cent, and the regimental losses in both Hill's and Ewell's Corps were very heavy. On 34 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. our side, of the losses of the Pennsylvania regiments, the fol- lowing were in the first Corps: Eleventh Pennsylvania lost 117 out of 292, or 40 pei* cent. Fifty-sixth Pennsylvania lost 183 out of 252, or 50 per cent. Eighty-eighth Peun.sylvania lost 106 out of 296, or 35 per cent. Ninetieth Penn.sylvania lost 94 out of 208, or 45 per cent. One Hundred and Seventh Pennsj'lvania lost 165 out of 255, or 65 per cent. One Hundred and Twenty-first Pennsylvania lost 179 out of 263, or 68 per cent. One Hundred and Forty-second Pennsylvania lost 211 out of 362, or 59 per cent. One Hundred and Forty-third Pennsylvania lost 252 out of 465, or 55 per cent. One Hundred and Forty-ninth Pennsylvania lost 336 out of 450, or 75 per cent. One Hundred and Fiftieth Pennsylvania lost 264 out of 397, or 68 per cent. One Hundred and Fifty-first Pennsylvania lost 335 out of 467, or 73 per cent. The Union troops at various points won signal success, for they captured parts of three brigades of Confederate troops, Archer's Davis' and Iverson's. The One Hundred and Seventh Pennsylvania reported the capture of more prisoners than the regiment numbered. Of the Pennsylvania regiments in the Eleventh Corps, The Twenty-seventh lost 111 out of 324, or 45 per cent. The Seventy-third lost 34 out of 332, or 10 per cent. The Seventy-fourth lost 110 out of 381, or 32 per cent. The Seventy-fifth lost 111 out of 258, or 40 per cent. The One Hundred and Fifty-third lost 211 out of 569, or 39 per cent. On the Union side of the greatest regimental losses at Get- tysburg the First Corps is represented by the One Hundred and Fifty-first, One Hundred and Forty-ninth, One Hundred and Fiftieth, One Hundred and Forty-seventh, One Hundred and Forty-third and One Hundred and Forty-second Pennsyl- vania, and the Eleventh Corps by the Twenty-seS^enth, Sev- entj^-fourth. Seventy-fifth, and One Hundred and Fifty-thii-d Pennsylvania. On the Confederate side, the Twenty-sixth North Carolina lost, according to General Hoke's report, 708, but by the War Department list, 588 out of ''over 800," over 75 per cent., for these North Carolina regiments went into the field of great strength, some as high as 1,800, others 1,500; one Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 35 coni])any of the Twenty-sixth North ('iirolina lost out of 3 offi- cers and 84 men, all of the officers and 83 of men; another com panj, of the Eleventh Nortli Carolina, lost 80 out of 38. The Second Nortli Carolina Battalion was reported by General Ewell as losing 200, by the War Department 153, out of 240, 75 or 05 ])er cent.; Lane's North Carolina Brigade of Pender's Division, lost 000 out of 1,355, nearly 50 per cent. ; Daniel's Brigade lost 910 out of 2,100 over 43 per cent. ; Pettigrew's Brigade lost 1,105, nearh' the whole strength of Biddle's. The total loss in the Union Arni}^ at Gettysburg was 27 per cent., that of the First Corps on the first day was over 70 per cent., that of the Eleventh Corps over 00 per cent. Compare these with the losses in famous foreign battles. At Balaklava the Light Brigade lost 37 j)er cent., at lukerman tlie Guards lost 45 per cent., the heaviest German regimental losses in the Franco-Prussian war were 49 per cent. The Twenty-sixth North Carolina lost 73 per cent., the One Hundred and Forty- ninth and One Hundred and Fifty-first Pennsylvania about as heavil3^ Nor did these Pennsylvania regiments fight any bet- ter on Pennsylvania soil than elsewhere, while their comrades from other states fought as bravely here as in any other field during the war. It has been the habit to speak of the first day's battle as if it had been an accidental encounter, in which horse, foot and artillery were driven in and through Gettys- burg. In point of fact there was no accident, no surprise no easy victory. Buford went by Keynolds' order to find the enemy, and his report on the 30th showed where Lee's forces were concentrating. From the dawn of July 1st, when Bu- ford's cavalry first met the advance of Hill's Corps, until night- fall, when the Army of the Potomac was concentrated at and near Gettysburg, there was sturdy fighting, stout resistance against a largely superior force, and an all-important position and time to concentrate on it gained. The Confederate Army fought to win the first day, but the L^nion Army fought to win the next day and the next day, and the final victory.* The battle of Gettysburg was a varying series of successive engagements, with alternate gains and losses, but the final re- sult was that crowning success which was largely due to the good fight fought on the first day against heavy odds. •.John C. Ropes', "The Campaign under Pope." 36 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. The first day's battle was a series of distinct contests, and, like every battle, it was a compound of victory and defeat; every soldier killed, wounded or captured, every inch of ground gained or lost, being jjart of the final result. It was, indeed, "the soldier's battle," for it was the fixed determination of the soldiers to hold the ground that counted for more than any skillful manoeuvers of militar}' art or the best tactical methods. Buford's two brigades of cavalry fought and held in check Heth's Division, and when Buford w^as relieved, the First Corps fought Heth's and Pender's Divisions. When the Eleventh Corps came to the front it met Bodes' and Early's Divisions, and then the right of the First Corps also became engaged with these strong divisions. Meredith's Brigade of the First Division of the First Corps captured part of Archer's Brigade, Cutler's Brigade captured part of Davis' Brigade, Baxter's Brigade of the Second Division of the First Corps captured part of Iverson's Brigade of Bodes' Division of Ewell's Corps. Meredith's Brigade fought in turn the whole or part of Archer's, Pettigrew's, Brockeubrough's and Daniel's Brigades. Stone's Brigade and the Sixth Wisconsin, Ninety-fifth New York and Fourteenth New York fought Davis' and Daniel's Brigades, and the Fifty-sixth Pennsylvania and the Seventy- sixth New Y^ork also encountered them, while Baxter's and Cutler's Brigades Avere pitted against the brigades of Iverson, O'Neal and Eamseur. Of the artillery engaged on the first day, the record is one of pre-eminent service. Tidball's Horse- Battery, under Lieutenant Calef, fought almost unaided, and the batteries of the First Corps bore the brunt of a largely superior number and weight of guns; Cooper's Battery B, First Pennsylvania Light Artillery, Stevens' Fifth Maine, Reynolds' L, First New Y'ork, Stewart's B, Fourth United States, and of the Eleventh Corps, Wiedrich's I, First New Y^ork, Dieck- mann's Thirteenth New Y'ork Light Artillery, Wilkeson's G, Fourth Ignited States, Dilger's I and Heckman's K, First Ohio Light Artillery, greatly helped to secure the weak Union forces from the strong Confederate lines that steadily gath- ered there confident of success. Paul's Brigade captured part of several brigades of Pender's Division. Stone's Brigade of the Third Division fought in turn Davis' Brigade of Heth's Di- vision, Daniel's Brigade of Rodes' Division and Scales* Bri- Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 37 gade of I'eiuU'r's Dnisioii. Biddle's Brigade of the Third Di- vision on the extreme left, fought Pettigrew's and McGowan's Brigades of Heth's Division, while Brockenbrougli's and Lane's and Scales' extended the Confederate line and overlaj)- ped the Union left, just as Early's Brigades overlapped the Union right. There Barlow's Division fought Gordon's, Hays' and Avery's Brigades, and Ames' fought Doles, and Daniels', and the right of the First Corps, Baxter and Cutler, and the left of the Eleventh, fought Iverson's, Daniel's, Doles' Ram- seur's and O'Neal's Brigades. Coster's Brigade of Steinwehr's Division was pitted against Hays' and Hoke's and Ramseur's Brigades. While the First Corps was put in almost to the last man, and the Eleventh Corps had only a weak reserve on Cemetery Hill, the Confederates had two divisions, Johnson's of Ewell's, and Anderson's of Hill's Corps, estimated by Gen. Fitzhugh Lee at over 10,000 each, and the four divisions that had been engaged, Heth's, Pender's, Eodes' and Early's, at the close of the action, at over 4,500 each. The First Corps then was reduced from 9,000 to 3,000, and the part of the Eleventh Corps actually engaged from G,000 to 3,800. The actual losses of the Union forces on the first day were proportionally far heavier than those of the Union Army on the other days of the three days of fighting, and both Union and Confederate forces on the first day lost more heavily than on almost any other battlefield. The Second Corps lost 4,3.j0 out of 10,500 engag- ed, over 42 per cent., in the battles of the second and third days; the Third Corps lost 4,210 out of less than 10,000 actually engaged on the second day, 42 per cent.; the Fifth Corps lost 2,187 out of 11,000, less than 20 per cent. ; the Sixth Corps lost only 242, for it was wisely held in reserve ; the Twelfth Corps lost 1,801 out of 8,000. On the Confederate side on the first day, Heth lost 2,850 out of 7,000, 40 per cent. Pender lost 1,690 out of 7,000; Early lost 1,188, and Bodes 2,853 out of their divisions which went into action each 8,000; 35 per cent, for the latter, and about 12 per cent, for the former. Pickett's loss in his famous charge was 05 per cent., 2,888, of which 232 were killed, 1,157 wounded and 1,4!)9 captured or missing; but on the first day the Iron Brigade lost over 60 per cent., and Biddle's Brigade, and Stone's Brigade lost nearly 70 per cent. each. The First Corps with six brigades, and the Eleventli witli five, fought eight brigades of Hill's Corps and 4 38 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. nine of Ewell's, and yet at the close of the first day, the fresh Iroops of Lee's Army were held off from gathering the fruits of their hard-earned success by the strength of the forces be- fore them and those placed on the right and left. Even Wads- worth's Division, beaten and outnumbered, still held on to Gulp's Hill, and prevented Ewell from seizing it. Thus, too, Buford's little cavalry force made sufficient demonstration on the flanks to arrest the Confederate advance, and even the Union guns at the foot of Seminary Ridge, manned by the men of the Iron Brigade, though hard pressed, were safely with- drawn. Thus the Union forces were outnumbered and forced to retreat, but neither dismayed nor driven off hastily. Thus, too, w^as gained the practical fruits of the first day's battle, in the rapid concentration of Meade's Army on the position in the rear of Gettysburg, where General Meade turned his offen- sive defense into a final repulse and defeat of Lee's Army, It was the first day that prepared the way for this result, and dearly purchased as it was, the price was none too great to pay for the infinite advantage. There is glory enough for all who took part in the battle of Gettysburg, but for those who fought on the first day there is the special glory of having fought against overwhelming numbers, and yet with such firm- ness and pertinacity that the forward movement of Lee's Army was arrested, time secured for the arrival and concen- tration of Meade's Army, and the expected easy onset of the Confederates resisted at every point. To the events of the first day is largely due the final issue of the battle of Gettys- burg, and therefore it deserves a special record to-day here. No one thinks of limiting the significance of the battle of Gettysburg to the spot where it was fought, yet the fact that the field of battle lies within the limits of the State of Pennsyl- vania imposes a special dut}^ which has always been fully rec- ognized. As far back as 1804 the Battlefield Memorial Asso- ciation was organized to secure the ownership of the ground. State after state has joined in the solemn duty of marking, by permanent memorials, the position of ever}'^ organization, and the dedication services have been memorable for eloquence and pathos. The State of Pennsylvania now marks the final act of a long series of legislative and executive measures, by inviting the veteran soldiers of all its organizations that took party in the great battle, to join in this reunion, and to set the Pennsijlcaiiia at (Jclty.sbiir;/. 39 seal of approval on its work. By its gonerous aid and iiiidor the watchful care of a Commission composed of able oflicers, every one of its eighty-six organizations will be represented on the field by suitable memorials of its services here. Let us gratefully acknowledge the way in which the State of Pennsyl- vania has recognized and fulfilled its obligation. It has freely given money, and more than that, the Governor and the Com- mission a})pointed by him, have given time and thought, and have fulfilled to general satisfaction, a long, difficult and deli- cate task. The Commission closes its report with an urgent appeal for a^ memorial of General Meade and his great ser- vices. Let us heartily second that appeal. The same honor, too, is due to General Hancock. Great as is the work that has been done in making Gettysburg a permanent historical record in bronze and granite, that record is incomplete until statues of Meade and Hancock are placed on the field where the great victory was won. History has enrolled their names high on the list of those who deserved well of their country, and in its great and growing prosperity the country should not fall short in j)aying the tribute due them here. Meade and his able lieutenants earned here the gratitude of the nation, and he and thej^ should stand forever in living bronze, keeping watch and ward over the memorials of their soldiers. The men of the First Corps put Reynolds' statue here in memory of their deep sense of his great qualities, and of the affection that endeared him to his soldiers. The first day's battle was largely due to his inspiration, and his spirit ruled the field long after his dead body had been borne from it. To his successor in command there, sent in answer to Buford's warning note, 'there seems no commanding officer here' to Hancock, both for his services in the closing hours of the first day, in snatching the substantial fruits of victory from the enemy, and for his still more shining successes on the succeed- ing days of the battle, there is still due the acknowledgment best to be made in a bronze heroic statue. Then to complete the work, Meade himself should stand here,, that the long list of memorials on the field he won, should at last be completed by one worthy of the great commander. That done, and only then, may we feel that the history of Gettysburg is finally told in bronze and granite, and that to all justice has been fully meted out. 40 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Yesterday we dedicated our regimental monuments, to da j we recall the operations of each of the three days of the great battle. Honor has been duly paid to the organizations that fought here. Here stands the statue of Eeynolds. There at Round Top is the statue of Warren. We look in vain for Meade and Hancock. Their names are forever associated with Gettysburg, and it is due to them, to the men who fought under them, that here at Gettysburg due honor should be paid them. Until that is done, we cannot feel that the task is yet complete. Let us then see to it that before another Pennsyl- vania Day is celebrated, the statues of Meade and Hancock shall be put in place here. That done, then indeed, will the work be completed, and Gettysburg will no longer need the crowning memorial that is still wanting. In leaving Gettys- burg let us all bend our best energies to the requisite measures for securing suitable honors to Meade and Hancock, and may we meet here at no distant day to join in unveiling their statues on the field forever connected with their names. THE SECOND AND THIRD DAYS— JULY 2 AND 3, 1863. Brevet Brigadier-General Henry H. Bingham. IX the great metropolis of the nation but a few months ago. amid joy and thanksgiving, speech and song, peace and prosperity, hallelujah and praj^er, the official representa- tives of the people and assembled thousands of the populace, celebrated the centennial of the inauguration of George Wash- ington, first President of the United States. A government of the people, by the people and for the people, liberty for all, but exacting loyalty from all, the American Republic had lived one hundred years. Our Declaration of Independence was a masterful reality, our Constitution a matchless charter of free- dom, and that God inspired utterance that three millions of patriots gave to mankind and humanity: "We^ the people of Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 4l the United States, in order* to form a more perfect Union, es- tablish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States," found at the incoming of the second century, sixty-five millions of freemen, "a family at peace among ourselves," who could with reverent acclaim send gi-eeting to the generations to come and with bended knee and uplifted eyes, in spirit humble, but voice lirm and unwavering, declare, "We have fought a good fight, we have kept the faith, glory to God in the highest, on earth peace, good will toward men." We are to-day a happy people. A Constitution preserved, the integrity of the Union main- tained — liberty and law our cloud by day and pillar of fire by night. But the path has been no easy one to follow ; the roses that have lined the way have had many thorns, and their colors have been darkly red, and on the hill side and in the val- ley, the unnumbered and nameless graves with monumental shafts and simple stones, cover all that remains of a patriot dead who sacrificed their all for human rights, that here as- sembled to-day, we ''May hail the coming century with hope and joy." The limitations of the Constitution, the integrity and inde- pendence of the states, the legislation enacted by the sover- eign Congress, the statutes enforced within the borders of the commonwealths, the discussions in church and from the pub- lic rostrum upon the construction of our fundamental law, the variety and diversity of interests in our industries and large communities; labor in its many forms and conditions, all, all contributed to consummate, upon the election and inaugura- tion of Abraham Lincoln, that physical and moral climax of forces, known in our history as the War of the Kebellion or the American Civil War of ISGl-lSGo. It was the greatest war of modern times. Its field of operation measured almost a con- tinent in territory; eight hundred millions of treasure — a people's toil, but paid its living moving need.s — its dead and dying reached six hundred thousand men and permanently dis- abled and destroyed the health of over one million more — it covered a land with widows and orphans — it begot suffering never to be estimated and privations countless; it exhibited bravery unparalleled, courage and endurance uiisur])assed ; its 42 Pentisijlvania at Gettyshurg. leadersliip was inaouificeiit, its soldieiy heroic. vSiich was the nation's traged}' of the nineteenth century in which you played so well your i)art. Greatest of all, in the fulness of time it came, because in the destin}' of our civilization and national life it had to come that American constitutional liberty might live — "The Union, one and inseparable, now and forever." Amen to the mighty sacrifices — amen and all hail the might- ier consummation ! The contending armies cover bodies of men in action and battle, in suffering and slaughter, in camp and hospital almost beyond human conception or understanding. The Union forces enrolled during the four years number two millions seven hundred and seventy-two thousand four hundred and eight men (2,772,408) and estimated upon a basis of three years' service, 2,320,272, or about two thousand regiments. Tlie Confederate armies from the best attainable sources are estimated at 700,000 for the period of the war, or 780 regi- ments on the ten-company basis. The militar}' poi)ulatiou of the states on the Union side was 4,559,872, and from the eleven states of the Confederacy 1,004,- 193. There were killed or died of wounds on the Union side — Officers, 6,365 Enlisted Men, 103,705 Aggregate, 110,070 Died of disease on the Union side — Officers, 2,712 Enlisted Men, 197,008 Aggregate, 199,720 iMaking the grand aggregate from all causes during the war 359,528, or 15.4 of the entire army. There weie 275,175 wounded, but not moitally. The estimated loss of the killed or mortally wounded in bat- tle on the Confederate side was 94,000, and death from disease 59,297. The Union army embraced volunteers from every condition Pennsylvania at (JcKyshunj. 43 ol" our industrial life, hut the j^i-aiid measure of olili^atioii be- longs to that peojiie who in every contest lor I'reedoni liave ever been foremost. Forty-eight per cent, weie fanners, twenty-four per cent, meclianics, sixteen per cent, laborers, live per cent, commer- cial pursuits, three per cent, professional men, four per cent, miscellaneous. Nationality formed a distinctive feature. The great body of foreigners, who from the days of our Kevolutiou, have done so much to develop our industries and add to our wealth, strength and vigor as a people, responded (piickly to the call for troojjs, and fought bravely through the long wai-. Three-fourths of the army were native American. Of the oOO.OOO soldiers of foreign birth, Germany furnished 175,000; Ireland, 150,000; England, 50,000; British America, .50,000; other countries, 75,000. Coming late into active warfare, but when once a part of the army rendering valuable and distinguished service, we find the enlistment of the black troops to have reached the large num ber of 178,975, and their deaths from all causes to have been 36,847. The Kepublic has remembered their services and in the bat- tles of the future they will enter at the commencement of every struggle for freedom. There were one hundred and twelve battles in which one side or the other lost over ti\e hundred men killed and wound ed, and in all there w-ere one thousand eight hundred and remacy of their j)rin- ciples and nioial ideas, accepting in the aibitrament of aims the final determination of the issues involved. This mighty host — these millions who fought the tight, the hundreds of thousands who fell, and the million wlio were broken down in health and stiength, came willingly — came for the war shouting, "We are coming, father Abraham, live bun dred thousand more." Yea they came and brought tinal vic- tory — not siuii)ly the applause of the multitude from all <)\er 44 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. the laud — not alone the trophies of war — torn battle-flags and smoking guns, but they brought final victory full and com- plete. Our Constitutional Government saved — saved not only to the victors but to the vanquished. Saved to be loved and hon- ored, revered, respected and obeyed by all. A quarter of a cen- tury has passed and truly can we say as Milton said of Crom- well, "That war made him great, jjeace greater." Throughout the length and breadth of this great common- wealth a loud appealing voice rings out — "Watchman, what of the night?" The nation wants help! and lo, the answer comes from mountains and valleys, from the fields ripe with the wav- ing golden grain; from the centers of trade, commerce and manufacture ; from the loom, the anvil and the workshop ; from the bench, the bar and the pulpit; from the schools and col- leges of learning and science — ^from youth and age, from every condition of American manhood— "All's well, Pennsylvania will give her bravest and best, the strongest and most faith- ful of her sons !" Call the roll : 315,017 white soldiers, 8,612 black soldiers, 14,- 307 sailors and marines, aggregating 337,936 ! Sixty-five and nine-tenths of the military population, aver- aged upon the basis of three years' service, they numbered 265,517, embraced in two hundred and fifteen regimental or- ganizations. Of the three hundred regiments in the Union army that sustained the heaviest losses in battle, including every regiment in service which lost over one hundred and thirtj'^ killed or died of wounds during the war, fifty-three are grouped from Pennsylvania. Thirty-seven Pennsylvania regi- ments lost in killed and died of wounds in battle ov^er ten per cent, of their total enrollment. Of the forty-five regiments in the Union army that lost over two hundred men killed or mortally wounded in the action, eleven are from Pennsylvania. Of the twenty-two regiments in the Union army where the loss of killed or died of wounds during the war reached fifteen ])er cent, or upwards of their enrollment, five are from Penn- sylvania. They have the following order: 4th — On hundred and Fortieth Pennsylvania Volunteers, 17.4. Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 45 9th — One Jliindied and Forty-second Pennsylvania Volun- teers, 16.5. lOtli — One Hundred and Forty-first Pennsylvania Volun- teers, IG.l. 12th — One Hundred and Forty-eighth Pennsylvania Volun- teers, 15.6. 13th — Eighty-third Pennsylvania Volunteers, 15.5. Thirty-three thousand one hundred and eighty-three aggre- gate the number of deaths (wounds and disease) from all causes — an average of 15.4 of the troops furnished. The percentage of killed in action of the soldiers from the Keystone State, based upon the white troops, is greater than in the quota of any other northern state. The cavalry of Pennsylvania being especially distinguished, exceeding in losses that of the cavalr}' of any other state. These brave men who fought so gallantly were Pennsylva- nia's sons. They are all around us here to-day where they fell. They are buried in the sleeping homes of the nation's dead, and in the resting places where loving eyes can watch and loving tears can ever water their graves. You, the living soldiers here with us, equall}^ brave, have quietly melted into the peace- ful Avalks of life ever performing full duty as American citi- zens. Pennsylvania gave you all to the nation, and when you wore the honored blue, however much you loved your state, you be- came the soldiers of the Union. But the time was near in the mighty contest when you, the living, and the thousands dead, were to be marshaled upon the hills and valleys of your loved state and in a death struggle, fight the greatest battle of the war and contest in the most important strategic issue of the age, for it was upon this field — this Gettysburg "that the star of the Confederacy reaching the zenith turned by swift and head-long plunges toward the nadir of outer darkness and collapse." Waterloo and Gettysburg are marked as the two great bat- tles of the age. The Union army numbered 82.000 men and 300 guns; the Confederate numbered 70,000 men and 250 guns; the battle lasted three days and the casualties upon the T'nion side wei-e 23,003, and ui>on the Con federate 27,525 men. In detail the T^nion cause lost .'{,003 killed. 11.102 W()uiierate with the attack about to be made by (Jeiieral Longstieet. This movement was made, but was met by a counter-movement by (lenei-al IMeasonton v.'ho, under orders from (leuer-al Meade, had taken up a position to meet any flank attack by the enemy, and j)rotect the Lnion flank and rear. Simultaneous with the great cannonade Stuart's command, consisting of namitton's, Fitzhugh Lee's, W. H. F. Lee's and Jenkins' Brigades, advanced to the attack. The3' were met by Mcintosh's Brigade and Custer's Brigade, of Kill>atrick's Division, and, after a desperate hand to hand en- gagement, were rei)ulsed. Later in the day CJeneral Meade ordered (Jeneral Kilpatrick to take up a position to threaten the Confederate right. Cen- eral Iviljtatrick moved with Farnsworth's Biigade, and was subsequently joined by Merritt's Brigade, of Buford's Division. A demonstration was made b}^ General Kiljiatrick's order, din- ing which General Farnsworth M'as 'kille(|. The whole cavalry movement of the lM and .id of duly, ex- hibited on the part of officers and men, not oidy bravery and courage, but able leadershi]*, making memorable their record as indispensable adjuncts to the great battle and victoiy. rennsylvania's contribution to the corjis emluaced many trooi>s, and under the fighting (pialities of fearless IMeasonton, the names of Generals John Bufoi-d. Da\iiii-iK»s(' (»r prcsciN iiiii the l»;il I Iclicld and its suri'dHiidiiiiis, and of iiciiiclnal iii^ Ilic incnioiy of tlic di'eds of its i)ai'ti(*ii»anls. The (lettvshuiii I'at tldicld .Mciiioiial Association lias iii;h confined to a iiivcn locality, is of interest to the pcojilc of the country and the world. For historical purposes, and for the study of strategy and tactics. (Jettysburj;- is to he the les of right for which men here fought were universal, and the results here won of general value to our common country, so the battlefield of Gettj'sburg is the heritage of our countrymen everywhere. Their rejtre- seutatives control it now and it is to be hoped that their offi- cial representatives in Congress will make provision for its further development for liistorical purposes, until the location of every military organization which fought njioii the field will be designated and permanently marked. Pennsylvania has entire confidence in the ])reseiit organiza- tion charged with the duty of preserving and maintaining this battlefield, and she, without hesitation, transfers to its cus- tody these memorials, ei-ected by her official l)()unty and the contributions of the survivors of the several organizations which ]>articipated in the battU*. She has, by legislative en- actment, sanctioned the organization of the (Jettysbni-g I>at- tlelield Memorial Association; she has contributed of her funds to its support; she has i>iide in its work, and will, doubt- less, continue to co-oi)erate with it and through it for its con- tinued development, and the enlargement of its scojie and efforts. To you, as the rei)resentative this Association, I beg to transfer the custody of Pennsylvanin'** Afemorials, assured that llicy will be properly cared for and faitliliill\ preserved, 60 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. and that so long as these perishable materials shall continue to do so they will be permitted to tell their story of heroism, sacrifice and devotion to the generations vet unborn. ACCEPTANCE OF THE MONUMENTS ON BEHALF OF THE BATTLEFIELD MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION. Hon. Edward McPherson. GOVERNOR BEAVER: The Battlefield Association will- ingly accepts the care of the memorials which you have confided to it.« These tasteful and enduring monuments of bronze and granite, are an appropriate expression of the profound emotion with which a grateful people regard the great work done here by a noble soldiery. They vividly re- call to this generation, as they will suggest to future genera- tions, the anxieties and griefs which, in the midst of war's alarms, disquieted the homes of our broad and busy Common- wealth. The}^ will as vividly recall the numberless privations and fatigues of camp and march, the suffering in hospital, the constant strain of expectation, the awful carnage of battle, which those brave hearts endured for us and for the posses- sion of generations who are to come after us. And they will also forever testify the precious fruits of victory — our Union saved, our Constitution purified, our institutions immeasur- ably strengthened, the whole people firmly bound in an indis- soluble union of indestructible states. This lofty thought had, before the War of the Rebellion no place in the accepted theories of our government, but is a gift from that war. Before that event the Union was flippantly and frequently threatened from within, in both the North and the South; and if the states were boasted as indestruc- tible, it was because they were claimed to be independent and sovereign — and not at all as indestructible because an in- tegral part of a nnion indissoluble in whole and equally inde- Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Gl struclible in every part. So far as we are, therefore, this day fused iuto unity and have a cloudless future, we owe it primarily to the constancy and valor of the armies of the Union, who thereby made the nation their debtor to an amount which cannot be computed or paid. How much of the great result due to our many victories may be directly due to this victory, it is not possible accu- rately to state. But there were then existing circumstances of peculiar gravity which made this victory indispensable to the cause of the Union. We know that long before this battle several European cabinets had considered the policy of un- friendly intervention in our affairs. We know, definitely, tliat six months before this battle the Emperor of France had taken a step in that policy of hostility to which he was im- pelled by ambition for his dynasty, now happily sank from sight. And we know, further, that the governing classes in most European states then complacently regarded the end of the Great Kepublic as inevitable and awaited only a suffi- cient pretext to decide the issue and glean the profits. Our dangers from within w^ere hardly less serious. Delays and defeats, debt and the draft, had sorely tried and deeply dis- couraged the hopeful and faithful, and had driven the timor- ous, tlie time-serving and the treacherous to look for peace through surrender. The invasion of Pennsylvania was made at this supreme crisis — the supreme crisis of the war, diplo- matically, politically and militarily, and was timed so as to be adapted to these various exigencies. In all the war there was no moment so big with the fate of empire as July, 18G3. If at that pivotal period, with foreign and domestic enemies of the Union alike crouching for its destruction, the Army of the Potomac had been subdued and beaten, and if on the fourth of July, 1863, the victorious army of Northern Virginia had been in quick pursuit of its Hying foe to the then probable capture of Baltimore and of Washington, there can be no reasonable doubt that the fact would have become the long-sought pre- text for foreign intervention with its horrid brood of conse- quences. But the Army of the Potomac stood in its tracks — shaken but j'et firm, weakened but yet defiant, threatened but yet victorious. It remained master. The Army of Northern Virginia it was which sped its way to the camps from which it came, and whence it never afterward took a northern step. (52 ; P(')Uhsijh-ani(i (it (lettijsbiirg. As it disappeared there also disappeared all opportunity for iiitei'veutiou. And Gettysburg, haviug escaped the misfor- tune of witnessing the wounding unto death of Libert}' and Union, rose to be the venerated spot on which free institu- tions received their efficacious baptism of fire and blood. In order to comprehend Gettysburg as a great historic name, and as a special place in the world, it is necessary' to know exacth' what each side represented in this death strug- gle. For this the official data are available — data which can- not, be confused or denied, and must not be forgotten. The differences between the two were radical and unmistakable; were written down at the time in justification for action taken, and were put in issue when api)eal was made to the God of Battles. The "other side," by its declarations of that date, fought for the theory that our common Constitution had created a confederacy of states, and had not formed a union of the people of the states. They fought for the existence in that confederacy of an indefeasible right in each state to secede from it on ever^' pretext deemed good by each state, and against the right of the Union to prevent the withdrawal from it of the people of an}' state on any pretext. They fought for the right of two governments and two peoples, to divide between them the territor}- of the Union, and against the right of one government and one people to preserve as its per- l>etual home, the magnificent empire won and given by the fathers. And they fought that liuman slavery, instead of re- maining a S3'stem local to, and controlled by, states, and with only (pialilied but defined rights in the Union, should be made the universal dominating interest in the confederacy — abso- lute everywhere as to rights, its characteristic institution, the yer}^ "•cornerstone" of its fabric, tlie dictator of its i)oli- cies, and a chief object in its life. These fundamental difierences were brought by common consent, at Gettysburg, to the jjoint of the bayonet and the mouth of the cannon, lo be settled, afler gigantic combat, by those grim and imperious judges from whose decision there is no ai)i)eal. Every soldier who tough 1 in either ai-niy, there- fore, fought willingly or un\\ illingly, consciously oi- uncon- sciously, for or against the ideas involved in these dift'erences. And Gett3'sburg has thencefortli slood, and will stand while history endures, as a synonym for an indivisible government Prniisi/lrdiiid nl (IcttjiKhuvfi. G3 under the Coiisstidilioii, with ri-ccdom \\\n\ ('(|Uiil ii;^lits lor all as the pervadiiiji' piiijtost' of I lie former. ;niolitical lineage than this iu which we are. It was solemnly dedicated, over two hundi-ed years ago, by its wise, unseltish anendence, jtatriotic fei-vor drove it to the front, and troops from this n<»ighborhood were among the lirst to hurry, in ITT."), after IJunker Hill, to the hel]) (d' the cobniists of New I'^ngland whose cause they made their own. When indepeml- ence was proclaimed, \\ was on the soil of rennsyhania that its language was liist heard. A\'liile the countiv was iu the throes of the revolution, in 17St>, seven years before the jtas- 64 ^ Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. sage of the great northwestern ordinance, it was Pennsylva- nia — a name "already dear throughout the Avorld as a symbol of freedom" — which, first of the thirteen, "led the way to- wards introducing freedom for all," by i>assiug the act of emancipation, which restored and established within it the rights of human nature — giving as reasons therefore thank- fulness for escape from danger and a desire to give a sub- stantial proof of gratitude, the duty of proving the sincerity of their professions in favor of freedom and the peculiar pleasure of adding '"one more step to universal civilization." When independence was won, and the convention of 1787 produced, within its chief city, the Constitution of the United States, ''the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man," Pennsylvania, in its deep yearning for nationality, was one of the first two states, and the first of the large states, to greet and ratify it; and from that august moment to this it has, without default or stint, given to the safety of that Constitution and to the growth of that Union the sturdy service of its strong hands and the measureless wealth of its rich heart. It must, therefore, be regarded as a supreme historic fe- licity that upon a territory so dedicated, among a people so molded and so trained, and in a State so distinguished, in which over eighty years before, had been struck the first ring- ing blow for human freedom, was here struck the decisive blow, in the fullness of time and in a Titanic struggle, for the salvatien of our Constitution, the maintenance of our Union, and the rescue of the imperilled rights of human nature; and that, in this mighty contest, it was from out these peaceful and beautiful hills, for years the silent watchers and the shielding friends of fleeing bondmen, bondwomen and bond- children, when, suddenly, as in the twinkling of an eye, trans- formed by the subtle alchemy of battle, into quaking, smok- ing, cloud-capped, blood-drenched mounts, there issued in clear and resolute voice, amid the lightning flashes of artillery and the thunderous roar of musketry, the thrilling but just sentence that, as the expiration for all this suffering and as the punishment for all this wrong, both our Union and our Consti- tution shall remain inviolate, and our country shall no longer contain a slave. Then, and therein, had Gettysburg its con- secration. Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 65 Honored Goveruor ol' our illustiioiis Commonwealth! I ac- cept from your hands, by direction of the Battlefield Memo- rial Association, the gifts which are the embodiment of the people's gratitude; and, full3' realizing what they represent and what our duty is and will be towards them, promise you to devote ourselves to their care as to a religious duty of hichest obligation. (66) PENNSYLVANIA RESERVE DAY GETTYSBURG, SEPTEMBER 2, 1890 (67) PENNSYLVANIA RESERVE DAY TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1890, 1.30 P. M. Ceremonies at the Rostrum of the National Cemetery. Gettysburg, Pa. Hon. Andrew G. Curtin, Presiding, War Governor of the Commonwealth, 1861-18GC). Music, Frankford Band^ of Philadelphia. Prayer, Chaplain J. Hervey Beale. Choir, "Dropping from the Ranks." "The Organization of the Reserves," Hon. Andrew G. Curtin. ''The Commanders of the Reserves," Colonel John H. Taggart, Music, Frankford Band. ''The First Brigade at Gettysburg," Brevet Brigadier-General Robert A. Mc Coy. "The Third Brigade at Gettysburg," Lieutenant W, Hayes Grier. Poem, "Major and Surgeon G. B. Hotchkins, Read by First Lieutenant and Adjutant W. P. Lloyd. Presentation of Monuments to Battlefield Association, Hon. James A. Beaver, Governor of the Gommonivealth. Acceptance on behalf of Battlefield Association, Brevet Major Chillon W. Hazzard. Music, Frankford Band. (68) TlilO FIKST BRIGADE AT (iETTYSlUTRG. Bkevet Brigadieu-General Kohert A. McCoy. ON the 3d of June, X863, Brigadier-General S. W. Crawford, of the reguhir army, an able and gallant Pennsylvaniau, who had won distinction at Fort Sumter, in 1801, and later, as an oflQcer on General Rosecrans' staff, and also as a brigade commander in Banks' army, was assigned to the divi- sion and proceeded to prepare it for active service in its camps, near Washington, D. C, to which it had been with- drawn at the urgent solicitation of Governor Curtin, who al- ways vigilantly looked after the welfare of Pennsylvania troops, in order that its ranks might be repleted after the many hard-fought battles in which it had participated. All then existing vacancies in field and line officers were filled. With some recruits, and the return of many from the liospitals who had been absent, wounded or sick, the division was soon in good condition for the field; and both Reynolds, of the First Corps, and Meade, of the Fifth, applied to the War Department to have it assigned to his individual command. After four months of monotonous picket duty experienced on the outposts of the defenses of Washington, it became irk- some to the spirit of the corps, accustomed, as it had been, to most active and severe service at the front, and when rumors of a threatened invasion into Maryland and Pennsylvania fol- lowed close upon the battle of Chancellorsville, fought on the :U1 of May, 18(13, which were made significant by a call for the militia of the state by Governor Curtin, on the 12th of June, for her defense, the old veterans became restive and petition- ed the geneial government to return them to the Army of the Potomac. On the 12th of June, coincident with the state.proc- lamation, though no danger was then apprehended at Washing- ton of any invasion, Lee flushed and emboldened by his past (69) 6 70 Peiiiisi/]v(nii(t at Gettysburg. successes, which lie believed augured well for the success of other ]»laii.s that were far-reachiug iu their effect, left his posi- tion south of the liappahanuock, and started on a cautious movement toward the Shenandoah Valley tending towards the noi th. By the next da^' Hooker was also on the move, closely watching the unfolding of the enemy's plan. After capturing Winchester, on the night of the 14tli, the advance rebel cav- alry, under Jenkins, crossed the Potomac and pushed rapidly through to Chambersburg, Ta., followed by Ewell's Corps, on the 16th, that raided by division, north upon Chambersburg, York and Carlisle, and also westward up the Potomac to Cum- berland, Md. By these several movements Lee had hoped to draw the Army of the Potomac into Maryland and Pennsyl- vnia. and then with the balance of his army he would move by Snicker's and Ashby's gaps, in the Blue Kidge, upon Wash- ington, and strike from the south side. But the plan not hav- ing the desired effect upon Hooker, he suddenly ])ushed for- ward his whole arm^' into Maryland on the 2J:th and 25th, and rapidly advanced into Pennsylvania with the purpose to jtlunder and destroy, if he could not succeed in transferring the battle-ground fi'om Virginia. Hooker, who had advanced according to the movements of Lee, then started iu pursuit, and on the ^.jth crossed the Potomac at Berlin and I{]d wards' Ferrj^ and proceeded to Frederick, Md., thus keeping between Washington and the enemy, who had crossed at Williams|)ort and Falling Waters. On the 28d, orders were issued from the War Department for the Pennsylvania Reserves to join the main army at Frederick, though the Second Brigade was de- tained for defense at Washington. The regiments of the First and Third Brigades were withdrawn from their various out-posts, and by five o'clock that afternoon were on the move. On the 27(h, the Potomac was crossed at Edwards' Ferry, and on Sunday, the 28th, the division reached the army at Fred- erick, and was assigned as the Third Division, Fifth Army Cor])s, the same position it held through the Peninsular cam- paign. To their surprise they found General Sykes taking command as successor to General Meade, who, that morning, had received the ai»]iointment of commander of the Army of the Potomac, in place of Hooker, suddenly relieved at his own request. The same breath that heralded to the astonished troops the retirement of the one, through his own farewell Pcinisi/ln/iii(i (il (1( 1 1 i/shiiri/. 71 order to llic ai-iiiy, ainuninccd ilic ;iii|K)iiil iiiciil ol' the ollici*, and liis acccidancc of the ((Hiiiiiaiid. And \\liat«'\'eded progress, but after long delays, it moved so raju'dl}^ forward that lost time was re- covei'cd in xer}' severe marches, reaching Uniontown, Mary- land, on the evening of the :>Oth, where it encamjied for the night. On the afternoon of July 1st, the division was halted at the state line to hear a most patriotic and stirring address from Cieneral Crawford. Looking over into their own loved state with all the pride of their patriotic hearts, the enthu- siasm of the men became almost unbounded, and as they crossed the line with cheer after cheer there was determina- tion to light as they had never fought before to drive the in- vader from the soil of their native state. The march from the state line to Gettysburg, via Hanover and McSheriys- town, was almost continuous and very fatiguing, and, as l)ut little time could be allowed for either slee]) or rest, sorely tried the physical enduiance of the men. But they were in most excellent sjnrits, and but little sti-aggling took place. Perhaps never was greater effort made to keep up, and as they approached Gettysburg, knowing that the battle had alreadv 72 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. been forced and that General Ee3molds had fallen, it proved a stimulus to more than ordinary power to overcome fatigue, and helped the sick and the weak to force their waning strength. The death of General Reynolds was received with demonstrations of sincere sorrow by the old Reserves. He was the only one of the original quartette of her commanders that death had summoned, and from the battlefield. Brave, generous and true, his courage never failed where duty called. It was while conspicuously prominent in posting his troops, July 1st. — a target for the enemy's fire, that the fatal bullet pierced his neck and he fell — dying almost instantly. His re- mains were taken to Lancaster, the city of his birth, where, on July 4th, midst tolling bells and muffled drums, and solemn requiems sadly chanted — all that was mortal was laid away in quiet rest until that day when carnal strife is lost in ever- lasting peace. The division arrived on the field of battle on the morning of Thursday, the 2d of July, and joined the Fifth Corps at a point where the Baltimore pike crosses Rock creek, and was posted in the rear of the right of the line of the army as a support, that position being then threatened by the enemy. About three o'clock the Fifth Corps was moved from its position near the extreme right to the left of the line where General Crawford was ordered to mass the division near the east slope of Little Round Top, where guns and ammunition were inspected. The men were impatient to engage in the terrible conflict raging in their front, and into which they knew the}' would soon be ordered, but for the time being the topography hid from them the panorama of bloody war taking place in their front. The line of battle for the second day lay along Cemetery Ridge from Gulp's Hill, on the right, to Round Top, on the left, and the disposition of the troops was as follows: On the ex- treme right, on Gulp's Hill, with its right flank extending to Rock creek and the Baltimore pike, lay the Twelfth Corps, with Wadsworth's division of the First on its left ; connecting on the left flank of this division, and along Cemetery Ridge, lay the Eleventh Corps, with the First, Second, Third and Fifth Corps prolonging the line to Round Top, or rather such appears to have been the plan of the original line. But in tak- ing position that afternoon the Third Corps, General Sickles, advanced to a ridge about three-quarters of a mile to the Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 73 front, aloiij; niid Ix'voikI the I<}mraitsbui'g road, into the pres- ence of a laige body of llie rebel army, with his line on the right stretcliiug along the front of a part of the Second Cor})s, and the left down through the peach orcliard. wheatfield and woods to tlie Devil's Den, in the ravine in front of Konnd Toj). The position was one of extreme peril, and troops less brave and disciplined than the gallant old Third Corjis would not liave battled as they did against such odds until relief came, (ieneral Hancock placed his First Division to cover its riglit Hank, and sent Caldwell's division to strengthen the line on the left. Fortunately the Fifth Corps had just arrived, and (hiflin's division, commanded by Barnes, and Ayres' division, regulars, were also thrown in on the left, where the most des- perate struggle ensued for the possession of TJound Top. While this, contest was raging, and the Union forces battled and held their ground as a wall of iron, General Sykes ordered General Crawford to the slope of the rocky ridge to the right and front of Little Itound Top, to cover the troops engaged in the front should it become necessary for them to fall back. This movement placed the Third Brigade pretty well down the rocky slope with tlie Eleventh Kegiment in the rear of the brigade, and in front of the First Kegiraent of the First Bri- gade. At this juncture, and while the division was being massed left in front, an order was received by General Crawford to send one of his brigades to the assistance of Vincent, then closely engaged with the enemy on the slopes of Big Round Top; Fisher's Third Brigade was designated for this service, and filed out by regiment to the left. While this movement was being executed our troops in frontj borne down by su- perior numbers and pressed back, though contesting every inch of ground from the peach orchard to the wheat-field and stone wall suddenly broke and fell back in confusion across Plum run, closely pursued by the enemy who sought to cut through tlie T^nion forces and seize the l)attei'ies on the left with Weed's llill and Round Top. The moment of time was most critical. On it hung the destiny of the day, and the fate of the battle of Gettysburg — for a two days' loss of position would scarcely insure victory for the third. To stem the tide of «lisaster. General Crawford personally ordered Colonel Jackson not to move the Eleven tli Regiment out with the 74 Pennsylvania at Gettyshiirg. Third Brigade, but to remain in position where he was, in front of the First Brigade. The First Brigade then moved rapidly forward to the ground vacated by the four regiments of Fisher's brigade. This phiced the men within the range of the enemy's musketr}- fire, which was particularly severe on the Eleveutli Regiment. Here Lieutenant John O'Hara Woods and a number of enlisted men were killed, and Lieutenant- Colonel Porter and Lieutenant Fulton and many men wound- ed, with casualties in each of the other regiments of the bri- gade. It was a position requiring the highest qualities of the vet- eran soldier, but the men who fought at Dranesville, Me- chanicsville, Gaines' Mill, New Market Cross Roads, Malvern Hill, Second Bull Run, South Mountain, Antietam and Freder- icksburg held it unmovable with their comrades falling about tliem. only eager and impatient to meet the enemy and add new laurels to those already won. During this time Colonel McCandless was forming his brigade into two lines of battle — the first line composed of the Sixth, Colonel Wellington Ent, which was to the right and rear of the Elev- enth, Colonel S. M. Jackson, and the Fir.st Regiment, Colonel William Cooper Talley, on the left. The second line being massed on the first — the Second Regiment. Lieutenant-Colonel George A. Woodward, and the First Rifles (Bucktails), Colonel Charles Frederick Taylor, on the left. But before this movement could be fully carried out, and our front being })ractically uncovered by the broken masses of troojts retreating past us, and the enemy being at close range, the front line opened fire. The Eleventh was armed with smooth-bore muskets, and, in addition to tlic usual charge of "buck and l)all." llie men, teal- i/ing that the engagement would be at close (pmrters, liad added additional charges of -'buckshot.'' Never before in the history of its service did tlie Elevenlli deliver a vcdley with such terrible etlect, eacli musket sending, as it were, a luind- ful of deatli-dealing balls into the ranks of the exultant enemy advancing so confidently with shouts of victory. But it was only to receive a volley that sent many of them reeling in the agonies of ]>ain and death, while their comrades, broken and dismayed, had no time to re-form before the order was given, Foriranl, doiihlr ry/nV/.-— CHARGE. Pcnnsijlraiiid al del I i/shiir;/. 75 >\'illi iLe luiious hat tic yell pcH-iiliar with the i'eiiii.sylvauiii lieserve Corps, and well ixMneiubeied by "Stonewall" Jackson's men, against whom tlun wcic so often niatched, the briiiade swejtt down the declivlly, following' their gallant leader, Gen- eral Crawford (who carried the colors of the First Keginient on horseback I, o\er the bonlders of granite ainl swain])y ground of IMuni run, deploying as they went and hurling back the enemy, drove him across the plain, over the stone wall, through the woods and wheatlield, until the lateness of the hour made it imprudent to push farther into the enemy's lines. IJut it was enough, the tide was turned, a portion of the lost ground legained, many prisoners taken, and the day saved, and by this charge, so daring, etlective and decisive, was an in- spiration given to the whole line that brightened hope and renewed confidence in the ultimate success (hat so gloriously crowned the held of Gettysburg. With the exception of a strong skirmish line, the command was withdrawn to the stone wall and fence skirting the woods to the right. As they charged the regiments deployed so tliat when the stone wall was reached, the Sixth was on the ex- treme right, with the l']leventh, First, Second and Bucktails to its left. The Bucktails, in the charge, were met by a heavy fire on their front and on their left flank from the Devil's Den. Their brave leader. Colonel Charles Frederick Taylor, brotlier of the late Bayard Taylor, was instantly killed as his legiment took and crossed tlie stone Avail. The regiments remained in ])osition back of the stone wall until late in the afternoon of the ;>d, when (General Crawford, under j»ersonal direction from (General Meade, who anticipated another mo\-ement on his left, ordered Colonel McCandless to nio\(' his brigad instant, I was ordered to a>, found the darkest period in the history^ of the rebellion for the North. Every interest was at stake, and gloomy fears per- vaded cabinet councils and hearthstones. But when on that memorable afternoon the lightning telegraph Hashed from the Atlantic to the l*acific: "(TettAsburg and Vicksbui-g are ours," des])air vanished and hope again sprang into life with a vigor never to be quenched until final victory crowned our arms at Appomattox. Glorious 4th of July. 1T7(» — glorious 4tli of July, I8O0 — may their memories thus intertwined in the nation's heart, ever call forth our warmest gratitude. Ma}' the enjoyment of our world-i'enowned heritage of civil and religious liberty ever keep fresh the debt Ave owe to those avIio, through great tribu- lations, established our Declaration of Inde])endence. and those who eightA^-seven years later sealed the blood-bought treasure with a second sacrifice of blood-bought victory. PRAYEK. CirAPLAIN J. Hervey Beale. (1st. Pexxa. Cavalry). f>(H) of our Fathers, we adore and woiship Thee, and to J Tliee, by whose grace and ])rovidence we are what we are as a nation; liere. Father, from this sacred spot, sur- rounded by the thousands of known and uid^nown graves and a few of the survivors of this bloody field, we lift <»ur hearts in rendering thanksgiving and everlasting praise. We thank Thee for our glorious national heritage, for the magnificent land of wealthy hills and fertile plains, and for Pcniisi/Ivdiiid ot (ictt/jshiir;/. 79 the laws and iiist iint ioiis wliicli make it a land of ])i'ogTess and lil»er(y. We tliank Tlicc lor our (Miristiaii sires, lovers oT fi-eedom aud of God, men of conscience and inte<>i'ity whose names have jeweled liistoiT, and tlie memory of whose deeds is an in- spiration to heroism and patiiotic ]>ride. We thank Thee for riyinonlli Kock, for Yorktown, and (hat in the stren<»th of justice and llie luight of mercy our arms weic plumed Avitli victory at Appomattox. We lliank Thee that thronjiih Th^^ kindness and mercy, the father of our cor})s and so many of its survivors are here to- day. We implore Thee, Farther, to let heaven's richest blessing rest upon all that are present, the families of the survivors and of the fallen, upon our country and all for whom we should pi-ay ; in the name ol' Christ we ask it all. Amen. THE COMMAXDEKS OF THE KESERVES. Colonel John H. Taggart. COMRADES OF THE rENNSYLVANIA RESERVES: We meet to-day to dedicate these monuments to the memory of our fellow-soldiers, our honored commanders. The flight of years but enhance their merits; nor can time dull their recoi-d on the roll of fame. These leaders of the trooj)s raised by a gieat commonwealth were the sons of Pennsylva- nia, born under her conservative institutions. anrinci]»les of constitutional liberty and respect for the lights of ]>i'oj»ei-ty. The first sliot lired at tlic national flag, on Foit Suinler, bred also the northern lieart. To a man, Pennsvlvanians were, flrst of all, Americans. The Kevstone 80 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. State was one among many in that vast sectional strife, but all personal considerations, material interests, even the claims 'of kindred of her children, never caused them to waver for an instant in their devotion to their country. . While this was the general sentiment, the men who first signed the record of their principles as leaders of our armies, practically staked their lives and fortunes on the hazard of the die; and here the supremacy of moral and physical courage was strikingly displayed by Andrew G. Curtin, the War Gov- ernor of Pennsylvania. On his action the issue of the contest hung. Pennsylvania was the Keystone of the Union, and her chief executive personally supported the arch, not only of the nation, but of the geographical territory binding together the North and the South. Pennsylvania was more closely allied with the South than with the North in ante-bellum days. Her commercial inter- ests and family connections were largely with Maryland, Vir- ginia and other southern states. Many of her institutions were patriarchal. Her policy was one of peace, and her people were thoroughly aware of the magnitude of the im- pending conflict. No man was more personally endeared to the whole people of his state than Governor Curtin. His individual acquaint- ance with them was marvelous. It is alleged that he kissed every baby born in Pennsylvania in 1861 and 1862. Spared to see twenty-five years of peace, and bless his native state, he is to-day the grandest of all the historic figures among his living countrymen. A partisan administration had consigned to the southern arsenals great stores of munitions of war, and in the South, too, the largest division of the regular army, tuider General Twiggs, had supinely laid down their arms before the power of the confederacy of the slave states; yet Andrew G. Curtin recognized that Pennsylvania was sound to the core, and that her sons would unflinchingly fight for the preservation of the Union. His work in organizing and arming the Pennsylvania Reserve Volunteer Corps was not less phenomenal than the sagacity with wliich he selected George A. McCall to instruct and command them. McCall was a thorough soldier, a great organizer, and his strong personality was impressed upon the Reserves from the time thev entered the United States service Pennsylvania at Qettyshurg. 81 until tliey were mustered out at the expiration of their term of enlistment. He was as mild and gentle as a women, but firm as a rock in the enforcement of discipline, yet liis kindness of heart made him looked up to as a father by his beloved Re- serves, and his noble example of heroism in battle, endur- ance of fatigue and privation on the march and in camp was the admiration of those who felt proud of him as their leader. General McCall was a Philadelphian by birth, a graduate of the West Point Military Academy of 1822, and an old officer of the regular army. He served with distinction in the war against the Florida Indians in 1836, afterward in the Mexican war, and in 1850 was appointed by President Taylor, inspector- general of the United States army with the rank of colonel, which position he held with great credit to himself until April, 1853, when he resigned liis commission, retired from the military service, and remained on his farm in Chester county until the rebellion of the southern people called his countrymen to arms. Immediatel}^ thereafter, in April, 1861, Governor Curtin summoned Colonel McCall to Harrisburg, to advise with him on the military situation and assist in the or- ganization of the Pennsylvania Eeserve Corps. His whole heart and soul were in the work. It was his ambition and his pride to make the corps the equal, if not the suj^erior, of any other body of troops either in the regular or volunteer service. How well he succeeded the liistory of the division attests. After the first battle of Bull Run, if the Pennsylvania Re- serves had not been organized, armed and equipped ready for the field, Washington City would have fallen before the vic- torious foe. The . capture of Washington would have been most damaging to the Union cause, as its enemies could then have dictated terms to the conquered Federal government from its capital. When the Reserves encam])ed at Tenallytown, on George- town Heights, General McCall, on entering the United States service, was commissioned a brigadier-general in the volunteer service. Up to that time the Reserves had not been organized into brigades, being composed of separate regiments, under the command of General McCall, ■hol(Jing a state commission as major-general. In order to perfect their organization into brigades, General McCall recommended to General Simon 82 Pennsylvania at (icttijsihiirf/. Cameron, tlic tlieii Secretary of War, the assignment of Brioa- dier-Cieneial .lolm F. JJeynokls to command the First Brigade, Brigadier-CJeneral George G. Meade to command the Second Brigade and Brigadier-Geneial E. (). C. ()rd to command the Tliird Brigade. (leneral McGall's selection ol' liis brigadier-generals showed llic wniKlcrfiil perceptive and discriminating facnlties of the man. Tliese officers were all gradnates of the Military Acad- emy at West T*oint, bnt none of tlieni had ever commanded large bodies of troops until the}' were assigned to the Eeserve Corps. The men were green volunteers, but with such train- ing as IlicA^ received from these able and enthusiastic officers they lapidly developed into well-disciplined soldiers. In (he words of General .John (libbon, of the regular army, expressed in his address upon the unveiling of the statue of General Meade in Fairmount Park, Philadelphia, October 18, 1887, respecting (lenerals McCall, Reynolds and Ord : "Meade was esi)ecially fortunate in his associates; for George A. McCall, one of the most distinguished officers of his time, was his commander, and the other bi'igade commanders were destined to insciibe their names high on the glory roll of tlieii' country — lohn F. Beynolds and V.. O. C. Ord. "There were regulai' otTficers, who, at tlie commencement of our civil war, unmindrul of the dilfereiit circumstances under which tliey were serving, seemed to think there was but one way to enforce discii)line in our volunteer I'oices, and that was by following the old rut and routine of the i-egular army. Such an idea never found i)lace in the minds of the officers I have meiitioiKMl : and the results, as exemi»litied in the subse- quent career of the Pennsylvania Beserves, amply justitied the wisdom and sound judgment of those they were fortunate enough to hinc ])laced in conmumd over them. "It w;is fre(|uently noted dnring tlie war and afterwards, how much of (he i-cnown gained b\' Nolnnteer organizations could be traced back (o the righ( diiccdon given to tlieii- ef- forts by the sound judgment, good, hard, common sense, firm linnd, and jus( dealings of (lie coinmaiulcis who (irst took them in charge." General McCall commanded the Beserves in the brilliant engagement a( Dranesville, December 20, 1801, arriving on the ground soon af(er (he ac(i(»n had commenced under the direc- P(inisi/lr(iiiiy I'rison, had so seiiously im]!aii-ed (Jeneral McCall's health, that he was compelled to return to his liome in Chester county to rest and recuperate. After passing sev- eral weeks with his fannly, under constant ntedical treatment, he became convinced that he was not able to resume his ]iosi- lion in the army, and he resigned his commission and retired to private life. After the battle of New Market Cross Roads. General Truman Seymour, who succeeded General Ord in command of the Third Brigade after Ord was promoted to nmjor-general, assumed command of the Reserves until the re-^ turn of General Reynolds, who, being the ranking officer, took command of the cor})s at Harrison's Landing on the day of his return to that cam]». General Reynolds was a high-tempered man the ideal Ilot- sjtur, as l»rave as a lion in battle, and perfectly oblivious of danger when in presence of the enemy. His promotion to the command of the First Corps, and his heroic death on the bat- tlefield of Gettysburg, on the first day, are too well known to need rei)etition here. He diei-ove the ti'utli of my as sertiou. The Niuth and Tenth Kegiments occupied the valley between Big and Little Round Toj), and the l-^leventh was between the Tiostle House and the wheat-lield alon^ with the First Brigade. Oui- work was mainly one of watching the movemenis of tlie enenn' and holding the keys of the field. While the Tliird Brigade, as well as the l*"'irst and Second, was always ready to obey orders, it was the luck of cliance or the luck of war that prevented us from accompanying the First Brigade down into the vallev of death. We saw them starting and knew that it meant death to many — and when we started in another direc- tion we knew not whither we were going, but like good sol- diers followed our leader, trusting to a kind and over-ruling Providence to give us victory over death aud the enemy And here to-day we stand rendering homage to our comrades who fell in the fore-front of battle twenty-seven years ago. The nation yet mourns their loss, but it will take another generation before their familiar faces will be missed at tlieir home firesides. TRANSFER OF THE MOVEMENTS TO THE BATTLEFIELD MEMOKIAL ASSOCL\TION. IIoA. Jamks a. Bkavkk, (Joveunor oi' TUE Commonwealth. MK. TKESIDENT: After what you have told us of the or- ganization of the Beserves, after wdmt we have heard li-om lliose well able to tell it, of the story of its com- nuuKhrs, and of the j)art taken in the battle b}' those regi- mental organizations which were })re.sent, it is certainly not necessary, and would scarcely be becoming in me to atteinjd to sav anyiliing in regard to that famous organization. 94 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. It seems to me, however, ladies aud gentlemen, that it is en- tirely proper for me to speak very briefly, before the formal presentation of the monuments which mark the part taken by the Pennsylvania Keserve regiments in the battle of Gettys- burg, to the Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association, of the wise forethought and patriotic impulse which suggested the organization of that famous corps. No single act of any individual executive of any of the sev- eral states w^hich supported the government in the war of se- cession displayed more of wisdom and more of patriotism, or exerted a more decided influence upon the immediate and final results of that war, than the proclamation of our distin- gished chairman — then the Chief Executive of this Common- wealth — convening the Legislature of Pennsylvania in special session for the purpose of providing for the defense of the state and the future exigencies of the government. The prescience of the needs of the state, aud the necessities of the nation therein exhibited, were remarkable, and, in view of subsequent events, almost prophetic. The grasp of the situation, as thus shown by the Governor, and the subsequent adoption and embodiment of his recommendations in appropriate form by the legislative branch of the govern- ment of Pennsylvania, had a controlling influence in determin- ing the status of Pennsylvania as one of, if not tlie foremost, defender of the Union, and in saving tlie country from disaster and her arms from disgraceful defeat. I do not undervalue^ the service of the distinguished men who fllled, and filled woithily, the place of chief executive of our loyal states. Their patriotic purpose, wise plans and ener- getic efforts, are well known and fully appreciated. It is nevertheless true, however, that the Governor of Pennsylva- nia seemed to grasp more fully and to recommend more clear- ly, the things which were absolutely necessary in order tliat the war nvight be as brief, and its inevitable results as little hurtful to our people as possible. When it is remembered fliat the proclamation of the Governor ct)nvening the Legisla- ture in extraordinar}' session, for the ])urposes therein set forth, was issued at a time when Pennsylvania's quota of troops under the first call of the President of the United States for seventy-five thousand men had scarcely more than Pennsylvania at (Jeltijshurg. 95 been filled, the extraordinary character of his j)lans and pur- poses became more full}' apj)arent. Tlie "long line of border on states seriously disaffected and which must be protected," was clearly set forth; and, "tlie necessity for furnishing ready support to those who have gone out to protect our borders," was duly emphasized. Tlio leconinicndation for "the imme- diate organization, disci]>liiiiiig and arming of at least fifteen regiments of infantry, exclusive of those called into the ser- vice of the United States," almost necessarily followed and was quickly consummated. It is needless to speculate upon the results which must have followed if Pennsylvania had been permitted to employ this magnificent l)ody of citizen soldierly u])on her southern border, as was contemi^lated in its original organization. In its incep- tion, designed primarily and specially for that purpose, this compact and thorouglily well-trained division would have af- forded ample protection to the citizens of Penns3dvauia from the incursions made from time to time by those who were in armed rebellion against the authority of the general gov- ernment, and would have prevented the enormous losses which were necessarily^ entailed upon our people by the temporary invasion of hostile armies and predatory raids of hungry cav- alry. It is almost certain that if the Pennsylvania Reserve Division had been employed in the service for which it was originally designed, the battle of Gettysburg would not have been fought. Chambersburg would not have been burned, and no oi'ganization of insurgent forces would ever have looked upon the capital of our state. The authorities of Pennsylvania were in advance of those of the general government, however, and when the necessity arose, true to her loyal instincts and resolves, our Reserve Corps was transferred to the general service, and our border left to be cared for as the exigencies of war might dictate. This first experience was sufficient to demonstrate the futility of the organization of any bod}' of troops to be employed and maintained under state conti'ol, and subsequent events made this more painfully apparent. Even the large bodies of mili tia, organized and equipj)ed during the .several emei-gencies when Pennsylvania's bordei- was threatened, hei- tei-ritory in- vaded, and her citizens tem})or;niIy drixen from their homes 06 Peniisi/lrania at Gettysburg. and subjected to great loss, were transferi'ed as soon as placed in the field to the direction and control of officers of the gen- eral government. The protection of our border was not the only object of the organization of our Keserve Corps, however. The necessities of the general government, occasioned by the retirement of men from l*ennsylvania and elsewhere, who had been mus- tered into the militar}' service for three months, demanded its transfer to a broader and more immediate sphere of opera- tions, and when that demand was formally made the Avliole force, organized and equipped under the foresight and energy of the I'ennsylvauia authorities, was transferred to and be- come a part, although a very distinctive part, of the armies of the United States. In consequence of that transfer, a portion of the regiments of the corps took part in the battle of Gettys- burg, as you have alread}^ heard, and we are here and now as- sembled to transfer to the Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association the artistic monuments which mark that service, ;nid wliicli will testify to the on-coming generations the faith- fulness and the heroism witli which it was rendered. These monuments stand upon a conspicuous portion of the battle- field. They have already attracted much attention, and will make still nioie piominent and interesting that portion of tlie field. rennsylvania has a right to be proud of the part taken by her citizen soldiery in the great battle fouglit upon her soil, and acknowledges the services tlius rendered with gratitude. At every critical ])eriod of the conflict Pennsylvania seems to have been inominent, but at no time, ])er]ia}>s, did her sons render more faithful service, and secure more abiding and sat- isfactory results than when the two brigades of the Pennsyl- vania Reserves, in the Third Division of the Fifth Corps, made tlie famous charge which saved our left flank, and gave full and final possession of Round Top and Little Round To]> and their ajiproaches to the Federal Army. This service, and tliat which was lendered b}' the cavalry and artillery of the Re- serve Corps, are commemorated !>y these monuments. We formally transfer them to the care and custody of the Gettys- burg Battlefield Memorial Association. As tlic representative of tlie commonwealth, acting under the instrnctions of the Commissioners appointed for the erec- P(')iHsi/lr(nny that pile of stones we catch no glimpse of the inalienable right to life, liberty and the pnrsnit of happiness. We come to Bnnker Hill monnment and ask, ''W^hat mean these stones?" They mean that there is to be no government on this soil with taxation withont representation; they mean that onr forefathers "bronght fortli on this continent a nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal." We stand beside Bartholdi's statne of Liberty Enlightening the World, and, with our hands upon its broad foundation, ask, "What mean these stones?" They mean that Columbia stands with beacon light to welcome the oppressed of every land and every clime; welcome them to our hearts and our homes; wel- come them to the legacy of our freedom and our glory — to an undivided country and an unsullied flag. And now we have come to-day to stand beside these monu- ments, these granite markers, set up by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for the flower of its soldiery, for its gallant Eeserve Corps. And when the children of men come and ask, ''What mean these stones?" the answer will not be — they tell us of Curtin, of McCall, of Meade, and Eeynolds, and Ord, and Crawford ; of Biddle, Roberts and McCandless, and Gallagher ; of Sickel and Talley, Mann and Woodward, and Simmons and Fisher; of Ent, and Sinclair, and Henderson and Baily; of Jackson, and McCalmont, and McCoy; of Taggart, and Hardin, and Hartshorne; of Bayard, and Taylor, Easton, Cooper and Ricketts, nor of a hundred others as daring and as noble. The answer will not be — they will tell us of Dranesville where the Reserve Corps fought and won a victory all its own, nor of Mechanicsville, nor of Gaines' Mill, nor New Maiket, nor Malvern, nor Bull Run, nor South Mountain; they tell no story of Antietam, nor Fredeiicksburg, nor Bristoe; no story of Mine Run, nor the Wilderness, nor Spotsylvanin. nothing of the North Anna, nor of Bethesda Church. Tliese .stones will not even tell to the children of men how the Reserves fought here at Gettysburg. 100 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. No — the deeds of men, though writ in granite, fade away. For ages the school children of Greece were taught to re- i:eat from memory the names of the three hundred who fell at Thermop3'la^. Who can tell them uoav? What, then, will these stones tell to the children of men? The answer has been given by immortal lips. They will tell of PennsA'lvanians who died here that this Government of the people shall not perish forever from the earth. These stones, these monuments, will say to the children of men, as Abraham Lincoln said when he dedicated yonder monument: "Gather ye here increased devotion to the cause for which they gave their lives." And now, in the name of the Gettysburg Battlefield Memo- rial Association, we accept these monuments, and will give them our tenderest care. sp:rvices of the gettysbueg reserves at gettysburg. AT a meeting of the survivors of the Pennsylvania Reserves, held at Reading, Penna., June 7, 1886, the folloAving reso- lution was offered by Colonel 1*. McDonougli, Second Reserves, and unanimously'adopted : Whereas, On the seeoud day of the battle of Gettysburg the Pennsylvania Reserves, then forming part of Meade's reserve, were ordered to Little Round Top to save that position, the key of the line of battle, from the then victorious enemy who had driven back the Third Corps under General Sickles and the re^jul.irs of thinr <>\vn, the Fifth Corps, under General Sykes; and. Whereas, By a counter-charge of the Reserves they met and drove the enemy from said position and across the meadow beyond the stone wall, wliich they wrested from tliem, and thus saved the day, if not the battle; and, Whereas, In many nf the accounts of tliat day's fighting great injustice has been done the services of the Reserves, they being in said accounts I'ep- resented as occupying a position farther to the right and not on Little Round Top, and taking but little i)art in said action : now tliat justice be done to the memory of the grand old division, ///7>\ ' J.Shf.rrv m. 1 ^w^'::^-ii^im^^^^ VII. «|- '^//;! REBEL S: BATieRT V. .//■'.^^ ^-g^ ^^X' ■'^&i:i ^x; 1^.^ ':i:.A^^-:-^ 'F <^c 't^JC'i'-'^-y-v.' 93s \ • '?, -■^fuuv. POSITIONS AND LINES OF CFL\RGES OF THE PEXXSYLVAMA RKSEin'ES. Pciiiisi/lrdiiid (it Gettysburg. 101 Resolved, By tho I'ciiiisvlvauia Kcseivo Association, that a committee of seven be ai)i)()int<'(l by the president t<> prepare a full and trutliful account of the part taken by the division in said batti" .■md submit the same to the association at its next anntnil meetiiifr- The presifh'Ut aii|"iiuli'd thf t'dUdwins-named as- the committee: Majok K. M. Wooiiwaki), Second Reserves, Chairman. CoLONKi, W. Koss IIakisiiounk, lUuktails. Colonel Kohkut A. McCoy, lOleventh Reserves. Majou J. A. JMuPilEKKAN, Fifth Reserves. Colonel R. Bhuce Ricketts, First Reserve Aitillcry. Wallace W. Johnston, Sixth Reserves. Colonel P. .McDonougii, Second Reserves. John Taylor, iSecretary. EKPORT OF THE COMMITTEE. THE committee, recoguiziug- the importance of the trust con tided to them, the many years that had elapsed since the battle, and that the best memory is apt to be cov- ered with the dust of time, at once determined to exhaust all sources of information within their reach, and while getting at the facts as near as possible, to admit no statement that could not be clearly establislied. For this purpose a portion of the committee met on Little Kound Top on the following 2d of Juh', and, accompanied by (Jeueral Crawford, Major Chillon llazzard, and others, they had no trouble in locating the j)()si- tion of the First Brigade, from whicli it started upon its chaige twenty-three years before, or in tracing its steps thi'ough all its movements on the tield. A portion of the com- mittee remained u]M»n the ground several days, and others of it have since examined the tield, in company with many com- rades gathered there during the encampment of the Grand Army of the IJepublic, :ind iej)oited the inlorniation gained to the cliairnnin. It was also deemed of imjtortance that a measurement of the distances of the chai'ges made and other iuijioi-tan'l parts of the licld should i>e ntade. for which purpose one of the committee, during ihc winter, visited the lield, ami. 102 Pennsylvania at Gettyshnrg. with cliaiii and (•()nij>as.s, accomplished the work, the results of which have been embodied in the report. In regard to the misstatements that have appeared in print from time to time, and the injustice done our division, the com- mittee deem it unnecessary to refer, believing the true history of that great battle is yet to be written, and trusting with full confidence to the ultimate prevailment of truth. They, how- ever, deem it proper to refer, to some extent, to the articles published in the Philadelphia Press of August 4, 1886, entitled "The Federal Disaster on the Left," and on October 20, 1886, entitled "McLaws' Division and the Pennsylvania Keserves on the Second Day at Gettysburg," by "Lafayette McLaws, Major- General commanding McLaws Division, Longstreet's Corps." The first article was a reply to Major-General Sickles' Gettys- burg address, delivered in that town July 2, 1886. In it Sic- kles says, 'When the battle of the 2d ended * * * Craw- ford's division of Pennsylvania Keserves held the advanced ground I had occupied as far as the stone fence beyond the wheat-field (italics the com.); and this ground, so gallantly won by Crawford and his splendid division, he held all night and next day, and until the retreat of Lee." (Crawford's official report.) One of the maps, prepared by Brevet Major-General Charles K. Graham, accompanying Sickles' speech, as printed in the National Tribune, Jul}- 22, 1886, also places CraSvford's Division on the west side of the wheat-field, which doubtlessly was an unintentional mistake, as we will show we occupied the stone Avail on the east side of tlie wheat-field. This error must be kept in mind in reading both articles of McLaws'. Gen- eral McLaws, after quoting the above in his article of August 4, uttei'ly denies the charge of the Reserves and the capture of the stone wall. Quoting from him, he says, "I saw Wof- ford's Brigade * * * emerge from the woods (evidently TJose's on the west side of the wheat-field) through which it had charged, and I halted it, and asked what was the matter. He said that he had been ordered back by General Longstreet ; that he had driven everything in his front and was resting under shelter of a stone wall at foot of Round Top when or- dered back; that there Avas no necessity for his coming." Further on he says, ''Up to 11 p. m. there Avas no advance made against Semmes' Brigade (evidently at the Devil's Den), and as that command could see all over the ground from which Gen- Pennfiylrdilid (it GeAtysburg. 10;> eral Woll'ord loliied, tlicy could Icll il' any I'cmisylvaiiia Re- serves 01' an}' other body of men advanced on tliat day, the 2d, to re-occupy the ground lel't vacant bj^ WoU'oid. I feel war- ranted in saying- that there was no advance on the 2d by tlie Federals to re-take the positions won I'loin tlieni on that day.'' This article was ably replied to by (ieneral Crawford, in the Press, in which he gave the movements of our division on both days with accuracy. His repl}^ evoked from (jleneral McLaws his second article of October 20, in which he substantiates, in his own opinion, his stateinents in his lirst article. The gen- eral says, "I accordingly formulated a series of questions which would cover the claim made by General Crawford, and sent a copy to General Wotford, whose reply was never re- ceived ; to General Humphreys, who commanded the Twenty- fii'St Mississip])i, in Barkss of the enemy. * * * j positively assert that no at- tack was made by General Crawford's Dixision on any ]ioition of the line. **I am aware that WolVonl, at Ihe extreme line of his ad 104 PcnnsyJvanla at (Jtettyshurg. vaiice. i-ecei\ed b}' some mistake (?) an order from General Lougstreet to retire. * * * General Crawford may have made such advance, but there was no serious fighting at, the stone fence. Wofl'ord's retreat was by order, and executed witliout fighting or being jmrsued, as far as I could see, and was stopped b}' General McLaws in person, as soon as the mis- take was discovered, * * * but it left me powerless to continue the advance." McLaws says, "On our left was Wofford, but separated from us by the 'wheat-field,* Avliich Avas thinly covered by straggling men from Wofford and Senimes, and possibly a few of Ker- shaw's." We have quoted in full to give General McLaw^s the advan- tage of his own statements, but the committee can hardly com- prehend how honorable gentlemen, wh'o doubtless sincerely be- lieved in the correctness of their statements, could have al- lowed the dust of time to so completely settle on their mem- ory. The committee recognizes that in weighing the conflict- ing statements, fair-minded people will consider the evidence of General McLaws as entitled to as much credence as that of General Crawford; that the Confederate officers's statements equals that of your committee. Therefore, the scales being thus equally balanced in the minds of impartial readers, the committee had to seek other testimony to substantiate their position, and they are happy to say that it is of such a nature that the positive assertions of General McLaws will be laid out aw flat as the Keserves laid out his regiments and brigade on those memorable days. Captain (George W. H. St(mch, Third Regiment, U. S. In- fantry, now stationed at Fort Shaw, Montana Territory, who, at (iettysburg, was Sergeant-Major of the Eleventh U. S. In- fantry, wi-ites to the committee: ''On the 2d of July our regi- ment, then belonging to the Second Brigade, Second Division, Fifth Corps, niovol fiom the northwest slope of Little Ivound To}> nearly to the wlieattield, when it changed direction to the left and was advancing in this new direction, Avhen our right Ihmk was turned by the Confederates. We fell back in great confusion, and were driven to Little Eound Top, followed by the enemy that had been in our front, and also bv those on our think. While falling back, I, with Lieutenants Pettee and Elder, and others, were captured by WotTord's Brigade and I'cinisi/I r LicnU'iKiiil A. A. Sciiddcr, Sixth Kcsci-nc. I>ri;;;i(l(' ('(tiiniiis saiy. The rc^iiiKMits \\('i c as lolldws: Fiist KMllcs. "Ilucktails." Colonel Charles Frederick Taylor. First Inl'aiitry, Colonel William.Cooper Talley. Seeoiid Inlaiitry, Lieuteiiaiil-(,'olonel George A. Woodward. Sixth Iiilaiitry. Colonel Wellington II. Fnt. The Third.* Colonel .Joseph AV. Fisher, Fifth Keserve, with stall' as follows : Ca]>tain Hartley llowaid. Acting Assistant rnsi>ector-Gen- eral. Lieutenant -lohu L. Wright. Acting Assistant Adjutant-Gen- eral. Lieutenant Charles K. Chamberlain, Aide-de Camp. Lieuteuant William H. H. Kern, Aide-de-Camp. Cajjtaiu George Norris, Brigade Quartermaster. Lieutenant Samuel Evans, Brigade Commissary. Major .Iose])h A. riiillips, Brigade Surgeou. The regiments were as follows: Fifth Infantry, Ijientenant-Colonel George Dare. Ninth Infantry, Jjieutenant-Colonel -lames McK. Snodgrass. Tenth Infantry, Coloiu'I Adoniram .J. Warner. Eleventh Infantry, Colonel Samuel M. Jackson. Twelfth InfantrA', Colonel ilartin I). Hardin, C S. Aimy. At dark that night the division was put in motion, and after a rapid and latiguing march, near daylight were laid to rest, hut hardly an eye closed ere the drums of reveille beat. While in motion the news of the defeat of the First Corps and the death of General Keynoldsf was received, depressing the sj)iiits of the men, but sti-englhening their resolutions for the fight. At noon, after marching forty miles with but two houis' sleep we reached Kock Creek, and, filing to the left *The Second RriKade, Colonel Horatio G. Sickel, Third Reserve, was detained by the authorities within the defenses ot Washington. . It participated with honor in Ceneiiil Ceorsc Cioiili's campaign in West Virginia. Colonel Sickel was promoted Brevet Major-* Jeneral V. .*!. V., and was severely wounded near the <'loso of tlie war. tin the atul)uljince-waj;on of tlie First BriRade was secjetly stored a masnlficent sword for i)resontation to tJeueral Heynolds. The (leneral had consented to receive it upon heiuf; assured it was from the enlisted men only of that brigade, and that no oHicer would lie connected with it. A note was addressed asking him, In the lull of the cominx battli-. to n>celve the gift direct from the boys, one being chosen from eai-h regiment to await an opp.ortunity to present it to him on the field. Subsequently It was i>resented by Sergeant W. Hayes Grier, Fifth Kegiment, to the general's sister, I he wife of Captain Henry I). I.andis. 110 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. from the Baltimore pike, joined our corps, the Fifth, Major- General Sykes, in rear and in support of the right of the line of battle. About 4 o'clock, General Crawford, seeing the First and Second Divisions of our corps moving to the left, followed through the woods to. the cross-road leading to the Emmits- burg road. Here the division was massed in the right rear of Little Round Top, in and near the old brier patch. Soon after General Crawford, by order, sent the Third Brigade, Colonel Fisher's, with the exception of the Eleventh Reserve, to Big Round Top to succor General Vincent, they marching by the left flank. At the same time the First Brigade, Colonel Mc- Candless, was moved to the western slope of Little Round Top and massed in column of regiments, left in front, the Elev- enth Reserve being the head of the column. Little Round Top, rising two hundred and eighty feet above the general water-level of tlie streams which drain the valley at its base, like Big Round Top, nearly south of it and four hundred feet high, is of volcanic origin, crowned with Avood growing amid bowlders of syenite. The two hills, seven hun dred yards from crest to crest, are separated hj a deep rocky depression, and form perfect forts covering our left flank, they being the key-points of tlie whole battlefield. The western slope of Little Round Toj) sinks to a little stream called Plum Run, which drains a swampy meadow. This run gradually as- sumes the character of a rivulet as it enters the precincts of the Devil's Den, another chaotic distribution of bowlders. The *'Den," in an angle of this and a contributory stream that flows from Seminary Ridge, is one hundred and eighty feet al)ove the water-level and five hundred j^ards due west of Little Round Top. Its eastern slope is steep; its western, i)rolonged as a ridge. Its northern extremity is composed of liuge rocks and bowldei-s, forming innumerable crevices and lioles. from tlie largest of whicli it derives its name. Plum Run Valley, three hundred and fifty yards broad, is marshy but strewed with bowlders, as is also the sloi)es of the Round Toj). Tliese afTord lurking-places for a multitude of sharp-shooters, whom, from the difficulties of the ground, it Avas impossible to dis lodge, so that at the close of the battle those hidiiig-])laces. and especially the "Den,'' were filled with dead and wounded men PenfisyJvdiiid at (Iclli/shiirt/. Ill of the conteiuliiiii ainiics. Extending northward from tlio "Deu," beyond and on the western side of IMuni Kun Valley and partially between the valley and the wheat-field, is a low ridge terminating in "Houck's Hill." From near the ''Den" a stone wall runs over the "hill," through the level and beyond the ''cross-road," it bordering on the then eastern edge of Trostle's woods. This wall, which runs nearly northeast on the wheat-field side, was fringed with heavy timber from the "Den" to the woods at the "cross-roads." The distance fiom the "den" to the "cross-road" is five hundred and eighty- three 3'ards. Tliis "cross-road," skirting the northern slope of Lit- tle Tiound Top, extends northwesterly to the Emmitsburg load, in the southeasterly intersection of which is the peach- orchard, fourteen hundred and fifty yards from Little Bound Top. This "cross-road" separates the wheatfield from Tros- tle's woods. This Avoods, four hundred yards long, is sepa- rated at its western end b}- the "cross-road" and a brief inter- val from Kose's woods, which sweeps to the southerly and to the easterly back to Devil's Den, enclosing the wheat-field on the westerly and southerly sides. The wheatfield is two hun- dred and twenty-two yards along the stone wall, three hundred and sixty-one yards next to Trostle's woods, four hundred and forty-four yards along IJose's woods, and five hundred yards on the southwesterly side, containing about twenty-five acres. Into the depression between the Round Tops, Law's Brigade of Alabamians, su])ported b}' Robertson's Texans, had forced themselves, and were advancing to the possession of the Tops, when they were met by Vincent's Brigade of Barnes' Division of our cor])s, that had been posted there by General Warren, where the struggle became severe and protracted. As before stated, the Third Brigade had gone to the assist- ance of Mncent, and the First was massed on Little Round Top ; but a very short time after these movements were made the situation in our front changed rapidly. Sickles, who had been severely wounded, and who had been struggling for hours on his line, extending from the Devil's Den around to the wheatfield and beyond the peach oi'chard, was at last over- powered and swept awa}'. Ayres' Division of regulars of our corps, which had been sent to his aid. had gallantly held the stone wall, but was driven from it and forced over the valley. 112 f'ciiiisi/lvdnia at Gettysburg. All rliel'uion lines in onr front were irrevocably broken. The valley was covered with fngitives from all divisions, who rushed tliiongii onr lines and alonjj: the road to the rear. Frag- ments of r(»;^inients came back in disorder and without arms. A section of a German battery, Avliose horses had all been killed, was abandoned by the gunners immediately in front of the right and left of the Eleventh and !r>ixth Keserves, and for a time all seemed lost. Close on these fugitives came the enemy, his lines irregular but massed here and there and his colors flying. While this scene was passing before our eyes, tlie brigade, McCandless', with the Eleventh Eeserve of Fisher's Brigade, formed into two lines, the first being composed of the Sixth on the light, with their left resting on the "cross-road," the Eleventh in the center, and the First on the left. The second line was nuissed on the first; the Second Reserve on the right, and the Hucktails on the left. Before this movement ■ could be fulh' executed, our front was practically uncovered by the fugitives, and the enem}^ recognizing the unexpected ob- stacle, came direct for us. The first line opened a destrui^tive fire at short range, the Eleventh using "buck and l)all," some of their muskets having the buckshot of several cartridges in them. The bi-igade was still left in fiont, facing In- the rear r;inks. In fact, so sudden had been the change in our front, we Imd not time to assume our proper formation. There cannot be the least doubt in the minds of those who knew the exact state of affairs ui)on the field at that time, that a few moments de- lay in onr ariival on Little Round Top, the key of the field would lune been lost, and very ])robably the battle of Gettys- burg would have closed that night. On the left of the second line, Golonel Taylor, not realizing the position, undertook to countermai'ch the Bucktails, which movement was also at- tempted by the Second, but in the confusion of the movement they suddenly found (hcmselves confionted and mixed up with the charging enemy. In the shoit but desparate melee that followed, the greatei- ]>art of these two regiments charged without firing a shot. So far up the slope were the enemy, that the gunners of Hazlett's Battery on the crest were pre- piiiing to spike their guns, but this movement encouraged them not to do so. The right of the line had fired three or r were (|uiekly got into line, and they were gathering last, hut before forty men were in line, to our sur- prise, we distinctly heard the orders pass down the line of -Left face, march 1" The rear of their line, their front facing westwaid, had not moved twenty paces before the}' broke, by order, into a "double (luick,'' cairying their banners at a trail. Had this brigade resoluteh' charged, they would have driven I he head of our long, scattered column back for some distance, until we could have got ourselves in shape to properly resist them, but such was our sudden appearance, and at such disad- \ antage to them, that they naturally became demoralized and supi)osed we were in much heavier force than we really were. The Comte de Paris gives an account of the "piking out'' of this brigade, which he says was Kershaw's, that we cannot re- train from adding it, gravely surmising, however, it was the ingenious invention of some brilliant Confederate writer who conceived the idea of turning their somewhat laudable exit into a dexterous military manceuver. "Kershaw finds himself isolated in his turn, and believing himself already surrounded, in order to escape from the enemy resorts to a manceuver which Ave mention on account of, as the count naively says, " 'its sing-ularity.' He sends the color-bearers of his regi- ments to plant their flags a few hundred yards in the right- rear, across the tributary of Plum Run, subsequently ordering his soldiers to break ranks and reform in this new position." So sudden was the charge that we killed and captured their butchers while engaged in skinning beeves, and also a fatigue I)arty, who were burying their dead. We recaptured the greater part of the battlefield lost by Sickles, with its thou- sands of dead and wounded, ca})tured the colors of the Fif- teenth Georgia, which are now in the Adjutant-General's office at Washington, and over tAvo hundred prisoners, among them a lieutenant-colonel of a Georgia regiment, and captured and recovered three thousand two hundred and fifty-eight mus- kets, one brass twelve-pounder, and three caissons. With this chaige ended the battle of GettA'sburg. The movements of both days Avere made under the personal direction and super vision of General Crawford. 120 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. The distance charged over the wheatfield was seven hun- dred and fifty yards, from that point towards Slyder's house six hundred and sixty-six yards — fourteen hundred and fifteen yards in all. Taking them, as we did in a measure, by surprise, and on the flank, their rout was no disgrace to them, nor was their military honor tarnished. Such occurences are not unknown in war. Those landless resolutes who had gallantly performed their part on many hard-fought fields, and who sub- sequently proved their devotion to the end, cannot be judged as wanting in spirit or courage. Soon after we halted. Captain Coates came with orders from General Crawford for us to preceed no farther, and at this point we were rejoined by the Sixth Reserve. After dark we retraced our steps to the southwestern edge of Eose's woods and bivouacked on the ground where we first encountered the enemy and pierced their line. Here we buried our dead, some seven or eight in number, our wounded having been removed on stretchers following the charge. Some distance in our front was Rose's springhouse, in which lay dead a Confederate officer and two men. From this stream we refilled our can- teens, and our pickets, being concealed near it, captured a number of prisoners, who came there for the same purpose. All night long the ambulances and stretchers were collecting the wounded, who had lain there from the afternoon of the 2d. During the night a supply of ammunition was received, Colonel McCandless carrying it on his horse, one hundred and four thousand eight hundred and twenty rounds having been is- sued to the division during this battle, and at 2 o'clock the next morning, the 4th, we moved down the eastern side of the woods along the wheatfield to near its northern border, where we entered the woods, and, moving through it, lay down on its western edge fronting the ])eacli orchard, with our right rest- ing near the cross-road. Soon after daylight, the enemy's pickets called to us to come and get our wounded who lay be- tween the two lines. Volunteers went out for that purpose, but, being fire upon, returned. Several round-shots were fired from a distant battery, but they richochetted harmlessly over the field. The fire was returned by such of the boys who felt inclined to do so; a skirmish line was sent out to develop their position, but the whole affair was spiritless, and after 10 Pennsylvania at Gettijsburfj. 121 o'clock we saw uo more of lliein on lliat licld. These were the last shots fired at Gettysburg. There was an abaudoned gun and caisson of a Union battery near Trostle's woods. During the morning of the od tlie Con- federates attached a long rope to the gun and tried to pull it over the Iiill near Trostle's barnyajd, but one of the Sixth, who was out hunting "grub" from the rebel's haversacks, dis- covered the manoeuver and, creeping up, cut the rope, which created (piite a suri)rise to those pulling on it. Late in the afternoon of that day, when the Sixth attempted the capture of the enemy's battery, Company "1" was sent to the extreme right to cover the house and barn, and when they returned they brought them into our lines. Company K, First Eeserves, was from the town and neigh- borhood of (icttysburg, many of the men fighting within sight of their homes, and some even to drive the invaders from their own fields. The fathers and younger brothers of some of the boys accompanied them to Little Kound Top, and one went to the stone wall with us. When Ave advanced across the wheat-field, Brigadier-Gen- eral Bartlett, at the request of General Crawford, moved a regiment to the stone wall, and threw a force to our right to protect that flank. About noon, being relieved by a brigade of regulars, we moved back to the stone wall, passing an artillery horse seated on his haunches with his front-feet on the ground and head erect, just as he had been killed. Against the wall were rest iug thousands of muskets picked up off the field. Soon after other troops came to the wall, and we moved back to Little Eound Top, where rations were distributed, and where we re- mained until the afternoon of the next day, the 5th; the rain, which commenced about noon of the day before, still continu- ing. Then we started on our fifth tiamp up and down through \'irginia. 122 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. ITINERAllY OF THE UNION FOECES IN THE GETTY SBUEG CAMPAIGN. JUNE 5. — The Army of the Potomac, commanded by Major- General Joseph Hooker, with headquarters near Fal- mouth, Avas posted on the north bank of the Eappahan- nock Elver, confronting the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, under General Eobert E. Lee, mainly concentrated about the town of Fredericksburg, on the south bank of tlie river. The se^■eral commands of the Army of the Potomac were distributed as follows: First Corps (Eeynolds') in the vi- cinity of White Oak Church; Second Corps (Couch's) near Fal- mouth; Third Corps (Birnej^'s) at Boscobel near Falmouth; Fifth Corps (Meade's) in the vicinity of Banks', United States, and adjacent fords on the Eappahannock ; Sixth Corps ( Sedg- wick's) near White Oak Church, with the Second Division (Howe's) thrown forward to Franklin's Crossing of the Eappa- hannock, a little below Fredericksburg, near the mouth of Deep Eun; Eleventh Corps (Howard's) near Brooke's Station, on the Aquia Creek railroad; and the Twelfth Corps (Slocum's) near Stafford Court House and Aquia Landing. The Cavalry Corps (Pleasonton's, with headquarters at Manassas Junction) had two divisions (DufiQe's and Gregg's) and the Cavalry Ee- serve Brigade, all under Buford, in the vicinity of Warren ton Junction, and one division (B. F. Davis') in the neighborhood of Brooke's Station. The Artillery Eeserve (E. O. Tyler's) was near Falmouth. Jnnc 6. — Howe's (Second) Division, Sixth Army Corps, crossed the Eappahannock at Franklin's Crossing, and, after a skirmish, occupied the enemy's rifle-pits. Wright's (First) and Newton's (Third) Divisions of the same corps moved to the same point from White Oak Church, taking position on the north bank of the river. June 7. — Wright's (First) Division, Sixth Corps, was sent across the Ea])pahannock at Franklin's Crossing, relieving Howe's (Second) Division, which returned to the north side. Pennsylvania at Gcttyshurcj. 123 June 8. — The Cavalry Corps (Pleasonton's), consisting of Buroi'd's (First), 1). ^Vc^V. Gregg's (Third) and Duffle's (Sec- ond) Divisions, and the Jiegular Keserve Brigade, supported by detachments of infantry, under Generals Adelbert Ames and David A. Eussell, moved to Kelly's and Beverly Fords prepara- tory' to crossing the Ka])pahannock on a reconnoissance to- ward Culpeper. June 9. — Newton's (Third) Division, Sixth Corps, relieved Wright's (First) Division on the south bank of the Rappahan- nock at Franklin's Crossing. The cavalry corps, supported by Generals Ames' and Russell's infantry, crossed the Rappahan- nock at Kelly's and Beverly Fords, fought the enemy at or near Beverly Ford, Brandy Station, and Stevensburg, and re- crossed the river at Rappahannock Station and Beverly Ford. June 10. — The Cavahy Cori)s took position in the neighbor- hood of Warrenton Junction. Its infantry sujjports in the re- connoissance of the daj' pievious rejoined their respective coniinaiids. Howe's (Second) Division, Sixth Corps, moved from Franklin's Crossing to Aquia Creek. June 11. — The Third Corps marched from Boscobel, near Falmouth, to Hart wood Church. June 12. — The First Corjjs marched from Fitzhugh's planta- tion and White Oak Church to Deep Run; the Third Corps from Hartwood Churcli to Bcaleton, with Humphreys' (Thii'd) Division, advanced to the Rappahannock; the Eleventh Corps from the vicinity of Brooke's Station to Hartwood Church; and Headquarters Cavalry Corps from Manassas Junction to Warrenton Junction. The advance of the Confederate Army skirmished with the Union troops at Newtown, Cedarville and Middletown, in the Shenandoah Valley. June 13. — The First Corps marched from Deep Run to Beale- ton; the Fifth Cor})s from the vicinity of Banks' Ford, via Grove Church, toward Morrisville; Wright's (First) and New- ton's (Third) Divisions, Sixth Corps, from Franklin's Crossing to Potomac Creek; the Eleventh Corps, from Hartwood Church to Catlett's Station; the Twelfth Corps from near Staf- ford Court House and Aquia Creek Landing en route to Dum- fries; Wyiulhara's Brigade of Gregg's Cavalry Division, from Warrenton Junction to Warrenton; and the Artillery Reserve from near Falmouth to Stafford Court House. McReynolds' 124 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. (Third) Brigade, of Milroy's Division, Eighth Army Corps, marched from Berryville to Winchester. Comiats: Skirmishes at White Post, Berrysville, Opequon Creek, and at Bunker Hill, and engagement (first day) at Win- chester, Va. June 1^.— Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from near Falmouth to Dumfries ; the First and Third Corps march- ed from Bealeton to Manassas Junction; the Fifth Corps ar- rived at Morrisville and marched thence, via Bristersburg, to Catlett's Station; Wright's (First) and Newton's (Third) divi- sions. Sixth Corps, moved from Potomac Creek to Stafford Court House; the Eleventh Corps from Catlett's Station to Manassas Junction, and thence toward Centreville; the Twelfth Corps reached Dumfries; and the Artillery Reserve moved from Stafford Court House to Wolf Run Shoals. Daniel Tyler's command, of the Eighth Army Corps, fell back from Martinsburg to Maryland Heights. Combats: Skirmishes at Martinsburg and Berryville, and en- gagement (second day) at Winchester, Va. June 15. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Dumfries to Fairfax Station; the Second Corps (Hancock's*) moved from Falmouth to near Aquia; the Fifth Corps from ('atlett's Station, via Bristoe Station, to Manassas Junction; the Sixth Corps from Aquia Creek and Stafford Court House to Dumfries; the Twelfth Corps from Dumfries to Fairfax Court House; the Cavalry Corpsf (except Wyndham's Brigade, which marched from Warrenton to Manassas Junction, and thence on the 10th to Union Mills) from Warrenton Junction to Union Mills and Bristoe Station; the Artillery Reserve from Wolf Run Shoals to Fairfax Court House; and the Elev- enth Corps arrived at Centreville. Milroy's (Second) Division of the Eighth Army Corps, evacuated Winchester, and fell back to Marjdand Heights and Hancock, Md. Comhats: Skirmish near Williamsport, Md., and engagement (third day) at Winchester, Va. June 16. — The Second Corps marched from near Aquia, via Dumfries, to Wolf Run Shoals, on the Occoquan; the Sixth •General Hancock assumed control of the Second Corpa June 9, 1863, succeeding General Cor.ch, who was assigned to the command of the Department of the Sus- i|uchanna. tPy orders of June 13, 1863, this corps were reduced from three to two divisions, commanded by Bris. Gens. John Buford and D. McM. Gregg. Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 125 Corps from Dumfries to Fairfax Station; and the Cavalry Corps from Union Mills and Bristoe Station to Manassas June tion and Bull Kun. June 11. — The First Corps marched from Manassas Junction to Herudon Station; the Second Corps from Wolf Kun Shoals to Sangster's Station; the Third Corps from Manassas Junc- tion to Cenlreville; the Fifth Corps from Manassas Junction to Gum Springs ; the Eleventh Corps from Centreville to Cow- rioru Ford, or Trapjje Rock, on Goose Creek; and the Twelfth Corps from Fairfax Court House to near Dranesville. The Cavalry Corps moved from Manassas Junction and Bull linn to Aldie. Conihats: Action at Aldie, Va.. and skirmishes at Catoctin Creek and Point of Rocks, Md., and at Thoroughfare Gap and Middleburg, Va. Ju)ic 18. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Fairfax Station to Fairfax Court House ; the Sixth Corps from Fairfax Station to Germantown; and the Twelfth Corps fiom near Dranesville to Leesburg. J. I. Gregg's Cavalry Brigade advanced from Aldie to Middleburg, and returned to a point midway between the two places. Combats: Skirmishes at Middleburg and Aldie, Va. June 19. — The First Corps marched from Herndon Station to Guilford Station; the Third Corps from Centreville to Gum Springs; and the Fifth Corps from Gum Springs to Aldie. Gregg's Cavalry Division, except Mcintosh's (late Wyndham's) Brigade, advanced to Middleburg. Mcintosh's Brigade moved from Aldie to Hay Market. Combats: Action at Middleburg, Va. June 20. — The Second Corps moved from Sangster's Station to Centreville, and thence toward Thoroughfare Gaj); the Sec- ond Division (Howe's), Sixth Corps, from Germantown to Bristoe Station. Combats: Skirmish at Middletown, Md. Jutic 21. — The Second Corps arrived at Gainesville and Thor- oughfare Gap. The Cavalry Corps (except Mcintosh's Brig ade, of Gregg's Division), supported by Barnes' (First) Divi- sion, Fifth Corps, marched from Aldie and Middleburg to F]) perville. Mcintosh's Cavalry Brigade marched from Hay Market to Aldie, and thence to I'^pperville. Stahel's Division of Cavalry from the Defences of Washington, moved from 120 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Fail-fax Court House, via Centreville and Gainesville, to Buck- land Mills. Comhats: Skirmishes at Gainesville, Thoroughfare Gap, and Hay Market, Va., Frederick, Md., and engagement at Upper- ville, Va. June 22. — The Cavahj Corps and Barnes' (First) Division of the Fifth Corps, returned from Upperville to x\ldie. Stahel's Cavahy Division moved from Buckland Mills, via New Balti- more, to Warrenton. Comhats: Skirmishes near Dover and Aldie, Va., and at Greencastle, Pa. June 23. — Stahel's Cavalry Division moved from Warrenton, via Gainesville, to Fairfax Court House. June 24- — Newton's (Third) Division, Sixth Corps, moved from Germantown to Centreville, and the Eleventh Corps from Cow-Horn Ford, or Trappe Kock, on Goose Creek, to the south bank of the Potomac at Edwards' Ferry. Stahel's Cavalry Di- vision moved from Fairfax Court House to near Dranesville. Combats: Skirmish at Sharpsburg, Md. June 25. — The First Corps marched from Guilford Station, Va., to Barnesville, Md.; the Third Corps from Gum Springs, Va., to the north side of the Potomac at Edwards' Ferry and Ihe mouth of the Monocacy; the Eleventh Corps from Ed- wards' Ferry, Va., to Jefferson, Md.; and the Artillery Keserve from Fairfax Court House, Va., to near Poolesville, Md. These commands crossed the Potomac at Edwards' Ferry. The Sec- ond Corps marched from Thoroughfare Gap and Gainesville to Gum Springs. Howe's (Second) Division, Sixth Corps, moved from Bristoe Station to Centreville; Crawford's Division (two brigades) of Pennsylvania Reserves, from the Defenses of Washington, marched from Fairfax Station and Upton's Hill to Vienna. Stannard's Vermont Brigade, from the Defenses of Washington, left the mouth of the Occocjuan en route to join the Arnw of the Potomac. Stahel's Cavalry Division moved from near Dranesville, Va., via Young's Island Ford, on the I'otomac, en route to Frederick, Md. Comhats: Skirmishes at Thoroughfare Gap and Hay Market, Va., and near McConnellsburg, Pa. June 26. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Fairfax Court House, Va., via Dranesville and Edwards' Ferry, to l*oolesville, Md. ; the First Corps from Barnesville to Jeffer- Pennsylvania at Gcttyshnrg. 127 sou, Md. ; the Second Coips I'rom (iiiiii Springs, Va., to tlie north side of the Potomac ai IMwaids' Ferry; the Third Corps iioni tlie month of the Monocacy to Point of Koeks, Md. ; the I'^'ifth Corps from Aldie, Va., via Carter's Mills, Leesburg and Edwards' Ferry, to within fonr miles of the mouth of the Mon- ocacy, Md.; the Sixth Corps from Germantowu and Centreville to Drauesville, Va. ; the Eleventh Corps from Jetl'erson to Mid- dletown, Md. ; the Twelfth Corps from Leesburg, Va., via Ed- wards' Ferry, to the mouth of the Monocacy, Md. ; and the Cav- alry Corps (Buford's and Gregg's Divisions) from Aldie to Leesburg, Va. Stahel's Cavalry Division was en route between the Potomac and Frederick, Md. Crawford's Pennsylvania Reserves moved from Vienna to Goose Creek, Va. Combats: Skirmish near Gettysburg, Pa. June 21. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Poolesville to Frederick, Md.; the First Corps from Jefferson to Middletown, Md.; the Second Corps from near Edwards' Ferry, via Poolesville to Barnesville, Md. ; the Third Corps from l*oint of Rocks via Jetferson, to Middletown, Md. ; the Fifth Corps from a point between Edwards' Ferry and the mouth of the Monocacy to Ballinger's Creek, near Frederick, Md. ; the Sixth Corps from Dranesville, Va., via Edwards' Ferry, to near Poolesville, ^Id. ; the Twelfth Corps from near the mouth of the Monocacy, via Point of Rocks, to Knoxville, Md.; Buford's Cavalry Division from Leesburg, Va., via Ed- wards' Ferry, to near Jefferson, Md. ; Gregg's Cavalry Division from Leesburg, Va., via Edwards' Ferry, toward Frederick, Md. ; and the Artillery Reserve from Poolesville to Fredeiick, Md. Stahel's Cavalry Division reached Fiederick, Md. Craw- ford's Pennsylvania Reserves moved from Goose Creek, Va., via Edwards' Ferry, to the month of the Monocacy, Md. Conihats: Skirmish near Fairfax Court House, Xn. June 28. — The First Coi]>s marched from Middletown to Fredoi-ick; the Second Cori)s from Barnesville to Monocacy Junction; the Third Corps* from Middletown to near Woods- borough; the Sixth Corps from near Poolesville to Hyatts- town ; the Eleventh Cor])s from ]\rid(ll<'town to near Frederick, and the Twelfth Corps from Knox vi lie to Frederick. Bu- ford's Cavalry Division moved from near Jefferson to Middle- •Major-Ooiieral D. K. Sickles rosuined command of the Third Corps, relieving Major-General D. B. Birney, who had been temporarily Id command. 128 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. town; Gregg's Cavalry Division reached Frederick and march- ed thence to Isew Market and Kidgeville. Crawford's Penn- sylvania Keserves marched from the mouth of the Monocacy and joined the Fifth Corps* at Ballinger's Creek. Stahel's Cavalry Division was assigned to the Cavalry Corps, as the Third Division, under Brigadier-General Judson Kilpatrick, with Brigadier-General Elon J. Farnsworth commanding the First Brigade and Brigadier-General George A. Custer com- manding the Second Brigade. Combats: Skirmishes between Ofl'utt's Cross-Koads and Sen- eca, and near Kockville, Md., and at Fountain Dale, Wrights- ville, and near Oyster Point, Pa. June 29. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Frederick to Middleburg; the First and Eleventh Corps from Frederick to Emmitsburg; the Second Corps from Monocacy Junction, via Liberty and Johnsville, to Uniontown ; the Third Corps from near Woodsborough to Taney town; the Fifth Corps from Ballinger's Creek, via Frederick and Mount Pleas- ant, to Liberty; the Sixth Corps from Hyattstown, via New Market and Eidgeville, to New Windsor; the Twelfth Corps from Frederick to Taney town and Bruceville; Gamble's (First) and Devin's (Second) Brigades, of Buford's (First) Cavalry Division, from Middletown, via Boonsborough, Cavetown and Monterey Springs, to near Fairfield; Merritt's Eeserve Cav- alry Brigade, of the same division, from Middletown to Me chanicstown; Gregg's (Second) Cavalry Division from New Market and Kidgeville to New Windsor; Kilpatrick's (Third) Cavalry Division from Frederick to Littlestown, and the Artil- lery Keserve from Frederick to Bruceville. Combats: Skirmishes at Muddy Bianch and Westminister, Md., and at McConnellsburg and near Oyster Point, Pa. June 30. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Middleburg to Taneytown; the First Corps from Emmitsburg to Marsh ]\uii ; the Third Corps from Tanej'^town to Bridge- port; the Fifth Corps from Liberty, via Johnsville, Union Bridge and Union, to Union Mills; the Sixth Corps from New Windsor to Manchester; the Twelfth Corps from Taneyfown and Bruceville to Littlestown; Gamble's and Devin's Brigades, •Mnjor-Gi'iU'ial Ceoifre G. Meade relinquished command of the Fifth Corps to Major (Joni'ral George Sykes, and as^sumed command of the Army of the Potomac, relieving Major-General Joseph Hooker. Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 129 of Bufoid's Cavalry Division, from near Fairfield, via Kninuts- burg, to Gettysburg; Gregg's Cavalry Division from New Windsor to Westminster, and thence to Manchester; Kilpat- rick's Cavalry Division from Littlestown to Hanover, and Ihe Artillery Reserve from Bruceville to Taneytown ; Kenly's and Morris' Brigades, of French's Division, left Maryland ITeiglits for Frederick, and Elliott's and Smith's Brigades, of the same division, moved from the Heights, by way of the Chesapeake ;ind Oliio Canal, for Wasliington. Conihalf^: Action at Hanover, Pa., and skirmishes at West- minister, Md., and at Fairfield and Sporting Hill, near Havris- hnrg. Pa. July 1. — The First Corps moved from Marsh Kun and the Eleventh Corps from Emmittsburg to Gettysburg; the Second Cor])s from Uniontown, via Taneytown, to near Gettysburg; the Third Corps from Bridgeport, via Emmittsburg, to the field of Gettysburg; the Fifth Corps from Union Mills, via Hanover and McSherrytown, to Bonaughtown; the Sixth Corps from Mancliester en route to Gettysburg, and the Twlefth Corps from Littlestown, via Two Taverns, to the field of Gettysburg, Gregg's Cavalry Division marched from Manchester to Han- over Junction, whence Mcintosh's and J. I. Gregg's Brigades proceeded to Hanover, while Huey's Brigade returned to Man- chester, Kilpatrick's Cavalry Division moved from Hanover, via Abbottsville, to Berlin, and the Artillery Reserve (Ran- som's and Fitzhugh's Brigades) from Taneytown to near Get- tysburg. Stannard's Vermont Brigade from the Defenses of Washington, joined the First Corps on the field of Gettysburg. W. F. Smith's (First) Division of the Department of the Sus quehanna, marched from the vicinity of Harrisburg to Carlisle. Kenly's and Morris' Brigades of French's Division readied Frederick. Combats: Battle of Gettysburg (first day), and skirmish at Carlisle, Pa. July 2. — The Second, Fifth and Sixth Corps, Lock wood's Bri- gade, from the Middle Department, Mcintosh's and J. I. Gregg's Brigades, of D. McM. Gregg's Cavalry Division. Kil- jiatrick's Cavalry Division and the Artillery Reserve reached the field of Gettysburg. Gamble's and Devin's Brigades, of Buford's Cavalry Division, marched from Gettysburg to Tan- 130 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. eytown, and Menitt's Eeserve Brigade from Mechanicstown to Emmitsburg. Coml)at§: Battle of Gettysburg (second day), and skirmishes at Hunterstowu and near Chambersburg, Pa. July 3. — Gamble's and Devin's Brigades, of Buford's Cavalry Division, moved from Tanneytown to Westminster; Merritt's Reserve Brigade from Emmitsburg to the field of Gettysburg, and Huey's Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, from Man- chester to Westminster. Comhats: Battle of Gettysburg (third day), and action at Fairfield, Pa. July Ji. — Gamble's and Devin's Brigades, of Buford's Cavalry Division, marched from Westminister, and Merritt's Eeserve Brigade from Gettysburg, en route to Frederick; Huey's Bri- gade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, from Westminster, via Emmitsburg, to Monterey ; J. I. Gregg's Cavalry Brigade from Gettysburg to Hunterstown, and Kilpatrick's Cavalry Division from Gettysburg, via Emmitsburg, to Monterey. Smith's Di- vision, of Couch's command, moved from Carlisle, via Mount Holly, to Pine Grove, and the remainder of Couch's troops from the vicinity of Harrisburg toward Shippensburg and Chambersburg. Elliott's and Smith's Brigades, of French's Division, arrived at Washington from Maryland Heights, and moved to Tennallytown. Morris' Brigade, of French's Divi- sion, marched from Frederick to Turner's Gap, in South Moun- tain. Combats: Action at Monterey Gap, Pa., and skirmishes at Fairfield Gap, Pa., near Emmitsburg, Md. July 5. — Leaving Gettysburg, the Second Corps marched to Two Taverns; the Fifth Corps to Marsh Run; the Sixth Corps to Fairfield; the Eleventh Corps to Rock Creek; the Twelfth Corps to Littlestown; Mcintosh's Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division to Emmitsburg, and the Artillery Reserve to Littles- town. Buford's Cavalry Division reached Frederick. J. I. Gregg's Cavalry Brigade moved from Hunterstown to Green- wood. Kilpatrick's Cavalry Division and Huej^'s Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, marched from Monterey, via Smlths- burg, to Boonsborough. Combats: Skirmishes at or near Smithsburg, Md., and Green Oak, Mercersburg, Fairfield, Greencastle, Cunningham's Cross Roads, and Stevens' Furnace (or Caledonia Iron Works), Pa. Pennsi/Ivania at Gettyshur;/. K^l .full/ (i — Tilt' First Corps inaiclicd tioiii ( let t ysltinj; to Ku\- iiiitshiiiii'; llic l-'irtli Coi-ps tictin Mnrsli Kiiii to Moril/Zs Cioss Koiuls; tlie Sixlli Corps Irom Fnirlicld to I>mmitsl»\nji. (*X(('i»l Niell's (Third) Brigade, of Howe's (Second) Division, wliidi, in conjnnction with Mcintosh's P.iitiade of Cavalry, was left at Fairlield to pursue the enemy; the ICleventh Corps from liock Creek to Emmitsburg; Bn ford's Cavalry Division from Fred- erick to Willianisj)ort and thence l)ack to Jones' Cross iioads; Kilpatrick's Cavalry Division and Huey's Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, from Boonsborongh, via Hagerstown* and Willianisport, to .Tones' Cross Boads; Mcintosh's Brigade of Gregg's Cavalry Division, from Emmitsburg to Fairfield; and J. I. Gregg's Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, from Green- wood to Marion; Smith's Division, of Couch's command, moved from Pine Grove to Newman's Pass; Kenly's Brigade, of French's Division, marched from Frederick en route to Mary- land Heights; Elliott's and Smith's Brigades, of French's Divi- sion, left Tennallytowu, via Washington and the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, en route to Frederick. Combats: Actions at Hagerstown and AVilliamsport, Md. Julij 7. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Gettj^sburg to Frederick; the First Corps from Emmitsburg to Hamburg; the Second Corps from Two Taverns to Taneytown ; the Third Corps from Gettysburg, Via Emmitsburg, to Me- chanicstown; the Fifth Corjis from Moritz's Cross Boads, via Emmitsburg, to IJtica; the Sixth Corps from Emmitsburg to Mountain Pass, near Hamburg; the Eleventh Corps from Em- mitsburg to Middletown; the Twelfth Corps from Littlestown to Walkersville; and the Artillery Keserve from Littlestown to Woodsborough ; Buford's and Kilpatrick's Cavalry Divi- sions and Huey's Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, moved from Jones' Cross Boads to Boonsborongh; J. I. Gregg's Cav- alry Brigade was moving en route from Chanibcrsburg to Mid- dletown ; Mcintosh's Brigade of Cavalry and Niell's Brigade of the Sixth Corps, moved from Fairfield to AVaynesborough ; Smith's Division, of Couch's command, nianhcd fi-ctm New- man's Pass to Altodale; Kenly's Brigade, of I-'icnch's Division, with other troo]ts forwarded by Schenck from Baltimore, re- •Riohinontrs Brljiade of Kilpatrick's Division, remained at Hagerstown, whence it retired toward Boonsborongh. 132 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. occupied Maryland Heights ; Elliott's and Smith's Brigades, of French's Division, reached Frederick from Washington. Comhats: Skirmishes at Downsville. and Funkstown, Md., and at Harper's Ferry, W. Va. July 8. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved fi-om Frederick to Middletown; the First Corps from Hamburg to Turner's Gap, in South Mountain ; the Second Corps from Tan- eytown to Frederick; the Third Corps from Mechanicstown to a point three miles southwest of Frederick; the Fifth Corps from Utica to Middletown; the Sixth Corps from near Ham- burg to Middletown; the Eleventh Corps from Middletown to Turner's Gap, in South Mountain, Schurz's (Third) Division being advanced to Boonsborough ; the Twelfth Corps from Wal- kersville to Jefferson; and the Artillery Reserve from Woods- borough to Frederick ; J. I. Gregg's Cavalry Brigade was mov- ing e)i route from Chambersburg to Middletown ; Smith's Divi- sion, of Couch's command, moved from Altodale to Waynes- borough ; Campbell's and Mulligan's Brigades, of Kelly's com- mand, Department of West Virginia, were concentrated at Hancock, whence they moved to Fairview, on North Mountain. Goinbats: Action at Boonsborough and skirmish near Wil- liamsport, Md. July 9. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Middletown to Turner's Gap; the Second Corps from Freder- ick to Rohrersville; the Third Corps from near Frederick to Fox's Gap, in South Mountain; the Fifth Corps from Middle- town, via Fox's Gap, to near Boonsborough; the Sixth Corps from Middletown to Boonsborough; tlie Twelfth Corps from Jefferson to Rohrersville; and the Artillery Reserve from Frederick to Boonsborough; J. I. Gregg's Cavalry Brigade reached Middletown from Chambersburg; Elliott's and Smith's Brigades, of French's Division, marched from Frederick to Middletown. Comhats: Skirmish at Benevola (or Beaver Creek), Md. July 10. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Turner's Gap to Beaver Creek, beyond Boonsborough; the First Corps from Turner's Gap to Beaver Creek, where it was joined by Kenly's Brigade, of French's Division, from Mary- land Heights; the Second Corps from Rohrersville to near Tilghmanton; the Third Corps from Fox's Gap, through Boons- borough, to Antietam Creek, in the vicinity of Jones' Cross Pennsi/lvdilid at Gcttyshiirtf. 13.'? Roads, wlicri' it was joiiicil hy lOlliolt's and SiiiillTs Ilriuadcs, of FreiK'li's division, wliicli inarclicd fioiii Midfllctowu, and Morris' Brigade, of tlu' same division, wliich niarclied from Turner's Gap; the Fifth Corps from near Boonsborough to Delaware Mills, on Antietani f'reek ; the Sixth Corjis f!-om Boousborongh to Beaver Creek; the lOleventh Corps from Tni-- ner\s Gap to Beaver Creek and the Twelfth Corps from Rohr- ersville to Bakei'sville; linford's and Kilpatrick's Cavalry Di- visions moved from Boonsborongh to Funkstown; Hney's Bri- gade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, from Boonsborough to Jones' Cross Roads, and Mcintosh's Cavalrj' Brigade from Waynesborough via Smithsburg and Leitersburg, to Old An- tietam Forge, and back to Waynesborough. Gomhats: Skirmishes at or near Old Autietam Forge (near Leitersburg), Clear Spring, Hagerstowu, Jones' Cross Roads (near Williamsport), and Funkstown, Md. July 11. — The Second Corps moved from near Tilghmanton to the neighborhood of Jones' Cross Roads ; the Twelfth Corps from Bakersville to Fair Play and Jones' Cross Roads; Gam- ble's and Devin's Brigades of Buford's Cavalry Division from Funkstown to Bakersville; J. I. Gregg's Cavalry Brigade from Middletowu to Boonsborough; Kilpatrick's Cavalry Division from Funkstown to near Hagerstown; the Artillery Reserve from Boonsborough to Benevola ; Neill's Brigade of the Sixth Corps, and Smith's Division, of Couch's command, from Waynesborough to Leitersburg. Combats: Skirmishes at or near Hagerstown, Jones' Cross Roads (near Williamsport) and Funkstown, Md. July 12. — The First, Sixth and Eleventh Corps moved from Beaver Creek to Funkstown; Mcintosh's Cavalry Brigade from Waynesborough, via Leitersburg, to Boonsborough; Kilpat- rick's Cavalry Division and Ames' (First) Division, Eleventh Corps, occupied Hagerstown ; Neill's Brigade, of the Sixth Corps, moved from Leitersburg to Funkstown, where it re- joined its corps; Smith's Division (except one brigade, left at Waynesborough) from Leiteisburg to Cavetown ; Dana's (Sec- ond) Division, of Couch's command, from Chambersburg to Greencastle; and Averell's Cavalry Brigade, Department of West Virginia, from Cumberland en route to Fairview. 10 134 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Combats: Skirmishes at or near Hagerstown, Jones' Cross Koads (near Williamsport) and Fimkstown, Md., and Asliby's Gap, Va. July IS. — The Sixth Corps moved from Fuukstown to the vicinity of Hagerstown; the Artillery Reserve from Benevola to Jones' Cross Koads, two brigades remaining at the latter place and the others returning to Benevola; Smith's Division, of Couch's command, from Waynesborough and Cavetown to Hagerstown and Beaver Creek. Averell's Cavalry Brigade joined Kelley's infantry at Fairview. Combats: Skirmishes at Hagerstown, Jones' Cross Roads and Funkstown, Md. July Ui. — The First Corps marched from Funkstown to Wil- liamsport; the Second Corps from near Jones' Cross Eoads to near Falling Waters; the Third Corps from Antietam Creek, near Jones' Cross Roads, across Marsh Creek; the Fifth Corps from the vicinity of Roxbury Mills, on Antietam Creek, to near Williamsport ; the Sixth Corps from the neighborhood of Hag- erstown to Williamsport; the Eleventh Corps from Fuuks- town, via Hagerstown, to Williamsport; and Williams' (First) Division of the Twelfth Corps from Jones' Cross Roads to near Falling Waters, and thence to near Williamsport. Buford's Cavalry Division moved from Bakersville to Falling Waters; Mcintosh's and J. T. Gregg's Brigades of D. McM. Gregg's Cav- alry Division from Boonsborough to Harper's Ferry; Huey's Brigade of same division, from Jones' Cross Roads, via Wil- liamsport to Falling Waters; and Kilpatrick's Cavalry Divi- sion from Hagerstown, via Williamsport, to Falling Waters. Kelley's command, Department of West Virginia, marched from Fairview to Williamsport. Combats: Action at Falling Waters, Md., and skirmishes near Williamsport, Md., and Harper's Ferry, W. Va. July 15. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Beaver Creek to Berlin ; the First Corps from Williamsport to Rohrersville ; the Second Corps from near Falling Waters to near Sandy Hook; the Third Corps from Marsh Creek to near Burnside's Bridge, on the Antietam; the Fifth Corps from near Williamsport to Burkittsville ; the Sixth Corps from Wil- liamsport to Boonsborough; the Eleventh Corps from Wil- liamsport, via Hagerstown, to Middletown; and the Twelfth Corps from Fair Play and near Williamsport to Sandy Hook. Pennsylvaniii atrick's Cavalry Divi- sion from Falling Waters, via Williamsport and Hagerstown, to Boonsborougli. Kelley's command, Department of West Virginia, marched from Williamsport to Indian Springs. Combats: Skirmishes at Halltown and She])herdstown, W. Va. J nil/ 16. — The First Corps marched from Rohrersville to near Berlin; the Third Cor])s from Burnside's Bridge to Pleas- ant \'alley, near Sandy Plook; the Fifth Corps from Burkitts- ville, via Petersville, to near Berlin; the Sixth Corps fi-om Boonsborongli to near Berlin ; the Eleventh Corps from Mid- dletown, via Jefferson, to Berlin ; and the Twelfth Corps from Sandy Hook to Pleasant Valley. Buford's Cavalry Division mo\ed from Berlin to Petersville; Hney's Brigade of Gregg's Cavalry Division, from Boonsborongh, via Harper's Ferry, to Shepherdstown ; and Kilpatrick's Division from Boonsbor- ongh to Berlin, whence De Forest's (First) Brigade proceeded to Harper's Ferry. Combats: Action at Shepherdstown and skirmish at Shang- hai, W. Va. July 17. — The Third Cori)s moved from near Sandy Hook, crossed the Potomac at Harper's Ferry and proceeded to a j>oint three miles sonth of the Ferry; the Fifth Corps move«l from near Berlin to Lovettsville, crossing the Potomac at Ber- lin. Gregg's Cavalry Divi.sion marched from Shepherdstown to Harper's FeriT, Kiljiatrick's Cavalry Division from Berlin and Harper's Ferry to Purcellville; Custer's Brigade crossing the Potomac at Berlin and De Forest's Brigade the Shenan- doah at Harper's Ferry. Kelley's command. Department of AVest Virginia, moved from Indian Springs, Md., to Hedges- ville, W. Va., crossing the Potomac at Cherry Bun. Combats: Skirmishes near North ^fdnntain Station. W. A'a., and near Snicker's Gap, Va. July 18. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from 130 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Berlin, Md,, to Lovettsville, Va. ; the First Corps from near Ber- lin to Waterford, crossing the Potomac at Berlin; the Second Corps from near Sandy Hook to Hillsborough, crossing the Po- tomac and Shenandoah Kivers at Harper's Ferry; the Third Corps from near Harper's Ferry to Hillsborough; the Fifth Corps from Lovettsville to near Purcellville; the Artillery Ee- serve from Berlin to Wheatland; and Buford's Cavalry Divi- sion from Petersville to Purcellville, crossing the Potomac at Berlin. Combats: Skirmishes at and near Hedgesville and Martins- burg, W. Va. July 19. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Lovettsville to Wheatland; the First Corps from Waterford to Hamilton; the Second and Third Corps from Hillsborough to Wood Grove; the Fifth Corps from near Purcellville to a point on the road to Philomont; the Sixth Corps from near Berlin to Wheatland, and the Eleventh Corps from Berlin to near Hamilton, both corps crossing the Potomac at Berlin : the Artillery Keserve from Wheatland to Purcellville; and the Twelfth Corps from Pleasant Valley to near Hillsborough, ci'ossing the Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers at Harper's Ferry. Buford's Cavalry Division moved from Purcellville, via Philomont, to near Rector's Cross Roads. Mcintosh's Bri- gade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, moved from Harper's Ferry toward Hillsborough and Huey's and J. I. Gregg's Brigades of the same division, from Harper's Ferry to Lovettsville. Kil- patrick's Division of Cavalry marched from Purcellville to Up- perville. Kelley's command, Department of West Virginia, fell back from Hedgesville to the Marj'^land side of the Poto- mac at Cherry Run. Combats: Skirmishes at and near Hedgesville and Martins- burg, W. Va. July 20. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Wheatland to Union; the First Corps from Hamilton to Mid- dleburg; the Second and Third Corps from Wood Grove, the former going to Bloomfield and the later to Upperville; the Fifth Corps from a point on the Purcellville and Philomont road, via Union, to Panther Skin Creek ; the Sixth Corps from Wheatland to near Beaver Dam ; the Eleventh Corps from near Hamilton, via Mt. Gilead, to Mountville; the Twelfth Corps from near Hillsborough, via Wood Grove, to Snickersville ; and Pennsylvania at Octtyshurf/. 137 the Aitillery Kesoive li'(tiii I'liic rll\ ille to Union; Buford's Cavalry Division nioxcd lidiii iicai' Jtector's Cross IJoads to Rectortown, Gamble's J>ii;;a(l(' .uoinji' thence to Chester Cap, Uevin's Brigade to Salem and Merritt's Brigade to Manassas Gap ; Mcintosh's Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, reached nillsboroiigh and marched thence toward I'lircellville; Huey's and .1. I. Gregg's Brigades, of same division, moved from Lov- ettsville to Goose Creek. Conihuts: Skirmishes near Berry's Ferry and at Ashby's Gap, Va. July 21. — Huey's and J. I. Gregg's Brigades, of D. McM. (iregg's Cavaby Division, moved from Goose Creek to Bull Run; Mcintosh's Brigades returned to Hillsborough; Kelley's command. Department of West Virginia, recrossed the Poto- mac from Maryland into Virginia at Cherry Run. Gonibats: Skirmishes at Manassas and Chester Gaps, Va. July 22. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Union to Upperville; the First Corps from Middleburg to White Plains; the Second Corps from Bloomfield to Paris: the Third Corps from Upperville, via Piedmont, to Linden ; the Fifth Corps from Panther Skin Creek to Rectortown ; and the Sixth Cori)s from near Beaver Dam to Rectortown ; Devin's Brigade, of Buford's Cavalry Division, moved from Salem to Barbee's Cross Roads; Huey's and J. I. Gregg's Brigades, of D. McM. Gregg's Cavalry Division, from Bull Run to Broad Run; and Kilpatrick's Cavalry Division from Upperville to Piedmont. Comhats: Skirmishes at Manassas and Chester Gaps, Va. July 23. — Headijuarters Army of the Potomac moved from Upperville to Linden; the First Corps from White Plains to Warrenton; the Second Corps from Paris to Linden; the Third Corps from Linden to Manassas Gap; the Fifth Corps from Rectortown, via Markham Station, Farrowsville and Linden to Manassas Gap; the Sixth Corps from Rectortown to WTiite Plains and Barbee's Cross Roads; the Eleventh Corps from Mountville to New Baltimore; the Twelfth Coips from Snick- ersville to Ashby's Gap and thence to Markham Station; and the Artillery Reserve from Union to near Rock Creek ; Bu- ford's Cavalry Division concentrated at Barbee's Cross Roads; Mcintosh's Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, moved from 138 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Hillsborough to Snickersville; and Kilpatrick's Cavalry Divi- sion from Piedmont to Amissville. Comhats: Action at Wapping Heights, Manassas Gap, and skirmishes near Gaines' Cross Koads, Snicker's Gap and Ches- ter Gap, Va. July 24. — Headquarters Arm}' of the Potomac moved from Linden to Salem; the Second Corps from Linden to Markham Station; the First Division (Wright's), Sixth Corps, from White Plains to New Baltimore; the Second Division (Howe's), Sixth Corps, from Barbee's Cross Koads to Markham Station and thence to Orleans; the Third Division (Bartlett's), Sixth Corps, from Barbee's Cross lloads to Thumb Kun; and the Twelfth Corps from Markham Station to Linden, counter- marching, via Markham Station, to Piedmont; Huey's and J. I. Gregg's Brigades, of D. McM. Gregg's Cavalry Division, moved from Broad Kun to Warrenton Junction; Kelley's command, Department of West Virginia, advanced from Cherry Run to Hedgesville. Combats: Skirmish at Battle Mountain, near Newby's Cross Koads, Va. July 25. — Headquarters Army of the Potomac moved from Salem to Warrenton; the First Corps from Warrenton to Warrenton Junction, the Second Division (Kobinson's) going on to Bealeton; the Second Corps from Markham Station to White Plains; the Third Corps from Manassas Gap to near Salem; the Fifth Corps from Manassas Gap, via Farrowsville and Barbee's Cross Koads, to Thumb Kun; the Sixth Corps concentrated at Warren tan, Wright's (First) Division moving from New Baltimore, Howe's (Second) Division from Orleans, and Bartlett's (Third) Division from Thumb Kun; the Elev- enth Corps moved from New Baltimore to Warrenton Junc- tion; and the Twelfth Corps from Piedmont, via Kectortown and White Plains, to Tlioroughfare Gap; the Artillery Keserve leached Warrenton; Kelley's command, Department of West Virginia, occupied Martin sburg. Combats: Skirmish at Barbee's Cross Koads, Va. July 26. — The Second Corps marched from White Plains to near Germantown; the Third Corps from near Salem to vicin- ity of Warrenton; the Fifth Corps from Thumb Kun to vicinity of Warrenton, Crawford's (Third) Division taking ])osition at Fayetteville ; and the Twelfth Corps from Thoroughfare Gap, Pennsylvania at (ivltyfibiir;/. 139 via Greenwich and Catlelt's Station, to Wanenton Junction; Buford's Cavalry Division took position at Warreuton ami Fayetteville; McTntosli's Bri<»ade, of Giegj^'s Cavalry Division, marched from yniclversviUe, via 1 'pperville, to Middlehnr*;; Kelley's command, Department of West Virginia, occuiiicd Winchester. July 27. — ^The Fifth Corps encamped between AN'arrcnlon and Fayetteville; Mcintosh's Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Di- vision, marched from Middlelmrg, via Wliite Plains, New Bal- timore and Warrenton, toward Warrenton Junction. July 28. — Mcintosh's Brigade, of Gregg's Cavalry Division, moved via Warrenton Junction, to Catlett's Station. July 29. — D. McM. Gregg's Cavalry Division moved fioni Warrenton Junction and Catlett's Station to Warrenton. July 30. — Kenly's (Third) Division, First Corps, moved from Warrenton Junction to Rappahannock Station; the Second Corps from near Germantown to Elk Run; D. McM. Gregg's Cavalry Division from Warrenton to Amissville; and Kilijat- rick's Cavalry Division from Amissville to Warrenton. July 31. — The Second Corps marched from Elk Run to Mor- risville; Howe's (Second) Division, Sixth Corps, from Warren ton to near Waterloo; the Twelfth Corps from Warrenton Junction to Kelly's Ford; and Kilpatrick's Cavalry Division from Warrenton to Warrenton Junction. 140 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 0KGA:MIZATI0N of the army of the POTOMAC, COMMANDED BY MAJ.-GEN. GEOEGE G. MEADE, U. S. ARMY, AT THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA, JULY 1-3, 18G3. GENERAL HEADQUARTERS. COMMAND OF THE PROVOST-MARSHAL-GENERAI.. Brig. -Gen. Marsena R. Patrick. 93d New York,* Col. John S. Crocker. 8th United States (eight companies),* Capt. Edwin W. H. Read. 2d Pennsylvania Cavalry, Col R. Butler Price. 6th Pennsylvania Cavalry, Companies E and I, Capt. James Starr. Regular cavalry (detachments from 1st, 2d, 5th and 6th Regiments) . SIGN.AL CORPS. Capt. Lemuel B. Norton. GUARDS AND ORDERLIES. Oneida (New York) Cavalry, Capt. Daniel P. Mann. ARTILLERY, t Brig. -Gen. Henry J. Hunt. ENGINEER BRIGADE.! Brig. -Gen. Henry W. Benham. 15th New York (three companies), Maj. Walter L. Cassin.' 50th New York, Col. William H. Pettes. United States Battalion, Capt. George H. Mendell. FIRST ARMY CORPS. § Maj. -Gen. Abner Doubled ay. Maj. -Gen. John Newton. general headquarters. 1st Maine Cavalry, Company L, Capt. Coustantine Taylor. FIRST division. Brig. -Gen. James S. Wadsworth. First Brigade. Second Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Solomon Meredith. Brig. -Gen. Lysander Cutler. Col. WiLLLAM W. Robinson. 7th Indiana, Col. Ira G. Grover. 19th Indiana, Col. Sam'l J. Wil- 76th New York: liams. IMaj. Andrew J. Grover. 24th Michigan : Capt. John E. Cook. Col. Henry A. Morrow. 84th New York (14th Militia), Capt. Albert M. Edwards. Col. Edward B. Fowler. 2d Wisconsin : 95th New York : Col. Lucius Fairchild. Col. George H. Biddle. Maj. Jolin Mansfield. Maj. Edward Pye. ("apt. (}('(. rg(> H. Otis. 147th New York: Gtb ^Vis(•onsin, Lieut. Col. Rufus Lieut. Col. Francis C. R. Dawes. Miller. 7th Wisconsin : Maj. George Harney. Col. William W. Robinson. 56th Pennsylvania (nine compa- Maj. Mark Finnicum. nies) , Col. J. Wm. Hof- mann. »Not engaged. tScc artillery brigade.s attached to army corps and the reserve. tNot ensaged. With p.xception of the regular battalion, it was, July 1, and while at Beaver Dam Creek, Md., ordered to Washington, D. C, wliere it arrived July 3. §Maj. Gen. John F. Reynolds, of this forps, was killed July 1, while in eommand of the left wing of the army; General Doubledny commanded the corps July 1. and Gen- eral Newton, who was assigned to that command on the 1st, superseded him July 2. Pennsylvania at Getty sbntyj. 141 SECOND DIVISION. Brig. (Jon. John C. Rorinson. First Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Gabiuel R. Paul. Col. Samuel H. Leonard. Col. Adkian R. Root. Col. Richard Coulter. Col. Peter Lyle. Col. Richard Coulter. 16th Maine: Col. Charles W. Tilden. Maj. Archibald D. Leavitt. l.'Uh Mas.sachu.sftts : -Col. Sanuicl H. Ijcouard. Lieut. -Cul. N. Walter Batch- elder. 94th New York : Col. Adrian R. Root. Maj. ISamucl A. Moffett. 104th New York, Col. Gilbert G. Prey. 107th Pennsylvania : Lieut. -Col. James MacThom- sou. Capt. Emanuel D. Roath. Second Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Henry Baxter. rjth Massachusetts: Col. James li. Bates. Lieut. -Col. David Allen, Jr. &')d New York (!»th Militia), Lieut. Cul. Joseph A. Moesch. 07th New York : Col. Charles Wheelock. Maj. Charles Northrup. 11th Pennsylvania :* Col. Richard Coulter. Capt. P>enjamin F. Haines. Capt. John B. Overmeyer. SSth Pennsylvania : Maj. Bcnezet F. Foust. Capt. Henry Whiteside. !)Oth Pennsvlvania : Col. "Peter Lyle. Maj. Alfred J. Sellers. Col. Peter Lyle. third division. Brig. -Gen. Thomas A. Rowley. Maj. -Gen. Abner Doubleday. First Brigade. Col. Chapman Biddle. Brig. -Gen. Thomas A. Col. Chapman Biddle. Rowley . 80th New York (20th Militia), Col. Theodore B. Gates. 121st Pennsylvania: Maj. Alexander Biddle. Col. Chapman Biddl(>. Maj. Alexander Biddle. 142d Pennsylvania : Col. Robert P. Cummins. Lieut. -Col. Alfred B. McCal- mont. 151st Pennsvlvania: Lieut. -Col. George F. Mc- Farland . Capt. Walter L. Owens. Col. Harrison Allen. Second Brigade. Col. Roy Stone. Col. Langhorne Wister. Col. Edmund L. Dana. 14.'>d Pennsylvania : Col. Edmund L. Dana. Lieut. -Col. John D. Musser. 14nth Pennsylvania : Lieut. -Col. Walton Dwight. Capt. James Glenn. 150th Pennsylvania : Col. Lauf;horne Wister. Lieut. -Col. Henry S. Huide- koper. Capt. Cornelius C. Widdis. Third Brigade. Brig. -Gen. George J. Stannard. Col. Francis V. Randall. 12th Vermont,! Col. Asa P. Blunt, loth Vermont : Col. Francis V. Randall. Maj. Joseph J. T?oynton. Lieut. Cnl. William D. ^lunson. 14th Vermont. Cul. William T. Nichols. l.")th Vermont, + Col. R.'dti.-ld Proctor. IGth Vermont, Col. Wheelock G. Veazey •Trnusferred In afternoon of Jieut.-Col. Caspar Trepp. 2d United States Sharpshooters (eight companies), Maj. Homer R. Stoughton. •Transferred from Artillery Beserve, July 1; 14th New York Battery attached. Pciiiisi/hania at Gettysburg. 145 Third Brigade. Col. P. Regis De Tuohkiam). ITtli M:iitii', Liout.-Col. Cbarlcs 15. Mt«i:ill. 3d Michij,'iin : Col. Byron R. Pierce. lat'Ut.-Col. Edwin S. Pierce, nth Michigan, Lieut. -("<•]. John Pulfnrd. •iUth New Yorl<, Col. Thomas W. Egan. llOth Pennsylvania (six coinnauies ) : Lieut. -I'ol. David M. Jones. Maj. Isaac Koi;ers. SECOND DIVISION. Brij'.-Cen. Anhkew A. Humphkeys. First Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Joseph B. Caku. 1st 11th IGth 12th Uth l.'6th 84th Massachusetts, Lieut. -Col. Clark B. Baldwin. Massachusetts, Lieut. -Col. Por- ter D. Tripp. Massachusetts : Lieut. -Col. Waldo Merriam. Capt. Matthew Donovan. New Hampshire, Capt. John F. Langiey . New Jersey : Col. Robert IMcAllister. Capt. Luther Martin. Lieut. John Schoonover. Capt. William H. Loyd. Capt. Samuel T. Sleeper. Lieut. John Schoonover. Penn.sylvauia, Maj. Robert L. Bodine. Pennsylvania,* Lieut. -Col. Mil- ton 0pp. iSccond Jirigade. Col. William R. Bbewsteb. 70th New York, Col. J. Egbert Faruum. 71st New York, Col. Henry L. Potter . 72d New York : Col. John S. Austin. Lieut. -Col. John Leonard. 7od New Y'ork, Maj. Michael W. Burns. 74th New Y'ork, Lieut. -Col. Thomas Holt. 120th New York: Lieut. -Col. Cornelius D. Westbrook . Major John R. Tappen. Third Brigade. Col. GeOKGE C. BURI.ING. 2d New Hampshire, Col. Edward L. Bailey. 5th New Jers(>v : Col. William J. Sewell. Capt. Thomas C. Godfrey. Capt. Henry H. Woolsey. 6th New Jersey, Lieut. -Col. Stephen R. Gilkysou. 7tii Xi'w Jersey : Col. Louis R. Francinc. Maj. Frederick Cooper. .Sth New Jersey : Col. John Ramsey. Cnpt. John G. I..angston. lloth Pennsylvania, Maj. John P Dunne. 'Guarding corps trains, and not engagiKl In the battle. 146 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. ARTILLERY BRIGAUK- Capt. George E. Randall. Capt. A. jfudsou Clark. New Jersey Light, 2d Battery : Capt. A. Judson Clark. Lieut. Robert Sims. 1st New York Light, Battery D, Capt. (ieorge B. Wiuslow. New York Light, 4th Battery, Capt. James E. Smith. 1st Rhode Island Light, Battery E: Lieut. John K. Bucklyn. Lieut. Benjamin Freeborn. 4th United States, Battery K : Lieut. Francis W. Seeley. Lieut. Robert James. FIFTH ARMY CORPS. Ma j. -Gen. George Sykes. GENERAL HEADQAKTERS. 12th New York Infantry, Companies D and E, Capt. Henry W. Ryder. 17th Pennsylvania Cavalry, Companies D and H, Capt. William Thompson. FIRST DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. James Barnes. First Brigade. Col. William S. Tilson. 18th Massachusetts, Col. Joseph Hayes. 22d Massachusetts, Lieut. -Colonel Thos. Sherwin, Jr. { 1st Michigan : Col. Ira C. Abbott. | Lieut. -Col. Wm. A. Throop. j 118th Penn.sylvania, Lieut. -Col. Jas. | Gwyn . Second Brigade. Col. Jacob B. Sweitzer. 9th Massachusetts, Col. Patrick R. Guiney. 32d Massachusetts, Col. G. L. Pres- cott. 4th Michigan: Col. Harrison H. Jeffords. Lieut. -Col. Geo. W. Lum- bard. G2d Pennsylvania, Lieut. -Col. James C. Hull. Third Brigade. Col. Strong Vincent. Col. James C. Rice. 20th Maine, Col. Joshua L. Chamberlain. 16th Michigan, Lieut. -Col. Norval E. Welch. 44th New York : Col. James C. Rice. Lieut. -Col. Freeman Conner. 83d Pennsylvania, Capt. Orpheus S. Woodward. second DrV'ISION. Brig. -Gen. Romeyn B. Ayres. First Brigade. Col. Hannibal Day. Hd United States (six companies) : Capt. Henrv W. Freedlcv. Capt. Richard G. Lay. 4th United States (four companies). Cap. Julius W. Adams, Jr. 6th United States (five companies), Capt. Levi C. Bootes. 12th United States (eight com- panies) , Capt. Thomas S. Dunn. 14th United States (eight com- panies) , Maj. Grotius R. Giddings. Second Brigade. Col. Sidney Burbank. 2d United States (six companies) : Mnj. Arthur T. l^ee. Capt. Samuel A. McKee. 7th United States (four com- panies) , Capt. David P. Hancock. 10th United States (three com- panies) . Capt. William Clinton. 11th United States (six com- panies) , Maj. DeLancey Floyd- Jones. 17th United States (seven com- panies I . Lieut. -Col. J. Durell Greene. Pennsylvania at Gclfi/shinff. m Third Brigade. Krijj.rjpu. Stki'IIEn II. Wkkd. Col. Keneh Uakkaku. 14(lth Ni'W York : Col. Patrick H. O'Korke. Li»nit.-C(il. r.diiis lOrnst. 14Gth New York : Col. Ki'iiiK^r Garrard. Lieut. -Col. David T. Jenkins. !)lst Pennsylvania, Lieut-Col. Joseph H. Sinex. innth Penn.sylvania, Lieut. -Col. John II. Cain. TiiiUD uivrsiON.* P.rifj. (leu. S.XMUEi, W. Ci;.\\\K()i{i). First lirifitide. Third liriijade. Col. William McCandless Col. Joseph W. F'isiieb. 1st Pennsylvania Reserves (nine companies), Col. William C. Talley. 2d Pennsylvania Reserves, Lieut. - Col. George A. Woodward. 6th Pennsvlvania Reserves, Lieut. - Col. Wellington H. Ent. l.'Jtli Pennsvlvania Reserves : Col. Charles F. Taylor. Maj. William R. Harts- horne. 5th Pennsylvania Reserves, Lieut. - Col. (ieorge Dare. nth Pennsylvania Reserves, Ueut.- Col. James McK. Snod- grass. 10th Pennsylvania Reserves, Col. Adoniram J. Warner. 11th Pennsylvania Reserves, Col. Samuel M. Jackson. 12tb Pennsylvania Reserves (nine companies) , Col. Martin D. Hardin. artillery BRIGADE. Capt. Augustus P. Martin. Massachusetts Light, 3d Battery (C), Lieut. Aaron F. AValcott. 1st New York Light, Batterv C, Capt. Almont Barnes. 1st (Ihin Li-ht. ]'.atterv L. Captain Frank C. Bibbs. 5th United States, Batterv D: liieut. Charles F. Hazlett. Lieut. Benj. F. Rittonhouse. 5th United States, Battery 1: Lieut. Malboue F. Watson. Lieut. Charles C. MacConnell. SIXTH ARMY CORPS. Maj. -Gen. Joiix Sedgwick. GENERAL HEADQUARTERS. 1st New Jersey Cavalry, Company L, 1st Pennsylvania Cavalry, Company H, Capt. William S. Craft. FIRST division. Brig. -Gen. Horatio G. Wright. Provost Guard. 4th New Jersey (three companies), Capt. William R. Ma.\well. First Brigade. • Brig. -Gen. A. T. A. Torbert. I 1st New Jersey, Lieut. -Col. Wil- liam Henry, Jr. 'Jd New Jer.sey, Lieut. -Col. Chas. Wiebecke. '.'A New Jersey, Lieut. -Col. Ed- ward L. Campbell. ' 15th New Jersey, Col. William H. Penrose. ' Bris Second Brigade. -Gen. Joseph J. BARXLETT.t 5th Maine, Col. Clark S. Edwards. 121st New York, Col. Emory Upton. 05th P.-nnsylvaiiia. Lieut. -Col. Ed- ward Carroll. OGtli P.iinsylvania, Maj. William H. Lessig. 'Joined corps June 2S. Tbe Second Brigade left in the Departinont of Washington. tAlso in command of the Third Brigade, Third Division, on July 3. 148 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. Third Brigade. Brig. -Gen. David A. Russell. 6th Maine, Col. Hiram Burnham. 40th Pennsvlvania (four companies), Lieut. -Col. Thomas M. Hulings. lli)th Pennsvlvania, Col. Peter C. Ellmaker. Oth Wisconsin, Col. Thomas S. Allen. SECOND DWISION.* Brig. -Gen. Albion P. Ho\ve Second Brigade. Col. Lewis A. Gbant. 2d Vermont, Col. James H. Wal- b ridge. 3d Vermont, Col. Thomas O. Sea- ver. 4th Vermont, Col. Charles B. Stoughton. 5th Vermont, Lieut. -Col. John E. Lewis . ()th Vermont, Col. Elisha L. Bar- ney. Bri2 Third Brigade. Gen. Thomas H. Neill. 7th Maine (six companies), Lieut. - Col. Selden Connor. 33d New York (detachment), Capt. Henrv J. Gifford. 43d New York, Lieut. -Col. John Wilson . 49th New York, Col. Daniel D. Bid- well. 77th New York, Lieut. -Col. Winsor B. French. 61st Pennsvlvania, Lieut. -Col. Geo. F. Smith. third division. Ma j. -Gen. John Newton. Brig. -Gen. Frank Wueaton. First Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Alexander Shaleb. i 6r)th New York, Col. Joseph E. Harablin. fi7th New York, Col. Nelson Cross. 122d New York, Col. Silas Titus. 23d Pennsylvania, Lieut. -Col. John F. Glenn. 82d Pennsylvania, Col. Isaac C. Bassett. Second Brigade. Col. Henry L. Eustis. 7th Massachusetts, Lieut. -Col. Franklin P. Harlow. 10th Massachusetts, Lieut. -Col. Jos. B. Parsons. 37th Massachusetts, Col. Oliver Ed- wards. 2d Rhode Island, Col. Horatio Rogers, Jr. Third Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Frank Wiieaton. Col. David J. Nevin. 62d New York : Col. David J. Nevin. Lieut. -Col. Theodore B. Hamilton. 93d Pennsylvania , Ma j . John I . Nevin . 9Sth Pennsylvania, Maj. John B. Kohler. 102d Peun.sylvania,t Col. John W. Patterson. 139th Pennsylvania : Col. Frederick H. Collier. Lieut. -Col. William H. Moody. artillery brigade. Col. Charles H. Tompkins. Massachusetts Light, 1st Battery (A), Capt. William H. McCartney New York Liuht, 1st Batterv, Capt. Andrew Cowan. New York Light, 3d Battery, Capt. William A. Harn. 1st Rhode Island Liuht, Battery C, Capt. Richard Waterman. 1st Rhode Island Light, Battery G, Capt. George W. Adams. 2d United States, Batterv D, Lieut. Edward B. Williston. 2d United States, Battery G, Lieut. John H. Butler. 5th United States, Battery F, Lieut. Leonard Martin. ♦No First Brigade iu division. ttiuiiiding wngoii train at Westminster, and not engaged in the battle. Pcuusjilnniin (it Vnlhjshuni. 140 i:li:vi:ntii army corps.* Maj.-CJen. Oliveu U. IIowauu. GKNKUAL IlEADQAinKKS. 1st Imliaiia Cavalry, Companies I and K , Capt. Abrain Sliaira. 8tli New York Infantry (one company) , Jaciit. Hermann Foerster FIKST DIVISION. Bri{,'.-Gen. Fkancis C. Barlow. Bris.-Geu. Auki.hekt Amks. Second lirlfjudc. Brig. -Gen. Adelbeut Ames. Col. Andrew \j. Harris. 17th Connecticut : Lieut. -Col. Douglas Fowler. Maj. Allen G. Brady. 25th Ohio : Lieut. -Col. Jeremiah Wil- liams. Capt. Nathaniel J. >Linning. Lieut. William Malonoy. Lieut. Israel White. 75th Ohio: Col. Andrew L. Harris. Capt. George B. Fox. 107th Ohio: Col. Seraphim Meyer. Capt. John M. Lutz. First Jirigadc. Col. Leopold von Gilsa. 41sl New Y'orU (nine companies), Lieut. -Col. Detleo von Eiusiedel . 54th New York : Maj. Stephen Kovacs. Lieut. Ernest Both [V]. GSth New York, Col. Gotthilf Bourry . 153d Pennsylvania, Frueauff. Maj. John Bri First BrUjade. Col. Charles K. Coster 134th New York, Lieut. -Col. Allan H. Jackson. 154th New York, Lieut. -Col. D. B. Allen . 27th Pennsylvania, Lieut. -Col. Lo- rcnz Cantador. 73d Pennsylvania, Capt. D. F. Kelley . second division. Gen. Adoi.ph von Stein weiir. Second Brigade. Col. Orland Smith. ood Massachusetts, Col. Adin B. Underwood . loGth New York, Col. James Wood, Jr. 55th Ohio, Col. Charles B. Gam- bee. 73d Ohio, Lieut. -Col. Richard Long. Maj First Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Alex. Schimmelfennig. George von Amsherg. Illinois, Lieut. -Col. Edward S. Col. 82d Salomon. 45th New Y'ork : Col. George von Amsberg. Lieut. -Col. Adolphus Dobke. 157th New York, Col. Philip P. Brown, Jr. 61st Ohio, Col. Stephen J. Mc- Groarty. 74th Pennsylvania : Col. Adolph von Hartung Lieut. -Col. Alex, von Mitzel. Capt. Gustav Schleiter. Capt. Henry Krauseneck. T1III4D division. -Gen. Carl Schukz. Second Brigade. Col. W. Krzyzanowski. 58th New York : Lieut. -Col. August Otto. Capt. Emil Koonig. 119th New York : Col. John T. Lockraan. Lieut. -Col. Ed w a r d Floyd. 82d Ohio: Col. James S. Robinson. Lieut-Col. David Thomson 75th Pennsylvania: Col. Francis Mahler. Maj. August Ledig. 2Gth Wisconsin : Lieut. -Col. Hans Boobel. Capt. John W. Fuchs. F. •During the interval hetwcc-n the death of General Reynolds and the arrival of Gen- eral Hancock, on the afternoon of July 1, all the troops on the field of battle were com- manded by General Howard, General Schurz taking command of tiie Eleventh Corps and Gonernl Schlmiuelfcnnig of the Third Division. 11 150 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. ARTILLERY BRIGADE. Maj. Thomas W. Osborn. 1st New York Light, Battery I, Capt. Michael Weidrich. New York Li?ht, 13th Battery, Lieut. William Wheeler. 1st Ohio Light, Battery I, Capt. Hubert Dilger. 1st Ohio Liuht, Battery K, Capt. Lewis Heckman. 4th United States, Battery G: Lieut. Bayard Wilkeson. Lieut. Eugene A. Brancroft. TWELFTH ARMY CORPS. Maj. -Gen. Henry W. Slocum.* Brig. -Gen. Alpiieus S. Williams. provost guard. 10th Maine (four companies), Capt. John D. Beardsley. FIRST DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. Alpheus S. Williams. Col. Brig. -Gen. Thomas H First Brigade. Archibald L. McDougall 5th Connecticut, Col. Warron W. Packer. 20th Connecticut, Lieut. Col. Wil- liam B. Wooster. 3d Maryland, Col. Joseph M. Sudsburg. 123d New York : Lieut. -Col. James C. Rogers. Capt. Adolphus H. Tanner. 145th New York, Col. E. Livingston Price. 46th Pennsylvania, Col. James L. Self ridge. RUGER. Second Briyade.-f Brig. -Gen. Henry H. Lockwood. 1st Maryland, Potomac, Home Brigade, Col. WiUiam P. Maulsby . 1st Maryland, Eastern Shore, Col. James Wallace. 150th New York, Col. John H. Ketcham . Third Brifjude. Brig. -Gen. Tiio^fAS H. RuoER. Col. Silas Colgrove. 27th Iildiana : Col. Silas Colgrove. Li out. -Col. John R. Fesh-r. 2d Massachusetts: Lieut. -Col. Charles R. Mudge. Maj. Charles F. Morse. 13th New Jersey, Col. Ezra A. Carman. l()7th Now York, Col. Nirom M. Crane. 3d Wisconsin, Col. William Hawley. •Exercised couimand of the right wing of the army during a part of the battle. tUnassigned during progress of battle; afterward attached to First Division as Second Brigade. The command theretofore known as the Second (or Jackson's) Brigade had previously been consolidated with the First Brigade. ' Pc)))isi/]va)ii(i at (icfti/sbiir;/. 151 SIXO.M) DIVISION . Brii;.-(i('ii. JoiiN W. Gkahy First liriyudc. Col. CiiAKi.ES Candy. nth Ohio, Col. John H. Patrick. 7tli Ohio, Col. William R. Creigh- tou. 29th Ohio : Capt. Wilbur F. Stevens. Capt. lOdward Hayes. 66th Ohio, Lieut. -Col. Eugene Pow- ell. 2Sth Pcunsj'lvania, Capt. John Flynn. ItTtli Ponn.sylvania (eight com- paiiios) , Lieut. -Col. Ario Pardee, Jr. Second lirit/ade. Col. Gkorgb a. Cohiia-M, Jr. Brig. -(Jen. Tiio.mas L. Kane. Col. George A. Cohham, Jr. 29th Pennsylvania, Col. William Kitkard.s, Jr. 109th Pennsylvania, Capt. F. L. (iiniher. 111th Pennsvlvania : Lieut. -Col. Thos. M. Walker. Col. George A. Cobham, Jr. Lieut. -Col. Thos. M. Walker. Third Brigade. Brig. -Gen. George S. Greene. 60th New York, Col. Abel Godard. 7Sth New York, Lieut. -Col. Herbert von 102d New York : Col. James C. Lane. Capt. Lewis K. Stegmau. IHTth New York, Col. David Ireland. 149th New York: Col. Henry A. Baruum. Lieut. -Col. Charles B. Randall. Ilamuiersteiu . ARTILLERY BRIGADE. Lieut. Edward D. Muiilenrerg. 1st New York Light, P.attery M, Lieut. Charles E. Wiuegar. Penii.svlvania Light, Battery E, Lieut. Charles A. At\v<'ll. 4th United States, Battery F, Lieut. Sylvanus T. Rngg. 5th United States, Battery K, Lieut. David H. Kinzie. CAVALRY CORPS. Maj.-Gen. Alfred Pleasonton. FIRST DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. John Buford. First Brigade. ' Col. Williaji Gamble. Sth Illinois, Maj. John L. Bever-l idge. 12th Illinois ( four cos .) Col . G. H 3d Indiana (six cos.) Chapman ' Sth New York, Lieut. -Col. WU- liam L. Markell. ' Second Brigade. Col. TnoMAS C. Devin. 6th New York, Maj. W. E. Beards- ley. 0th New York, Col. AVilliam Sack- ett. 17th Pennsylvania, Col. J. II. Kel- logg. . 3d West Virginia (two companies) , Capt. Seymour B. Conger. Reserve Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Wesley Merritt. 6th Pennsvlvania, Maj. James H. Ilaseltine. 1st United States, Capt. Richard S. C. Lord. 2d United States, Capt. T. F. Kodenboiigh. nth United States, Capt. Julius W. Mason. 6th United States : Maj. Samuel H. Starr. Lieut. Louis H. Carpenter. T.ieut. Nicholas Nolan. Capt. Ira W. Clatlin. 152 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. SECOND DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. David McM. Gregg. Hcadquartars Guard. 1st Ohio, Coinpauj- A, Capt. Noah Jones. I Second Brigade. % Col. Pen NOCK Huey. First Brigade. Col. John B. McIntosh. 1st Maryland (eleven companies), 2d New York, Lieut. -Col. Otto Harhaus. 4th New York, Lieut. -Col. Augus- tus Pruyu. 0th Ohio (ten companies), Maj. William Stedman. 8th Pennsylvania, Capt. William A. Corrie. Lieut. -Col. Jas. M. Deems Purnell (Maryland) Legion, Com- pany A, Capt. Robert E. Duvall. 1st Massachusetts,* Lieut. -Col. Gree- ly S. Curtis. 1st New Jersey, Maj. M. H. Beau- mont. 1st Pennsylvania, Col. John P. Tay- lor. 3d Pennsylvania, Lieut. -Col. E. S. Jones. r!d Pennsylvania Heavy Artillery, Section Battery H,t Capt. I W. D. Rank. Third Brigade. Col. J. Irvin Gregg. 1st Maine (ten companies), Lieut. -Col. Charles H. Smith. 10th New York, INIajor M. Henry Avery. 4th Pennsylvania, Lieut-Col. Wm. E. Doster. 16th Pennsylvania, Lieut. -Col. John K. Robison. THIRD division. Brig. -Gen. Judson Kilpatrick. Headquarters Guard. 1st Ohio, Company C, Capt. Samuel N. Stanford. First Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Elon J. Farnsworth. Col. Nathaniel P. Richmond. 5th New York, Maj. John Ham- mond. Second Brigade. Brig. -Gen. George A. Custer . 1st Michigan, Col. Charles H. Town. 5th Michigan, Col. Russell A. Alger. 6th Michigan, Col. George Gray. ISth Pennsylvania, Lieut. -Col. Wil- ! 7th Michigan (ten companies), Col. Ham P. Brinton. William D. Mann. 1st Vermont, Lieut. -Col. Addison W . Preston . 1st West Virginia (ten companies) ; Col. Nathaniel P. Richmond. Maj. Charles E. Capehart. horse artillery. First Bngad0. Capt. James M. Robertson. 9th Michigan Battery, Capt. Jabez J. Daniels. 6th New York Battery, Capt. Joseph W. Martin. United States, Batteries B and L. Lieut. Edward Heaton. United States, Battery M, liiout. A. C. M. Pennington, Jr. 4th United States, Battery E, Lieut. Samuel S. lOlder. I 2d 2d Second Brigade. Capt. John C. Tidball. 1st United States, Batteries E and G, Capt. Alanson M. Randol. 1st United States, Battery K, Capt. William M. Graham. 2d United States, Batterv A, Lieut. John H. Calef. 2d Uuit.-d States, Battery C,§ Lieut. William D. Fuller. •Served with the Sixth .\rmy Corps and on the right flank. tServing as light artiUory. t.\t Westminster, etc., and not engaged in the battle. §With Huey's Cavalry Brigade, and not engaged in battle. /*cnnsi/lr(ini(i (it (i('tfi/sl)iiri/. 153 Airrii,i.i;KV hkskuvk. Brig. -Gen. Roheut (). Tyi.er. Capt. James M. Rorertbon. II citihltnirlcru fl imrd . (1 M.issnclmsi'tts Tiifnntry , ( 'uinpiiny C, Capt.' Jo.siah C. Fuller. Second Volunteer Brigade. Capt. Elijah D. Taft. 1st Connecticut Heavy, Battery B,t Capt. Albert F. Brooker 1st Connecticut Heavy, Battery M,+ Capt. Franklin A. Pratt. K, I.ifut. Ji)hn G. TurnbuU. Connecticut I-isht, 2(1 Battery, Capt. Uli rnitcMi St.iti\s, Battery C, Lieut. John W. Sterling. lOvan Thomas. New York IJu'ht, Hth Battery, Capt. r)th United States, Battery C, Lieut. Elijah I). Taft. (Julian V. Weir. First Regular Brigade. Capt. Dunbar R. Ransom 1st United States, Battery H: Lieut. Chandler P. Eakin. Lieut. IMiilip I). Mason. ;'.d United State.s. Batteries F and First Volunteer Brigade. Lieut. -Col. Freeman McGilvery Thiid Volunteer Brigade. Capt. James F. Huntington, Massachusetts Light, 5th Battery New Hampshire Light, 1st Battery, (El,* Capt. Charles A. Phillips. Capt. Frederick IVL Edgell Massachusetts I>i-ht, t)th Battery: l.st Ohio Light, Battery H, Lieut. Capt. Jchn Bigelow. George W. Norton. I-ieut. Richard S. Milton. t 1st Pennsylvania Light Batteries F New York Licht. loth Batterv, and G, Capt. R. Bruce Rick- Capt. Patrick Hart. etts. Pennsylvania Liuht, P.atteries C and West Virginia Light, Battery C, F, Capt. James Thompson. Capt. Wallace Hill. Fourth Volunteer Brigade. Capt. Robert H. Fitzhugh. Maine Lisht. 0th Batterv (F) , Lieut. Edwin B. Dow. >raryl:nid Liglit. Battery A, Capt. James H. Rigby. New Jersey Light, 1st P>attery, Lieut. xYugustin N. Parsons. 1st New York I^isht, Battery G, Capt. Nelson Ames. 1st New York Light, Battery K,t Capt. Robert H. Fitzhugh. Train Guard. 4th New Jersey Infantry (seven companies), Maj. Charles Ewing. •lOth Now Yoi-k battery attached. t\ot encaijod. tKleventli .New York battery attached. 154 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. KETURN OF CASUALTIES IN THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC, COMMANDED BY MAJ.-GEN. GEORGE G. MEADE, U. S. ARMY, AT THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA, JULY 1-3, 1863.* Command. CAPTnBED OB Missing. GP3NERAI. HEAnQUARTERS. Staff, FIRST ARMY CORPS. Maj.-Gen. John F. Ketxoi.iis. Maj.-Gen. Abner Doubleday. Maj.-Gen. John Newton. GBNEItAI. IIBAnQUARTEnS, Staff 1st Maine Cavalry, Company, I , FIRST DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. James S. Waiiswoktii. First Brigade Brig. -Gen. Solomon Meuedith. Col. William W. Roiiinson. Staff 19th Inrliana, . 24th Mifliigan, 3d Wisconsin, 6th Wisfonsin, 7th Wisconsin, Total First Brigade, Second Jlrigade. Brig. -Gen. I-y.sandeii Cutler. 7th Indiana 7Gth New Yorli, 84th New Vorl< i I4th Militia), 95th Nc?w York 147th New 'b'ork 56th Pennsylvania, Total Second Brigade, Total First Pivision SECOND DIVISIO.N, Brig. -Gen. John C. Robinson. Staff. 280 121 197 144 109 95 5 U6 99 54 135 56 465 1,131 13 4 46 3 83 5 47 22 1 , 51 249 1 ; 45 92 1 54 1 210 363 233 16S 178 1,153 10 234 217 115 296 130 1,002 2,155 ♦Also includes losses in skirmishes, Jnly 4. Pennsylvania at Gcttyshiirt/. 155 Killed. Wounded. CAPTURED OR M188INO. COMUAMD. 4) c ■3 c a 3 "3 a 00 s -3 c Ed a to ii -1; First Brigade. Prig. -Gen. Gabriel n. Taui.. Col. Samoei. H. Leonakd. Col. AniiiAN U. Root. Col. Kir HARD Coulter. Col. Peteh T,y[.e, Col. Richard Coulter. Staff 2 2 2 21 2 i 7 7 12 U 1 11 1 5 4 6 10 2 8 1 54 73 .S2 81 12 48 2 U 3 8 10 6 1 153 98 167 82 ""'92 5 ICtli M.nino 232 1S"> 91th New Vork 24'. IWth New York 194 15 165 Total First Bricnde, 49 36 321 40 593 1,041 Second Brigade. Brig.-C.cn. HEM;r Baxter. Staff ". 3 4 10 5 4 7 7 3 9 6 3 3 31 "45 15 27 46 52 42 227 1 3 3 4 1 ""59 58 73 60 47 39 338 931 1 lift S3(l Now Vork (Hth Militia) 82 97th New Vork, la's 117 SSth t'onnsylvanin, 110 93 Total Second Brigade 7 33 12 64S Total Second Division 9 S2 68 54« 52 1,690 THIRD DIVISION. Brig.-Gen. Thomas A. Rowley. MnJ.-Gen. AnxER DounT,Er>AY. Statf 1 1 First Brigade. Col. Chapman Biddle. Brig.-Gen. Thomas A. Rowley. Col. Chapman Biddle. 3 i s 1 1 t ' 4 "■'32 12 10 49 1 15 3 11 9 ""96 101 U7 202 i 1 2 4 8 """'4 4 1 8 1 II ....„ 60 68 71 222 91 107 1 73 271 1 80th New York (f»th Militia) 17rt 179 211 337 Total First Brigade 103 41 516 896 Second Brigade. Col. Roy Stone. Col. l.ANOHORNE WiSTER. Col. lOiiMiNK L. Dana. l-tSd PennsTlvnnIa 20 53 33 11 14 10 1 130 158 143 430 149th Pennsylvania 33); 2B4 Total Second Brigade 106 8S IK« ■ •Transferred on afternoon of July 1 from the Second to the First Brigade. after July 1 are reported witli the Inttor brigade. Ita losaea .-.n Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. C'APTnr.ED OR Missing. Third Jirigade. Brig.-Gon. George J. Stannaud, Col. FitANCis V. Randall. Staff 13th V'ormont, 14fh Vermont IGth Vermont Total Third Brigade, Total Third Division, ARTILLERY BRIGADE. Col. Charles S. Wainwrigiit. Maine Light, 2d Jiattery (B) Maine Lisht, Eth Battery (E) 1st New Yoik Light Battery L,* .. 1st Pennsylvania Light, Battery B, 4tU United States, Battery B, Total Artillery Brigade, Total First Army Corps, SECOND ARMY CORPS. Maj.-Gen. Winfibld S. Hancock, P.rig.-Gen. John GrunoN. GENERAL HEADQUARTERS. Staff 6th New York Cavalry, Couiiianios D and K FIRST division. P.rig.-Gen. .ToiiN C. Caldwell. First Brigade, Col. Edward E. Cp.os.s. Col. H. BOTi) McKeen. StaCf 5th New Hampshire, filst New York Slst Pennsylvania, l+Sth Pennsylvania Total First Brigade, Second Brigade, Col. Patrick Kelly. 28th Mnssaehnsetts, G3d New York, ... fiilth New York, ... .SSth New York, ... llCith Pennsylvania, Total Second Brigade, 44 3 2 1 1 3 1 2 99 66 97 262, 1,206 16 18 11 14 8 29 SO 2,96=9 S3 3 ""49 50 44 95 238 56 9 13 16 11 i i 106 2 2 10 123 21 10? 1 I 119 32 j 351 525 '• 2,103 18 7 I 23 1 i 17 12 3 j 31; 11 lOS 2,079 6,058 1 80 62 62 125 100 23 2-. 2S 'Battery E, 1st New York Artillery attached. /'ciuisijlvdiiia (it (!Ia\vare (>4th New York , . . 53il Pennsylvania, It.'th Pennsylvania, Total Fourth Brigade, Total First Division, SECOND DIVISION. Brig.-Geu. John Gibbon. Brig.-Geu. William Harrow. First Brigade. Brig. -Gen. William Harrow. Col. Francis E. Heath. Staff 19th Maine 15th MassEchusetts 1st Miuuesota," 82d New York (2d MiKtia), Total First Brigade, Seccnid Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Alexanukr S. Weui:. 01»th Ponns.vlvania, 71st Prnnsylviinirt, 72fl Pcniisyhania, lOtith Poniisylvania, Total Second Brigade, . Third Brigade, Col. Norman J. Hall. 19th Massachusetts, 20th Massachusetts, 7th Michigan 42d New York, .. 59th New York, .. Total Third Brigade, 3 2 5 S 23 26 , 24; 136 18 209 4 7 7 11 ; 9 19 54 57 56 60 246 38 82 798 3 1 11 8 14 12 "159 89 159 120 46 527 8 3 7 9 72, 55 ' 139 45 Sll 52 i 86 *1 49 2B 21 9 8 3 6 S 29 268 1 203 14S D24 192 768 137 9S 192 64 127 6'> 74 SI 3T7 •2d Company Minnesota Sharpshooters attached. 158 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. ^ Captured Killed, WOUNUED. OR Missing. Command. 2 c a a a a 0) 2 •o » ■a L< ^ a fa a Q a 6 c o H o a o ca 1st Company Massachusetts Sharpshoot- ers, Total Second Division, THlltD DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. Albx.4NI)er Hays. First Brigade. Col. Samuel S. CAnuoi.L. 14th Indiana 4th Ohio Sth Ohio, 7th West Virginia, Total First Brigade, . Second Brigade. Col. Thomas A. S.mtth. I.,ieut.-Col. FnA.NCis E. PiEKf'E. 14th Connecticut, 1st Delaware 12th New Jersey, 10th New York (battalion), lOSth New York Total Second Brigade Th ird Brigade. Col. George L. Willabd. Col. Eliaicim Sherrill. Lieut. Col. James M. Bull. 39th New York, Ulth New York, 125th New York, 126th New York, Total Third Brigade, Total Third Division, ARTILLEIIY BnlGADE. Capt. John G. Hazard. 1st New York Light, Batterq B,* . 1st Rhode Island Lisht, T!fltter.v A, 1st Rliode Island Light, Battery B, 1st ITnited States, Battery I tth fnited States, Battery A Total Artillery Brigade, Total Second Army Corps, 2 25 319 6 3 1 1 17 5 3 35 10 i 9 2 21 2 3 13 G 1,097 6 22 16 73 40 151 42 44 79 4 76 i 245 1 77 169 98 172 516 912 1 15 27 18 23 31 114 2,924 13 8 95 1,647 " ' ■ ■ '-5 31 31 1 102 1 47 7 211 4 6fi 12 77 9 115 6 102 ffi 366 95 ii 249 9 139 10 23.1 33 714 65 1,291 26 1 32 • 2 28 25 38 3 149 365 4,369 • •Transferred from Artillery Reserve, July 1; 14tU New York Battery attached. Pennsylvunid at Ucltysbin'g. 159 TllIUI) AKMV CUKl'S. Maj.-Gpn. Dambl E. Sickles. Maj.-Oen. David B. Birney, FIltST DIVISION. Maj.-Gen. David. B. B'iinei. Biig.-Geu. J. H. Hobakt Ward. First Brigade. Brig.-Gon. Chaui.ks K. Giuham, Col. Andrew H. Tiitin. Staff 57th Pi'unsylvaim, 63d Penn^ylvaiiin. GStli IVnusylvania, 106th rcnnsylvanin, 114th I't'iinsylvairla, 141st Pennsylvani."!, Total First Brigade Second Brigade. Brig. -Gen. J. H. IIohart Ward. Col. Hiram Berdan. Staff. l»th 3d 4th S6th 134th 99th 1st 2d iQdiana Maine, M^ine New York, New York Pennsyh ania, United States Sharpshooters; United Stales Sharpshooters, Total Second Brigade Third Brigade, Col. P. Heois de Trobriani). 17th Maine 3<1 Miehijian 5th Michigan 40th New York, . llOtb Ponn.sylvania, Total Third Brigade. Total I'irst Division, second divisio.n. Brig. -Gen. Andrew A. TIcmi'IIkkv; Staff Captured on Missing. 26 117 101 85 97 105 57 66 48 54 77 33 19 3 115 31 15 i 132 155 149 1 156 122 141 66 90 110 49 43 135 4S 109 150 63 2,001 100 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Captubed Killed. Wounded. OB Missing. Command. d c a a a aJ £ "O u ttJ ^ •a g, Q "3 e a e 7^ < o H o S o ta First Brigade. Bi'ig.-Geu. Joseph B. ("auk. Staff 1st Massachusetts, 11th Massachusetts, 16th Massachusetts 12th New Hampshire Ilth New Jersey, 2Gth Pennsylvania, Total First Brigade Second Brigade. Col. William R. Bp.ewstei!. Staff 70th New 71st New 72<1 New 73d New 74tU New 130th New York, York, York. York. York, York, Total Second Brigade, Third Brigade. Col. Geokge C. Bukltng. 2d New Ilamps-hire, .Tth New Jersey, 6th New Jersey, 7th New Jersey. 8th New Jersey, 15th Pennsylvan'a, .. Total Third Brigade Total Second Division, ARTILLERY BRIOADE. Capt. George E. Randolph. Capt. A. Judson Clark. New Jersey I,ight, 2d Battery, 1st New York Light, Battery D, .. New York I>ight, 4th Batterv 1st Rhode Island I^ight, Batterv K, 4th United States, Battery K Total Artillery Brigade Total Third Army Corps, 75 89 49 65 U5 166 8 ■ So 6 ' 62 7 i 73 11 ' 92 144 523 119 60 29 76 31 IS MC 1,422 2,778 2 120 129 81 92 153 213 117 91 114 Ifi"^ 89 193 94 41 114 47 24 613 214 2,092 20 18 1 13 1 i 30 4 25 17 575 106 4,211 Pennsylriniid at (Iclti/slnir;/. 161 ~- Captdrbd Killed. Wounded. OB MlBBINO. CoMM^^'D. c it d ■a 6 a c e a o a o a o K KIFTH AKMY CORPS. Mnj.Gen. Geohoe Sykks. FIRST DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. .J.vme.s Baiines. First Brigade. Col. WlI.I.IAM S. TlI.TON. I'^tli M.Tssnchusetts, 2l'(I Mjissaclmsotts, 1st Michigan U*^tli I'euu.sylvanin Total First Brigade Second Brigade, Col. Jacob B. Sweitzer. 9tli Massachusetts, 32d Massachusetts 4th Michigan, 62rt Peiiusylvanla, Total Second Brigade, Third Brigade. Col. Strong Vi.ncent. Col. James C. Rice. Staff 20th Maine 16th Michigan 44th New York ySd Penns.vlvani.i, Total Third Brigade Total First DiviKion, SECOND division. Brig. -Gen. Romeyn B. Firat Brigade, "Col. Hannii:\l Dat. Staff 3d t'nifed States, 4th T'nitod States, f.th I'nltod States, 12th T'nitod Stati>s, 14th United Slates, Total First Brigade, 7 SO 166 175 1 125 60 111 55 S32 1 73 40 44 92 133 162 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Command. Captured OR Missing. Second Brigade, Col. Sidney Bdrbank. 2d TInited States, 7th Uiii'ed StiUes, lOtli United States, nth United States, 17th United States, Total Second Bridage, Third Brigade, Brig. -Gen. Stephen H. Weed. Col. Kenner Garrard. Staff 140th New York. .. 146th New York, .. 91st Pennsylvania. Ij.'jth Pennsylvania, Total Third Brigade, Total Second Division THIRD DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. Samckl W. Cra« rouii. First Brigade. Col. AViLLiAM McCandi.ess, 1st Pennsylvania Reserves, 2d Pennsylvania Reserves, r.th Penns^ylvania Reserves 13th Pennsylvania Reserves (1st Rifles), Total First Brigade Third Brigade, Col. Joseph W. Fisher. ."ith Pennsylvania Reserves, 9th Pennsylvania Reserves, 10th Pennsylvania Reserves, nth Pennsylvania Reserves, 12th Pennsylvania Reserves, Total Third Brigade, Total Third Division artillery brigade. Capt. Augustus P. Martin. Massachusetts Light, 3d Battery (C), 1st Ohio Light, Battery L .'.til T'nited States, Battery D .">th United States, Battery I Total Artillery Brigade Am1)ulance Corps Total Fifth Army Corps, 51 42 27 85 105 22 14 U 131 746 63 2 2 1 ao 67 59 51 13) 150 1 133 1,020 2 5 5 41 2 65 210 6 2 13 22 43 1 ' 2,187 Prnnsi/lninia at Crffi/fiburfi. 163 Killed. Wounded rOMMAN.i. c o ,-t •*« CQ 7] o s a e a o a a w Captuked on Missing. d a> a a M e s tc o K ^' SIXTH AIJMY COUPS. Mnj. C;ou. .lOH.N Sedgwick. * FIRST DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. Hobatio CS. Wri.;ht. First ISrigade, Brig. -Gen. Alfled T. A. Tokrf.ut, 2d New .Jersey .W New .Tersey, 6 2 3 ,, 6 2 3 Total First Brigade 11 11 Second .lirigadc. Brig. -Gen. Joseph J. Rartlett. 121st New York, i 2 1 1 2 2 1 Total Second Brigade, 1 4 6 Third Brigade, Brig. -Gen. Damd .\. Uhssell. 119tli Pennsylvania 2 2 Total Third Brigade 2 2 Total First Division, 1 17 18 SECOND DIVISION, Brig. -Gen. Albion P. Howe. Second Brigade. Col. Lewis A. Grant. 4th Vermont ; 1 1 Total Second Brigade ^=^ .^^^ 1 1 Brig. -Gen. Thomas H. Neii.l. 7th Maine 43d New York i i 6 i i i 2 6 5 49th .\ew York, ii 1 2 Total Third Brigade, 15 1 1 12 =^= 2 16 104 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Captured Killed. Wou-\i'i;n. OR Missing. Command. d j4 c a g a 6 m ■o M w ■J B 7J e a e a bj) < o H o a o S THIRD DIVISION. Maj.-Gen. John Newton. Brig. -Gen. Frank Wheaton. • First Brigade. Brig. Gen, Alexander Shaler. 65th New York 4 5 9 67th New York, i 1 122d New York i 10 2 1 30 12 2 44 14 S2u Pennsylvania 6 6 Total First Brigade, 1 14 3 53 3 74 Second Brigade. Col. Henry L. Eustis. 7th Massaohusetts 6 6 10th Massachusetts 1 3 5 9 ::.::: 2 1 1 25 5 19 1 47 2d Rhode Island 7 Total Second Brigade, 3 2 39 25 69 Third Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Frank Wheaton. Col. David J. Nevin. 1 1 1 10 9 12 93a Pennsylvania 10 98th Pennsylvania, 2 9 11 1 3 16 20 Total Third Brigade 2 7 44 53 Total Third Division, 1 19 12 136 2S 136 artilt,krt brigade. Col. Charles H. Tompkins. Now York Light, 1st Battery 4 . 2 6 12 Total Artillery Brigade, 4 2 6 12 Total Sixth Army Corps, 2 £6 24 171 30 243 ELEVENTH AltMY CORPS. Moj.-Gen. Oiivrit 0. Howard. general headquarters. Staff 1 1 1st Indiana Cavalry, Companies I and K 3 3 FIRST DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. Francis C. Barlow. Brig. -Gen. Aueluert Ames. Staff, 1 1 — Pcimsylvania at iicttyshnni. 165 CaI'VUIIKD Killed. Wounded. OK M::jSi.Nu. Com MA NO. c d 01 c = a l* •a t Qi 0) e 3 6 a Q c o K o H o H Fiiat Brigade, Col. I.KOIOI.I) VO.V GlI.SA. Staff, 41st 54th 6Sth 153d New York, New York, New York. P< niis.vlviiiiia. 17th r.th 7r.th 107th Total First Brigade Second Brigade, Brig. -Gen. AnEi.nERT A.mes. Col. Andrew L. Haiskis. Connecticut Ohio Ohio Ohio Total Second Brigade, Total First Division. .SECOND DIVISIO.N. Brig. -Gen. Adolpii von Rtei.nw eiiu. Staff First Brigade, Col. CirAIiI.ES R. COSTEU. 134th New York 154th New York, 27th Pennsylvania, 73d Pennsylvania, Total First Brigade, Second Brigade. Col. Orland Smith. 33d Massachusetts, 136th New York, .. 55th Ohio 73(1 Ohio Total Second Brigade, . Total Second Division, THIRD DIVISION. Ma j. -Gen. Cabi. Scuuitz. First Brigade, Brig. -Gen. A. Scuimmelfennig. Col. George von Amberg. 82d Illinois, 46th New York 137th New York Cist Ohio 74th Pennsylvania Total First Brigade 12 1 11 S 50 2 75 7 2 45 4 44 102 7 4 59 2 66 13S 22 7 135 46 211 i 50 21 289 6 157 527 2 18 4 77 2 94 197 1 8 5 95 3 72 184 2 14 7 67 4 92 186 23 8 103 77 211 5 63 24 342 9 335 778 9 113 46 631 15 492 1,306 1 1 1 41 4 147 2 57 252 1 1 20 9 169 200 4 3 26 1 75 111 7 27 34 3 53 S 220 12 301 597 7 38 45 17 i 88 1 2 io;t 6 1 30 1 11 49 21 3 117 4 145 51 5 Z!Z 2 17 348 3 IM 14 493 14 318 946 4 1 18 4 85 112 11 1 34 14 1&4 224 4 23 8 158 6 108 307 2 4 6 30 2 10 54 - 8 4 36 a 58 UO S 50 20 276 28 425 807 = ■ = 160 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. CaI'TUKED OB MlSSl-NG. Second Brigade, Col. W. IvRZYZANOWSKI. 5Stb New York 119tli New York, S2d Ohio, 75th Fennsylvania 26th Wisconsin, Total Second Brigade Total Third Division ARTILLERY BRIGADE. Maj. Thomas W. Oseokn. 1st New York Light, Battery I, New Y'ork Lisht. 3d Battery 1st Ohio IJ^'ht, Battery I, 1st Ohio Light, Battery K, 4th United States Battery G Total Artillery Brigade Total Eleventh Array Corps, .. TWELFTH ARMY CORPS. Ma.1.-Gen. Henrt W. Slocdm. Brig.-Gen. Alpheus S. Williams. t'IKST DIVISION. Brig.-Gen. ALpnEf.'.«5 S. Williams. Brig. -(Jen. Thomas H. Ruoku. First Brigade. Col. Archibald L. McDougall. 5th Connecticut ?X)th Connecticut, 3d Maryland 123d New York 145tJi New York , 46th Pennsylvania Total First Brigade Second Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Henry H. Lockwood. 1st Maryland, Potomac Home Brigade, 1st Maryland, Eastern Shore, 150th New Y'ork, . Total Second Brigade Third Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Thomas II. Ruger. Col. Silas Colsguove. 27th Indiana 2d Massachusetts 13th New Jersey, 107th New York, 3d Wisconsin Total Third Brigade Total First Division, 1 2] 13 9 4 6* 13 14 71 84 118 IS 31 5 11 12 63 36 20 113 56 3 2 ..... i 352 2 2 4.7 90 6 — 3 120 50 1,802 i 1 1 1 2 22 6 9 8 8 4 56 3 3 77 IS 23 118 8 8 3 i ao 27 78 101 17 2 7 203 62 1,448 20 140 181 Ul 217 201 669 626 1,476 13 11 13 15 17 69 3,801 104 25 45 1 110 4 136 21 2 10 5 279 1 30 633 Pcnusi/Jrdiiid ill (lil t i/sbiir;/. 1(17 Capvurkd KiLLKI). WOCNIIED. nil Missing. Com MA Ml. a c a c s ^ r> •3 •a e m a e c g 3 tc o a o a o ~ SECOND DIVISION. Bri^.-Crn. John W. Okaky. First Brigadr. Col. Charles Candy. 5th Ohio 7th Ohio 29th Ohio 6fith Ohio I'Stli Ponnsylvania 14Tth Pennsylvania, Total First Brigade, Sncond Brigade, Col. GEOnGE A. COBIIAM, Jit. Brig. Gen. Thomas L. Ka.ne. Col. Geokge a. Cobham, Jr. 29th Pennsylvania 109th Pennsylvania, 111th Pennsylvania, Total Second Hrigade Third Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Georce S. Gree.ne. 60th New York, "Sth New York, 102d New York, 137th New York, 149th New York, Total Third Brigade, Total Second Division, ARTILLERY BRIGADE. Lieut. Edward D. Mdiilenbbug. Pennsylvania Light, Batterv E, 4th United States. Batterv "K 5th United States, Battery K Total Artillery Brigade, Total Twelfth Army Corps, . CAVAIJtY CORPS Maj.-Gen. Alfred Pleasonton. FIRST division. Brig. -Gen. Joii.v Buford. First Brigade, Col. William Gamble. Sth IlUnots 12th Illinois (fcnr companies), 3d Indiana (six companies). .. Sth New York Total First Brigade, 52 30 29 137 55 1,082 1G8 Pennsylvania at Gcttyshnrg. Captured on Missi.N';. Second Brigade. Col. Thomas C. Devin. 6th New York, 9th New York 17th Pennfi.vlvania , 3d West Virginia (two comianies), Total Second Brigade, Reserve Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Wesley Mebritt. 6th Pennsylvania, . 1st United States, . 2d United States, . 5th United State.s, . Gth United States,* Total Reserve Brigade Total First Division, SECOND DIVISION. Brig. -Gen. David McM. Gregg. First Brigade, Col. John B. McIntosh. 1st Maryland 1st New .Terse.v, 1st Penns.vlvauia, 3d Pennsylvania 3 1 3 1 6 5 13 6 27 12 Total First Brigade, ... Third Brigade. Col. J. Irvin Gregg. 1st Maine 10th New York 4th Pennsylvania 16th Pennsylvania Total Third Brigade. Total Second Division, THIRD division. Brig. -Gen. Judson Kii.patrick. First Brigade. Brig. -Gen. Elon J. Farnsworth Col. Nathaniel P. Richmond. Staff 5th New York IStU Pennsylvania, 1st Vermont, 1st West Virginia Total First Brigade •Jjosses occurred at Fairfield, Pa, 2 5 6 1 206 13 15 17 5 242 10 1 19 4 4 4 i 12 1 31 1 Pennsylvania at Gcttysharg. IGl) Command, Second Brigade. Brig. -Gen. GEOUor: A. Custeh, 1st Michigan 5tli Michigan, 6tli Midiigan, 7th Michigan Total Second Brigade Total Tliird Division HORSE ARTILLEKV. First Brigade. Capt. James M. Robertson. 9th Michigan 6th New Yorli IM United States, Battery M. .. 4th United States, Battery K. Total I'^irst Brigade, Second Brigade, Capt. John C. Tidbai.l. 1st United States, Battery K. 2d United States, Battery A, Total Second Brigade, Total Cavalry Corps, WOUNUED. Captijisei) OR Ml.SSINO. 56 28 100 artii.i.f;ky resebvk Brig. -Gen. Uobeut 0. Tyler. Capt. James M. Robertson, | First Regular Brigade. Capt. DuNBAu R. Ranso.m. j 1st United States, Battery H, 3d United States, Batteries F and K, .. 1 4th United States, Battery C, 5th United States, Battery C, Total First Regular Brigade 1 First Volunteer Brigade. Lieut. -Col. Freeman McGilvery. Massachusetts Light, uth Battery (K),* Massachusetts Light, Sth Battery, 1 New York Light, loth Battery, Pennsylvania Light, Batteries C and F, | 134 162 1 4 1 5 ! xl 39 13 315 8 399 1 i 2 7 14 16 12 49 1 1 4 2 Total First Volunteer Brigade, 16 16 2 11 18 3 61 5 — : — *10th New York Battery attached, whose loss, here included, was 2 men killed and 3 wounded. 170 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Captured Killed. Wounded. OK Mlssi.nc. Command. c o a a a o ■a 13 •a 2 0/ ^ '£, tn a a B c e ■a w o a '-' ^ - H Second Volunteer lirigadc. Capt. Elijah D. Taft. • Connecticut Ught, 2(1 Battery New York Liglit, 5tli Hattery, i 3 2 5 2 2 5 3 Total Second Volunteei- Brigade, .. ^^^_ 1 8 Third Volunteer Brigade. Capt. James P. Huntington. New Hampshire I-iijlit, 1st Battery, ... 2 G 2 1 3 5 13 2 3 3 7 1st Pennsyhania Light, Batteries F 23 West Virginia Light, Battery C 4 Total Third Volunteer Brigade, — 10 1 23 3 37 Fourth Volunteer Brigade. Capt. ROEBIiT H. FiTZHUOH. Maine Light. 6th Battery fF), 2 13 7 7 7 13 9 1st New Yorl{ Light, Battery G, 1st New York Light. Battery K,* 7 7 Total Fourth Volunteer Brigade, .. 2 34 36 ■2 41 15 172 12 242 KECAPITUL.\TION. General Headtjuartors First Army Corps, Second Army Cordis Third Army Corjis Fifth Army Corpi--, Sixth Army Corps Eleventh Army Corijs Twelfth Army Corps, Cavalry Corps Artillery Heserve, Total Army of tlie Potomac *llth New York Battery attached. 42 624 68 731 50 &43 28 337 2 25 33 336 IS 1S6 S6 2 41 21C 2.909 262 270 251 12S 14 120 43 39 15 1,14-5 2,969 2,924 2,778 1,482 171 1,802 769 315 172 13,384 S3 '2," 079 13 365 14 575 1 210 30 62 1,448 2 64 8 399 12 lf3 5,1S2 4 6,069 4,369 4,211 2,187 242 3, SOI l.SOJ 852 242 23,049 Pennsylvania at (Icllijshiir;/. 171 GENERAL SUMAIARY OF CASUALTIES IN THE UNION FORCES DURING THE GETTYSBURG CAMPAIGN, JUNE 3-AUGUST 1, 1S63. Ca PTC 11 ED KlI.I.KD. WOUNDKD. OH Missing. Location. c o a c s e E 11 T3 R in e c B ■^ E C o a o ^ o Ncai' I'ayc'tteville. Va., Juno .3 Franklin's Crossing oi' Deep Uun, Va., .luno 5-13 Hriindy .Station (Kleetwood) and Bever- ly l'"ord, Va., June 9 Stevensburg, Va., June 9, Berryville, \'a., June 13, Opoquon Creek, \'a., June 13, Bunker Hill, W. Va., June 13 Winchester, Va., June 13-15, Berryville, Va.. Juno 14 Martinsburg, W. \'a., June 14, Williamsport, Md., June 15 Aldie, Va., June 17, Catoctin Creek and Point of Uocks, Md., June 17, Middleburg, Va., June 17-1!', Jliddlebnrg, Va., June 19, UpperviUe, Va., June 21 Near Gainesville, Va., June 21, Thorough fa re Oap and Hay Market, Va., June 21-25, Near -Mdie, Va., Juno 22, (ireenenstle, Pa., June 22 McCunni'U.-ilMHL', Pa., June 25 Near (;ett.\ sburg. Juno 26 Near Fairfax Court House, Va., June 27, Near Kockville, Md., June 2S Wrightsville,. Pa., June 2S Muddy Branch, Md., June 29, Westminster, Md.. June 29, Hanover, Pa., June 30 Sporting HilJ, near Harrisburg, Pa., June 30 : Carlisle, Pa.. July 1 Gettysburg, Pa., July 1-4 Fairfield Gap, Pa., July 4, Monterey Gap, Pa., July 4, Kinmitsburg, Md., July 4, Cunningham's Cross Itoads, Pa., July 5, Near (Ireencastle. Pa., July 5, Near Fairfield, Pa., July 5 Sniithbnrg, Md., July 5 Hagerstown, Md.. July C Williamsport, Md., July 6 llownsville, Md., July 7 Funkstown, Md.. July S Boonsborough, Md., July ?, Near Williainsi-ort, Md., July 8, Benovola or Beaver Creek, Md., July 9, Funkstown, Md.. July 10-13 Hagerstown. Md., Julv 10-13 Jones' Cross Koads, Md-.. Julv 10-1?, .. Ashby's Gap. Va., July 12 Near Williamsport, Md., Julv 14 Falling Waters, Md., July 14 Near Harper's Forrv, W. Va., July 14, Halltown, W. Va.. July 1.1 Shepherdstown, W. Va., July l.i, 3,909 1,145 1 I 2 1 3 3 45 356 13 %6 12 13 2 2 15 33 1 54 336 144 3,856 1 2 67 7 12 13,384 4 9 24 42| 117 I 1 49 4 17 70 i 27 1 7 6 2 2 5,182 13 29 67 1 18 ■■■■4 1S4 66 "56 18 5 5 i 12 2 7 5 30 24 2 57 S37 29 4 17 97 4,443 3 159 3 305 2170 99 209 9 1 10 176 73 19 23 7 49 215 12 23,049 21 43 68 3 19 7 10 2^3 120 2 6"> 80 4 25 97 49 11 17 7 121 25 5 1 172 Pennsylmniu at Getty s})urg. GENERAL SUMMARY OF CASUALTIES— Continued. Captcred KlLI,ED. Wounded. 01! Missing. Location. S e 3 K •= K •? ti 3 7^ S a e 7^ ^ a o " o H Shepheidstown, W. Va., July 16, Snicker's Gap, Va., July 17 Hedgesville and Martinsbuig, W. Va., July l.S-19 Ashby's Gap, Va., July 20, Berry's Ferry, Va., July 20, Manassas Gap, Va., July 21-22, Chester Gap, Va., July 21-22 Wappin^ Heights, Manassas Gap, Va., July 23 Near Gaines' Cross Roads, Va., July 23, Near Snicker's Gap, Va., July 23 Battle Mountain, near Newby's Cross Koads, Va., July 24 Brandy Station, Va., August 1 Miscellaneous affairs, en route Total, s 8 64 3 24 1 1 ■■"■9 1 4 3 3 13 8 3 3 8 16 17 2 81 1 1 5 3 4 21 2 1 10 11 94 B 8 14 20 226] 3,355 1,294 15,282 407 11,418 104 4 6 29 25 108 6 4 30 145 242 STRENGTH AND LOSSES OF PENNSYLVANIA TROOPS AT GETTYSBURG. Captured Dead. Wounded. AND MKS.SINC ORGANIZArnN. u. a a a d t ^ a Infantry. Eleventh Twenty-third Twenty-sixth Twenty-seventh, .... Twenty-eiglith, Twonty-nintli, Thirtieth Thirty-first Thirty-fourtli, Thirtv-liftli Thirty-eighth Thirty-nintli Fortieth Forty-first, Forty -second, Forty-sixth Fortv-niiitli Fifty-third Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh Sixty-first, Sixty -second Sixty-third Sixty-eight, 292 10 62 60 &3S 1 1 13 365 1 29 10 168 7 324 2 7 3 23 1 75 303 6 1 19 2 485 2 13 43 8 444 13 3 30 2r73 9 2 25 1 334 2 3S0 3 1 20 377 5 420 2 3 392 1 4 3 33 320 1 1 349 2 9 8 27 2 262 2 1 9 1 318 135 7 11 56 6 252 i 16 5 5S 1 54 207 2 12 9 34 3 55 4O0 1 1 426 4 24 10 97 40 296 1 3 26 4 1 3S3 3 10 9 117 13 132 14 213 111 28 66 46 37 2 24 5 5 41 2 48 13 "so 130 115 2 175 34 152 I'ciinsijlvania at Gcttyshurf/. 173 STRENGTH AND I.OSSES OF PENNSYLVANIA TROOPS AT GETTYSBURG— Continued . Wou.NUi;i>. Captored on Missing. ;^ ! I 5 Sixty-ninth, Sovonty-first, Scvcntj-sccond, Sevciity-tliirfi, Si'vciitv-fourtli, Sovonty-flftb EiKlitvfnsr Kiglitvsocond Eighty-third Eighty-fourth Eighty-eighth, Ninetieth Ninety-first Ninety-third, Ninety-fifth Ninety-sixth Ninety-eighth, Ninety-ninth, One Hiinilreii ami Seeond Oni' Hundied and Fifth One Hnndud and Sixtli One Hundred and Se\entli One Hundred and Ninll) One Hundred and Tenth, ^ One Hundied and Eleventh One Hundred and Fourteneth, . One Hundred and Fifteenth, One Hundred and Sixteenth, ... One Hundred and E shteenth, One Hundred and Nineteenth, . One Hundred and T\\enty-first, One Hundred and Thirty-ninth, One Hundred .and F^itieth, One Huidred and Foity-first. Oni^ Hundred and Forty-seeond, One Hundred and Fortv-third, . One Hundred and Forty-fifth, . One Hundred and Forty-seventh, One Hundred and Forty-eishth, One Hundred and Fortv-ninth, One Hundred and Fiftieth, One Hundred and Fifty-first, One Hundred and Fiftv-thivd One Hundred and Fifty-fifth. Twenty-sixth Emergeney, Cavalry. First, ., Seeond Third Fourth Sixth Eighth Sixteenth. Seventeenth, Eighteenth, ArtiUrrji. B. First F, First O. First, C, Independent. E, Independent, F, Independent n, Third ♦Effective force of Battery F included. 174 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF THE UNION LOSSES AT GETTYSBURG BY STATES, ETC. Kil. -ED. WonXDED. OR Missing. C 1 ~ ^ tJ , T! SS c e 7^ G "^ B o '^ ^ ^ Connecticut Delaware Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, ... Michigan Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York Pennsylvania, Ohio Rhode Island Vermont, AVest Virginia, .. Wisconsin, Staff, Ambulance Corps, U. S. Regulars, . U. S. Volunteeis, Total 4 41 IS 3 18 17 9 5 5 91 33 7 112 36 ; 1 4 2S ■t 1 18 182 79 18 182 57 3 47 14 5 62 27 S 72 43| 76 902 29'4 53 692 2S3 15 124 GO 1 13 4 1 57 13 2 9 4 5 100 40 5 2 34 12 1.59 ■■"62 1 10 S 246 1 2,90a 1,145 165 98 29 351 570 103 939 596 159 236 448 3,713 3,469 709 74 285 43 473 I 11 1 860 52 13.3S4 2 110 1 24 4 92 4 68 15 287 4 8 311 4 2.54 1 1 1 38 1 63 69 l,6i)2 45 1,339 12 351 5 59 1 8 8 180 3 1 6 275 1 20 1S3 5,182 340 161 139 552 1,02:7 140 1,537 1,111 223 36S 634 6,746 5,891 1,271 97 415 67 806 56 1 1,374 92 23,049 CEREMONIES AT THE DEDICATION REGIMENTAL MONUMENTS (175) (\^:G^ DEDICATION OF .MONUMENT 11'^^" REGIMENT INFANTRY* September 3, 1890 ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN HENRY B. PIl'EIi MY Comrades: — T late civil war : member of tha Comrades: — To have taken part on the side of the Union in thi- is of much importance, and to have participated ns a that grand old regiment, the Eleventh Pennsylvania Vol- unteers, may be coimtcd an honorable distinction. The part it played in the most sanguinary national tragedy of the century, was both important and conspicuous. ]*]utering the services at the beginning, and continuing to the end, participating in the first and last battles of the war, its very name became the synonym of patriotism and bravery. Early in April, 1861, the old Eleventh was organized as a three months' regiment under the first call for troops by the President, and saw ?ome I)ractical campaigning during that period, participating in the batt'e of Falling Waters, Va., which was the first infantry fight of the war. It was the first Pennsylvania regiment to reorganize for three years' ser- vice. On July 15th, 1861, by official order of the Secretary of War, its ser- vices as a regimental organization were formally accepted, and it again entered on a career as one of the most faithful of all faithful military or- ganizations placed in the field by our native State in those dark and bloody days. Passing over all its subsequent campaigns preceding the summer of 1863, the old Eleventh, then a part of Baxter's Brigade, Second Division, First Army Corps, left Falmouth, Va., on the 12th of June, reached the state line, by way of Warrenton Junction, Herndon and Guilford Stations, Barnesville and Emmitsburg, camping at Wolford's farm on the evening of June 30th, reaching the vicinity of Gettysburg at 11 o'clock in the fore- noon of the next day, and were saluted by a sound of cannonading in the direction of Chambersburg. For the first time a northern army seeking a hostile foe stood inside of the boundaries of our grand old Commonwealth, and the harvest-gilded valleys of the Keystone state were reverberating the deep-throated echoes of a foeman's cannon. The sons of hardy New England, of the Empire state and the west, were thrilled with intense and consuming interest of the hour, as much so as if the contest about to be waged was on the threshold of their own homes, liut the old Eleventh, the heroes of a score of bloody conflicts, breathed their native air, trod their native vales, stretched their line of living valor along the crests of their native hills and battled for the homes of thedr childhood. Never did men more eagerly seek the field of carnage. •Organized at Harrisburg and Westmoreland Co., December 11. 1S61, to serve three years. On tbe expiration of its term of service the original members (except veterans) were ii;i'sterod out and the organization composed of veterans and recruits retained in service until July 1, 1865, when it was mustered out. (177) 178 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. The summer sun poured down its tropic heat. The distant ridges were filled with a brave and desperate foe, and whether Virginia or Pennsylvania was to be the seat of war was an open question to be decided by tjie bloody arbitrament of arms. Never had two great armies been so matched. It was a field which, like Marathon and Hastings and Waterloo, bound up in its issues the destinies of a thousand years of national life. Like IMarmont's race with the Eiidish across the Spanish peninsula, the two opposing hosts had bent every collec- tive energy to the task of reaching an advantageous position for a northern campaign. But across the path of the rebel chieftain, Meade had swung his magnificent army. Lee, careful, sleepless, tireless in his patient vigi- lance, mustering the pride of the Confderate hosts under his banner, strove to transplant from the bleeding bosom of his native state to the hills and valleys of Pennsylvania, the eating canker of civil war. Every man com- prehended with more or less clearness the importance of the hour, and the veterans of our own gallant regiment fought only as brave and deter- mined men can fight in defense of their homes and their country. As they neared the position to which they were subsequently to be as- signed, crossing the field and the meadow, they heard for the first time of the death of the gallant Reynolds. Having gone forward in advance of the troops to select position for the impending conflict, he was killed by a rebel bullet before the fight began. No braver, truer man ever fell in the line of duty on the brink of a great battle. Had it been his to lead the brave men, whom he had so often led, in that bloody fray that followed, those who knew him best knew full well how to the laurels already gathered he would have added imperishable fame. By noon the regiment had taken its position on Seminary Ridge, south of the railroad cut. Scarcely had it halted in this position when General Baxter received an order from General Robinson to send forward two regiments to check the enemy who was ad- vancing on the north side of the railroad cut. The Eleventh Pennsylvania and the Ninety-seventh New York, Colonel Coulter in command, were selected for that purpose. Crossing the railroad and moving forward and to the right about a quarter of a mile, they met the advancing foe, held him in check, and prevented him from occupying the position he was so eager to obtain. It was at this point that the old Eleventh Pennsylvania and the Ninety- seventh New York charged and captured part of a brigade of North Caro- linians. But the work so well done on this part of the field, and whi'.^h was so essential to the final success of the Union arms in this great con- test, was not accomplished without sacrifice. A list of the casualties will give some idea of the fierceness of the conflict. About 3 o'clock your speaker was wounded and retired to the hospital in the town of Gettysburg. Soon after this our troops fell back to Cemetery Hill, south of the town, where they participated, with the main body of the army, in the contest of the second and third days. Those of you who were present and took part in the first day's conflict will pardon me when I mention the personal bravery of that grand old man. Colonel Wheelock, of the Ninety-seventh New York. He was taken prisoner on the afternoon PouL-ii/Ji-diiid at (icttijshuni. 179 of tlio first diiy, but iniulc his escape a few clays later. Siirviviii;,' the perils i)f the battletiehl, he has since joined the inuumorable hosts who have pitched their tents upon the eternal plains on the other side. While occupying a hotly-contested position on Cemetery Hill, Colonel Coulter was ordered to the command of the First Brigade. Not wishing to be separated from his regiment, he secured its transfer also, and during the remaining part of the battle, the old Eleventh was temporarily a p.-nt of the First Brigade. Q^he shifting changes of battle found our regiment near the Emmitshurg road supporting the Union batteries in the evening. About noon the next day, July 2d, it was relieved by the division of General Hays and fell back to replenish its exhausted cartridge boxes. In the evening the brigade was thrown farther to the left and suffered heavily from the enemy's guns. About 10 o'clock at night it was engaged, in conjunction with a part of the Eleventh Corps, in front of Cemetery Ridge, and was only relieved at day-break on the morning of the od. In the afternoon the regiment gal- lantly supported the celebrated battery of Captain Ricketts on Cemetery Hill. Here Colonel Coulter was severely wounded, but remained in com- mand. Though decimated and fatigued by the constant vigil of a three days' engagement, the old Eleventh, in support of the Second Corps, par- ticipated in the desparate struggle in which the Confederate chieftain was finally overthrown in his last despairing effort to win the ensanguined field. Immediately after the failure of Pickett, in his last tremendous charge, Lee began to withdraw his forces and the field of Gettysburg was won. Years have elapsed since these hills reverberated to the thunder of the enemy's cannon. The soil, once red with patriot blood, grows rank with tangled grasses, or is starred with summer flowers. The eternal hills, lift- ing themselves toward the heavens, silent as though the spirit of solitude sat enthroned upon their changeless summits, give no sign of the red cur- rent of battle that, twenty-seven years ago, rolled around their rocky bases. But the level of the western sun touches with softened ray the grnnite slabs and monumental shafts that mark the final resting places of the ashes into which has mouldered the brave hot hearts who fought, who fell, who died that the Union might be preserved. They were willing to wash out the footprints of the rebel foe with their blood, and count it a joy to die. But, ah! Not here alone lie our fallen comrades of the old Eleventh. Along the bloody trail of war, at Bull Run, whose dual disaster twice made the nation tremble, on Antietam's historic field, on Fredericksburg's luckless plains, in the Wilderness, at Petersburg, on Virginia's hills and pl.iins, wherever raged the deadly fight — there may be found the graves of our brave and honored dead. It would be a grateful task to recall the in- stances of personal heroism and bravery in which the history of the regi- ment abounds, but time would fail to speak of it all, and it would seem in- vidious to speak of some. I may be, I know I shall be, pardoned if I tarry here, in passing, to say, that while the records of this Commonwealth endure, Pennsylvania will do well to honor the name of General Richard Coulter. Wounded again and again, with indomitable courage and en- durance, he led the old Eleventh gallantly in all its famous fights. Cool, ISO Pennsylvania at Getty shurg. brave, even-nerved, well-balanced, self-poised, he possessed the highest in- stincts of a true soldier, united with the manliest attributes of a true man. Long may he live to meet and mingle with the survivors of that gallant band he so often led to victory and never deserted in defeat. But I cannot if I would, I would not if I could, forget the uncrowned and unsung hero of the knapsack and the musket. History furnishes no parallel to the gallantry of our citizen soldiery, the courage and grit of the American volunteer. The perils and hardships of war were his. His were the lonely vigils of the picket beat, and the dangers by flood and field. Upon his brave heart and conscience lay the political destiny of this great republic. The nation placed her life in his hands. And on a hundred bloody battlefields he proved himself sublimely worthy of the trust. Among this unselfish host of brave, true men, none were more brave and true than the .soldiers of the old Eleventh. Their bones lie on every great battle- field of the east, and the records of southern prisons show the names of some of our gallant boys, not permitted to share a soldier's death on the field of battle, but dying like some ancient martyr in love with his God and his country. To him, to the common soldier, to our dead comrades, whether here beneath his native soil he sleeps, or under the softer .«kies of the sunny south-land, we turn in grateful, tearful remembrance. We rear these monuments to their honor and in their memory. But in the unborn ages yet to come, long after we too shall have passed away, a saved and grateful republic will rear in history and everlasting memorial to their devotion and their valor, more changeless than brass and more enduring than marble, and that shall exist as long as these voiceless hills bear testi- mony to Gettysburg's fateful day ; and among the immortal names pre- served as thosa the nation delights to honor in all the future, a high and honored place shall be forever held by the old "Eleventh Pennsylvania Vol- unteers." And now, to the memory of our fallen companion of the old "Eleventh Pennsylvania Volunteers," the heroic dead who lost their lives in the ser- vice of their country, and to the regiment in whose ranks they fell, this monument is solemnly dedicated by their surviving comrades. May its silent presence teach more eloquently than language can express, the lessons of patriotism and self-sacrificing devotion to country. DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 22P REGIMENT INFANTRY* Septembeu 12, 1SS9 ADDRESS OF COLONEL JOHN F. GLENN COlNfRADES:— We assemble here to-day to unveil a statue that sur- mounts our monument, that we had the honor to dedicate some two years ago, and it is with feelings of gratification that I extend con- gratulations to the Twenty-third Pennsylvania Volunteers and comrades ♦Organizod at I'liiliuipliihia, August 31, 1S61, to serve tlirep years. The original members (except veterans) were mustered out September S, 1864, and tlie veterans and recruits transferred to the 82nd Penna. Pennsi/lraiiid at Gettyshnrf). 1>>1 (if Shiilcr's BrifTixli'. for such a largo attendant of their survivors on this lialhiwcd ground and in tlicir name I most heartily thank our friends who liave honored the occasion by tlieir presence. To the State of Pennsyl- vania we extend our grateful thanks for the gift which I now unveil, that of a Biruey Zouave— and in saying this I assure the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania of the gratitude of all the survivors of the Twenty third Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry. ADDItlOSS (»K PIUV.VTH WIMJAM J. WIIAY. MK. Secretary and Members of the (Jettysburg Bs Association:— On August 6, 1886, the Survivors' Twenty-third Kegiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, Battlefield Memorial Association of the and their friends, had the honor to dedicate and turn oviH- to the keeping of your Asso- ciation this tablet, that marks the position of the Twenty-third during the actiiui of .luly o, 18(33. On that occasion. General Alexander Slialer, as orator of the day, after reviewing the action of Gettysburg, and history of the regiment, in most eloquent words, generously paid tribute to the com- mand as its brigade commander. Since that time the State of Pennsylvania has appropriated for the erec- tion of monuments the sum of .$1,500 to each Pcnnsjdvania conunand that ])articipated in the action. Our association appointed the required com- mittee — selected a design of a statue to surmount their tablet. The Penn- sylvania State Commission on Gettysburg Monuments having approved of our selection, the work was ordered done, and we are here to-day to transfer to the keeping of the Battlefield Memorial Association, this granite woi-k of art, just unveiled — a statue of a "Birney Zouave." You will observe the figure represents a youthful soldier, who, advancing up the slope at trail arms, grasps his musket impulsively as he suddenly receives the fire of the enemy. It is quite a departure from the dress parade figure usually cut in granite, and while not regulation as to the position of the musket, it is realistic — thus showing the soldier under fire — and one more appro- priate on a battlefield. The surroundings being woodland — the figure is supported by a Itroken tree, apparently struck by a piece of shell — all details as to uniform and accoutrements have been brought artistically out, and in placing this work of art in the keeping of your Association, we deem it a pleasant duty we owe to thank you for the faithful manner in which you have labored for the preservation of this field — and in the name of the survivors of the Twenty-third Pennsylvania Volunteer In- fantry, we gratefully acknowledge the gift of the State of Pennsylvania, who so generously appropriated the funds for its erection. 13 182 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. ORATION OF BREVET :\IAJOR-GENERAL ALEXANDER SHALER. COMRADES:— We meet to-day upon historic ground. Some of us have met here before. Twentj--five years ago, within a few days, two great armies confronted each other in this vicinity. One in de- fense of state rights, the other in defense of United States rights. One assaulted the Union, the other defended it. I shall not attempt to describe in full the great battle which ensued, relate the causes which led to it, nor discuss the effect upon the country of the. resulting victory of the Union army, but content myself with a brief synopis of the part taken in this and other battles by that portion of the Sixth Corps in which we had the honor of serving. Let us go back to the autumn of 1861. The "tocsin of war had sounded." The cry to arms had reverberated throughout the land. Fathers, hus- bands, brothers and sons turned their backs upon their children, their wives, their parents and all that was dearest to them on earth, and rushed impulsively to the defense of the Union. To show how spontaneous and how general this outburst of patriotism was, it may be stated that be- tween July 27, 1861, and October 27 (a period of three months), there were added to th'e army then organizing, about 120,000 men; and that in De- cember following there- were in the vicinity of Washington and in the Shenandoah Valley over 200,000 men in battle array. AVashingtou and its suburbs was one grand encampment. Troops from every loyal state were being marshaled and prepared 'for active service. General George B. McCellan, whom we familiarly called "Little Mac," owing to his success in West Virginia, in the summer of 1861, had been called to Washington to organize and command an army for the double purpose of defending the Capital and of taking the field. As regiment after regiment arrived, they were organized into brigades and divisions without much reference to the states from which they came, and were encamped contiguous to each other. At Queen's Farm, on the Bladensburg road, just on the outskirts of the city, the Twenty-third Pennsylvania, Colonel Birney ; the Thirty-first Pennsylvania, which afterwards became the Eighty-second Pennsylvania, Colonel Williams; the Sixty-fifth New York, Colonel Cochrane, and the Sixty-seventh New York, Colonel Adams, were encamped, and formed what was known as Graham's Brigade, under the command of Brigadier-General Pike Graham, an officer formerly of the United States cavalry service. This brigade formed part of the division commanded by General Don Carlos Buell. As early as October, 1861, the organization of the army was practically completed, and from that time until April, 1862, when the Peninsular campaign was begun, were drilled and schooled in the practices of war. The monotonous routine of camp life was varied only by an occasional wild rumor of approaching rebels, and a reconnaissance of the surround- ing country. With the exception of a skirmish at Lewinsville, Virginia, just beyond Chain bridge, in which a part of the brigade (the Chasseur Regiment) was engaged, the troops had so far experienced only the drudgery and the Pennsylvania at Gettysburf/. 1S3 jollities of camp life. But this was ended iu the spriug of 1862, by the cry of "Ou to Richmond," when our brigade, with the rest of the army, took transports at Alexandria for Fortress Monroe. In the meantime the !:^ixty- first Pennsylvania, Colonel Rippey, had joined us. The campaign was begun with three corps of the army, to wit:— the Second, commanded by General Sumner; the Third, commanded by General Heintzelman, and the Fourth, commanded by General Keyes. Couch's Division, to which we were attached, belonged to Keyes' Corps. Ou'- ad- vance up the Peninsula was slow and tedious, although no enemy was seen until we reached Yorktown. Pending the seige of that place we were occupied iu watching Warwick river. The battle of Williamsburg followed the evacuation of Yorktown, and our brigade, after marching all day through a drizzling rain and mud ankle-deep, reached the battlefield iu time to support some of Hooker's troops in making their final charge. Before we had advanced far enough from Fortress Monroe to see the enemy. General Graham ^yas relieved from duty and General Wessells, also of the regular army, put in command of the brigade. General Wes- sells was in a short time succeeded by another regular officer, Genei'al Abercrorabie, who was with us at Fair Oaks, and retained the command until after the second battle of Bull Run, fought by General Pope. We crossed the Chickahominy at Bottom's bridge about the 25th of May, and advanced within five miles of Richmond, where, at Seven Pines and Fair Oaks, on the 31st of May, was fought the first important and severe battle of the campaign. In this battle the regiments of our brigade were separated. We were encamped along the Nine Mile road, extending from Seven Pines, on the Williamsburg pike, to Fair Oaks Station, on the Rich- mond and York River railroad. Owing to the suddenness of the enemy's attack, the Twenty-third Penn- sylvania and the Sixty-seventh New York were thrown forward, while marching towards Fair Oaks on the Nine Mile road, into a dense' pine grove on the left, through which the enemy was advancing. They succcded, with the Thirty-first Pennsylvania and Sixty -first Pennsylvania, already in line, in checking that advance, but were subsequently forced to retire with very heavy losses. In .this onslaught the Sixty-first Pennsj'lvania lost its colonel (Rippey) and was badly cut up. Their resolute stand, however, en- abled the rest of the brigade to reach Fair Oaks Station, where, after holding position a short time, the Thirty-first Pennsylvania and Sixty-first Pennsylvania having previously taken position in advance of their camps near the railroad station,, they were witlidrawu under the personal saper- vision of General Couch, the division commander, with a section of Brady's Battery, the Sixty-second New York, Colonel Riker, and the Seventh Massa- chusetts, Colonel Russell, along the road leading to the Grape Vine bridge, so far as the Adams House. The Thirty-first Pennsylvania, the Sixty-fifth New York and two com- panies of the Sixty-first Pennsylvania, which had been on the picket Mne, were posted in the order named on the right of the road facing and on the edge of a dense woods, while the Sixty-second New York, Brady's guns and the Seventh Massachusetts were posted in the order named on the 184 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. left of the road, on a knoll overlooking an open field and flanking the woods along which the first-named regiments had been formed. The enemy's advance through the piece of woods was resolute and per- sistent. Regiment after regiment was brought forward to drive us back and get on the flank of Brady's guns, but without avail. The dogged ten- acity with which the men of the Thirty-first Pennsylvania, the Chasseurs and the Sixty-first Pennsylvania clung to their position, outmarched the fierceness of the enemy's assault. Despairing of success in their efforts to flank the artillery, the ?nemy essayed a direct attack, but with no better success, although a few dead rebels were found within twenty-yards of the muzzles of the guns. This attack was made about two o'clock in the afternoon, and so sudden that the bridges commander. General Abercrombie, was caught in the v.-oods between the lines and received a .slight wound in the face. Between four and five o'clock in the leading brigade of Sedgwick's Division and Kirby's Battery of twelve-pounders, which had crossed the Chickahominy on the Grape Vine bridge, arrived on the field. The infantry were posted on the right and in the rear of our line, and the artillery on the knoll beside Brady's two guns. Other infantry were put in position on the left of the artillery, and connection made with the troops which had been forced back by the impetuosity of the assault. Fresh troops were advanced by the enemy and the battle raged until dark, but not an inch of ground was yielded. The conduct of our men in this battle furnishes an example of the benefits derived from proper instruction and rigid discipline. Under guidance of their oflicers, they reserved their fire until the enemy could be seen through the thicket in front of them. As a result, a large proportion of the shots were effective. The Chasseur Regi- ment captured a battle flag and the next morning buried over one hxuidred rebels found in their front. The following day the brigade was again united and moved to an ad- vanced position. On the 26th of June the extreme right of our army at Mechanicsville was attacked by the rebels in force, and from that time until July 1st, when the battle of Malvern Hill was fought, we experiencfd all the trials and sufferings incident to a forced march of six days, without sleep, shelter or regular food. At Malvern Hill, our division, having been among the first to arrive, was naturally assigned the most important posi- tion. Three several times it was assailed by the rebels, who were repulsed with fearful loss. On the right of the line, held by Couch's Division, the Chasseur Regiment was at one time compelled to change front under fire, and did it with such wonderful coolness and precision as to command the admiration and the compliments of the brigade connnander. The six weeks encampment of the Army of the Potomac at Harrison's Ijanding, on the James river, its transfer to the city of Washington, the part it took in supporting Pope's army in the second battle of Bull Run, and its subsequent reorganization by General McCellan, furnish nothing of special note in reference to our brigade, except that Brigadier-General John Cochrane, who had been promoted from the colonelcy of Chasseur Regi- ment after the battle of Fair Oaks, was put in command of our brigade in the place of General Abercrombie, who had been assigned to duty at Pcnnsi/Ironid at G(ll!/sJ)iirf/. 185 Ccntrovillp, after Pope's ciiinpiiiKn, and Coueh's Division was transferred to the Sixth Corps, commanded by General Franklin. Ill tlie reorganization of the army, early in September, while on the march, the One Hundred and twenty-second New York regiment. Colonel Silas Titus, was added to our brigade, and we becami> the First F.rifiade, Third Division, Sixth Corps. After the defeat of Pope at Manassas, Lee boldly struck out northward, in tlie direction of Leesburg, necessitating great caution on the part of McCellan, who bad been again rcrlxilhj placed in command of the troops about Washington, embracing those designated as the Army of Virginia. The battlefield of Antietam was reached by our brigade early in the afternoon of the 17th of September, after a tramp through Pleasant A'alley and up to the t<)p of Maryland Heights, in search of the rebel General McLaws, on one of the hottest days and over the dustiest road we had ever marched. At Antietam we relieved that part of the line to the riglit of a corn field and immediately in front of Dunker Church. This line we occupied until the morning of the 19th, when our division was put in pursuit of the fleeing rebels, the rear guard of which we had a fight with, and drove across the river at Williamsport. McCellan's tardiness after the battle of Antietam caused much uneasi- ness and great dissatisfaction with the authorities at Washington, and resulted in his being relieved at Warren ton, and General Burnside being placed in command of the Army of the Potomac on the 9th of November, 18G2. Upon the reorganization of the army which followed. General Couch was assigned to the command of the Second Corps and General John Newton to the command of the Third Division, Sixth Corps. In the calamitous failure of Burnside's attack on Fredericksburg, De- cember 13th to 15th, the Sixth Corps, then in command of General W. F. Smith, popularly known as "Baldy Smith," formed a part of the Left Grand Division, commanded by General Franklin. We crossed the Rappahannock about three miles below the city, near the Bernard House, and supported General Meade in his attack upon the enemy's right, without serious lo.ss, although constantly under a heavy artillery fire. On the 20th of January following. General Burnside con- sidered that "the auspiciuous moment had arrived" and issued his orders for recrossing the Rappahannock at Banks' Ford. No sooner had the troops broken camp than the rain commenced to fall in torrents, and, after flound- ering around a whole day, they returned to camp at night, having .'dded nothing to our prestige or that of the commanding gciicial, and iiotliing to history, except the record of a "mud march." General Burnside's retirement from the command of the army soon fel- lowed, and General Hooker, already known as "Fighting Joe" for his gal- lant and persistent assaults upon the rebel earthworks at Williamsburg, on the Peninsula, and at South Mountain and Antietam, superseded him. Then followed another reorganization of the army, in which the Sixtv-tirst Pennsylvania was taken from our brigadi' and madi- a p.irt of the f-ight Brigade, organized for special purposes. 180 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. The resignation of General Cochrane, on the 1st of March, 1863, placed the speaker in command of the brigade. General Hooker's first field operation was an effort to crush the Army of Northern Virginia at Chan- cellorsville . It was a part of his plan to have Sedgwick, who now commanded the Sixth Corps, assault and carry the Heights of Fredericksburg, move out on the road to Chaucellorsville, and strike the rear of Lee's army while he. Hooker, engaged it in front. For that purpose the Sixth Corps crossed the Rappahannock below Fredericksburg, near the old Franklin crossing, on April 29th, and on the night of Saturday, May 2d, at la. m., commenced a flank march into Fredericksburg. Our brigade was honored with the advance and instructed to let nothing impede the march through the town, over the heights and out on the Chancellorsville road; an easy order for a general to give, but not easy of execution, in the presence of a wide-awake enemy, holding earthworks across your path, an effort to take which had already cost fifteen thousand lives. After driving in the outposts, in which the Chasseur Regiment, under the lamented Hamblin, showed conspicuous gallantry, losing many men and leaving Major Healy on the ground mortally wounded, as was sup- posed, we continued our march until the enemy's line of defenses at the foot of Marye's Heights was encountered, when, by an order of the divi- sion commander, the head of the column entered the city, leaving one of our regiments, the Twenty-third Pennsylvania, deployed in the open field facing the never-to-be-forgotten stone wall. When daylight appeared the men of the Twenty-third found themselves exposed to the enemy's fire, and for five long hours, without an opportunitj' to even make a cup of coffee, they maintained this harrassing position. About 10 o'clock Sunday morning the columns and deployed lines were formed by General Newton for storming the heights. The column on the extreme right was composed of the Sixty-first Pennsylvania and Forty-third New York, of the Light Brigade, under the command of Colonel Spear, and was supported by the Eighty-second Pennsylvania and the Sixty-seventh New York, of our bri- gade, under command of the speaker. The Twenty-third Pennsylvania formed a part of the deployed line on the left of the second column of attadv. The Chasseur Regiment and the One hundred and twenty-second New York were directed to follow with the rest of our division and join the brigade after the heights had been carried. Upon the opening of Newton's batteries both columns debouched from under cover, and the deployed lines advanced to the assault. Spear's column on the, right was enfiladed by batteries stationed in the road at the top of the hill and in the works on each side of the road; rifle-pits at the ba.se of the hill also confronted him. The column moved out on the double- quick, but the road was narrow and before the column had passed over half the distance it was literally swept away by the iron hail showered upon it. Colonel Spear fell mortally wounded. Major Kassett, with the Eighty-second Pennsylvania, found himself at the head of the column, and struggled manfully to carry his men forward, and finally, encouraged by the presence of their brigade commander with his two aides. Lieutenants Arm- strong and Johnson, rushed forward with the Sixty -seventh New York and I'oni.si/lrdiiid (if (ictti/.shur;/. 187 curried tin- licifflits. (•.iiituiinjr two piocos of the Washin;,'tou battery of artillfry, oiu- olliccr nnd ;i number of men. The Twenty-third Pennsyl- vania, in deployed line, with the Fifth Wisconsin, Sixth Maine and Thirty- first New York, moved gallantly to the charge. An eye-witness belonging to the Second Division, in speaking of this line, says, "Four more gallant regiments could not be found in the service. Leaving everything but guns and ammunition they started forward, encountering a shower of bullets, grape and canister as soon as they rose above a slight knoll. It was a noble spectable and filled our hearts with pride for our brave comrades." The brigade was subsequently united and marched out on the road to Chancellorsville. The enemy's occupation of Salem Heights stopped our ad- vance, and in the battle which ensued w(; took position in an open field to the right of the road, which was held until the evening of the 4th, when the whole corps recrossed the Rappahannock at Banks' Ford and returned to our old camps. Throughout this short campaign the conduct of the officers and men of our brigade was everything that could be desired: and it was through no fault of theirs or any other part of the Sixth Corps, that Hooker's first campaign came to such an inglorious end. Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville had so improved the morale of the rebel army which had been reinforced by two of Longstreet's division from the James river and a large number of conscripts from Richmond, that Lee determined upon an invasion of the North . This threw the Army of the Potomac on the defensive. So. on the 1.3th of June, Hooker broke up his camp on the Rappahannock and moved northward. The Sixth Corps had, on the 6th of that month, again crossed the river at the Bernard House, and for a week observed the movements of the rebels who occupied the defenses of Fredericksburg Heights, but recrossed and followed the main army on the 14th by forced marches until the vicinity of Washington was reached. The Potomac river was crossed at Edwards' Ferry on the 26th of June, and the march of the army directed on Frederick City. About this same time differences arose between General Halleck at Washington and General Hooker, in relation chiefly to the disposition of the forces at Harper's Ferry, and General Hooker asked to be relieved. General George G. Meade, then commanding the Fifth Corps, was immediately placed in command of the army. From Frederick City our corps marched to Manchester, which would have been the extreme right of the army if Meade's line of battle had been formed along Pipe creek, as some suppose he had intended. But events occurred which determined (icttysburg to be the ground upon which was to be fought the mightiest and most sanguinary battle of modern times. The operations of the First and Eleventh Corps on Seminary Ridge, where Reynolds lost his life, on the 1st of July, were important, in that they pre- vented the rebels from occupying the favorable ground upon which our army was subsequently formed for battle. On the night of the 1st of July our corps was at Manchester thirty-six miles away. At 9 o'clock in the evening we started for Gettysburg and did not halt for any length of time until we reached Rock creek which crosses the Baltimore pike about a mile from here. There we rested and made coffee. Resuming the march we moved to the base of Little Round 188 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Top, where the Fifth Corps was stemming the rebel current which had forced bade portions of the Third Corps. Two of our brigades were imme- diately thrown forward to the relief of the Fifth Corps, while the rest were placed in a line of reserve. Before leaving Manchester, our division commander. General Newton, took leave of us and went immediately to the front to assume command of the First Corps in the place of General Reynolds, who had been killed that morning, and General Wheaton, by virtue of his rank assumed command of this division. This march of the Sixth Corps, of thirty-six miles in seventeen hours on a sultry summer night and morning , i-'^ probably the most memorable one of the war. AVhen we consider the load which a soldier carries on the march, even in light marching order, the absence in the field of all com- forts which he enjoyed at home, and the peril to life and limb which con- stantly surrounds him, we cannot but admire the pluck and courage with which he undertakes the most difficult and perilous tasks and honor him for the sacrifices he makes. About sunrise on the morning of the 3d, our brigade was ordered to Culp's Hill to aid General Geary of the Twelfth Corps, in retaking the works on the extreme right, occupied by the enemy during the previous night. The seriousness of Longstreet's attack upon our left induced General Meade to order reinforcements from General Slocum, commanding on this part of the field, which necessitated the evacuation of a part of the line before established. These works were seized by the wily enemy, and at daylight our troops undertook to dislodge him and drive him back. Upon reporting to General Geary, our brigade was formed in the open field, just in rear of the line of defenses, in a column of battalions de- ployed. After a personal reconnaissance by General Geary and the brigade commander, the One Hundred and twenty-second New York, Colonel Titus commanding, was directed to relieve the One Hundred and eleventh Penn- sylvania, then occupying a position in the front line. This position they held for two hours and a half under a very severe fire, losing many in killed and wounded, and were then relieved by the Eighty-second Pennsyl- vania, Colonel Bassett. At 9.20 a. m., the Twenty-third Pennsylvania, Lieutenant-Colonel Glenn commanding, w-as placed in .position to support the front line. Three hours later five companies of this regiment, under a galling fire of musketry, were advanced into the breastworks and, after silencing the enemy's fire, sent out a line of skirmishers, which, however, were promptly r<'called, the enemy still being in line of battle in close prox- imity to our works. At 11 a. m. the Sixty-seventh New York, Colonel (]ross, marched into the breastworks from which the enemy wen- then fleeing, and succeeded in capturing about twenty prisoners. At 11. lo a. m., the Chasseur Regiment (Sixty-fifth New York), Colonel Hamblin, occupied a position in support of the Twenty-third Pennsylvania. About 1 p. m. all of our regiments were relieved by others belonging to the Twelfth Corps. Longstreet's attack upon our left, and Ewell's attack upon our right had both failed; and now a desperate attempt to pierce our center was to be made. As a prelude to the grand assault of Pickett's Division, one hun- dred and fifteen pieces of artillery opened their murderous fire upon our lines, and were responded to by about eighty of our own guns. With the Pennsylvania at Gcttyshiirf/. 189 order and steadiness of troops on parade, Pickett's lines moved out in view and commenced to advance across the open field to a point jnst south of the ("inu'terj- grounds marked by a clump of trees. No sooner was the piiint <•{ his attack made manifest, than every available Union battery was tiained upon his columns. The carnage which ensued was terril)le ; but on they came, alternately wavering, staggering, rallying and pressing for- ward, until the i-ebel General Armistead found himself pierced by a rifle- shot within our own lines, followed by a few hundred of the most fortunate and courageous of his men who became prisoners of war. It was while this was being enacted, that o>ir brigade was called from this position on the right, to traverse the field and reports to General Newton, commanding the First Corps, at the left center, near the point of Pickett's assiailt. After the repulse of this infantry charge, the rebel batteries kept up a tantalizing but irregular fire; and one of the last shots fired lost to the Twenty-third regiment one of its most promising young officers. Lieutenant Garsed. A solid shot literally tore him to pieces. Before darkness had shrouded the field, the roar of artillery and the rattling of musketry had ceased. The great battle of the war had been fought. The stillness of the night was broken only by the groans of the wounded and dying, and the rumbling of ammunition and commissary wagons. The losses in both armies amounted to about 50,000 men, equal to one-third of all the number engaged. The rebel army was now compelled to abandon all the hopes whicli its scheme of invasion had inspired; and bitter as the alternative was, its retreat was imperative. So, after spending the fourth day in burying the dead and caring for the wounded, it silently and sullenly retired from our front on the morning of the fifth, and the Sixth Corps was sent out on the Fairfield road in pursuit. Lee's rear guard was overtaken in a pass of the South Mountain range, but was not pursued beyond it. General Meade having determined to keep his army on the east side of that range. It crossed the Potomac at Harper's Ferry and Berlin, July 17th and 18th, and moved along the east of Blue Ridge, while Lee retreated up the Shen- andoah Valley, west of Blue Ridge, and finally encamped in the vicinity of Culpeper Court House. The Army of the Potomac went into camp about Warrenton, Virginia. In an address which I had the honor of delivering upon these grounds two years ago, on the occasion of the unveiling of the monument of the Twenty-third Pennsylvania Regiment, I took occasion to refer to an in- justice which had been unintentionally done us in the report of the battle by the army commander. As the remarks I then made in reference to the Twenty-third Regiment are ai)plicable to each and all of the regiments of our brigade, I quote them verhaiim. After speaking a word of praise in behalf of General Doubleday, of the First Corps, and General Sickles, of the Third Corps, for the services they rendered on the first and second days respectively, I say, "And while claiming this special recognition for them, I have a less pleasing, but to you a more important duty, to perform, and that is, to demand an official recognition of the services, in this battle, of the brigade to which you were attached. The student who in future years peruses the official reports and records in the War Department, will 190 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. there find recorded, over the signature of the commander of the Army of the Potomac, that in the battle of Gettysburg Wheaton's Brigade was ordered to the right, to aid in driving back the enemy and in retaking the works. In other words, the troops of Wheaton's Brigade were credited, in the official report of the. battle, with the service performed by your bri- gade. Upon learning of this error, I spoke to General Meade about it, at an army reunion, held in Boston nine years after the battle, and he prom- ised to have his report corrected. I spoke also to General Wheaton of the credit he had received at another's expense, and of the injustice done the regiments of the First Brigade. He promised that he would write to Genei'al Meade upon the subject, but I am not informed that either of the promises were fulfiilled. As our great lamented President (Lincoln) said, in commenting upon the battle. 'There was glory enough for all.' No excuse, therefore, can be given for withholding from any of the troops engaged the full measure of credit due them, much less should one organi- zation be glorified at the expense of another. In justice to the memory of those brave men whose heroic services you this day commemorate, and in justice to you who have been permitted to survive them, and to perform tnis act of soldiery love and friendship, 1 protest against tne wrong which has been done. I may be answered that it matters little, so far as the brigade is concerned, since the survivors have erected tablets upon one of the grounds they occupied in this battle. Is it of no consequence to the relatives and friends of those who have died for their country, to their comrades who have survived them, to the officers who commanded them, that the official reports are silent as to the services of the organiz:itiou with which they fought and died? Nay, more; that such reports should actually give to another organization credit for services which cost them so many lives? For years and perhaps ages to come, the archives of the war will be perused and studied by historians and military students in search of material with which to compile history or solve military problems ; aud must it be said to them, that the records are unreliable — that to ascer- tain the services of any particular organization of the army, a visit must be made to the battlefields, and the monuments and tablets consulted? Such a confession would be humiliating, but it must be made, so far as it relates to the services of the First Brigade, Third Division, Sixth Corps, in the battle of Gettysburg. And, if I am correctly informed, in reference to other organizations also. A greater value attaches, therefore, to the testimonials you this day dedicate, than you probably anticipated, for it corrects the record ; more than that, it stands alone as the only record accessible to all, that our brigade fought and suffered in this part of the field in the greatest battle of the war." On the 7th of November following, an advance movement was ordered, and the right wing of the army, composed of the Fifth and Sixth Corps under the command of General Sedgwick, was moved to a point on the river called Rappahannock Station, at which point the enemy occupied a series of earthworks on the north side of the river, consisting of two or three redoubts and a long line of rifle-pits or trenches. The approach to these works was over an open field, which could be swept by the enemy's guns for a considerable distance in every direction, and as the head of our Pennsylvania a( Gvltyshnri). 191 columns debouched from the woods to deploy iu line oi battle, they furuiyhed ■I splendid target for the rebel gunners' practice. The scene was grand beyond description. When the speaker entered the open held, the Fifth and part of the Sixth Corps were already in line of battle, with flags flying and bayonets glistening iu the sunlight of a beautiful autumn day, having the appearance of troops on dress parade rather than formed for deadly conflict. Like Humphreys' tactical movements of his division on the fivld of Gf.'ttys- burg, our brigade was closed up and, without halting, advanced and de- ployed in the position assigned it, having only the sound of the enemy's guns to keep step with. Without delay our brigade was ordered to drive in the rebel sharpshooters and secure the possession of a knoll in the right and front for the occupation of a battery. This was quickly done, and soon after the battery was established, a column of attack was formed from the Sixth Corps and put in command of General Russell. Colonel Upton led the column with his regiment, and made one of the most bril- liant and successful charges ever made upon any field. He not only cap- tured the whole line of works, but with it some sixteen hundred prisoners, six battle-flags and many pieces of artillery and small arms. His attacking column numbered only sixteen hundred. The services of our brigade as \Yell as those of Upton's troops, were made the subject of a complimentary order from corps headquarters. The next move of importance was Meade's effort to interpose his army between the two wings of Lee's army, and for that purpose directed the various corps to cross the Rapidan at different points, the Sixth at Jacobs' Mill Ford, which they did on the 27th of November. Our division was ordered to report to Genei'al Warren, to aid him iu outflaukinj;, if possible, the enemy's right. Sunday, November 29th, found us in what was then considered a favor- able position from which to attack, and orders were issued for Warren to do so at 8 o'clock next morning. But when morning came things were changed. Lee had entrenched himself in our front and planted batteries on our left. The flankers were outflanked, and Warren's heart failed him. As he told the speaker afterwards, "he had not the courage to attack." But he had the courage to sacrifie himself rather than his men. He as- sumed the responsibility of suspending the attack, and General Meade sub- sequently justified him. Thus ended the brief winter campaign of Mine Run and we returned to our old camps. During December, ISK^, while in camp at Brandy Station, the Govern- ment called upon the three-years men, two years of service having ex- pired, to re-enlist, for three years from that date or the war. This call was responded to by the men of our regiments, with remarkable unanimity and promptitude, nearly two-thirds in the aggregate voluntarily offering to continue their services until the last rebel laid down his arms. In January, 1864, our brigade was ordered to Sandusky, Ohio, to prevent an anticipated attempt ti> liberate the rebel officers confined on Johnson's Island, Sandusky Bay, and remained there until the 12th of April, 1864, when brigade headquarters and three regiments (the Sixty-fifth, Sixty- seventh and One Hundred and twenty-second New York) proceeded to re- 192 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. join the army at Brandy Station. During our absence from the army, the old Third Division was disbanded, and we were assigned to the First Division commanded by General H. G. Wright, constituting the Fourth Brigade of that division. Grant's overland campaign to Richmond began at midnight, the Sd of May. Our brigade, or rather the three regiments of it in camp, crossed the Rapidan on the 4th in charge of an ammunition train which was parked a short distance in rear of the line of battle formed by the Fifth and Sixth Corps in the Wilderness, and at midnight on the 5th, moved forward and reported to our division commander. He assigned us to a position on the extreme right in support of General Seymour, who commanded the troops at that point. An advance of the line about 8 o'clock in the morning of the 6th, so shortened it that in order to retain possession of a prominence on our flank, our regiments had to be placed in the front line, thus presenting to the enemy a single attenuated line where a strong, well-supported one should have been. Early in the day we were called upon to send a regi- ment a little to the left, to the aid of General Neill's Brigade which was being hard pressed. The Sixty-seventh New York was sent in, and returned in about an hour, having lost about one hundred men in that short time. Much anxiety was felt throughout the day for the safety of this flank which was practically in the air, guarded only by a skirmish line thrown around the rear, and subsequent events justified that anxiety. The attention of corps head- quarters was repeatedly called to its weakness, but for reasons unknown to the speaker no troops were sent to us, and it was an easy matter, there- fore, when a brigade of Ewell's Corps, under General Gordon, about 6 o'clock in the evening, drove in our skirmishers, to also double up our single line of infantry. A few officers and men of each of our three regi- ments were captured, and many killed and wounded. The able-bodied who escaped capture, reformed a line along the wood road which crossed our line of battle perpendicularly, a few yards to the left. The brigade commander in reconnoitering on the borders of tliis load, with moi'e zeal than caution rode into the enemy's lines and was cap- tured. This terminated his services with the brigade in which he had served since the organization of the army, and to which he had become dearly attached. The command of the brigade devolved upon ("dloncl Nelson Cross, of the Sixty-seventh New York. In the successful assaults at Spotsylvania and Cold Harbor, and the defense of North Anna, which followed the battle of the Wilderness, its reputation was fully sustained. Throughout the trinls encountered in the change of base to the south side of the .Tames, and the besieging of Peters- burg, its patience and its power of endurance was manifest; and when a detached column under General Early, early in July again threatened the National Capitiil, the confidence of the army commander in its prowess, and its devotion to the cause secured the transfer of the Sixth Corps to the point of danger. The old residents of Washington will never forget with what celerity the rebel general was made to retire from the front of the Capital and subsequently beat an inglorious retreat up the Shenandoah ronisi/lvdiii'i (il dell i/slnir;!. 1^'' A';ill('.\ . hcftirc tlic \viir-scarrt>(l vctcniiis >>i thr Sixtli (^orps, wliich, b.v tlu' cclt-rit.v of its inovcinciits, li:ul hccninc liimwii ;is S(>fl};wick's Cjivjilry. Aftpr this short cainpniirn wo lind ilir briiindi' hack iiRiiin aniong its vctoraii roimadcs of the army, liaiimit'rinn awa.y at thf (Icfciiscs of I'cti'rs- tmr^, niitii on Sunday iiioininu, April 2d, the final charfic upon tiic works is made. The signal success of the Sixth Corps in this charge, not only carryine; the line of defense in their front, but sweeping to the left and capturing a long line, tliousands of prisoners and many guns, and subse- (luently turning to tlie riuht a^aiu, diiving everything before it, until the enemy \\rn> rncircird within tlieir last cui-ddu of defenses, was the first of tlie series iif staggerinu lilnws which ultimately deti'i-mined the fate of the Confederacy. The pni-allel race with Lee's army, which so accord upri.sie and bid definance. The conflict rages. Death, devastation and destrur'tion SlSaKi^Wa...— .. A Pennsylvania at (jrettysburff. 195 revel. Gloom and sorrow prevail. Portentous clouds of darkness envelop us. Evil spirits, with licllish intent, pursue uneliallenKed their damnable ways. Tiie anucls niouiii. and :ill nnturc in darkness weeps. But see, a silver lining appears! Pccrini; with hnpet'ul aspect. Peace, with olive branch extended, seeks audient-e. In the distance seething masses of armed men struRule for mastery. With diminished force rebellion aims her blows, and finally sinks to rise no more. Victory perches on Loyalty's crest. Homeward turns the Spartan band, heroes all I Ilalos of glory illumine the sky. Loved ones meet in joyous e(.-stacy. r.,iberty and peac(> have resumed their idaccs. The dream has passed, but stern reality bids us inquire, where is father, brother and sou? lu yonder graves they lie, victims of disloyalty and martyrs for their country. Let us keep their memories green, and each recurring year cover them with immortelles and sweet-scented flowers. And let us not forget the living heroes. Let us remember that to them we are indebted for the blessings of peace and prosperity which our re- united country now enjoys. Let us remember that the "stars on our banner grew suddenly dim," and that it was the private soldier who re- stored to tiiem their luster, and palsied the hand which attempted their obliteration. While our children are taught to revere that emblem of unity and strength, let them "also be taught the danger of assailing it. Teach them toi;iln July 1st we moved from Biid^'i'port via Emmitsbuig to the field of JKittli', and while our ffallaiit First I'ligade was en route, late in the night, with the Twenty-sixth at the head of the column, we marehed into the Confederate lines near the lilacU Horse Tavern, quietly Kiithered in the only i)ieket post in sisht, about-faced in majestic silence, and n-siMncd the ri^ht road to (Jettyshnrji, in time to assume our place upon the second day of tiie battle. In fact we arrived at the midnight closing the first and oi)enins the sec1, to servo tliroo ycais. On tho ox|iir;ili<)n of its tcrirs of service the oriKinnl mcmliers (oxpopt veterans) were niiisterpd out and the orcaiiizat'on composed of veterans and recruits retained in service until .Tuly 18, 1S65, wlieii it was mustered out. Pennsylvania at Gettyshtirf/. 201 to "Candy's'' First Brigade, "Geary's" Second Division, "Slocum's" Twelfth Corps from the time of leaving Aquia Creek until its return to the Rapidau. Early in June, 1863, while the Array of the Potomac was in camp in the vicinity of Stafford Court House and Fredericksburg, recuperating from the losses of the Chancellorsville campaign, General Lee, commander of the rebel forces, concluded upon an aggressive movement. He started his army on forced marclies to invade Pennsylvania, and endeavored to outflank Hooker, enlist the sympathies of the foreign powers to further assist them, and to increase the strength of his army by the accession of a large number of rebel sympathizers in Maryland and southern Penn- sylvania. How well he succeeded in this is a matter of history. He was successful in moving past our right flank, and 'appeared in front of Winchester, Va., on the I4th of June, with a large force under the command of (Jenerals Early and Lougstu'eet, and they immediately made preparations to attack General Milroy, who was in command of the Union forces. Early and Longstreet being successful in their attack, capturing a large part of Milroy's command and scattering the balance, the valley of the Shenandoah was open for Lee's Army of Invasion. Lee had outwitted General Hooker, and having a good start, our army was compelled to make long and rapid marches to get within reasonable distance of the rebel host. On the 13th day of June, Hooker abandoned his positii>n opposite Fred- ericksburg and east to Aquia Creek, and started the Army of the Potomac on its march northward. The first intimation of anything unusual occurring from the ordinary routine of every-day camp life was the promulgation of orders, on June 12th, to hold ourselves in readiness to move at a moment's notice. Pi'epara- tions were made at once, and the command was kept in suspense waiting for orders to march until the evening of June 13th, when, at 8 o'clock, the order to march was given. Leaving camp at Aquia Creek, Stafford Court House was reached at midnight. Continuing the march via Tele- graph road, crossing the Aquia and Chopawamsic creeks, the command was halted at Dumfries at 1 p. m., June 14th, and biovuacked. Marched twenty miles. March resumed on the morning of June 15th, at half- past three o'clock, halted at 7 o'clock for breakfast. Reaching Wolf Run Shoals the com- mand halted for rest and dinner. Resuming the march, we crossed the Occoquan creek and reached Fairfa.x Court House at 8 p. m., and bivou- acked. Marched twenty-two miles. This march will long be remembered as a very trying one by all who participated in it, owing to the extreme heat, dusty roads, very little shade along the roads and the great scarcity of water, the water with which the men provided themselves soon becom- ing unfit to drink owing to the intense heat. On June 16th, the command was moved a «hort distance and went into regular camp. On June 17th, left Fairfax Court House, and marched to within a short distance of Dranesville and bivouacked. Marched eight miles. On June ISth, at 8 a. m., resumed march, passed through Dranes- ville, crossed ISroad nm and (joose creek, and encamped near Leesburg. 202 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Marched twelve miles. While on the march in the afternoon, had a heavy thunder storm, drenching the command. On June 19th, at half past ten a. m., the entire Twelfth Corps was ordered out for parade, and formed into three sides of a hollow square, to witness the execution of three men of the First Division for desertion, a terribly sad sight for a fellow soldier to witness, but a punishment made necessary to insure discipline and pre- vent the depletion of th.e army. After the men were shot, the different commands returned to their respective camps and remained there, while General Hooker, with 'a portion of the army was reconnoitering in the vicinity of Aldie, Middleburg, etc., on the search for Lee and his army. A small force of the rebels attracted Hooker's attention in that locality, while Lee with the larger portion of his army was then moving on Chambersburg, Pa., and it was not until June 26th, at 5 a. m., that we left camp and started again on our march northward. It rained hard all day, making the roads almost impassable, and retarding our progress greatly. Crossed the Potomac river at Edwards' Ferry on pontoons, passed through Poolesville, encamping at the mouth of the Monocacy. Marched thirteen miles. Regi- ment posted on picket, where it remained until 6 a. m., June 27th, when, with the entire corps, resumed the march, en route to Harper's Ferry, to reinforce the garrison stationed there, and, with it, attack the rebel line of communication. (The order for this movement was countermanded by the authorities at Washington, and resulted in the displacement of our much-beloved commander. General Hooker, and the appointment of General George Gordon Meade to the command of the Army of the Potomac) . The command passed through the Point of Rooks, crossed the canal and marched via the tow-path to Catoctin, recrossed the canal, passed through Peters- ville and encamped near Knoxville at dark. Marched twenty mUes. June 28th. "The second anniversary of the muster of the Twenty-eighth Pennsylvania Volunteers into the service of the United States." Left camp near Knoxville at 6 a. m., passed through Petersville, Slab- town and Jeffei'son, halted at the latter place to permit a brigade of cavalry to pass, resumed march and went into camp one mile from Frederick. Marched thirteen miles. At 5 a. m., June 29th, resumed march, and marched through heavy rains and over bad roads, passing through Frederick, Walkersville, Woodsbor- ough, Ladiesville and Bruceville, encamped near the latter place. Marched twenty-four miles. At half past seven a. m., on June 30th the march was resumed, and on quick time, passed through Taney town. On crossing the State line you all remember with what glad hearts you pressed your feet on Pennsylvania soil, and the huzzas that were sent up as each command entered the State, and how light the step that gave outward signs of your eagerness to meet Lee's forces and defeat him on your native ground, and one of his own choosing, for had he not left his own State and dared you tr follow and give him battle? How little he knew that the Potomac veterans were so close on him at that time!. On reaching the out- skirts of Littlestown, Pa., we were halted in the road to permit Knap's Pennsylvania Battery to pass, they having been ordered up on the double- quick to assist the cavalry, who wore engaged .with the enemy near Han- over. Our forces weie successful there and drove the enemy some distance Pennsylvania at Oettijshiirf/. 203 beyond Hanover. The residents of Littlestowu received us very kindly, giving us plenty to eat, and supplied us with good, clear, cold water to (juench our thirst, and will ever be remembered for their kindness. Passed through the town and encamped one and one-half miles beyond. Marched thirteen miles. At 5 a. m., on July 1st, we left camp, marching through Littlestowu and via tiie Baltimore pike to near Two Taverns where we halted, by reason of the pike being blockaded by the artillery and supply-trains of the tn)ops preceding. The sound of battle could be distinctly heard in advance of our position, and with what suspense we anxiously awaited the news from the front. At 2 p. m. orders were received to move forward, and by as rapid marching as the blockaded roads would permit, we reached the scene of action at 4 p. m. and formed in line of battle to the left of the pike a short distance and immediately in the rear of Cemetery Hill in sup- port of the Eleventh Army Corps, who had fallen back to this position earlier in the day. It was a night of fears and doubts; little, if any, infor- mation could be obtained as to the results of the day's battle ; the silence of every one, was, if anything, confirmatory of a reverse ; the knowledge of severe loss of life and apparent retirement of our forces led us to fear somewhat the coming of the morrow. Marched eleven miles. The regiment remained in this position until 8 a. ni., July 2d, when we were moved with the corps to the right of the pike, ordered into line of battle on this "Culp's Hill," facing Rock creek, thus forming the extreme right of the line of battle. In connection with our t;ikiiig possession of Culfi's Hill and forming line of battle here, I wOl here insert an extract from an address read before tlie Historical Society of Pennsylvania, March 8, 1880, by Brevet Brigadier- General J. Wm. Hofmann, Colonel Fifty-sixth Pennsylvania Volunteers, commanding Second Brigade, First Division, First Army Corps, whose command joined our left on the summit of Culp's Hill. "The Seventh Indiana of our brigade, detached in the morning for special duty, as I have stated, and not engaged in conflicts with the enemy, rejoined us as we were re-forming in the cemetery, and being in compact organization, it was sent at once to form a line on Culp's Hill. Major Glover, its commanding officer, established a line from the pinnacle down to the foot of the eastern slope and on his way back to the center, en- countered and captured a scout of the enemy who had crossed the hill before the line was established and was on his way back when captured with the report that the hiU was not occupied by our troops. Grover's line of pickets was soon reinforced into a line of battle. It has always seemed to me that without Culp's Hill in our possession, we could never have held our line on Cemetery Ridge on the second and third days of the battle." This I cite to show the importance of the taking possession of, and the subsequent action of the troops who so gloriously defended this ijart of the field from the terrible onslaughts of the enemy. The Twenty-eighth in about an hour after reaching Culp's Hill was ordered forward, deployed as skirmishers along Rock creek, immediately in front of this position. We remained there exchanging shots with the enemy, who were in large force on the opposite side of the creek, until about 204 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 7 p . m . , when General Geary received orders to move his command to tho left of the line of battle, in support of the Third Corps at Round Top. The Twenty-eighth, with the First and Second Bi-igades of "Geary's Second Division left the position. Gulp's Hill, which we had occupied all day, leav- ing the Third, Gi'eene's Brigade, to cover the front occupied by the entire Twelfth Corps. In moving over to the Baltimore pike, we were obliged to cross the "swale" between our works and the pike, and were exposed to an annoying artillery cross-fire from the enemy, suffering to some extent in loss of men. Early in the night, while we were absent. General Ewell, commanding the rebel force, in front of Gulp's Hill, made an attack on the position vacated by us, and history records how the enemy found a portion of our works deserted, and, exultant beyond measure, they throught victory was theirs; but they counted without their host. Old Pop Greene, with his gallant Third Brigade of "Geary's" Second Division was there and opened fire, making it very warm for them, and checking their advance in short order. The fight was short, sharp and decisive, the loss was severe on both sides, and it can safely be said, that had "Greene" and his gallant little band been defeated in this section, the battle of Gettysburg might not have been the glorious victory it was for our arms. The enemy although gain- ing a slight foothold in occupying a portion of the works vacated by us, were not aware that they held the key to our artillery and ammunition reserve, which was parked only a short distance from them, and should they have captured or destroyed this, our army would in all probability have been defeated . By some misconstruction of orders or the incompe- tency of" the guide sent to pilot General Geary to his position at Bound Top, the Twenty -eighth and a large portion of the division never reached there, and were kept on the move all night. The men were weary with the incessant marching and loss of sleep, and it was not until near daylight of July 3d that the command came to a halt, when we found ourselves immediately in rear of the position on Gulp's Hill, occupied on the 2d instant. General Geary having ascertained that the enemy was in pos- session of a portion of our works, made good disposition of his force, and at early dawn gave orders for the First and Second Brigades of his divi- sion to advance. With a hearty cheer, the wearers of the "White Star" rushed gallantly forward to the charge, and in much less time than it takes me to relate the incident, the enemy were driven beyond Rock creek, and the vacated works were again in our possession. The loss of the enemy was heavy, whilst ours was comparatively small. The Second Brigade, "Kane's," were then distributed in the works. At about 7 a. m., the Twenty-eighth Pennsylvania was ordered forward and relieved the Twenty- ninth Ohio Infantry. Comrades, you will never forget what it meant to relieve a regiment deployed in the tempm-ary works that were so rudely constructed of cordwood, stones, etc., on the lower side of the knoll on which we now stand. The rebel sharpshooters were perched on and behind the immense rocks and boulders that still remain in the immediate front of our position; how as each command was relieved, the incoming and out- going troops were subjected to a withering and well-directed fire from their skilled marksmen, every shot from their guns made to do its deadly work; Pcini.si/lrdiiid (il (1(1 1 ifshiirt/. 205 Mild linw, wht'ii we wtTc s;ifc'ly l(M';itc(l ill tlir wiuks, We watched for tin- liiin's <<{ simil;i' fniin tlifir rillrs : li.iw (|uii-k we were to reply, with what elToft the hirge niiiiihcr of dcjid iiifii ;iiid cmpty-hauded rifles left behind in their retreat told the sorrowful tale. When once in the works it was much safer to reiu.iiti, hut tlie constant firing made it necessary for the troops to be relieved to cIimii tlieir guns and replenish their supply of ammunition. It may imt Ik- amiss to mention here that on page 770 of tiie "preliminary print of tiie ullliial records of the War of the Rebellion," it is recorded that "General Meade complained to General Slooum that General G'eary was expending too much ammunition at this point, but upon investigation, he, (Jeneral Slocum, was satislicd to the contrary." The enemy made several onslaughts which were pushed with great de- termination, and it showed how grand a prize this portion of the field would have been to them. Each time their desperate charges came to naught; they were hurled back with terrible loss, only to be ordered forward again and again to meet the same fate. I'.rave nu-n, tliey deserved better success for their undaunted courage ! At alxiut half past seven a. m., tlie Twenty-eighth Pennsylvania, having exhausted its ammunition (eighty i-ounds per man I, was relieved by a New York regiment of "Greene's" Third P.iigade, and moved to an orchard in the rear of Gulp's Hill on the pike, to clean their guns and replenish amnaunitiou. We had been in this position but a short time when the enemy's artillery opened fire on our forces stationed on Cemetery Hill. Then and there was inaugurated one of the most terrible artillery duels in the world's history. As the fight progressed our position (which was im- mediately in the rear of Cemetery Hill) became untenable, as the shot and shell fell thick and fast amongst and around us, unnecessarily exposing us to great danger. General Geary being advised of our dangerous position, gave orders for us to move across the pike behind a large stone barn. Hemained there until about ."^ \). m., more or less exposed to the same artillery fire, when we were ordered to resume our former position in the works on Gulp's Hill, relieving the Seventh Ohio Infantry. Remained in the works, keeping iii> a constant fire on the sharpshooters perched on and lu'liind the rocks in our frmit, until about 9 a. m., when the enemy made their final assault. They were soon repulsed and the firing almost ceased for the night. Shortly after the assault the Twenty-eighth Penn- sylvania was relieved from the works foj- the purpose of receiving rations. At midnight we returned to the works, relieving the Sixtieth and Seventy- eighth New York Volunteers nC "( Jrecne's" Third Brigade. TIhtc w.is very little firing in our front after midnight. The night was dark, and a heavy rain falling, every one of us being drenched to the skin, just such a night as would enable an enemy to get out of the way without being disturbed, which to our surprise was the case when the morning of July 4th dawned upis. The enemy having fled, left us in undisturbed pos- session of the field and the victory was ours, but how dearly bought I How many good and lirave men on both sides gone forev»'r from comradeship and companionship, from fireside never to return! How many loved ones at homes waiting anxiously to hear from the thousands on both sides who will never return ! It makes one almost shudder at the thought of the misery caiised by the instigators of that cruel war. 206 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. When it was ascei-tained to a certainty that the enemy had fled, we proceeded to the front of our works, and details were immediately set to work burying the dead. Some twelve hundred of the enemy's dead were found in front of the Second Division works, of which' the division details buried nearly nine hundred ; their loss in wounded also must have been very heavy, as the number of muskets left by them on the field on our front was very large. The ordnance officer of the First Division, Twelfth Corps, reports having collected eight hundred and four muskets and the ordnance officer of the Second Division, Twelfth Corps, reports collecting sixteen hundred and eighty muskets in addition to a large number of bayonets, etc. The Twenty-eighth Pennsylvania alone carried to the rear of our works over five hundred muskets. Our men being very much fatigued, having been without sleep for three nights, and soaked with the heavy rain of the night of the third, and having assisted in burying the dead, rested the balance of the day and prepared ourselves to be in readiness to start in pur- suit of the enemy when ordered. It has always seemed to me, and I think I will be endorsed in my opinion, when the true and just history of this battle shall have been written, that the importance of the victory of the troops of the Twelfth Corps, especially the part taken by "Geary's" Second Division, has never received the recog- nition and publicity it deserved. Everything that was done here and on some other points of the field as gallantly defended, haye been overshad- owed by the prominence given the painting representing Pickett's charge. Without Gulp's Hill in our possession, Pickett's charge would never have taken place, as the position on Cemetery Hill would have been untenable for our troops. At no portion of the field were the troops under a more constant or murderous fire than on Gulp's Hill. For seven hours we were under constant fire, and at no point, nor at any time, did the line waver. The gallant Second Division, assisted by Shaler's Brigade and the Mary- land Provisional Brigade, by their dauntless courage did much towards saving the Army of the Potomac from defeat. I do not want to detract anything from the heroism or valor of the troops of the Second Corps, as they were all gallant and true, but so much stress has been laid oil their particular action, on the afternoon of the third, that the part taken by other troops equally deserving has not had that credit given which is their due. When our eyes glance upward as we look at this monument, which we dedicate this day to the memory of our departed comrades, we behold the emblem, "the star," under which we stood shoulder to shoulder on the march and on the battlefields of so many States. I cannot refrain from insert- ing here some extracts taken here from a work recently published by Colonel Wm. F. Fox, on the regimental losses during the war of the rebellion, which in a great measure atones for the shortcomings of some of the previous authors of war history and endeavors to deal justly with the part taken by the different commands in this battle. He writes: "The Twelfth Army Corps," "Winchester," "Port Republic," "Cedar Mountain," "Manassas," "Autietam," "Chancellorsville," "Gettysburg," Wauhatchie," "Lookout Mountain," "Missionary Ridge," "Ringgold." Pennsyivuiiia at Uettu.sbiir;/. 207 "Tho corps thiit novcr Inst :i colni- or a gun. When its dosiguation was chaiiKcd to the Twontioth it still preserved unbroken the same grand record. The veteran divisions of Williams and Geary wore their star badges through all the bloody battles of the Atlanta campaign and the Carolinas, and still kept their proud claim good, marching northward to the grand review with the same banners that had waved at Antietam and Lookout Mountain ; with the same cannon which had thundered on the battlefields of seven states; none were missing. "The brunt of the battle of Chauccllorsville fell on the Third and Twelfth Corps, and yet amid all the rout and confusion of that disasterous battle the regiments of the Twelfth Corps moved steadily with unbroken fronts, retiring at the close of tho battle without the loss of a color ; while the Corps artillery, after having been engaged in the close fighting at the Chancellorsville House, withdrew in good order, taking every gun with them. In this compaign Slocum's troops were the first to cross the Rapi- dan, and the last to reci'oss the Rappahannock. Its losses at Chancellors- ville were two hundred and sixty killed, one thousand four hundred and thirty-six wounded and one thousand one hundred and eighteen missing; total, two thousand eisht hundred and fourteen. The hardest fighting and heaviest losses fell on Ruger's and Candy's Brigades of Williams' and Geary's Divisions." "At Gettysburg, the Twelfth Corps distinguished itself by its gallant defense of Gulp's Hill. At one time during the battle, the corps having been ordered to reinforce a distant part of the line, Greene's Brigade of Geary's Division was left behind to hold this important point. While occnpying this position, with no other troops in support, Greene was at- tacked by Johnson's Division, but the attack was successfully repulsed. The details of this particular action form an interesting chapter in the history of the war. Still, some of Johnson's troops effected, without oppo- sition, a lodgement in the vacated breastworks of the Twelfth Corps, and upon the return of. those troops a desperate battle ensued to drive the Con- federates out. After a long, hard fight the corps succeeded in reoccupying its work. On no part of the field did the Confederate dead lie thicker than in front of the Twelfth Corps position . "Johnson's Division, containing twenty-two regiments, official report, lost in this particular action, two hundred and twenty-nine killed, one thon«;and two hundred and sixty-nine wounded and throe hundred and seventy five missing: total, one thousand eight hundred and seventy-three. To this loss (of Johnson's) must be added the losses in Smith's, Daniel's and O'Neal's Brigades, containing fourteen regiments, which were sent to John- son's support, which was two hundred and twenty-nine killed, one thou- sand and sixty-nine wounded and two hundred and forty-seven missing. Making a total loss in the rebel forces attacking Gulp's Hill of four hun- dred and fifty-eight killed, two thousand throe hundred and thirty-eight wounded and six hundred and twenty-two missing; total loss, three thou- sand four hundred and eighteen. Pickett's Division, official report, lost in front of Cemetery Ridge, two hundred and thirty-two killed, one thou- sand one hundred and fifty-seven wounded and one thousand four hundred 208 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. and ninety-nine missing; total, two thousand eight hundred and eirjhty- eight. "The Twelfth Corps, containing twenty-eight regiments, lost two hun- dred and four killed, eight hundred and ten wounded and sixty -seven miss- .ing; total, one thousand and eighty-one." Less than one-third the rebel loss. The Twelfth Corps was small, but was composed of excellent material. Among its regiments were the Second Massachusetts, Seventh Ohio, Fifth Connecticut, One hundred and seventh New York, Twenty-eighth Pennsyl- vania, Third AVisconsin and others equally, famous as crack regiments, all of them with names familiar as household works in the communities from which they were recruited. On page 426, in the same work, referring to his statements giving the list of commands showing the greatest losses in battles. Colonel Fox says, "Among the leading regiments in point of loss at Gettysbui'g as given here, the Twelfth Corps, is scarcely represented, and yet, the services rendered on that field by that command were unsurpassed in gallantry and important results. The remarkable losses sustained by Johnson's Confederate Divi- sion and the three brigades attached to his command were inflicted by regi- ments which have no place in the list of those prominent at Gettysburg, by reason of their casualties. Granted that Greene's Brigade delivered that deadly fire from behind breastworks ; but, when Williams' and Geary's Divisions returned from Round Top and found that during their absence their works had been occupied by the enemy, they became the assaulting party ; they drove the enemy out of the works, re-took the position and saved the right. That, in accomplishing this, they could inflict so severe a loss and sustain so slight a one, is as good evidence of their gallantry and efliciency as any sensational aggregate of casualties." Comrades, after such complimentary and just criticism of our actions, should we not feel proud . of having been wearers of the starV I do not think it would be atniss, to insert here, an extract from the address as deliv- ered by the Hon. Edward Everett, at the ceremonies attending the conse- cration of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg on the 19th day of No- vember, 1863. Extract, Second Day. "At eight o'clock in the evening, a desperate attempt was made by the enemy to storm the position of the Eleventh Corps on Cemetery Hill, but here, too, after a terrible conflict, he was repulsed with immense loss. Ewell, on our extreme right, which had been weakened by the withdrawal of the troops .sent over to the support of our left, had succeeded in gaining a foothold within a porticm of our lines near Spangler's spring (foot of Gulp's Hill). This was the only advantage obtained by the rebels to com- pensate them for tlie disaster of tlie day, and of this, as we shall see, they were deprived . "Such was the result of the second act i)f this eventful drama. A day Tiard-fought and at one moment anxious, but, with the exception of the slight reverse just named, crowned with dearly-earned but uniform suc- cess to our arms, auspicious of a glorious termination of the final struggle, on these omens the night fell. In the course of the night General Geary returned to his position on the right from which he had hastened tlie day Pennsylvania at Gettyfdiatfl,v t'lijxaKod the enemy, and after a sharp deeisiv(> action drove tiiem out of our lines, reeover- ing the ground wliich had been lost on the preceding day. "A spirited contest was kejit up all the morning ou this part of the line, but General Geary reinforced by Shaler's Brigade of the Sixth Corps, main- tained his position and inflicted very severe losses ou the rebels. "Such was the cheering commencement of the third day's work, and with it ended all serious attempts of the enemy ou our right." Nothing of auy importance occurred in our vicinity during the 4th, ex- cept the circulation of numerous cami) rumors as to the whereabouts of the enemy, etc., the night was spent in the works awaiting marching orders. About 3.30 a. m., July 5th, the line of march in pursuit of the enemy was taken up, but in a difToretit direction from that expected. The Twenty- eighth Pennsylvania on tl:e .Hlvance of the Twelfth Corps headed for Littlestown, which we reached before noon, very weary and footsore. "The men having lost so much rest and being confined in the works such a great length of time were hardly prepared for steady marching yet." Marched ten miles. The Twenty-eighth being the advance regiment, it of course was posted on picket, and iiasscd a very ([uiet night there. On the morning of ,Tuly fith, at seven o'clock orders were received to resume the march, but l)y reason of General Meade having with a portinn uf liis cominaiid encountered the rear guard of the enemy near Gettysburg, the order was countermanded. On July 7th, at .3 a. m., we left Littlestown, passed through Taneytowu, iNIiddleburg and Walkersville, encamping a short dis- tance beyond the latter place about 6 p. m. Marched about thirty miles, most of the distance through the fields, the road being occuppii'd by the artilh'ry and supply trains. The morning of July 8th ushered itself in rainy and very disagree.able, putting the roads in bad condition, but orders to resume the march were given, and at 7 a. m. we were on the move, passed through Frederick, were halted a short time for an issue of rations, after which resumed the march, reaching Jefferson about 6 p. m. A great many men were desti- tute of shoes, and in consequence suffered very much, as the march this day was mostly made over a turnpike road. Marched fifteen miles. July 9th left Jefferson, passed through Burkittsville, crossed South Mountain at Ciainptim's (Jap an/ '^'t Pennsi/lvfiiiia ry late before the troops were able to prepare their scanty supper. Many of the men dropped to the ground and slept where their commands halted, too woai'v to undertake to make preparations for supper. Marched twenty-five miles. July •27th moved a short distance, tents were pitched and regular camp duties resumed. Remained at this place resting from the fatigues and labors of the campaign until July 31st, when the reveille was sounded at half past three a. m. and orders to march were given at half past three a. m. Arrived at Kelly's Ford on the Rappahannock river at 7 p. m., a pontoon bridge was laid and a portion of the First Brigade of Geary's Second Division crossed to the south side, encountering the enemy's pickets and after some slight skirmishing the enemy were driven ofif. Very warm day. Marched eighteen miles. August 2d left Kelly's Ford at 4 p. m., and marched to near Ellis' Ford, where the regiment was posted on picket. Marched five miles. August 3d regiment reli<»ved from picket and went into regular camp. Thus ended the marching and duties performed by the Twenty-eiy-hth I'ennsylvania, in the campaign connected with the battle of Gettysburg, and the defeat of the rebel army of Northern Virginia, a fifty days' cam- paign, during which some four hundred miles were marched, and one of the bloodiest battles in the world's history fought by the bravest men on earth ; and we meet here over twenty-six years after, to commemorate the gallantry of the men who fought, bled and died on those memorable days of July, 1863, that the grandest government on the face of the globe might udt perish, and we dedicate to their memory this monument, which we trust will mark this spot for all time. DKDKWTION OF MONUMENT 29™ REGIMENT INFANTRY* Septe.mher 11th, 1880 ORATION OF r.RFVKT LIKrT.-COJ.oXFI. itoJUlU'r I' DKCHERT THE history of the world has not presented the story of a coiiHict greater in its results because of the interests involved than that of the battle of Gettysburg. The forces engaged between the combatants were nearly equal ; the Unionists while endeavoring to prevent the further ad- ♦Orsranizd at Philailflphin Jiil.v 1, 1861, to sorvo tliioc yoar.s. On th»> oxpiratlon of its terin of service the orijriiial luembers (except veterans) were mustered out and the organizi'tion composed of veterans and recrnits retained in service until July 11, 1S65, when it was mustered out. 212 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. vance of the enemj- northward, threw themselves into a defensive position and compelled General Lee to attack them in their works. In the event of the success of the enemy in that battle his passage to the Susquehanna, Baltimore and perhaps Philadelphia would have been se- cured . Four years ago we had the honor to dedicate upon this field a monument prepared by the survivors of our regiment, which was intended ti) mark the place occupied by those in rear of the works first constructed. The generosity of the State of Pennsylvania has now enabled us to place another monument upon this line of works constructed ned the attack upon this historic ground . Pennsylvania at Gettyshurfj. 213 Gulp's Hill was one of the many nicniorable spots on the field of Gettys- burg. While Kothermel has selected another part of it from which to picture a combat of the two armies, he might easily have selected this place to illustrate the desperate determiuation and bravery of the opposing forces. Upon this field your regiment lost heavily, many of your comrades gave up their lives to preserve their country's honor, whilst others have since suffered through honorable wounds received here in those dark and dismal hours. The Twenty-ninth regimcTit was early organized for the war, and was selected by the Government as the fourth regiment from Pennsylvania for the three years' service. Under an experienced commander, who has since irdiic ti) his liii;il hiimc l.-idcn with honor, it started for the seat of war. Little did you then think that a service of three years, "unless sooner discharged," would extend into one of four years or upwards, and would embrace so large a territory as you were called upon to traverse. The experience in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia was a pleasant prelude to the active life that followed, though to many of j'ou the recollections of Front Royal and Winchester remind you of the commencement of warlike experiences . Some of you well remember the conflict at Cedar Mountain, the fa- tiguing marches and meager rations which followed it, ending with the triumph at Antietam under General McClellan. Whilst others will better recall the associations of Martinsburg, Williamsport and Hagerstown, where a portion of the regiment performed duty during the same period ; and many will be reminded of the privations in prison life while in the hands of the enemy. After Chancellorsville and Gettysburg the survivors of this regiment wei*e transferred to the western army under Grant, where .\nu met and repulsed the enemy at Wauhatchie and Ringgold. It was there that the charge of the troops under General Geary was made up the rocky and rugged sides of Lookout Mountain, driving the enemy before them and beyond its summit in confusion and dismay, until at last when the clouds and smoke of battle had been lifted away, there stood revealed to our gladdened hearts the nation's flag floating grandly to the breeze upon the highest pinnacle of the mountain. The clouds which had enveloped the crest, had so completely obscured the summit from the view of the troops in the valley, that they could only trace the ascent by the firing of the musketry, the struggle ap- pearing to be, as has been described "a battle above the clouds." Thus commenced the memorable march on Atlanta, fruitful of good deeds and results. I cannot refrain from mentioning at this point, that when, in the early winter of 1863-64, the Government invited her soldiers to re-enlist for another term in her service, it was this regiment that achieved the honor of being the first in the entire army to offer its services as a veteran regi- ment. On the expiration of the furlough of thirty days, which was granted for the purpose of re-enlistment, the regiment returned to the same army, then commanded by Sherman, and at Buzzard's Roost, Rocky Face Ridge, Tunnel Hill, Dalton and Resaca, it performed an active part. It is needless to recall the crossing of Pumpkin Vine Creek, or New Hope Church, or 15 214 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Pine Hill, or Peach Tree Creek, or Culp's [Kolb's] Farm, or Pine Knob, or the turning of the enemy's flank at Kenesaw, or the skillful manoeuvering and fighting in front of Atlanta. During this campaign the Twentieth Corps, under the leadership of Major-General Joe Hooker, well sustained the reputation its troops had gained in the Army of the Potomac. With an implicit faith in their commander, that army marched and toiled under .Sherman, until every obstacle was overcome — Fort ^McAllister was cap- tured and Savannah was occupied. A little later the campaign through the Carolinas was commenced and concluded with th'e battles of Averys- \ boro. and Bentonville. The end of that campaign was reached at Raleigh. There you received the glad tidings that Richmond had fallen, and that the arniy of Lee had surrendered to Grant at Appomattox. How much of that great result should be attributed to the bold and arduous campaigns of .Sherman must be decided by posterity and history. Shortly afterward you marched over the despoiled soil of Virginia to Washington, where you participated in the grand reviews in May, 1865, and you returned to your homes and again assumed your appropriate places in the pursuits of peace. There are familiar names closely associated with the history of this regi- ment: of Murphy who organized it, and who, after a life of unusual use- fulness, has been called to his final abode;- of Banks, who, having served in the halls of Congress, is still prominently in public life; of Williams, who died while a member of Congress, a genial gentleman, who graced every position he filled, aud served his country gallantly in two wars; of the brave and impulsive Kane, who died in our midst but a few years ago; of Geary, who, having also served in two wars, occupied the highest civic station in our state ; of Ruger, now a general officer of the army ; of Hamilton, one of your early commanders; of Mansfield, who gallantly died at the head of his corps at Antietam ; of Greene, a distinguished soldier and citizen, who, at advanced years, still adorns the community in which he. lives; of Gordon, associated with your campaigns in the Shenandoah Valley; of Cobham and Ireland, who fell in battle in your midst; of Bar- num, an able and faithful officer; of Mower, who commanded your corps aud afterwards fell a victim to tropical disease; of Hooker, a fighter, who led you in the Atlanta campaign; of Slocum, the gallant commander of the Army of Georgia, who has since ably I'epresented the country in Congress, and of Sherman, to whom the nation owes as much as to any other marshal for the successful results of the war. Ill the summer of 1863 General Lee planned an invasion into Pennsyl- vania with a view of forcing his advance to Harrisburg, and securing the supplies and wealth of the State. Immediately the hearts of our people were fired with resolute determination to resist the invader and drive him from our soil. The purpose of the enemy was bold, the immediate results of such an invasion were apparent. The array was then inspii'ed with greater activity. There was assigned to its command one of the ablest officers who had served with honor and distinction in many well- fuiight battles on the Peninsula — a Penusylvanian, thus further impressing the array with courage and confidence. The advanced force was com- mnndid by General Ki'vnolds, a IN'unsylvanian , who fell gallantly leading Pennsjjlvaiiid (it (jettysburg. 21." liis romin.'UHl mi the lirst day of the battle. The center wing of the array, after the death of Reynolds, was commanded by another heroic son of Pennsylvania whose memory is cherished by his countrymen, who died while senior major-general of the army — Hancock. The battle of Gettysburg stands out upon the pages of history as a' last- ing monument to the honor and memory of Major-General George G. Meade. The enemy was flushed with victory ; he had forced our army to retire from the assaults on Fredericksburg and Chaucellorsville ; he had removed the seat of war to northern soil, as had been predicted; his available force was as great as our own; he well knew his ability to subsist upon the rich agricultural fields of the fertile valleys of Pennsylvania ; the tempting prizes of Harrisburg and Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington seemed to be almost within his grasp, and with desperatifin he hurled his solid phalanx against the lines at the cemetery, at Round Top, on the left center and on Gulp's Hill, to be repulsed again and again by the unflinching men who heroically held the works. History has recorded no struggle of greater magnitude and more honorable to the combatants than the battle of Gettysburg. The leaders of each of the opposing forces knew that the result would be a decisive point in the progress of the war — a victory there would establish a supremacy that could not be overcome by any future successes of the vanquished, and each army was actuated by this impulse and fought with the dotorminution of brave men. It was however decreed by the God of battles that your works at Gettys- burg should not be wrested from you, and at the same timo the glorious news was given to the country of the surrender of PemberU>n at Vicksburg. You and your comrades performed your part in this struggle at Gulp's Hill,— throughout the contest you rendered conspicuous services, which should ever be remembered by a grateful people. Brave men fell upon this field, and their memories are sincerely revered by their surviving comrades. It is not our duty now to recall the animosities of the conflict. It re- sulted from causes which the present generation could not have influenced . The passions aroused by it have subsided ; the combatants have long since "beat their swords into plow-shares, and their spears into pruning hooks." Peace has been restored to every portion of our country. We are cementing the better feelings of our intelligence and civilization, and earnestly repair- ing all the injuries resulting from civil war. Remembering the honorable lives of the soldiers who fell on this hal- lowed and historic ground, let me utter the sentiment of the immortal poet, who said — "P.e just and fear not, I^t all the ends thou aiin'st at be thy country's, Thy God's and truth's; then if thou full'st, O'Cromwell, Thou fnll'st a blessed martyr." The special purpose of our gathering on this day, is to mark on the pages of history, for the benefit of posterity, one of the particular places which the Twenty-ninth Regiment occupied on Gulp's Hill, during the darkest periods of the progress of the battle of Gettysburg. Here, to-day, we come again to dedicate a monument in memory of our departed cunirades, who 216 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. sealed their devotion to the flag by yielding up their lives on this bloody field. May their memories ever remain as enduring as the granite shaft now erected to mark the spot of their heroic deeds. ADDRESS OF COLONEL WILLIAM RICKARDS. LADIES and geutlement: — Comrades, when I received the letter from the chairman of the committee, notifying me that I had been chosen to make the oration at the dedication of the monument to the Twenty- ninth Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, I confess I was some- what staggered at the thought how I should proceed, and do credit to the occasion, to my comrades, and to myself. At the dedication of the tablet erected by the Survivors' Association of the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, July 3d, 1885, in the introductory address which it was my province to make, I spoke of the circumstances which led to the formation of this great American Nation ; of the patriotic zeal and wisdom of its founders ; of the causes and se- quences which made it necessary for the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania Volun- teers with thousands of other brave comrades to be on this field twenty- two yeai's before ; of our victory over armed treason and rebellion and of the public opinion which had decided to consider this the typical battle of the war for the Union. That this latter view has become a national one is proven by the array of monuments placed to mark the position during the battle of the regiments engaged. States have vied with States and regimental organizations with each other in securing the aid of the artist to make more attractive the ground on which the advance of treason and rebellion was staggered and from which it was driven backward, beaten again and again, until its final over- throw at Appomattox. Under some circumstances the place where men have died is repulsive. Rut it is not with us on the field where our comrades fell whilst making their breasts a barricade between our country and its foes. Whilst to individuals and families death is a separation of the tender ties of father, mother, wife, children, or friends; yet collectively those who fell in our glorious and holy cause are not dead to us. The memory of good deeds should never die, and as we meet year after year to deck the graves of our comrades w'ith the fairest flowers of spring it should be with the feeling that we are offering incense to the spirits that muster on the parade ground nf heaven. And so when our posterity shall visit this ground which art has made so attractive, though drawn here by curiosity or admiration of tlie beautiful, the thought will turn back to that patriotism which offered life and sacrifice for the preservation of this glorious heritage of freedom, beciueathed us by the sires of the revolution. The elaborate artistic eft'ort to perpetuate the memory of this battlefield, I believe exceeds anything of the kind in the history of the world. But to Pennsylvdniii at struiigle foi- the preservation of our union of States, so this monument would be typical of the national spirit of loyalty that inspired the thousands of brave men who rushed to the field resolved that our Union must and shall be preserved. I would not deprecate the courage of the men we met on this or other fields during the war. They started with many advantages in preparation for action not possessed by us. They were led by men whom the Government had educated in the art of war, many of whom were considered superior in military attainments. This with military spirit in their rank and file gave them a prestige which seemed to place victory within their grasp ; but there was a principle involved in the struggle. It w.is to decide whether a govern- ment of the people, for the people, and by the people shall endure on the face of the earth. Despite the previous preparation, the military advant- ages, the ehivalric prestige and courage, the truth of the old adage still remains, "he is doubly armed whose cause is just." And thus armed we were prepared to give our lives if need be to preserve to our posterity this great gift of our patriotic fathers, — "One country and one flag." Comrades, more than twenty-six years have passed since the preserva- tion of our Union made it necessary for us as loyal citizens to meet on the field of Gettysburg the insurrection forces that were moving for its destruction. It was believed the result on this field would be the turning- point of the war. Victory on the side of the Union would send the re- bellion on the downward track and show its sympathizers the folly of any further effort to advance the cause of secession, whilst defeat would give encouragement to the enemies oi j)opular goveriiiiient to still aid the destruction of the Union. This thought carries the mind back to the battle of Gettysburg as a momentous occasion in the history of our country, and the field of Gettys- burg a place of intense interest as the spot where rebellion was checked in its advance for conquest and again placed on the defensive. As repre- sentatives of the State of Pennsylvania we are here to-day to aid in per- petuating the memory of those hours of trial and danger devoted to the preservation of our National (iovernment, and I wish that every soldier who served honorably in any Pennsylvania regiment could have had the same advantages offered to him to visit this ground as those who fought here have. We are to-day to receive from our great State the testimony 218 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. of her appreciation of our services in the war for the Union and especially for our action in the battle of Gettysburg fought Avithin her borders. But a few years more and the last comrade of the grand army for the Union will have been mustered out to join the immortals. It is the usual custom to erect monuments to the dead only. Here that custom has been de- viated from ; and the living as well as the dead are honored and the evi- dence given that our services shall be preserved in the future. In this, comrades, it is commendable egotism in us to say we are re- ceiving from the present generation no more than a just recognition of services rendered ; and are conferring a lasting benefit on our posterity by leaving them a united country, and the record of a heroism that wa.s patriotic and a patriotism that was heroic. SKETCH OF THE REGIMENT COMPILED RY THE COMMITTEE, THOS. DE MAISTRE, GEORGE A. BROWN, LOUIS R. FORTESCUE, THEO. S. S. BAKER AND JOHN H. HUGHES. In the month of May, 1861, John K. Murphy and a numbr>r of citizens' met for the purpose of organizing a regiment for the war, and after a few preliminary meetings the following organization was effected: Colonel, John K. Murphy. Lieutenant-Colonel, Charles Parham. Major, Michael Scott. Adjutant, William Letford, Jr. Regimental Quartermaster, Albert S. Ashmead. Surgeon, W. J. Duffee. Chaplain, Benjamin T. Sewell. Sergeant-Major, Robert P. Dechert. Quartermaster-Sergeant, Charles Mintzer. Commissary-Sergeant, Frederick Mintzer. Hospital Steward, Eli B. Garwood. Company A — Captain, ; First Lieuten- ant, Louis R. Fortescue ; Second Lieutenant, G. Higgens, Jr. Company B — Captain, Davis M. Lane; First Lieutenant, George B. Johnson; Second Lieutenant, Joseph Maguigan. Company C — Captain, Jesse R. Millison : First Lieutenant, W. F. Stine; Second Lieutenant, J. Jacobs. Company D— Captain, William J. Byrnes; First Lieutenant, Edward E. Burr; Second Lieutenant, John H. Byrnes. Company E — Captain, Samuel M. Zulick ; First Lieutenant, Thomas T. Seal; Second lieutenant, W. D. Rickford. Company F — Captain, Louis C. Kinsler; First Lieutenant, William A. Wood; Second Lieutenant, Alexander Cook. Company G — Captain, William D. Richardson; First Lieutenant, James C. Linton; Second Lieutenant, David Richardson, Jr. Company H — Captain, Fred- erick Zarracker: First Lieutenant, John W. Williams; Second Lieutenant, William Doughton. Company I— Captain, William Rickards, Jr.; First Lieutenant, Samuel C. Reeves; Second Lieutenant, Theodore K. Vogel. Company K — Captain, James E. Wenrick ; First Lieutenant, William J. Augustine; Second Lieutenant, Philip A. Voorheves. These gentlemen were commissioned on May 14th as officers of the Jackson Regiment, and when, on June 10th, eight hundred names had been inscribed upon the rolls of the different companies, the Honorable Simon Cameron, Secretary of War, notified Major C. F. Ruff, of the United States /'( II nsi/l rail id ill (li 1 1 ,/st)in(/. 219 Army, tu niiistci- the incii into the iiiilit:ir.v sorvire of the United Stiiti'S Tlio work of the mustiMiiis Dtlici r w.is dclnyod howovor, tli*- first ooinpimy 'not being mustorod in until June "JOtli, :ind (lie last ciiniiiany on Jnly l.'Uli, IStil . The unifnrni adnptcd foi- the cidisti'd nit-n oonsistcil of was substituted sonii- few months afterwards. (til .luly ]<>tli the retjinient went into ramp in Jones' Woods at Hoston- \ille, where it remained until August .'Id, when it left for Sandy Hook, Maryland, opposite Harper's Kerry, and encamped in Plea.sant Valley, Maryland, being attached to the Second 1-rigade of (Joneral Banks' Divi- sion, Department of the Shenandoah. I)iu-ing the autumn and winter months of 1861-2, the regiment did considerable marching from Pleasant Valley to Darncstowm, thence to Ball's BlulT, .Muddy Branch and Frederick, the latter place being reached on December 25th, where it went into winter ipiarters at Camp Carmel. Remained tuitil February 2oth, when it broke c.imp the next day, the 26th, and crossed the Potomac river at Harpr-r's Ferry. Camped on Bolivar Heights, Virginia, over night, on March 12th, then marched to Winchester, whore General Jackson's troops had been de- feated. The enemy retreated up the Shenandoah A'alley, the Union troops advanced to Edonburg, where the regiment lost two men killed. On April 17th advanced to Mount Jackson and made a detour to the right to flank Rude's Hill, on which General Jackson had taken position. Readied there too late on the morning of the ISth to catch Jackson napping. Forded the Shenandoah river, moved on to Harrisonburg, marched back to Stras- burg and went into camp and erected fortifications. May 23d Companies B and G, which had been sent to Front Royal were attacked by a large force of Jackson's men and nearly all were captured. The Confederates' next movement was to cut our communication off with Harper's Ferry. The regiment began to move at midnight and at .S a. m., next day, 24th, reached Middletown and turned to the right on a road leading to Front Royal, and after a march of three miles on this road the men of the com- Iiany B were met who reported a large force of rebels coming. The regi- ment about faced and marched back to Middletown, thence to Winchester, where the Union troops (being followed by the Confederates) took position on the ridge. On the morning of the 2.5th (Siuiday) the en(>my advanced to turn our right, the Twenty-ninth Regiment being ordered to meet and check them. The enemy advanced in columns of regimental front, our destructive firing killing and wounding about one hundred. The regiment lost one hundred and twenty-eight officers and men taken prisoners. Colonel Murphy being among the number, the regiment being the last .troops to l(>ave the ridge. The array fell back to the Potomac river and crossed over to Williamsport, the regiment under command of the major being detailed to do provost duty, three companies G, E and F, with General Pope in his Virginia camjjaign and the rest of the companies at Hngerstown, Maryland. P>etween De- cember 10th, 1S62, and April lOth, 1S6:3, the regiment participated in .all 220 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. the campaigns of the Army of the Potomac, having joined the Third Bri- gade, First Division, Twelfth Corps, and being confined principally to the one camping ground in the vicinity of Stafford Court House. It was while at this camp, on the latter date, that President Lincoln, accompanied by General Joe Hooker and staff, reviewed the troops, the Twenty-ninth Regi- ment being commended by the reviewing officers for its proficiency. On April 27th commenced the memorable Chaucellorsville campaign in which this regiment suffered in the loss of officers and men. In the (Gettysburg campaign the regiment broke camp at Aquia Creek, Virginia, June 13, 1863, crossed the Potomac river at Edwards' Ferry into Maryland on the 26th of June, and marched within sight of the town of Gettysburg on July 1st, where they turned to the left of Baltimore pike and laid on their arms all night. Early on the morning of the 2d moved forward to Round Top and formed line of battle. There being heavy firing in front, at 11 a. m. moved forward one mile and crossed to right of Balti- more pike to Gulp's Hill and formed a line on right of and at right angles with Third Brigade of our corps, the Twelfth, the men throwing up breast- works. At half past six p. m. the Twenty-ninth Regiment with the re- mainder of the brigade were taken out of their works for the purpose of reinforcing the left on Round Top. While this movement was taking place a solid shot from the enemy's battery struck Sergeant-Major Charles Let- ford, who after a few hours of intense suffering expired. Between 9 and 10 o'clock p. m. the brigade received orders to return to their breastworks, but officers and men alike were surprised to find that the enemy had pos- session of the works. As we were about to enter the woods nearly opposite our front position the enemy opened fire, killing Lieutenant Harvey of Company K and three men, and wounding ten others. We returned to the pike and re-entered the woods by the lane at Spangler's house following the One hundred and ninth and One hundred and eleventh Pennsylvania. The brigade halted at the left on the line of works, and on the right of General Greene's Third Brigade, the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania being at the stone wall. By di- rection of General Kane, a detail of skirmishers under the command of Captain Geo. E. Johnson, Company B, Twenty-ninth Regiment, was or- dered to ascertain, if possible, the position of the enemy. The captain was prompt in action and soon disappeared in the darkness in the enemy's lines, where, with five of the men, he was captured. The captain made his escape near Crampton's Gap, where he rejoined the regiment and reported that on the night in question the enemy lay quiet until the detail were within their lines and were then ordered to surrender. The brigade then moved up between the breastworks and the stone wall, one-half of the Twenty-ninth Regiment remaining outside of the wall, the other in the field, halting about one huodred and fifty paces in front of the position now occupied by tablet No. 1, erected July, 1885. . All was quiet until about 2 a. m. the 3d, and although it was but half moon the position occupied by the enemy was readily distinguished and their men seen moving about. They then commenced a rapid firing which increased in force until it extended across our front, our brigade returning the fire with such spirit that tliat of the enemy soon ceased. General Pennsylvania (if CUclh/shiirf/. 221 Kane then ordered the brigade to move back to the ledge of rocks, whert- dispositions were made to resist the assault. The line was shdrtened to two regiments, the third in reserve, two regiments filling the space from the works to the wall. As the day began to break the enemy opened from behind the rocks and trees and the fight became general. About 9 a. m. the Twenty-ninth, having enhausted their ammunition, were relieved by the One hundred and eleventh reuusylvania , and were ordered back to the ammunition train to replenish, the men taking this time from eighty to one hundred rounds each. In about forty-five minutes they returned and again relieved the One hundred and eleventh. About half past ten o'clock, the enemy consisting of Stuart's Brigade of Bradley Johnson's Division of Ewell's Corps, advanced in battalion front to the charge, the Second Maryland Regiment in the lead. Their columns moved down on us between the breastworks and the stone wall. Our line to oppose them consisted of the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania and the One hundred and ninth Pennsyl- vania, the latter on the right extending to the wall, their front partly pro- tected by the ledge of rocks. The left of the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania extended to the breastworks. Our men had been firing at will all the morning, and when the head of the enemy's column appeared in sight did not require orders to commence firing. The enemy advanced steadily some- what covered by the rocks and trees, until they arrived at one hundred paces from our line where the ground was more open. Noticing by the falling leaves that our men were firing too high the colonel gave the com- mand to shoot at their knees, the effect of which was noticeable at once. The enemy came on steadily until within sixty paces when, our fire beginning to «tell on them, they began to waver. At forty paces their con- fidence failed them. They had expected to break through our thin line with ease, but were demoralized by the undaunted bearing of the men of the Pennsylvania Brigade of the White Star Division. It was fortunate for the Union case that Ewell's Corps met with this repulse, for had they succeeded in breaking through the lines of the Twenty-ninth and One hun- dred and ninth Regiments the road would then have been opened to the center of our position involving the capture of our ammunition trains and our hold upon Gulp's Hill and Cemetery Hill in the rear of our lines. They could then have taken Greene's line in the rear and have placed him be- tween the two fires, forcing him to face the rear, when the attacking line in front would have assaulted and carried the works. Skirmish firing was kept up after this all day by the enemy on the hill above Spangler's Spring as well as in front of our works and of Greene's Brigade. The morning of the glorious Fourth of July found the enemy in full retreat never again to return to this side of the Potomac river. During this assault and repulse of the enemy the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania Regiment lost seventeen killed, forty-five wounded and six prisoners; that of Stuart's Rebel Bri- gade, led by the Second Maryland, fifty-two killed and one hundred and forty wounded. The pursuit of the enemy which commenced on July 5th was contiiuK-d until August 3d, the troops undergoing long and fatiguing marches. On September 28th, the Twelfth Corps, to which the Twenty-ninth Regi- ment belonged, b-ft T'.randy Station to reinforce General Rosecraus' army 222 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. in the southwest, an-iviug at Nashville, Tonnessee, at six p. m., of October 5th, and on the 28th of same month engaged the enemy at Wauhatchie. November 24th the Twenty-ninth Regiment led the charge which ulti- mately captured Lookout Mountain, taking in that contest more prisoners than were men in their ranks. They were then moved over to Missionary Ridge, then to Ringgold, Georgia, and assisted in dislodging the rebels from Taylor's Ridge. While in camp at Lookout Valley, December 9, 1863, this regiment de- cided to offer their services to the government for the war, and upon the announcement being made to headquarters were sworn in and were the first to receive the distinguished title of Veteran Union Soldiers by re-en- listraent. On Di^cember r2th, the veteran furlough of thirty days having been granted, the regiment took their departure for Philadelphia amid the cheers of the White Star Division drawn up by orders of General Geary to render the parting salute, and on Deceqiber 22d they arrived at their destination,, meeting with an enthusiastic reception. After recruiting its ranks the regiment again started for the front reach- ing Nashville on March 21, 1864. Taking part in the Georgia campaign they engaged the onemj- on the Sth of May near Snake Gap ; again from the r2th to 15th of same month at Resaca, losing in killed and wounded eighty-two men. On May 25th, moved against the rebels at New Hope church. Were engaged from June 13th to loth at Pine Knob and in making the assault at this point lost their colonel by a serious wound through the left breast, several of our nivn being wounded. General Hooker's attention being called by, a member of the Twenty-ninth Regiment to the enemy massing theii' forces in front of our First Division, the General, taking in the situation, put spurs to his horse and galloped off to the right of the line and had the First Division placed in readiness for an attack. The attack was made and the enemy defeated with a loss of nearly two thousand men killed, wounded and prisoners . On the 16tli the brigade moved to the right to Muddy Creek and threw up breastworks, the line of works being so close to the enemy's thut our men were compelled to take turns in going to the rear of our works to cook coffee. In this movement Private Sellman of Company G was killed re- turning to the works. On the 17th the enemy fell back and oui- troops advanced four miles. The enemy taking up a strong position in a clump of woods, the Sixty-eighth New York Regiment and the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania Regiment were detailed to support a battery that was ordered to open fire on the enemy three hundred yards in our front. On the 20th our corps advanced their lines. The enemy fired but were driven off the field, a large number of prisoners falling into our hands. In this encounter Colonel Cobham was killed, our brigade commander. On the 21st Captain Goldsmith was ordered to take command of the Twenty-ninth Regiment and on the 22d moved about one mile nearer to Kolb's Farm, thence to Kenesaw Mountain, driving in the enemy and building breastworks: 24th. the members of the regiment who did not re-enlist held a ineetiiiir and appointed a committee to wait upon General Hooker, to know from liini Pennsylvania d that they would be ou their way home by the first of the month (July). On the 28th our lines advanced, those who had not re-enlisted being sent to the rear in charge of Major Millison, who reported to General Geary's headquarters, the General shaking ea»h by the hand, and were then marched eight miles to Big Shanty Station where the cars were in waiting to take them homeward. The Twenty-ninth Regiment being now left without a field officer I.,ioutenant-Colonel Walker was placed temporarily in command of the regiment, but on July 21st was relieved of the com- mand by Captain Goldsmith. July 26th, the lines advanced within view of Atlanta and on the 2Sth General Jlookcr tendered his resignation which action had a depressing effect upon the troops of his corps. On the 30th Captain Goldsmith, who was in command of the regiment, was relieved by Captain Frank Zarracker, his term of service having expired. In Au- gust General Slocum resumed command of the Twentieth Corps and the troops advanced slowly but surely on Atlanta, the shells from our batteries thrown into the city setting fire to the buildings. September 2d and 3d, the troops marched throujrh Atlanta our brigade being in the advance. The Twentieth Corps remained at Atlanta until November 15th and during this time the regiment was sent on several foraging expeditions, frequently for forty-eight hours at a time, in every instance returning to camp with long trains of wagons filled with provisions for men and horses. November 5th, i-eceived orders at two p. m. to pack up immediately, moved out of the camp about two miles, and rested over night. On the 6th discovered the enemy's cavalry reconnoitering us. On the 15th broke camp, marching eastward eighteen miles, the city of Atlanta ablaze; the fire being started by our troops. On the 19th niarehed through Madison and on the 23d assisted in tearing up the railroad tracks. 25th, men halted for twenty-four hours until nine bridges were repaired which spanned the swamp near Davisboro. 26th and 27th, continued marching and destroying railroad tracks. 28th, marched back to Davisboro then to Holcomb, then to Louisville, Georgia, the troops subsisting on the country. December 2d, met the enemy's skirmishers and repulsed them ; on the 11th brigade advanced within five miles of Savannah, our left resting on the Savannah river and our men lying in ditches as a protection from the enemy's shells. On the 18th General Sherman demanded a surrender of the city but was met by a refusal, the enemy subsequently evacuating their works. 21st, the authorities came from the city bearing a flag of truce to meet our troops which resulted in the surrender of the city of Savannah. Our regiment, being the first to enter the town, was accompanied by General Geary, di- vision commander, and Barnura, brigade commander. 25th. Christmas dinner enjoyed by the members of the twenty-ninth Regiment, the men being quartered in houses that had been deserted by the owners. On the 29th left Savannah and marched, keeping to the line of the Savannah and Charleston railroad, finally crossed the Savannah river into South Carolina on pontoon bridges at Sisters' Ferry on February 7th ; at Black Swamp we erected bridges and construfted mads for nearly a 224 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. mile across the swamp which in some places showed a depth of three feet of water. On the 15th entered Lexington. 17th, Columbia occupied by Fifteenth Corps. 23d, marched to and crossed Catawba river on pontoon bridges, and on March 4th crossed the line into North Carolina. The 24th witnessed the passage of the troops through Goldsboro, where a review took place by Generals Sherman and Slocum and the reading of the circular issued by order of General Sherman commanding his army . The morning of April 27th opened auspiciously to the men of the Western Army, bringing with it the glorious tidings so long contended for by them of the surrender of General Joe Johnston and his ai'my to General William Tecumseh Sherman ; carrying with it the dissolution of those forces and that inexpressibly happy termination of our troubles indicated in the words — Homeward Bound . Between April 30th and July 13th, the Twenty-ninth Regiment as a part of the Twentieth Corps marched through North Carolina and Virginia and participated in the grand review before the President in Washington, being mustered out on the latter date. During its service of four years its muster-rolls contained the names of over two thousand five hundred men, its casualties in killed, wounded and prisoners being eight hundred and seventy, and it returned to the custody of the Governor of the noble old State of Pennsylvania which it repre- sented its colors untarnished and its record pure and unstained. On July 3d, 1885, the survivors of the Twenty-ninth Regiment erected a tablet to mark the position occupied by them on July 3d, 1863. This tablet is of dark granite with polished sides traced in panels upon which the history of regiment is cut, the whole being seven feet high by four feet square at the base. DEDICATION UF MONUMENT 30^^^H REGIMENT INFANTRY* (First Reserves) ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN WM. D. STAUFFER THE regiment broke camp at Fairfax Station, Virginia, on the Orange and Alexandria railroad, on June 25, 18(>3, in the early gray of the morning, and took up the line of march for Frederick City, Mary- land, where we remained a short time with the main body of the Army of the Potomac. On June 29th we marched for Gettysburg, going through Hanover, York county, Pa. About five miles from Gettysburg we struck the Baltimore pike and marched direct for the battlefield, arriving about 11 o'clock in the forenoon of July 2d, when we were halted near General Meade's headipiarters, stacked arms and were told to cook our coffee which •Organized at West CljestiT July 20, _ 1S61, to serve three years. It was luustcreil out .June 11, 1S64, by reason of expiration of term of service. Pennxjjh'iniid (it (Ictti/sbitrfj. 225 we h;i(l imt t.istt-d fur sovonil days. In ii very short tiino tlic bugle calliMl us to fall ill, wlicii wo wcro moved oil" to the left at a doublc-tiuick and took our position at the front of l.itllc Uouiid 'i^op, where we hiy on our arms, bayonets lixed. About .> p. in. tin- order to charge was given, when the First Regiment gave the enemy iwho were following our retreating forces) one volley, and then at them with the cold steel and drove them through the ravine up tiie side of the hill over the stone wall out into the wheat field, killing and capturing many of the enemy. We remained at the stone wall all night. The next day (July 3d) the regiment was in th his neck and another was accidently shot through the head. A small tone of the enemy could have held the mount- ains against ns as they would have had every advantage. A line of skir- mishers- properly supported would have been more effective. Upon arriv- ing at the western base, the men were collected and ret'onned in..i little valley, and after an hour's rest were marched back ami eiicaniipid, where fresh beef was served out. On the 25th, we sounded reveille at three o'clock and iM'tracing our steps for some miles turned to the right following along the foot hills of the Blue Mountains, and halting about three in the afternoon, bivouacked. The next morning at five o'clock we marched off in good spirits, passing a large number of prisoners near Orleans whom the boys hailed in friendly terms. At noon we halted in a clover field about two miles from Warren- ton, having made thirteen miles with but one halt of fifteen minutes. We had been short of provision for several days, and while we laid here General Crawford was saluted by his hungry boys with the cry of "crackers" as he passed by. This annoyed him and he rode over to General Meade and demanded rations. "Why my dear General," he replied, "you should not let that annoy you. One night at White Plains, where I marched the boys a couple of miles out of the road, they actually called me a 'four-eyed old devil,' but upon my soul I could not get mad at them." Towards dark we got into motion and marched six miles, passing to the west of Warrenton we bivouacked in a low open field, where we were annoyed for the first time during the war by. mosquitoes. The next raorn- ing we sounded no reveille, but woke the men up early and marched towards Fayetteville, near which we halted at eight in the morning for the day and night. On the 28th we moved about two miles to a new position where we laid until August 1st spending one day on picket. While here First Lieutenant John Taylor, commanding Company E, was appointed an aide-de-camp on Colonel McCandless' staff. Considerable cannonading was heard towards Warrenton Springs, our cavalry skirmishing with the enemy . From there we moved to Rappahannock Station where we formed a regular encampment, and the Gettysburg campaign closed. For ten days prior to this, we had been almost every night upon the march not getting far from our original starting point. The clink of tin cups on the bayonets and the rumbling of artillery wagons was continu- ally heard. At every stopping place orders were issued to lay out our camps regularly, dig sinks and build bough arbors over our tents. Orders were issued that the army would be supplied with knapsacks in which we were expected to carry a large number of light rations and extra rounds of ammunition. Troops were continually arriving from a short distance up the railroad. These movements impressed the enemy with the idea :234 Pennsylvania at Getty shurg. we were beins heavily reinforced ;nid intended moving towards Richmond, when in fact large numbers of troops were being secretly sent to certain points in the Northern States. DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 34TH REGIMENT INFANTRY* (Fifth Reserves) ^^ XT THEN the army under Hooker marched on the Gettysburg campaign, yy the Fifth Regiment, together with the brigade commanded by Colonel Fisher, was ordered to join it, and was assigned to the Fifth Corps, General Meade, subsequently General Sykes. Upon its ar- rival on the field, the brigade was for a time held in reserve in the vicinity of Little Round Top. The rebels had discovered that this eminence was the key to the Union position, and were struggling hard to gain possession. The Third Brigade, First Division, P^'ifth Corps, under command of Col onel Vincent, of the Eighty-third Pennsylvania, had been ordered to move on the double-quick and occupy it. Scarcely had Vincent reached the crest and taken position, when Hood's Division of Longstreet's Corps, in three lines, came rushing on with deafening yells, determined to possess the coveted prize. With the energy of desperation they struggled to clear the rugged sides and carry the heights. Failing upon the left and front, they poured through the little valley between Round Top and Little Round Top, doub- ling up the left flank of Vincent, occupied by the Twentieth Maine Infantry and threatened the rear. For some time possession seemed doubtful. At this critical moment Colonel Fisher was ordered to advance with the Fifth, Lieut. -Colonel Dare, and the Twelfth, Colonel Hardin, to the relief of the hard-pressed and well nigh crushed brigade. With a cheer that sounded above the clangor of battle, sending gladness to friend and terror to foe, the command went forward at double-quick, dashing up the hill and gaining the summit in time to share in the victory, and to render its posseission secure. During the night these regiments were advanced to the summit of Round Top, and the two hills were joined by a strong line of breast- works, constructed of loose boulders, and the position made amply secure." •Organized at IlaiTisliurK Aujriist 17. ISGl, to serve three years. It was mustered out June 13, 18C1, l).v reason of expiration of terra of service. Pc)uisi/I rail ill at (1( 1 1 i/shiiri/. '2'A~) DKDICATIOX OF MONUMENT 35'^^H REGIMENT INFANTRY* (Sixth Reseuves) September 2, 1890 ADDRESS OF PRIVATE HALSEY r.ATIIUOl' CA( ».M IvAl »i:S 111' the Sixth Pciiiisylv.iiiia Kcst-vvcs: We liavc ussciulilrd ou this historic batth'ticld to dt'dioute this mouumont, ereotod by a ^ gvatoful Commonwealth, in commcinoriitiou of your services as de- fenders of your country, geiuMally. l)iit csix-cially your services on the battle- Held of Gettysburg. There are two matters of regret connected with these dedicatory ser- vices. First, that one better qualified has not been chosen as orator, and second, that more of the survivors of the old regiment are not here to participate in these services. I am no orator; I am but a plain, blunt man. I can only speak right un, to tell you those things that you yourselves know— point to the record you have made, and let it speak for me. In considering what might be appropriate to say on this occasion, my mind went back to the 27th day of July, 1861, when the one thousand men and boys (for many of us were mere boys) stood up and subscribed to that oath which transformed them from State mUitia to volunteer sol- diers of the United States army. The memories of the three years' cam- paign of that regiment came up, and in my mind I followed them, first, to Tennallytowu where we built that magnificent fort and named it after our own State. It stands to-day a monument of your industry and skill. Then, just as we were congratulating ourselves on its completion, and con- templating the ease with which we could repel any force that might come against us, we were moved across the Potomac, where, at Langley's X Koads we established Camp Pierpoint, where we entered upon that system of drilling which would fit us for the arduous duties that awaited us, and from which we sallied forth on the various foraging expeditions, one of which occurred December 20, 1861, and resulted in the battle of Draues- ville, where you, with the other regiments of the brigade, achieved the first victory for any part of the Army of the Potomac. Comrades, I will not take the time to jiarticularize, as I mention your various movements — your minds will readily fill in the details. The mem- ories of the knapsack and other drills you underwent, and especially of the battle of DrauesvUle, where you received your baptism of fire, no doubt clings to you with greater tenacity than even the mud of Peirpoint. You could not forget if you would, and I venture to say, would not if you could, the breaking up of Camp Pierpoint, March 10, 1862, and your march to Hunter's Mills and return to camp, near Alexandria, better known as * Organ;-- III at Iljirrislmrtr in June, lS(il. to sorve three years. It was uiustereil «>ut June 11, ISOJ, by reason of expiration of scrviee. 236 Pennsi/lvunia at Gettysburg. Smoky Hollow ; then your advance towards Manassas, and how easily you took that stronghold of the enemy; then, after a few days, your march down the railroad to Catlett's Station. Oh, how hot it was I and how we did unload those terrible knapsacks. A few days later found us encamped on the banks of the Rappahannock, at Falmouth, where we vied with each other in fixing up the picturesque quarters which we occupied during most of the month of May. On June 10, just thi'ee months after we broke camp at Pierpoiut, we boarded transports for a voyage down the Rappahannock, up to the York and Pamunkey rivers to White House Landing, where our regiment was left to guard the base of supplies for McCellan's army, which was engaged in the Peninsular campaign, which ended with the seven days' fight. About this time an eagle flew into a battery of United States artillery and lit on the shoulders of Lieutenant William Sinclair, and then it was Colonel Sin- clair, of the Sixth Pennsylvania Re.serves, who, with his family, we are glad to see with us to-day. You, no doubt, remember the beef you confiscated while there, the fort you built and what you named it, and how rapidly you evacuated your position at Tunstall's Station and marched to White House Landing, where we again took transports for an excursion down the Pamunkey and York rivers, and where we met the Army of the Potomac returning from its unsuccessful attempt to take Richmond, who, when they knew that the Sixth Pennsylvania had arrived "thanked God and took courage." Porliaps some of you have forgotten the chickens, pigs, etc., captured when you would go on picket, on the south side of the river; but you shoulS not be too severely censured, for the beef we drew was so tainted with garlic that we could not eat it. Mush and milk was not very plenty, and even if we got the latter, behold the garlic was there too ! After laying there a little over a month, we descended the James, crossed the Chesapeake Bay, ascended the Potomac, landed at Aquia Creek Land- ing and took up our march for Fredericksburg, encamping near the spot where we had broken camp about thi-ee months before. But we did not long remain inactive. The situation of affairs demanded action. The rebel army was marching northward, so the campaign commenced which re.sulted in what is sometimes called the disaster of Second Bull Run. I need not stop to discuss this battle or its results, enough to know that the Sixth Pennsj'lvania Reserves faithfully and gallantly discharged every duty that was imposed upon them, and if you did not come off from that ill-fated field with flying colors it was because the flag-staff had been broken by a missile from the enemy; but "(lur flag was still there." A few days later found you at Arlington Heights, with terribly diminished ranks, but full of hope and determination for the future. The rebels, flushed with victory, still pursued their northward way. Now came, the march through Maryland and Virginia, passing through a country that had not been devastated by the ruthless hand of war. We found rails were plenty, chickens did not roost so high as in Virginia, peaches, apples and other fruit were in a most desirable condition as to quality and quan- tity. Of course orders against foraging were very strict, and of course you strictly obeyed those orders (?) You no doubt remwnber the orders. J*(n)tfii/lraniti at (Iflti/sbiirf/. L'.'IT to only take the top rail of tho fonco. This order you strictly coinj)ik'd with, thoiiph if often happened tliat so many had preceded you at the fence tliat the liottom rail was the tup one. Sunday nioruing, Sei)tembi'r 14, 1S(312, found you oncaniped on the banks of the .Monocacy, near Frederick City, Maryland, with orders to "move forward." You had taken a refreshing bath in the creek the night before, and some of you even went so far as to put on a clean shirt. But I will venture to say that a whole lot more of, you failed to make this change, because of a lack of that very desirable article. You were thinking how perfectly lovely it would be to attend church in Frederick this beautiful Sabbath day, but, alas I you were under contract for the magnificent sum of thirteen dollars a month to obey orders, though you perish in the at- tempt. The orders were, "forward march I" and that order held good until the order to "halt I" was given. The order to "halt," was given by the enemy's guns on South Mountain, but, not recognizing their authority, you pushed forward, and ere that Sabbath sun had set behind the we«;tern hills your flag floated in triumph from tho svmunit of South Mountain, while the enemy, who had so stubbornly resisted your ascent of the mountain, were very rapidly descending the opposite slope. But I must stop right here and go to the rear, for one of my legs went on a strike just as we reached tho mountain top, hence your subseiiui-nt movements, until you arrived at Fredericksburg, are unknown to me from personal observation. But I am assured that at Autietam, three days later, you nobly played your part. Of your return march, through Virginia, I will not speak. At Fredericksburg you made a record that you can point to with pride, and had the adjoining division and those who should have supported you, properly seconded your ell'orts the history of Fredericks- burg would have read differently from what it does. History records how gallantly you charged across that open field, swept by the enemy's fire — took an advanced position and stubbornly held it until all hope -of reinforcements had vanished, when, with ammunition nearly gone, you yielded to overwhelming nmnbers and sullenly retired to your original position. Again your humble servant was knocked out just as the long-looked-for reinforcements arrived, and so I must necessarily pass over your return to the vicinity of Washington where you remained until the second attempt of the rebels to invade the Northern States, which resulted in the battle of Gettysburg. But I know y»u were rejoiced when you knew you received the order to march, when you knew you were to again join the Army of the Potomac in its attempt to repel the advancing hosts of Lee. Y'our next meeting of the enemy, in hostile array, was at New Hope Church, on the Mine Run campaign the latter part of November, 186.3 (if we omit the little difficulty at Bristoe Station where, if memory serves me, we did not play an important part), where your gallantry in deploying as skirmishers, under a withering fire from the enemy, called forth, as it deserved, the compliments of the commander of the forces there, and ex- cited the admiration of all who beheld it; and in fact, boys, we felt a little proud of it ourselves. Our advance through that tangled second growth of pine and cedar, in the face of stubborn resistence from the 2')8 Peiinsi/Jvdiiid at (J( tt)/sh}irg. oneniy, you must remember well. Thnt night, upon the skirmish line in the iinmodiate presence of the enemy, without an opportunity of mrking our usMiU cup of coffee, was one of the episodes of active campaigning. How cheerfully we yielded our position on the skirmish line in the morn- ing, to our relief, and with what enthusiasm we engaged in the manu- facture of a cup of coffee as soon as opportunity presented itself. Then up and away for the main body of the Army of the Potomac, from which our brignde had been separated, for a short time, while on a scout with (Jregg's division of cavalry. We found them on the banks of Mine Run, confronted by Lee's army, strongly fortified in a naturally strong position, and preparing for what bade fair to be the most desperate battle of the war. The contemplated charge was not made and we returned to winter ([uarters, near Bristoe Station and Broad Run. Your record in the WPder- ness in May, 1864, is one of "Picket line and battle fray. And weary marching night and day." gloriou.sly winding up your three years' term of service. May 30, 1864, at Bethesda Church, where you probably killed more rebels in one hour than you killed in any one battle in which you were engaged. May 30, you bade your comrades, who re-enlisted and who were to continue in the service with the One hundred and ninety-first Pennsylvania Volunteers, farewell, taking with you the glorious old flag that Governor Curtin had given you at Tennallytown in 1831, faded and battle-torn to be sure, but no stripes missing, and its stars all there. You returned it to Harrisburg, where you can see it to-day, a silent but eloquent testi monial of your service in the war for the preservation of the Union. Thus, comrades, I have briefly spoken of what is a tithe of your service in putting down the rebellion. I have not spoken of the terrible losses you sustained in the battles I have mentioned. That is the sad side of the picture. Your heroic dead lie on every battlefield on which you were engaged . Suppose we could see arrayed in line before us now, the old regiment of 1861, only with places vacant where should stand those who lost their lives in battle and died of disease during the war. What a spectacle it would present! Then let the survivors appear in their present condi- tion — what a change! Truly, we would say with the old song "The boys in blue are growing gray. Thin grows our ranks and thinner: We've faced Death's battle many n day. But Death to-day is winner." And how many empty sleeves and missing le!,'s? Those strong, athletic forms have become bowed by proiniture old age. The hardship of soldier life in camp, battle and prison jj-n, has done its work. But we must not pause to contemplate, lest we he overcome with emotion. While we drop a tear to the memory of the dead, let us dedicate this monument to the living. So remove the drapery and let there appear the record of your services and your losses. Yes, cut the strings .so that all who behold may I'oinsi/lrtinid til CcU nxhiinj. 23!) see what the Sixth ronns.vlvnni.i Ilescives siilTciod, that the "govonimont of the people, by the people, suul for the people, misht not perish from the earth." ADDRHSS OF COLUXKL II. 1'.. .McKEAN. y'^t l.MUAl»KS: You have met to-day on this hf-roic batth-lield to per- I form a most interesting ceremony. The place where more than a ^-^ quarter of a century ago the most terrific battle was fought that has been recorded in history. Allow me to congratulate you, my comrades, that you were members of that grand old regiment — the Sixth Pennsyl- vania Reserves. Its officers and men were coura.geous in battle and courteous in civil life. Your timely arrival of AVasbingtou, D. C, with the other I'egiments' of the Pennsylvania Reserves, immediately after the first battle of Bull Run, in 1861, saved the Capital. The Third Brigade of the Pennsylvania Re- serve Corps, consisting of four regiments, was a grand body of men, com manded by that grand soldier. General E. O. C. Ord, who was made the first major-general of the brigade. Commanders Generals George G. Meade, J. F. Reynolds and Ord, you know were in the first successful engagements of the Army of the Potomac. At Dranesville, Va., December 20, 1861, Captain Ent, commander of a company in the Sixth Regiment, fired the first shot, his company, acting as skirmishers. The Sixth made the first charge, then ordered by General Ord to charge the Confederate battery under the command of the "Little Adjutant." How well you obeyed the order, capturing the battery and several prisoners. Tour loss was slight — two killed and a number wounded. Among the wounded were Captain Bradbury and Halsey Lathrop. That was your first baptism of fire. Comrades, the great State of Pennsylvania has erected this granite iiioinunciit to perpetuate the heroism of the members of the Sixth Regi- ment on this field of battle. A grateful people remember your heroic deeds here on that hot day, July 2, 1863. You with the other regiments of the Pennsylvania Reserves, Third Division, Fifth Corps, arriving on the north side of yonder Little Round Top, charging the advancing Confed- erates and driving them back to the point where this monument stands. You held it as you always did, saving from capture Little Round Top and the field. During the three y<>ars of service you were in all the principal enga.sements of the Army of the Potomac — the first in and the last out. Comrades, your military history is written in letters of gold so high on the tablet of fame that no one can erase it, and my congratulations shall be; Brave in battle, chivalrous in peace and heroic in every trait that de- velops true manhood. 240 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. ADDRESS UF MAJOR W. H. H. GORE. COlNIRADES:— The history made by the Sixth Regiment you helpini make, and are as familiar with it as I am. What I say here, or what we do here, will not alter the facts as they are handed down to future generations by the historian. I propose, on account of time, to give but a brief history of the regiment: Organized as it was, from companies recruited from the three months' service, the companies were all recruited in the month of April, 1861, and consisted of two companies from Bradford, one each from Tioga, Susque- hanna, Wayne, Columbia, Montour, Snyder, Dauphin and Franklin coun- ties. Owing to the call being filled they remained in Camp Curtin until after the passage of the act creating the Pennsylvania Reserves, when they were organized into the Sixth Regiment, with W. W. Ricketts, colonel; W. M. Penrose, lieutenant-colonel; H. J. Madill, major; H. B. McKean, adjutant; R. H. McCoy, quartermaster; Charles Bower, surgeon, and Z. Ring Jones, assistant surgeon. They were sent to Greencastle and placed in a camp of instruction under INIajor Harshbergcr as instructor. After the disastrous battle of Bull Run, a call was made on Governor Cartin for troops, and the Reserves were rushed to Washington ; the Sixth was the first regiment to arrive and was mustered into the United States ser- vice July 27, 1861, and sent to Tennallytown, D. C. While in this camp over one-half of the regiment was stricken with typhoid-fever, greatly retarding the efficiency of the regiment. While in this camp the Reserves were formed in three brigades, the Sixth with the Ninth, Tenth and Twelfth formed the Third Brigade. October 9, 1861, the division was moved across the river into Virginia and went into camp near Langley. December 20, the Third Brigade and the First Rifles fought the battle of Dranesville — gained the first victory for the Army of the Potomac. March 16, 1862, they broke camp and marched to the victory of Hunter's Mills, then back to Alexandria. In the meantime Colonel Ricketts and T.ieutenant-Colonel Penrose had resigned and their places were filled by William Sinclair as colonel and H. B. McKean, lieutenant-colonel. The quartermaster also resigned and A. A. Scudder was appointed. The division was attached to McDowell's Corps, and in April marched to Manassas,' Catlett's Station, thence to Fredericksburg. In June they were on transports and went down the Rappahannock, up the York and Pamunkey rivers to White House and attachinl to the Fifth Army Corps. The Sixth was halted at Tunstall's Station to guard the road and keep open the communication with the front. While here Colonel Sinclair joined us and assumed command ; the left wing of the regiment was sent to White House to guard the stores ; the Seven Days' battle opened at Mechanicsville, and the regiment was cut off from the main army, and after destroying the vast accumulation of stores, was taken by boat, via Fortress Monroe and James river, to Harrison's Lauding, where they were joined by the balance of the division. The Sixth R(>giment was here rcnusijlrtiitiii (tl (Icll i/shiti;/. 24-1 tfausferrt'd to tlic First Urif^ado wliicli now coiisistrd uf the L'irst, Second, Sixth, Ninth and IJucktails. The next move was by boat from Harrison's Landing to Aquia Cicck, thence by rail to Fredericksburg, thence by way of Kelly's Ford to War- renton, where they joined Pope's army and took an active part in tlic battle of Second Bull Run. Falling back with the army to Washington they marched through Maryland to South Mountain, and in that batth; was on the extreme right of the army, and was attached to the First Corps; at this battle and Antietam the regiment met with severe loss, especially in officers. Major Madill was now promoted to the colonelcy of the One hundred and forty-first Pennsylvania Volunteers, and Captain Ent was promoted to major. In November the march was again resumed, ending at Fredericksliurg, where, on the 13th of December, the regiment, in connection with the balance of the Reserves, made the most gallant charge of the war. Had I time I would say more about this battle, but I will pass it by leaving to future historians to give us the honors that we that day earned. Our losses here were greater than any other battle we ever fought; we were but a handful left for duty, and the Reserves were ordered to Washington and vicinity to rest and recruit, the Sixth was sent to B^iirfax Station, where it remained until June, 1863, when it again joined the armj- — was attached to the Fifth Corps and marched for this historic field; and here, on this ground, where we are dedicating this monument, we aided in fighting the battle of Gettysburg. Moving with the Army of the Potomac, marching and skirmishing, we finally went into winter (luar- ters at Bristoe Station. In the meantime Colonel Sinclair had resigned and field officers were filled by promoting Ent to colonel, Dixon to lieutenant- colonel and Gore to major. In the spring of 1864, they took in all the fighting under (Jeiieral (irant, through the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, North Anna river to Bethesda Church, doing their full share of the work in that arduous campaign, end- ing their service with brilliant victory at Bethesda Church. And now, comrades, I have briefly sketched the history of your regiment, its marches and hardships, its gallant fighting; it never disgraced itself; there were other regiments as good as j'ours, but none better. We have met here to-day to dedicate this shaft as a monument of your valor, but your history will be a monument that will last as long as the American nation exists, and until after those stones shall have crumbled into dust. 242 Poiusjjlvania at Gcttysbitrg. DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 38™ REGIMENT INFANTRY* (Ninth Reserves j September 11, 1889 ADDRESS OF FIRST LIEUTENANT ELL. TORRANCE COMRADPjS of the Ninth Regiment Pennsylvania Reserves :— We have met upon historic ground, ground as sacred as our feet will ever tread. For more than one hundred yeai's Lexington and Bunlter Hill have sent forth a resplendent light to all lovers of liberty, but to us and our children at least, nothing can eclipse this field of glory. More than a quarter of a century has passed away since we last ^tood here. Then angry clouds hung over our heads, and the ground Avas con- vulsed under our feet with the shock of battle, but to-day the skies are peaceful, and the sounds of war have ceased to reverberate among these hills. We have met upon a most auspicious oc'asion, and for a purpose which falls only to the lot of patriots. I am not insensible to the honor you have conferred upon me. Having for more than a score of years resided in a distant Commonwealth, and never having had the privilege of meet- ing with you since the close of the war, it gives me inexpressible pleasure to again return to my native State, and once more look into your faces and bring to and receive from you fraternal greetings. At such a time and place as this, how inadequate is language to frame our thoughts, or give expression to the emotions of our hearts. This monument, which we to-day dedicate, though beautiful in its pro- portions and workmanship, is of little intrinsic value, but who can esti- mate Avhat it cost to lay the foundations for its erection . As we look upon it we see and read much more than the simple and appropriate inscriptions it bears. It represents great sacrifices — sacrifices so great that they cannot be computed — sacrifices, the cost of which lies outside the domain of any arithmetic. It represents the scattered graves of our comrades who died in defense of their country. As we stand here our memories are (luickened and our vision enlarged, so that we look back through the intervening years, as if it were but yesterday, when we parted company forever with our comrades, who, on the field of battle, paid the full measure of their devotion with their lives. We have grown old since then, but their faces are unchanged. Many of them sleep in Unknown graves that loving feet have never yet been able to find, but they are not forgotten, and as we look upon this polished shaft, we can, underneath its shining surface, read the names of every one. True men they fell; and faithful to the last, Thougli overpowered by death, yet still iu death uucouquered, Forever sacred he their memories, And imperishable, their heroic names. •Orfranized in AlU-chony Co., July Z7, 1S61, to serve three years. It was mustered out May 12, lS64,by reason of expiration of term of service. I'cnntijjlvAinia al (Idl/jshitr!/. 24.'> History rccinds no sncrilices more sublime tli.in tliat of tin,' (k-ad n . It will stand long after we have passed away, to speak with a persuasive voice to generations yet unborn, educating them in all that pertains to the safety, prosperity, and perpetuity of our country, and inspiring them with an exalted patriotism, and an unflinching courage in the defense of her institutions. The Commonwealth of I'ennsylvania has acted wisely in i)roviding for the erection of these monuments and setting apart this day for their dedication, and in calling together her sons to bear witness to the solemn and impressive services. Upon this loyal soil the defiant army of ti'eason, und'er General Lee, was defeated. Around the base of these Round Tops, and upon the slopes of Cemetery and Culp's Hills, broke the topmost wave of the great Rebellion. The beginning of the end was Gettysburg, and froni the 4th day of July, 1863, the friends of liberty were confident of triumphant victory. Eighteen States were represented in the Army of the Potomac upon this famous field, and most appropriately we find the Key- stone State, in the person of her soldiers, everywhere present in the fore- front of the battle, from its commencement to its close. During those three memorable days her voice was never silent, and through camion, musket and sabre, she spoke in defense of human rights and constitu- tional law with a power and eloquence that time will only glorify. Behold her three score and ten regiments of infantry, in battle array, stretching from right to center and from center to left. See those lines of blue, with banners unfurled, steady and undismayed, in the whirlwind of strife. Listen to the thunder of her cannon as they answer the brazen mouth of treason. Hear the sharp clash of sabre as her squadrons ride down to death the ruthless invader. Well may our beloved State glory in the record made by her chivalrous sons, and perpetuate, not only in bronze and marble, but in the hearts of her children, their deeds of valor and sacrifice. As we look around us to-day, we are conscious that one thing yet remains to be done by. the State of Pennsylvania— one duty is yet unperformed, and that is the erection upon this battle-field of a suitable monument to our illustrious and distinguished commander. General George G. Meade, and until that is done, the anthems of praise that continually ascend from these hills will never reach their sweetest and most complete harmony. (Jeueral Meade commanded the Army of the Potomac for almost two years, or about one-half the period of its entire existence. He was a brave soldier .and a tru' gentleman. His patriotism was of the highest and purest type, and he was trusted and beloved by the entire army. He gave to his country, in her hour of jx-ril, his best services, with a willing heart, and with rare courage and patienci- tiid he bear the heavy responsibilities that were placed upon him. On the soil of lils native state he won undying 244 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. fame, and upon this "field of monuments," made forever sacred by the blood of so many of his soldiers, should be erected to his memory, a monument that would bind together, and be the Keystone of them all. And with the name of IMeade must forever stand associated the name of that magnificent soldier and Pennsylvanian, General John F. Reynolds, who laid down his life, as a morning sacrifice, at the very opening of the battle. These two names are inseparable and their fame is imperishable. Their first commands were composed of a part of the Pennsylvania Reserves, and their military glory we claim as a part of our own peculiar inherit- ance. But time will not permit me to speak of Geary on the right, of Hancock in the center, of Crawford on the left and of the host of brave men who filled the gaps between. As we withdraw our thoughts from the past and turn our faces toward the future we behold a pleasing prospect. We feel assured that in the providence of God this country is destined to occupy a pre-eminent place among the nations of the earth. This j'ear marks the completion of our first century of constitutional liberty, and within no other period of the world's history has such progress been made in all that pertains to the highest civilization of man. We are amazed when we contemplate the rapidity and solidity of the growth of this republic. There is no halting in her onward march. Each generation pushes rapidly forward and takes a higher place than the one occupied by its predecessor. Education has opened wide the door of hope and usefulness to all classes and conditions of men, and liberty has widened her domain, until, under the protecting folds of the Stars and Stripes, representatives of all na- tionalities, races and civilizations, dwell together as free men, and you look in vain for serf or slave. * Behold this nation of American Freemen ! No titled nobility , but in its place the true nobility of manhood and womanhood. For regal splendor and the moated castle is substituted the quiet home with its hearth-stone, and the virtues and sturdy patriotism of the common people. It is not our rulers that have made this country great — they are our servants — but the people themselves, who, each in his day and generation, well and faithfully perfoi'ms his allotted task . As we have been inspired by the example of our God-fearing, liberty- loving and self-sacrificing forefathers, and have been able in the hour of trial to stand the supreme test of loyalty to our country, so will the gen- erations that follow us take new inspiration as they look upon this battle- field of monuments, and listen to the voice that comes in one mighty chorus from the countless graves of the loyal dead, imploring them to be true to the trust committed to their keeping. Tremendous was the price we paid for an unbroken Union, but it was worth all it cost, for who can foretell the position of power, honor and usefulness to which the nation may attain . Those who gave tlieir lives that the country might live did so without a murmur or regret. Those of us who survive enjoy the consciousness of duty don(>. We are content with the record as it stands, and have high hope for the future. It will not be long until our work is endcxl and wc shall finally be mustered Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 245 out to join the mighty host that hiis preceded us. Soon we also shall sleep in the majesty of eternal repose, but we shall in our latest hours be sus- tained by an unfaltering trust in the stability of our institutions and in the continued prosperity and welfare of our beloved country. ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN ROBP^RT TAGGART. COMRADES:— The Legislature of our State, during the session of 1886 and 1887, passed an act appropriating certain public moneys to be expended in the erection of memorials or monuments with which to mark the positions occupied by Pennsylvania Commands on this battlefield. A Commission, composed of leading and intelligent citizens in full sym- pathy with the spirit of the act, was appointed to cari-y out its provisions. It is well known that the members of this Commission, individually and collectively, have devoted much time and careful study to the discharge of the duties imposed on them ; and yet, their actions in some instances have been severely criticised. But this is not surprising when we reflect that, in the line of their duty, they have been called upon to decide iiues- tions as to the locations of regiments, and other details of the battle, about which, in most cases, they could know nothing personally, and in the decision of which they were confronted with conflicting testimony — on the one hand that of individuals based solely on memory, and on the other, the published reports of the battle made at, or immediately after its occurrence. No doubt, in the excitement incident to the engagement, or, possibly, through a desire to appropriate to themselves and those 'mder them, at least a full share of the honors of victory, some of the brigade and regimental commanders may have exceeded the bounds of accurate knowledge in making out their reports. But, at this late day, these re- ports, in the absence of positive evidence of their inaccuracy, should be accepted in preference to mere statments which may have percolated through twenty-five years of treacherous memory, aud, doubtless, absorbed much of the prejudice or partiality of the minds through which they passed. The Commission seems to have been governed by this view of the matter ; and, while their actions in some cases may have created dissatisfaction on the part of a few, it will be generally conceded that they have acted faithfully, intelligently and impartially in the discharge of their delicate and responsible duties, and, I believe, in the end, it will be acknowledged by all who desire to preserve intact the history of this battle, that so much of the act providing for the erection of these memorials as requires that all important details shall be subject to the inspection and approval of the Commission, is a wise and an importjint provision — one which has shielded the work from much inaccurate and discordant proclamation, and imparted to it something of true historic value. I refer to this matter for the reason that certain of the regimental com- mittees of the "Reserve Corps" — our own included— have had some discus- 17 246 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. sion, if not controversy, with the Commission touching the matter of con- solidating the appropriations to which the respective organizations are enti- tled, for the purpose of erecting a single memorial building. You will re- member that, at the reunion held in New Brighton two years ago, the committee then and there appointed was instructed, if practicable, to join with the committees of other regiments of the corps in the erection of a division memorial ; or, failing in that, to proceed and erect a regimental monument. Your committee made an honest effort to meet your preference in this matter ; but, after a careful study of the question in all its bear- ings, found they could not do so and avail themselves of the State appro- priation. This conclusion was arrived at by the State Commission, was sus- tained by the Attorney-General of the State, and reluctantly accepted by your committee as the ultimatum for their guidance. And now, having completed the work assigned us, you have been invited to meet here to-day, and I have been requested, in behalf of the committee, to make formal presentation of this monument to you. In discharging the duty which the partiality of my comrades has assigned me, I am well aware there are many channels in which our thoughts might be led with propriety and profit; but I feel that our presence here, or aught that we might say or do, would be but empty nothingness did we faU to grasp the true significance of this occasion. And what is this? If there is one more than another that we should learn as a lesson of the civil war, of which the battle fought here was the decisive conflict, it is that God reigns and holds within His hands the destinies of nations and of worlds, whilst we. His creatures, are but instruments whereby His power is manifest and purpose wrought. If we seek His -guidance and follow His appointed ways we have assurance that He will not forsake us ; but if we strive to buUd a Babel tower to mock His sovereign wUl, there are a thousand ways whereby confusion and disaster may set at naught our mightiest human efforts. That "Man of destiny" — so called — whose meteoric rise from a humble station to an empire's throne so astonished and dazzled the world but a century ago, exemplified in his brief career the blasphemy of his own lips' utterance when he declared that "Providence is always on the side of the heaviest battalions." In a burst of confidence he unfolded to one of the favorites of his court, the plan of a campaign on v/hich he was about to enter, and spoke with arrogance of certain victory. Being reminded that man might propose, but that God disposes, he replied "I propose and I also dispose." Within a twelvemonth more than one-half of that grand armj' of five hundred thou- sand men with which he invaded Russia had fallen victims to the casualties of battle or exposures of the march, whilst he, in advance of his retreating columns, was hurrying back to transfer the tidings of disaster to hopeful and expectant France ; and within two years thereafter the "vain froward child of empire" was an exile, shorn of power and fretting his life away on a barren isle. From the time that the stripling son of Jesse, with but sling and smooth stones gathered from the brook, went forth, in the name of Israel's God, to meet and vanquish the boasting giant mailed in brass and armed with Pennsylvania at Qettysburf/. 247 sword and spoar and shield, on to tlio time whon the little army of the Athenian and Platean patriots, chanting their battlc-hyiun along the monntain slopes of their native laud, bore down in triumph on the invad- ing hosts, ten times their number, of Mode and Persia, down through the ages to the time when our fathers, untrained and untried in the art of war, achieved their independence — through all these centuries history's p:i};("s are written over with refutations unmistakable and conclusive of the Napoleonic blasphemy, and abound in recorded triumphs of men and nations engaged in seemingly hopeless though right(H)US endeavors. From the sacred aisles of old "St. John's" in Richmond, then; comes to us through more than a century of years, the echoings of that sentiment which filled our fathers' hearts with hope and nerved their arms to action. Trusting not in their human strength, or martial skill or powess, but in firm reliance on the God of nations, they went forth to battle in a righteous cause, whilst one was chosen as their leader of whom it has been truly said ".belief in God and trust in an overruling power formed the essence of his character." We speak of Gettysburg as the most important battle of the civil war, in that secession here received its fatal w'ound. A wound from which it lingered, by virtue only of inherent force and courage in the hearts of those who listened to its siren voice and followed its deceptive banner. And we glory in the fact that he who led us on to victory here received his first promotion as one of our brigade commanders — one whom we had learned to love and honor for his patriotic virtues, his martial skill and uianly courage. Does it not increase our admiration for General Meade, to know that, as commander, he counselled all his soldiers to reliance on an all-controlling Providence, and that in the hour of triumph he gave to God all thanks for victory? Then, comrades, as we unveil this monument which speaks of the great event enacted here in years gone by, let us not exalt the human effort that gave to Gettysburg renown, above the cause and vital principles which were at issue in the contest; and above all let us not forget to acknowledge with becoming reverence the favor of the God of nations which gave to us the victory. In giving special prominence to such thoughts and feelings, it does not fall on us that we should ignore the personal efforts, or lightly estimate the personal sacrifies that are interwoven with the history of the war. It was our privilege to belong to a regiment which took part in the battle fought here, and to-day we have assembled to dedicate this monument, wrought from imperishable granite and erected on the spot where, more than a quarter of a century ago, we contended for what we then be- lieved, for what the lapse of time, the logic of events and the just verdict of mankind have since demonstrated to be right. It is a grand thought and glorious feeling to know that in great emer- gencies of life or of history we have had the privilege and embraced the opportunity of contending in a righteous cause. For the world's great crises are numbered not at stated intervals or by the changing years, but are born of epochs often hoary with the frosts of centuries, and to realize that we have been, though humble, actors in such a crisis is something that comes not in the course of every h\mian life. 248 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. The battle fought here during those memorable July days of 1863, was one of many in a more than four-years' contest between the North and South of our land, which has been aptly described by the lamented and martyred Lincoln as a test of the endurance of human government based on the equality of man. In that marvellous epic delivered by him at the dedication of the Cemetery on yonder heights, November, 1863, he made use of this language. "Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this con- tinent a new nation — conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposi- tion that all men are created equal. We are now engaged in a great civU war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedi- cated, can long endure." Such in truth was the nature of the conflict which took place here ; and who can now doubt that a decision adverse to the principle for which we contended would have proved a dire, if not an irreparable, calamity to mankind. To have testified to the world that this latest and most auspi- cious example of popular goverument based on universal intelligence, free conscience and moral power, had, within the first century of its existence, genei'ated within itself the elements of its own destruction, would have been to confess to the world that mankind in the most advanced state of civiliza- tion and under the most favorable conditions is incapable of self-govern- ment. Our name as a nation blotted from the registry of time would have checked the onward march of civilization for centuries to come, and the dark pall of oblivion would have enshrouded alike freedom's glory and man's earthlj' hopes. That we were right in that contest is a feeling not only borne in the inner consciousness of every Union soldier who took part in the civil war, but is even now testified to by many of the best and bravest of those who differed from \is in the past, and the courage of whose convictions was proved on many a hard-fought field. At a meeting held during the recent centennial observance in New York City, a noted Confederate gen- eral publicly declared his belief that the result of the war was fortunate for all concerned. At the same meeting the Governor of that State within the borders of which was first unfurled the banner of secession and along the shores of which re-echoed the first gun of the rebellion publicly said: "We may have been wrong, God only knows, and it now does seem as though His decision is against us." When time shall have healed the wounds and smoothed the asperities of the war, the utterances of these two representative men of the New South will have become crystallized into positive truth, accepted in good faith, and glorified in patriotic endeavors by all citizens of the republic ; and there shall be found none in this broad land to question the righteousness of that verdict which settled in all minds and for all time, the questions of the in- dissolubility of the American Union. It is therefore a matter of interest to us to meet here after the lapse of many years, to dedicate this monument which testifies to where we stood in the great crisis of our country's history. True it speaks to us in a special sense of Gettysburg; but who can read the inscriptions of other battles in which we took uo unimportant part, and not indulge in retrospective Pennsylvania at Gcttyshurg. 240 thought of all the thrilling scones .'iiiil incid'Mits of the three-years' service of the regiment. One of America's gifted suns has characterized "midnight's holy hour" of the closing year aa "A time for memory and for tears." If our feelings may be moved to such a depth by reflection on the chang- ing scenes and incidents of one brief year, what must be the emotions of our hearts as we contemplate to-day the most important, the most eventful period of our lives, between which time and this a quarter of a century has intervened. In memory we recount the many times we've tramped along the mountain slopes, across their crests and through the valleys from here to Richmond; and as we review the hardships, the trials, the dangers, the sorrows; and weigh them in the balance with the joys and hallowed recollections of those years, and see around us in the growing greatness and glory of our country, such grand fruition of our hopes and efforts, we might ask ourselves, would we, with knowledge of all we then endured, again enlist as soldiers should our country call to arms? I think I hear you answer yes, as then, from a sense of duty, but not otherwise. And yet as I look into your faces and see in furrowed cheeks and whitened hairs sad premonition of declining years, I am afraid you'd not respond to every roll-call after weary marches such as those that we were wont to make. But they are over — those days have passed, and the great events with which they were prolific are written on the pages of our country's history, whilst the surviving actors in the bloody drama are journeying down life's slope towards the setting sun. But of one thing we're as- sured. There is no regret in any soldier's heart for having served his country in that hour of danger. There is a well-grounded attachment on the part of the surviving members of the old Ninth Regiment to the memories that cluster around its history. But this is not surprising when we reflect that each member of that or- ganization was animated by a spirit of patriotism, to unite in the defense of our common country. Each shared in the common dangers of camp and field, and all were bound by the ties of a comradeship that were "welded in the fires of battle." Not least among the treasured recollections of our army life is the one that our regiment was among the first to respond to the call of the President for troops. It is worth somefhing at this time to know that the men who enlisted in the early days of 1861, when there was no enticement of a large bounty before, and no coercive power of conscription behind them, represented the typical American sol- dier, the free citizen of a free laud, understanding and appreciating the blessings and privileges, and willing to share the responsibilities and duties of citizenship. Of such were the men who took their first lessons in the school of the soldier in old Camp Wilkins and who were there organized as the Ninth Regiment of the "Pennsylvania Reserve Corps," an army in itself conceived in the wi.sdom and created through the energy of our then war Governor, Andrew (J. (^irtin, who still lives, ripe in years, hon- ored by all patriotic citizens and beloved by a!l surviving soldiers of the war. 250 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. It may well give us pride now to look back on those years and feel that, throughout our term of service, the regiment was second to no other of the division in the good opinion of brigade and division commanders, and that, at times, it pleased them to make public acknowledgement of the fact. And it must certainly add to our appreciation of such opinions to know that they came from such sources as Genera] Meade, the hero of Gettysburg ; General Reynolds, whose life blood hallowed the memories of this field ; General McCall, our organizer and first commander, and our own Genei-al Ord, under whose dashing leadership the Third Brigade won the first laurels of victory at Dranesville, that crowned any portion of the Army of the Potomac. These brave soldiers have all fought their last battle, and gone to their reward, as have also our first field officers, Jackson, Anderson and Snodgrass. May their memories be cherished by all true patriots, as I know they are by all surviving members of the old Ninth Regiment. But it was not only our officers and commanders who shed a halo of glory around the regimental history. There was to be found among the private soldiers a degree of intelligence, courage, patriotism and moral standard, at least, unsurpassed by any other similar organization of the war. It would be impossible, without more complete data than I have at com- mand, to mention aU the many conspicuous instances of gallantry and devotion to duty that might be gathered and woven into heroic or pathetic story if we could obtain from friends and comrades the true heart histories of all who fell from our ranks. Of these there are a few still fresh in memory to which I may be permitted to refer as illustrating something of the character of the boys of the regiment. On the eve of the second battle of Bull Run a number of enlisted men, having been promoted for meritorious service on the Peninsula, received their commissions, with instructions to report at headquarters for assign- ment to duty. They were entitled to, and could have claimed, thoir dis- charges, but with that high sense of honor characteristic of the true soldier and brave men under all circumstances, they declined to turn their backs on their comrades in the hour of impending danger, and went into that fight, carrying their guns as enlistod men, while they held their commissions as officers in their pockets. One of their number, the brave John Dannals, of Company A, was killed in the fight, while two others that I know of, who are stiU living, honored citizens of the country they helped to save, were seriously wounded. Just before the battle of Fredericksburg the bright and grave young soldier, John Westlake, having been for a long time on detached service with the Signal Corps, reported to his company for duty. I see him to-day, as he had just returned from a visit to his home, his trim form, handsome boyish face and bright new uniform, ready, willing and anxious to share with his comrades whatever of danger there might be in the line of duty. Fredericksburg was his first and last battle. Those who took part in the charge on the left of our line that day, will remember with what reluctant regret we relinquished the advantage we had gained, because of the failure to send us the needed and promised support. Many were the brave boya who fell with Jackson, our general and leader in that terrible charge and Pennsylvun'ta at (Ictlj/shKru. 251 disastrous retreat — and among them young Westlako. Whore his body was afterwards found, there were three or four of the company rifles which the boy soldier had gathered and endeavored to bring from the field, show- ing that the pledge given to the citizens of Pittsburgh who had presented those rifles to the company was, with him, no unmeaning obligation, but one in the fulfilment of which he offered up his life. The night before that same battle. Lieutenant Long, who you all re- member, sat beside the camp-fire with a friend and comrade, and talked of a premonition he had that he would fall in the approaching engagement. His comrade tried to lead his mind away from such forebodings, but he continued to talk of his approaching death, as that comrade afterwards in- formed me, in a brave, calm manner; and the last words he said that night were: "I feel sure this will be my last night with the boys of the company and regiment." He had given his watch, letters and other tokens of value to the hospital steward, with instructions to send them to his mother after the battle. He fell mortally wounded in the front of the fight and lived but a few hours. I had known Reuben Long from the time, when, as lads in our teens, we attended the same school, and as boy and man he was ever noble, true-hearted and brave. It matters not what you or I may think of premonitions such as so impressed his mind that night before the battle. This we know. As he sat beside the camp-fire, and calmly, bravely, as his friend expressed it, talked of his approaching death, he felt within his soul that to-morrow's sun would light his pathway to the tomb. Yet, when the mist was lifted from the field of Fredericksburg, and the battle line was formed on that December morning, he was present at the post of duty, nor faltered, though he heard his death knell in the command to charge across that fated field. It is easy to understand how, in the whirl of the battle's mad fury, one may encounter and despise danger, or even death with all its terrors. But in the stillness of the night, to calmly contemplate the giving up of home, and friends, and kindred, and life itself with all its hopes and joys and aspirations, and yet, in honor's name, resolve to make the sacrifice, is something that the truly brave of heart, and only they, can understand. In such heroic conduct in the very face of death, we have a clearer view of how a brave man may approach his grave. "I-lke ore vrho wraps the drapery of his couch About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams." In my own company there were three brothers — sons of a widow — one of whom, the brave, cheerful, noble-hearted William MahafTey was among the first to fall in that fearful charge at Gaines' Mill; and to-day his mould- ering remains lie somewhei'e, in an unknown and unmarked grave, on the Peninsula. At the battle of Bull Ruu that gallant soldier. Captain Shan- non, received a leaden messenger of death in his forehead. Lieutenant Kirkpatrick, ever foremost and fearless in the path of duty, was at home seriously wounded. The first lieutenant, complaining of some bodily in- firmity, I know not what, was at Washington city pleading for a discharge from the service. Robert Mahaffey, one of the two remaining brothers of whom I have spoken, was first sergeant and in command of the company. Though suffering from a severe wound in the arm, received from the flying 252 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. fragment of a shell, he refused to act on the advice of Dr. Phillips and go to the hospital for treatment. But, with his arm bound and carried in a sling, he led the company on that tiresome march through Maryland, up the rugged steeps of South Mountain, and on to the battlefield of Antietam, where, with Snively, Swartzlander, Scott, Lemon, McLain, Vanlier, and other brave boys like himself, who fell around the regimental colors, he poured out his life's blood in defense of the flag. Who that lay beside tliis stone wall when first erected wUl ever forget the piteous cries for water, that came as an aftermath of the charge in this swale, from the wounded Confederates who lay in our front. They were in armed rebellion against the legally-constituted authorities of our government — sworn enemies of our country, bent on its destruction. But they were our brothers, and the ethics of our Christian civilization not only forbade that we should needlessly torture them, but demanded that we should use all reasonable measures to prevent their suffering, and there was common assent and approbation v/hen Sergeant McMunn volunteered to carry to those wounded men the water for which they prayed. But, oh! the cruel treacherous greeting with which that act of Christian charity was met, in the worse than rebel bullet that came crashing through his face as he bent to cool with water the burning lips of a wounded, helpless foe. It did not prove a fatal wound, but it v/ould have been a blessing to our comrade had that bullet struck a vital spot, for who can measure the depth of pain and sorrow and mental anguish in which it plunged his after life, at last dethroning reason and ending in his self-destruction. I have spoken but of the dead, and not of the many wounded living who bear in their bodies painful reminders of their devotion to country and duty, and those of whom I have spoken were not officers of exalted positions, commanding divisions and army corps, but all of them, at the time of their enlistment, numbered among the rank and file of the regi- ment. But I need not say to you that there marched in the ranks of our volunteer soldiers many who, as to moral and intellectual force, social standing and all the elements of true nobility of character, were peers of any and more than peers of many of those to whom they owed obedience in the line of duty, and do you tell me that these men in the humbler stations who so faithfully and courageously performed the obligations of their soldier life are deserving of honor or gratitude in less degree than those who, by chance or favor, or even by virtue of their talents, were more exalted in position? Though such a sentiment seems to accord with the spirit of the times I cannot believe it. The general who rode at the head of the columns with groom and orderly to pitch his tout where to •sleep at night did his duty no more and no less than the private soldier who, foot-sore and weary, under the burden of his arms and accoutrements, marched through summer's heat or winter's cold, content to bivouac under lieaven's blue vault for a tent, with but a single blanket as a martial cloak to shield him from the snows, the rains and the chilly airs of night. In a letter which the treasurer of our association received from the late William Thaw of Pittsburgh, and which accompanied a liberal contribution toward the erection of this monument, the spirit which animated the boys of 1861 is referred to, though briefly, in a manner alike eloquent with truth Pennsylvania at Gettyshuvfi. 2~)'.\ and creditable to the patriotism . of that jjr<'at and good mau, and this suggests a thought to which it is propcM* I should rofcr here. The State, as you are awaro, appropriated the sum of fifteen hundred dollars to each separate command that participated in this battle. Your committee, desiring to erect a more imposing monument than this sum would justify, made an appeal, by circular letter, to members and friends of the regiment, for contributions to a supplemental fund. Mr. Thaw who was one of the early patrons of the regiment and especially of Company A, in which he took a special interest, sent his cheek for a large contribution, and wrote Mr. Murdock, our treasurer, as follows: * * * "Meanwhile I send you a check for five hundred dollars, fur the fund for erecting a monument at Gettysburg to the Ninth Pennsyl- vania Reserves, as a memorial of Mrs. Thaw to her brother, John S. Copley, killed at South Mountain, September 14, 1862, and from myself also as a memorial of a large number of personal young friends who went away with the 'Pittsburgh Rifles' (Company A) that summer morning in 1861 (whom I, with other of their friends and relatives marched up Penn street by their side), and who never came back, leaving their bodies scat- tered — and in some cases unmarked — sacrificed for their country with an intelligent and spontaneous patriotism such as was not surpassed by any organization that went into the war." A few weeks ago, in a foreign city, the immortal spirit of William Thaw passed from earth to heaven, and but recently his body was entombed in his native city. While living, because of his generous spirit and unbounded charities, he was, perhaps, the best loved man in the State of Pennsylvania, and to-day his memory is enshrined in the hearts of thousands, nt>t only of those who were sharers of his bounty, but also those who were admirers of his character. Also, widely known for large beneficence and purity of life, is the widow to whom, in her sad bereavement, a multitude of mourning hearts go out in sympathy ; and I know that the hearts of all who are here assembled will respond with quickened impulse to a sense of gratitude and sympathy when it is learned that this noble woman's present interest in our organiza- tion is born of what to each of us is a sad but hallowed memory of the war— the heroic death of our brave and worthy comrade, her brother, I feel that I but meet the wishes and voice the sentiments of all the com- rades, when to her, and to all the friends who have so generously con- tributed to the erection of this monument, I make public acknowledgment of their liberality and friendly interest. This letter of the grand man whose friendship is one of the memories of which we may well feel proud, refers to an "intelligent and spontaneous patriotism" as the inspiration that prompted the young men of the country to respond to the call of duty in 1861. I know there are many of intensely practical temperament, whose view of life and measure of its duties is bounded by the narrow circle of selfish interests, desires and pleasures, who cannot comprehend the full and true meaning of "intelligent patriot- ism," or understand how such a sentiment can have a dwelling place in the heart of man. But, thank God, it has pleased him to implant in the hearts of the great majority of His rational creatures a feeling that 254 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. patriotism in its true sense, as signifying those virtues which grow out of a love of country, is as much a divine attribute in the human soul, as is that love to God and humanity, on which the ^Master assures us, "hang all the law and the prophets." Sentiment it may be, and doubtless is, but not such according to Hume and his class of metaphysicians — a mere feeling — but rather a resultant of the co-operation of rational power and moral feeling. Why, I can no more conceive of those young men — boys in years, but men in deeds — whose familiar forms rise in memory before me to-day, as I have seen them in the hour of deadly conflict, their pale faces seamed with the smoke and sweat of battle — doing, daring, dying for their country. I can no more conceive of them as being actuated by a wild and irrational impulse or unreasoning sentiment when they exchanged the comforts of good homes and the companionships of kind friends, for the rough, bare and common dangers of a soldiers' life, than I can conceive of them as being moved by mercenary considerations in abandoning profit- able and congenial employments for the distasteful and profitless calling of arms. Say if you will, that they were moved by sentiment. It was such a one as has been the inspiration of martyrs and patriots in all ages of the world, when they have counted their lives as nothing in comparison with their convictions of right and the demands of duty. Such a senti- ment as has proved an inspiration to the noblest deeds of philanthropy, of which the world has had knowledge, and through which mankind has been blessed. The liberal contribution which accompanies this letter from our honored friend, whose lips are now sealed in death, coming as it does as the joint gift of husband and wife, suggests a thought which very seldom receive.^ that consideration its importance demands, and this is, that there were heroines as well as heroes in our civil war; and they apart from the many noble women, whose heaven-born mission led them as ministering angels to hospital and battlefield, where with tender loving care they nursed the sick, or prayed beside the couch of dying soldier boys. We are apt in estimating the cost as well as in apportioning the honors of the civil war, to become so absorbed in the financial and military prob- lems wrought out in halls of legislation and on the battlefield to overlook the patient, though silent, influence that Avent out from the home circles of our land, where mothers, sisters, wives and sweethearts, toiled with willing hands and prayed with fervent spirits in our behalf. Many of you have heard one of our comrades tell how, having enlisted when under age, his father tried to prevent liiin from continuing in the service. During his first visit to camp the father failed to shake the boy's purpose, and the day following he returned, bringing his wife along to plead for their son's return. Failing again to make the desired impression, and finding that a threat to exercise his legal authority to compel the boy to return home was of no avail, the father turned in despair to the little woman at his side. Reaching up and placing her hands on the broad shoulders of her boy, she said: "My son, you are dearer to me than the apple of mine eye, and yet if you feel it to be your duty to enlist and should fail to respond to your country's call, in this hour of the nation's peril, all I can say, is, you would then have none of your mother's blood in your veins." Pennsylvania at (JcttjjshHr;/. 255 Who can tell how much th:\t foclini; of patriotism referred to in the letter of William Thaw as the animating spirit of the boys of 1861 was inspired, encouraged and controlled by the loyal women of our land, and to what extent its spontaneity was owing to their active earnest sympathy and efforts. And is it not true that the tiresome march was made with less fatigue, that privations were borne more willingly, and dangers encountered with courage strengthened because of loved ones praying for our safety and the triumph of our cause? We rejoiced that they were far rcinovMl fnuu the scene of conflict and were blessed with comforts to us denied ; but he has yet to learn the depth and power of woman's love, who knows not, that, in sleepless nights, in anxious fears, in patient waitings and in bitter sorrow for the loved ones lost, they suffered more than tongue can tell. God bless these mothers, sisters, wives and sweethearts of the war in whose approving smiles and sympathizing hearts we found such patient inspiration in the path of duty and the hour of danger. But, comrades, the hours of the day are passing, many years have come and gone since first we looked upon the field of Gettysburg; and this is, perhaps, the last time that, as an organization, we shall gather here. Without pretense to powers of divination, I think I may safely say your minds have largely dwelt to-day upon the strange and striking contrast between the scene as here presented and that which met the view when first we came upon this field. Then this ground, crimsoned with the ming- ling blood of friend and foe, trembled beneath the shock of battle as hos- tile forces charged and counter-charged across these fields. These hills were ablaze with the very flame of death as it belched from cannon mouth. The air was rent with cannon roar, with shriek of bursting shell and w-histling bullets sound, all playing to the sad accompaniment of moan, and groan, and prayer, and imprecation from the lips of wounded, dying men, w-hile from out the pandemonium, none knew how soon might come to him the summons to '■Take his chamber in the .silent halls of death." To-day the air is filled with peaceful sounds and odors. The ripened harvests have been gathered from the fields where the reaper death mowed with bloody scythe and fiendish joy the cannon's swath. The chirp and song of bird are undisturbed by gun report or shout of hostile army, and everywhere around w-e may see a token of that promised coming of the Lord, when sword and spear, the implements of war, shall be beaten into share of plough and pruning hook. "When nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more." Until we shall behold the glory of this prophetic vision, may we not indulge the hope and prayer that never again may we be called upon to resort to the dread arbitrament of arms to defend the honor of our country's flag. And now, comrades, as we part to-day, what thought or lesson of the hour shall we take with us to our homes to serve as an incentive to renewed devotion in the line of patriotic duty? 256 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. When the first great leader and lawgiver of the children of Israel was laid to rest, "in a vale in the land of Moab," Joshua, his successor, directed, as the host were passing over Jordan, in the presence of the priests who bore aloft the ark of the covenant of the Lord, that twelve men be chosen- one from each of the tribes that had journeyed in the wilderness, and that these men take, each, a stone from the bed of the river where the bearers of the ark had stood, and that these stones be carried to the place on the east side of Jordan where they should encamp that night, and be there erected as a memorial unto the children of Israel forever. Not as testifying to the courage and endurance of the chosen people who had wandered for forty years in a barren land, but as testifying to the mightiness of God and his faithfulness in the fulfilment of his promises. And when the stones were placed as directed, Joshua spake unto the people saying: "When your children shall ask their fathers, in time to come, saying what mean these stones? "Then ye shall let your children know, saying, Israel came over this Jordan on dry land." "That all the people of the earth might know the hand of the Lord, that it is mighty." Standing within the shadow of these hills which were silent witnesses of the contest waged here in the ever-to-be-remembered past, and in the presence of this monument which speaks of where we stood in that hour of trial and danger, and seeing the sculptured granite with which this field is dotted, may we not imagine our children and our children's children in the years to come, asking their fathers, as did the Israelitish children of old: "What mean these stones?" Truly maj' it be said to them that "the hand of the Lord is mighty" and though they may not be told that their fathers "came over this on dry land," but rather on ground drenched with the blood of wounded and slain comrades, yet may it be said they stood here devoted to the cause of human liberty and upholding the "Ark of our Covenant" of Perpetual Union ; and if ever the unrighteous hand of political ambition shall again remove that ark from our midst may worse than Assyrian calamities aSlict the plunderers till our treasure be restored. If ever the genius of human liberty be driven from our shores, like Noah's dove may she find no rest for the soles of her feet until she return and find a glad people ready and willing to receive, to cherish and to love her. As testifying to the restoration of that Ark of our Covenant — to the re- enthonement of that presiding genius of our nation, and to the heroic endeavors of those who, under God's favor — though it may have been in tears, in sorrow and blood, wrought out the triumph of a righteous cause, may this monument remain a memol^ial unto your children forever. Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 257 ADDRESS OF SERGBANT-^fAJoR A. P. MORRISON. TWENTY-SIX yi;ars have swiftly roll«^d away, old comrades of the "Ninth," since we stood hero on this very spot in battle line, bearing our part in that momentous three-days' struggle between the armies of the North and South, which history has already recognized and recorded as one of those great battles of the world, which change or fix and de- termine the destinies of nations, and the character of their civil institutions for all time. Here, on this bloody field of Gettysburg, the surging tide of "Secession" was stayed and turned back, and the "union" of these states was saved from impending dissolution, and for all time made sure and strong. Here the most costly sacrifice of patriot blood was poured out a willing offering by the nation's sons, to the end that this great nation might live, and con- tinue to live on and on, "to the last syllable of recorded time." Yes, comrades, the "Ninth" stood here then, in name and fame strong as in other days of battle, to meet the foe — but in numbers how reduced. Where now — in this the very crisis of the great conflict — where now, are those ten hundred men and moi'e, who two short years before had marched beneath the battalion banner of the "Ninth," with bounding hearts and buoyant step, away from home and friends, and all the joys of peaceful life, to battle for the right? Here, but a handful of those brave ones stood to meet the onset of the impetuous foe, whose feet had dared invade the borders of their native State. Where had the others gone? Let Dranesville tell; let the gory fields of the seven-days' fight from Beaver Dam to Malvern Hill make truthful answers. Let the fierce fighting in 'the Pope campaign from Rap- pahannock's banks to Chantilly's woods be heard — let South Mountain and Antietam mournfully reply ; and Fredericksburg with solemn voice from hill and plain, report the number of the fallen there — let all the wearing marches and the exhausting toils of duty in the field, whether the summer sun was scorching, or the frosts and piercing winds of winter chilled the lonely picket's blood— let all that this imports of hardships and physical disability and sickness unto death, make up account for the absent ones of this great day. Ah, comrades, what a small space of ground among these grey and rugged rocks and boulders, could our good regiment cover and fight for and defend when the "battle was set in array," on that sr-cund and third day of July, 18G3. Its ten companies, all told, could only place about three hundred men in line. We believed in the inherent and ever-abiding justice <>f tlie cause foi which we fought. We felt in our inmost being, then, as evi-r, that, "Right is right— since God Is God, And right the day must win; To doubt would be disloyalty, To falter, would be sin." And, notwithstanding its depleted ranks, the "Ninth" went forward to its place in the line of battle, as steadily and firmly as if it had been itself a whole army corps. 258 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. In the Gettysburg campaign the glory of our regiment, and of the brigade as well, consisted not so much in what might be called the actual clash of arms in conflict with the rebels, as in its always getting to the right place, however perilous that place might be, at the right time — however long and exhausting the marches, the effort might require — and in its tenaci- ously holding the position to which it was assigned, against the very flower of the Confederate army. The march from the defenses of Washington, begun on the 25th of June, to the battlefield of Gettysburg, not far from Little Round Top — taking into consideration the frequent, almost incessant, rains, and the heavy and slippery condition of the roads — was a very remarkable one in- deed. It tested the vigor and endurance of the men to the utmost limit of their strength. If in the daytime we moved slowly and with difiiculty through fields and woods, guarding, it might be, long trains of ammunition and supplies or batteries of heavy guns, which occupied and oftentimes blocked up the soft and deeply-rutted roads, when the sun went down we were pushed forward far into the night to make up for our retarded progress in the day. To you all, soldiers of the "Ninth," I need not enter into details of that seven-days' march. Here, on this historic spot, where its goal was reached, it comes back to every mind, with all its incidents fresh and vividly as if a thing of yesterday. But you will bear with me while I read from the dim and faded pages of my own little pocket diary these few brief ex- tracts of memoranda relating to that march: June 24th, 1863. Our regiment was lying quietly at Vienna. On the evening of that day we got orders to rejoin our brigade at Upton's Hill some eight miles back. We marched about 9 o'clock and reached our destination a little after midnight. Thur.sday, June 25th. The "Ninth" marching with the brigade at 1 o'clock p. m., moved out in the direction of Vienna on the same road we of the "Ninth" had come in on the night before, and halted not far from where we had been encamped. This marching up the hill simply to march down again did not seem exactly right to our boys. It meant for them sixteen miles of unnecessary tramping through the rain. Friday, 26th. Reveille at 4 o'clock in the morning; on the march at 6. Raining hard all day; roads very slippery and heavy. Made about sixteen miles and halted in the evening at Goose creek not very far from Edwards' Ferry. Saturday, 27th. Reveille at 4 o'clock; to march at 5. Crossed the Poto- mac at Edwards' Ferry on a pontoon bridge and found ourselves once more in Maryland, a part of Hooker's army. Day showi^ry and roads muddy. Halted at night near the mouth of the Monacacy river having made at least fifteen mUes. Sunday, 28th. Reveille at 3.30; on the march at 5; crossed the Monocacy ; day cloudy with a little rain ; joined the Fifth Army Corps ; our "Pennsyl- vania Reserves" having been assigned to that corps on the request of Gen- eral Meade, its then commander; halted near Frederick after marching about twelve miles. Here we learned of the appointment of General Meade to the command of the "Army of the Potomac." Great news this for us Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 259 of the Pennsylvania Reserve Corps. Wo were proud to know that one of our own generals, one for whom we felt that tvc had won the "stars." should be placed in this very highest position in the army in the very crisis of the nation's fate. We had confidence in him for wo knew liim to he an energetic, brave, cool and determined leader. Monday, 29th. Reveille again at 4 a. m. ; the "Ninth" fell in about 8, but did not move forwsrd until about 1, and then marched slowly all the afternoon; the day was rainy and the road was (illed up with wagon trains; about 6 o'clock in the evening the road was cleared before us and we started off almost on a "double-quick ;" crossed the Monocacy and turned directly northward towards Pennsylvania, marching over very bad country roads; halted about midnight, having made some fifteen miles. Tuesday, June 30th. Reveille at 4 o'clock; it rained on us very hard last night and this morning; marched at 7 a. m. ; found the road exceedingly heavy and slippery; passed through Liberty, Johnsville, Union Bridge, Union, and halted near Union Mills, having made a big day's march, not less than twenty miles; the "Reserves" are all in high spirits about going into Pennsylvania. Wednesday, July 1st. On the march by 6.30 this morning, moving rather slowly all day; crossed the State line into old Pennsylvania about 4 p. m. amid glad cheering and loud hurrahs ; heard the dull boom of distant cannon from time to time, but did not then know that the great battle was al- ready on; about 6.30 o'clock in the evening the division was massed, rations were issued and extra ammunition distributed to the men, and all signs indi- cated a coming fight; there was not much rest in this short halt, and by 8 o'clock we were again on the move ; marched on without stopping until about 2 o'clock of the morning of the 2d, halting at last, after passing through Hanover, near McSherrystown. Thursday, July 2d. After only two hours rest, reveille at 4 a. m., and marched immediately without waiting even to make a cup of coffee. Pretty hard this, but the weary men now understanding that the emergency was pressing, and forgetting the want of much-needed sleep and food and rest, pushed forward cheerfully and eagerly toward what they knew must be a bloody battle. After marching about an hour we were halted long enough to make our coffee, and then once more moved rapidly forward until about 10 o'clock we reached Rock creek, some two miles southeast of the town of Gettysburg. Here we learned of the disastrous fortunes of the preced- ing day to the Union forces, and worst news of all, the untimely death of one of our best loved generals, one whom the Pennsylvania Reserve Volun- teer Corps was proud to have claimed as its own commander — the beau ideal soldier, the gallant General Reynolds. From 7 o'clock a. m., of July 1st to 11 o'clock on the 2d, twenty -eight hours, with only about three hours given to sleep and rest, our regiment had marched forty-two' miles. Is it any wonder that when the halt was sounded the weary men threw themselves upon the ground, under that burning July sun and slept away the hours, while the battle was preparing? About 4 o'clock in the afternoon the fiery storm suddenly burst in fierce fury on Sickles' Third Corps. Immediately the Fifth under Svkes was 260 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. hurried forward to the succor of the Third, tben badly broken up and forced back in shattered fragments from its too-far-advanced position. It must have been about 5 o'clock when our division, the Third of Sykes' Corps, under the gallant General Crawford, passed over the crest of the ridge out yonder to the right of Little Round Top, and first came under fire. How vividly the fearful scene of that dread hoar comes back to you old soldiers of the "Ninth," as you now look out over yonder quiet woods and peaceful fields. The sun, a dull, red ball of fire, was going down "wrapped in drifts of lurid smoke." The appalling roar of cannon; the screaming shells ex- ploding in mid-air; the sharp rattling and continuous crash of infantry firing; the charging masses of the enemy; the broken columns of our side slowly falling back, contesting every foot of ground, and yielding one position only to make a more stubborn stand for another ; the whole atmos- phere thick and heavy with the sulphurous smoke of battle. Yon field of ripened grain just ready for the harvest, "blasted below the dun hot breath of war." Oh, comrades, it was not a cheering scene that then opened on our view! On the contrary, we might truly say that at that moment "disaster stared us in the face." The two brigades of United States Infantry, the "Regu- lars," had just advanced across yon piece of level ground, while our two brigades of Pennsylvania Reserves, by General Crawford's orders, were "massed in column by division," in the open space just north of this rocky spur of Round Top." Vincent, and O'Rorke, and Hazlett, and Weed, with their gallant com- mands, had but a few moments before wrested this master-post of Little Round Top from the grasp of Hood. But, oh! at what a cost! Vincent and O'Rorke, Hazlett and Weed, all four, lay dead upon this mount of glory. The question then was, could the survivors of the terrible struggle to secure this vantage ground, thus bereft of all their leaders, could they with- stand another impending charge of the now exviltant rebels? The stake was great, too great to be left in doubt. Humphreys was "changing front to the rear," but to no good purpose. Sweitzer's Brigade fiercely beset on its flank and rear was forced from its position. The "Regulars," attacked in front and flank, were compelled to fall back. You all remember how they looked . How firmly they held themselves together, firing and falling back, firing and falling back, their front diminish- ing at every volley until only one-half of their charging column was left to fire ! It was just at this critical moment that our gallant Genornl Crawford put his two brigades of Pennsylvania Reserves in motion, our Third Bri- gade in front. Advancing rapidly we were very soon within range and under a heavy fire from the enemy. But we had not gone more than fifty yards when the urgent call for re-inforeement for the few survivors of the ■ gallant regiments that had at such a heavy cost plucked Little Round Top from the clutch of Hood and his Confederate veterans — and who now crippled, and exhausted by the deadly struggle, their leaders cold in death, still lying where they fell, awaited among these rocks and on this rugged Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 201 hill, the still more dosiienite cimrgo the bafllod rebels were prepnring to ovorwlu'lin their deriuiMtcd rimks and seize this granite key of the battle- field — reaehed General Crawford. lie was not slow in responding to the call. Ours, the leading brigade, was halted and ordered to go at once to tlie succor of the exhausted comrades of the Vincent and O'Rorke com- mands. Without a moment's delay, the Fifth, Ninth, Tenth and Twelfth Regiments of Reserves changed direction and moved by the left flank, almost on a double quick over the hill to this, its western slope, and joined the remnant of Vincent's Battalion. The movement was in the very nick of time. The plan of Hood and Law, to seize the "coigne of vantage," was foiled, for with accession of Fisher's Brigade to the gallant men who had so desperately fought for and so tenaciously held this almost impreg- nable position, any new attack would be madness, and could only result in a repulse more sanguinary and crushing than the first had been. Little Round Top, found and proclaimed by Warren to be the key to the whole Union battle line, was saved — and safe — for General Meade, what- ever might befall on other portions of the field . A little later when darkness had settled ove'r these woods, the Fifth and Twelfth Regiments were taken by Colonel Fisher, with other troops, to drive the enemy from Roimd Top and occupy its lofty summit, while the Ninth and Tenth were left to hold and guard this gap which Hood and Tjaw had deemed their open gateway to our left and rear. We did not then know the supreme importance of the position we had to protect, but we do know now from General Hill's official report that "Hood's right was held as in a vise." About 10 o'clock that night, our line being established and our pickets set a few j-ards in advance, we lay down, each soldier in his place and "with all his armor on" ready for any night attack the rebels might attempt ; and notwithstanding an occasional shot from a picket post to remind us of im- pending danger, and the pitiful moaning of the wounded all around us, we slept as only exhausted soldiers can. With the earliest dawn of day on July 3d, our line was up and on the elcrt. How vigorously you all worked, comrades, on this stone wall! A labor of love it was, of love of life, if honor, of country; for well you knew how this low breastwork, rude and rough in form, might help to gain and save them all, in the storm of battle that then seemed sure to burst upon us ere the sun was high. And here we lay all that long summer day awaiting calmly, yea hoping, for the charging columns of the rebels. But no attack in force was made on our position. Skirmish firing in our front and the crack of the sharp- shooters' rifles were the only sounds of war that broke the stillness of these woods, until, sudden as a flash of lightning in the sultry afternoon, these "rock ribbed hills" wei'C made to shake and quiver by that terrific roar of three hundred cannon thundei'ing from the opposing lines. Oh! how great and grand it was, and yet how dreadful. These rocks and woods that seemed to promise refuge and safety became an added element of danger when the iron hail that filled the air cut olT large limbs from these tall trees and hurled among us granite fragments whenever a heavy round shot struck and shattered some protruding boulder. But with all that fearful shelling the casualties in the Ninth were very few. The records 18 262 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. show we had but two men killed and five men wounded in this great battle. But the wounding of one of our comrades, one who but lately, "after life's fitful fever," has gone to his long rest, was an incident of that day which may have special mention. Here it was, right here, that brave and generous Sergeant McMunn of Company G, moved only by an impulse of pity for a sufferiug man, laying aside his gim and holding up his hand in token that he went only on a deed of peace and mercy, stepped out from the protection of our wall of stones, to carry to the parched lips of a sorely wounded foe, a cup of water. And while bending over the death- stricken body of the rebel soldier in this ministration of pity and compas- sion, a bullet from the rifle of some ruthless rebel sharpshooter hidden in the tree top crushed through his face. It was a most dastardly deed ! But sudden and sure vengeance followed on the instant, and the rebel miscreant fell pierced by more than one ball from the sergeant's comrades of Com- pany G. The battle ended with the setting sun of that third day of mighty conflict and slaughter, and victory at last rested with the side which was contending for the righteous cause of our national unity and the per- petuation of that beneficent system of government which had been handed down to us, a precious legacy, by the patriot fathers, the wise and far- seeing statesmen and sages of the old Revolutionary times. When the morning sunlight gilded these mountain heights and rugged rocks, and spread in splendor over all these blood-stained plains and ridges on that 4th day of July, 1863, the ever- joyous anniversary of our nation's natal day, the nation's existence which had been ruthlessly threatened and imperiled by its Confederate enemies, was once more firmly established on its sure foundation, its underlying corner-stone, strong and enduring as this great rock of Round Top under whose shadow we now stand — that ever living principle which appeals to the common sense of the common people among all races and in all times — the principle, namely, "of govern- ment of the people, by the people, for the people." That, comrades, was the great stake for which we of the Union army battled here and on a hundred other glorious fields all over the Union's wide extended realm. And may I not now, after the lapse of these many years, adopt the beautiful language of Edward Everett, the venerable and eloquent orator on the occasion of the dedication, a quarter of a century ago, of yonder National Cemetery to the sacred dust of the martyr heroes who gave up their lives, "that wheresoever throughout the civilized world the accounts of that great warfare are read, and down to the latest period of recorded time, in the glorious annals of our common country, there will be no brighter page than that which relates The Buttle of Geityshurg ." Pennsylvania neral Irvin McDowell was commander, and remained near Alexandria while the other corps were em- barking for the Peninsula. The First Army Corps was originally com- posed of the divisions commanded by Generals Franklin, McCall and King. Franklin's Division was sent to Yorktown in April and became the First Division, Sixth Army Corps. April 10, the Third Brigade, Pennsylvania Reserves, marched by way of Fairfax Court House and Centerville. cross- ing Bull Run at Blackburn's Ford, and arrived at Manassas on the 11th. The Tenth Regiment was assigned quarters in a rebel camp about a mile southeast of Manassas Station, but in a few days marched to Catlett's, where it endured nearly three weeks of extremely disagreeable weather, and on May 4, to Falmouth via Hartwood Church. Though out of season, some bee products and some turkeys were confiscated on this march, even the dignified colonel of the Tenth Regiment being said to have been im- plicated in the turkey business. After a few days near Falmouth, the Tenth Re.iciment moved to the vicinity of Potomac Creek and fitted up a camp in very fine style, the other regiments of the brigade doing likewise. Heavy details were here em- ployed in cutting and hauling timber, building bridges and repairing the rail- road from Aquia Creek Landing on the Potomac to Fredericksburg and be- yond. These, with drill, guard and picket, kept the men very fully em- ployed. Here the brigade lost the leadership of General Ord, who was pro- moted to be a major-general and assigned to the command of a new division attached to the First Army Corps. Brigadier-General Truman Seymour was assignd to command the brigade, a change of commanders that was never appreciated by the command. The Tenth Regiment also lost its honored chief. Colonel McCalmont's personal affairs rendered it imperative that he should resign, and much to the regret of both oflicers and men, he was mustered out of the service. Lieutenant-Colonel Kirk became colonel, and Captain A. J. Warner of Company G was promoted to lieutenant-colonel. 266 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. June 13th, the Tenth Regiment emba'-ked on the Rappahannock river above Port Royal, on the steamer Thomas Jefferson and the schooner T. Raymond which was towed by the steamer. There was considerable novelty in the trip, occupying most of two days, down the Rappahannock, both steamer and schooner often finding the bottom of the river. On the morning of the 16th, the Tenth landed at White House, on the Pamunkey, and marched out the railroad, passing Tur stall's Station, just missing J. B. B. Stuart's cavalry in its famous raid around the Array of the Potomac. The Third Brigade was here temporarily reduced to three regiments, the Sixth Regiment being detached to guard the railroad. June 18th, the divi- sion marched from Dispatch Station up the north side of the Chickahominy, and passing Porter's Provisional Fifth Army Corps, at Gaines' Mill, took post at the advance of the right wing of the army, on Beaver Dam run, about a half mile east of the village of Mechanicsville, which village (entirely deserted by its inhabitants) was occupied by our pickets as their reserve post, and is only five miles from Richmond. The intrenchments and camps of the rebels were in plain view across the Chickahominy. Some small earthworks were thrown up by the Third Brigade along the east bank of the Beaver dam, and the timber boi-dering that stream mostly cut down, the enemy meanwhile keeping us stirred up by an occasional shot or shell, which they could throw from their works beyond the Chickahominy entirely over our camps. In the afternoon of June 26, the rebel divisions of D. H. Hill and A. P. Hill, having crossed the Chickahominy above and at Mechanicsville, cap- turing most of the pickets, appeared on the high ground west of the Beaver dam, and soon advanced furiously to attack our position. Our line was held by the First Brigade, General John F. Reynolds, on the right, on its left two companies, A and B of the Tenth, then the Twelfth Regiment completing the line to the Chickahominy flats, on our left. The other com- panies of the Tenth and Ninth regiments were in reserve, and the Second Brigade, General George G. Meade, held the line of the Chickahominy to left and rear. Archer's and Field's brigades of A. P. Hill's Division, attempted to carry the right of the line, and Ripley's and bri- gades of D. H. Hill's, were hurled against our left. At every point they were most severely repulsed, the First North Carolina and Forty-fourth Georgia regiments of Ripley's Brigade meeting with losses exceeded in very few instances during the war. Official report gives loss of Forty-fourth Georgia as three hundred and twenty-five killed and wounded in this en- gagement. The whole rebel loss was one thousand three hundred and sixty- five killed and wounded, and that of the Pennsylvania Reserves, the only troops engaged on the Union side, was two hundred and fifty-six killed and wounded, and one hundred and five missing, the missing including the captured pickets. Next morning the division marched back about four miles, and rested behind the lines of Morrell's Division at Gaines' Mill. The rebels, reinforced by Longstreet's Division and the three divisions under Jackson, followed the movement closely, and in the afternoon assailed Moi'rell's and Sykes' positions in heavy force, bringing on one of the most stubbornly contested battles of the war. The regiments of the Third Bri- gade were sent into action separately, as their presence seemed to be PcnHtii/lvailia at (tettysburg. 267 needed to support the haid-presscd front line. The Tenth, going to the assistance of Gi'ilHu's Brigade, took a gallant part in repulsing repeated assaults of Pender's, tJregg's and Anderson's brigades of A. P. Hill's Division, holding its ground until late in the evening, when, with ammuni- tion exhausted and ranks sadly thinned, the whole line was forced to give way, before the overwhelming onslaught made upon it by Longstrcet's, Jackson's and Whiting's divisions. The loss suffered by the Tenth Regi- ment at Gaines' Mill was numerically the greatest it ever sustained, al- though the percentage of loss out of number engaged was much greater at Manassas, and also at Fredericksburg, and was the heaviest of any regiment in the division except the Eleventh — being forty killed and one hundred severely wounded. During the night of the 27th Porter's com- mand crossed the Chickahominy to Trent's Hill, where we remained during the following day. On the 29th, marched, passing Savage's Station and White Oak Swamp, to Charles City Cross Roads, called also Glendale, where, on the 30th, the Tenth Regiment was again engaged with the enemy, performed with entire success the difficult manoeuvre of making a left half wheel, under a heavy fire of artillery, and in the presence of an attacking column of infantry, and immediately charging, completely broke up the Seventeenth Virginia Regiment of Kemper's Brigade, capturing nearly half its number, and it.self sulTering very slight loss in doing so But, a little later, by somebody's blunder or want of judgment, it was placed in an exposed and untenable position, where it sulTered severe loss. Its loss this day was twenty-four killed and forty severely wounded. July 1, the division enjoyed the position of lookers-on at the battle of Malvern Hill, and at niglit led the army in its march to Harrison's Landing, on the James river. Here it rested, suffering from the heat of the weather and the badness of the water— all who were there doubtless remember vividly the pork-barrel wells that were dug, also the shelling by the "rebs" from the south side of the James, on the night of July 31. After the latter occurrence the Third Brigade was sent across the river, and spent a pleasant week at Coggin's Point, the old Edmund Ruflin plantation. On the withdrawal of the Army of the Potomac from Harrison's Land- ing we embarked on a steamer, two regirjents. Tenth and Seventh on one boat, landed at Aquia Creek August 19, and were at once transported by rail to Fredericksburg. Late in the evening of the 21st the division, now commanded by General John F. Reynolds, started out upon what tried to the utmost its powers of endurance — the march to Warrenton, to join the army of General Pope. We rested at Warrenton until afternoon of August 27, 1862, when departure was taken in haste by the old turnpike toward Bull Run and Centreville, the division again forming part of the First Army Corps— commanded by Major-General McDowell. We came in contact with the enemy on the morning of the 28th near Gainesville and again in the afternoon, and in the night made a long circuitous march nearly to Manassas and back nearly to the Henry House on the old battle- field of Bull Run. On the 29th the Third Brigade especially was usrd as a detachment t»> feel for the enemy's position in front of the left of Pope's army and open communication with Fitz John Porter's command should it advance 268 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. upon the enemy. On the afternoon the Third Brigade with General G. K. Warren's Brigade of the Fifth Corps and McLean's Brigade of Sigel's Corps were the only infantry left on the south side of the pike, and bore the brunt of the overwhelming charge of Longstreet's whole corps. The loss suffered here by these brigades testify to the fact that they did all that men could do to hold their ground. The Tenth lost in this battle twenty-two killed or mortally wounded and about forty others wounded. The last day of the month was spent at Centerville, the division picketing along Cub run at night. September 1, we reached Chantilly late in the evening, and in an outpour of rain halted in support of Kearny's Division, in the engagement in which that dashing leader lost his life. Next day marched from Fairfax Court House to Arlington, where we rested until the night of the 6th during which we marched again, crossing Long Bridge, and through the city of Washington to Leesboro, Md. After here receiving some much-needed supplies, our march was continued northward, and on the evening of the 13th we bivouacked at the crossing of the Monocacy by the Frederick pike. Next day pushed forward through Frederick and Middletown, and in the afternoon took an active part in dislodging the enemy from his formidable position on South Mountain. At the foot of the mountain the division filed off to the right about a mile, and charging up the face of the ridge quickly dislodged the enemy, completely dispersing Rodes' Alabama Brigade. Loss in regiment, seven killed, and thirteen wounded. Next morning followed the retreating rebels to the Antietam just beyond Keedysville. After waiting until the evening of the 16th, the First Corps, which since leaving Washington had been commanded by General Joseph Hooker, moved up the creek a short distance, crossed by a stone bridge, pushed on to the Hagerstown and Sharpsburg pike, and Meade's Division being in advance, we got sharply into action with the enemy just before dark, and the opposing line of battle passed the night only a few yards apart. The attack by Hooker's Corps was resumed at dawn on the 17th, King's Di- vision going to the front, immediatelj' followed by the Third Brigade of Meade's, and at once began the bloodiest forenoon's work of the war. Fortunately for the Tenth Regiment, the confidence of the corps commander either in its reliability or in the skill of its lieutenant-colonel, in a situa- tion that might require the exercise of those qualities in unusual degree, was here the occasion of our escaping the very fiercest of the conflict. Just as it was entering the famous cornfield. Colonel Warner was ordered by an aide of General Hooker to move his regiment by the right flank across the turnpike, go as far to the right and front as possible, and watch the movements of the enemy. This duty it performed, itself suffering but little, except the very serious wounding of its gallant commander. The regiment encamped near Sharpsburg until the 26th of October, on which day it marched to the summit of South Mountain at Crampton's Gap, a day and night of experience with mud and rain and fierce searching wind on the dreary mountain top. We crossed the Potomac again into Virginia, at Berlin, October 30, marched across Loudoun county by way of LovettsviUe, Philomont, Union and Middleburg to White Plains and Warren ton, and sheep and hogs being numerous and in prime condition, we Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 209 fared as well as at any time during the service. The First Corps moved from Fayettcville near Warrenton, November 17, and next evening camped at Stafford Court House, soon moving again to Brooke's Station, and after some two weeks of. extremely cold weather for so early in the season spent there, moved on the 6th of December to White Oak Church, from whence, at 2 o'clock on the morning of the 11th, we started for the Rappa- hannock, the Tenth being detailed to guard the laying of pontoon bridges at Franklin's Crossing, about two miles below Fredericksburg. The enemy's pickets were quickly driven from the opposite baulc and two bridges soon completed. The Sixth Corps crossing on thorn during the afternoon, and the First Corps on the 12th ; the latter corps moved down the river to Bernard's plantation, where it bivouacked. Nothing was visible on the morning of the 13th but a most remarkably dense fog. The division how- ever moved out across the Bowling Green road finding there the skirmishers of the enemy. The lines of the First Corps, which was now commanded by General John F. Reynolds, were soon formed, the First Division on the left faced nearly east, the Third Division (Pennsylvania Reserves), General George G. Meade commanding, on its right fronting nearly to the south at almost a right angle with the First, faced the enemy's batteries and lines of infantry on the wooded hills beyond the railroad, the Second Division on its right extending in the same direction, and the Sixth Corps prolonged the line still farther to the right. The assault on the enemy's position was made by the Third Division, now consisting of the thirteen old regiments of Pennsylvania Reserves and two new regiments, the One hundred aifd twenty-first and One hundred and forty-second regiments Pennsylvania Volunteers, incorporated respectively in the First and Second Brigades. The First Brigade Avas deployed on the right, the Third on the left and the Second massed in rear of the center. The Tenth Regiment formed the extreme left of the line. It had only eight companies in line. Company B having been sent out as skirmishers down the Bowling Green road, where the cavalry skirmishers of the enemy had become troublesome, and Company D being provost guard of division. About 2 o'clock they moved forward as steadily and in as complete order as though its ranks were not being plowed by shot and shell from the enemy's batteries. The distance to be traversed was about a half mile over a treeless plain, which was found to be crossed by fences bordered with briars, and a wide ditch about five feet deep with nearly perpendicular sides, and water and ice at the bottom, but these obstacles scarcely oc- casioned a break in the line as it swept on toward the enemy. After cross- ing the railroad the Tenth Regiment found itself exposed to a heavy cross- fire from the left as well as the fire in its front. In fact the left of our line had struck near the center of Archer's Brigade, and the right of that command overlapped our left, thus compelling the left of the Tenth to fall back to the railroad, which it held, engaging the enemy, and keeping silent a section of artillery posted about two hundred yards to its left and front. The right of the Third Brigade dislodged the Nineteenth Georgia Regi- ment forming the left of Archer's Brigade, almost annihilating it, and capturing its colors, and swinging forward to the left, widened the interval between it and the left of the First Brigade. This interval was at once 270 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. occupied by the Second Brigade, which, pushing directly forward, badly worsted the famed South Carolina Brigade of General Maxcy Gregg, and causing the death of General Gregg. The ground thus wrested from the enemy the division held for about two hours, repulsing all attempts of the enemy to retake it, until, after nearly half its numbers were killed or wounded and its ammunition entirely expended, it retired over the same ground it had made its advance, bringing back every one of its colors, and also several others taken from the enemy. The division entered the engagement with less than four thousand five hundred men and lost therein over two thousand killed, wounded and missing. The Tenth Regi- ment, out of about two hundred and fifty engaged, lost eleven killed, eighty- one wounded and forty -seven missing, as reported immediately after the battle; of the wounded, twelve died of their wounds. Although the Tenth did not penetrate the enemy's line as far as some of the other regiments, it hold most determindedly a position that was all important to the safety of the whole division, and it was only by the greatest possible effort that the unemployed enemy on its left were held back from closing the gap in the rear of those who had advanced into the woods. As a military movement, for dash and gallantry in making the advance, for steadi- ness and determination in holding a position gained within the lines of an enemy much superior in numbers to the attacking force, and especi- ally for the adhesiveness shown in retiring without assistance, and with- out loss of organization, from so exposed a situation, this charge of Meade's Division certainly compares creditably with anything recorded in history . The division crossed back to the north side of the river on the night of the l.^th of December, and after a few days moving about settled down in a camp among the sand hUls near Belle Plain Landing, whei'e it remained, with the exception of three days following January 23, 1863, during which it participated in the no way pleasant experience of "Burnside's Stuck in the Mud," until February 9, when it embarked on the Potomac, and next day landed at Alexandria, marched to Minor's Hill, and was employed in picketing in front of the fortifications of Washington, until AprU 20, when the Third Brigade moved into Washington, occupied barracks on East Capitol street, and up to the 1st of June was engaged in various duties pertaining to the Military District of Washington. June 1, 1863, the Third Brigade marched to Upton's Hill, and thence, on the 2.5th, along with the First Brigade (the Second being left at Alex- andria), set out to join the Army of the Potomac, coming up with it on the 28th at Ballinger's creek near Frederick, Md. The two brigades now became the Third Division, Fifth Army Corps, and so remained until expiration of thoir service. June 29', we march«^d to Liberty, on the 30th to Union Mills, Md., and on July 1, crossed into Pennsylvania, and were puslied on toward York, so far from Gettysburg that the sound of battle did not reach us at all, and we were entirely unaware of the desperate conflict going on, until late in the afternoon, when news was received that a battle was in progress and that General Reynolds had been killed. The news of the death of General Reynolds caused a universal feeling of sadness throus^'hout the division, Avhich had known him from the begin Pennsylvania at Gcttyshurc/. 271 iiing as brigado, division and corps commander, atul all Iidiiuri-d and re- spected him in the very fullest sense. Late in the evening of July 1, the head of column of the Fifth Corps was turned toward Gettysburg, the Third Division passing through Hanover after dark. The weary march was until after midnight, when near the village of Bonneauville a halt' was made, and the tired soldiers laid down and slept by the roadside until day, which came at a very early hour. After a hasty breakfast the corps was again on the march, and soon came in sight of the skirmishers of the enemy, who held poss:>ssion of that road to the town of Gettysburg. We let them keep it, and filed to the left down a small stream until we reached the Baltimore turnpike, which we fol- lowed toward Gettysburg. After crossing Rock creek the Fifth Corps filed off the pike to the left, lay down and rested until about 5 o'clock in the evening, at which hour the sound of battle came loud from this part of the field. Quickly under arms the corps was soon in motion toward the sound, crossing the Taney town road, we ascended the slope of Little Round Top, meeting many wounded from the battle which was fiercely raging beyond the hill. The First and Second Divisions had preceded us, and the Third Brigade of each had been left to hold TAttle Round Top and drive the enemy from the rocky valley between the two hills, while the other brigades, had passed on to the wooded broken ground and the wheat field beyond. A wonderful scene met the gnze of the Pennsylvania Reserves when they reached the crest of Little Round Top. It was near the close of what General Longstreet has denominated "the best two hours' fighting that ever took place on this planet." It was the moment just before exhaustion of the tremendous and desperate effort by the divisions of Hood, McLaws and Anderson, comprising thirteen brigades of the very flower of the rebel army, under the personal direction of Generals Lee and Longstreet, to crush the left wing of the Union army, and gain possession of I^ittle Round Top. It should be remarked that the brigades of the "rebel army at this time were just about one-third heavier than those of ours. The two being nearly equal in numbers, theirs was composed of thirty-eight infantry regi- ments and ours of fifty-one. So that while our brigades averaged about one thousand and five hundred men, theirs exceeded two thousand. In re- pelling this mighty assault there had been engaged the six brigades of the Third Corps, four brigades of First Division, Second Corps, and five bri- gades of the Fifth Corps. When the Pennsylvania Reserves looked down tlie western slope of Little Round Top, the skirmishers of the enemy wore almost at its foot and his .somewhat broken and disordered but exultant lines not far in their rear. The First Brigade dashed down the slope, deploying as it went, drove back the skirmishers and nearest brigade of the enemy, and the mighty effort put forth to wring from the Union array the key to its position was over, and with it had passed the highest wave of the rebellion. From those two hours fighting — 5 to 7 o'clock, July 2, 1863, may be dated the commence- ment of its ebb-tide. When the First Brigade charged down the slope of Little Round Top, the Third Brigade was sent to the left into the valley at the foot of the larger liill, the Ninth and Tenth regiments forming line 272 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. of battle perhaps over one hundred yards in rear of the position marked by the stone wall which they subsequently buUt and which is marked by their monuments, and the Fifth and Twelfth regiments dislodged part of Law's Alabama Brigade and occupied the summit of Big Round Top. At daylight next morning the Tenth Regiment advanced to the position now marked, and at once commenced and in surprisingly short time completed the construction of this wall ; in pushing back the skirmishers of the enemy from this position, two men of the Tenth were killed and three wounded. The sharpshooters of the enemy, under cover of the rocks and trees, were very troublesome, but volunteers from the Tenth were ready to meet them, and they were very soon receiving as good as they sent. Major J. C. Rogers, commanding the Fifth Texas immediately in our front, says in his I'eport, "just before day on the morning of the 3d orders reached me that breastworks must be thrown up and the position held. During the day constant skirmishing was kept up with the enemy which resulted in the loss to us of many of our best scouts." On the 5th of July the regiment marched in pursuit of the enemy, with whom we came up and skirmished on the 12th and 13th near St. James College and Williamsport, Md. The rebels having escaped across the Po- tomac, we marched back over South Mountain and on the 17th of July again crossed into Virginia at Berlin. Here Colonel Warner, who— though suffering from his wound received at Antietam to a degree that would have entirely disabled almost any other man — had up to this commanded the regiment, gave up the command to Lieutenant-Colonel J. B. Knox. July 23, we reached Manassas Gap or Wa^jping Heights, where we ad- vanced over the summit of the Blue Ridge in line of battle, but the enemy retired without causing us any loss. From the gap we marched to War- renton (blackberries being all the provender in sight), then on down by Fayetteville to Rappahannock Station, where we rested until the 16th of September, when advance was made, the Fifth Corps locating beyond Culpopcr, and again we took things easy in a very pleasant camp until the 10th of October. The rebel army then commenced a movement by way of Warrenton, toward our rear. We got into action with Hill's Corps at Bristoe on the 14th. The enemy in his eagerness to attack the Fifth Corps which was in a rather exposed position, exposed himself to the Second Corps, and lost heavily; two brigades, Cooke's and Kirklands of Heth's Division, being almost annihilated and a battery captured. The Tenth Regiment here performed the doty of rear guard of the Fifth Corps, hold- ing the enemy in check while the corps withdrew toward Manassas. Its loss was one killed and two wounded. Wo retired to Manassas, then re- turned to Bristoe after night, to assist the withdrawal of the Second Corps, then again passed Manassas, crossed Bull Run to Blackburn's Ford and next morning were at CentervUle. In the advance which followed we marched by way of Bull Run battlefield and Greenwich to Warrenton Junc- tion, where we halted from October 21 to November 7, when the Fifth and Sixth Corps advanced to Rappahannock Station, a brigade of the Sixth as- saulting the enemy's entrenchments captured almost entire Hays' and Hoke's brigades of Early's Division, one thousand six hundred men with their arms, a battery and pontoon bridge. Pennsylvania at Oettyshurg. 273 Crossing the Rappahannock at Kelly's Ford we moved out to Mountain run, and occupied new and commodious quarters just built by Battle's Alabama Brigade, but left them on the morning of the 26th of November, on which day we crossed the Rapidan, at Culpoper Mine Ford, and bivou- acked that night at the junction of the Germanna and Orange Plank Roads; next day marched by old Plank road toward Orange Court House, and in the afternoon came up with Gregg's Cavalry Division engaged with the enemy at New Hope Church, and at once proceeded to take part, but, thanks to good luck or good dodging, none of the Tenth were seriously hurt. Next day moved to the right to where the old Fredericksburg and Orange Court House turnpike crosses Sline Run. On the 29th remained in posi- tion, looked at rebs building works on their side of the run and worked some at same on ours. The morning of the 30th was extremely cold; moved very early about two miles to right, whore Fifth and Sixth Corps massed and prepared to assault the enemy's works, but to the great satisfaction of everybody the order to attack was countermanded and we returned to the position of the previous day. December 1 continued to fortify, and so did the enemy. The Tenth was on the skirmish line, was relieved after dark and started to the rear by the old turnpike, recrossed the Rapidan at Germanna Ford at daylight, and crossed the Rappahannock at Kelly's Ford and continuing on to Warrenton Junction, there built winter quarters and went to guarding the railroad. After changing several times, the Tenth finally was located, December 30, 1863, to pass the winter at Manassas. Divided into detachments to guard the railroad we were constantly an- noyed by guerrillas, by whom at one time two men were wounded and cap- tured, and two were killed April 15, 1864. During the w-inter one hundred and twenty men of the regiment re- enlisted, and were given furlough for thirty-five days. April 29, the Tenth Regiment bade final farewell to Manassas, and on the 30th crossed the Rappahannock, and joined the Fifth Corps near Stevensburg. Very early in the morning of the 4th of May, the Fifth Corps (now in- cluding the First) set out for its last trip across the Rapidan, crossing it about noon at Germanna Ford, it pushed on to old Wilderness Tavern. Next morning Third Division started on by a cross-road toward Parker's Store, but soon came up with the enemy, and after some skirmishing fell back nearly to the old tavern. On morning of 6th, pushed to the front on both sides of the turnpike, capturing a heavy line of skirmishers, until we found ourselves facing a line of earthworks and in a very exposed posi- tion. Here we held on, however, until evening, losing five killed and several severely wounded, among the latter, very unfortunately, being Colonel Aver, and from this time Adjutant G. W. McCracken was virtually commander of the regiment. After dark moved at double-quick down the Gemianna road to support Sixth Corps, which had been attacked and Seymour's and Shaler's brigades captured, but returned later in the morning, crossed Wil- derness run and lay quiet until night. Then the Fifth Corps pulled out, crossed the old Plank road, passing along the lines of the Second Corps lying in their entrenchments along the Brock road, passed the cavalry just at daylight at Todd's Tavern, and then commenced pushing back the enemy's cavalry, and clearing the road 274 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. of obstructions, which continued until we crossed the Ny river and found ourselves in the presence of and sharply eugagi'd with Longstreet's Corps in front of Spottsylvania Court House. That evening, May 8th, the Third Division, supported by the First, charged upon the enemy. We advanced through thick woods until dark, got into the enemy's line, engaged in numerous hand-to-hand encounters, and lost a good many men reported missing, most of whom doubtless were killed, as they were never heard from afterward. Those who were captured were very fortunate in being recaptured next day by the cavalry at Beaver Dam Station. The Tenth was engaged with the enemy every day and almost every night for a week, on this northwest side of Spotsylvania Court House ; then during the rainy and exceedingly dark night of the 14th of May, moved around to the east and put in another week, but without being quite so constantly en- gaged. Loss in all these actions, twenty-five killed and sixty wounded. Pulling out to Guiney's Station on the 20th, we took the Richmond road, crossed the North Anna river at Jericho Mills on the 23d, and had a brisk fight, losing two killed. Next afternoon the division pushed down between the river and enemy and covered the crossing of the Ninth Corps. Next morning pushed forward still farther down the river, and during 25th and 26th confronted enemy's works — at a distance of two hundred to three hun- dred yards. During night of 26th withdi'ew to north side of North Anna, and started down the I'iver, crossed the Pamunkey at Hanover Ferry, and on the 29th pushed out to Totopotomoy creek where the Tenth skirmished with the enemy, being on picket line that night. Next forenoon were relieved by Ninth Corps, and, crossing the creek, we joined the division near the MechanicsvUle road. Skirmishing was going on, and as soon as we came up we were ordered to the skirmish line to take the place of the Fifth Regiment which, armed with smooth-bore muskets, was unable to drive the enemy's skirmishers. The Tenth at once deployed and moved forward to the skirmish line where we found the Bucktails deployed to our right. The whole line was ordered forward, and forward it went driving before it a heavy line of rebel skirmishers, and followed by the division in line of battle which halted and threw up some slight breastworks near Bethesda Church. The skirmishers kept on for nearly a mile over open fields and then across a narrow swamp, when they found a line of earthworks facing then at not more than one hundred and fifty yards distance ; over these works at once came the enemy in force ; that the Tenth Regiment got out of that strip of woods, and back over open fields three hundred to four hundreds yards wide, before any cover was reached, has always seemed a piece of wonderful good fortune. But it did so without having a man seriously hurt, and losing only two captured. The skirmishers rallied with their brigades, who had hastily thrown together some rails for breastworks, and the enemy, two brigades of Ewell's Corps, following them up, were re- ceived with a fire that almost annihilated them. One of these was the famed old Stonewall Brigade, its commander, Colonel J. B. Terrill, falling about one hundred yards in front of the Tenth Regiment. For destruc- tiveness to the enemy, coupled with slight loss to ourselves, this engage- ment at Bethesda Church was very much like those of Dranesville and Pennsylvunin at (ictt/jshiir;;. 275 ]\Iechauiosvillo. The Tenth lust one inau mortally wounded. This ended the services of the Tenth Regiment. Xi>xt indrniii!; it n-ccivcd the follow- ing order: "Headquabteus Firm Akmy Coups, May .'51, 1.SG4. "Special Orders No. . "2. In issuing the order for the returu of the renusylvania Reserves, whose term of service expires to-day, the general commanding begs leave to express to them his great satisfaction at their heroic conduct in this arduous campaign. As their commander he thanks them for their willing and efDcieut efforts, and congratulates them that their successful engage- ment of yesterday, closing their term of service and long list of battles bravely fought, is one they can ever remember with satisfaction and pride. "By command of Majoi'-General Warren. "A. S. Mauvin, Jr., A. A. fl " The total enrollment of the Tenth Regiment Pennsylvania Reserves was one thousand one hundred and sixty officers and men. Of these one hun- dred and sixty were killed in battle or died of wounds, thirty-one died of disease or accident, twenty-eight deserted or were dishonorably discharged, forty were transferred to cavalry or artillery service in the regular army or to the Veteran Reserve Corps, forty-two were discharged by order mostly to accept commissions in other organizations, two hundred and seventy-one were discharged for disability largely caused by wounds, two hundred and sixty-ouQ were transferred to the One hundred and ninetieth and One hundred and ninety-first regiments Pennsylvania Veteran Volun- teers, two full companies, I and K, of the One Hunded and Ninety-First being entirely composed of veterans and recruits of the Tenth Regiment, and three hundred and twenty-seven were mustered out at Pittsburgh, June 11, 1S61. Of the two thousand and forty-seven regiments in the Union army during the rebellion the Tenth Regiment stands forty-fifth of those sustaining the greatest percentage of loss in battle to total enrolment, its loss in killed and mortally wounded being nearly fourteen per cent, of enrolment. And this loss was not (as was the case with some organizations suffering heavy losses) occasioned by any overwhelming disaster, but in every in- stance represented hard fighting in which the enemy had no particular ad- vantage. In fact wherever there was marked advantage the enemy had far the woi-st of it. This was unmistakably true at Dranesville, at Me- chanicsville, at South Mountain, and last but not least at Dethesda Cliiinh. Of the forty-seven regiments of the Union army suffering the largest percentage of loss in killed and died of wounds, forty belonged to the Army of the Potomac; twelve of them to the First and Fifth Corps, and four of them being regiments of the Pennsylvania Reserve Corps. It is also wathy of remark that eleven of the forty-seven were Pennsylvania regiments. The loss of the Tenth Regiment by disease was the smallest of any three-years' regiment in the entire army. In the Union Army according to statistics compiled by the AVar Department, the aggregate number of men enrolled was two million seven hundred and seventy-eight thousand three 276 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. hundred aud three, and the aggregate number of deaths from all causes, three hundred and fifty-nine thousand five hundred and twenty-eight ; nearly thirteen per cent, of total enrolment. Pennsylvania furnished three hundred and thirty-seven thousand nine hundred and thirty-six men, of whom there died from all causes, thirty-three thousand one hundred and eighty-three; less than ten per cent. The killed or mortally wounded of the entire army numbered one hundred and ten thousand and seventy ; not quite four per cent. Pennsylvania troops lost in killed or mortally wounded, fifteen thousand two hundred and sixty-five ; nearly four and a half per cent. Died of disease, entire army, two hundred and twenty-four thousand eight hundred and eighty-six, a little less than eight per cent. ; of Pennsylvania soldiers, there died of disease, fifteen thousand nine hundred and one; about four and three-fourths per cent. Thus we see that while the loss of Pennsylvania soldiers by the missiles of the enemy was heavier in pro- portion to numbers than that of the whole army, their losses from disease were only about half the average. And in the case of the Pennsylvania Reserves this difference is still more marked. The loss in killed and mor- tally wounded in the thirteen infantry regiments of Pennsylvania Re- serves was one thousand five hundred and ninety-three, a little more than ten per cent, of the whole enrolment of the division; while those who died of disease, including the unfortunates starved in Andersonville and other prison pens of the South, numbered seven hundred and fifty, or less than five per cent. — just reversing the common statement that in armies two men die of disease for every one killed in battle. But the experience of the Tenth Regiment was the most marked of all in this respect ; the losses of the Tenth Regiment Pennsylvania Reserves in the twenty-two engage- ments in which it participated, were one hundred and sixty killed or mor- tally wounded out of the aggregate enrolment of one thousand one hundred and sixty, nearly foux'teen per cent., while the deaths from disease, including those in southern prison pens, were only thirty-one, being less than two and three-fourths per cent, of the enrolment — or less than one-fifth as many died of disease as were killed in battle. DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 40™ REGIMENT INFANTRY* (Eleventh Reserves) ADDRESS OF BREVET BRIGADIER-GENERAL S. M. JACKSON THE battle of Chancellorsville had been fought and lost, and the Army of the Potomac, battered and broken, but not conquered, recrossed the Rappahannock and took up its old position on Stafford Heights, in the rear of Falmouth. The southern press and people clamored for northern invasion, and even the rank and file of the Army of Northern Virginia joined in this general outcry . •Organized at Pitt.'jbursli in June, ISGl, to serve three years. It was mustered out June 13, 1864, by reason of expiration of term of service. Pciuisi/lraiiid at (ictti/.sbiinj. L'TT This, together with the overflowing griiiiiiries nud storehouses of -Mary- Inud and southern Pennsylvnniii, doubtless induced General Lee to under- take the campaign which proved so fatal to the Confederate causr. Lougstrcet with his thirty thousand veterans was ordered up from Xurtli Carolina, and by the stimulus of invasion, conquest and plunder, the thinned ranks of the Confederate army were refilled, and General Lee with his boasted hundred thousand invincibles started on the memorable Gettysburg campaign . He moved up the south l).iiil< nf tlie Ii;ippahanii<>ck river, wliilst Gfuernl Hooker, at th(> head of the Army of the Potomac, moved in a parallel line up the north bank, like two sparring pugilists, each watching for a favorable opportunty to strike the other. This sparring continued until Lcc struck the foot hills nf the I'.lue liidge Mountains, through which he passed and placed this natural barrier be- tween him and his foe. He then proceeded north along the western slope of the Blue Ridge, while Hooker moved leisurely along the eastern slope, keeping between the Confederate army and the city of Washington. Lee with his army crossed the Potomac river near Williamsport, Md., while Hooker crossed about twenty-five miles further south, at Edwards' Ferry. On reaching Maryland, the South Mountain range completely sepai'ated the two contending armies, and by guarding the few passes through this range, the movements of the one army was thoroughly hidden from the other. Hooker concentrated the Army of the Potomac in the valley of the Monocacy, a few miles south of the city of Frederick. The Pennsylvania Reserve Division having been recalled from the Army of the Potomac early in 1863 to the defenses of Washington, was located at different points withiu the Washington department, except the Second Brigade which had been ordered to West Virginia. The Eleventh Regiment, which I had the honor to command, was sta- tiimed at Vienna, Va., a small village some twenty-five miles south of AVashington on the Leesburg and Alexandria railroad. Brigadier-General S. W. Crawford, a Pennsylvanian, but an old army veteran, had just been assigned to the command of the division, and under his order we broke camp on June 2.5, 1863, and started to join the Army of the Potomac. We moved by way of Dranesville, Va., crossed the Potomac at Ed- wards' Ferry, and reached the camps of the army on the evening of June 26, the same day that General Hooker had been relieved, and (Jcneral (leorge G. Meade had been designated by the President as Commander of the Army of the Potomac. Meade's appointment to this important command was received with much mistrust by many of the old officers and men of the army, as he was a comparative stranger to most of them, but well known to every oflScer and man in the Pennsylvania Reserves, having entered the service in 1861 as commander of the Second Brigade, and remaining with us as brigade and division c<>mmander thnmgh th.- Pi-ninsiilar. Second Bull Run, South Mountain, Antitam and Fredericksburg campaigns. True he had been in command of the Fifth Army Corps, a short time, I)ut had gained no particular notoriety in this position. The announcement 19 278 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. of his appointment was made just as v/e reached the outer camps of the army and our men shouted themselves hoarse over the welcome news. Doubtless this demonstration mi nuv part had something to do with the marching of our division through the camps of the army that evening, and I am satisfied that it created a feeling of confidence among the ofiBcers and men of the army, in the ability of the new commander. After reaching our camp that evening, a number of the officers rode over to army headquarters to pay our respects to our old cummander, and to congratulate him on his distinguished promotion. We found him in close conference with Generals Reynolds, Hancock, Sedgwick and others. He seemed delighted in welcoming us back to the army. Thanked us for our congratulations, but said that he did not know whether he was a subject for congratulation, or commiseration. He appeared anxious and showed that he fully realized the responsibility of his position. He said however that he had all confidence in the bravery of the officers and men of the army and felt assured that we would achieve a glorious victoi'y in the coming conflict. That, doubtless, was a sleepless night to the new commander, for before the sun rose the next morning the order directing the movements which culminated in the battle of Gettysburg had been prepared and sent out to all the subordinate commanders. Our division was designated as the Third Division of the Fifth Army Corps, then under command of Major-(ieneral George Sykes. The orders directed the movement of the army from Frederick City in three columns. The left column under General Reynolds, consisting of the First, Third and Eleventh Corps, was to move by way of Emmitsburg direct to Gettys- burg. The center column, consisting of the .Second, Fifth and Twelfth corps, was to move in the direction of Hanover, Pa., and under the eye and immediate direction of the commanding general. The right column, consisting of the Sixth Corps under General John Sedgwick, was to move in the directior of Westminster, Md. Just before crossing the State line, which we did near Unioutown, Md., the commanding general issued a general order directing corps, division, brigade and regimental commanders, to address their troops on the importance of every man performing his whole duty in the coming conflict, that an expectant nation was looking to the Army of the Potomac to drive the ruthless invaders from the free soil of Pennsylvania, and keep the scene of war away from northern homes. On the receipt of this order General Crawford called together his brigade and regimental commanders, and here, for the first time, I made the ac- (puiintance of the lately-appointed regimental commanders of the division. The brigade commanders were William McCaiidless of the Second Regi- ment and Joseph W. Fisher of the Fifth, both of whom have gained some civil notoriety since the war, both having served as State Senators. Mc- Candless as Secretary of Internal Atlairs of Pennsylvania and Fisher as Chief -Justice of the Territory of Wyoming. The regimental commanders were as follows: First Regiment, Colonel W. Cooper Talley ; Second Regiment, Lieutenant-Colonel P. McDonough ; Fifth Regiment, Lieutenant-Colonel George Dare, afterwards killed in the battle of the Wilderness; Sixth Regiment, Colonel A. J. Warner; Eleventh Regi- Pcitnsi/lrdiiid at del I i/;iiiieiit in ilie iii'imir- iible chai'>;e \'v>»n Little Rniiml TiPii. General ("rawl'urd read to us this late order of the rnnmiaiidiii;; jreiieral aud urged uiimi us tlie necessity of arousiufr our m t.> a full sense <>f their duty, to exert their every elTort in the protection of tlu-ir homes and firesides, since they were now on the suil nf their native State. Colonel Fisher, our brigade eonnnander, always anxious for an opportunty to make a speech, called out the brigade and gave us a most excellent and elo(|uent talk, which seemed to arouse the men very much at the time, but the long ni.iiht march before reaching Gettysburg took much of the spasmodic pa- triotism out of the boys. On the morning of July 1, 1863, we left our canii) about 5 o'clock and moved rapidly in the direction of Hanover wliicli puint we reached about 5 p. m. During the afternoon we heard heavy firing toward our left and thereby knew that General Reynolds had struck the enemy. Just before reaching Hanover we passed over the ground whore Kilpatrick had defeated the Confederate cavalry the day before. The field showed all the marks of a well-contested battle, being strewn over with dead horses, broken caissons aud sabers, and the accompanying debris of a battlefield. On reaching Hanover tnw n the head of the column turned square to the left and moved forward ra|iidly in the direction of Gettysburg. We all knew from this that the concentration of the army was to take place on General Reynolds' ct)lunin, which we supposed at this time was in the neighborhood of Gettysburg. Darkness" came on, yet no signs of a halt appeared; on the contrary, the wnrd passed back along the line "kee[) well closed up and press forward." The men became tired, footsore and cross; midnight passed, 1 o'clock passed, but they longed in vain for the order to halt. Many an exhausted soldier dropped oiit of the ranks, still the order "press forward." Finally after passing the village of McSherrystown , Pa., the head of the column turned into a meadow on our right and the weary men were directed to lay down and rest. Poor fellows, they had hardly touched the groimd till they were fast asleep, the last sleep on earth for many of them. We were called up just as the sun began to crimson the eastern sky aud moved out in the direction of Gettysburg with the same old order, "press forward." As the head of my regiment filed out on the road. General Crawford, who had just mounted bis horse, called me to him and informed me that General Reynolds had been killed in an engagement near Gettys- burg the evening before. He told me not to let the men know it, saying it was a hard blow on the army and country just at this particular crisis. After marching a few miles we were halted and the men wore allowed to make cofleo. We w'ore then mov«'d fc.rward to the rear and east of Big Round Top where we were halted and ammunition issued to the men. The undisturbed quietness in our front was painful, for we all well knew that the giants were stripping for the contest, and that the movements for posi- tions were now going on. About 4 o'clock iu the afternoon a single gun was 2S0 Pcnu.sijlvania at GcUyHhiirg. iired in the directiou of and beyond Big Round Top ; tiiis was followed by the sharp rattle of musketry and the heavy booming of artillery. Very soon aides and orderlies began to gallop in all directions. One soon found his way to division headquarters when General Crawford and his staff quickly mounted and the order was passed along to fall in. We moved in the rear and east of the Round Tops, filed to the left and crossed the ridge between Little Round Top and the Cemetery. We were then moved to the left and took position on the western slope of Little Round Top, massed in a battalion front with the Third Brigade leading. This formation placed my regiment in the rear of the brigade. We re- mained in this position but a short time when the firing became very heavy on our left and in the direction of Big Round Top, when a staff officer rode up and directed Colonel Fisher to move his brigade in that direction and aid Colonel Vincent's Brigade in holding that important position. In obedience to this order the brigade commenced filing out from the head of the column, first the Twelfth Regiment, next the Fifth, and then the Tenth which unmasked the right of my regiment. While these movements were going on the battle in our front became terrific and very soon we could see that our troops were being driven back. At this moment, and just as I was about to move off to the left with my regiment. Major Speer of the division staff, rode up and said, "Colonel Jackson, General Crawford directs that you remain in position and hold this hill at all hazards." In obedience to this order I faced my regiment to the front and moved forward to the position just vacated by the Twelfth Regiment, and ordered the men to lie down and withhold their fire until I would give the com- mand. This very trying order was most heroically obeyed as we were wholly exposed to the galling fire of the enemy from the direction of Devil's Den, and (luitf a number of my officers and men were here killed and wounded. Our position gave us a complete view of much of the day's battlefield, including the wheatfield and part of the peach orchard be- yond, together with the woods on the right and left of the wheatliold and the greatci' poition of Devil's Den, that stronghold so tenaciously lu'ld by the foe. A discouraging, yet sublime view it was about 6 o'clock, that hot July afternoon. The enemy forcing back foot by foot the struggling heroes of the Third Corps and the First Division of the Fifth Corps, down through the wheatfield and the woods on the right and left of the wheatfield, while the artillery to our rigiit and left were playing upon them with shot and sliell Still on they came, a seeming irresistible mass of living gray. The First Ohio Battery, commanded by a German captain, had gone into action on my left-front, and when it seemed that nothing could stop the onward progress of the enemy, this gallant officer became very much exercised over the safety of his guns and loudly announced that he would be compelled to limber to the rear to save his pieces from capture. 1 told him to double-shot his guns, hold his position, and we would see to their safety. The boys along the line of the regiment hearing this colloquy between the German captain and myself, holloed out, "Stand by your guns, Dutchy, and we will stand by you." This seemed to put new confidence in the cap- /'onisj/lnniia di (Irll ifsfmrf/. 2S1 tnin, who rctiinicd to bis guns aiul served tliem most lifroically, iiitlictiiiK friijhtfiil <'.v«'ciitioii upon the foe, as he poured tlie shot and shell into their vei-y faces. All this time my regiment remained quiet and motionless save in carrying back our killed and wounded. The men hugged the ground closely, which , by the helii of n scrubby growth of pine which stood ahmg the western slope ipf the hill, scieenei] them i)retty effectujilly from the enemy's view. The siiinke by this time ii.id literally lilled the v.iljey in mir front, !ind it was alniiist impossible In even see the troup.s It was a trying moment. We could with difficulty see a column commencing to ascend the slope, but could not t<'ll whether it was our troops retreating, or the enemy advancing. Finally two men came u]> the hill and as ihey .ippi-iiachcd ns, I iiHpiin'd if the front was clear nf mir men. They replied. "Yes ; those fellows (pointing to the line mnvinj;- uii tlie hill a few nxls in our front are John- nies." I immediately gave the command to fire, which was obeyed with alacrity, and we poured a terrible volley into the very faces of the enemy. This evidently was a surprise, for they faltered in the onward march and began to collect in groups. Their galling fire, however, was kept up on our line, jiarticul.-irly from Devil's Den, and I soon realized the fact that the nnly way to hold the hill was to charge forward. Therefore, I gave the command to fix bavonets and charge. This oi'der was obeyed with a will and, with that familiar yell iteciiliar tc the Pennsylvania Reserves, we rushed uiiiiii the foe with a (letenuin;itii>n to either drive the invaders back or sacrifice ourselves on our native soil. Our fondest hopes were realized. The tide was turned, the enemy broke and fell back in much disorder. As we neared the swamp or run, about midway between Little Rounf the One hundred and thirty-ninth Penn.syl- vania, and that his regiment was directly in our rear and would gladly take our place if needed. ( >n looking back I beheld the mountain side and away toward Cemetery Kidge, literally covered with troops. The colonel said that was a division of the Sixth Corps, which had just arrived on the field. This was the first intimation I had that the Sixth Corps had got 282 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. up, and it was comfortir^ indeed to know that such a grand body of true and tried troops were on the ground. This fact in itself assured to us the victory . The position taken at the wheatii;'ld was held throughout the night and next day until after Pickett's repulse on Cemetery Ridge, when General Meade rode over to the left and directed Colonel McCandless to drive the enemy from the woods to the left of the wheatfield, which he did by moving his brigade in line to near the top of the hill in the wheatfis^d, when he ordered a left-half wheel and charged up through the woods at a double- quick, yelling lustily as we advanced. This forced the enemy to abandon their stronghold at Devil's Den, and as we reached the open ground extend- ing out to and beyond the Emmitsburg road, we saw a large body of the enemy moving by flank at a double-quick, far off to our left, hastening to gain their forces in our front beyond the Emmitsburg road. Here we remained through the night, and very early on the morning of the 4th a terrific rain storm set in which continued the greater portion of the day. Along in the afternoon the Sixth Corps was movtd out to f:'-l the enemy, but beyond a light skirmish lino which they quickly dislodged, they met no opposition. We wore then moved back to near the wheat'ield from whence we started the evening before, where rations and ammunition were issued to the men. Thus ended the battle of Gettysburg. The foe was conquered and we stood victorious on the field. The record of which shall ever illumine the pages of American history, as the greatest battle, both in results and casu- alties in proportion to the troops engaged, over fought on the American con- tinent. ADDRESS OF BREVET MA.TOH IT. K. SLOAN. THE Pennsylvania Reserve Corps originally consisted of twelve regi- ments infantry, one regiment rifles (Bucktails), one regiment cavalry and one regiment artillery, in all fifteen regiments, fifteen thousand eight hundred enlisted men, field, staff and line. After the battle of Fredericksburg, Va., December 13, 1862, the division was ordered back to defenses of Washington, D. C. The Third Brisade at Minor's Hill . , The Eleventh Regiment was ordered from this position to Vienna, Va . , and lay there until the movement culmin.iting in the battle of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, commenced. Two brigades, the First, under command of Colonel McCandless, con- sisting of Bucktails (First Rifles), First, Second and Sixth infantry regi- ments. The Third under command of Colonel Fisher, consisting of Twelfth, Fifth [Ninth], Tenth and Eleventh infantry regiments. The Second Brigade, consisting of [Third], Fourth, Seventh and Eighth regi- ments, were detached from the division. At battle of Gettysburg the First and Third brigades formed the Third Divis=ion, Fifth Army Corps, under command of General S. W. Crawford, the Fifth Army Corps commanded by General Sykes. I'cnjisi/lnniia at <1( 1 1 i/shiirf/. 28.T Tho Elcvciitli Rcpimont \v:is at lliiiontowii, .Mmber numhert as a guard for wagon- trains, etc. This detail marched with the train until toward sunset, when the news was received that the advance of our army was engaged with the enemy at (iettysl)urK. Pennsylvania, and we were ordered to rejoin our cciinnuinds. Tin' trains were ordered to Westminster. We rejoined our regiment and marched steadily until Id or 11 o'clock in tlie niglit, when all were tired, sleepy, cross and in(|uiri(>s were made with all the emphasis tired, hunnry and sleepy soldiers could, "When will the oilicers halt?" etc. — clieering was heard on the road upon Avhich we were marching, in advance of us, on' other roads running ])aran<'l to our road, and the boys wondered what those fools were yelling for. The cheering came nearer and nearer, increasing in volume, and finally some one at the side of the ro;id called out, "Boys, General McClellan is in command," and then for the time being, empty stomachs, sleep and fatigue were all forgotten, and we joined madly in the cheers. Predictions were freely offered that we were going to wlii|i the enemy, aye destroy their army, etc. This news helped us along on the weary march until about 1 o'clock of the morning of the 2d of July, when tired nature asserted its power and men fell out of ranks, even the strongest and most energetic gave out and fell into the ditch by the roadside, and lay there. This weary and almost intolerable march was continued until 3 o'clock of the morning of the 2d, Avhen, just after passing through the village of McSherrystown, Pennsylvania, the regiment, having been twenty- three hours on the march was turned into what seemed a meadow, on the riglit hand side of the road, we laid down and slept — were awakened at ;1 o'clock, having had about two hours sleep and rest, and found we were laying in a swamp. The coarse swamp grass had served us for a bed, a softer bed I do not believe was ever given human beings — being composed largely of water. Immediately on being awakened at 5 o'clock a. m., on the morning of July 2, 1863, the regiment, being the left of the brigade, moved out into the road, and after marching .some two or three miles was halted and leave given to make coffee and get breakfast. We were given about tiiirty minutes to do this — then the march for Gettysburg began in good earnest. I do not know exactly when our brigade struck the P.altimore pike, but I remember marching along the Baltimore pike some distance before we tiled otT. The point at which we marched off the Baltimore pike was. I thinl;, at wlitit is known as the White Church, at wliich point, whilst marching on the pike to Gettysburg, we filed off the pike and marched along a country road for a distance of about one mile, when we were marched into a field on right-hand side of road looking towards Gettys- burg, we lay here until about 3.30 or 4 o'clock in the afternoon, when orders were received to advance (I do not know where the First Brigade of our division was at this time). Our brigade marched along the same road we had entered on leaving the Pialtimore pike, passed the rear of Big Round Top and passed up onto F.ittle Round Top, when the brigade was formed en nmssc battalion front. We were then moved to the right-front 284 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. of Little Round Top and formed at the foot of the hill towards Gettys- burg. This formation for some reason was not satisfactory and we were marched back onto the hill close to the artillery on the top of the hill. The brigade remained there a short time preserving the same formation, viz: en niasse battalion or regimental front; after a very short interval an officer rode up and directed the bi-igade to move over and retake Big Round Top, that the enemy had or were about to obtain possession of that hill. The brigade in obedience to this order was moved rapidly, com- mencing on the right. The Twelfth marched around our right and roar — as soon as the Twelfth had unmasked the Fifth, that regiment marched and the Tenth followed — as soon as the Tenth unmasked our regiment. Colonel Jackson gave the command, "Shoulder arms, right face." At this instant an officer rode up, gave the compliments of some general with directions that he halt his regiment and hold the hill at all hazards until reinforce- ments could be got up. Colonel Jackson, in obedience to this order, gave the regiment the order, "front, forward march," and we marched in line of battle to the position which had been held by the Twelfth in our brigade formation, on the slope of the hill looking towards the whcatfield, and woods to riglit of wlieatficld. The Devil's Den, and woods to left enemy, the wheatfield and the woods around it and in view of the Devil's Den all in their possession and all rompletely filled with their troops— infantry and artillery, and the valley in front and right and left-front of I>ittle Round Top filled Avith smoke, hiding from the view of the few anxious watchers on Little Round Top, the struggling, suffering and dying combatants below in the valley of the shadow of death. The enemy's hosts S(>emed inuunicrahle and unconquerable, and what of tlic little band of infantry and artillery on Tattle Round Top? They rested in ilisphiy ! retreat wliilst loiidiiig ahuiit-faee aud deliver a fire in the face i>f the enemy. This was gr.nul and inspiring; finally two men came up the hill — Colonel Jackson asked, "How many of our peo|)le are down thercV" They replied, "not one. Tho.se people you see coming ui) the hill are 'Johnnies.'" Colonel Jackson then gave the order "Fire." It was obeyed aud some three or four rounds were fired when Colonel Jackson gave the order, "Fix bayonets — charge," etc. This order was obeyed. Allow me to re- mark just here— that I was near Colonel Jackson when he received the order to hold the hill at all hazards. I was also near him when he gave the order to fix bayonets and charge. I would certainly have seen any officer giving him the order, and as certainly have heard such an order if it had been given to him by any one. There were no orders given him and therefore am I positive in my belief, and deliberate in my statement, when I say, that Colonel Jackson alone determined the action of his regi- ment, and of his own motion and as the only possible way to hold that hill until reinforcements could be got up, gave his order to fix bayonets and charge. The charge was made down the hill through the smoke across the valley of death to the fence at the wheatfield and in front of woods to the right of the road and to the right of the wheatfield. After our regiment reached this position, hearing cheering in our rear, I turned, looked back, and the Bucktails, that grandest of regiments, composed of men who were bravest among the brave, were coming on a double- quick. With them came the First, Second and Sixth regiments, the First Brigade of our division, and as they came up they formed line of battle on the right and left of our regiment as follows: The Bucktails and First regiments on our left covering the wheatfield and extending over towards Devil's Den, the Sixth and Second regiments on our right extending along the stone fence in front of woods on our right. (This is as nearly as I can fix the formation of First Brigade and our regiment ; our regiment being, as nearly as I can remember, in the center of this line of battle.) General Crawford, division commander, then rode up and speaking to Colonel Jackson said, "Colonel Jackson, your regiment is worth its weight in gold, worth its weight in gold, sir." This the general repeated three (U- four times. This was a compliment and all felt proud and were glad we were there. The line of battle remained in same position along the stone fence until the afternoon of 3d of July, when, after the repulse of Pickett's charge, (Jeneral Meade came over to Little Round Top aud ordered our line t^i go over and see how many people the enemy had in the woods at the head of the wheatfield. The enemy had a battery beyond the woods and when we moved over the stone fence into the woods this battery opened a close aud galling fire. The Sixth Regiment was deployed as skirmishers with orders to silence that battery, and the line of battle, con- sisting of Second, Eleventh, Bucktails and First regiments, moved diago- nally across the wheatfield and just cnti'n-d the woods beyund it, wh«'n the order was given to open fire. This was done, and after a few volleys (the Sixth having in the meantime silenced the battery) Colonel McCandless commanding the First Brigade gave the order "by the rear rank right-about face, right-turn, march." This movement when completed threw us on 286 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. the enemy's right fl.niik, and we drove them in great disorder. The pris- oners stated they had six thousand men in their line, whilst we had scarcely fifteen hundred men. On we went and finally the recall was sounded, a mistake as we afterwards learned, as no order of that kind was either ■ given or thought of. The fruit of this day's movement was all of the enemy's dead on that part of the field, about six thousand stand of arms and a number of prisoners. We lay in the edge of the woods the night of the 3d. The enemy's dead in the field were just at edge of woods, on the Rose farm. I do not know exactly the point we reached this evening before the mistake was made withdrawing us from the position we had won, but in my opinion it was considerably in advance of the Rose farm. During the night of the 3d a cold rain set in and on the morning of the 4th of July, 1863, we were withdrawn from our position near Rose's house to the position at the .stone fence front of wheatfield and woods occu- pied by us prior to our charge on 3d. Shortly after being so withdrawn ammunition was issued and we were informed that there would be a general advance made by the whole army, but the rain was falling, literally in sheets of water, and we were afterwards told that the advance had been abandolied by reason of the severity of the rain, and so ended the battle of (iettysburg, so far as our regimt^ut was concerned. In view of the statements heretofore given I feel that I can safely assert: First. That Colonel Jackson with his regiment, the Eleventh Pennsyl- vania Reserves, and the artillery held that part of Little Round Top on the afternoon of the 2d of July, 1863, at the supreme crisis of the battle. Second. That Colonel Jackson assumed all the responsibility of issuing the order to his regiment and did make the charge successfully, driving back the enemy which had defeated the Third Army Corps and two divi- sions and one brigade (the First and Second divisions, Second Brigade Third Division) of the Fifth Army Corps, and this with a force of less than four hundred men. Third. That the First Brigade of the Pennsj'lvania Reserve Corps did not reach the position in the front of the wheatfield and woods until some time after it had been occupied by the Eleventh Regiment under command of Colonel Jack.son. Fourth. General Crawford was not seen by our regiment until after the First Brigade had come up and formed line of battle on the right and left of the Eleventh Regiment in the manner of formation heretofore given. Fifth. And that when General Crawford did join the line of battle, he gave the credit for leading the charge to the Eleventh Regiment, and did compliment Colonel Jackson as above stated on the wonderful results at- tained by the charge made by his regiment under his orders. Sixth. At that time no man dreamed that the action of the Eleventh in leading the charge on that day and saving the day to the Union army would ever be belittled or ignored, both of which has been done. The above hasty and v(>ry brief statement has been written with a view of comparing notes and arranging the evidence relative to the duty per- formed by the Eleventh Regiment Pennsylvania Reserve Corps at the battle of Gettysburg — specially so as to the evening of July 2, 1863 — and is written solely with u view to obtain justice for a regiment that always PannsylvanUi al (1< 11 i/sInn;/. 287 performed its duty, whether in canip, ou the inarcli, or ou the field of battle. Other regiments were as good, but none better; and now when more than a quarter of a century has elapsed since the organizatinn of this regiment, it is meet and proper that the survivors should gather the testimony and show that this regiment did its duty. Othei'wise history will record that — it was organized, mustered into the service, served three years and was mustered out. Tliis won't do— we must brighten our mem- ories, refer to our diaries, look up and write up our history, and demand that the truth be told of us and justice be done to our dead and to thf survivors of our regiment. DEDICATKJN OF MONUMENT 41 ST REGIMENT INFANTRY* (Twelfth Reserves) ADDRESS OF BRIG. -GEN. MARTIN 1». II AH DIN THE Gettysburg campaign, on the Union side, began with the battle of Brandy Station, one of the results of which was the knowledge that Lee's army was moving northwestwardly. This action was the nu»st important, as well as the most severe, the cavalry of the Army of the Potomac had fought. By it the Union cavalry not only developed the Confederate plan of campaign, but also learned its equality with the enemy's cavalry. As soon as General Hooker received certain information that Lee had extended his army from Fredericksburg to the Shenandoah Valley, he pro- posed to General Halleck to attack Lee's rear at Fredericksburg. This movement was disapproved. Hooker then gave orders preparatory to meet- ing Lee's army in its northwestward movement. There was some delay due to instructions from General Halleck, but in a few days the Union army moved between the Couofederate army and Washington, with the main body of its cavalry on its left (west) flank. The cavalry covered the Union army most thoroughly, it never performed its duty toward that army in a more scientific (military) manner. The fighting about Aldie, Upper- ville and Middleburg, Va., was admitted by the Confederates to have been the best the Union cavalry had ever done, except at Brandy Station (Bev- erly Ford). The cavalry was supported by a small infantry force both at Brandy Station (Beverly Ford) and in the region about Middleburg. The German officer Major Von Borcke, and others, state that Stuart's Confederate cavalry was never more numerous (Von Borcke estimated it at twelve thousand and twenty-four guns), and never in better condition. Considering this, we can then better appreciate the fine work done by the Union cavalry in this advance northward. The Confederate cavalry con- •Orfr.iiiizcd at Harrlsliurc Aupu.«t U, 1S61, to servo tlirt'o years. It was uius»cred out June 11, 1864, by reason of expiration of term of service. 288 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. siderably outnumbered the Union up to the time that General Stahel's Cavalry Division, from the defenses of Washington, joined the Army. The Army of the Potomac moved slowly northwestward, crossed the Potomac, June 26-27. Lee's main army had crossed this river at or near Williams- port, Md., June 23-24. AVhen Hooker reached the vicinity of Washington his army had been much reduced by expirations of terms of service (Hooker said about forty thousand). He now learned that there was a large number of troops (about thirty-seven thousand) in the defenses of Wash- ington. Inasmuch as the Army of the Potomac now covered Washington, hfe requested that some of these troops be sent to reinforce his army. He was authorized to take Stahel's Division of Cavalry and the Pennsylvania Reserve Division of Infantry. He ordered the Pennsylvania Reserve Divi- sion (June 24) to join his army. When the Reserves heard that Lee again threatened to invade Maryland and possibly Pennsylvania, officers and men began to take on the military air which had been somewhat put aside after Fredericksburg, and talk of applying to rejoin their comrades of the Army of the Potomac on their nuirch northward became prevalent. This went so far, in one case at least, as to be put in the form of a written petition. Whatever the form, the feeling of the command, from drummer boy to chaplain, was to take an- other turn at the "Johnnies" — to go in for a fight — if Lee's army went as far north as Pennsylvania. June 24, 1863, the Twelfth Regiment, Lieutenant-Colonel Gustin com- manding, formed a part of the Third Brigade ; Colonel Fisher commanded the brigade and General Crawford the Reserve Division. The Third Bri- gade, consisting of the Fifth Regiment, Lieutenant-Colonel Dare; Tenth, Colonel Warner: Ninth, Colonel Anderson; Eleventh, Colonel Jackson, and Twelfth, Lieutenant-Colonel Gustin, was in camp at Minor's Hill, Vir- ginia. The Fii'st Brigade, Colonel McCandless commanding, consisting of the First RiHes (Bucktails), First, Second and Sixth Regiments, was in camp at Fairfax Court Hou.se. Second Brigade, Colonel Sickel command- ing, consisting of Third, Fourth, Seventh and Eighth regiments, was on provost dut.v* in Alexandria, Va. In accordance with instructions from General Hooker, General Crnvford ordered the three biugades of the Penn- sylvania Reserve Division to inarcli on the 25th. The First and Third brigades moved accordingly, but the Second Brigade was detained by Gen- eral Slough, Military Governor of Alexandria. He though a veteran bri- gade necessary to keep convalescents in camp ! In violation of all mili- tary principles (and it might possibly be said in violation of patriotic mo- tives) he retained this splendid body of veterans against their will and in disobedience of General Hooker's oi'dcrs. However, he was sustained by the action of the military coterie which surrounded our noble President. This coterie never forgave Hooker for his first dispatch upon assuming command of the Army of the Potomac, namely, requesting that General Stone be made his chief-of-stafT. Not only did this coterie refuse to enter- tain General Hooker's charges against (jeneral Slough, but it refusrd him control of the large force at Maryland Heights, and ultimately forced him to throw up the command of the army. /'cinisi/lrdjiid (it (',( tl jishinuj. 289 The Twelfth KcKimt'iit moved with tlic Third Hrigjidc, in a rain storm, on the 'ifith, marching to Goosp Crock, Va . The division had been delayed two days waiting lor transportation. The First Brigado joined the Third c)i route, the two hrisadcs, alxxit tlin-c thonsand four hundred and seven- teen strong, camping together at (loose ("icek. On tlie JTih the division moved at (hiylight, mardied ahmg the Leeslmrg turnpike. It was m\ieh delayed by the trains of the .\rmy of the Potomac, and by its own train, (leneral Crawford tele-raplied (Jeneral .Meade commanding the Fifth Corps us follows: "On the MoNocAcy, Junr ,'7, .}./.; p. m. GBNEnAi.: T have received ordei-s from headquarters Army of tlie Potomac to Join your corps; I am on my way and just in from the rear; to-night I will encamii above the mouth of tlic Monoeacy, as I find my train, which is ontiroly ni'w, cannot go far- thci-; liave two lirigadcs: Second detadicd at Alcxiindria. If I receive no instructions to the contrary. I shall move at daylight, to overtake, if posslbli', your command." Tlie division crossed tlie Potomac at lOdwards' Ferry, on pontoon bridge, and camped at night at mouth of the ^lonacacy. Colonel Hardin, of Twelfth, joined vn roiiie. "Sunday, 28th, clear and pleasant, moved at day- light and .soon crossed the aqueduct of Chesapeake and Ohio canal at the Monoeacy, and passed through Ruckeystown, bivouacked on Ballinger's creek about two miles from Frederick, Md. ; here joined the Fifth Corps." General Meade was this day assigned to the conimand of the Army of the Potomac, General Sykes to that of the Fifth Corps. Hooker had advanced a portion of his army through South ^Mountain passes, with the view of cutting Lee's communications, but this movement was disapproved at Washington, and the corps advanced through the mountains were ordered back to Frederick and directed to proceed up the east base of these moun- tains. This latter movement was taking place when the Reserve Division joined the army. The greater part of the Union army at this time rested near Frederick. At this date (June 28), Lee's army was stretched from Hagerstown to the Susquehanna near Harrisburg, and to York, Pa. lOwell's Corps at Carlisle and York ; Lee's headquarters with Longstreet's and Hill's corps near Chambersburg. Lee was preparing to cross the Su.squehanna, but that night, he says, "he learned from a scout that the Union army had crossed the Potomac and was threatening his communica- tions at South Mountain." "It was resolved," he says, "to concentrate the army east of the mountains." Meade states, "That he had no special plan but to move northward until he made Lee let go of the Susquehanna." ^leade learned, on the 30th, that Lee was moving with his main force to the east side of the mountains, and he decided to concentrate his army on Pipe creek. There was an assemblage of officers of the Reserve Division, whilst it was camped near Frederick, looking over maps of the country, and guess- ing at the future movements of the Union and Confederate armies. Colonel Warner of the Tenth, and Colonel Hardin of the Twelfth, agreed that the chances were in favor of a fight at or near Gettysburg, the next good cross- ing place in the mountains, north of our then position, as shown by the maps we had. The morning of the 20th, the writer visited Frederick and conversed with officers of General Reynolds' command (First and Eleventh Corps), all thought they were going to Gettysburg, or sjwke of that place 290 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. as their ultimate destination. Returning towards camp the writer met the division en route to Frederick. It had left Ballinger's creek about noon. We marched but a short distance when the division was stopped to let other troops take precedence. The division remained here several hours, it then followed the artillery reserve. The writer during this delay, visited his old friend. Lieutenant "Cog" Hazlett, who commanded Battery "D," Fifth United States Artillery. The weather was very warm and Lieu- tenant Hazlett wore a small soft white hat. As the writer left him to rejoin his command, he called back, " 'Cog' we are going to have a fight soon, don't wear that white hat into battle." At 7 p. m., we crossed the Monocacy bridge on the Baltimore pike and turned up the bank of the stream heading north, soon after we waded the stream and struck" across the fields, and about 10 p. m. bivouacked in a wood, having made a tire- some day's march of ten miles." The loug delay before mentioned caused our division to get far behind the other divisions of the corps, we had to ru-sh along, well into the night, to reach the corps camp, where the lead- ing divisions had arrived early in the evening and in good order. Having arrived in camp late, and it being very dark, we made a bivouac, whilst we saw the other division of the Fifth Corps in a regular camp. Most of us were so hot and tired we dropped down and went to sleep without even making coffee. A bad beginning for a long march. "The morning of the 30th, we started early, passed through Liberty, Union Bridge and Uniontown (a pontoon train accompanied us, this day), march twenty miles and bivouacked. Near dark were mustered two miles beyond Uniontown." The marching all the forenoon was very slow with many stops, but in the afternoon we were again rushed along. This march was the cause of great injustice done the division by our new corps commander, in that he re- ported to the army commander that our division could not march as fast as the other divisions. It will be noted that these other divisions had clear roads, no trains to follow, early start, no forced delays, nothing to pre- vent them from making their marches in time. The Twelfth Regiment, moving with the Pennsylvania Reserve Division, left camp two miles beyond Uniontown . at 5 a . m . , July 1 . Hearing of Confederate cavalry in the country, skirmishers and flankers were thrown out to cover the division, which moved thus several miles. About 2 p. m., halted on Pennsylvania State line: at 3 p. ra., were addressed by General Crawford . General Meade's orders on the expected battle had been read to us before we started. We then moved on till we came to a fine open woods where we rested till dark. All day we had been enjoying the cherries which overloaded the trees along the roadside. The turnpike along which we marched a great part of the day was white, hot and dusty. We passed Kilpatrick's battlefield at Hanover, and, at dark, took up our march again, and continued moving until utterly exhausted ; about dawn we dropped down, compelling a halt of the division. The marching during the night had been without proper halts. After resting about an hour we again took up the march, and continued it across country till about 12.30 p. m., when we arrived on the battlefield on the Balti- more pike, in rear of the center of the army. Our divisinii in tli(> very hot weatlicr, marclied in the worst possible Pcunfti/lvniiia at (I'rftj/shiirfi. 201 manner, accomplishod nearly seventy miles in three and a half days, and on the afternoon and evening of the fourth day went to the top of Hig Round Top. In the nieniitiin(\ (Jeneral Buford, comniandinj; a cavalry division, left MiddlebiuK, M<1.. on JOth, arrived at Gettysl)urK on 30th; passing through (Jettysburg at noon (June 30), he reconnoitred west and north. He was hero long enough to see the advantages of the Gettys- burg position, and he determined to hold it until he was driven away or relieved by infantry. The night of June 30, he notified General Reynolds, "that Hill's Confederate Coi-ps was camped nine miles west of Gettys- burg, and Longstreet's behind Hill's; that no Confederate force had yet l)assed through the mountains from the north toward Gettysburg, but that such force would soon be at ITeidler.sburg." This information was subsequently shown to be correct, (n-neral Meade had directed General Reynolds, "that if he has to fall back, to do so on Emmit.sburg, that the Third and Twelfth Corps will come to the assistance there of his and the Eleventh Corps." When General Reynolds reached Gettysburg, at 8.35 a. m., July 1, Buford was with his artillery and dismounted skirmishers, standing off Hill's troops. Reynolds joined Buford in the seminary tower, and as old companions in arms, with perfect confid(>nce in each other, discussed the position and the military .situation. Reynolds decided at once to support Buford. He knew that if his troops could be brought up promptly to this position, Lee could be made to take the offensive, or be compelled to fall back witli his whole fonc witliout fighting. And thus, if a battle took place here, the Union army would be enabled to fight oil the defensive. Buford promised to hold on until Reynolds' bat- teries and infantry could get up. Reynolds felt sure his corps with the Eleventh could hold on until the Third and Twelfth could reinforce them. The information he had of Tree's army, showed that it was almost as badly scattered as was the Army of the Potomac. Four corps of the Union army could reach this ground by the early afternoon, and the Second Corps by sundown. Force enough, with proper management and good lighting, to withstand Lee's whole army coming up from several directions until the whole of the Union army could be assembled. It was most for- tunate for the Union side that it had such intelligent and energetic gen- erals in advance as Reynolds and Buford, generals who had the confidence of the army commander. General Meade giving General Reynolds (a fighting general) his advance with three corps, proved to that general, as to the world, that General Meade was not attempting to avoid a hattli'. but was only anxious that the fight, which must take place, should be a defensive one, on his side, if possible. A few minutes after his arrival, as soon as he had taken a look at the ground from the seminary tower and had had a few minutes conversation with Buford, General Reynolds, who was a most accomplished artilleryman, seeing what fine groiuid lay in evei-y direction to the front for artillery (the arm well known to preponderate in the Army of the Potomac, more powerful and more numerous than Lee's, the only arm in which the Union army was superior to the Confederate), a battlefield to make an artilleryman grow en- thusiastic, requested Buford to hold on till his (Reynolds') batteries and 202 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. infantry could come up. He sent off in hot haste several officers for his own and the Eleventh Corps batteries, and to hurry up his own and Howaid's infantry. He then went to select ground for his batteries (he had brought up with him Captain Hall, chief of artillery of his lead- ing division), so that no time would be lost. Reynolds thus anticipated the present German instructions for battle ! In a few minutes Hall's Battery arrived and was immediately posted. Soon after, Reynolds' First Division came up and was posted to support the First Corps and Buford's batteries. In the expectation of the early arrival of Howard's batteries. General Reynolds now went to select positions for them; whilst doing so, he is struck down by a sharpshooter. Reynolds had already seized this good position, and had given such an impetus to his command, that it went on without a break, in carrying out his designs, under his able fighting successor. General Doubleday. Reynolds had planted the advance of the Union army in Lee's route, he had secured a position across all the roads leading east of the mountains at this point, a point where the Confederate ;.rmy must assemble, if it united east of the mountains. Reynolds might have had three corps at Gettysburg, earlier in the day, but he would not run the risk of throwing this force against Lee's whole army, which might be at Gettysburg at the same time. He thus showed his prudence, but when he arrived there in person and was satisfied that the informa- tion received from Buford during the past night was correct, and learned that Lee's army was stUl en route to assemble at this point, he acted as the prompt and intelligent soldier that he was. Buford's batteries and dismounted skirmishers succeeded in holding the enemy on the west side of Willoughby run till Wadsworth's Division ar- rived. Captain Hall, commanding the artillery of this division, had pre- ceded the infantry and had posted his own battery in aid of Buford's batteries, which were doing heroic service on the Chambersburg road. As soon as it arrived. Cutler's Brigade was posted on either side of the Chambersburg road and across an old railroad cut, to support these bat- teries. Meredith's (Iron) Brigade was sent to the left of the road to occupy a piece of woods which Hill's troops were entering. Heth (Con- federate division commander) attacked with four of his brigades at once the position hold by Reynolds' force. The three right regiments of Cutler's Brigade were forced back. Reynolds ordered Meredith's Brigade to attack across the front of the Confederate force. This attack was successful, the Confederate General Archer and many of his men were captured. These dispositions were just completed, in which his two brigades had defeated and almost destroyed two brigades of the enemy, when this accomplished general was killed. The falling back of Cutler's right, left Hall's Battery exposed, but the Fourteenth Brooklyn, Ninety-fifth New York and Sixth Wisconsin, changed front and charged the ^lississippi troops attacking Hall's Battery and captured two Mississippi regiments in the old railroad cut. Rowley's Division of the First Corps was put in here ; Robinson's division of the First Corps was held in reserve on Sem- inary Hill. Soon Rodes' division of Ewell's Confederate Corps attacked from the direction of Carlisle, and Robinson's Division was advanced to meet it. Baxter's Brigade wiMit in i>n the right of Cutler, and afterward Pcinisijlvdiiid (il (1( II i/shi(rii. 293 took Cutler's position. (MMicnil Paul's brigade went on right of Baxter's. Robinson's Division resisted well Rodes' attack and captured throe North Carolina regiments. So far the First Corps had more than held its own. "If the Klev(>nth Corps had been as well handled and fought, the day would prohalily have seen no reverse." General Howard spread his two divisions, IJarlow's and Schurz's to the right of tht; First Corps, but did not make strong connection with it. The Confederate seized Oak Hill, a prominent point between the Union corps, and charging from this point, turned the right of the First Corps and the left of the P^leventh. For- tunately General Howard had placed one of his divisions, Steinwehr's, in reserve on Cemetery Hill, and the left of the First Corps fell back in order and covered the retreat of the artillery and ambulances. But nearly five thousand prisoners were left in the enemy's hands. General Reynolds had, early in the day, sent word to General Meade that the enemy was in force near Cashtown and advancing on Gettysburg, and that he would endeavor to hold Gettysburg till reinforced. Soon after General Reynolds was killed the cool-headed Buford thought matters were not being con- ducted very well, and he sent off a dispatch to the effect that, "there seemed to be, no head," and requested that some one be sent forward to command. It was, no doubt, in answer to this request that General Hancock was sent forward to take supreme command. When he arrived, matters looked badly, .so much so, that he at first thought the part of the army here would have to be moved back. Soon, however, the bat- teries got into position on the left of the town, and Steinwehr's Division with Howard's batteries showed a good front on the right, and the ad- vantages of the position were explained to him, when he saw that Lee would have to continue to attack, so that it was only a question whether the Union army could at this point hold its position. By sundown all was ready to meet an attack. The Union position at this time i\ppeared so strong General Lee and his corps commanders concluded they could not assault it that evening with success. Thus, two Union corps, even with the loss of their commander, had been sufficient to hold Lee for an entire day. How much easier and with how much less loss it could have been done if Reynolds had lived and been in command of three or four corps. General Lee's troops were disposed on Seminary Ridge, about one mile from the Union line and parallel to it. The Confederate line was about five miles long, concave to the Union line which was about three miles long. Lee's concave position enabled him to utilize his large reserve ar- tillery, both for connecting his wings and to crush the Union artillery, which latter had to be concentrated too much (on the third day the guns were only a yard apart). The defects of Lee's position were, his inability to make the troops on his long line act together, and his inability to rein- force either wing promptly, and these were probably the causes of the failure of his attacks. If he had entrenched his center and either of his Hanks and had used his main army on either of Meade's flanks he would probably have succeeded in dislodging the Union army. It seems to have been the intention, that Ewell's Corps should attack early on the 2d, also it was thought Longstreet would be in position to attack on Confederate right by 9 a. m. Such was no dig Round Top contended with Vincent for this ravine. Vin- cent was soon supported by Weed's Brigade of the Second Divi.sion of the Fifth Corps, and Hazlett's Battery was carried to the top of Little Round Top. When the ammunition of Vincent's and Weed's brigades was expended (both these brigade commanders being killed), Fisher's Brigade of the Reserves was hurried to their support. By this time the Confed- erates had become exhausted, and those who had not fallen back were captured. Upon arriving on the battlefield about 12.30 p. m., the Twelfth Regiment, as the entire division of the Reserves, was given time to rest and to make a full meal, the first since leaving Frederick, Md. As soon as W(> had feasted, many of tlie mounted oflncers of the division started out to .see the line of battle. We rode up to the rear of the town of Gettysburg, then moved along the line of battle to General Meade's head- quarters, where we had a conversation with members of his staff, then we .started to ride down General Hancock's line, when we heard the commence- ment of Sickles' fight. We galloped over to our camp where we found the Fifth Corps moving off to Sickles' support. We, at that time, had never heard of Round Top, Big or Little. The First Division of the corps led, followed by the Second Division, General Ay res commanding. Theu came our divi.sion, Third Brigade leading, which at that time was well filled and Pciiiisi/lriiiiid (it (itll i/shur;/. 207 closed up. Wo iiiovod westerly iiloiiK ii wood road and soon came to a place whore the road was narmw mid cnrdurdyed, a fence on one side and brush on the other; woods nn Imtli sides. As we advanced we began to meet wownded men returninj; ; soon the road was so encumbered with wounded walkinjr to the rear, and ambulances going the same way, we liad \i< take to the woods along side of the road. This caused some delay. We lilid up on the north side of the ridge to the right of Little Round To]). The ground here was rocky and covered with thick brush; some time was taken uii in getting into position; eventually we got into line by brigade front, the Tliird l'.ri;;a(le in front. We then advanced to the crest of the ridge. As we reached the crest we got our first view of the battle on the left ; it was not a reassuring sight ! The whole valley between us and the ridge opposite, about a third of a mile off, was filled solid with our retreating soldiers and batteries, thousands of the soldiers wounded and all the batteries disabled. Some of the men, especially toward the left-front, were retreating at a run. The enemy's line was only visible by the white puffs of smoke at the crest of the opposite ridge. Very few of our iiieii were firing — a man now and then would stop and take a shot. This great mass of thousands in the valley was moving sullenly to the rear at a walk. There seemed no organized fqrce, a mere mass of men, officers and men, inextricably mixed — all seeking safety behind the ridge upon which we stood. A battery was making its way into position in the underbrush on our right and a few .i;uns in position on the ridge to our l(>ft (since called Little Round Top), were firing slowly at the enemy in the woods beyond the opposite ridge. As soon as the division got into position (there being a lull in the acticn at this time) the writer rode up the ridge to the left to get a look at the enemy's position ; when near the top he met a party of ofticers and men carrying General Weed, who was mortally wounded. The writer wlio know the general personally, stopped to see if he could be of any service. Whilst conversing here, another party came along bringing back his old friend. Lieutenant Hazlett, who in the haste of going into action had forgotten that fatal white hat. He was shot through the head, probably by the same sharpshooter who had killed General Weed. Finding he could see little more here than at the position the division occupied, the writer started down; he met the Twelfth Regiment coming up with the Third Brigade except the Eleventh Regiment. We scrambled up and over Little Round Top and moved down the left-front, going to the assistance of Vincent's Brigade. As the Third Brigade moved away, the First Brigade was ordered to advance to the front. The Eleventh Regiment being still in its position when, the First Brigade came up to the front line, it joined that brigade and advanced with it. We saw the First Brigade and Eleventh Regiment make their gallant advance through the retreating multitude, as we clambered over the rocks on top of Little Round Top. We joined in their cheer and started at a double-(|uick down the left-front of Little Round Top, stumbling over rocks, and the numerous dead of Vincent's and Weed's gallant brigades. As we advanced, a few scattering shots came from the retiring enemy. Our advance was most fortunate as Vincent's and Weed's brigades had expended all their am- 298 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. munition. The Confederates (several hundred) remaining between Big and Little Round Top, seeing and hearing our advance, laid down their arms and became prisoners to the brigades which were so weU entitled to receive them. Darkness ended the contest. Thus our small division, coming on the field in the nick of time and advancing boldly, turned the tide of success on the left, and the enemy's great efforts, on their front, were rendered entirely futile. About 9 p. m. Colonel Fisher commanding the Third Brigade, with the consent of the division commander, ordered an advance up Big Round Top. The Twentieth Maine deployed as skirmishers, the Fifth and Twelfth regiments to follow in support in line of battle. The skirmishers started promptly, but on account of the darkness and difficulty of deploying into line in this rough place, it was some minutes after they started that the line of the Fifth and Twelfth followed. The skirmishers went promptly to the top of the mountain ; only an occasional shot was fired by the Confederates. The Fifth and Twelfth regiments advanced at the word of command given in Colonel Fisher's stentorian tones. The line upon advancing in utter darkness was almost immediately broken and became confused by the rocky, precipitous and difficult ground. Officers became separated from their men, but all pushed on up the mountain; when about one-third way up all order was lost. Officers and men of different companies and even of different regiments became intermingled. The commanding officers of the brigade and the regiments began calling to each other ; the rocks and woods resounded with the cries. It is said, and no doubt with good reason, that the Confed- erate troops stationed at this time on the mountain, hearing all this noise, and knowing that the Sixth Corps had lately arrived, believing that whole corps was about taking position on Big Round Top, hastily retreated down their side of the mountain. The confusion was so great that officers and men of the Fifth and Twelfth regiments concluded to return to the position from which they had started, the valley between Big and Little Round Top. On making this ascent, a number of Confederate prisoners fell into the possession of the Fifth and Twelfth regiments. A squad of officers and men (about seventy) in which the writer found himself upon first descending to the foot of the mountain, sent forward two men to investigate the first camp fires seen. These scouts were answered by members of the Fifteenth Alabama. Our party then, after discussion, concluded to move around the mountain side toward the left or south in which direction we were sure of finding the Sixth Corps' pickets. We in this way, after an hour's very hard march, found the Vermont Brigade pickets and went at once to our starting point. In the meantime nearly all the members of the Fifth and Twelfth regiments had found their way back to the same place. The Twentieth Maine skirmishers finding themselves unsupported had returned t« this starting point. It was now suggested that the Fifth and Twelfth regiments should march up the mountain by the fiank, the Twentieth Maine skirmishers leading as before, this plan was adopted. Advancin!>: in this manner, all soon reached the tH|) in good order. The Twelfth on the crest; the Fifth on its right; the Twentieth Main skirmishers remained out as pickets toward the left-front. /'rinisi/lvdilid (il h Aikons, Company G, Twelfth Regiment wounded . Tho Confederates on their rigiit, about dark, slowly withdrew to the line the Third Union Corps had held. lOwoU began his attack from Confed- erate left about sunset; he found the Union line strii)ped ah)ng his left, there was nothing but Greene's Brigade of the Twelfth Corps on the Union extreme right. Early attacked Cemetery Hill .•uid Johnson, Gulp's Hill. Early's attack was gallantly made but failih'on, must fail. As witness this grand attack and many made by General Grant's army en route to Richmond. In this third day's magnificent assault and hi'roic defense our regiment wks only a deeply interested spectator. The grand scene was clearly in view to any one who would chance his life against the deadly sharpshooters by raising his head above the stone breastwork. The First Brigade of the Reserves, under command of C«douel McCand- loss, advanced late in the afternoon of the .^d, and by its bold and skilful movements defeated a force more than twice its stren;ith, and recovered all the ground lost by the Union army on the '2d. The Third Brigade remained in the breastworks on Big Round Top until the morning of tho 5th, when it moved olT with the Fifth Corps toward Emmitsburg. oOO Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. The euemy withdrew the night of the 3d and morning of the 4th. Their absence being soon detected, many of us took this opportunity to visit the battlefield on the left and front. The criticism of General Meade for not attacking the Confederate army after Gettysbui-g, was refuted by subsequent events. What chance had General IMeade with a force no larger than the enemy, when General Grant with more than double the enemy's force in his repeated assaults, suffered such heavy losses and accomplished so little? The numbers actu- ally engaged in the fighting were nearly equal. The Confederates were much the stronger July 1. The two sides were about equal the second day, the Union force probably the stronger the third day. The losses, July 1-3, as given by the Adjutant-General's office, were: "Union, twenty-three thousand and three; Confederate, twenty thousand four hundred and fifty- one." 42^* REGLAIENT INFANTRY* (TinuTKENTii Reserves, First Rifles) ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN JOHN P. BARD AFTER Buruside's "Mud March" in January, 1863, the division of the Pennsylvania Reserves, on account of the terrible loss it had sus- tained in the battle of Fredericksburg, Va., December 13, 1862, was ordered to tlie Department of Washington for the purpose of recruiting its ranks. The First Brigade, to which the Bucktail Regiment belonged, was in camp at Fairfax Station, on the Orange and Alexandria railroad, when the battle of Chancellorsville was fought, where they remained until they were ordered to rejoin the Army of the Potomac. When they received the news that I^ee had assumed the offensive and threatened an invasion of the North, and that Hooker's army was falling back tiiw.ud Wasliington, the men composing this division of Penusyl- vaiiinus, lircd with tlie patriutic zeal and heroism that had characterized thcui (III many hard-fuuglit lields of battle, demanded that their fortunes be again joined with the oft-defeated, but never conquered. Army of the Potomac. Some y roMsoii of e.Npiratioii of leriu of si'rvice. ^\ BUCKTAV Pcnnsyhdiiid al (Iclli/shnr;/. 'M)\ The Second r.iif;;iil(> did nut jniu in tlic inuvcmciit , Init r<'iii:iiiicd in the Department of Washingtun, Ixins stationed at Alexandria. Early Friday morning, June 20, the First Brigade broke camp at Fairfax Station and marched to Edwards' Ferry, where they crossed the Potomac riv'er, marching thence by Frederick City to near Uniontown, Md., arriv- ing at the latter place on Tuesday, June 30. In the meantime Lee had crossed the Potomac at Williamsport, with his entire army, except a large corps of General Ewell's and Stuart's division of cavalry. The latter troops had crossed earlier and had advanced into Pennsylvania. Several bfidies of their scouts had readied as tar north as the Susquehanna river near Harrisburg. During the march to Uniontown, we received the intelligence that Gen- eral ^leade had succeeded General Hooker in command of the Army of the Potomac. Knowing that (jeneral John F. Reynolds was Meade's senior in rank, this information caused some surprise among the Reserves. They felt, however, that no mistake had been made in appointing General Meade to that command. Both these ollicers had conuaanded our brigade and division, and were quite well-known to the men. They knew their fighting qualities and were quite well satisfied that either one would command the army with dis- tinguished ability. Being warm personal friends and wholly devoted to the cause, either would have the hearty support and earnest co-operation of the other. It was a source of great satisfaction to the officers and men of the Reserves to know that they would fight the next battle on their native soil and under the leadership of a Pennsylvanian who had com- manded the division in the terrible battle of Fredericksburg. The Reserves were assigned to the Fifth Corps, commanded by Major- General George Sykes and wore the Maltese cross, being the Third Divi- sion. On Thursday morning, July 2, the Fifth, having been selected by General Meade as his reserve corps, took a position in the rear of the right wing of our army. From their position, owing to the peculiar forma- tion of Meade's line, they could in a very short time, reach any given Iioint. General Sickles, with the Third Corps, was to occupy the left of the line, in the formation of which he was to connect with Hancock's left and form on a prolongation of his [Hancock's] line, with his left resting on Round Top. This would bring the line of the Third Corps ahmg the crest of Little Round Top. For some reason, not necessary to discuss here. General Sickles advanced beyond the position assigned him and formed his line on a plain, his left crossing the Emmit-sburg road, with both flanks exposed. The ground upon which he formed his line is certainly more than half a mile ill advance of the position which General Meade intended he should occupy. About the time General Sickles had his line formed General Meade arrived at Little Round Top, and, seeing the mistake Sickles had made, sent for that officer and point out to him his error. (Jeneral Sickles at once proposed to withdraw his corps and form on the line originally indi- cated. General Meade replied that the enemy would not permit his withdrawal, as it could then be seen he was preparing to attack. While 302 Pennsylvanki of Cctiyshurq. they were talking Ijongstreet's guns opened, and soon his long lines of in- fantry began to emerge from the woods. It now became evident this was to be a determined effort on the part of that able Confederate chieftain to destroy the Third Corps before they could receive support. When the first gun was fired General Sickles hastened to the front, and General Meade ordered the Fifth Corps to march with all possible haste to General Sickles' support. The gallant Third Corp.s fought despei-ately to hold their ground, but the long line of Longstreet's extending beyond both flanks, steadily drove them back. On the right of the Third the line of the enemy was pushed rapidly forward, with the evident purpose of turning that flank and getting between the Third Corps and the main line of our army. At the same time Longstreet's right was thrown forward, making a vigorous attack on Round Top, while o very strong force from the Devil's Den made a determined assault on Little Round Top, breaking the line of the Third Corps, which at that point was thrown into confusion. By this time the Second Division of the Fifth Corps, composed of regulars, arrived on the ground, and was formed on the left of Hancock's line. When the Third Corps broke, General Meade ordered the Second Division to charge in the direction of the wheatfield and peach orchard. The regulars went forward in splendid form ; when they reached the wheatfield they were met by a counter-charge of the now victorious troops of Longstreet. The regu- lars received the charge gloriously, but, after stubborn fighting and vei'y heavy loss on both sides, being largely outnumbered, they were forced back. They, however, kept their line and retired in good order, all the time keeping up a steady fire. In this manner they retreated, closely fol- lowed by the Confederates, across the swamp and half way up the side of Little Round To]), or rather half way up the slope of the hill on the right of Little Round Top, the left of the Second Division, when it fell back, barely reaching the base of Little Round Top. On the right the enemy succeeded in capturing several guns, but were only able to hold them a few minutes ; a murderous fire from Hancock's batteries and the charge of the regulars checked their advance and re-captured the guns. At this moment the situation on the left was alarming; everything indi- cated a rout of that wing of the army. At this crisis General Meade, who Avas fortunately present at this point, ordered a charge from in front of Little Round Top by the First Brigade of the Pennsylvania Reserves. The Third Brigade, commanded by Colonel Fisher, had been sent to the extreme left to the support of General Vincent, at Round Top. Little Round Top, as its name indicates, is a round hill rising about two hundred feet above the streams which run at its base. The top and side facing the enemy are covered with rough rocks, some of them very large; that side is also very steep, and near the top difficult of ascent. At the foot and in our front there is a small stream known as Plum Run, the course of which i.s pai-allel with our line. The ground on both sides of this stream is swampy, forming a flat some fifty or seventy-five yards wide. On the opposite side of the stream, (ui our right, the ground rises more gently, gradually falling olT into a i)laiii. In our front and on the left I'cinisiflrdii'Ht (il ((( 1 1 i/shiiri/. ',)()'.', it jrrows ri>iii;li(n' and stft'ix'i' until it r>'acli('s tlic Devil's I )cn , a cluster i)f very large roc-ks on our left, tlic ground liftwrcn tht-ni nnu-h hrnkoi and covered with scrubby timber, covering an area of perhaps three acres. At that time the woods extended down to the edge of the swanif) in our fi-(«nt and continued over the hill till it reached the whea tlii'ld mi nm- right. I'l-yond the wheatfield there was aimther striji of wnuils, and lieyMiid that the peach orchard fronting on the Emmitsbnrg road. The stdue wall or fence was lucated across Plum Run close by the edge of the woods and to the right of the crest of Little Hound Top. The stone wall covered about one-half of our regiment when in line. The Pennsylvania Reserves arrived on the ground at the supreme mo- ment. If Longstreot had obtained possession of Little Round Top, Meade's position would have been turned. From this point the guns of the enemy would have raked our center and left-eonter and from this position he could strike the right wing on the flank and real. General Meade's pres- ence at that part of the line would indicate the deep anxiety he felt in the result of the conflict for the possession of the Round Tops He knew it was of the utmost importance that the advance of Longstroet's exultant troops should be checked before they reached the crest of Little Rouiid Top, the real key to his position, and v/hich was, at the moment when we arrived upon the ground, almost within their grasp. The brigade marched upon the field in reverse order, throwing the Buck- tails vipon the left of the line with the r^ar r;;nlv to th'^ enemy. Cucktails, springing forward with a cheer, engaged the enemy in a desperate hnnd-to- hand conflict lasting but a short time when, for the first time that day, Long- street's brave men were forced to retreat. With a broken line and in considerable confusion they flew down the hill and across the swamp, the Bucktails following close and capturing quite a number of prisoners. At the foot of the hill Lieutenant-Colonel A. E. Niles fell on the front line severely wounded. The Bucktails kept up a steady fire from their breech-loading rifles as they charged; the lines being very close they inflicted terrible punishment on the retreating foe. At the stone wall the enemy made a feeble attempt to re-form, but were not able to check the im- petuous charge of the Bucktails. It is needless to state that Colonel Taylor and Major Ilartshorne were to be found in the front line all the time. Xot taking any account of what was occurring on the right of our line, the Bucktails pushed on after the imw thoroughly routed enemy who fled through the w^oods, on up the hill, on, on, until ne.ir the edge of the wheat- field when Colonel Taylor, discovering that he was a considerable distan<'e in advance of our line and unsupported, ordered a halt. 304 Pciuisi/lrania at Geftyshiirg. After wp lialtcd the enemy were either reinforced or concentrated their scattered lines, ns they kept up a heavy fire in our front, but as we were still in the woods and our boys found good cover behind trees they did ns but little h;\i-m. Up to this time we had captured a larjre number of prisoners. Just after the line halted we received a heavy volley from our right- center. Colonel Taylor with two other officers and fifteen or twenty men were on th.it part <>f the line at tlie time. Quickly facing to the left they discovered, but a sliurt distance away, two hundred or three hundred rebels partly hidden by the timber. An officer promptly demanded their surrender when nearly every man in their line threw down his arms. Just then a Confederate in the rear of their line sang out with an oath, "I'll never surrender to a corporal's guard." The rebels again grasped their arms when Lieutenant Kratzer called out to the Bucktails, "Tree, every man of you," and, jumping behind a tree near him, be turned to Colonel Taylor, who was near by, and urged him to hurry. Just as the colonel laid liis hand on Lieutenant Kratzer's shoulder, and was in the act of stepping under shelter of a tree, a rebel sharpshooter sent a bullet through his heart — when our brave and beloved commander died without speaking a word . When the few men that were there saw Colonel Taylor fall they poured several volleys in quick succession into the enemy at the same time calling upon them to surrender. About forty or fifty threw down their arms and gave themselves up ; the others retreated in the direc- tion of the Devil's Den. The command of the regiment now devt)l\ed on Major Ilartshorne, who was at the time on the left of the line. As soon as he was informed of the death of Colonel Taylor and knowing that there was a considerable force on our left and rear, \w withdrew his line to the stone wall and sent Captain Kinsey with his company out in the direction of the Devil's Den, with orders to form in line of skirmishers at right angles with the line of the regiment, attack the enemy and develop his strength and posi- tion. When Captain Kinsey reached the edge of the Devil's Den, he was ni(>t witli a li(>avy volley from the enemy who were posted Ix'hind rocks and trees, taking such cover as they could find, and a lively skirmish en- sued. The rapid firing attracted Major Hartshorne's attention, when he sent Lieutenant Kratzer to ascertain whether or not Captain Kinsey could hold his position. Captain Kinsey urged Lieutenant Kratzer to support him with his company, in.sisting, that with some help he could carry the rocks and capture the force defending them. The lines were very close, only a few yards apart, and the exposure of any part of the body called forth a shot from the watchful foe. Lieutenant Kratzer agreed to go back, and if he could get Major Hatshorne's consent to bring up his com- pany. Just as he turned to go back, several shells fell in their midst and exploded. This was promptly followed by a volley from the enemy in their front. Captain Kinsey was severely wounded by a shell. In the con- fusion following, Lieutenant Kratzer got away and reported the situation to Major Hartshorne. It being then dark and the enemy still in strong force in his front, ^lajor Hartshorne d'-eming it unsafe to attemi)t without support to drive the enemy from his strong position, r<'called Captain Kin- Pcn)isi/Iv(nii(i (it (I'clt j/slntnj. ',\0~i sey's company, leaving only a fi'w pickets to watch the niovements of the enemy. A brisk firing was kept up all along the line till alxnit o'clixk, wlii'ii it ceased, seemingly l)y imitu.il cunscnt. So ended the battle of the 2d of July, in front of Little Round Top. Tliv fighting from 2 o'clock p. m., had been of the most desperate character, and the ground all round was strewn with killed and wounded. Side by side in death lay the Blue and the (4ray, while here and tliere desperately wounded Yankees and Confederates lying on the field would talk over the day's work and speculate on the result of the battle to be fought on the morrow. Very early on the morning of July 3, Major llartshorne sent Captain Frank Bell, with Company I, and Captain John A. Wolff with Company F, to attack and develop the strength of the enemy on our left flank in the Devil's Den. The.se two companies, deployed in line of skirmishers, cau- tiously advanced. W'Ik'ii tliey reached the edge of the Devil's Den, they encountered the enemy strongly posted behind rocks and trees. The fighting at once became very severe; the enemy's fire indicated a large force, and their position was so strong that any attempt to carry it by storm with so small a body of troops must prove disastrf)us. Taking <.'uver, the Bucktails opened a rapid lire, hoping to punish the enemy so severely as to either compel him to retire or come out of his stronghold to drive them off. The reader will bear in mind that the Bucktails were armed with beech-loading rifles, some of the companies with Spencer repeating rifles; the great advantage of these arms, when firing from cover, is known by all soldiers. Any object that will cover the body is all the protection a man armed with a breech-loading rifles wants. He is not exposed in loading, and can load on the run almost as well as when standing still. This will account, in part, for the heavy loss, on many occasions, inflicted oil the eneuiy by the Bucktails when their loss was comparatively very small. On this occasion, the superiority of the arms, soon gave them a very decided advantage. Whenever a rebel exposed any part of his body he was sure to be hit and the result, notwithstanding their superiority in numbers, was only a question of time. The Bucktails were punishing them severely with no loss, since they had taken cover. The enemy dis- covered that they were playing a losing game, made a dash on the handful of brave men who were opposing them. Their numbers surprised the Bucktails, and to prevent the capture of their little party, they beat a hasty retreat, glad to make their escape and get back to the regiment. In this retreat Captain Bell received a wound which caused the loss of a leg, and several others were wounded. The enemy, strange to say, did not follow up their advantage, but, seemingly satisfied with driving off the party in their front, returned to their first position. Major llartshorne, determined to make them develop their purpose, ordered Lieutenant Kratzer to take his company (K) and make another effort to rout them. The regiment being constantly engaged in the frt)nt, no considerable force could be spared. Deploying his company in line of skirmishers, Lieuten- ant Kratzer gave them the word when they started forward on a run. The rebels permitted them to get so close that their features could be easily distinguished and the bore of their guns plainly seen when they sprang from their cover and fired a vollt-y that killed and wounded about 306 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. one-third of the number. A Confederate officer close by called to Kratzer to surrender ; the brave lieutenant answered him with a shot from his revolver; the Confederate returned the shot, when Kratzer fired again and his foe fell. One of Kratzer's men called his attention to blood on his hand ; the lieutenant replied that he was shot through the arm above the elbow. After firing this volley the Confederate officers compelled their men to lie down ; the lines were so close that their oomm:iuds wore distinctly heard though spoken in an ordinary tone. It was now near 2 o'clock p. m. and preparations were being ni.ide for a general attack on this part of the line. Major Hartshorne therefore called in the party sent out with Lieutenant Kratzer. About 3 o'clock the brigade advanced in line ; charging on the enemy they drove him through the woods to the wheatfield, on through the field and through the strij> of woods beyond into the peach orchard, capturing several hundred pris- oners and completely destroying the Confederate line in their front. Early that morning Major Hartshorne had informed Colonel McCaudless, com- manding the brigade, of the force on his left in the Devil's Den. Colonel McCandless having nothing to fear from the line in his front determined to pay his respects to that party ; he therefore directed Major Hartshorne to change front to the left and charge with the Bucktails in that direction, while he would form the rest of the brigade in column by regiment closed in mass and follow him at supporting distance. The Bucktails in line of skirmishers moved forward through the woods at double-quick for several hundred yards, when they came upon a line of the enemy in position. With a cheer they rushed on them, when they had another hand-to-hand fight with what proved to be the Fifteenth Georgia Regiment. The Georgians stood up bravely for fifteen or twenty minutes when they threw down their arms, the Bucktails capturing the entire command with their colors. Turning the prisoners over to the troops in the rear the Bucktails pushed on through the woods into open country, when Colonel McCandless deployed the brigade into line and moved forward capturing quite a number of prisoners. He continued till there was no enemy to be seen in our front and night put an end to our fighting, when the brigade rested for the night fully one mile in front of Little Round Top. By this movement Colonel McCandless completely flanked the Devil's Den and forced the enemy to retreat from a position that it would have been next to impossible to have driven him by a direct attack. So ended the battle of Gettysburg. The last shot, the Bucktails claim, was fired by them on nearly the same ground where the battle of July 2 was opened by Longstreet's attack on Sickles. In the two days' iiglitiug the Bucktails total loss was forty-seven. Killed, two officers and eight enlisted men ; wounded, eight officers and thirty enlisted men. The loss in officers was unusually severe, nine ofiicers out of a total loss of forty-seven. It will be observed that from the time the Pennsylvania Reserves entered the fight until the end the Confederates on this part of the line fought entirely on the defensive ; up to that time they were the attacking party and were flushed with victory. They had driven the Third Corps, with terrible slaughter, tlirough the peach orchard, met the Regulars in the rrinisi/lriiiiid nl f Irl f i/sliiif;/. ."'.(IT wheatfitld, and, aftor liard lijihtiiiK and heavy l at Raleigh, when we got the glad news of the surrender of Lee's army to Grant; what a joyful day that was. Then soon thereafter, on April 27, Johnston surrendered to Sheridan, and, thank God, the war was over, and the Union was saved. Then commenced your homeward march to Richmond, and Washington and the grand review, and your dis- charge at Harrisburg, Pa., July 16, 1865, with the thanks of Congress. And now, my comrades, in closing I would add, that I congratulate you on having had this starry emblem for your corps badge ; we believe it the grandest of them all . What memories cluster around this emblem . We read in the Bible of "the star guiding the wise men to the manger in Bethle- hem," "and that the morning stars sang together;" also, "can you bind the sweet bands of Orion," etc. Our emblem is represented everywhere in nature. On the earth you find it as it is delineated on the beautiful flower ; you find it portrayed in the beautiful snow, as it falls in tiny starry flakes, carpeting the earth in winter; you find it in the star-fish of the mighty-deep, or as it flashes in phosphoric stai'S at the vessel's bow'as it plows the ocean, and all earth, and the heavens, as well as this granite monument, will continue to perpetu- ate the memory of the Old Star Corps. And, comrades, my prayer is "that when your star shall set at life's close, it m:iy set, as sets the morning star which goeth not down in the darkened west, but molteth away into the brightness of Heaven ;" may God bless vou . DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 49TH REGIMENT INFANTRY* September 11, 1SS9 ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN JOSEPH B. DOWNING THE Forty-ninth Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers was organized at Camp Curtin near Harrisburg, Pa., under the call of President Lincoln for three hundred thousand men for three years or during the war, in the month of September, 1861, by the selection of the following field and staff ofiicers: Colonel, William H. Irwin, of Lewistown, Pa. ; Lieutenant-Colonel, Wil- liam Brisbane, of Luzerne county. Pa., Major, Thomas M. Hulings, of •Organized at Harrisburg and Lewistown, October 24, 1861, to serve three years. On the expiration of its term of service the original members (except veterans) were mustered out and the organization composed of veterans and recruits retained in service until July 1.'., 1865, when it was mustered out. / Pennsylvania at Gciiysburf/. 313 Mifflin county. Pa.; Adjutant, James M. Miller, of Dauphin county. Pa.; Quartermaster, John H. Gray, of Chester county. Pa. ; Surgeon, William H. Gobrecht, of Philadelphia, Pa.; Assistant Surgeon, John F. Huber, of Lancaster county, Pa. ; Chaplain, Hov. William Earnshaw, of the Mi.-tho- dist Episcopal Church. The companies were enlisted in different parts of the State; A and G from Centre county; I? and F from Chester, C and D from Huntinjidon, I>. II and K from Mifflin and I from Juniata. The companies were ollicered a.s follows: A — Captain, J. Miles Green: First Lieutenant, Andrew S. Davidson; Second Lieutenant, R. D. Harper. B — Captain, George F. Smith; First Lieutenant, Baynton J. Hickman; Second Lieutenant, Isaac B. Parker, Jr. C — Captain, John B. Miles; First Lieutenant, James B. Eckeber^'er; Second Lieutenant, . D — Captain, James D. Campbell; First Lieutenant, John H. Westbrook ; Second Lieutenant, F. Y. Mc- Donald. E — Captain, Henry A. Zollinger First Lieutenant, Amor W. Wakefield; Second Lieutenant, John Hancock. F — Captain, Benjamin II. Sweeney; First Lieutenant, F. W. Wombackcr; Second Lieutenant, Don Juan Waitings. G — Captain, John Boal ; First Lieutenant, A. B. Hutchison; Second Lieutenant, William Reed. H — Captain, Ralph L. .Maclay ; First Lieutenant, William G. Mitchell; Second Lieutenant, John Cox. I— Captain, Cavlin DeWitt; First Lieutenant, R. M. McClellan ; Second Lieutenant, David B. Spanogle. K — Captain, Matthias Neice ; First Lieutenant, John R. Keim ; Second Lieutenant, Thomas F. Neice. Of the above named officers the following obtained distinction in other <<>mmands as follows: Chaplain Earnshaw resigned October 9, 1862, and was shortly afterwards appointed chaplain in the United States army where he served during the war. At the close of the war he was appointed on a commission to collect tlie remains of our gallant dead and have them removed to the National cemeteries, and by his personal appeal to Hon. Henry Wilson, Chair- man of the Military Committee of the Senate, an appropriation was passed liruvidinu for a marble head and foot stone for every Union soldier so buried. After the completion of this service he was sent as chaplain to the Soldiers' Home in Dayton, Ohio, where he remained until his death in 1885. Captain George F. Smith was, in March, 1862, appointed to the majority of the Sixty-first Reaiment Pennsylvania Volunteers with which command he remained until nearly the close of the war, being promoted in the meantime respectively to lieutenant-colonel and colonel of the regiment. Lieutenant William G. Mitchell was appointed aide-de-camp on the staff of General Hancock, with whom he served until his death in 1883. During the war Mitchell rose to the rank of brigadier-general of volunteers and at the close of the W'ar was appointed captain of the United States army on the staff, and one of the last oflifial arts of thi- lamented Presidt-nt Garfield was to promote him to major and a«?sistant adjutant-general. Lieutenant John Hancock, brother of the general, was appointed captain and assistant adjutant-general at General Hancock's headquarters with wlinni he remained until the end of the rebellion. 314 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Lieutenant Isaac B. Parker, Jr., was also appointed an aide-de-camp to General Hancock and rose to the rank of lieutenant-colonel and was mus- tered out at the close of the war. On September 19, 1861, the quartermaster's department issued the arms to the different companies. They consisted of Harper's Ferry muskets that had been changed from flint lock to percussion of .68 caliber. The ammuni- tion was a cai'tridge made with powder, a round bullet and three buckshot. The muskets were very unserviceable, being about as dangerous to the sol- dier who used them as they would have been to an enemy in his front. During the following winter, before the regiment had been engaged with the enemy, they were exchanged for Austrian rifles of .54 caliber, using a minie ball cartridge. On September 20, 1861, after the dress-parade, Governor A. G. Curtin and his staff appeared and presented to the regiment the National and State flags, which were received in an able, eloquent and patriotic speech by Colo- nel Irwin. In the course of his remarks the colonel said "that while he had an arm to wield a sword or a man to fire a gun, the colors should never drop in the face of an enemy nor be desecrated by the touch of rebel hands," and that promise was faithfully kept although the dear old colors were torn to shreds by shot and shell of the enemy. On the next day, September 21, reveille sounded at 4 a. m. with orders to break camp and prepare to move to the seat of war, and later in the day the regiment was loaded on cars of the Northern Central Railroad Company. The train was run in two sections. When within twelve or fifteen miles of Baltimore the second section ran into the first, in which accident two men of Company G (Parker and Fulton) were kUled and three others injured. Arrived in Baltimore about midnight, disembarked and marched from the Northern Central to the Baltimore and Ohio station. Early the next morn- ing the command was fed by the Union Relief Association and about 9a.m. took cars and arrived in Washington about 2 p. m., wont to the Soldiers Re- treat for rations and then into camp on the common about one mile north of the capitol. Here we remained five days, drilling, doing camp duty, etc. On September 27, we struck tents and moved out through Washington and Georgetown up the Potomac about eight miles to Chain Bridge which we crossed into Virginia and went into camp about 9 p. m. at Camp Advance. It had rained hard all day and when camp was reached, tired, wet and hungry and no trains arriving, without tents and rations, tlie men felt that they had fallen on hard lines. On September 28, Hancock's famous brigade was formed consisting of the Fifth Wisconsin Volunteers, Sixth Maine, Forty-third New York and Forty- ninth Pennsylvania. This brigade, with Brooks' Second, Third, Fourth and Fifth Vermont regiments. Seventh Maine, Thirty-third and Forty-ninth New York and the Forty-seventh Pennsylvania Volunteers made up the division and was commanded by Brigadier-General William F. (Baldy) Smith. On this day there appeared great warlike movements. Many regiments moving, .strong fortifications in view and a battle looked for. Two companies of the Forty-ninth ordered out on a reconnoitering expedition, marched very rapidly at first, then cautiously for some miles. No enemy being found they re turned to camp about midnight. Pennsylvania at (h'ttijahurff. 315 The next day, September 20, nboiit 5 a. m., an alarm was sotindfd and the Forty-ninth immediately fell into line expecting an attack until II a. m. After dress-parade in the evening Colonel Irwin drilled the regiment in Imt talion drill until after dark. September 30, moved a few miles to the front and went into a new camp, "Vanderwerken." The next day again moved forward to the villages of Liingley and Lewinsville and went into camp at Camp GrifTui and remained here until March 10, 1862. The first place at which we pitched our tents in this place being on low ground, moved about one-fourth of a mile onto higher ground where we went into winter quarters. On October 24, the regiment was first mustered into the United States ser- vice. Through some technical informality the first muster in at Harrisburg had been decided illegal and owing to this a great wrong worked to those of the regiment who did not re-enlist, compelling them to serve from two to three months more than the three years. Notwithstanding the informality alleged, the men were paid from the date of enlistment and not from the date of muster into the United States service. During the stay at Camp Griffin drills were regular in the school of the soldier, squad, company, battalion and skirmish and the evolutions of the brisade, and during this work of discipline and becoming acclimated, many of the members died and when in the following spring we moved away, we left a right large sized burial ground. On November 20, the regiment participated in the grand review at Mun- son's Hill, in which the divisions of McCall, McDowell, Heintzelman, Por- ter, Franklin, Blenker and South, about ninety regiments of infantry, twenty batteries (100 pieces) of nine regiments of cavalry, in all about 70,000 troops, took part. Immediately after the Forty-ninth had passed the reviewing stand. Colonel Irwin commenced drilling the regiment and blocked up the troops that were passing in review. General Hancock rode up rapidly when he had found the cause of the trouble, placed Colonel Irwin in arrest, and the regiment worn out with the fatigues of the day, straggled back to camp where they all ar- rived during the night. For this breach of discipline Colonel Irwin was tried by court martial. About this time several changes took place among the line officers. T>ieu- tenant Harper, of Company A, resigned. Lieutenant Reed, of Company G, resigned and Sergeant J. T. Stuart was promoted; Lieutenant Spanogle, of Company I, resigned and Sergeant John Stewart promoted ; Lieutenant John R. Keim resigned and Sergeant William B Freeburn promoted; Adjutant J. M. Miller resigned, and Sergeant Major E. D. Smith promoted. On March 6, regiment went on a reconnoLsance to Hunter's Mill, and re- turned to camp on the 0th. The next day the whole nrmy moved to Fairfax Court House, and finding the enemy had evacuated his position at Bull Run and Centreville we retraced our steps to Alexandria and embarked for Fort- ress Monroe, and the penninsular campaign was inaugurated. At the time of the embarkation of our briaade it seemed necessary to put two regiments on one boat and the Forty-Third New York and Forty-ninth Pennsylvania Vol- unteers were placed on board the steamer North America. Shortly after an altercation took place between the men of the two regiments which rendered 316 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. it necessary to remove the Forty-third New York to another vessel and they departed from the steamer to the tune of "Bully for You" from the Forty- ninth band. After which episode the North America proceeded on her way and landed us safely at Fortress Monroe. Upon our arrival upon the Peninsula the army was organized into corps and Smith's Division with Couch's and Casey's formed the Fourth \rmy Corps and was commanded by General E. D. Keyes. Went into camp near Hampton, Virginia, moved forward by slow and easy marches up the Peninsula. Early in April, our advance reached War- wick river near Lee's Mills. A spirited advance and attack was made by the Vermont Brigade but was repulsed. On that night the Forty-ninth was moved up to the front and threw up rifle pits. When we arrived on the ground by some error the regiment stacked arms with the right flank in the direction of the enemy. A little after daylight the next morning a heavy cannonade was opened on us and the rebs quickly got the range of our stacked muskets. Orders were not waited for but personal preservation was the order of the day. Every man broke for a gun and then to the rear, to the timber, where the lines were reformed and the scare was over. Re- mained in this vicinity until May 4. On April 28, the regiment lost its first man killed by the enemy ; Corporal Watson, of Company A, was killed on the picket line. While remaining in this position many of the men were sick. Water was exceedingly bad and plenty of it only twelve or eighteen inches under the surface of the ground. The siege of Yorktown closed on May 4th, by the evacuation of the enemy and we immediately started in pursuit, arriving in the vicinity of Williams- burg at dark. The battle opened early on the 5th, by the advance of Heint- zelman's Third Corps Divisions of Hooker and Kearny. Hancock's Brigade moved to the right and came to a large mill dam. The bridge wossed on the dam breast. This dam breast was covered by an oarthwoi'k but it was unoccupied and the crossing was made without inter- ference. A line of battle was formed with the left resting on the stream, Sixth Maine on the right. Fifth Wisconsin in the center. Forty-ninth on the left and the Forty-third New York thrown out as skirmishers. Moved for- ward from one-half mUe to a mile without much opposition, and then held our ground until the middle of the afternoon when Ewell's Brigade advanced on us expecting to capture the brigade. Their impetuous advance threw the Forty-third New York in on the right, and as the enemy neared us Hancock ordered a retreat by alternate battalions, leading the advancing column away from their supports until we had good ground both to hold and advance from ; when Hancock directed a charge upon the advancing enemy. This was Hancock's* famous charge at Williamsburg. The enemy was beaten with great loss, in killed, wounded and captured, and the way was opened for the flanking and destruction of Margruder's army. But we were satisfied with the repulse and allowed Magruder to depai't in peace. The loss of the Forty-ninth in this engagement was one killed, David Gilbert, and six slight- ly wounded. On May 8, three days after the battle, we advanced leisurely up the Pen- insula, noting, by destroyed stores, the hurry the enemy had been in on their retreat, passing Burnt Ordinary and New Kent Court House and arrived at Cumberland Landing and West Point on the Pamunkey. Peniisi/lvdiiia iif Grtti/shiirii. HIT At this point the Sixth Corps was cri'iitod, (."omiiost'd of the Division of Smith and Franklin (now Slocuin's) and commanded by Gt-ncral W B. Franklin, and from this time to the end of the war the Forty-ninth Pennsyl- vania Volunteers formed a part of this famous command. The next march brought us to Cold Harbor, and the next to the banks of the Chickahorainy, and the siege of Richmond was inauRuratcd. The regi- ment remained on the north bank of the Chickahominy until about June 15, when we crossed to the south side and took up line of battle ueur Garnctt's Hill. The malarial swamps in this vicinity were very destructive to the regiment. Very manj' sickened and numbers died. • On the afternoon of June 27, the fighting commenced in our front. The regiment supported artillery and was under heavy artillciy firing during the afternoon, and about sunset the enemy advanced but was handsomely re- pulsed. The Forty-ninth lost five killed and about fifteen wounded, one mortally. The next day, 28th, regiment engaged at Golding's fanu and the brigade captured Colonel L. Q. C. Lamar of Mississippi. In this day's en- gagement regiment lost two killed and several wounded. Regiment was engaged at Savage Station June 29, White Oak Swamp June 30 and Malvern Hill July 1 and arrived at Harrif»)n's Landing on July 2 through a drenching rain and mud knee deep. The retreat ended and the base changed. The regiment and the army remained at Harrison's until August 1.5, then moved down the peninsula to Fortress Monroe and embarked on the steamer ]\Iontreal and arrived at Alexandria on Sunday afternoon, August 24, where we remained until the 29th. 'On the morning of this day we marched off in great haste to the relief of Pope and arrived at Annandale in the evening, having made the prodigious march of four miles in one day. The next day marched to Ceutreville but arrived too late to do anything for Pope as the second battle of Bull Run had been fought and lost before our arrival. We occupied the forts around Centreville and prevented the further advance of the enemy in that direction. But while in this position, were in great dnnger of being cut off by the advance of the enemy to Chantilly. The regiment re- turned with the army to Washington, crossed the Potomac at Long Bridge, through Washington and Georgetown to Tennallytown. Then on the Mary- land campaign to Crampton's Gap into Pleasant Valley and remained there until Harper's Ferry capitulated and the battle of Antietam well on, when the regiment with the corps moved in rear from right of the whole army through Boonsboro, etc., and went into the engagement on the extreme right, relieving Sumner's Corps. Upon our arrival at the front. General Richardson having been mortally wounded, General Hancock, our beloved brigade commander, was appointed to the command of Richardson's Divi- sion of the Second Corps. Our loss in the battle was slight; one killed and a few wounded. The one killed was Charlie King of Company F, drunini'T. .i bright boy of about thirteen years of age. After the battle moved to the Potomac near Shepherdstown, thence to Bakersville where we encamped about two weeks, then marched to the Penn- sylvania line in an attempt to intercept the enemy's cavalry raid. On this movement the regiment did picket duty in our native State facing north. The enemy succeeded in making his escape and recrossed into Virginia. 318 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Regiment returned to Hagerstown and went into camp and remained there until the army agaiji moved south. While at Hagerstown, Lieutenant-Colo- nel Brisbane and Chaplain Earnshaw resigned and Major Hulings promoted to Lieutenant-colonel and Captain John B. MUes to Major. From Hagerstown the regiment moved through Boonsboro, Middletown and Petersville, crossed the Potomac at Berlin, down Loudoun Valley to White Plains, where he went into camp for a few days. While here, the first snow storm of the season occurred, accompanied by very cold weather, causing considerable sutYering among the men. A number of the regiment who went out foraging from this camp were captured by the guerrillas under IMosby. The next move brought us to New Baltimore. Here General Mc- Clellan was relieved of the command of the army and General Burnside as- signed in his stead. Shortly after this event, the army was organized into three grand divisions. The First and Sixth Corps formed the left grand di- vision commanded by Major-General W. B. Franklin, the Sixth Corps by General W. F. Smith, our division by General Howe, General Pratt retain- ing the command of the brigade. From New Baltimore marched to Aquia Church, to Stafford Court House, to Stafford Heights opposite Fredericksburg. The Sixth Corps going into camp near White Oak Church. Participated with the left grancj division in the battle of Fredericksburg, December i2 to 14, 1862. Recrossed the river on the Pontoon bridge on the night of the 14th and returned to our old camp and remained until the Chancellorsville campaign. On January 11, 1863, the regiment having become very much depleted in numbers, by a special order from the War Department, was consolidated in- to four companies. Companies H and I formed new A, Captain Wakefield, First Lieutenant Thompson, Second r>ieutenant Hilands. Companies K and F and part of E formed new B, Captain Freeburn, First Lieutenant Swain, Second Lieutenant Barr. Companies G and D and the balance of E formed new C, Captain Hutchison, First Lieutenant Wombacker and Second Lieutenant J. P. Smith. Companies A, B and part of C formed new D, Captain Quigley, First Lieutenant Sherwood, Second Lieutenant, B H. Downing. Captain Hickman was serving at division headquarters as ord- nance officer: Captains Campbell and DeWitt resigning. Colonel Irwin, Major Miles, Captains Sweeney, Eekeberger and Cox, Lieutenants Ritner, E. D. Smith and D. J. Wallings and all the supernumerary non-commis- sioned oflicers were sent to Pennsylvania on recruiting service. The colonel and major only remained during the balance of the winter and then rejoined the battalion. The rest remained in different parts of the State until No- vember 19, 1863, when, by an order from the War Department, the super- numerary line officers were mustered out and honorably discharged and the non-commissioned officers returned to the regiment and assigned to the new companies then being organized. The battalion under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel Hulings took part in the "Mud March." Shortly after the army again exchanged commanders. Hooker succeeding Burnside, and the army went back to the corps organiza- tion. Among other general oflicers, Franklin and Smith were relieved and Major-General John Sedgwick was assigned to command the Sixth Corps, General Brooks the division and General Russell the brigade. About this Pennsylvdilid at (Jcttijstbur;/. 319 time the light division was formed, and two regiments from our brigade (Fifth Wisconsin and Sixth Maine) were assigned to it. Their phices in the brigade were filled by two other regiments. On May 1, the Chancellorsville campaign opened and the Forty-ninth crossed the Rappahannock in pontoon boats under the fire of the enemy. They succeeded in crossing and hold the ground while the pontoon bridge was thrown across. In this engagement Colonel Irwin and Captain Free- burn were wounded, the latter mortally. Corporals Cresswell and Bruce were also wounded. After the corps succeeded in crossing, the regiment took part in its movements and after being almost surrounded after Hooker's de- ■ feat, succeeded in escaping across the river at Banks' Ford. After Chancellorsville, nothing of importance occurred until Lee made his movement north. On June 20, the Forty-ninth and brigade again crossed the Rappahannock below Fredericksburg in pontoon boats and cap- tured the enemy's pickets and picket reserves and again established our line south of the river and entrenched from Deep Run to the Bernard House. After completing the works, re-crossed the river and followed the army now in pursuit of Lee. Arrived at Fairfax Court House June 26, Edwards' Ferry on the Potomac, June 28, crossed to Poolesville, Maryland, and after two days' marching arrived at Westminister, Maryland, on the evening of July 1, and the first day's battle had been fought at Gettysburg. From Westminister marched to Gettysburg, thirty-two miles, in a broiling July sun, with but one half to make coffee and get something to eat. Arrived on the battlefield about 2 p. m. of the second day and formed the reserve. On the night of the 2d, took position on the side of Round Top but were not en- gaged. On the morning of the 3d took position on this ground covering the left flank of the army. Grant's Vermont Brigade with Russell's formed in line at right angles with the main line of the army. Fifth Wisconsin Volun- teers on the extreme left and the Forty-ninth joined it on the right. In this position held the ground under heavy artillery fire but no casualties are re- ported. After the retreat of the enemy, the Sixth Corps led the advance in pursuit, first in the direction of Chambersburg, then to the left in the direc- tion of Emmitsburg, arriving at the foot of the Catoctin Mountains about dark and attempted to cross during the night but, owing to the darkness and heavy rains, were compelled to go into camp on the top of the mountain near Hamburg. Early the next morning continued our march west through Mid- dletown, crossed the South Mountain at Turner's Pass and camped at Boons- boro. The next day the Forty-ninth, being in the extreme advance of the army, were deployed as skirmishers on either side of the National turnpike in the direction of Hagerstown. Skirmishing continued during the day; we advancing and the enemy falling back on his main body. When near Wil- liamsport, Maryland, in the evening of that same day, in skirmishing, Lieu- tenant Swain was wounded through the thigh. No attnck in force being made that evening the enemy withdrew across the Potomac. The Union army crossed at Berlin via Boonsboro, marched through Loudoun Valley and went into camp at Warrenton, Virginia, and remained, comparatively in- active until November 6, 18ft"3. While in camp here, on October 24, Colonel 320 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Irwin resigned and returned home, the command devohdng on Lieutenant- Colonel Hillings. On November 6, moved in the direction of Rappahannock Station. On the 7th, the Forty-ninth again in advance, did the skirmishing until near evening when the Sixth Maine took our place and we returned to the main column. By this time we were in front of the enemy's works on the north side of the river near the Station, held by Hoke's and Hays' brigades of Lee's army. The works were carried by storm and almost all of the enemy captured. The severest loss on our side fell to the Fifth Wisconsin and Sixth Maine who lost heavily. The loss in the Forty-ninth was three killed, three mortal- ly aud fifteen others wounded. Among the latter was Captain Hutchison and .\djutant J. T. Stuart. Among the severely wounded was Qurirter- master-Sergeant J. D. W. Henderson who gallantly borrowed a musket and went into the fight and was badly wounded. From this point the regiment moved to Brandy Station and went into camp near Hazel creek where the winter was spent. Early in December a move- ment was made to Mine run where the enemy was found in force. No strong attack was made, but for two days the regiment was under artillery fire, dur- ing which a shell burst in the regiment, wounded slightly Captain Quigley and four men. Returned to the camp and put up winter quarters. A.bout this time the supernumerary non-commissioned ofiicers rejoined the regiment, and drafted men and substitutes also arriving, four new companies, E, F, G and H, were organized and commanded respectively by Wombacker, Sher- wood, Stuart and Swain. A new company of volunteers recruited by Ser- geant Kephart also joined the regiment and was commanded by Captain W. P. Kephart. The regiment now filled to the minimum. Colonel Hulings, Lieutenant-Colonel Miles and Major Hickman were mustered in as the field oSicers. The supernumerary non-commissioned ofiicers were assigned to the new companies. Eight new lieutenants were mustered. Lieutenant Hilnnds promoted to adjutant, and the regiment was well manned and officered for the spring campaign, having nine companies well filled, about seven hundred and fifty strong, a large regiment for those days'. On May 4, the regiment moved with the army in the direction of the enemy about 10 o'clock who opened a volley on us at about thirty yards, formed line of battle and moved forward into the Wilderness. Struck the enemy about 10 o'clock who opened a volley on us at about thirty yards. More than fifty per cent, of the men in the regiment were new and untried and many of them had been compelled to serve by draft, but they stood the shock with an .invincibility that would have done honor to Napoleon's Im- t)erial Guard in its palmiest days. We drove the enemy back a short dis- tance and entrenched . In this engagement the regiment lost about forty men, of whom three were killed and two mortally wounded. Maintained our position until after dark of the 6th. On this evening the enemy in great force attacked the right of our corps and the army aud suc- ceeded in turning the flank, capturing two brigade commanders in the Third Division and many of the men. At the same time the Forty-ninth was sub- jected to a very heavy fire, suffering a loss of ten men wounded, one of them mortally. After the flanking movement was stopped our line was changed at right angles to the one previously held and remained in this position until after dark of the 7th when the race for Spotsylvania commenced, the Sixth Pennsylvania at GcHj/.'^biirtf. 321 following the Fifth Corps. Wo arrived at Looust (Jrovc about 3 p. m., Sun- day, ^Fay 8, and found the Fifth Corps on'jaijod and about to charge tho enemy. Wo foriucnl lino to sui)p(Ht tho charge. For some reason it was not made. Remained in this position during the night and early on the morning of tho 9th extended our line taking position on the loft of the Fifth Corps joining it on our right. While these dispositions were being made, the gal- lant and heroic commander of the Sixth Corps, Major-General John Setlg- wick, was shot by a sharpshooter and killed. This calamity throw a gloom over everyone. All felt that while the army and country had lost a valuable and able commander, every member of his gallant corps had lost a personal friend. General H. G. Wright succeeded to the command of the corps, General Russell of the division. General Eustis of the Third Brigade. With the exception of tho death of the lamented Sedgwick, this day. May 9, passed in comparative quiet in our front. About 3 a. ni., of May 10, companies D and C, Captains Quigley and Stuart, with two companies from the One hundred and nineteenth Pennsyl- vania Volunteers, all under command of Captain Landell, wore sent forward as skirmishers into the dense woods. Advanced about three hundred yards and found a strong lino of skirmishers of the enemy. We advanced and drove them back on their supports and then back on their line of battle ;u en- trenchments. In this advance we reached a cart road at which we stopped, still under cover of about seventy-five yards of timber with piles of fence rails for barricades. At this point the officer commanding the right of the line, ordered the men to hold this road and to protect themselves behind trees, rail piles, etc. At this moment a field ofiicer, a lieutenant-coU'nel, rode along and directed the line to advance to the edge of the woods. The lieutenant with his men knowing the attempt would result in certain defeat obeyed the order and moved forward about forty yards and received a galling fire from a line of battle entrenched. The enemy then poured out against us and we were driven back two hundred and fifty or three hundred yards into the woods fighting as we went. We then halted, faced about, and again moved forward under a terrible fire, losing men from our weak line at every step. We fought our way back to the cart road and rail piles at which point we stopped and held that lino. The first time we had reached this position with very small loss, but to re-take it cost the two companies more than forty men, one-third of whom were killed. We held the position until about 2 p. m., when we were relieved by companies A and E, Captains Wakefield and Wombacker. The two relieved companies, D and G, returned to the regiment and rested until about 4.30 p. m., when Eustis' Brigade with Upton's and another, mak- ing* a division of twelve regiments of infantry, under tho command of Co]onel Emory Upton, of the One hundred and twenty-first New York Vulun'eors, moved forward to assault the enemy. The storming column was formed in four lines with a front of three regiments and the lines twenty paces apart. The same cart road which had been so gallantly fought for and held by the skirmishers during the day was the very spot where the assaulting columns were formed and from which the charge was made. The Forty-ninth was upon the right of the second line and was represented by six cvard under a terrible fire of infantry and artillery, across the open field, through the slashed timber and over the first line of earthworks filled with the enemy, who threw down their arms and were sent to the rear, then forward through another line of rifle-pits. While between these two lines we suffered dread- fully from a battery about one hundred yards distant on our right which threw canister into us by the bushel. A little later the battery was cap- tured, Captain Honey of the Sixth Maine cutting down an artilleryman with his sword with his hand on the lanyard . The charge was up to this time a complete success, but a little while after, owing to the failure of the sup- ports to arrive in time to protect our flanks, the enemy on the flanks changed front and compelled the withdrawal of the whole force who were able to leave the field. The Forty -ninth with the other regiment did all in this charge that could possibly be done by the same number of men and with the support received, but at dreadful cost. Colonel Hulings, Lieutenant- Colonel Miles, Captain Kephart and Lieutenant Lytle were killed; Captains Barr, Quigley and Stuart wounded, the former mortally; Lieutenants Irwin, Russell, Hilands, J. B. Downing wounded, and Lieutenant Barton wounded and captured. Seventy-one enlisted men killed, twenty-one mortally wound- ed and one hundred and eighty-two others wounded and missing. A total of two hundred and eighty-six officers and men out of about four hundred and fifty engaged, a loss of sixty-three and one-half per cent, of all who went into the engagement. The total loss to the regiment in this day's fighting was about three hundred and twenty-five men . The next day, INIay 11, it was comparatively quiet in our front. Lieuten- ant John M. Thompson was badly wounded in the left arm by a sharpshooter while on picket. On the morning of May 12, General Hancock, with the Second Corps, charged at what afterwards was known as the "Bloody Angle," captured two general officers and several thousand prisoners, but was unable to continue the movement and the Sixth Corps was sent to his relief. The Forty-ninth fought the enemy for the whole day at only a few yards distance, as many as two hundred rounds of ammunition being used per man, and the muskets became so foul and heated that the riffe in the bore was worn smooth, and after this fight they would carry a ball thirty yards. They were after- wards changed for Springfield rifles. In this fight large oak trees were liter- ally cut off by bullets; no artillery could be used. The regiment lost in this engagement, sixteen killed, two mortally wounded and about thirty others wounded. Among the latter was Captain Wombacker, Lieutenants B. H. Downing and Howell. The losses in officers in these engagements made the following promotions: Major Hickman to lieutenant-colonel, Captain Wakefield to major; Lieuten- Pennsylvania at ndfi/fihur;/. 1)2?, ant Thompson to captain Company A, Second I.ioutrnant Wix to first and Sorscant J. B. Rodpois to second lieutenant A, liieutonant Byors to captain of I, Hackonberjj first lieutenant and D. A. Stahl second lieutenant, John S. Bratton to captain B. Samuel H. Irvin first and John J. Hight second lieutenant, Joseph W. Wallace first and O. S. Rumberjter second lie iten- ant of H and Howell and Davison first and second lieutenants of F. After the sanguinary engagements of Spotsylvania were ended, moved by the left flank to the Pamunkey river and Cold Harbor where the resiment was under fire and partly engaged daily from June 1 to 7, losini; nine killed, two mortally wounded and about thirty others wounded and missing, among the latter Lieutenant James P. Smith and several men wore captured by the enemy. liieutenant Smith was held a prisoner until the following spring and rejoined the regiment after Lee's surrender. From Cold Harbor moved again by the left and crossed the James river and took part in the siege of Petersburg until July 7, 1864. While here Colonel Oliver Edwards of the Thirty-seventh Massachusetts Volunteers succeeded General Eustis in command of the brigade. On July 7, 1864, a strong force having been sent to menace Washington and Baltimore, the Sixth Corps cut loose from the Army of the Potomac and took transports at City Point for the National Capital, arriving in Washing- ton on the evening of July 9. We raced the enemy from Fort Stevens in the defenses of Washington to Snicker's Gap, but they succeeded in crossing the Shenandoah and escaped. Returned to Washington passing through our old Camp Griflin on the way. Marched through Maryland to Frederick City and to Harper's Ferry. By this time the Middle Military Division was formed and composed of the Sixth, Eighth and Nineteenth corps, all under the command of Major-General Philip H. Sheridan who gained for his troops additional glory and they in return made him world-famous by the time the campaign ended. Shortly after our arrival at Harper's Ferry the small-pox broke out in the regiment and it was isolated at Bolivar Heights for about a month. On Sep- tember 13, rejoined the division then encamped near Berry ville. Early on the morning of September 19, moved in the direction of Win- chester. Struck the enemy near Opequon creek and fought a fierce battle during the whole of the day, the enemy's forces falling back towards Win- chester. About noon two brigades of Early's forces which had been sent in the direction of Martinsburg returned and made a desperate attack on the left of the Nineteenth Corps, driving them back. This repulse uncovered the right flank of Russell's Division of the Sixth Corps. Russell put himself at the head of the brigade and hurried in to retrieve the disaster, and suc- ceeded in stopping the enemy, but in the movement the general was killed, shot to death with a cannon ball. General Frank Wheaton succeeded to the command of the division. Towards the close of the day, and while the in- fantry and artillery were driving the enemy, the cavalry division struck them on their left flank, doubling them up and sent them "whirling through Winchester," winning a glorious victory on the open field. In this engage- ment First Lieutenant Joseph W. Wallace was killed and Captain Johi; M. Thompson desperately wounded in seven places by the explosion of a sharp- 324 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. nel, directly in front of him. Ten enlisted men were killed and about thirty wounded, eight of them mortally. While the fight was at its height Major Wakefield, who had been away on special service, was returning, and hearing the sound of the battle, with two or three comrades were burring up from Berry ville to rejoin their commands, and when within a mile of the line of the Union army in action were cap- tured by gang of Alosby's men and carried around the flank of our army to Richmond. He was confined at Danville, Va., until the next sprinj^ After this engagement the brigade was detailed to guard the post of Win- chester, guarding trains-to and from Martinsbui'g, etc., until after the battle of Cedar Creek, on October 19, 1864. While encamped at Winchester the regiment received from the State a new stand of colors which were presented by Colonel Edwards, and received on the part of the regiment by Captain James T. Stuart. On October 24, the brigade rejoined the corps at Cedar Creek and re- mained there until after the presidential election, then moved midway be- tween Middletown and Winchester until about December 6, when the Sixth Corps left the valley and returned to the seige of Petersburg. Went into the line in front of Yellow House near Fort Wardsworth. The regiment sucr ceeded in finding splendid winter quarters built by some soldiers of the Fifth Corps. Here we remained, with the exception of a reconnaissance to Hat- cher's Run, until April 2, 1865. In the last days of March troops in large bodies were passing in the rear of us to the left, moving to Five Forks and the series of battles wore com- mencing to end the rebellion. On Sunday morning, April 2, the regiment and brigade (having formed dur- ing the previous night in front of Fort Fisher) at the early dawn charged the works in our front and broke through the enemy's lines. The regiment turned to the left and emptied the rifle pits for about a mUe, when troops from the Second Corps took our place and continued the movement while we faced about and closed in on Petersburg, the Sixth Corps holding the line from the Appomattox river to the old rebel line of works. Loss of the regi- ment in the engagement, one killed and about a dozen woudnded. Among the latter was the adjutant who received a slight saber cut in the left hand in going over the rebel entrenchments. The movement of this day compelled the evacuation of Richmond and Petersburg. Early on the morning of the 3d, started in pursuit of the enemy in the direction of Amelia Court House. General Sheridan had been pleading for the Sixth Corps from the beginning of the campaign but until now Grant had work for them and they could not be spared. The Sixth Corps now moved rapidly across the army to the extreme right to Sheri- dan's help. We caught up with him at Sailor's creek about 5 p. m., of April 6, and immediately formed line of battle under Sheridan's direcMon, the brigade in the following order: Fifth Wisconsin on the right joined by the One-hundred and nineteenth Pennsylvania Volunteers, the Forty- ninth in the center joined by the Sixth Maine to the left and the Thirty- seventh Massachusetts on the left of ho brigade. While forming iMajor Gray of the One hundred and nineteenth asked the general of the situation. He replied aloud, "Boys, Custer is across there (pointing) about two Pennsylvania at Gcttjjftburfi. .''2.' miles with his cavalry and fourtoon pieces of artillery )iiiach orchard and the Emmitsburg road. At first uncertain what it meant we soon saw them penetrate the peach orchard, and. realized by the I'attle of musketry which followed that the second day's fight had opened. Entertaining no doubt but that we would shortly be ordered forward to join in it, we were intently watching the fighting going on before us, when we were, about 5 p. m., suddenly called to attention and our brigade was ordered to the left, at double-quick, our movement being left in front. We were soon in line of battle at the edge of the wheatfield, where by the time of our arrival the First Brigade of our division . under command of Colonel Cross of the Fifth New Hampshire, had already become hotly engaged and were being pressed by the enemy. Halting only to rectify our ranks, our brigade was ordered to advance to the relief of the First Brigade, and we at once moved forward faced by the rear rank, having no time to form by the front, and passing the line of the First Brigade at the edge of the field , struck the enemy and we also found ourselves hotly engaged . Our brigade however pressed forward steadily, firing as it advanced, op- posed by both infantry and artillery, the latter boing posted on the high ground beyond, but we nevertheless soon drove the enemy's front line by our firm advance, but the enemy's artillery fife was now felt by Colonel Brooke to be telling too severely upon us at this time and he there- fore ordered a charge by the brigade, which gallantly resjjonded, and, dashing forward, broke the enemy's, second line and mounting the high ground beyond the run, drove the enemy's artillery from its position, and it was in this charge and at this time the Fifty-third Pennsylvania reached the identical spot now marked by this monument, the Sixty-fourth New York being on our left, two companies of the Twenty-seventh Conner-ticut on our right, with the One hundred and forty-fifth Pennsylvania on the 334 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. right of the line and their respective monuments stand with our own on this glorious and advanced line. A part of the Third Brigade of our division (our original brigade) was not far off, and hoping to maintain our position. Colonel Brooke, in the emergency, at once assumed command over them, ordering them to our aid, to hold what we had gained, but we were too far in advance of our lines, and the enemy still being in strong force in our front and moving upon both our right and left flanks, seeing no troops coming to our as- sistance. Colonel Brooke was obliged to order our line to fall back, which it did slowly and in good order, firing as it retired. In fact we retired none too soon, as our brigade was almost enveloped by the enemy before it had reached and repassed the wheatfield, where we reformed behind some stone walls in line with our other troops, prepared to continue the fight, but at this time fresh troops came up and relieved our brigade, when we withdrew to a point nearer Little Round Top to reform, it being then about 7 p. m. and the fight for the day practically over. After reforming, we moved to a position near that occupied by us before the battle where we rested under arms until early the next morning, July 3, when we again moved with our -position in the front line on Cemetery Ridge, the enemy having our movement in plain view, shelling us severely; we lost several of our brigade in killed and wounded. Here we dug rifle pits and then awaited further events. That the fight would reopen we knew was inevitable, and there was apparent evidence that both armies were preparing for its renewal, but beyond some desultory firing here and there, there was comparative quiet until about 1 p. m., when the silence was broken by the crash of artillery firing which opened on each side with a terrific roar. This was kept up without appreciable diminution on either side until about 2.30 p. m., when our own guns gradually slack- ened their fire, though that of the enemy continued in full volume until about 4 p. m., when it also diminished in volume and we saw their in- fantry deploying by their left, a little to the right of our own front, and we" realized another struggle was at hand. As they came from the cover of the trees and secured proper frontage, their lines moved slowly for- ward, and then we saw line after line developed until the charging column under Pickett was formed and moving rapidly upon our lines. Then it was our guns awoke to new life, as it were, and reopened vigorously from all sides upon the devoted column, but, as you know, great as was the havoc wrought in its ranks by our guns, its forward movement only ceased when it struck our Second Division immediately on the right of own own. I need speak no further of it than to say it was a gallant and magnificent charge, as gallantly and as magnificently met and repulsed. Upon this occasion, however, neither our regiment or brigade were di- rectly engaged, but as showing the close proximity of the fighting, I would mention that the skirmish line of the charging column extended across a portion of our own front and right, and likewise reached our lines, but coming on without firing a shot, and our men, seeing no troops following them, immediately refrained from firing upon them; on the contrary, as their skirmishers reached our lines they were permitted to enter unmo- lested, and our men after sharing the contents of their haversacks with Pcnnftjjlvanid at Gettysburg. 33& them, sent them t<> the rear as prisoners, even wliih' the fight was in des- perate progress so uoiir upon our right. Defciitcd and shattered, the frag- ments of Pickett's columns withdrew and the third day's fight was ended. The next day, July 4, broke upon us bright and clear, and found all ready for a resumption of the contest if it was to come, but we early learned that the enemy was already in full retreat, although there was still considerable picket firing in progress, muttering of the storm of battle at it were, which had just passed. At last our men could take the rest they so sorely needed, after their long march from the Rappanuock and the wearing fatigue and desperate fighting of the past three days, and we went into bivouac in position where we were;_but not for long, for at 4 p. m., July 5, we took up our line of march from Cemetery Ridg*; for Two Taverns, where we again went into bivouac and remained until r» a. m., July 7, when we marched for Taueytown, Maryland, whidi we reached at 11 p. m., July 8, 5 a. m., wc. left Taneytown ; our march for the day bringing us to a point about four miles from Frederick City. July 9, 5 a. m., we were again in motion iuul marc-hing through Frederick City reached Burkittsville at 5.30 p. m. Halting but one hour, we resumed our march and passing through Cramptou's Gap went into bivouac about 9.30 p. m. at Rohrersville, Maryland. July 10, 5 a. m., our column was again on the march, moving tin Keedysville, and passing over the old Antietam battlefield about 1.30 p. m.; we went into bivouac at a point about six miles from Williamsport. July 11, 6 a. m., we marched for Jones' Cross Roads, where we went into line of battle, expecting an attack by the enemy but none followed. July 12, 2 p. m. we moved forward about three-fourths of a mile from the enemy, where we again halted and threw up entrenchments, remaining in this position until 5 a. m., July 14, when our corps went into line of battle and moved upon the enemy's position, our line of battle being preceded by a skirmish line under command of Colonel Brooke, composed of the Fifty- third Pennsylvania, Second Delaware, Sixty-fourth New York of our own brigade, to which, for this special duty, was added the Fifty-seventh New York of our old Third Brigade and the Fifth New nnmpshire of the First Brigade of our division. With our skirmish line deployed at one pace interval, we moved upon the enemy's position, but they had generally recrossed the Potomac and we fell in only with a strong rear guard near Falling Waters with which, however, we had a sharp encounter before they could cross the river, in which several hundred of them were captured by us, after which wo went into bivouac until 5 a. m., July 15, when, there being none of the enemy north of the Potomac, we took up our line of march with our corps fur Harper's Ferry, marching via Downsville and Sharpsburg and at 6 p. m. went into bivouac along the tow-path of the canal, having marched all day without food. The next day we moved to Pleasant Valley, where our corps remained until 6 a. m., July IS, when we took up our march again for Harper's Ferry, at which point we forded the Potomac and again found ourselves in Virginia moving southward on the east side uf the Blue Ridge, while the enemy was moving on parallel lines on the wi-st side of the ridge. 336 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. It seems a singular coincidence, yet such are the facts, that our corps, then commanded by General Sumner, was the advance of the Army of the Potomac in its movement on Fredericksburg in '62, while our regiment was one of the brigade which led the corps, and was the first to enter Falmouth and appear before Fredericksburg. Again, when the Army of the Potomac abandoned the front of Fredericksburg, our corps was the last to withdraw, while our regiment was one of the brigade which was rear guard for the corps, and consequently the last to leave the front of Fredericksburg. And again, as our army turns its steps southward, fol- lowing the enemy's retreating columns, our own regiment, together with a majority of our brigade, is in the skirmish line of the last line of battle which moved upon the enemy north of the Potomac, and our regiment took part in the last action had with the enemy's rear guard and fired the last shots as closing the Gettysburg campaign. Drawn from memory and aided by memoranda made by me at the time I have given you as briefly as possible, assuming it would be of interest, our movements from the day we started from Falmouth, June 14, to meet the enemy at Gettysburg untU the battle over, we had our final combat with them just one month after, on July 14, and the Gettysburg cam- paign was past, fraught with all its influences upon the subsequent opera- tions of the enemy. In common with the other commands which had seen equal service, our regiment went into action at Gettysburg much re- duced in numbers. Three companies numbering about one hundred, and under command of Captain Mintzer, were, during the battle, on duty at corps head- quarters as provost guard, and were engaged in guarding prisoners taken in the fight, subsequently about three thousand of them being marched to Westminster, Maryland, assisted by some cavalry, all under command of Captain Mintzer. The other seven companies remained with the brig- ade, and taking active part in the battle numbering exactly one hundred and thirty-five officers and men, and were under the command of Lieu- tenant-Colonel McMichael ; a pitiful remnant of the gallant regiment which had left Camp Curtin nine hundred and twenty strong, less than two years before, but the difference in numbers is easily understood when we refer to the previously mentioned regimental reports of casualties in action, to which might well be added the numbers, aud they were not a few, who died of sickness contracted in the service, and the large num- bers in hospital, wounded or sick. Truly, our regimental report for the day was "All present or accounted for." Of the one hundred and thirty- five who entered the fight on the 2d of July in line with the brigade, the losses were as follows: Killed. Wounded. Capiured or Missing . Total. Officers, — 11 . — 11 Enlisted men, ..-7 56 6 69 Totals, 7 67 6 8Q Of the tot.il number engaged: Our aggregate losses of all kinds equalled, 59 2-10 per cent. Our losses in killed and wounded, 49 6-10 Our losses in killed alone, 5 2-10 '* *' Our losses in captured and missing, 4 4-10 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 337 Out of the one huiidrod and thirty-live who went into the fight but fifty- five were left iu line of battle under our regimental colors the next morn- ing, but few as t^ey were they were there in line of battle with their brig- ade and ready on the 3d, to sustain the previous well-earned reputation of the gallant Fifty-third; our regiment needs no eulogj' at our hands, for what it achieved is written in history. That it did its duty nobly and unfliuchirtgly we very well know, but still some statistical facts in this connection may not prove uninteresting. Colonel William F. Fox, in his work, upon losses sustained in battle, enumerates forty-five regiments which, of all regiments serving in the armies of the United States during the war, suffered a loss each of two hundred or more in killed in action or died of wounds received in action. The Fifty-third Pennsylvania is one of the forty-five. Out of the forty- five regiments enumerated, three were members during the war of our own Fourth Brigade, viz: The One hundred and forty-eighth Penn.syl- vania. One hundred and forty-fifth Pennsylvania and Fifty-third Pennsyl- vania, the first mentioned under command as colonel of the present Gov- ernor of our State, General James A. Beaver, whose regiment became at- tached to our brigade with the opening of the Wilderness campaign, while he himself had command of our brigade after the wounding of Colonel Brooke at Cold Harbor, and until he also was wounded at our head. Of the forty-five regiments mentioned, twelve of them belonged to our own corps, the Second, or more than twenty -six per cent. Agiiin, Colonel Fox enumerates nine heavy artillery regiments which similarly suffered a loss each of two hundred or more in killed in action or died of wounds received in action. Of these one regiment, the Seventh New York, was a member of our brigade, having been added to it during the Wilderness campaign of '64 a few days after it had seen its first en- gagement; while five out of the nine regiments, or more than fifty-five per cent., belonging to our corps. By the same authority, the infantry regiment which suffered the largest loss in killed of any infantry regiment in all our armies was the Fifth New Hampshire, of ^he First Brigade of our division, our near neighbor in many a fight and to whose relief we went in the fight on the 2d of July. From the statistics, therefore, the Fourth Brigade, First Division, Second Army Corps seems to have had a somewhat remarkable service in its severity, not that I would arrogate for it or for our regiment, which was a member of it, a soldierly rank higher, or claim for it a spirit more gallant than pertained to other commands, but simply that the exigencies of the service seems to have thrown it into the forefront, that it seems to have been its fortune to find its place as a rule in the thick of the fight, and these statistics, showing as they do, stamp our old Fourth Brigade and with it the Fifty-third Pennsylvania as commands possessing remark- able soldierly bravery and fortitude. If this is regarded as regimental egotism, I simply invite those who so regard it to read and analyze the figures. Though I love my old regi- ment and old brigade, yet mine are not the partial words of praise of one who was a member of them, nor words of exaggeration. They are de- 888 Pennsylvania at (jciti/sfniri-iiis. On ilu- cxiilratloti of Its term of service the orijrinal uienibers (except veterans) were mustered out nnd the orKanizatioD comrosed of veterans and recruits retained in service until July 1, lS6o, when it wts mustered out. 340 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. On the morning of March 8, 1862, the regiment, under command of Colonel S. A. Meredith, moved from Camp Curtiu with nearly eight hun- dred officers and men destined for the Army of the Potomac, then at AVashington. Sixteen months of active field service and the sun of that July morning shone down upon the regiment as it came upon this field with its effective force reduced to seventeen officers, two hundred and thirty-five men; and true it is also, that the regiment was back within the borders of our State, and within so short a distance from the camp of rendezvous, and that the great struggle in which it had been engaged was still undecided. If we follow the track of the regiment's march, we shall find, however, that it had already marched a great distance, that it had already crossed many fields of battle, had moved over roads covered with stifling dust, or bottomless mud, through exhausting heat, through biting cold, through rain and hail and snow, had forded rapid streams and crossed rugged mountains. The exposure incidental to these marches had brought many a stout-hearted comrade to the hospital cot, to rise only after months of agonizing pain, and perhaps with health ir- reparably shattered, or there to end his days upon earth. Add to these cases, the long list of comrades killed and wounded in the battles, and the absent at that morning's roll-call are accounted for. JNIoving by rail, that factor so essential to success in modern warfare, the regiment arrived at Washington on the morning of March 9, and en- camped on Kalorama Heights.- Then moved to Fort Albany, west of the Potomac river. April 4, it moved by boat to the "Lower Potomac" to guard government stores left there by Hooker's Division, which had gone to the Peninsula. On the 24th, the regiment was carried to Aquia Land- ing, then the northern terminus of the Richmond and Washington rail- road. There the regiment was engaged for some time in repairing the wharf, rebuilding the railroad, cutting wood and other uncongenial duties; uncongenial, because at the time deemed to be unsoldiery duties. Long before the war had been brought to a close, it was learned that destroy- ing and rebuilding railroads, and the general use of the pick, and the spade, and the axe, formed in fact a legitimate part of a soldier's duty. May 7, found the regiment at the Rappahannock river, engaged in guard- ing the railroad back to the Potomac creek bridge. It was now assigned to the brigade commanded by General A. Doubleday, and known as the Second Brigade, First Division (King's), First Corps (McDowell's). On the afternoon of August 9, the regiment joined the brigade column, crossed the Rappahannock at Fredericksburg, and entered upon the march that led to Cedar Mountain, thence to the battlefields of Rappahannock Station, to Sulphur Spring, then to Gainesville, where Captain Corman gave his life to his country, and where Colonel Meredith was severely wounded, and for his gallantry here was promoted to brigadier-general.— Then to Groveton, and to Manassas, each of these in turn claiming a sanguinary tribute from the regiment. Then recrossing the Potomac river at Washington, the march led through Frederick City and Middle- town to the foot of the eastern slope of the South Mountain, about a mile north of Turner's Gap, the crest of the mountain at the time glittering with the arms of the enemy. A gallant ascent of the steep slope, in line Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 'M\ of b;ittlf, a four hours' fight, aud i\w vittorj' was won. I'liilcr cover >»f tlie night the eucmj' retrcatoil. Early in the battle, (ieuoral Hatch, com- maudiug the division, was wounded, and was succeeded by General Doubleday ; the command of the brigade then devolved upon your lieu- tenant colonel, aud remained in my hands until the early part of Novem- ber; the command of the regiment devolved upon Captain F. Williams. This, as an index of the severity of our losses in a campaign then extend- ing not over five weeks, for, on leaving Fredericksburg my name stood only number seven in the order of seniority upon the brigade roster. I pause a moment in the narration to pay a well-earned tribute to two officers whom it became necessary now to detach from their company for duty upon my improvised staff. Lieutenant (now Colonel) Laycock aud his friend Lieutenant Samuel Healy. Although new to the duties that now devolved upon them, the energy, zeal and efficiency with which these were performed, confirmed my admiration for them, awakening in the night battles at Gainesville and at Groveton, and which was never lessened thereafter, whether, in many changes which followed, they served in the line or on the staff. Next morning, September 15, the road was again open for the march that now led to the field, memorable in the annals of warfare, as the battle of Antietam. A battle of charges and counter-charges, but a victory so fruitful in its results. The enemy was driven back into Virginia, Maryland was saved to the Union. The in- tense anxiety of the people of the North for the safety of the National Capital was relieved. President Lincoln utilized the victory as a fulcrum for his pen, and sent forth the edict, one of the mightiest, most just, most humane of any issued by a ruler during historic times — the edict that expunged for all times the word slave from our statute book. Thence- forth all who stood beneath our country's flag stood there as freemen. Such were the results that were wrought by the victory achieved by the valor of the Army of the Potomac upon the field of Antietam. October 30 found the fegiment again crossing the Potomac river into Virginia, now by a pontoon bridge laid at Berlin. The Army of Nor- thern Virginia, under General Lee, was retreating southward in the valley of the Shenandoah. The Army of the Potomac, under General McClel- lau, was pursuing in the Loudoun valley. The First Corps, under General Reynolds, with our division, under General Doubleday, leading, was in the advance; our cavalry, under General Pleasonton, was in front, en- gaged in driving the enemy's cavalry, under General Stuart, into the gaps of the mountain that forms the wall dividing the two valleys. When in front of Philomont, General Pleasonton requested an infantry support. Our brigade was honored by being detailed for this special duty, and on the morning of November 2, it reported to him whUe in front of the town of Union, and at the time shari)ly engaged with the enemy. Tn conformity with his directions, the brigade was formed in line of battle, and then advanced steadily from point to point throughout the d:iy, and steadily the enemy was driven back. The next day the brigade held the ground that had been gained and the cavalry aided by the First New Hampshire Battery, then forming part of the brigade, drove the enemy through Up- perville into Ashby's Gap. General Pleasonton, in his note from Upper- ville. on the evening of November 3, informing General Doubleday that ho 23 342 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. will not need the services of the brigade any further, pays a well-earned tribute to your gallantry on the preceding day. Gratifying to the soldier, as is the commendation of his commanding ofhcer, no less so is that ex- torted from his enemy. Since the close of the war, a number of those who were against you in battle on that day, have placed themselves upon record, freely according your gallantry and success in your several attacks upon them . Rejoining the division at Rcctortown on the evening of the oth, the march led to Warrenton, where General McClellan was relieved, and General Burnside was placed in command of the army. Then the march led back to Aquia Landing. Then to the battlefield of Fredericksburg; and after the sanguinary repulse the army met with on the right — to the winter's camp, near Belle Plain on the Potomac river, where it rested till the close of April . Dui'iug the battle of Fredericksburg the division , under General Doubleday, was in line along the Bowling Green road, on the left of the army, ready to advance. When the army withdrew on the night of the 15th December, although you were not the extreme left, you had gained the confidence of General Reynolds so fully, that, bj' his direct order, you were detailed to cover the withdrawing of the troops from that part of the field, and were the last regiment to leave it. The only incident of special note during the camp life that now followed being that known, and vividly remembered by those who participated, as the "mud march," and another change in commanding officers ; General Hooker asumming command of the army. General Wadsworth that of the division and General Cutler that of the brigade. Then followed the second Fredericksburg. Then Chancellorsville, with humiliating and de. pressing results. Then the regiment rested again in a camp for a few weeks, now near the Fitzhugh House on the left bank of the Rappan- nook, a few miles below Fredericksburg. Late on the afternoon of June 7, the regiment entered upon the Gettys- burg campaign; again honored by special detail. Some days previous our cavalry had gone on a reconnaissance in force in the direction of Culpeper. An infantry force was now sent to its support. The Sixth and the Eleventh Corps each furnished a brigade. The First Corps furnishing u provisional brigade, consisting of the Fifty-sixth Pennsylvania and the Seventh Regiment and two companies of the Second Regiment, Wisconsin Volunteers. The whole of the infantry assembled, about midnight, at Hartwood Church, under command of General Russell of the Sixth Corps. On the morning of the 8th the detail from the First Corps moved to Kelly's Ford on the Rappahannock river, and on the morning of the 9th, when the cavalry under General Gregg had crossed, forded the river and moved to near Brandy Station. At noon the Fifty-sixth was detached, and moved to Beverly Ford, where it covered the recrossing of a part of our cavalry, the regiment recrossing at dark, and being the last of our troops to recross at that point. On the 13th the regiment rejoined the brigade at Bealton, the whole division having arrived there. Then the march led to Centerville, then to near Leesburg. The army undi'r (ieneral Lee having again crossed the Potomac, was now moving on Ilarrlshurg, via the Cumberland Valley. rctuisijlcaiiid ill Gettyfihurtj. IIA'^ The Arniv of the I'otuiuui- puisiu'd ; tin- First ('i)i-|)S crossed the river, over a poiitoou bridge laid at tlie mouth of (Joosc «reek, on the 2.')th, th(!n moved via Jcrt'orson, the Catoctiu Mountain and Middletown, to Frcdeiiek City. General Hooker having asked to be relieved from the command of the army. General Meade, then commanding the Fifth Corps, was as- signed to the command and entered upon his new duties by issuing tlie fol- lowing modestly-worded, soldierly and effective order: "Jfy direction of the President of tlie United States I hereby ahsuiue coinmuud of the Aruiy of the Potomac. As a soldier, in obeying this order, an order totally une.vpectod and unsolicited, I have no promises or pledges to make. The country looks to this army to relieve it from the devastation and disgrace of a hostile invasion. Whatever fatigue and saerihces we may be called on to undergo, let us have in view constantly the luag nitude of the interest involved, and let each man determine to do his duty, leaving to :in all-controlling Providence the decision of the contest. It is with just dlffldence that 1 relieve in tlie command of this army an eminent and accompllslied .soldier, whose name njust e\er appear conspicuous iu the history of its achievements, but I rely upon the hearty supi ort of my companions in arms to assist me in the discharge of the duties of the important trust that has been contided to me. George li. Meade, llajor-Ocneral Commanding," Ou the 29th our brigade was detiiiled for duty as the rear-guard of the corps. The regiment — which had been on picket duty during the uight under Lieutenant-Colonel Osborn, as gallant an ofEcer as ever drew sword, and as eflicient as he was gallant — came in about 5 a. m., and was soon formed in column ready for the march. But a long wagon train was passing, and there was a tedious delay; it was after 9 a. ui. when the column was put in motion, and then kept in rapid motion, with but two short rests, until after midnight, when it went into bivouac near the southern end of Emmitsburg. At a very early hour on the 3Uth, it was in line of battle in front of the town, and at noon went into bivouac ou the south bank of Marsh creek, near whore it crossed by the bridge ou the Enimitsburg-Gettysburg pike. During the afternoon there was the usual bi-monthly muster for pay, then a formation in line of battle to resist an apprehended attack by the enemy, then came tatoo with its roll call. How many brave comrades answered that roll call "Here" for the last time I Then came "taps," and the regiment slept, slept all the more soundly because of the brief, early broken rest of the previous uight; and all unconscious of the momentous events that the morrow had iu store f-.i- it. Un the morning of July 1, the brigade moved out at about 8 o'clock, crossed the creek by the bridge on the pike, and moved on Gettysburg, distant about four miles. The Seventy-sixth New York led the brigade, the Fifty-sixth Penusylvtmia followed, iind was itself followed by the One hundred and forty-seventh New York, Ninety-fifth New York and the Fourteenth Brooklyn. The Seventh Indiana was detailed for special duty. In rear of the brigade followed Hall's battery. In front of the brigade rode General Cutler and staff, in front of him, (Jeueral Wadsworth and staff, iu the advance rode General Reynolds and staff. At the farm, now known historically as the Codori Farm, the column left the pike, inclined to the left and crossed the Seminary Ridge near the seminary building, descended into the swale in front of it; then the Seventy-sixth, Fifty-sixth and One hundred and forty-seventh were moved north across the Gettys- 344 Pennsylvania at Getty shunj. burg-Chambersburg pike, and beyoud the railroad grading, and were then formed in line of battle near the gentle elevation upon which you now stand. The regiment was then moved forward a short distance. As the horizon opened, a line of battle was seen approaching to the right and front. General Cutler being in your immediate rear, having decided that the line was a line of the enemy, you received the command to aim to the "right oblique," and then the command to "fire," when you delivered the opening fire of the infantry, in the great and decisive battle of Gettysburg. Thus the honor of having delivered the opening fire of the infantry, be- longs to no individual officer or man, but to the Fifty-sixth Pennsylvania Volunteers as a unit. And it is doing you but simple justice to state, as an indication of the coolness and steadiness of the oflicers and men under the exciting circumstances, that a more solid volley, "by battalion," has seldom been heard. General Cutler, a few months afterwards deemed the event so well worthy of note, that he wrote to Governor Curtin, setting forth the fact that it was the Fifty-sixth Pennsylvania Volunteers that opened the battle, and requested him to have it so recorded in the ar- chives of the Commonwealth as an act of justice to the regiment. And so it has been done, and so it now appears to your honor, in the enduring bronze memorial now before you . The event cannot be relegated to the chapter of accidents. You were not the leading regiment that morning; the result was owing in fact to long persistent efforts, to cheerful com- pliance with all orders, many involving great sacrifice to personal com- forts. Comrades, this it was, constant cheerful obedience to all orders, that enabled you to give prompt response to commands when the instant for action arrived ; and it has therefore, been deemed proper that the event should be, as stated, so recorded in the enduring bronze, together with the long list of battles, before and since the battle of Gettysburg, in which the regiment bore an honorable part. There is also recorded in the bronze the fact that the regiment re-enlisted and became a veteran regi- ment serving until the close of the war. The severe losses sustained on this ground by the three regiments, caused General Wadsworth to order them to retire for a time. General Cutler then moved the Fifty-sixth and the Seventy-sixth to the railroad embankment east of the Seminary Ridge ; but when they were rejoined there by the One hundred and forty-seventh, which had not received the order at once, by reason of Colonel Miller being wounded, and had held on to its ground heroically, as the other two regiments had done until the order was received — the three regiments were at once moved forward and again occupied their original ground. In tlio meantime, the Fourteenth Brooklyn and the Ninety-fifth New York, which had been detached after having crossed the Seminary Ridge, and sent westward, under Colonel Fowler, to support Hall's battery which went into position near the Mc- Pherson barn — being joined by the Sixth Wisconsin under Lieutenant- Colonel Dawes, of the First Brigade, that had now arrived upon the field - had captured a large number of the enemy who had taken shelter in the railroad cut upon their approach. The First Brigade, upon its arrival, charged into the woods south of the pike, and met with a brilliant success, capturing a general officer and a large part of his brigade. It is deserving Pciiiisi/lnniiti (it Gettysburff. ."M.") of uoto to state that in this fust mis.'t witli the <'iiciny, Wadsworth's Di- visimi, which consisted of only the two brigades, and also the division of Iletlis, with which it was then engaged, both lost a greater percentage, in killed and wounded than was sustained by the column of the enemy that made the charge on the afternoon of the third day of the battle, and which lias commanded so much attention as a grand exhibition of valor. Karly in this onset an irreparable loss had befallen us, the aiiny and thi' cnun- try ! General Reynolds, then commanding the First, the Tliird and tin- Eleventh Corps, constituting the left wing of the army, had fallen. Among those of the regiment who had fallen, was Lieutenant Gordon, who had earned his commission by brave and faithful service in the ranks. <}eneral Doubleday, our former brigade and division commander, now com- manding the corps, directed the movements after the fall of Reynolds. Subsequently General Howard arrived, and, by virtue of seniority, as- sumed command of the left wing of the army. A lull in the battle now followed. It lasted for over an hour. Additional forces of the enemy came from Cashtown on the west, from Carlisle on the north, and from York on the east. The Second and the Third Divisions of our corps also arrived, and, later, the Eleventh Corps. The three right regiments of Cutler's were now moved to the north end of the wood on Seminary Ridge, in front of which was a field of grain in full ear. Here they became immediately engaged with Iverson's Bri- gade of Rodes' Division. They were now soon joined by the Fourteenth and Ninety-fifth, and then supported on the right by Baxter's Brigade of Robinson's Division of our corps, and by joint action a large part of what was then left of Iverson's Brigade was then captured. The ammunition of Cutler's Brigade was now expended, and it was relieved by Paul's Brigade and moved to the east slope of the ridge, but while here, it was enfiladed by a battery that the enemy had placed in position on Oak Hill. The extreme right of our corps was at this time gallantly held by the Ninetieth Pennsylvania of Baxter's Brigade. The Eleventh Corps was then formed nearly at right angles Avith the general direction of our corps ; but an opening was left on our right, and into this the enemy penetrated, and our line then became untenable. Then came the order to retire, but it came late, so that while passing through the thronged streets of the town the brigade lost heavily by capture. It reformed in the cemetery, and was there rejoined by the Seventh Indiana. But that regiment was at once sent to Culp's Hill, by order of General Hancock, who had been sent forward by General Meade to assume command of all the forces then present; there that regiment, imdcr Colonel Grover, rendered invaluable services in capturing a scouting party, or rather a part of it, for some escaped and the report w'hich these made influenced General Ewell in post- poning the attack on the hill which he had proposed to make that evening, until next day. Never was delay more fatal I A short time sufficed to reinforce the thin line of the Seventh by the remnant left of Wadsworth's Division, and then came shortly, a division of the Twelfth Corps, having upon its battle flag a silver star. And when Ewell's Corps made the at- tack on the following evening, you had the honor of aiding in inflicting the sanguinary repulse that it then met with. During the afternoon of 34:6 Pennsylvania at Gettyshmg. that day the enemy had made a vigorous and persistant attack on the left of our lines then resting far out in front of the Round Tops, and at first gained some ground, pressing our troops back to the general line; but there they met with a sanguinary repulse. On the afternoon of the third day of the battle, the enemy opened a cannonade from his guns sta- tioned along the Seminary Ridge, and directed against our troops holding the Cemetery Ridge, hoping to shake the morale of our troops, then pene- trate there and cut our army in two! The cannonade lasted for two hours, during which the very hills seemed to be shaken by the roar of the two hundred guns that were brought into action. But the cannonade failed in its object; the morale of our troops remained unshaken, as the enemy discovered, when, allowing his overheated guns to cool, he launched forth that great column of infantry in which he had placed his last hopes for success, and he saw that great column torn, broken and shattered to pieces. Thus upon its left, upon its right, and at the center, the army had in turn been attacked; and at the left, at the right and at the center, it had inflicted a sanguinary repulse upon the assailant, and had thus, proved itself worthy of the confidence that was reposed in it by its new commander, the illustrious Meade. Late on the afternoon of this day, the Fifty-sixth, Seventh and the Ninety-fifth, were detached from the brigade and moved to the foot of the eastern slope of Cemetery Ridge, to support the batteries upon the crest, and within the cemetery grounds, and remained in support of these during the night. Next morning (July 4) the Fifty-sixth and the Seventh were moved through the town to the northeast angle, with the view of bringing in the wounded that might be found on the field in that direction ; but after some delay after having arrived at that point, the movement was suspended, and the two regiments rejoined the brigade then still on Gulp's Hill. On the morning of the 5th, the brigade moved to the western slope of Cemetery Ridge, and bivouacked near the ground charged over by the enemy on the afternoon of the third day of the battle, and remained there until the morning of the 6th. The field return of the regiment for that day, shows "present for duty" eleven ofiicers, one hundred and eleven men. Of the losses, one hundred and twenty occurred on the first day of the battle. A terrible loss, but the victory was won! And the Army of Northern Virginia under General Lee, was again moving rapidly for the Potomac river . Comrades, the great losses sustained on this field by the Army of the Potomac, and by its adversary, would alone cause the battle of Gettys- burg to rank as one of the greatest battles of the world; but beyond, are potent reasons why it will be so classed . It culminated in defeating a great and powerful host, one of a number that had been organized and marshaled to destroy that, which in the language of the immortal Lincoln was — and let us thank Providence that it still is — "a government of the people, for the people and by the people;" it was upon this field that that great host which you had met on so many fields of battle, was defeated and turned back upon the march that Peti}ifii/Ir(i)ii(i (it Gcttys'burg. 'Ml thoroaftor ever led southward ; and although at times standing at bay, and obstinately fighting, still, ever thereafter marched southward, until at Appomattox it finally surrendered its colors to the grand, undaunted, in- destructible Army of the Potomac. Comrades, when the grand master of tin- art <>f warfare had carriod his army to the foot of the Pyramids, and was surrounded by an active, vigiliiiit I'lic, desiring to animate his troops to renewed deeds of valor in the impending battle, he turned to them, and, pointing to the Pyramids, exclaimed, "Soldiers I Forty centuries are looking down upon j'ou !" Comrades, no voice calls upon you to-day for renewed deeds of valor I Your work is done, your arms are stacked, and your battle flag, rent and torn so oft by shot and shell, is furled. Ten times forty centuries will not obliterate from the pages of the world's history the deeds of valor which you and your comrades of the Army of the Potomac performed on the many battlefields whose names cluster around that of Gettysburg. But hark I There comes a voice, softly, calling to you! It comes from yonder slope where victory on high tenders the wreath of laurel. It comes from the many battlefields that border the Potomac, the Rappa- hannock, the Rapidan, the North Anna, the Totopotomoy, the Chicka- hominy, the James and the Appomattox rivers. It comes from the graves of comrades who fought at your side, and who, while gallantly fighting, fell. It asks a kind recognition at this hour for those who sleep in a patriot-soldier's grave! Comrades, in appreciation of their gallant deeds, in the appreciation of the sacrifice which they made, and all that these have brought to their surviving comrades and to all who dwell in the land, let us respond by embalming their memory sacredly within our hearts. And let us thank Providence, that in taking a retrospective view from this field to-day, there comes, irresistibly, the conviction, that the great and incomputable expenditure of treasure and of life, and, inci- dentally, the untold suffering and distress extending far beyond the lines where the hosts were contending, that the sacrifice has not been in vain; that the victory will redound to the happiness of millions who will follow us in the distant future ; that already a quarter of a century has passed since the last Confederate banner disappeared from the land ; that upon this very field the survivors of the Army of the Potomac have extended in amity, the fraternal hand to those who were their adversaries on so many fields of battle ; that again the flag of the Republic, with its union glittering with an intensified luster, waves unchallenged and gracefully, (»ver all the land, from the pine-crested hills of Maine southward to the Rio Grande, and from the Atlantic ocean westward to the (lolden Gate, the symbol of a free and reunited people. 348 Pennsylvania at Getty shurg. DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 57TH REGIMENT INFANTRY* September 11, 1889 ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN E. C. STROUSS COMRADES:— The men composing the Fifty-seventh Regiment Penn- sylvania Volunteers assembled in skeleton companies at Camp Cur- tin at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, during the autumn months of 1861. These companies receiving recruits from time to time, were, about the middle of November, merged into the Fifty-seventh Regiment. The men of the different companies were principally from the following coun- ties of the State, viz: Company A, Susquehanna and Wyoming; Company B and C, Mercer; Company D, Bradford and Tioga; Company E, Mercer and Allegheny; Company F, Mercer; Company G, Bradford; Company I, Mercer and Venango; Company K, Crawford. The original field, staff and line officers of the regiment were as fol- lows: Colonel, William Maxwell, of Mercer; Lieutenant-Colonel, Elhanon W. Woods, of Mercer; Major, Jeremiah Culp, of Bradford; Adjutant, Wil- liam B. Necpcr, of Allegheny; Quartermaster, Horace Williston, of Bradford; Surgeon, Jonas W. Lyman, of Clinton; Assistant Surgeon, A. W. Fisher, of Northumberland; Chaplain, William F. McAdam, of Mercer . The company commanders were: Company A, Captain Peter Sides; B, Captain, Samuel C. Simonton C, Captain Jerome B. Hoagland ; D, Captain Hiram W. Caulking; E, Captain James B. Moore; F, Captain Ralph Maxwell; G, Captain George S. Peck; H, Captain John Griffin: I, Captain Thomas S. Strohecker ; K, Captain Cornelius S. Chase. Non- commissioned staff: Sergeant-Major William Wert Chase; Hospital- Steward William Bollinger ; Quartermaster-Sergeant George Snell : Com- missary-Sergeant John H. Rodgers. The original strength of the regi ment was almost eight hundred and fifty, including officers and men. About the 1st of December, the regiment received its arms. Companies A and K had the Belgian rifle, the other companies the Harper's Ferry muskets. These were exchanged about the 1st of January, 1862, for the Austrian rifles. The latter were discarded in August, 186.3, for the Spring- field rifled muskets, which remained the arm of the regiment until the close of the war. On the afternoon of Saturday, December 14, the regiment received its colors, with appropriate ceremonies, from the hands of Governor Curtin, and was then marched to the railroad near camp, where it boarded the empty freight cars en route for Waf^hington , D. C. The next day we •Organizf'd at IliurisburR, December 14, 1S61, to servo throe years. On the exiilration of its term of service tlie original members (except veterans) were mustered out and the organization tomro.sod of veterans and recruits retained in service until June 29, 1S65, wlion Ir was mustered out. Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 341) were in Baltimore where we were well fed by the "Uiiiuii It.'li.'f Associa- tion" of that city. During the following night we arrived at Washing- ton, where we were quartered at the large l>uilding known as the "Soldiers' Retreat," adjoining the Baltimore and Ohio railroad depot. The next day, after receiving a suflicient number of "Sibley tents," the regiment was marched to a point about a mile northeast of the capital, where it encamped near the toll gate on the old Bladensburg road. While we re- mained in the camp we formed u part of the Provisional Brigade com- manded by General Silas Casey. In February, 1862, we moved across the Potomac, and encamped near Fort Lyon, about two miles southwest of Alexandria, Virginia. While here we were assigned to Jameson's Brigade of Heiutzelmau's Division. On March 8, 1862, by order of President Lin- coln, the formation of "Army Corps" was adopted. General Ileintzelman was assigned to the command of the Third Corps. He was succeeded in command of his division (the Third) by General C. S. Hamilton. The First and Second Divisions were commanded by General Fitz John Por- ter and Joseph Hooker respectively. The composition of Hamilton's Di- vision was as follows: First Brigade, General C. D. Jamison, Fifty-seventh, Sixty-third and One hundred and fifth, Pennsylvania Volunteers, and Eighty-seventh New York Volunteers. Second Brigade, General D. B. Birney, Third and Fourth .ALiine Volunteers, Thirty-eighth and Fortieth New York Volun- teers. Third Brigade, General H. G. Berry, Thirty seventh New York Volunteers, Second, Third and Fifth Michigan Volunteers. The artillery of the division consisted of the following batteries: Thompson's Bat- tery G, Second United States Artillery; Beam's Battery B, New Jersey Artillery, and Randolph's Battery E, First Rhode Island Artillery. Colonel Maxwell of the Fifty-seventh, resigned March 10, 1862, and was succeeded by Colonel Charles T. Campbell, formerly colonel of the First Pennsylvania Artillery. On March 17, Hamilton's Division began to em- bark for the Peninsula. The Fifty-seventh marched to Alexandria on that day, but as the transports were not all ready we passed the night on the wharves at that place, and next moraing got on board the steamer "Ken- nebec," on which was also a part of the One hundred and fifth Pennsyl- vania, and steamed down the Potomac. The next afternoon we lauded at Fortress Monroe during a rain storm. For several days we were quar- tered in the lofts of some cavalry sheds, after which we went into camp near the burned town of Hampton. Here for two weeks we were abund- antly exercised in drill, inspections and reviews. On the morning of April 4, we struck tents, and started towards York- town, Va., arriving before that place on the afternoon of April .'>. The first picket duty of the regiment was performed by companies A and K, on the night of the 6th. On the left of the line, where Company K was stationed, the enemy opened fire on the morning of the 7th. Their fire was returned with good effect, as they were seen carrying off several bodies, while on our side there were no casualties. While the regiment was on picket near the same place, a few days later, we were fired on by a piece of the enemy's artillery from a small fort in our front. One of their shells exploded near a group of our men, killing one instantly. ;}50 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. His name was George Varrick, of Company G. He was the first man killed in the i-egiment. The first skirmish the regiment had with tho enemy occurred at Palmentary's peach orchard near the Warwick road on the afternoon of April 11. The Sixty-third Pennsylvania was on picket and was fiercely attacked by the enemy, when the rest of our brigade was ordered out in support. The Fifty-seventh formed line in the edge of the woods, behind a rail fence, and soon became briskly engaged with the enemy. Some of our artillery also opened fire, and for a while consider- able noise was made. The rebels were driven back to their works and the affair was soon over. In this skirmish four men of the Fifty-seventh were wounded, one of them dying a few days afterward. We were kept busy while at York town, constructing earthworks and roads, picketing and skirmishing with the enemy. Out of the thirty days we were in front of the place it rained at least twenty. The inclement weather together with the bad water we were obliged to drink while there, greatly increased our sick list, so that we were obliged to leave forty-five sick in the hospitals when we left the place. General Hamilton who had protested against the excessive fatigue duty required of his men, was relieved from command of the division on the 1st of May, and succeeded by the famous one-armed soldier. General "Phil Kearny." The enemy evacuated their stronghold at Yorktown on Saturday night. May 3, and the next morning Stoneman's Cavalry and Hooker's Division led the advance in the pursuit, followed by our division about 2 p. m. We marched to a point about three miles west of York- town, and then encamped for the night. It began to rain during the night and continued to do so throughout the next day. We were up by day- light on the 5th, and had finished our breakfast, expecting to move at once toward the front. We did not go forwai'd, however, until 9 o'clock a. m. Meanwhile we were watching the troops of all arms moving past us toward the front. When we did start we had gone but a short distance, when we found our march much obstructed by wagons stuck in the mud, and by the troops of Sumner's and Keyes' corps. Hooker, about 7 a. m., be- came engaged with the enemy at Williamsburg, twelve miles west of York- town, and Kearny was striving hard to go to his assistance. Our bri- gade was the rear one in the division that day, and from the horrible condition of the roads it seemed as though we were making little or no progress toward the front. When within about two miles of the battle- field, we were ordered to throw off our knapsacks — which were left in charge of guards — and proceed to the front with all possible speed. Night was fast approaching, and Hooker, whose regiments were hard pressed, thought he must yield to the enemy his hard-fought for position, when Kearny, with two of his brigades, arrived to support him. Our brigade arriving on the field, was formed in line near the enemy, the Fifty-seventh on the left of the Williamsburg road, with the One hundred and fifth Pennsylvania in its rear. The Eighty-seventh New York was formed on the right of the road, with the Sixty-third Pennsylvania in its rear. We were considerably exposed to the fire of the enemy, but did not be- come actively engaged. At night we moved to the front line and bivouacked for the night among our dead and wounded comrades. This was the Pennsylvania at (icttyshurg. 351 first ro;il battle on tlie Peninsula, jiiul tiif iiit,'lit s|)ciit on that field, in the cold rain, aiuuug the dead and dyiiiK, will long be ri'iucnibLTcd by the im II of the Fifty-seventh, as one of the most harrowing in all its ex- perience. The next morning it was found that the enemy iiad again retreated, when, ut daylight, we advanced and oeeupied the town, tlie Fifty-seventh going a mile or so in advance on picket. On .May 7. we resumed the advance, nnirching a few miles each day, until about the lath, when we reached Cumberland Landing in New Kent county. The whole army was concentrated here, but moved forward the day after our arrival. The place, which is on the Pamunkey river, was made .i temporary depot of supplies, and the Fifty-seventh remained here for a week doing guard duty after the rest of the army had left. A new depot having been established further up the river, at White House Land- ing, the one at Cumberland was abandoned, whereupon the Fifty-seventh moved on and rejoined the division at Baltimore Cross Roads. On Sunday, May 25, we crossed the Chickahominy at Bottom's ridge, thirteen miles from Richmond i;iu the Williamsburg stage road. On the afternoon and night of May 30 it rained in torrents, which raised the Chickahominy bank full and overflowed the low land on its borders. At this time the corps of Sumner, Franklin and Porter were on the left or east bank of the Chickahominy, and the corps of Heintzelmau and Keyes were on the right bank. Casey's Division of Keyes' Corps was in advance, at a place called "Seven Pines," on the Williamsburg road, about seven miles from Richmond. The camp of the Fifty-seventh was about five miles in rear of this; in a pine grove near the Richmond and York River railroad. General Joseph E. Johnston, who commanded the rebel forces, knowing that the swollen state of the Chickahominy would render it difficult or impossible for the right of our army to assist the left, concluded to attack that portion on his side of the river. About 1 o'clock p. m., of May 31, he suddenly and fiercely attacked Casey's Division which soon was overpowered and driven from the field. The other divisions of Keyes' Corps, and part of Kearny's Division, were next engaged. In the camp of the Fifty-seventh we were ordered to fall in, and after being told to remain in camp and be ready to move at a mo- ment's notice, we stacked arms, broke ranks and lounged about wonder- ing where we were to be sent. About 2 p. m., the regiment left camp, and marched through the woods for a short distance, until we reached the railroad, when we filed to the left, and started up the road on the double- i|uick in the direction of Richmond. On reaching the battlefield we were ordered to support the Third Maine, who were in position behind a rail fence a few rods in our front. We were there but a few minutes when we were ordered to go to the sup- of the First Long Island (Sixty-seventh New York) which was supposed to be somewhere in the woods on the left of the Williamsburg road. Cap- tain Hasslor of General Jameson's staff was to guide us to the place. After floundering about in the woods, through swamps and over logs, further search for the First Long Island was abandoned. 352 Pennsylvania at (Jcttysbuiuj. The Fifty-seventh then formed line on the edge of the woods, with the right resting near the road. We were soon attacked bj^ the enemy who were thrice our strength, but our little regiment made a gallant stand, and it was not until our colonel and major were stricken down, and we were outflanked on our right, that the regiment retired from the field. Our losses in this engagement, which is known as the battle of "Fair Oaks," were Major Gulp killed. Captain C. S. Chase wounded (died June 17), Colonel Campbell severely wounded in arm and groin, and several other officers slightly wounded. Enlisted men, ten killed, forty-nine wounded and three missing. The battle was renewed next day when Hooker's Division and a part of Sumner's Corps drove the enemy from the field and occupied the ground in advance of Casey's former position. From June 1 to June 25, the regi- ment was engaged in picketing and in constructing roads and fortifi- cations . On the morning of June 25, the divisions of Kearny and Hooker were ordered to advance, which soon brought on a brisk engagement, resulting in a loss on the Union side of about three hundred killed and wounded. The loss in the Fifty-seventh was two men wounded. Although the enemy was driven backward for about a mile, in the evening our forces returned to the position occupied in the morning, by orders from army headquar- ters. This engagement is called "Oak Grove;" the enemy call it "King's School House." The regiment remained in the front line until June 28, when with the division it moved a mile to the rear, and occupied the breastworks at the crossing of the WUliamsburg road, and near Savage Station. The day previous the enemy had defeated our right wing at Gaines' Mill, and the retreat to the James river had commenced. In the evening one hundred and fifty rounds of ammunition was issued to each man, and at the same time, by order of General Kearny, every officer and man of his division was ordered to wear on his cap a red patch about an inch and a half square, in order that they might be readily dis- tinguished in battle and on the march. This w.is the first distinctive badge worn in the Army of the Potomac. In April, 1863, when "Corps Badges" were adopted by that army, the badge assigned to the Third Corps was in the shape of a diamond or lozenge. "Kearny's Old Division" continued to wear its "Red Diamond" until the close of the war. The swamps among which we had been encamped at Fair Oaks, and the bad water we were obliged to drink, had greatly increased our sick list, and many of the Fifty-seventh had died in the hospital since the 1st of June. When the retreat commenced the sick and convalescents were or- dered to Savage Station, and from there were conducted, in charge of proper officers, to James river. Of this party the Fifty-seventh furnished at least a hundred. Of those who remained with the regiment and car- ried muskets, the number was about two hundred and many of these were barely able to stand the fatigue of the march. On the morning of the 29th the regiment was sent across a large field and into the woods near the camp we had left the day previous. We re- mained here on picket until noon, when we moved back again and retook our position at the breastworks. Pf)iiisi/h'(iiiif iiis horse at Fair Oaks. General Jame- son died at his liome in Maine in November following. Having crossed the White Oak Swamp, we arrived about 10 p. m., on the ground where, next day, June 30, was fought the battle of "Glendale," better kn Wasli- ington . On the 2d, our division started for Alexandria, Va . , and on the after- noon of the 3d, wi' readied tiiat place and encamped once more near Fort Lyon. The Fifty seventh had been ^icatly dcplcti d in numbers since it left this place in March previous. Then it had in its ranks about seven hun- dred men for duty, now, owing to battle and disease, it could muster barely two hundred and fiftj-. We remained in this vicinity until the 16th of Sei)tember, when the division (now commanded by (Jeneral Stone- man) moved up thv Potomac via Rockvillc and Poolesville to (,'onrad's Ferry. We encamped here for six weeks, our brigade guarding the river from the mouth of the Monocacy to Edwards' Ferry. On September 25, companies D and G, were disbanded and the men as- signed to other companies. From this time until January 15, 1865, the regiment consisted of but eight companies. About the 1st of October the regiment, accompanied by a section of artillery and a squadron of Colonel Duffie's cavalry, crossed the Potomac at Conrad's Ferry, and made a reconnaissance to Leesburg, which is located about three miles from the ferry. We captured a few prisoners in the town and returned to our camps in the evening. On October 11, our brigade took part in the expedition sent out to cap- ture Stuart's cavalry, which had crossed above the right of our army and made a raid on Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. Owing to some mismanage- ment, the enemy was allowed to recross the river with all his booty at White's Ford, with a loss of but two or three men whom we captured. On the 10th of October, Colonel Campbell returned and took command of the regiment, relieving Major Birney, who was assigned to the Thirty-eighth New York. A general advance of the army being ordered, we crossed the river on October 28 and moved southward. When near Warrenton, Vir- ginia, on November 7, General McClellan was relieved from command of the army, and was succeeded by General Burnside. On November 12, near Waterloo Bridge, six men of Company K were captured, while returning from a foraging expedition, by some of Stuart's cavalry. About the 20th of November, we reached Falmouth, Virginia, and the whole army being concentrated there, we expected soon to be engaged with the enemy who were on the opposite side of the Rappahan- nock on the hills in rear of Fredericksburg. No immediate atta<'k was made, however, and the weather growing cold, our army went into winter quarters about the 1st of December. On the 11th we broke camp, and that night bivouacked in a large field near our camp. On the evening of the 12th, we moved down the river, near the pontoon bridge, where Franklin's Grand Division had already crossed. About 11 a. m. next day, our di- vision began to cross over, and after marching a short distance we were halted and then laid down under a heavy fire of the eiu-my's artillery. About 3 p. m. we were ordered forward to siipport an attack that had been made by General Meade's Pennsylvania Reserves. Colonel Camp- bell moved the regiment forward in splendid style, and after passing Ran- dolph's Battery we took position in a ditch, and opened fire on the enemy. ^56 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. which checked their advance, and frustrated their hopes of capturing Randolph's Battery. Our position in the ditch enabled the battery to fire over us, killing a number of the enemy, some of whom fell into the ditch we occupied. The enemy fell back into the woods, but many of them who Ihad takett refuge in the ditch became our prisoners when We were relieved «ifte^ "dark by the One hundred and fourteenth Pennsylvania Volunteers. 0*ii the 14th, the regiment remained on the field in rear of our batteries, \intil dark, when we were again sent to the extreme front, where we stayed until about midnight on the 15th, when with the rest of the army Ave recrossed the river. In the battle. Colonel Campbell, who still carried his arm in a sling (from a wound received at Fair Oaks), was again se- verely wounded in the same arm and in the groin. He was afterward promoted to brigadier-general and assigned to the "Department of the J"f oi'tb'west . " Surgeon Kennedy and Captain Strohecker were also wounded. Th'fi latter was soon after honorably discharged. Our loss at Fredericks- tb»irg was twenty-one enlisted men killed, three ofiicers and fifty-four en- listed men wounded and fifty-three men captured. Captain Peter Sides of Company A, who had been absent on account of sickness, returned on December 15, and, having been promoted lieutenant-colonel, he took com- mand of the regiment. The division reoccupied its old camp which was now uamd "Camp Pitcher," in honor of INIajor Pitcher of the Fourth Maine, who was killed at Fredericksburg. Between the 20th and 23d of January, 1863, we took part in the famous '"Mud March," when we "marched so far in one day that it took us two (days to get back." On January 25, General Hooker succeeded General Burnside in com- mand of the army. General Birney our division, and General Ward our .brigade. Soon after the battle of Fredericksburg, certain evil-disposed persons at the north were loud in their assertions that the Army of the Potomac was ■demoralized and tired of the war, and circulated other reports derogatory to the character of that army. To confute such reports, and to denounce those with whom they originated, a meeting of the officers and men of the Fifty-seventh was held on February 26, at which resolutions were adopted denouncing as false the calumnious reports circulated concei-ning the army. One of the resolutions declared that the Fifty-seventh would sustain the government in the future as in the past, a resolution which was made good by three-fourths of the regiment re-enlisting for three years in the following December. Our regiment was the first to adopt resolu- tions of this nature, which were ordered to be published in the news- papers in the counties from which the regiment was raised. Our example was followed by many of the regiments of the Army of the Potomac. Camp Pitcher was abandoned on March 4, when we moved about four miles and laid out a new camp near the railroad bridge over Potomac creek. On the same day, the Fifty-seventh was reassigned to the First Brigade, commanded by Colonel Collis, who was succeeded a few days later by General Charles K. Graham. The brigade now consisted of six Pennsylvania regiments, viz: Fifty-seventh, Sixty-third, Sixty-eighth, One hundred and fifth. One hundred and fourteenth and Qw ^^V^ndred nnd Pennsylvania nr initiation into what is known as the Chancellorville Campaign. On the 29th we moved backward and forward to various points along the river, the object of which seemed to be to lead the enemy to think that we wore going to cross and attack at that place. On the 30th the weather had become clear and warm, and about noon we started up the river road, and at night halted near Hartwood Church. Next morning we crossed the river at the United States Ford. About 2 p. m. the march was resumed and soon after we reached the Chancellor Hou.se, a large brick building on the Frederick.sburg and Orange plank road. After a short halt our brigade was marched westward along the plank road, for almost a mile, to Dowdall's tavern iu rear of the position of the Eleventh Corps. We remained here but a short time when we marched back and rejoined the division near the Chancellor House, halting for the night in a large field. The enemy annoyed us some by shelling us with their artillery which was posted near the Old Furnace, but did no damage. On the morning of ]\Iay 2, we moved west on the plank road for a short distance, and then, turning to the left, we marched along a road leading through the woods, on the southern border of which we threw up a line of works of logs and dirt. This is the position known as Hazel Grove. About noon a column of the enemy, and a wagon train, was seen moving across our front about a mile distant, and as their course was southward it was thought that they were retreating. Our artillery opened on them, which caused them to take another road. Our division was advanced, skirmishing with the enemy, and soon captured the Twenty-third Georgia which was stationed at Welford's Furnace. Barlow's Division of the Eleventh Corps was advancing with us on our right. On reaching the high ground overlooking the furnace a halt was made and the line rectified. It was growing late in the day and every- thing seemed to be moving along finely, when about 6 o'clock a tremendous cannonade was heard in the vicinity of the plank road and Hazel Grove, which we had left but a few hours before. It proved to be the onset of Stonewall Jackson, who, by marching along roads hidden by the woods, had reached the right and rear of our army and was driving back in con- fusion the divisions of Schurz and Stein wehr of the Eleventh Corps. At dark we were ordered to fall in and move to the rear, at the same time we were cautioned to make as little noise as possible. We soon reached the open field in front of the line of works we had thrown up in the morning, and which now were held by the enemy. Ward's Brigade on our right made a charge into the woods and succeeded in driving back the enemy far enough to give us an opening to get out in the morning. At the dawn of day on the 3d the enemy's skirmishers attacked us on our left, their fire enfilading our line, and as the ground would not permit our form- ing a line to oppose them, we faced to the right and double (piieked until we reached the large field which runs back to the Chaneellor House. Here the regiments were deployed, and faced the enemy, and until 10 24 358 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. o'clock we were in some of the hottest lighting seen during the war. General Hooker had been injured by a shell and General Couch had tem- porary command. Our corps commander General Sickles, had asked to be reinforced from the unemployed troops in the rear, but none came. After having re- pulsed charge after charge we were finally withdrawn to a new line in the rear. We did not again become engaged with the enemy but they gave us a severe shelling while we occupied the new entrenched line, on the evening of the 4th, wounding some of our men. The casualties in the Fifty-seventh at Chancellorsville were. Captain E. J. Rice of Company E, and Lieutenant Joseph Brady of Company H, killed; eleven enlisted men killed; three officers and. forty-five enlisted men wounded and twenty-three men captured. Chaplain McAdam and Assistant- Surgeon Leet were captured, but were soon after paroled and exchanged. On the afternoon of the 5th a rain storm set in, which continued through the night and next day, raising the river, and threatening to sweep away our pontoon bridges. On the morning of the 6th, we recrossed the river at United States ford and after a hard march through mud and rain, we reached our old camps about dark. The weather having become quite warm, we abandoned our winter quar- ters the last week in May, and moved about two miles, and pitched our tents in a large field near Belle Plain Landing, where we remained until the Gettysburg campaign opened on the 11th of June. About 1 p. m. on that day we packed up in a hurry and began our long march northward. The weather was exceedingly warm, and there was considerable straggling, but the men all came up at night, after we had halted near Hartwood. On the 12th, we marched to near Bealton Station, on the O. & A. R. R. On the 13th, we marched a few miles towards Rappahannock Station. On the 14th, we started in the evening and marched to Catlett's Station, arriving about midnight. On the 15th, we moved to Manassas Junction. This was one of the hottest days of the summer, and about forty men were prostrated by sunstroke in our division. On the 16th, we moved to Bull Run, camping at Mitchell's Ford. On the 17th our march was continued to Centreville. Late in the afternoon of the 19th, we started for Gum Springs. We had not gone far when a severe storm of rain, thunder and lightning set in. We arrived at Gum Springs about 3 a. m., on the 20th, when part of the regiment went on picket, and the rest laid down on the drenched soil to sleep. AVe remained at this place until the 25th. It having been ascertained that Lee's army had crossed the upper Potomac, and was on the march to Pennsylvania, we broke camp and crossed the Potomac at Edwards' Feri-y, and from thence moved up the river to the mouth of the Monocacy. On the 26th, we moved to Point of Rocks on the Potomac. On the 27th, we resumed our march at 8 a. m., and mai'ching through Jefferson, we halted for the night near Middletown, Md. On the 28th, we marched through Middletown and Frederick City, halting for the night a mile or so beyond the city. In the evening we learned that General PennsijlvtDiifi of dell i/.' took position near the road, we were exposed to one of the hottest artillery fires we ever encountered. The enemy's batteries south of the orchard, and west of the road, poured a regu- lar stream of shells towards us, but fortunately most of them exploded after passing over us. When this fire slackened, the enemy's infantry advanced towards us through the fields west of Sherfy's house. The Fifty-second and One hundred and fourteeth were then ordered to cross the road to meet the enemy. The Fifty -seventh took advantage of the cover afforded by the house and adjoining out-buildings, and opened fire with good effect. No doubt the reuiments stationed at this point could have beaten back the enemy, but we had not been long engaged, when we learned that the enemy had broken through the angle at the peach orchard, and were swarm- ing up the road in our rear. It was evident that if we remained at the house, we would all be captured, so we were obliged to fall back. We tried to warn our comrades, who had sought the cover of the house, and were firing from its doors and windows, but could not make them understand tin' situation, and all were captured. During all this time the battle was raging fiercely nt the Round Tojjs, Devil's Den and the wheatfield. The Excelsior Brigade of our Second Di vision, and troops of the Second Corps were sent to our assistance, and the battle raged until dark in the fields between Plum Run and the Em- mitsburg Road. Birney's division at the opening of the battle occ\tpied a very exposed position, and in trying to hold it, had met with such severe losses that it was not again actively engaged during the battle The Fifty-seventh entered the fight with a total of two hundred and nine officers 360 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. and men. It lost, officers, two killed, nine wounded and four captured. Enlisted men, twelve killed, thirtj-four wounded and fifty-five captured, a total of one hundred and fifteen, being over half the number that entered the battle. Lieutenant Henry Mitchell of Company E, and Lieutenant John F. Cox of Company I were killed. Among the wounded were Lieutenant-Colonel Sides, Acting Adjutant Nelson and Captain Houser. Major Neeper was captured and I'emained a prisoner for about a year when he was exchanged. Lieutenant Crossley, after one ineffectual attempt to escape in Novei^nber, 1864, succeeded on a second trial and escaped from prison at Colurabia, S. C, and entered the Union lines December 20, 1864, after his term of service, had expired. Lieutenant Hinds was one of the one hundred and ninety-officers who escaped from the famous tunnel at Libby Prison in February, 1864, but he had the misfortune to be recaptured, and remained a prisoner until shortly before the war closed, and was honorably discharged in May, 1865. Lieutenant Burns remained a prisoner until after his term of service expired and was honorably discharged in March, 1865. Of the fifty-five enlisted men who, on the 2d of July were captured at Gettysburg, forty-four died in southern prisons. On the morning of July 3, our brigade was posted in a small grove, about three-fourth of a mile in rear and to the right of the Sherfy house. Here we enjoyed a good rest under the shade of the trees, until about 2 p. m., when the tremendous cannonade that preceded Pickett's charge began. Soon after we were ordered into line, and facing to the right we took the double-quick step, and on reaching the open field, we formed line in rear of our artillery, which was busily engaged in replying to the enemy's guns. Immense cheering was soon after heard on the right, and then we learned that the last attempt on our lines had failed. At night the regiment went to the front on picket, being posted on ground that was thickly strewn with dead men and horses ; and as some of these had been dead for twenty-four hours, the stench was sickening. At daylight we rejoined the brigade, the enemy in the meantime having begun their retreat. We remained at Gettysburg until July 7, when our corps moved off, passing through Emmitsburg to Mechanicstown, Md. On the 8th, we passed through Frederick City and encamped two miles beyond the town. On the 9th, we started from near .Middletown and marched to South Moimtain . About this time the division of General W. H. P^rench was assigned to the corps, and was designated as the Third Division. General French took command of the corps, succeeding General Sickles, who lost a leg at Gettsyburg. Colonel Madill of the One hundred and forty-first com- manded the brigade. General Graham being made a prisoner in the late battle. On July 10, we marched from South Mountain to about five miles beyond Ke<>dysville, Md. On the nth, we marched to near Falling Waters. On the r2th, we were ^rawn up in line of battle and expected to mnke an nttack on the entrr^nch- Fcnnsylvaniii at (Jcttyshury. 361 ments of the enemy, but we were not ordered forward. The enemy having rccrossed the river into Virginia, wc left our camps on the 15th and after passing over the old Antietam battleground, we halted about two miles beyond Sharpsburg. On the 16th, we passed through Browns- ville and Rohrersville, and enoampod near Harper's Ferry. On the 17th, we crossed the Potomac at Harper's Ferry, and were once more in Vir- ginia. We resumed the march on the 18th and 19th, and on the 20th, we reached Upperville. On the 23d, we were near Manassas Gap, where it was expected we would strike the enemy's column, that was moving up the Shenandoah Valley. We moved to the top of a high hill, where we had a line view of the surrounding country, and also witnessed a battle between a small force of the enemy and the Excelsior brigade. The Fifty-seventh was only slightly engaged and had a few men wounded. The enemy having disappeared during the night, we marched next day some miles beyond Pied- mont on the Manassas Gap railroad. The greater part of our march was over the torn up railroad track, and as the weather was excessively hot, we were a tired lot of men v/hen we encamped that night. On the 25th, we marched to within six miles of Warrcnton, and on the 2Gth, we moved to Sulphur Springs about four miles west of Warrenton. At this place we encamped for about six weeks, during which time Colonel Sides, and some of the officers and men that had been wounded at Chaneellorsville and Gettysburg, returned for duty We had a fine camp, with good facilities for bathing in Hodgeman's river, a branch of the Rappahannock. For exercise we had frequent brigade and regimental drills, with occasional picket duty. We broke camp on September 16, and crossed the Rappahannock at Freeman's' Ford near which we bivouacked for the night, and the next day we moved on and encamped near Culpeper. Here we remained until October 11, when it was found that General Lee was trying to turn our right, and get in our rear as he had done the year before. This made a retrograde movement of our army a necessity. On the afternoon of the 11th we moved to the rear, recrossed the river, and about dark camped a few miles south of Sulphur Springs. We continued our move to the rear and on the 13th, about 4 p. m., we encountered the enemy's cavalry at Auburn Creek. Our brigade held the advance of the column on that day, and the Fifty-seventh was the leading regiment. Com- l)anies A and K acted as advance guard. These companies deployel on either side of the road, and opened fire on the enemy's cavalry, who were dismounted and were advancing through the woods and open fields Our firing soon brought up the rest of our brigade and a battery. A few shells thrown toward the enemy sufficed to drive them off ; when we moved on and at night halted at the village of Greenwich. On the 14th, we marched to Centreville, via Bristoc and Manassas Junc- tion. On the 15th, we moved to Fairfax Station, where we remained until the 19th. The enemy having declined to attack us in position in Centreville, they retreated, closely followed by our army. On the 19th, we again moved forward and encamped near liristoo Station. On the 20th, we marched tlnough (ireenwich and encamped about two miles beyond the town. On 'Mj2 Pennsylvania a I Gettysburg, the 21st, we passed through Auburn, and over the ground where Hays' Division of the Second Corps had engaged the enemy a few days before. At night we encamped near Catlett's Station on the O. & A. R. R. From this date until November 7, we moved to various points along the line of the railroad, which having been destroyed by the enemy, made it necessary for us to rebuild it; consequently our advance was slow. At 5 a. m., November 7, we broke camp and moved to Kelly's Ford on the Rappahannock. Here the enemy disputed our crossing and a brisk skirmish ensued. They finally relinquished their attempts to build the ford, when we crossed over and encamped. In this skirmish, while Captain T. L. Maynard, our brigade inspector, was giving a drink of water to a wounded rebel, he was mortally wounded and died next morning. On the 8th, we moved to Brandy Station, and after a few days we moved into the woods close by, and occupied a lot of huts that had lately been constructed by the rebels, to be used as winter quarters, but they had now fallen back beyond the river Rapidan. We remained in this camp for a few weeks, when we were once more on the move, to take part in what is called the "Mine Run Campaign." On the morning of November 26, we moved out of camp, and in the evening crossed the Rapidan at Jacobs' Ford, without interruption by the enemy. The advance was resumed next morning, and about 4 p. m. our division was hurried to the front to relieve the Third Division which had become engaged with Johnson's Division of Ewell's Corps. We got into a brisk little fight in which the Fifty-seventh had seven men wounded. This action occurred at Locust Grove. It appears that our corps com- mander. General French, got on the wrong road, and instead of getting between the corps of Hill and Ewell, who were miles apart, we rifn against Ewell, and that brought on the engagement. The enemy retreated during the night, and the next morning their army was concentrated, which our movements the day before were intended to prevent. On the 28th, we started again and after marching all day in the rain we came up with the enemy, who were occupying a strong position along the banks of Mine Run. The next day we laid in a field in support of a battery, and at night were ordei'cd on picket. The weather had grown very cold, and as no fires were allowed we were nearly frozen. After several days spent in manoeuvring, it was decided that the enemy's position was too strong to be successfully attacked, therefore a retreat was ordered. On the night of December 1, during a severe snow- storm, we moved to the rear, and recrossed the Rapidan at Culpeper Mine Ford, about daylight on the 2d. About 9 o'clock the march to the rear was resumed, the Fifty-seventh and Sixty-third Regiments acting as guard to our wagon train. Having run out of rations we were very hungry, but we managed to procure something to eat before night. The next day we reached our old camp and as we found our huts all in good condition, we soon had them rooffd with our .'^liclter tents, and were once more comfortably housed. For some weeks after the Mine Run expedition the question of re-en- listiug formed the chief topic of conversation among the men of the J'ifty- scvi'tith. The War Depai'tment has issued General Order 191, which al- I'cnn.si/lcdiiid al (Icll i/slniri/. '.W.\ lowed a bounty of HOO, and a I'urlimgli (d' tliirty days to each man who rc- cnlistcd. Where thi'ee-fourths of the; men i)rf tlie men st.'pped forward, and after giving three clieers for the Union, were dismissed. Then for several days the oflicers and first sergeants were busily m;;iiiiig out muster rolls, furloughs, and re-enlistment papers, etc. Among the men the furlough was the all absori)iug theme. It is safe to say tliat a bounty of $1,000 without the furlough would have secured but a small portion of the men. But the assurance of being allowed to spend thirty days at liome, was the great inducement to re-enlisting The following named ollicers resigned or were honorably discharged during the year 1863: Major Simontou, Major Strohecker (resigned as Captain), Assistant- Surgeon Leet; Captain Gillespie and Lieutenant Collomore, Company B; Captain Eberman, Company E; Captain Maxwell, Captain Clark and Lieu- tenant Cameron, Company F; lieutenant PMmistou, Company H. PUO .MOTIONS. Lieutenant-Colonel Sides to Colonel; Captaiii Neeper to Major; Second Lieutenant Hinds to First Lieutenant and Sergeant Green to Second Lieu- tenant, Conii)any A. Sergeant Burns to Second Lieutenant Company B. First Lieutenant Hill to Captain, Sergeant Major McCartney to First lieutenant and Sergeant Houser to Second Lieutenant Company C. First Lieutenant Rice of Company A, to Captain Company E. Color Bearer Williams to First Lieutenant and to Captain Company E. Second Lieu- tenant Mitchell to First Lieutenant and Sergeant Park to Second Lieu- tenant Company E. Second Lieutenant Nelson to First Lieutenant and to Captain, Sergeant Kuger to First Lieutenant, and Sergeant Cameron to Second Lieutenant Company F. First Lieutenant Darling to Captain, Sergeant Shaw to First Lieutenant and Sergeant Gore to Second Lieutenant Company H. First Lieutenant Bumpus to Captain and Sergeant Bowers to First Lieutenant Company I. January 8, 1864, was the time appointed for the regiment to leave for the north, and long before daylight the men were up and getting ready for their departure. About 7 a. m., we boarded the cars at Brandy Sta- tion and were soon under way for AV'ashiugton, where we remained ior u day and a night and then started for Harrisburg, Pa. Here we deposited our arms in the arsenal, and then the men departed by various routes for their homes. Before we left Brandy Station, each man who re enlisted had received the pay due him ; the old bounty of $100, one mouth's pay in advance, and the first instalment ($.50) of the new bounty. Therefore the men were well fixed financially, to enjoy what is known as the "Veteran Furlough." 364 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. When the men had been at home for some time manj' of their former companions and friends were eager to enlist and return with our boys to the armj'. On account of our success in obtaining recruits the furlough of the men was extended. When we left the front the regiment numbered barely 200 enlisted men. After an absence of about forty-five days it re- turned with at least 500 men in its ranks. Our old flag, which had been torn by the bullets of many battles, was left at Harrisburg when we came home ; and on our return to the front we received a new one from the hands cf Governor Curtin. On the 25th of February, we rejoined the brigade near Culpeper, Va., and on the 27th, we went with the brigade on a reconnaissance in the direction of Madison Court House. We were gone two days during which time nothing of im- portance occurred. General Grant having been appointed Lieufenant-General and placed in command of all our armies, made his lieadquarters with the Army of the Potomac some time in March, 1864. About the 16th of the same month, that army was reorganized. The First and Third Army Corps were disbanded and the divisions assigned to other corps. The First and Second Divisions of the Third Corps (the old divisions of Kearny and Hooker) were assigned to the Second C'orps and were commanded by Generals Birney and Mott respectively. General Hancock commanded the Corps. Our division was now designated the Third Division of the Second Corps. Our brigade (now the Second) was commanded by General Alexander Hays, who was formerly Colonel of the Sixty-third Pennsylvania Volun- teers . Our Third division was assigned to the Sixth Corps. The men having a great pride in their former organizations, and proud of the badge which designated them, were allowed to wear the badge of the old Corps to which they had been attached. The great campaign of 1864 began soon after midnight on the 3d of May. The Second Corps with a strong force of cavalry moved out and about daylight crossed the Rapidan river at Ely's Ford. On the night of the ith, we bivouacked on the old ChancellorsvUle battlefield on the ground where we had fought one year and a day before. On the morning of the 5th, we moved down the plank road towards Fredericksburg, then turned to the right and took a road leading south- westerly towards Todd's Tavern, near which we halted at noon. About 2 p. m., we renewed our march, passing over the Brock Road, and soon after formed line in the woods on the left of the road. Here we were moved about from place to place for some time, and finally moved back into the road, and then faced to the right and ordered forward in double- quick time, until we reached the crossing of the Orange Plank road. When the left of the regiment had crossed the road, we were faced to the left and advanced in line of battle through the dense woods known as the Wilderness. Brisk firing was going on in our front and we had not gone far when we met the enemy. The left of the Fifty-seventh rested on the plank road and on the opposite side of the road was the Seventeenth Maine. Our line was quite close to the enemy, but the density of the Ptnnfiijlvania at (Jcttij-sbiirfj. 365 undoibrush madi- it almost impossible to see them, so takiug direct aim was out of the question. Never before were such volleys of musketry heard as those which rolled through that gloomy wilderness on May 5, 1864 The old regiment fought nobly, meeting with fearful loss, but they stood their ground until relieved in the evening, and then went back to the Brock Hoad. The next morning we moved out beyond the position where we had fought the evening before. We soon came against the enemy, drove him back nearly a mile, but they were soon re-enforced and then it was our turn to fall back. We had been fighting the troops of A. P. Hill's corps and had them about whipped, when Longstreet came on the field with his fresh corps. After some grand bushwhacking, our line fell back to the breastworks along the Brock Road. The casualties in the Fifty-seventh (which were principally incurred on the 5th), were four officers wounded; enlisted men, twenty-two killed, and one hundred and twenty-four wounded and three missing. Colonel Sides was badly wounded in this battle and did not again return to the regiment for duty. We also had to mourn the loss of that brave soldier and hero. General Alexander Hays, who fell at the head of the brigade on the evening of Maj' 5. At about the same hour on May 7, the two armies began to move on parallel roads toward Spotsylvania. The regiment now commanded by Captain A. H. Nelson of Company K, had a slight bru.sh with the enemy at Ny river on May 8. At Spotsylvania on May 12^ Birney's and Barlow's divisions formed the first line in Hancock's great charge on the enemy's works, when we cap- tured from thirty to forty guns and several thousand prisoners. From ^lay II to May 18, the casualties in the Fifty-seventh were one officer killed and wounded; enlisted men. six killed, seventeen wounded and three missing. Lieutenant Green of Company A, was killed ^lay 12, Lieu- tenant Bowers of Company I, died May 22, and Captain Williams of Com- pany E, May 28, of wounds received in action. In a charge at the battle of North Anna river, the regiment had one man killed and three officers wounded. At Totopotomoy river on May 31, and at Cold Harbor on June 3, the regiment was engaged losing in each action, one man wounded and three missing. On June 3, the colors of the Fifty-seventh was furled around tlu" stafT. which was struck in the breastworks, when it was struck by a piece of shell and cut in two. On June 12, our army left Cold Harbor and started for Petersburg, our Corps crossing the James river at Wilcox's wharf on June 14. From June l(i to 18, the regiment was in several charges which were made on the enemy's works at Petersburg ; losing Adjubint Clark M Lyons, and four enlisted men killed, and twelve men wounded; Lieut.nnnt Henry M. Adams, while standing on our works, was killed by a rebel sharpshooter, June 1.5. Major Neeper, who had bcou (.ipturfd at Getty.sburi,'. had been ex changed, and promoted to Lioutcu.int-Colonel, returned to the regiment about this time and assumed command. In an engagement on June 22, the Fifty-seventh h:id one officer and four 366 Pcnnsijlvania at Gettyshurg. PDlistpd men woundpd ; Liputennnt Jamos F. Rugei- and nine enlisted uien were captured. The regiment was also under fire at Deep Bottom on July 26, and durin? the "Burnside Mine" affair on July 30. During a second expedition to Deep Bottom August 12 to 18, the Fifty- seventh lost one officer (Captain Lyons) and fifteen men wounded and four missing. In the fight at Poplar Grove, October 2, three men were wounded. Our next engagement was on the Boydton Plank Road on October 27. Our division (now commanded by General Mott) and Egan's division of the same corps, had moved to the left with the cavalry, to attemj^t to capture the South Side railroad. While these two divisions were in a large field surrounded by woods, near Burgess' Tavern, waiting for Gen- enil Warren's iFifth) Corps to join us on the right, the enemy discovered the gap between the tAvo corps, through which Mahone's rebel division charged, and came suddenly upon us. For a short time there was con- siderable confusion, but order was soon restored, and the enemy di-iven back, leaving with us many of their men as prisoners. This affair is gen- erally known as the "Bull Pen Fight." Our effort to surprise the enemy had failed, so we moved back to camp during the night. On December 9, an expedition under General Warren, consisting of his own Corps, Mott's Division of the Second Corps, and a brigade of cavalry, started out for the purpose of. further destroying the Weldon railroad. We struck the railroad near Jarratt's Station, and effectually de- stroyed it for twenty miles, to a point near the North Carolina line. A very disagreeable feature of this expedition was the snow storm th\ouL;h which we marched back to our old camp near Petersburg. Several hundred recruits, substitutes and drafted men joined the regiment during the autumn months of 1S64. The term of service of a number of officers and men expired in the nronth fif November, 1864, for which reason they were honorably discharged and mustered out. The following changes occurred among the officers during the yoar. Those killed or died have already been mentioned. Colonel Sides discharged on account of wounds November 28. The fol- lowing were discharged on account of expiration of term in the month of November; Lieutenant-Colonel W. B. Neeper, Quartermaster Israel Gar- rettson, Captain Hill and Ijieutenant McCartney of Company C, Captain H. II. Nelson, Company F and A. H. Nelson, Company K. Surgeon Lyman was mustered out September 16, to accept the Lieuten- ant-Colonelcy of the Two hundred and third Pennsylvania Volunteers ; while serving with that regiment, he was killed at Fort Fisher, N. C, January 1.5, 1865. Captain J. R. Lyons discharged for wounds; Captain Darling and Lieutenant J. M. Robison for physical disability. In the month of January, 1861, the Fifty-seventh and Eighty-fourth Pennsylvania Volunteers were consolidated, the Fifty-seventh retaining its numerical designation. Since September 25, 1862, the Fifty-seventh had consisted of but eight companies. By special Order No. 8, War Depart- ment, January 6, 1865, the Fifty-seventh was consolidated into six com- Pcnufii/lninin at (Ictli/s-hiirg. .'{(17 panics. Companies A and E woro brokou up and the nion distri' utcd with the remaining six oompanios so as to eqnalize them in strength. By the same order the Eighty-fourth was consolidated into a batt.ilion of four companies, and these were then united with the Fifty seventh, forming u regiment of ten companies, averaging fifty men pre-sent to fucli company. The Eighty-fourth hail a splciidid r.Turd . Its' first fighting was at Winchester, Va., March 23, 1862, where it lost many gallant offKers and men. Since August of the same year it had been connected with the Army of the Potomac, where it nobly sustained its old reputation. The consolidation made it necessary to change the letters of some <>f the companies of the old Fifty-seventh although the organization of the companies whose letters were changed was not disturbed. Per Special Order, No. 4, Headquarters Fifty-seventh Pennsylvania Veteran Volunteers, January 16, 180.5, the following alterations in the lettering of the companies of the old Fifty-seventh was ordered: Company H, to be designated Company A; Company I, to be desig;iated Company D; Company K, to be designated Company E; Companies B, (! and F, to retain their letters. The companies of that part which comprised the old Fifty-fourth were lettered G, H, I and K. Lieutenant-Colonel Bumpus who commanded the regiment from November, 1864, until the consolidation, was mustered out as a supernumerarj', as were also the non-commissioned, officers of the dis- banded companies. For about two months after consolidation the regiment was commanded by Major Bryan. Colonel Zinn, who was absent on account of wounds, returned and took command on ilarch 18. About the same time Lieuten- ant-Colonel Perkins, who had been serving on General Mott's staff as Captain, returned for duty with the regiment- On February 5, another move was made beyond Hatcher's Run for the purpose of extending our lines, and if a favorable opportunity ofTi-red, of taking the coveted South Side railroad. We moved by the Vaughan road, and having crossed the run threw up a line of works. Late in the after- noon the regiment (expecting Company E, which was on picket duty on another part of the line) had a brisk fight with the enemy, in which two of our men were wounded. We were out on the expedition until the lOth and as usual were caught in a snow storm. Nothing of importance occurred on our part of the line until ^Lirch 25. Early on that morning the enemy tried to break through our lines at Fort Stedman some miles to our right. A few hours later the picket line of our brigade was ordered to advance We had not gone far when the enemy's pickets opened on us. Several of the Fifty-seventh were wounded, among whom was Lieutenant R. I. Campbell who was hit on the hand. The line was ordered back again to the entrenched position in the re.-ir. where it remained until relieved at 9 a. m. About 3 p. m. the whole division was ordered to the front where we threw up a line of works near the house of >frs. Watkins. About dark the enemy made a heavy attjick, but we had the strongest force on the ground. r*»G8 Pennsylvania at Geitysl)urg. and hu.t few of them got back to their works. The Fifty-seventh captui-ed one hundred and sixteen prisoners, among which were six officers The regiment had five men wounded, one of Company E, mortally. On the morning of March 29, was inaugurated what proved to be the last campaign of the Army of the Potomac. On that morning we moved about thi'ee miles to the left, and began to throw up a line of works. The cavalry and the Fifth Corps, under General Sheridan, and the Second Corps under General Humphreys, were operating on this flank. For sev- eral days there were more or less fighting, but our brigade had not become seriously engaged. On the evening of April 1, Sheridan gained his great victory at Five Forks, some four miles to our left. On the same night a large detail of the Fifty-seventh was sent on picket on an entrenched line which ran across the field where occurred the "Bull Pen" fight on the 27th of October previous. This line was hotly shelled by the enemy on the morning of April 2, during which time several of our men were wounded. Far off on our right the splendid charges of the Sixth and Ninth Corps had made the fall of Petersburg a certainty. About 9 a. ra. our division started for Petersburg via the Boydton Plank road . Arriving near the city we moved about from one point to another until late in the afternoon, when we were formed in line a few rods from the house that had been the headquarters of the rebel General Mahone. Here while we were constructing a temporary line of works, we were sub- jected to a severe shelling which wounded several of our men. During the following night the enemy evacuated Petersburg and re- treated westward ; our army following on parallel roads, and also pressinii tht- hills iif Ciottysbiirg, and whiii ho finally determined to hnrl himself like a thunderbolt at an ;iiiiiy waiting on its native soil, the entire world stood aghast, and watched these two mighty contending forces, concentrating themselves for the final contest. And when after three days of smoke, din, carnage, blood and death, the terrors of war had written themselves in the clouds, and the sun, long concealed behind the black curtain of gloom, burst forth through the midst of the battle, and the roar of the last sullen wave of strife bad died beyond the hill tops, Lee, the proud champion of the Confederacy, his army helpless and bleeding, hastened away from a field of irretrievable disaster, looked back to behold the scene, had nothing but dismay and ruin to his hope and cause and country, saw high up in the heavens of mid- summer, wreathed upon a scroll of immaculate white, "Victory for the Union," and yet higher upon the very last and highest scroll of fleecy wiiitenrss "Liberty and Freedom I'^orever." ADDRESS OF SERGEANT AT. BREWER. WE MEET to-day in a treble capacity. As citizens of our great repub- lic; now imperial in power as well as extent. As representatives of the historic Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, so abounding iu the unsearchable riches of patriotism, and as survivors of a conflict to maintain the one and shield the other. The American nation, twentj'-five years ago, spontaneously and officially, recognized this place as one destined to an honored immortality. Hither came the illustrious Chief Magistrate, and, inspired by the association, uttered exalted sentiments, with a splendor of language unequalod in oratory. These blood stained hills and valleys, battle-scarred rocks and trees, were sacredly dedicated to the patriotic valor displayed by the dead and the living. Here nature, rugged, grand, diversified, as it is, has yet been enriched by what art could do in marble, bronze, granite and laud- scape decoration, and the sixty-five million people of our restored Union have charged themselves with the perpetual and reverent care of this consecrated ground. And outside of our own country, the world over, for all time, the fame of Gettysburg will live. The human symi)athy in great struggles for liberty, which has preserved Marathon twenty-three centuries, will secure this field to the remotest age. But as representatives of the sovereign state on whose soil the conflict occurred, we have an interest more personal than historic. All other states concede to Pennsylvania a peculiar relation to Gettysburg. It was her ter- ritory which was moistened by so much precious blood. It was the only battle fought on free soil during the war, and the only great battle ever fought within the bounds of the Keystone state. It was the only ni 'eting of hostile armies within her limits since Washington, in 1777, led his heroic band against thi' ICnglish at (Jermantown. On the p.irt of Ponn- '.M2 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. .sylvuniii, it was a couflict to protect, from immediate capture, her proud capital, sitting like a queen on the rippling Susquehanna, and her renowned metropolis, where Independence was first proclaimed. It was natural that Pennsj-lvania, with peerless colonial historj', and acknowledged pre- eminence in the Revolution, should resist with deathless valor, any foe that dared cross her border. And it was a piece of good fortune for Penn- sylvania, attributable to a favoring Providence, that the National .'^rmy at Gettysburg was composed so largely of her troops, affording them the privilege of defending their own State. Her regiments of infantry, cavalry and artillery were here to the number of nearly one hundred, and they were on all parts of the field, from the magnificent resistance of Buford's cavalry and the First Corps, July 1, to the repulse of Pickett, July 3. That they did their whole duty is abundantly attested by the long roll of dead and wounded, and the effective work accomplished. The most dis- tiguished officer killed, the much loved and lamented Major-General John F. Reynolds, was from Pennsylvania. Right grandly did he defend his native state in the early and discouraging part of the battle. Then came the incomparable Hancock and the Commander-in-Chief General Meade, both from the same state. The people of Pennsylvania, therefore, have reasons for their determina- tion to exhibit to the Avorld the high esteem in which they hold the ser- vices of their own forces on this memorable field. While fully approving all the nation has done, the state adds yet other honors to perpetuate the deeds of her own sons. The monument to-day dedicated, is the gift of the State, under a law passed no long2r ago than June 15, 1887, twenty four years after the battle. How significant was the passage of this law by the men then composing the legislature. Some were born after the buttle. Many others were school boys when the thundering cannonade at Gettys- burg was heard over half the State. The pure stream of patriotism flowing out from here has spread its benign influence all over the State and opened the heart and the purse of a new generation. Yet we sustain another and still more intimate relation to this battle- field. To us this atmosphere is perfumed with recollections of July 2 and 3, 1863, but how changed the scene. The same sun, indeed, shines in the heavens, some of the same trees spread their green foliage over us, the f.ame brook rolls its gentle flood at our feet, the same rocks, hills, valleys, ravines, greet our vision; the same Baltimore pike stretches its white length before us, and the same Taneytown and Emmitsburg roads wind through the same fertile farms and cragged glens. Still, the scene is different. Instead of the deafening roar and din of a mighty conflict, all is peace and good will. But our minds and hearts are stirred no less than they were twenty-live years ago. Indescribable emotions agitate and thrill us as we look abroad over this field to-day, and especially as we behold the spot where we now are. There is, however, one feeling which can be expressed. We are thankful to realize that no sacrifice was made in vain. Not alone did the cause triumph for which we contended, but the Nation, taking new life, has had unparalleled growth and prosperity. From something over thirty million, it has increased to sixty-five million of happy, free people, devoted to the Pennsylvania at Qettyshun/. .37IJ Union and teaching their children to love liberty and revere tin" nn'inory of those who saved the Nation in the great civil war. Returning in 1865 to peaceful pursuits with our fellow-countrymen, most of us still young, we have waged the battle of life for five-sixths of a generation, and yet our average age now is not over fifty years. At the same time we are as old as the majority of those who served as volunteers in the late war. How young then, must have been the lives here laid on the altar of liberty and national unity a quarter of a century ago? While the loss was great, can any one say the gain was not comnsensurate? Dare any one say the sacrifice was too great, beholding at the same time the splendid republic, washed by two oceans, bound together by iron rails, with teeming millions of contented people, knowing but one flag, and that the stars and stripes? It is true, the noble young men who fell here at the average age of twenty-two, gave great promise of distinguished use- fulness in all walks of life; but without the government, they and their comrades fought to save, what would life be worth? No one would want to live amidst the dissevered fragments of the Union, and no one could then look even upon a picture of the old flag without pangs of remorse and bitter humiliation. We are not here, therefore, to bewail the fallen as those who fell in vain, nor to bemoan the sacrifices of those who yet live, but rather to honor the services of both on this and other fields of the war. As the organization, whose monument is to-day dedicated, belonged to the Army of the Potomac, and shared its experience for four years, wo will contemplate for a while that celebrated army. Considering its history from first to last, no army of which we have any record, can be compared to it. It exhibited a peculiarity never before witnessed in a vast army, and that was the indestructible personality and spirit of the soldiers. As a whole, in its formative period at least, it was a political foot-ball and victim of party intrigue, adversely criticised by the press, sneered at by the other armies, and covertly censured by government oflicials. Yet the soldiers, with unsurpassed intelligence, keeping constantly in mind the object for which they enlisted, bore themselves like senators, preserving a dignity and self-respect which no disaster could affect. No army of men in the world's history ever suffered so many defeats and dis- appointments without losing its martial spirit and becoming worthle-^.c ns an organization. In ancient times one defeat in a general battle prac- tically ended an army, leaving the survivors utterly discouraged. The famous Roman armies sent against Hannibal were each ruined in a single battle, though only a small proportion were killed. Each of the three Austrian armies sent against Napoleon in Italy, were destroyed in a single battle, yet not over ten per cent, were killed or wounded. So it has ever been with armies in all countries. The military prestige is all gone after nut' or two defeats. This being true, what will the historian of the future say of the Army of the Potomac? Look at its battles— Bull Run, Ball's Bluff, march against the wooden guns at Manassas Junction in the spring of 1862; Yorktown, a month in the mud; Williamsburg, an obviously un- necessjiry sacrifice: Fair Oaks, a great battle, only to be followed by a month in the Chickahominy swamps, and the seven days retreat engage- 374 Pennsylvania at Getty shurg. ments ending with Malveni Hill. Second Bull Run, Chantilly : Antietam, a bloody, but indecisive victory, with nothing to encourage soldiers; Fred- ericksburg, a sacrifice of fourteen thousand men in a movement known to be foolish by half the private soldiers in the army ; Chancellorsville and second Fredericksburg, costing over sixteen thousand more, with no ad- vantage. Up to July 1, 1863, the Army of the Potomac, in its thirteen principal en- gagements, had lost 92, 494 men in battle, of whom 10,524 were killed, being over seventeen per cent, of all men killed in the entire war. This is not counting those who fell in minor affairs and skirmishes, nor those who died of disease, and leaves out entirely the losses sustained in the ill-starred cam- paign of General Pope, and the fruitless Shenandoah movements. Behold then an army that had fou.ght thirteen pitched battles, losing in the aggre- gate as many effective men in actual contest as it ever had at any one time, marched and countermarched through three states, always facing the enemy, never achieving any substantial success ; and yet its ardor unimpaired ! This army was now called to meet the best and largest force ever mustered by the Confederacy, not in the enemy's country, but far in the interior of Pennsylvania. But this is not all. The rebels were flushed with a recent victory, and two years' experience had convinced that army it was uncon- querable. Nor can we stop here. The concentrated ambition and hate of a century was in the rebel army. It was determined to go to Harrisburg, Baltimore, cut off Washington and dictate terms of peace from the st^ps of Independence Hall at Philadelphia. It had boundless confidence in its leaders and in the efficiency of its organization. On the cnntniiy, the Army of the Potomac scarcely knew who its com- mander was, for no order had been read to the troops relieving Hooker, or appointing Meade. McDowell, McClellan, Burnside, Hooker, had all failed and no one expected anything great from Meade. If the troops had been consulted they would have appointed Hancock, the very man whom Meade himself considered the great general of the army, and selected to direct the battle. According to all teaching of military history, the Army of the Po- tomac was doomed to certain defeat at (Jettysburg. The chances app?ared to be a hundred to one against it. If anything was needed to make its de- feat beyond a peradventure, it was furnished by the government in the change of commanders, thr(>e days before the battle, when the armies were actively feeling for eacli other. The i-eiiioval lialf severed the hair suspend- ing the sword of Damocles. But history will have to reconstruct its theories. It will be compelled to record that the Army of the Potomac presented feat- ures hitherto unheard of in martial organization. The historian will find the explanation in the character of the private soldiers and subordinate ofli- cers of the line. These men had not talu'ii up arms for nothing, nor had they been following a great, dazzling leader, as willing instruments in his hands. They had the conviction which moves the patriot as well as the dauntless courage of the tried soldier. The desperate forces of treason surged and dashed a.gaiust them in \ain. They stood their ground, and the proud foe retreated never again to set foot on free soil. It is not possible to give a history of the battle, but justice to the Army of the Potomac re(iuires a few statements. On the first day our forces were Pcinisifl ra nid ill (lit I i/slnir;/. .'>7.~) grcMtly nut iimiihcnMl \i\ the fin'iii.v . TIm'ii licyiinlds, the cominaiirlfr, was killed ill till' riuciKMiii :iii(l by the time 1 >oiilili'(liiy , who succfcdcd liim, },'i>t his fiirccs well ill ii.iiid, .iiid was dnitiL; ^rnod work as mortal man i-vrv did uiidi'f like dillicultii's, he, in turn, was succeeded hy Howard, in vii'tue of spuiority. Howard, with iiiadi'c|uate knowltnlgf of the situation, made ."-oine movements, luit he was soon relieved by Hancock, who came on the field, reprt'sentiim (ieinial Meaiie. In the face of so many changes, th»' marvel is that the army was not completely crushed. On the second day the encMuy had the advant;ii;e in numheis and the en- thusiasm arisiiiu from vii toi\ , as (hnusaiids of I'nion prisoners had been r'ap- tui-ed and marched to the rear tliron-rh tln' Confederate lines. I'.y a mistake, the Third Coi-ps, under Sickles, was placed in an advan<-e Army of th(> Potomac exhibited a steadiness in movements, lirmiiess in lu.iiiitainiiii; positions, and a ,i;all,intry in actual contact with the enemy, never surpassed by an army, and this is the tes- timony of all American as well as foreign writers on the subject. If that army had fought no other battle, its fame would have been secure. But after Gettysburg it fought thirty-eight battles, losing on the field no less than 280,656, of whom 22,6!)! were killed. According to official statistical record, the Army of the Potomac from first to last, in its fifty-one battles, lost 32,268 killed, 256,8.30 wounded and 69,597 prisoners, a grand total of 367,295. I>y disease it lost, on the usual estimate, at least 62,000 more, who actually died in the service, making tiie total num- ber of deaths 94,000, and aggregate loss, so far as shown by acc<'ssible records, of 429,295. P.ut to this number should be added those who were dis- charged for disability, arising fnmi disease contracteil in the service. Of such there must have been enou^rh to swell the total loss to half a million, not counting losses in small alTairs ami skirmishes. One other fact should be mentioned, not as a compl.iint, but as an incident, rel.iting to the Army of the Potomac. During the war, Congress, beginning with December 24, 1861, and ending with March 3, 1865, passed fifteen joint resolutions, expressing th.-inks of the nation to various odicers and armies, ;nid lu-oviding speci.-il honors for them. 376 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg . Yet the Army of the Potomac was never mentioned except once, January 28, 1861, when the three names, selected for honor, were not the men entitled thereto, in the estimation of that army, and therefore, the resolution did more harm than good. Here then was an example of pure pati-iotism. An army, battling with the flower of the Confederacy, defending- the national capital, suffering un- precedented losses, which are unavailing through various causes, ignored by Congress, whose sessions were held within the sound of its cannon, and whose laws derived all their effect from its power, still maintaining the con- flict until the last enemy of the republic was killed or captured. The fame of the Army of the Potomac must constantly increase as its ser- vices are better understood, as was said of illustrations heroes of* old: "Far reaching, bright shining, through ether, to heaven, ascending." The Army of the Potomac, like other Union and Confederate armies, was divided into corps. But so many changes occurred, from time to time, in the troops that only a few corps, as such, acquired special honor on account of fighting qualities. One of the few, having a special and distinct fame, was the "old Sixth," as it was affectionately called. It was organized under an order of President Lincoln, dated July 22, 1862, and remained with few changes until June 28, 1865. Included in that corps, from first to last, was the Sixty-first Pennsylvania, and what is said of the corps will apply also to the regiment. The Sixth Corps, besides taking a most conspicuous part in every movement of the Army of the Potomac, had some striking and dra- matic experiences of its own. It was the famous Vermont brigade of the Sixth Corps that was sent to New York to quell the riots in 1863, and it was the commander of that fighting brigade who, when complaint was made by the New York authorities that his men fired bullets instead of blank cart- ridges at riot prisoners, on attempting to escape, replied, "My men never learned how to fire blank cartridges." On September 16, 1863, at Culpeper Court House, the Sixty-first Pennsylvania turned out and presented arms to the Vermonters on their return from New York. This shows the generous spirit always a feature of the Sixth Corps. It was the Sixth Corps alone that fought and won the second battle of Fredericksburg, while ths^ re- mainder of the army was at Chancellorsville ; that fought the battle of Salom Church, losing in both battles over twenty per cent, of its entire force. It was the Second Division, Sixth Corps, that fought the brilliant and bloody battle at Fort Stevens, July 12, 1864, under the eye of President Lin- coln and his cabinet, in the very suburbs of Washington. In this battle the Sixty-first Pennsylvania was one of the six regiments making the successful charge on Early's position, and its commander. Colonel Crosby, lost an arm. In fact every regiment in that charge lost its commander. The Sixth Corps then went to the Shenandoah Valley and won fadeless renown with Sheri- dan. At the battle of Cedar Creek, while Sheridan was making his im.mor- tal ride from Winchester, the Sixth Corps kept up the fight, swinging around like a gate on its hinges to meet the enemy, after the left flank of the army had been turned. It was on the unconquerable lines of the Sixth Corps, then reduced to a mere handful of men, that Sheridan rallied his shattered army, and it was a charge from the Sixth Corps and Custer's Cavalry that started the enemy on the run and inaugurated the movements ending in the crushing Pennsylviuiui nt Gettysburg. 377 defeat of the rebel .army. General Sheridan, after the surrender of the French army, at Metz, being on the ground, paid n high compliment to the Sixth Corps by remarking to Prince Frederick Charles, the German com- mander, that he (Sheridan )could have cut his way out of Metz with one divi- sion of the Sixth Corps. The French had 172.000 men. It was reserved for the Sixth Corps, under the immediate direction of General Grant, to make the final assault at Petersburg and break the rebel lines on April 2, 1SG5, starting Lee's army for Appomattox. It was also the Second Division and Third Brigade which led that charge, and the Sixty-firpt Pennsylvania was in the center and hottest pai't of the battle, losing its colonel. The Sixth Corps did most of the fighting at Sailor's Creek, the last hard battle of the war. After the surrender of Lee the Sixth Corps were imniodiatcly started to join Sherman and aid in finishing Johnston's araiy, but only reached Danville before Johnston capitulated. The Sixth Corps was not present at the grand review in May, I860, at Washington, but had a separate review by the President afterwards, and ended its existence June 28, 1865. Stevens, the historian of the Sixth Corps, says "It was the grandest corps that ever faced a foe." The regiment, who.se services we are today commemorating, fitly repre- sents the State of Pennsylvania, the Sixth Corps and the Army of the Po- tomac. More than any other regiment it presents the true type and average character of the Keystone soldiers, who volunteered for three years in TS61. This is true because it was raised in different parts of the State, and included all classes in its ranks. Company A was recruited in the northern part of Indiana county, on the skirts of the Alleghenies, from hardy farmers and bold lumbermen of that locality. Five companies, B, C, E, F and K, were raised in and about Pittsburg, from the enterprising manufacturers, mer- chants, mechanics, iron workers, coal operators, boatmen and other brave men of the Union-loving region. Company D was raised in Luzerne county, the neighborhood of hard coal, where the beautiful valley of Wyoming recalls sad and bloody massacres by English and Indians a century ago. The com- pany was composed of intelligent, stout men of all trades and callings. The other three companies, G, H and I, were raised in Philadelphia; the patriotic city of brotherly love, of womanly sympathy, of chivalrous generosity, whose motto of "hot coffee free for volunteers" was known and read of all men. The pride of every Pennsylvanian, the inspiration of all friends of liberty, equality and Union, the home of unpretentious refinement and culture, the abode and patron of art, the seat of unostentatious wealth and diversified industry, the paradise for every wounded .soldier. These three companies were in all things worthy of the city they represented. They furnished the regiment three colonels and two lieutenant-colonels in less than three years' time. The regiment, as a whole, combined every element of military strength It could build bridges, lay out and make roads, plan and construct forts as well as make long marches and fiiiht battles by day and night. The Sixty-first was fortunate in having for its first colonel a veteran of the Mexican war, who had also been in the three months' service. A patriot, an orator, a model soldier was Oliver H. Rippey, from Pittsburg, whose com 378 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. mission was issued tweuty-seven years ago to-day. His command, the Sixty- first, was soon organized and in September, 1861, moved into Virginia near Alexandria, joining the Army of the Potomac, whose fortunes it shared, without interruption, to the end of the war. If it is true th.it the Army of the Potomac deserves the place in hi:^tory which ha.s been indicated, and that the Sixth Corps in the amount and vai-iety of its services, ranks so high in that army, then, indeed, is the record of the Sixty-first Pennsylvania, a proud one to contemplate. Only one regiment in the Sixth Corps had more men killed in action during the war than the Sixty- first, and only seven regiments in the five hundred or more in the Army of the Potomac, had more men killed in any one action. But the Sixty-first has a broader reputation than the army or the corps with which it served. Lieu- tenant-Colonel Wm. F. Fox has been examining the record of all Union regi- ments and gives the result in an interesting article in the May Centuru , 1888. His tables show that the Sixty-first Pennsylvania, in the number of officers killed in action, stands first in the entire Federal army, also that it stands eleventh in the number killed in any one action in the Union army, and fif- teenth in the total number killed during the war. It is worthy of remark that the fourteen other regiments having greater total losses than the Sixty-first, every one, belonged to the Army of the Po- tomac. It is also worthy of note that forty out of the forty-five regiments sustaining the heaviest losses in killed during the war, belonged to the Army of the Potomac. It is worthy of still further mention that out of the forty- five honored regiments, eleven belong to Pennsylvania. The aggregate loss in the Sixty-first Pennsylvania Volunteers is frightful for any one regiment. It had nineteen officers and two hundred and thirty- five men killed in battle, twenty -seven officers and six hundred and ten men wounded. One officer and one hundred and seven men died of disease, mak- ing total killed, wounded and died of disease nine hundred and ninety-nine. In the whole Federal army, on an average, two died of disease for every one killed, but in the Sixty-first nearly an average of three were killed to one dying of disease. It is not possible to give a history of the Sixty-first in less than a volume, nor is it necessary in order to appreciate the character of the regiment. By experienced military men, three tests are applied to troops. Firmness in re- maining where they are placed, gallantry in assault and steadiness when surprised. Let these tests be applied to the Sixty-first, in three actions, each furnishing a fair trial of its firmness, gallantry and steadiness. At Fair Oaks, May 31, 1862, a large Confederate army attacked the Fourth Corps of the Army of the Potomac with a view of capturing or de- stroying it before General McClellan could move reinforcements across the swollen Chickahominy . The Sixty-first, after standing in line for hours, was led forward into the woods, by (ieneral Couch in person, to meet the enemy, advancing in strong force. Directly the rebels were met marching by the flank. When the columns had npin'oached near each ntliei- tlie rebels went "right by file into line," and the Sixty-first filed right and inoveH its entire length parallel t<> the Confederate line, and faced to the front, the lines being about two hundred feet apart. Then at the word of command from the colonel the regiment opened a point blank lire. At the same instant Pciiiisi/I raiiia nl ( !( 1 1 i/shur(/. iJTK the ciiciny iipciifd ;iii(l ;i deadly stni^rnlc bcgaii. Tlic Sixty-first hud no sup- port (III its riulit. and the Union troops on tln' left were soon driven hack, h'axini: oiif rc^irneiit to contend a.uainst a liiu- of hatth' (JUt-flanking it on eitlicr si(h'. lint the Sixty-first did not stop to cah-uhitc. It jiourcd in a contiinioiis lire. The rohol line was reinforced time and ajrain and finally worked around on the ri.uht and left, opeiiiii; lire, and yet the Sixty-lirst maintained its ground. Tile iiia\-e ("olmiel Ri|)i)ey was killed. I .leuteMant-Cohmel Sjieai- and .Major Smith were wounded. Still the men kept up the fi^lit until an order was passed aloii;; the lines to fall hack. When the oiiler Wiis given, and not till then, the uninjured men started back. Th(>y found tlu> rebels <>n their right and left closing rapidly the small gap left for es<'ape. Disregarding all demands for surrender they rushed past and through the rebel lines reach- ing the second Union position in small groups. On moving hack tlie Sixty-first left on its line ninety-one killed, including its colonel, and over two hundred wounded, including Lieutenant-Colonel Siiear and Major Smith, both being captured. During this engagement the men of the Sixty-first fired thirty-seven rounds apiece. Toward the close hot muskt>ts burned the soldiers' hands into blisters. After retiring, rem- nants of the Sixty-first without field officers, part under command of Captain Jacob (^reps of Company A, and part at another point under Captain after- wards Colonel RobtM-t L. Orr, joined the second and aided in the final repulse of the Confederate army. Xo prisoners were taken from the Sixty- first exc(>pt the wounded who were unable to leave the field. Passing over a whole year of hard lighti'm' .-iiid marching, another en^rage- nient will he noticed, illustrating uallantiy. < »n Sunday morning, ^lay 3, \SI53, as beautiful a morning as ever smiled on htnnanity, the Sixty-first headed a charge on Marye's Heights, at Fredericksburg, across the canal bridge marching by the flank in column of fours. It was exactly like Na- poleon's famous charge across Lodi bridge. The Confederate forts were on the hei-hts in full view a quarter of a mile away, with lines of rifle i)its in front. As soon as the regiment started over the bridge double (piick, the rebels ran cannon out into the road and fired directly into the head of the column, the grajje sweeping through the ranks for the whole length of the Sixty-first, and even into the troops behind it. At the same time artillery opened from the forts, raining grape and canister like hail upon the advanc- ing force, and the rifle pits in front and on both flanks were a sheet of flame. Just as the line, left in front, reached the Confederate side of the bridgi' Cs in the lines, and was moved from place to place, in l)rigades, reginuMits and even battalions, during the re- Pcniisi)! raiiid til (,'i 1 1 i/slniri/. '^8'.j niJiiiidi'i- of tho fight. For .1 l'>in: linii', (ImiiiB July '.i, one brigiulo of tho Sixtli Corps, tlu' Vfiinoiitcis, lidd tlic cxtrcr.u' li'ft of tlif army at Round Top, and anotliiT, tlir Third, the extreme right at Wolfs Ildl. In the Third hriuadi'. Second division. Sixth ('or|is, was the Sixty-first I'ciiiiss [\ani:i , whosi' niovcinrnts will Uiiw ix' dc'S( rilicd . The regiment was then under coiuniand of Major (icoi-ge W. Dawson. It occupied four iliffer- eut i)la(es in tlH> lines. First, in the eveniui; of July 2, to the riuht of Round Top, with the corps in its first movement against and reiiulse of Longstreet; second, later the sanu' evening, jifter stoppiu;: awhile in IL-iucock's line on Cemetery Ridge, took position in tiic woods to the right of Culp's Hill; third, at Wolf's Ilill , on the extreme right of the ariiiy connecting with tho cav- alry. Here four companies, under Caiitain Ci-eps, were on the picket line all day on the 3d, continually engaged with the vnemy, the balance of the regiment being in the front line on the northerly slope of Wolf's Hill; fourth, about noon, and duriiru the lull which [)recede(l the great cannonade, that jiart of the regiment not on the picket line nV)ved to Cemetery Ridge and took position in front of Meade's headquarters, where it remained until about six o'clock. Then after the repulse of Pickett, and termination of the battle, the Sixty-first marched back again to Wolf's Hill and remained there until the morning of July /i. Ry this descrii)tion it will be seen that the Sixty-first marched four to six miles after reaching th(> battle-field on July 2 which, added to its long march, made nearly fort.v miles for the day. Besides, a part of the regi- ment remained nu duty all night and began fighting at break of day, July 3. It is not possible or necessary to give further details, though the speaker cannot close without referring to the scene ou Cemetery Ridge during the artillery firing and the assault which followed. For a few minutes after the Sixty-first formed its line all was silent. Then a rebel signal gun was fired to the north on Seminary Hill. Instantly the whole line of rebel guns, one hundred and thiity-eight in number, joined in the cannonade. All the guns northeast, north and northwest concentrated their fire on Cemetery Ridge. livery size and form of missile known to gunnery crashed, shr'eked, whirled, mo.ined and whistled alon- the ridge, splintering trees, bounding from rocks, smasliinu w.igoiis, disalilinu guns, tearing through the house at M<'ade's headMuarters .and plowini; u]> the ground in all directions. It is said they came six in a second. The roar at first was deafening, but became awful when over a hundred Union guns replied firing from all the hills on the line. The earth shook and it seemed from the sulphureous smoke and flame and thiuider that the last day had arrived. At this moment the re- serve artillery of the Union army, eighty guns, came into position along Cemetery Ridge, making the most sublime and exciting spectacle ever wit- nessed by the speaker. Soon the firing of cannon ceased on the enemy's side, and on came their bold chaiire jiccompanied with wild yells extending a mile or more along their serried ranks. The moment was thrilling. It 384 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. was the high water mark of the RebeUion and made an epoch in human destiny. The Union lines were immovable, the assailants were crushed. From that moment the Nation was saved and consecrated anew for com- ing ages. Americans the next day adopted the motto: "All honor to the heroic living, AH glory to the gallant dead." The monument this day dedicated speaks to the living and for the I'ead. When the living shall have joined their comrades in the deathless world, the memorial will proclaim to descendants of those who formed the Sixty first Pennsylvania Volunteers, the imperishable honor here and elswhere achieved by that regiment, and when its monument here and other memorials on this most renowned battlefield of the ages, shall have crumbled to atoms, every lover of liberty will yet crown with unfading laurels and burnish with immortal luster the memory of the gallant and dauntless men who won free- dom's battle at Gettysburg. DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 62D REGIMENT INFANTRY* September 11, 1889 ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN WM. J. PATTERSON COMRADES: — Gettysburg takes distinguished rank as one of the great battles in the history of warfare. The vital interests that hung in the balance, the gallantry of the opposing armies, the number of men en- gaged and the abilities of the leaders, all combined to make this field one of the grandest that was ever baptized with the blood of valor. To under- stand its importance to the Union cause we must remember that the darkest hour of the war was upon us. The Union arms had signally failed almost under the shadow of the nation's capitol. The disaster of Fredericksburg had been followed by the defeat of Chancellors'ville . The administration was discouraged and the people of the North disheartened. The martial spirit of the young men of the loyal states seemed to be exhausted and the unpopular method of the draft had to be enforced to fill up our ranks. The clouds of adversity oast a gloom of despondency over the north which threatened to eclipse the light of patriotism in our fair land. The South was correspondingly elated. The Army of Northern Virginia was the hope and pride of secession. The supreme opportunity of the struggling cause was at hand . The leaders were filled with renewed confidence ; "change the war from a defensive to an aggressive one," they exclaimed. "Make the North feel the crushing effects of its iron heel on her own soil, and the flag of truce would soon take the place of the relentless ensigns of battle, and the olive branch of peace would eventually float over a triumphant confederacy." ♦Organizccl at rittslmrsli, .\ugii.«t 31, 1S61, to serve three years. The original members (except veterans) were mustered out of service July 13, 1S64, and the veterans and recruits transferred to tUe 155th Penna. L^ X ♦ s Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 385 The leaders fondly hoped, too, if invasion proved successful, foreign inter- vention would step in to their assistance and victory at last crown their ef- forts. The vision was not an unreasonable one and the plans were well- laid. General Lee, at the head of the flower of the South, the veterans of the Airay of Northern Virginia, was entrusted with this weighty movement, lie [)nnnptly turned his columns noith and crossed tlie Potomac into Mary- land. His advance divisions penetrated Pennsylvania as far as Wrights- ville, on the Susijuehanna river. But the leaders of the South had yet mucli to learn of northern patriotism and northern bravery. That gallant and spirited old Army of the Potomac was to cover itself with new glory. The eyes (^f the whole country were upon it. While it had been defeated and baflled .iiid mismanaged, it never lacked patriotism and bravery of the high- est type. It always had its face to the foe. From Yorktown to Appomat- tox it never failed to give blow for blow. No army in the world was better organized, better disciplined, or better officered with skilful leaders. Its morale could not be excelled. Competout authority pronounced it the youngest and most intelligent body of men ever gathered together in the military service. The average age of its members at the close of the war was under twenty -live years. Many who are now serving on the bench, in the pulpit and in the legislative halls of the state and nation, marched in its ranks as private soldiers. General Lee's movements were closely followed. Three days before the battle General Meade assumed command of the Army of the Potomac. The Union forces pushed forward into Pennsylvania, and early on the morning of July 1, the enemy's skirmishers were encountered at Marsh Creek, near the Chambersburg pike, on which General Hill's corps was moving east. A severe battle was fought, in which the Union troops were overpowered and driven back at all points in considerable disorder. About 4 o'clock General Hancock arrived on the field and directed the movements for the final stand that was made on East Cemetery Hill. On the report of General Hancock, General Meade decided to order up the re- mainder of the army for a general battle at Gettysburg. Orders were sent out hurrying forward all the troops. The Fifth Corps, after a long and wearisome march, reached Hanover about 5 o'clock in the evening. At this point news of the battle reached us, and we were asked to press forward to the assistance of our comrades at the front. The march was continued and after midnight, the Second brigade turned into a grove, about five miles from the battlefield for a short rest. An incident occurred while on this night march that illustrated the strong attachment and abiding confidence the troops still had for their commander. Word was passed along the line that General McClellan was again in command and awaited the arrival of his old battalions at Gettysburg. This announcement caused unbounded enthusiasm, and to that extent contributed the victory that followed. With the first flush of day the brigade was again in motion, and reached the bat- tlefield about 7 o'clock. The division was massed in a field not far from Wolf's Hill, on the right of our line. We then moved some distance to the left, crossed Rock Creek to the front, and massed in the orchard just above the stone bridge on the Baltimore pike. There was nothing to indicate the terrible contest soon to shake the earth. Everything was quiet until the 386 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. middle of the afternoon. But it was the calm before a storm. About four o'clock the battle opened with unabated fury on the left. The lines of the ■ Third Corps, General Sickles commanding, extended from the Cordori house on the right along the Emmitsburg pike to the peach orchard, then bending back were continued to the base of Round Top. The engagement com- menced with a determined effort to turn the Union left at Devil's Den. Hood's and McLaw'.s division advanced to the attack, and the action rapidly extended along the line until the entire position of the Third Corps was furiously assailed. Reinforcements were called for. General Barnes' division of the Fifth Corps was the first to respond, and moved over the field, left in front, in the direction of the woods near where General Zook's monument now stands. When the head sition when shots were noticed striking our lines from tli" woods to our right and rear. (Jen- eral WofTord's brigade of (Jeorgia troops held the peach orchard road and the elevation at Zook's monument and was firing into our command. Colonel Boyd McKeen, in his report of the First brigade, First division, Second Corps, says: "They were relieved by a brigade (Sweitzer's) of Barnes' divi- sion. Fifth Corps. Passing the relieving brigade by file they were enfiladed by a galling fire," thus showing that the enemy made his appearance im our flank and rear almost immediately after we moved from the [leach orchaid road. The Fourth ^Fichigan and Si.xty-second changed front to the right to meet our enemies in that direction. The brigade was now nearly sur- nninded and in a very perilous position. Attacked in front, right and rear its chances of extricating itself were anything but good. General Barnes e.xclaimed, "There goes the Second brigade, we may as well bid it good-by." But it was not the first tim(> the Second brigade had been in critical posi- tions, and by good judgment and indomitable pluck come out all right. The command was terribly exposed in the open field, while our enemies had the cover of tile woods. The men's blood was u)) and they fought with des- perate resolution. The brigade fell back diagonally across the field, fighting every inch of the way, the command frequently halting and firing as it re- tired. The Fourth Michigan and Sixty-second became mixed up with the enemy and many hand to hand conflicts ensued. Colonel Jeffords of the Fourth Michigan, was run through with a bayonet while gallantly defending the colors of his regiment. When we were engaged at the stone fence a large squad of prisoners had been taken and sent to the rear, and when the regiment became entangled with the enemy the opposing forces could not at times fire into each other for the unarmed captives between the lines. When we emerged from the toils of imiiending capture, broken and cut to pieces, General Crawford led ('olonel McCandless' brigade of Pennsylvania Reserves in a sweei)ing charge, which again cleared the wheatfield. Our brigade took position in support of a battery on the line just to the right of Little Round Top extension, where it remained until the army moved in pur- suit of Lee. The Sixty-second lost heavily during the afternoon of the 2d, particularly in its pa.ssage across the wheatfield. The story of its casualties is chiseled on this marble shaft. It marched to the "Loop" with twenty-six officers and four hundred enlisted men in line and emerged from the wheat- field with twelve oflicers and two hundred and thirty-nine men. Four offi- cers and twenty-four men had been killed, ten oflicers and ninety-seven men wounded and forty men taken prisoners, a loss ratio of fifty-four per cent. of the offic(>rs and forty per cent, of the men. Two of the wounded officers died in a few days afterward, and it is safe to say that not less than fifteen men died from the effects of their wounds. The figures given on this monu- ment are taken from the official records of the War Department, and show a percentage of casualties greater than the famous Light brigade suffered in 388 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. its charge at Balaklava. Lord Cardigan took into action six hundred and seventy-three officers and men, and lost one hundred and thirteen killed and one hundred and thirty-four wounded, total two hundred and forty-seven, or 36 7-10 per cent. Of those who passed through the fight unhurt General Sweitzer had several close calls. His horse was shot under him, and the crown of his hat was laid open by a minie ball. Colonel Hall's tall form was conspicuous in the engagement, moving about with his accustomed cool- ness, directing the manoeuvers of the regiment. He passed the ordeal of the wheat field unharmed, to meet his fate like a gallant soldier in the Wilder- ness. Lieutenant Seitz ran into the enemy's lines at the peach orchard road while trying to communicate with General Barnes. He had his horse shot, and barely escaped capture. But I cannot go into particulars. The officers and men did their whole duty, and the regiment added still another laurel to its wreath of heroic deeds. No point in the extensive lines of Get- tysburg saw fiercer or more continuous fighting than here. This field had been taken and retaken, the lines swaying back and forth repeatedly, during the progress of the contest that afternoon. It has been fitly styled the whirlpool of the battle. When the action opened it was covered with the plumage of waving grain, ready for the harvest, and when twilight gathered over its surface the ripening stalks were trampled into the earth and dyed with the blood of the blue and the gray, and when the light of the moon cast its gentle rays over this gory plain it revealed scores of the pale, up- turned faces of friends and foes, whose only heritage in the glory of the bat- tle was a soldiers' grave. Hundreds of papers have been written on this famous battle, yet the one-thousandth part has not and never will be told. We read of the gallant Meade, justly named the hero of Gettysburg; how ably he marshaled his army and guarded every point on the line, until victory perched on our banners . We read of the death of Reynolds ; of the wounds of Hancock while leading his trusty veterans against the terrible charge of Pickett's division. We read of Warren, who, with the intelligent and prac- ticed eye of a soldier, saw at a glance the importance of Little Round Top, and with the instinct of a chieftain promptly took steps to hold it. We read of scores of other brave and skilful officers who aided in driving the in- vincible veterans of the South, under the so-called ablest general of the age, from our state in hasty retreat, never again to return. While a great deal is due to the brains and valor of the officers, yet the glory of victory should not be ascribed to them alone. The part the rank and file played in the great drama of war is recorded and eulogized. But who among the private soldiers is named? Have the dead been mentioned except in numbers? Have the cripples been referred to except in the aggregate? Yet it was the rank and file that stood the shock of battle and that gave blow, for blow. It was the columns of soldiers that charged the enemy or stood like a rock against fierce assaults. Does history do more with the name of the private soldier than bimdle it up with a thousand others and call the combination a regiment? The only glory the rank and file have is in the honor and repu- tation of their own organization. The spirit of generous emulation that ran through all organizations in the army was the outgrowth of enlightened valor, and is the distinguishing characteristic of the American soldier. Every man took pride in his own regiment and believed it the best and bravest in Pcnufiijlvania at Gettysburg. HSD the armj'. No soldier wlio wore tlu' l)l»ie iind was singed with tiie lire REGIMENT INFANTRY* September 11, ISSO ADDRESS OF COLONEL JOHN A. DANKS M Y COMRADES of the Sixty-third Regiment Pennsylvania Volun- teers: — Very few people (comparatively speaking) attach as much importance to the battle of Gettysburg as really belongs to it. Very few think of it as the Calvary of American Freedom. But such it is in the history of the United States. When we think of humanity as being crushed by sin, and look for a remedy, we begin at the Garden, and find the conclusion at Calvary. When we think and speak of the government of England as threatened with dis- mcMihcrnieiit i.nd ruin, and look for the remedy, we find it at AVaterloo. So, when we think and speak of oppression, class and caste in America, and look for the remedy, we begin at Harper's Ferry, with old John Brown, and find the answer in Pickett's charge at Gettysburg. So we say: For Humanity, Calvary: for England, Waterloo; for America, Gettysburg. AVhat a thrilling recollection it must be to each one of us, that we formed an important part of the army that rescued and saved the Nation. Fur- thermore that we discharged a duty on this line, more than twenty-six years ago, that ha-i been increasing in interest and importance as the yeai's go by. I had the honor to command the regiment in this battle, I there- fore, know whereof I speak, and deliberately say, that never did twenty houi'S witness, or one-fourth of a mile measure, more earnest devotion to the Union, than you rendered here on this line July 2, 1863. When the battle of Gettysburg was joined, the Third Corps in which we were serving was near Frederick, Md. : we then marched to Emmitsburg, Md., stacked arms and were resting, when the word came — the ai-mies are fighting at Gettysburg and General Reynolds is killed — go at once to Gettys- burg; we started at double-quick, we came in here about 8 o'clock on the night of the 1st. We halted for supper just to the right of Little Round Top ; at about ten o'clock that night we were ordered and led here on this line to do picket duty: early on the morning of the 2d, the enemy being in front fired on the right of our line : this continued at intervals until about nine. When a Maine regiment went out in front to test the strength of the enemy at this point, sixm they and we became hotly engaged all along the line. But soon the enemy withdr(>w — four times that day did the enemy cdmc out, deploy a skirmish Hue as tliough they would bi'ing on a general engagement. But you met them promptly and each time they retired. Between four and five o'clock p. m. I was informed by the com- pany commanders that our ammunition was about spent and we would have nothing but the bayonet, should the enemy come again. This report I sent ♦Organized at riftsl)iir};lii Aus"st 1. 1S61. to servo tliroe year.s. Tlic oriRinal nioinbers (oxcopt veterans) wmo mustered out September 9, 1S64, and the veterans and recruits transferred to tbe 99th Penna. and subsequently to the 106th Penna. gsg PEwwsy[V8>, Pcniisi/Jraiiid itl (lil t ifshiirf/. 301 liy Mil (ii-dcrly t" < ii'iinnl 1». I'.. r.iirn>.\ : simih .-i i-t'>;iiii r<'licv<' us, ^ud :i si.ilT (.Hirer f:irne with iiistnictioiis for lue t(i t.ilie tile regiment Jiiul repleiiisli the iiimiuiiiitioii. We cmsscd the ridge ;ind wiieii on the Tiineytown road I noticed our hiig.-Kh' niKJ (lixisjoii hc:i(l(|na iters Hags in our front. We moved into our place, and remained tiiere tiiat iiigiit. Xext morning we took our place in the line just to the right of Mttle Round 'Pop, there we remained until after IMckett's charge, when we were taken at a doiible-ciuick down the line, and halted in front of wher(> Pickett had been repulsed. We re- mained in the line there until the morning of the ."ith when tiie army went in pursuit of the enem.v. Reviewing the time and woiic, I am piciiared to say, surely no man or nation could ask or e.xpect an organization to do better service than you did at Gettysburg in 186.3. I)EDICAT(.H{Y Al>I>Ki:SS ( >F LIKUT. AXlHiKW (i. Wll.I.lA.MS. COMRADES: — The swiftly siieeding days of more than twenty si.v years ha\-e come and gone since first the Sixty-third Regiment Penn- sylvania Volunteers stood in the might and majesty of its loyal manhood in defense of this identical iKU'tion of the Union line of b.-ittle, and to-day W(>, the survivors of tli.it gallant old regiment, have met on this historic held; the field which ni.irk-; the high llood-tide of rebellion: the field against whose every side and flank the impetuous torrent of fratricidal war in all its hellish fury surged : to be rolled buck and sub- merged only when its ridges and its plains, its orchards and its glens, its rocky round tops and its devil's den had been drenched and ran red with the heroic blood of twenty thousand of your comrades, and not even then were the fierce tires of secession quenched on this field until three thou- sand more brave men went down to de.itli and placed their lives, the one most valuable and unmeasurahle oU'eiing that ever was or can be made by iiKut.al man for home and count r,\. upon the Nation's altar. Standing in this presence to-day we all fully realize how ch.inged the scene. "No hostile .■iiiiiic.'< jjatlu i- now Hut atituiiin air arouiui Breathes jieace and jo.v wlicrc once \vc> fouKiit Upon this very sround. When on tlits niouunient we siiw.r What hallowed memories tlirons Our oanse — forever it was riplit Our foes — forever wron«. Forever wrong; all time will point To : witli pride Here freedom triumphed and on tliis fleld Tlie hopes of treason (Iie(l." .Monuments are is old as our race :ind .-ill .along the history of the dim and dusty ages fif the past down to the right and joyous present man 392 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. has been perpetuating the memory of heroic men and deeds in monumental pile and storied urn tnd this inclination comes to the mind of our common humanity but as promptings from and a reflex expression of the great divine original Himself. God ever was and still continues to be a monu- ment buUder. On this field to-day we are reminded by the many monuments, all of which are silently, yet eloquently, proclaiming that affection for and appre- ciation of heroic patriotism and patriotic heroism still survives. We have met again on this once bloody field, after the lapse of so many years of peace and prosperity to perpetuate the memory and render our faint and feeble tribute of praise to the valor of Pennsylvania's soldiers and especially do we meet on this historic spot — the Peach Orchard — to dedi- cate this monument to the memory of the services of our loved and gal- land Sixty-third, than which there was no braver, whose long lists of glorious achievements have never yet been enumerated and the history of which when written will be the history of the Army of the Potomac. And yet it's true on every hand we are reminded that here the brave men of eighteen sister states standing elbow to elbow and side by side most nobly fought and fell. A Grecian philosopher once said "The whole earth is the sepulchre of illustrious men" and the Hon. Edward Everett in his matchless oration at the dedication of yonder national cemetery added "All time is the mil- lenium of their glory." The peaceful gathering here to-day of you, my comrades, but evidences the glorious success of your patriotic service. The Union and all that word implies ; flag and all the privileges and rights it represents ; country and all the hallowed memories and illustrious kinship we claim. All these must have inevitably and forever been engulfed in the whirlpool of rebel- lion, but for the service and sacrifice made by you bronzed and battle- browned veterans and your comrades. And now, my comrades, there remains for us who survive our fallen com- rades the high, the holy diity of here and now resolving that these our dead shaU not have died in vain, but that the cause to which they yielded their full measure of devotion shall forever have our undying fealty. This ground has been consecrated by the blood and death of our comrades; and this monument we now most solemnly dedicate to their memory and in honor of your service, and in its presence with uncovered head and unpraised hand, we pledge our lives in eternal defense of the principles of right and justice, the contest for which has made this field so memorable. We have all reached the meridian of life and many with halting step and silvered locks are far down on the shady side of the mountain, indeed almost in the glades at its base and soon must lay us down at "taps" and bid our last adieu to comrades dear and the loved land we helped to save ; let us see to it then that we so keep step to the music of moral heroism ; so touch elbow to elbow in the march of human happiness ; so stand in the ranks of valiant manhood, presenting a solid front against all the enemies of our race; so to put on the entire armour of Christian soldiers and fight successfully the battles of this present life. Pciiiisi/li-aniii (it tliroo yonrs and was mustered out of service June 9, 1866. 394 Pennsyh-(t)iiieutenant Tippin was the first man to mount the ramparts of the Mexican works at the battle of Molino-del-Rey, King Mills, to wave his sword and lead his men on to victory that so quickly followed; he was twice breveted for gallant and brave conduct in the battles of Contreras, Churubusco, Molino-del-Rey and other battles of that campaign in Mexico. The sword carried by this gallant defender of his country's cause and flag during the campaign in Mexico, has been presented by his widow to A. H. Tippin Camp No. 41, Sons of Veterans, of Potts- town, Pennsylvania, and it bears marks vi battle, a portion of a bullet embedded in the handle which struck it when its owner sprang upon the walls of the fort previously mentioned. The Sons of Veterans have placed this weapon of this dead hero of two wars among their archives of relics, and they prize it as dear to them as was the sword of Bunker Hill to the patriots who wielded it in th(" historic contest of Revolutionary times. Lieutenant-Cohine] Reynolds who was wounded and permanently dis- abled while gallantly leading us comrades upon this bloody and memor- able field, and since deceased, and Major Hawksworth who w^as killed at the battle of Fredericksburg, Virginia, December 13, 1862, and Captain Robert E. Winslow, subsequently lieutenant-colonel, and Captain Michael Fulmer, subsequently major, who is with us to-day, our honored president, some seventy years old, who has passed the medidian of life threescore and ten, full of vigor and manhood, carrying the scars of battle, all saw service in Mexico and displayed their gallant conduct and bravery during that campaign. Many of the line ofHcers and men of whom some fell upon this and other fields of battle in defense of their country and this glorious Union, were all veterans of ^Mexico, and also served during the three-months' service. The defeat of our arms in I'ope's Campaign of Northern Virginia, con- cluding with Chantilly, in 1862, caused the national authorities to summons peremptorily troops which had been mustered. The" Sixty-eighth, our regi- ment, with at that time lying in camp at Frankford, a suburb of the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; though above the minimum, its ranks were not up to the maximum standard and the men were only partially uniformed and equipped and not mustered into the United States service. Colonel Tippin at once responded prom|)tly to the order. The regiment broke camp on the evening of Sei)teinber 1, 1862, and at once proceeded to Washington city where it was mustered into the United States service. The army w^as just falling back to the heights around the National Capital, the regiment was immediately ordered across the Potomac river and went into camp on Arlington Heights, there it was armed and furnished with a complete outfit for an active campaign, and was assigned to Robinson's Brigade, Stoneman's Division, Third Army Corps. Soon after the battle of An- tietam the regiment moved from camp and passed through Georgetown, Pcinisi/lvaiiid (it (l(lfi/shnrn wliiili the rel)el (Jeiier.-ils Slii;irt iiiid Wjule Iliiiiipton witli M I;irj;e fnrce <>{ cnvnliy iii;ide their f.iiii?, when the jirmy again moved under General Burnside, who jtroposed to proceed up the Rappahannock river, and to cross the river and a second time 396 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. offer battle, which proved a great failure, and is known as Burnside's stuck in the mud. For three days we endured unparallelel suffering from the inclement weather and exposure, at the end of which the campaign was abandoned, and we returned to our old camp below Fredericksburg and again went into winter quarters and remainfd there until April 28, except at time when the regiment was sent out to do occasional picket duty. In the movement upon Chancellorsville,. the Third Army Corps was at first marched down the Rappahannock river to the point where they crossed in the Fredericksburg campaign, to make a demonstration as if to cross and offer battle at this point, while General Hooker, with the main body of his army, crossed and effected a permanent lodgment some miles above. When this had been accomplished General Daniel E. Sickles, who had succeeded to the command of the Third Corps, marched it hastily away to rejoin the army, then concentrated at Chancellorsville. We crossed the Rappahannock river on the 1st day of May, 1863, having left camp on the 28th day of April, passing the intermediate time in the operations below Fredericksburg. On the evening of May 1, we were drawn up in column, with the brigade supporting a battery which had opened upon the enemy, that was soou replied to spiritedly with shell. One of our regiment's pioneers was wounded. Here we remained faring the night. The next day we moved into various positions, covering the line of .skirmishers in the operations against the enemy on the left. At evening we retired and remained in position with the brigade. Before the men were fully prepared the next morning the enemy made a vigorous attack on our left and front and the position of our regiment was changed to the extreme right, so as to more carefully cover the battery we were supporting, now firing rapidly; the onset, however, was so rapid and de- termined and the front line having broken, and fallen back in some con- fusion, our regiment was forced to retire with the brigade, after which the brigade was quickly reformed and moved again to the front in column doubled on the center, deploying at the edge of a woods, to the right of our first position, which the enemy now held. We entered and soon engaged him in his rifle-pits, which we charged, and after a sharp and .severe contest we succeeded in taking them. At this point our regiment captured some thirty-five officers and men of the Tenth Virginia Regi- ment, its colors and color guard. During the battle the regiment was always placed in the hottest part of the line and subjected to the severest kind of musketry fire. The Wss sustained by the regiment was very severe. Captain John D. Pawling of Company I, and Captain James ►Shields of Company E, were both mortally wounded. The aiiny then recrossed the river and went into camp at Belle Plain near Aquia Creek where we remained until the 11th day of June, 1863, when we broke camp to enter upon the Gettysburg campaign ; the march was a long and wearisome one, as we were compelled to watch the move- ments of the enemy. At the opening of tlie battle of Gettysburg, July 1, 1863, the Third Army Corps was at Emmitsburg, Mar.vland, moving rapidly forward, reaching the field late at night. After the day's conflict was over as the Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 397 ooluinii rpachod tliis field it went into line of position along a slight ridgo extending diagonally across that open plain between Cemetery and Semin- arj' ridges, connecting with Hancock's Second Army Corps on its right and its left refused at this peach orchard, and stretched obliquely back through that woods to a rocky ravine in front of Round Top, called Devil's Den. The brigade, then commanded by General Charles K. Graham, was placed in position on that part of the line deflecting from the Emmitsburg pike, it stretched away to Round Top. The angle formed by this de- parture was at the point whore this road upon which you now stand leads from the pike to Little Round Top, and in this angle, near the house of John Wantz, which was one of the most exposed parts of the field, our regiment was placed, open to a fire on front and flank, supporting Clark's Battery B, First New Jersey Artillery, which was stationed in the yard in the rear of the AVantz house, just in our front, and being rapidly served aiid dealing out death and destruction to the enemy with the shot and shell they were throwing into their ranks. Many of the men of our regiment assisted the artillerymen to serve the cannoneers with their am- munition . Standing upon this spot, which is the most elevated part of the field, but not sufficiently so to be of any advantage in defense, it was a conspicuous mark for artillery for long range around, and open to the charge of in- fantry. Skirmishing commenced about nine o'clock on the morning of July 2, and gradually increased in severity until the battle opened in earnest. About four o'clock in the afternoon the enemy opened with heavy artillery fire and followed up with infantry, putting in brigade after brigade (en-echelon) , commencing on his extreme left ; it was some time before the infantry attack reached this peach orchard, here where our regiment stood, but the artillery fire bearing upon us was terrific, carrying away men at every discharge. As this was the key to the whole position it was necessary to hold it at all hazard, and the only alternative was to stand and be shot down without the opportunity to reply. In the midst of the fight General Graham was wounded and borne from the field and the command of the brigade devolved upon our gallant old Colonel Tippin. We then advanced into yonder peach orchard, and formed an angle fronting on the pike at the point where you will see that we have erected a white marble shaft. In that orchard we received the enemy's heavy charge and musketry fire; and bravely did the boys of our regi- ment return that fire with telling effect at every volley. During that bloody ordeal our brave color-sergeant was killed, but our flag was not permitted to fall, as the young and brave Color-Corporal Mcl-arnon n>- ceived the flag from the dead sergeant's hands as he was falling, and held it high at the same time waving it and cheering the men on to re- newed vigor ; for such acts of bravery he was subsequently promoted to color-sergeant of the regiment, and faithfully did he discharge his duty and . carry the flag until the close of the war, and he is now present with us to-day. It was a terrible afternoon in that orchard, and we all wen- anxious for reinforcements to come up, as wc were being decimated by their artillery. In that orchard Lieutenant-Colonel Reynolds and Major Winslow were wounded and ten other officers of our regiment were killed 398 Peiinsijlninir report of tlie operations of my regiment in the recent engaiiement at and near (Jett.vslinrj;. On the morning of July 2, I moved my regiment witli the l)rigade to the position assigned us in a large ojien field in tlie re;ir of our line of sliirmisliers, then engaged with the enemy's skirndshers In front. 'IMie lirigade was deployed in line of battle by l)attal:on doul)led on tlie center, my regiment being on tlie left of the line. After remaining in tliis [losition some time, the brigade was moved farther to the front, im- mediately in rear of Clark's Battery, deployed in line of battle, and ordered to lie down. AVe remained in this i)Osition nearly two hours, suffering severly from the destrnctive fire of the enemy's batteries, I'osted on our li'ft and front. I was then ordered to move my regiment forward into a peach orcliard, and fronting a road running parallel with the enemy's front. We had been in this position but a short time when significant movements on the part of the enemy made it evident we were about to be attacked; soon lie advancMl. I ordered the men to reserve their fire until reaching a certain point, when a destrnctive fire was opened, the enemy halted and dropping behind a fence, receiving reinforcements, and ln'avy masses of his infantry coming down on our right, I ordered my command to fall hack to the position in the rear of the batteries, which was done in good order. Here I met Ceneral Craham wlio ordered me to at once engage the enemy coming down on our right flank, which was piomptl.v done under his directions. Here too the gallant general was severly wounded and subsequently I'cinixiilvinihi III (li 1 1 ijshitni. 399 iiimlo prlsdiicr. lIi- ilirlimil any iissi.-.liiinc, niiil diri'ittd \w tip take idniiiiiiiid hihI lluht oil. I suiipoMMl liiiii ulilc In j.'i I to tln' rear, as after clisiiiiiiiiitln^', In- walk'-d wllli iil)parently llttlf tliaicult.v. \V»> hold tlu' position as Iouk as if was possililc to hold it. Tlic artilh-ry haviiiR ro- tlri'd and tlio ranks vi'ry ninidi d killed, and at Mine Run, on the '28th day of No- vember, 1S6.'}. In the entire camiiaign our regiment was given little rest, being almost constantl\' on the iiioxe and suffered considerable loss by sickness and battle. The regiment went into winter ipiarters at Brandy Station near Culpeper, Virginia, whse my eyes and the whole bloody panorama is unrolled before me. I catch the roll of the drum, and the shrill music of the fife; I see the marching columns stretched across sea to lake ; I hear the bullets whistle at the picket line ; I catch the sentry's call ; a line of camp fires stretches oiT across a continent; swords blaze; bayonets bristle, and a mil- lion men are under arms. The Army of the Potomac flings itself again and again against the enemy, night tuins into day in the blaze of the cannonade, and up from the field of blood comes the moans of wounded and dying. I hear the voice of a hundred thousand bleeding lives and broken homes, whence the wail of agony arises; the vision passes, I open my eyes upon a new life, new people, a new nation, disenthralled, regenerated, this by the goodness of Providence and the curing force of time. All the old scars are healed. The guns are silent and moss covered. Well for us and for all of us, and all who come after us, that you and such as j-ou fought. And I say that I count it my highest honor to be connected with those who played such parts in such an army. Peace has been greater than war, the skilful hand of science has brought into use unknown powers of the air, and mysterious forces of the earth, and the lovely hands of art are crowning our country with beauty. The numbers and wealth of our people have doubled, so has our territory, for the condemned deserts of the west turn out to be granaries of bread and pastures of meat for the world, the for- 402 Pcuusijlvdnid at Getiyshnrg. bidden rocks are silver and gold, and under their frowning peaks are found the sublime glories of nature, the pleasure grounds of mankind. The genius of America has united our distant coasts with bands of steel, and planted her feet upon those blue precipices which old explorers used to call the land of the shining mountains beyond the western plains. But, comrades, I am reminded that I am getting away from my duty. The oration of the day has already been delivered by my distinguished friend. I have a plain duty to perform, a duty that might have been placed iu abler hands, but as I have assumed the responsibility, nothing remains but the performance of that duty. Comrade Craighead: Your committee has designated me to present this monument to the (Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association. And, comrades and frit-nds, this grand old regiment, with its war-worn officers who distinguished themselves in more than one war, whose deeds of valor and whose bravey will be handed down to posterity, will live forever. Colonel Tippiu was a born soldier, beloved by his officers and men ; he died as he lived, a faithful soldier, a true gentleman, a kind and loving husband. Lieutenant-Colonel Reynolds, who was shot and wounded on this field, and totally disabled for future service, died in Philadelphia city but a few years ago since, honored by all who knew him for his devotion to his country and to his people. The fearless and no less brave Major Hawksworth, was killed at the Battle of Fredericksburg, Virginia, while gallantly leading his men. Captain Robert E. Winslow and subsequent major and lieutenant-colonel, and Captain Michael Fulmer, subsequent major, all veterans of the Mexican war. Colonel Winslow is still alive. Major Fulmer, the latter — look at the old war-worn veteran bearing the scars of many b.'ttles and with over seventy years of life's battles passed, with all the vigor and manhood of a boy — is with us to-day. But do not have me forget the brave boys who ranked as privates, a braver and more determined and faithful regiment of men never entered the army, and, sir, in presenting to your association this beautiful monu- ment, I do it with a devout reverence and with an undying love for the mem- ory of those brave men who in their youth and manhood offered and gave their lives that thiy country might live. They fell defending and upholding all that that flag represents and embodies ; the armies of the Union and the armies of the Rebellion together, the people, north and south, east and west, can and will mak(> fnr all time to come this rei)ublic that Lincoln died for, a government of the peojde, by the people, and for the people; and now in the name and in behalf of the survivors of the Sixty-eighth Pennsylvania Veteran Volunteer Infantry, Philadelphia Scott Legion Regiment, I have the honor of presenting to your care and keeping this handsome granite monvunent which marks the spot upon this memorial field where this grand old regiment stood unflinching twenty-five years ago, and where their brave comrades fell and gave up their lives upon the altar of their country thnt this glorious Union might be forever perpetuated. J'citnsi/lrdiild nt which has ever blessed the earth, shonld be iireserved and pin'ix'tuatcd in all its beauty, grandeur and great- ness and forev.'r. It is written that '•WlictluT oil tlic si-atTolil liiirli, or in the bntlle's van. The nolili'st phiic lor man to die, is where he dies for man." Is it s.)V 'IMieii I i-laim foi these, niir fallen comrades, that they died in the fure- front of the battle, fur the rights of nmn and in the interest of humanity. Again, it is written that "greater love than this hath no man, th;it In- lay down his life for his frieiul," and who so i)i-oves his love for his friends as the soldier wh(: willingly yields up life, liberty and the pursuit of happi- ness in their interest. Again, I claim for these, our comr.ndes, that from the gloomy beginning of the struggb', in 1861, until its final and glorious termination in 186.1, they daily olfered themselves to death and to Clod, with that sublime end in view. Does any nnin (piestion thisV Then to him I would say, "Be- hold a country, which tnider (Jod's pi-o\idence, has been and is iniw the refuge of (lod's poor, tin" ojiiiressed of all nations — preserved from de- struction, let us lioi)e forever. Behold the arch enemy' of the liberties of this and of ill nations and peoples, utterly discomfited and thwarted in her vile purpose of disruiiting, destroying this government of the peoi)le, for the people, and by the (leople, who, not .as of yore, b.v brazen armed inter- vention in oiir alVairs, hut this time by most wily and insidious means, did all in her piwer to ruin and make it a deiiendency of hers and plunder and impoverish its people. Of course, I allude to the government of Eng- land. And again, behold a hideous crime atoned for, a foul blot wiped out forever — in blood, it is tiin' — but wi[ied out forever by the enfranchise- •Orfrnii'Zed at Philadeliihia, Ausust IS, 1861, to sprve three years. On the expiration of its term of service the orijrinnl iiienilier.s (except veterans) were mustered out and the orBauization composed of veterans and recruits retained in service until July 1, lS6o, '^•hen it was mustered out. 404 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. inent of over four millions of bondsmen, slaves set free, a dissevered people, reunited, the blessings of peace restored." Oh I surely, my dear comrades, living and dead, it was a holy cause you battled for. Yea, and God's holy ones, the priests of God, were with us. They blessed our ai-ms and the bands that bore them. They accom- panied us to the field and daUy ministered to our spiritual wants, and by word and example did what they could to encourage us and bless our efforts — God bless them, dear Fathers Martin, Paul E. GUlen, Corby, Wil- lets, McKee, Dillon, and a host of others, God be with them. Comrades, it is also written that it is a wholesome and a holy thought to pray for the dead. Forget not this duty, this day nor any other day of the time that is left you. Pray then to the Lord of Hosts, the God of Battle, for your dead, for all the dead, whose souls rebaptized in their blood, went up to Him amidst scenes of strife and carnage during those dire yeai-s of war and its attendant calamities. They may need our prayers — who can tell? Pray then, most ardently, I beseech you, for thfe soul of that heroic soldier. Colonel Dennis O'Kane, who fell near the spot now marked by our monument, where, but a short time before, he stood grimly smiling at the stubborn resistance offered by the sturdy men under his command, to the fierce onslaught of Pickett's men, and forget not the other brave officers and enlisted men, who, to the number of one hundred and forty-seven, fell here beside him, and whose unparalleled bravery and stubborn courai^e here tossed back the highest, mightest wave of the Re- bellion . Nor would I have you forgot those of our comrades, who fell on other fields than this, for Some fell on far-off fields of fame. Some here sank down to rest, And the dear land they loved so well, Now folds them to her breast. All nearly gone, yet still lives on The memory of those who died, And true men, like you men, Remember them with pride. Comrades, in thus honoring the dead, you do honor to the living. You honor yourselves, and that beautiful monument will tell the story to genera- tions yet unborn, of your heroic deed, and the deeds, the heroism of the comrades who have gone on to "fame's eternal camping grounds" before you. They lived with honor — they died with honor ; be it yours to follow their example. And now, dear comrades, as a part of the duty assigned me on this occasion, I will proceed to give our hearers a brief glimpse of the early history of the regiment. -^ Long before grim-visaged civil war reared his horrid front in this our land, affrighting the inhabitants thereof, there existed in the city of Phila- delphia, State of Pennsylvania, a body of Irish-American citizen soldiery, known as the Second Regiment Philadelphia County Volunteers. It was numbered the Second Regiment, Second B>"igade, and belonged to the First Division Pennsylvania Militia. Pennsylvaniii at Gettysburfj. 405 The matorial uf which it was cmnposi-d (tlio otliccrs and men) was re- cruited or oamo from the humbler walks of life iu the great city. They were mostly hardy sons of toil ; men who earned their bread by the sweat of their brows. But very ambitious in a military point of view, and very patriotic, always ready to obey the orders of their officers ; always ready to defend the authorities and assist thorn, whether national, state or city; ever ready to shed their blood, if necessary, in defense of the honor and integrity of their adopted country, wiiile cherishing an ardent love for the land of their birtli, not because of the nationality of the officers and men, and the names of the companies of which it was composed. It was fre- quently, and truth compels me to add, derisively styled the Irish brigade, and there are here, to-day, some who can look back with shame and sorrow, to the time when hisses, derisive cries and shouts of contempt were freely bestowed on us and on more than one occasion something harder, in the shape of bricks and stones, fell thick and fast in the ranks of the organiza- tion, as it marched through the streets of that city — the city of brotherly love . But, thanks to God, and the services rendered by them and kindred organizations of which there were many in the late war, such senseless bigotry, such mean and contemptible prejudice obtains no more in this broad land. And, oh, my countrymen. Irishmen, what a debt of gratitude you owe to those, our comrades, to the brave men of our race, who, to the number of one hundred and forty-four thousand (see Professor Gould's statistics) went into the field in defense of our adopted country and made such a glorious record there. Nor does the abrve number include the tens of thousands of Irishmen's sons and their immediate descendeuts who took part in the strike on the side of the government. At the outbre.ik of the war the above organization was altered, as follows: For certain cogent reasons. Colonel Conroy resigned and by the advice and on the recommendation of the brigade commander. General John D. Miles, Joshua T. Owen was elected to fill the vacancy; D. Heenan remained lieutenant-colouel : James Harvey, beaten in the race for the majority, re- signed and organized a company for Max Einstein's regiment. Dennis O'Kane, then captain of Company C, was elected major, and James O'Reilly, fourth sergeant of Company C, was elected captain of said com- pany: in this order the regiment entered the field as the Twenty-fourth In- fniitrv Pennsylvania Volunteers for three-months' service under the call of the President for seventy-five thousand men. The regiment faithfully performed all duties assigned it, and was one of the two regiments who listened to the appeal of General Patteison to remain in the field after its service had expired until reinforcements could arrive to defend the upper Potomac, although over two hundred of the men were shoeless and with underwear for breeches. Mustered out August 9, 1861, it was immediately reorganized for three- years' service as the Secoud Regiment of Baker's Brigade, afterwards known as the Sixty-ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers. It would have been known as the Sixty-eighth but freby he multiplied the force of your fire many times your numbers, and by so placing his right behind wnlls as to enfilade the advancing mass ; had not the one piece of cannon been seized by the aid of your infantry, and run into the angle of wall to be loaded to tlie muzzle with broken sliells. balls and bayonets, hurling its deadly contents into the staggering mass at a close range ; had not your 414 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. brothers of the Sixty-ninth wheeled to face the breach opposite, and take the foe in flank, while the Seven tj'-second and a part of the One hundred and sixth advanced to meet his front — what might have been the result at that weak center? These unique and terrible resources might well have astonished and broken the hearts of exhausted manhood. They exhibited the genius of war in concentrating on strong points, and opening a trap to choke in a defile. The God of battles alone can know why the center of our army was not pierced on that day. But we now know that it was the second time in the history of the war that the Army of the Potomac owed to the Phila- delphia Brigade the safety of its center. The fact that less than a hun- dred Confederates crossed that stone wall proves that the force of the charge was broken by the cross-fire beyond, and these could well be cared for by the reserve of the brigade. Bachelder's map shows the great space between your brigade and that on your right, the thinnest of the line. You claim only to have done your duty, but the time, place and opportunity were yours. God, in his all-wise providence, decided events. We are now united, never again to be divided; our Union is cemented with our blood. Those who fell arc honored as heroes : those who remain are brothers in arms, dedicating here mementoes of valor, not of strife. I met recently an officer, a colonel, here. He said he started to ride at General Armistead, to overthrow him, and prevent the men from shooting him. This was valor in strife, honorable warfare, so dift'erent from political strife, which never forgives its own wrong-doing. The Philadelphia Brigade fraternizes with Pickett's Division. They recognize each other's bravery and respect each other's fame. The world will applaud both alike, and history will record their deeds together. This memorial of a regiment's deeds is a memento-mori of those who fell on both sides, and will be a guide mark on the route to fame for the future American soldier. The fortunate few who fought here that day. must wear the wreath of greatest glory, for the most conspicuous hand-to-hand encounter. That honor is shared by the Seventy-first Pennsylvania Volunteers, as a member of the Philadelphia Brigade, which received the force of the gallant charge of Pickett's Division. It is not invidious to speak of this regiment and that brigade, for it was the key of the position, and it was the fate of war. Other regiments and other brigades did their duty, and assisted in the fight; but here was the point of attack, here the rain of shot and shell centered, and foil in torrents long before the charge. Here is the historic spot, and around it a halo of glory will ever cluster, and the aureole encircle the brows of those who fought, with the light of undying fame. It is fiat justitia that Pennsylvania's sons should here defend their native soil. Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 415 ADDRESS OF BRIGADIER-GENERAL ISAAC J. WISTAR. (^ OMRADES and friends : — Upon me has been conferred the honor of delivering this completed monument to the custody and pious care of the Battlefield Memorial Association. We hope it may endure while these surrounding hills shall stand, not simply to mark for posterity this spot on which such momentous events transpired, but as a memorial from us few survivors to commemorate the far greater number of our glorious dead. You must give me a minute to recover myself. I cannot look on your small array — pitiful indeed in numbers, though in nothing else — without contrasting it with the numerous and gallant body I once led, and the feeling is too much for me. Your regiment, the Seventy-first of Pennsylvania, was mustered in on the 16th of May, 1861, by a captain of engineers, who afterwards became one of the greatest and most distinguished soldiers of our country, and whose great fame and reputation are among the most precious possessions of his fellow-soldiers and countrymen. General William F. Smith. It served its term in the Second Corps of the Army of the Potomac, but I will not enter on its history, which is well-known to every gallant soldier of that army. It was entitled to be mustered out on the 16th of May, 1S6-1, when the army was locked in deadly embrace with the brave Army of Northern Virginia, but at the call of its corps commander cheerfully re- mained and participated in the bloody assaults at Cold Harbor, where an historian has justly said that the Second Corps suffered losses from which, though it recovered and continued in service till the last day of the war, it was never afterwards exactly the same body it had been. I cannot speak to you with calmness. If you think I can or ought to look on the scanty and battered remnant of your once splendid array un- moved you are wrong. I cannot do it. Enough, however, have been said here by far better orators, though one hundred times as much would be inadequate to express the reminiscences and solemn thoughts which this historic spot and our dwindled ranks of scarred and battered survivors send surging through our breasts and welling from our eye. I cannot look into your faces and speak with steady voice. I can say no more now, but will express one single sentiment which I believe will reach all of our hearts. That while life remain for this small remnant, we may every one of us, till our last breath, continue to cherish for our friends and comrades, affection, love and personal friendship, and to share with our gallant enemies of long ago — enemies, thank God, no longer — peace, concord and fellowship under one common flag forever more. 416 Peiinsijlvonki at Gettyshurg. DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 72^ REGIMENT INFANTRY* July 4, 1891 ADDRESS OF PRIVATE JOHN REED FRIENDS and comrades: — The war is over, your legal contest is at an end. It becomes my duty as chairman of the monument committee of the Seventy -second Regiment to make a few remarks before plac- ing the monument in your care. In 1887, the State of Pennsj'lvania de- termined to erect monuments to mark the spots where each Pennsylvania command was engaged in the battle of Gettysburg. The legislature passed an act appropriating $1,500 to each regiment, and the Governor was required to appoint live commissioners to co-operate with five survivors of each com- mand, in the selection of a design and location of the monument. Your committee selected a design which was approved by the Commission ; it was a typical soldier of the day, a youth, for you will remember, that at the or- iginal muster of your regiment, 1,485 names were on your rolls, 1,200 of whom were under the age of twenty-one years. It is clothed in the uniform of which you were so proud, that of the Fire Zouaves of Philadelphia. The attitude of the figure is that of a soldier clubbing his musket to illustrate the closeness of the struggle that had taken place in this angle on the 3d day of July, 1863. When the location was selected, it became necessary to bring ample proof that the site would be historically accurate. This has been done, and the Commission were convinced beyond a doubt that the Seventy- second were in line during the cannonading of the rebels sixty yards to the left and rear of this spot, and when the enemy forced the troops from the first line of battle, you marched by the right flank imtil you nearly reached the north wall, faced to the front and engaged the foe. From that point you advanced fighting down to this wall having men killed and wounded in the advance, but in order to conform to the rules of the Memorial x\ssociation, the position of your monument was agreed to be twenty feet from the wall . Some unauthorized persons protested, and when your committee attempted to dig for a foundation, your chairman was arrested and held to bail for trespass. Then your legal battle began. I would say here, comrades, that yon were fortunate in the selection of your counsel, for had your committee hunted the country they could not have found more true and able gentlemen than Captain W. W. Ker, Major W. White Wiltbank of Philadelphia and J. C. Neely of Gettysburg. The two former, veterans of the late war, gave their time and talents to your case without compensation. Your counsel filed a bill in equity asking for an injunction restraining them from interfer- ing with us and the supreme court decided in our favor. But our troubles had not ended.- They said they could prove that the Seventy-second Regi- ment never fought in the angle. We asked that a master be appointed to take testimony, which was done, and the learned W. Arch McLean of Get- *Organize(l at riiiladelphia, August 10, ISGl, to serve throe years. It was mustered out August 24, 1S64, by reason of expiration of term of service. Poinsyluania at (icttyshiirq. 417 tysburg was chosen, and after hearing the testimony, decided the case ac- cording to the evidence and hnv. They were not satisfied but carried the case again to the supreme court who promptly sustained the master and the lower courts. And here ended the legal strife that has lasted so long. Comrades, in your struggle in this angle on July 3d, 1863, the God of bat- tles was with you, in your legal contest the Goddess of justice smiled upon you. I now present this monument to the Survivors' Association of the Seventy-second Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers and the good citizens of Pennsylvania of whom you form a part ; educate your children to guard it with a loving care and bv the will of God it will stand while the nation lives. ADDRESS OF BREVET-.AIAJOR WM. W. WILTBANK. COMRADES:— The State directed that the three commissioners ap- pointed by the Govei-nor should co-operate with the committee of three to be appointed by you in selecting the site of this monument ; and you were fortunate in all the stages of the action after that, because your claim, that you and your comrades did your best fighting here, was contested by others, and by you made good, before the statue was erected ; and thus wc may heed no criticism of the truth of this firm and lasting mark of valor and victory. Of all the regiments that fought on this wide field, in the battle that saved the Union, it so happens that the location of yours has the singu- lar glory of an approval of the judiciary as well as of the executive ; and the soldier who now fights here in bronze, shall stand forever under the protec- tion of the decree of the eminent officers of this country, ratified by the high- est court of the State; a decree that here you did your greatest work, and that no' man or body of men may gainsay it history and the law has placed this efiigy, and Pennsylvania protects it by her writ of perpetual admonition. You have thus, to-day, done your duty valiantly to your home, as you and your comrades did your duty in the fight, more than a quarter of a century ago, to your sovereign, the good republic. How many of you remain with us? And has a new generation come here with you? There were orphans, widows, the childless and brotherless made in melancholy hosts by the reap- ing of this field in the elder time. Thousands of men fell down. If their shades may, by the divine order, hear in symbols the well-known word of command, and obey an impulse that shall move their souls through the hap- piness of their immortality, the dead in body are alive in spirit about you now, perhaps in line of steady march from the cluster of short wood yonder, to take up their position ; perhaps in battle array, to anticipate the close con- flict that has since told them all its secrets, and it may be to live again in the hand-to-hand dispute tiU the brilliant moment of death. Those of you who have the lasting faith must now rest sure that it is a blessed thing to die for one's country, that the God of battles promotes to high places the servants who for him pass through the valley of darkness. Our ancestors of the Revo- lution created a nobility that has bred millions of sturdy men and women ; and these in turn gave us for our vindication, the strength, energy., daring 418 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. audacity; the irrepressible and swift execution, that made, and shall ever show, the hardy character of these sleepers ere they slept. There are three thoughts that your experience has brought to you no doubt, and that we may for a few minutes entertain now. Had you failed in the time in which the fate of Pickett's force was decided, so that the bloody angle was held against you a small part of an hour, say for only a twelfth of an hour, then the day would have been lost. It is true that other regiments, at other places in the line, were opened upon, under like attack; but at this place the hardest blows were given, the bloodiest and most violent attempt was made. From one hundred and fifteen to one hundred and fifty guns of the enemy concentrated upon you their shot and shell ; and a whole army marched across that plain from the westward, firing as it moved, to throw itself upon you . Your second thought is of glory ; one of your own heroes has written of your colors, that they were "held aloft till victory was won." That grand work was done by men whose names shall ever be re- membered. And after the sense of achievement has stirred you, and the ex- citement of the great battle has subsided ; after the pressure upon us of some struggle in our present days of quiet life , all of us know the final musing ; the illustrious and the unknown alike must go to earth. Whilst it is right that you should mourn the loss that you have had, it is natural and good that you should be proud, and in quick humor of content hereafter, as you see what you have done for your fellows, and what a heritage you have secured for the young and the young to succeed them. As one said of the ancient soldiers, our heroes were taken away from their glory, not from their fear. So pass the memory of their glory to your chil- dren, that these may live in prosperity, self-respect and peace. ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM W. KER. COMRADES: — The volunteer firemen of the city of Philadelphia were patriotic, intelligent and brave. You were fit and worthy representa- tives of that organization. When you offered yourself to the Gov- ernor of our State, you were young, strong and inured to hardship and dan- ger. No better material could be found in the world from which to form an army. You were mustered into the service of the United States on August 10, 1861, and Colonel D. W. C. Baxter was your first commander. Ofiicially you were designated as the Seventy-second Regiment Pennsylvania Volun- teers, but familiarly you were called "Baxter's Fire Zouaves." You were assigned to duty in the Second Corps in the Army of the Potomac, and from March, 1862, your fortunes and your fame were identified with that gallant corps. The siege of Yorktown was a series of engagements: the battles at Fair Oaks, on May 31, and June 1, 1862. were followed by Peach Orchard, Savage Station, Glendale, Malvern Hill, Chautilly, Antietam, Fredericks- burg and Chancellorsville. You participated in them all. You gained in them experience, honor, credit and renown. You were tried and trusted veterans of the Union Army. Pennsylvania at Getti/shnr(/. 419 On the 1st daj' of July, 1863, you numbered twenty- three officers and four hundi-ed and thirty-five men. You formed part of the Second Brigade of the Second Division of the Second Corps. That was the famous "Philadel- phia Brigade," commanded by that equally famous soldier, Brigadier-Gen- eral Alexander S. Webb. He was leading you on to (rottysburg, to drive the invadinu: enemy from your native State. As we stand here to-day, our thoughts carry us back to. the 1st, 2d and 3d days of July, 180."?. For twenty-eight yeai's summer has succeeded summer, yet the scenes and occurrences of tho.se days are as vivid and bright as though it were but yesterday. They pass before you in panoramic view. You recall the weary march from the Rappahannock, the crossing of the Po- tomac at Edwards' Ferry, the kind and hospitable reception at Union town, the halt at Taneytown on July 1, the sad news of the death of Reynolds and defeat of the First and Eleventh Corps, the midnight march to Gettys- burg, the forming of the line of battle on the morning of July 2, the attack by the enemy in the afternoon, the loss of Brown's Battery, your counter- charge to the Emmitsbui'g road, the recovery of Brown's guns, the wounding of Colonel Baxter, the reforming of your lines, the little spring in the rear where you filled your canteens and cooked your coffee, your restless sleep behind your stacked rifles, and the bright and glorious breaking of the morn- ing of the day of July 3. Let us pause here, for the scene approaches the reality. Here again you see the same low stone fence. It is angle-shaped — something like a huge letter Z traced upon the ground, only the angles are right angles — the bot- tom line extending towards Cemetery HUl on the right, the center line run- ning some two hundred and sixty feet to the front, and the front line reach- ing towards Little Round Top on the left. Out in front of these angles are two companies of the One hundred and sixth Pennsylvania, deployed as skir- mishers. Behind the angles are posted Cushing's Battery and your Phila- delphia Brigade. Along the rear line of the fence are eight companies of the Seventy-first Pennsylvania, their right connecting with Arnold's Battery and their left resting at the corner of the angle ; the center line of the fence, from corner to corner of the angle, is unoccupied ; along the front line of the fence are the other two companies of the Seventy-first, their right close up in the corner ; then to their left the fence is again unoccupied for the dis- tance of two hundred and seventy-four feet ; and then comes the right of the Sixty-ninth Pennsylvania. There, to the rear of the front fence, forming a line parallel with the rear fence, is Battery A of the Fourth United States Artillery — the renowned "Cushing's Battery" — with the muzzles of its guns pointing over the front fence at the unoccupied space between the right of the Sixty-ninth and the left of the two companies of the Seventy-first. There, behind the battery, and two hundred and seventy feet behind the front fence, is your Seventy-second Regiment, in line of battle to support the battery. And there, between you and the battery, is General Webb, slowly pacing up and down, keeping careful Avatch over his little brigade. This is j'our position at high noon. The Confederate batteries suddenly open fire. Every gun is hurling a missile into the ranks. The Union artil- lery replies. There you lie with your faces close to the ground. The storm of iron hail is flying around you, but you are helpless and unprotected. The 420 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. air is filled with flying shot and bursting shells, and the roar drowns all other sounds. The crash is blinding, and the shock is deafening. The cannoneers are falling at their posts, and Cushing's battery is fast being disabled. For an hour and a quarter, and the firing ceases, first on the Union side, then on the Confederate side. The first part of the great struggle is over. Now the Confederate line of battle appears, moving rapidly over the field. They cross the Emmitsburg road, and you see their faces. They are Pick- ett's men, the flower of the Southern army. Again the artillery opens, and cannon and musketry are mingled in a deafening roar. The Confederates never falter, never waver. On they come, confident of victory. They are led by Armistead. He is seeking a place to break through the Union lines. He sees Cushing's disabled battery, the unoccupied fence, and urges his men rapidly towards it. The skirmishers of the One hundred and sixth run to the rear, and are hastily formed on your left flank. The two companies of the Seventy-first retired from the front angle, and join their regiment at the rear. The right of the Sixty -ninth swings back on its center. Cushing's cannoneers are piled among the ruins of their disabled guns ; Sergeant Fuger and half a dozen of the men are all that are left ; one gun alone remains ; it is loaded with can- ister, and Cushing, Fuger and their men are around it; they move it to the front, closer to the fence, and take their places beside it. The fence in the front angle is wholly unoccupied. There is nothing to check the Confederate advance, save only that lone cannon and the heroic men beside it. The Confederates reach the fence. Armistead jumps over it. Twelve hundred of his men follow him. They rush upon the gun. A sheet of flame from its muzzle, a deafening report, the brave young lieutenant falls lifeless upon the ground, and Cushing's Battery is silenced forever. The Confed- erates have captured the angle. The Union army is cut in two at its center. The Confederates wave their flags in triumph, and again press forward. There you still lie — three hundred and sixty of you — crouching close to the ground. You know that your time has now come. You see the enemy ad- vancing upon you in overwhelming numbers. You know that alone and un- supported you must meet the attack. Your hearts are filled with bitterness, and you are eager for the fray. I'^ou look to General Webb for the expected command. Y'ou see his lips moving, but can hear no sound. He points his sword to the right, then waves it towards the enemy. You are well-trained soldiers, and understand his signs. You know that he wants you to march by the right face closer to the Seventy-first in the rear; then face to the left, and charge down upon the enemy. Y'ou spring to your feet. Away go haversacks and canteens. You face to the right, run quickly forward to the Seventy-first, and face again to the left. Your courage is contagious. Some brave men of the Seventy-first and One hundred and sixth, unbidden, jump into line with you on your flanks. There stand the enemy, their bayonets bristling and their rifles smoking. They are waiting for you — for this hand- ful of men against such fearful odds. One savage yell that rises above the din of battle, one wild and tumultuous rush, and you are upon them, dis- cliarging your rifles in their faces, beating their bayonets from their gims, and tearing their guns from their hands. With the ferocity of madness you leap upon them, clutch them by their throats, bury your bayonets in their bodies and hurl them to the earth. Mounted on their prostrate bodies, the (/ /, H!!fMAbi?A)iTRy Pennsylvania at (Irtti/shiirfi. 421 butts of your guns descend relentlessly, crushing them down before you Slowly they retire, surging back into the corner in the angle. Their colors are still flying. They are yet unconquered. A color bearer plants the flag of Vir- ginia at the fence, and his comrades are rallying around it; like a tiger Mc- Cuen springs upon him, and wrenches the colors from his grasp. A short struggle, a terrific blow, and Mcl*>ride is waving the second flag. A thrust of the bayonet, a crushing blow on the head, and two aouaves are struggling to reach the rear with two other flags. The colors of the enemy are cap- tured. The Virginians make a desperate rush for their colors. Again you are upon them with the fury of demons. Again your guns and your bayo- nets deal death and destruction in their ranks. They fall before you in great piles, wounded and dead. Armistead has fallen at the feet of your color bearer. Their leader is gone, their colors are lost. Disheartened and dis- mayed, they drop their arms. Eight hundred of them surrender. Four stand of colors, and eight hundred prisoners. Every Confederate who had crossed the fence is dead, wounded or captured. Not a man of them has es- caped. The Confederate army is cut in tw-o. Away to your right and to your left they fly before your victorious comrades. The battle is over. The ground is covered with the wounded, the dying and the dead. From the front fence to the center, the bodies of your zouaves lie close and thick. Sixty-two of them are dead, one hundred and forty-six are wounded and two are missing. Two hundred and ten of your brave comrades have ceased to answer at your roll call. One hundred and fifty of you are left. To this place, this unknown spot, you have given name and fame. It is re- corded in history "The Angle at Gettysburg." DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 73^ REGIMENT INFANTRY* September 12, 1889 ADDRESS OF COLONEL WILLIAM MOORE C(»MMANDK)R and comrades: — It is a great satisfaction to the monu- ment committee of this organization to now bring the labors of the committee to a close, by turning over to you and to the association this monument. It gives us pleasure, because while the labors of the com- mittee in getting up the monument were arduous, and in securing for it the position which it now occupies were still more so, our every effort has re- sulted in a successful termination. In history, the heroic action of the Seventy-third Regiment at the battle of Gettysburg remains unmentioned. At that time, myself, its colonel, had the misfortune to be confined in a hospital, suffering from a wound through the •Organized ;it fbiladelphla, Septoinbor 19, 1S61, to serve three years. On tlie expiration of its term of service the original members (except veterans) were mu.stered ont and the organization composed of veterans and recruits retained In service until July 14, 1865, when it V, as mustered out. 2S 422 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. lung received in the battle of Chancellorsville . The regiment was without a single field officer. All had been killed or wounded in previous battles. Consquently no official regimental report of the services performed by our regiment in this battle was ever forwarded to army headquarters, or trans- mitted to the department in Washington. By strenuous exertions we pro- cured testimony and evidence, among them letters from General Coster, who commanded the brigade to which our regiment belonged, and from Colonel Weidrich, who commanded the battery, and sworn affidavits from officers and comrades of the Twenty-seventh Pennsylvania Volunteers, and from members of our own regiment, and others, and were thereby enabled to con- vince the State Commissioners of the justice of our claim to erect our monu- ment on this spot; and, in addition, we have been permitted to place upon the face of the monument a bronze bas-relief, representing the heroic action of the regiment in repulsing the attack of the Louisiana Tigers, and, with the assistance of the cannoneers and other troops, recapturing Weidrich's Battery, thereby greatly assisting in making the battle of Gettysburg the glorious victory that drove- the rebels from the soil of our beloved State. May future historians do justice to the Seventy-third Regiment Pennsylvania Vol- unteer Infantry. And now, in the name and on behalf of the committee, I have the honor to present to you, this, your monument. ADDRESS OF PRIVATE GEORGE T. R. KNORR, OF THE SECOND MARYIAND INFANTRY. THE grand old Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to-day honors itself in honoring those, alive or dead, who, in 1863, with the aid of the loyal sons from other States, north, south, east and west, drove from her .soil the invading hosts. Twenty-six years after the repulse was made, and while many of those who participated in it are still numbered among her citizens, the State erects these monuments to mark the spot upon which each regiment, composed of her sons, performed its bravest work upon her own soil. Standing upon this hill, within a short distance of the spot upon which the martyr President delivered his sublimely eloquent address of dedi- cation in 1863, and upon which only a few months earlier the heroes who bared their breasts as a barricade between our country and its foes, were receiving the shock of advancing foemen, we appreciate the fact that we are upon holy ground, though none of us, save those who were present at the battle, can conceive the magnitude of the struggle, the scenes of carnage here enacted and the sacrifices here offered up on the altar of liberty and union. Our special portion of the ceremonies of the day is the dedication of this monument to perpetuate the memory of the service rendered by the Seventy-third Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, in the great battle fought upon this field, July 1, 2, and 3, 1863. Pennsylvania at Getty shurg. 423 In erecting a monument on this historic battle-ground, nearly every foot of which has been consecrated to liberty and union by individual deeds of heroism, and rendered sacred by a baptism of blood, it is fitting that some reason be given for such erection. It is my pleasant duty to-day to give the reasons for the erection of this stone, and the allotment of this position for it by the Board of Commis- sioners. In a circular from the Commission, we are informed that a full history of the command is not expected to be given to-day, but this regiment not having received any credit for its services here, in reports of the battle on file in the War Department, it is necessary to give some outline of its previous history ; the reasons for its not receiving credit in the reports referred to, and the evidence on which this position for the erection of the monument was granted by the Commission. The Seventy-third Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, Colonel John A. Koltes, was recruited in Philadelphia, entered the service Sep- tember 19, 1861, and was immediately attached to the Army of the Po- tomac, with which it served several mouths. In the spring of 1862, it was ordered to West Virginia, but in August of that year was reassigned to the Army of the Potomac, and participated in the second battle of Bull Run, August 30, 1862, where its colonel was killed, nearly one-half its company oflicers were killed or wounded and the rank and file suflfered a corresponding loss. At the battle of Chancellorsville, so disastrous to the Union arms, this regiment, then a part of Buschbeck's celebrated, brigade, was the first to make a stand against Stonewall Jackson's victorious army that was pur- suing Schurz's Division, which had become panic-stricken and was retreat- ing. In this engagement the losses in the regiment were again large. Captain Harry Giltinau, of Company K, being killed, and Colonel William .Moore and Major Strong, and a number of the company oflicers being among the wounded. The heavy casualties in these two engagements left the regiment without a field officer, and every company in it depleted in numbers. The rem- nant of the regiment, three hundred and thirty-two strong, under com- mand of Captain Daniel F. Kellcy, was in Coster's First Brigade, Stein- wehr's Second Division, Howard's Eleventh Army Corps, and on the morn- ing of July 1, 186;?, left Emmitsburg, Maryland, for this field, arriving at the junction of the Emmitsburg and Taneytown roads shortly after noon. The First Corps, which precceded the Eleventh on the road, was marched to the left, and formed a battle line beyond Seminary Ridge. The Eleventh Corps started through the town to form on its right, reaching round to the almshouse. Before the entire corps had passed through the town, re- verses were met with at the front, and a column of rebel troops was seen approaching on the Hanover road with the intention of dividing the command. Orders were given for the c»irps to retire to this side of the town, and while the batteries of the division, by command of General von Stein wehr, opened fire upon the enemy, the Seventy-third Regiment was deployed across the Emmitsburg and Baltimore roads, facing north, protect- 424 Pennsylvania at Gettyshiirg. ing the corps in its retreat through the town to near where we stand to- day. Bates' history says of this service: As the rear of the Union force was retiring from the town, closely followed by the enemy, the Seventy-third was ordered forward, and charged through the orchard just below the cemetery, chocking the pursuit and occupying the houses on either side of the Baltimore pike. A brisk fire completely swept all the approaches and checked the enemy's advance. The fire from the houses occupied commanded the streets and tops of the buildings in the town, and protected the cannoneers of Steinwehr's artillery on the heights above. Late in the evening, when the regiment had been stationed on Cemetery Hill, a general oflBeer rode up and inquired if there was a Pennsylvania regiment on the hill. An officer of this regiment responded, "Yes, here is the Seventy-third." Which answer was followed by the order, "Well, get your men in line, make a reconnaissance and ascertain the position of the enemy and how much of the town is occupied !" The order was promptly obeyed, the regiment advancing on the town in the following manner: Companies A. F and D through the gardens and alleys east of Baltimore street ; Companies E and H up Baltimore street ; Companies B, C and K on the left of Baltimore street, and through the wheatfield ; while Companies G and I, acting as a reserve, occupied what is now called the Battlefield Hotel. At the firing of a pistol by Captain Kelley, the signal agreed upon, the men advanced to a point beyond the old tanyard, where they were received with a well-directed volley of musketry by the enemy, who were posted in houses and the neighboring wheatfields. Several brave fellows here met their death. The object of the recon- naissance being accomplished, according to instructions, the regiment re- tired to its former position to take what rest could be obtained to prepare the men for the work of the morrow. On the morning of July 2, the regiment was posted in the old cemetery as a support to the batteries on the hill. There it remained, watchful but inactive, until near dusk, when a large force of rebels, with the famous Louisiana Tigers in the advance, made a daring and impetuous charge upon the batteries posted on the right on East Cemetery Hill. Before charging, the enemy had advanced cautiously under cover, of the houses of the town and the steep declivity of Cemetery Hill, and the movement was so sudden that they were already among the guns of the first battery (Wiedrich's and advancing on the second (Ricketts') when the Seventy-third discovered them, and with the Twenty-seventh Penn- sylvania Regiment rushed to the rescue. The hand-to-hand struggle, which is so graphically pictured in the beautiful bronze on the monument, then occurred, the regiments mentioned holding their ground and pre- venting the turning of the batteries until reinforcements arrived, when what remained of the Louisiana Tigers retreated down the hill, having made the last charge, as a distinct command, which history records for that organization of intrepid fighters. After the repulse, a new line of battle .was formed, in expectation of another attack, and several pieces of artillery were placed at the head of Baltimore street near the cemetery, so as to command the approaches from the town. The Seventy-third was sent in support of these batteries, and stood by them until the morning of the 3d, when they were again sent to the old cemetery to support the batteries stationed there. Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. 425 Bates' history says of the Seventy-third's third day iu the battle: t ()n the 3d, tbe regiment remained" in tlie iiosition held during the previous evening and in the afternoon, while the fi'arful cnunonnde was in progress which preceded the final struggle, it was exjosed to the lire of the enemy's guns from a circuit of two or three miles. The meu were lying among the graves, with two hundred guns trained upon them, the shot and shell from which shattered the gravestones and scattered the fragments around them. When the final charge of Pickett's and Pettigrew's troops was made, the Seventy-third was moved to the Tanoytown road, close to Zicgler's Grove, where they remained until the third day's fighting was ended. On the morning of the 4th the regiment was ordered into the town, which the3' entered, deployed as skirmishers along the streets on the w«st side of the town until they reached the Chambersburg road. Here quite a body of rebels held their ground, and only surrendered when cavalry appeared in the rear of their position. They were then marched into the town, to the square, and pl;iced in charge of the Seventy-third's reserve. The regiment was kept busily employed until nine o'clock, when the enemy fell back, leaving the field in our hands. Captain Daniel F. Kelley, commanding the regiment during these four days, neglected to make any regimental reports to headquarters, the result being that in the official returns the Seventy-third does not appear. When the State decided to erect monuments to the regiments which fought here, the survivors of the Seventy-third made claim for this posi- tion for its monument, and, after searching inquiry into, the matter by the State Commission appointed by the Governor, and by the Gettysburg Memorial Association, their claim was declared valid, and here your monu- ment is erected. Among the vast amount of testimony given in support of the Seventy- third's right to this position, was that of Colonel Weidrich, who commanded the battery. He said: "My recollection of the evening of July 2, 1863, is that when the Louisiana Tigers charged my battery, and when we were in a hand-to-hand fight with them, I saw that my position could not be held, and had ordered my battery to limber up and fall back to the Balti- more pike, when the Seventy-third and Twenty-seventh Regiments Penn- sylvania Volunteers came to my rescue and repulsed the rebels." The survivors of the Twenty-seventh Pennsylvania Regiment, testifying under oath, said: "Not only do we not oppose the location and design of the Seventy-third's monument, but we unanimously declare that they are fully and justly entitled to the position which they claim." The affidavits are quoted to show the quality of the evidence offered to prove the Sevf^nty-third's gallant struggle on this spot. Who has not read Tennyson's "Charge of the Light Brigade," at Bala- klava, and gloried in the bravery of that noble six hundred immortalized in his verse? And yet the unsung and unpoetic solid squares with which Wellington met Napoleon's onslaughts at Waterloo were composed of men who showed equal heroism, and that strict and unflinching obedience to orders which is the attribute most prized in a .soldier. Volunteers can always be had from any army to make a charge, be it ever so rash and 426 Pennsylvania at Getti/sburg. dangerous, for there is an eclat attached to it, and a feverish spirit of bravado will carry a man through a task he would shrink from if time were given for thought ; but they who have to stand under fire, calmly awaiting the onslaught, knowing not at what moment it may come— to stand hour after hour on the alert without action — have the most trying duty the soldier is called upon to perform. It was this duty, followed by a brave and stubborn resistance when called into action, which the Seventy- third Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry performed on this spot. Eulogize the bravery of the charge of the Louisiana Tigers as you may, and have the poet carry it down to posterity in glowing rhyme, if you will, the fact remains, and must be admitted, that the successful repulse of that charge was accomplished by men just as brave, and on whose braver3' twenty-four hours' experience in the dispiriting duty of waiting had no bad effect. When the enemy was discovered, you took a firmer grasp of your muskets, and with the cry, "Let us die on our own soil," hurled yourselves on the advancing column with such impetuosity as to check the foe and hold him until reinforcements arrived. During the entire battle the Seventy-third "played well its part ;" but it was here, where this granite and bronze will tell of its achievements to posterity, it gave that grand exhibition of bravery which forced back the best troops of the Confederacy with heavy loss, and aided materially in that demoralization of Lee's army which culminated in retreat. God forbid that we should claim the whole repulse for this one regi- ment ! It was first in the advance, with the Twenty-seventh Pennsylvania by its side, but other troops came to its assistance, and New York, Ohio* and Indiana have their share of the glory. Nothing is claimed for the regiment that cannot be fully substantiated. Nothing is claimed that has not been already proved before the Commission to which has been entrusted the duty of selecting the proper spot upon which to erect the monument. General Henry J. Hunt, Chief of Artillery of the Army of the Potomac, in the absence of reports from this regiment in the War Department, sought to secure for his arm of the service the whole credit for the repulse of the Louisiana Tigers. He writes: The cannoneers of the two batteries, so summarily ousted, rallied and recovered their guns by a rigorous attack, with pistols by those who had them, by others with hand-spikes, rammers, stones and even fence rails. * * * After an hour's desperate fighting, the enemy were driven back with heavy loss. It is admitted that the gunners of the batteries did their best to save their cannon, and that having no other weapons, they seized stones from the walls and rails from the fences to use against the foe ; but history cannot be permitted to give to postei'ity the impression that with these weapons alone eight hundred of the enemy were laid low in the assault upon this position. The Seventy-third Pennsylvania came to the rescue, and to the Seventy-third belongs the credit, as Colonel Weidrich testifies, of leading in the resisting column when he was about to endeavor by retreat to save his pieces. The Seventy-third's loss in this battle was comparatively small, seven being killed and twenty-seven wounded. PcnnstjJi-anid at Gettysbunj. 427 In September, 1SG3, the regiment was ordered to Chattanooga, Tennessee, where it was incorporated into the Twentieth Army Corps. At the battle of Missionary Ridge, November 25, 1863, after hard fighting, it was flanlved by a superior force of the enemy and only seventy-two of its members escaped capture or death. In December of the same year it was re-enrolled as a veteran organization, at -Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, and as a part of the famous White Star Division, was in every battle fought and won by the Twentieth Corps, marching to the sea with General Sherman, and being present at the sur- render of Oeneral Johnston at Raleigh, North Carolina. The victory won, the war ended, and peace reigned once more within, our borders. After an honorable record of three years and ten months, on July 14, 18G5, the Seventy-third Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer In- fantry, then consisting of eleven officers and one hundred and twenty- eight men, was mustered out of the service of the United States at Alex- andria, Virginia. During its term of service it had upon its rolls the names of one thousand two hundred and sixty patriots; and of this number, its loss in killed, wounded, capture or missing was seven hundred and seven. Among the members of the regiment who fell into the enemy's hands at Missionary Ridge was Benjamin F. O'Donnell, the left guide of the regi- ment, who in that capacity carried a guidon, or small flag. Seeing he could not escape capture, he quickly tore the flag from its staff and secreted it under his coat. One of the enemy, who had noticed his action, rushed at him, demanding "that rag." O'Donnell denied having it, and the rebel struck at him with his musket, injuring O'Donnell's hand so badly that he is to-day still crippled. The surging of the troops separated him from his assailant, and he was enabled to more securely hide the flag. He was taken by his captors to Belle Island, then to Pemberton prison, and finally to the prison pen at Andersonville. While here he sickened, and think- ing himself about to die gave his precious charge into the hands of Ser- geant Zachariah Rost, another prisoner from the Seventy-third. Rost was taken from Andersonville to Floi'ence, South Carolina, and exchanged at Hilton Head, May 1, 1865, bringing home with him the relic. O'Donnell did not die. After being exchanged he applied for a pension, the flag, in protecting which he was injured, being produced in evidence before the pension bureau. O'Donnell kept it in his possession until the 11th of last month, when he turned it over to this Regimental Association. What remains of this guidon, which, with those who carried it, was in- carcerated in rebel prisons for seventeen months, is before you, while Ben- jamin F. O'Donnell, who preserved it from capture, is present with us to-day, still acting as the left guide of the regiment. The flag is in ap- pearance now what the rebel called it at iNIissionary Ridge — a "rag." But how precious a rag, and what memories cluster around it to-day! Comrade O'iDonnell carried it on this field in the first battle in which it appeared. Then it was new and pleasant to look upon. Now, with no trace of comeliness remaining, it is looked up to by these veterans with veneration and pride, for the scars upon it are evidences of battles fought, of victories won, and of the hardships of seventeen months' imprisonment withi its brave defenders. 428 Pennsijlvania at Gettyshurg. The ground upon which this monument stands was dedicated by your heroic struggle, and by the bloqd of your fallen comrades; but the monu- ment, reared by a grateful Commonwealth in commemoration of your bravery, and in memory of those of your regiment who here sacrificed their lives on the altar of liberty, we now dedicate and convey to the State for the instruction of coming generations. Those who were engaged in the sanguinary hand-to-hand struggle on this spot, may well thank God that they are permitted to live to see the fruit of their labors in our re-united country with its unprecedented growth and prosperity; they may thank God that they live to see their heroism and bravery, and that of their former comrades, thus publicly and perma- nently recognized by the State under whose auspices they served the Fed- eral Government ; and they may thank God that the generations which have arrived at manhood since the war, hold in reverential remembrance, and teach their children to revere, those who in the hour of their country's need were ready to give their all, even life itself, for right, for liberty, and for the dear old flag. We now commit this monument into the hands of the Commissioners appointed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to accept and protect it. THE OLD FLAG OF THE SEVENTY-THIRD BY SERGEANT JAMES MURRAY COMRADES and friends:— -Before you is unfurled to-day one of the old State flags carried by the Seventy-third Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, during the war for the Union, and I am re- quested by the survivors' association to briefly tell you its history. Very few of the State flags carried by our boys can now be found out- side the State museum at the capitol, and to see one of them floating on this battlefield will scarcely fall to your lot again. When the Seventy-third left the State in 1861 to join the Army of the Potomac, the first State flag carried by its color-sergeant was given to us by the representative of the Commonwealth. At the second battle of Bull Run, where our brave commander. Colonel Koltes, gave his life for his country, the flag was so torn and riddled with shot and shell that it was unfit for further service, and was sent to the capitol for safe-keeping. The second flag given to us by the great War Governor, Andrew G. Crutin, was carried upon this field during the engagement, but at the battle of Missionary Ridge it was reduced to the same state as its prede- cessor by the hard usage it received while carried at the head of our column . The one before you was the third niul last State flag carried by the regiment, and was presented to us at Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, on behalf of the ladies of Philadelphia, who bade us protect it with our lives and bring it home with us in honor and victory. We pledged ourselves to do so. Pennsylvania at Gettysburr/. 429 Here it is! And uow, my friends, after hearing from the orator of this occasion of the gallant deeds performed by this regiment, I ask you, "Have we kept our vow?" Here waves the flag, unsullied by defeat, having invariably led us to victory. But hai-k ! The old flag speaks for itself: "You have carried me from CImttanooga to Itocky-face Kidge, to lle- saca. New Hope Church, Pine Knob, Kenesaw Mountain, Peach Tree Creek and to Atlanta in victory. You have carried me from Atlanta to the sea in victory. You have carried me from Savannah, through the Caro- linas, and to the 'surrender of Johnston.' Victory! Victory!! Victory!!! "You have brought me back to my old home in Philadelphia ; you have kept and protected me ever since, and to-day you have me with you to commemorate with your former comrades of the Army of the Potomac this glorious victory in which you bore such a noble part. I'^ou have in- deed kept your vow." God bless you, dear old flag! While one of the Seventy-third lives you shall be cherished and cared for, and as each one of us passes away to the great beyond, you shall cover his coffin and be with him to his last resting place. It will not be long, dear old comrades, for our ranks are thinning rapidly. Time was when you were surrounded by a thousand of as brave soldiers as served their country, and w^hose cheers of victory made the welkin ring. To-day wo arc with you again ; but, oil ! so few, so few. A few years more and there will be none to answer roll-call, and our memory will be as a dream to these young people who now surround us. In those days, my young friends, I trust some of you will give a thought to this day and think kindly of the old veteran and his flag. DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 74TH REGIMENT INFANTRY* JUI.Y 2, 1888 ADDRESS OF COLONEL A. VON HARTUNG COMRADES: — We are assefnbled here for the purpose of dedicating this monument. We all were here before twenty-five years ago. But, alas I I miss many of those who had joined us that time. They have been called home and are now members of that great army from which no one returns. Others are prevented by sickness, great dis- tance or by business from being with us to-day on this our day of honor. For what purpose were we here at that time, twenty-five years ago? We had not come in our usual citizens' clothing, but in uniforms, armed ♦Organized at Pittsburgh, September 30, 1S61, to serve three years. On the expiration of Its term of service the original members (except veterans) were niustered out and the organization composed of veterans and recruits retained in service until August 29, 1S65, wliiMi it was mustered out. 4no Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. with swords, guns and cannons in order to repel a haughty enemy ; we were here to help with armed hands to save the Union and to protect the starry banner. Twenty-eight years ago that memorable presidential election took place, from which Abraham Lincoln came forth as a victor. The South, for many years accustomed to rule the North, wanted to be independent, and now came the time of that treason, a more fatal one the history of the world never saw. Secretary of "War Floyd had the arms removed from the northern arsenals and conveyed to the south, where guns, cannons and ammunition purposely left unprotected were shifted into the hands of the traitors. The city of Pittsburgh made a glorious ex- ception. There the people arose and prevented by force the departure of the cannons that had already been put on board. Honor to those brave Pittsburghers ! The State of South Carolina had left the Union and dared insolently to tread under foot the flag of our ancestors. The other southern states soon followed and formed that league known under the name of the Southern Confederation. When Lincoln took the oath as President of the United States, on the 4th of March, he did not find a dollar in the treasury, not a vessel, not a soldier. The officers of the regular army, mostly southerners, had deserted and gone over to the service of those States. A hostile army threatened unprotected Washington, and the President applied to the Governors of the loyal States and asked for soldiers to portect the capital. They came with great enthusiasm, those States' militia differently uniformed and armed. Their intention was good, but, not accustomed to the severe hardships of a war, they were soon re- placed by seventy-five thousand volunteers who were enrolled for three months. After the first battle of Bull Run it was seen that the enemy had been greatly underrated, it became apparent that we had not to deal with a little revolt but with a great revolution. It was not before then that the whole country, and with it Abraham Lincoln perceived the greatness of danger. He dcmaiuled and received from Congress after a single short session the right to levy three hundred thousand men for thi-ee years, and besides one billion of dollars. And then Father Abraham called for three hundred thousand men, saying "the Union roust and shall be preserved." And then the hearts trembled and the whole nation was seized with a powerful enthusiasm. His call resounded like the sound of thunder; like the clash of swords and the roaring of the waves, and they came, the children of Father Abraham, and so we came too. We hastened on to preserve the Union and to protect the starry banner But the task was no easy one. A strong army, well armed, of excellent discipline and well led, stood against us, and not always the luck of war was on our side. The great battle of Chancellorsville Avas lost for us. The enemy invades the northern states, phinders Hngerstown and marches toward Philadelphia. The I'oad was apparently unobstructed, the Potomac army apparently annihilated. But in forced marches we came on, and here at Gettysburg, here on this field of honor, we threw ourselves into their way and called to them, "thus far and no farther." (^ne hundred thousand on our side, we fought for three days against an Pc)tnfi}/lvani(t at (iclti/.^fiiirf/. K'l army superior in huiiiIkt. It w;is a gigantic battle. Then at last the call resounded, Victory! Tlie hostile troops had left during the night The battle, the greatest, the most successful battle of the war, was won. Hut it was with great sacrilices that the victory was bought. In yonder cemetery thousands are slumbering the everlasting sleep, mowed down by hostile missiles. In honor of those dead these monuments have been put up. lUit also to the survivors' part of the honor is due. One falls in the battle, the other dies afterward of the wounds or iu consequence of the hardships of war. We who were so fortunate as to survive that battle and to see its results share in the honor as well as those who have gone hence before us. In former centuries it was not customary to erect monuments for the living. It was left to posterity to glorify the deeds of their ancestors. It is only a few years ago that his grateful countrymen erected a monu- ment in honor of Herman, the great German Chief who, more than 1800 years ago, defeated the Roman legions in the Tentoburg forest. But cus- toms and manners are changing. Eighteen years ago Germany fought that gigantic war with France, and it is long ago since that finest of monu- ments rises on the Neiderwald in honor of the dead as well as of the living. So also this monument. It is apparently a dead stone without language. But monuments speak a powerful language that warns and admoni.shes the living. As that monument on the Niederwald warns the FrtMuh til beware of German blows, and i-eminds the German youth to follow the sublime example of their ancestors and to sacrifice life and property in the defence of their country, so this monument speaks too. It tells of great heroic deeds and warns all who should ever dare again with an insolent hand to destroy our glorious Union or to insult the star-spangled banner. It admonishes the youth to follow our example and in the days of danger to stake life and property in the protection of our country. ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN PAUL F. ROHRBACKER. T T T E have met to erect and dedicate a monument which shall remind l/y generation's to come of the deeds of brave men who fell in as noble a cause as heroes ever contended for. Some may say: '•Why this monument? Why perpetuate the memory of the great strife?" We might simply answer, "Because we cannot help it." It is instructive, animating, reverential and patriotic, to bo reminded of the character and of the sacrifices of those heroes who gave their all in their country's ser- vices. Even if a quarter of a century has passed over their graves, yet the example which they gave us must be preserved to us in order to guide, strengthen and animate us and those that will follow us. There is no need to-day, and here, to recount the causes of the war in which those men sacrificed their lives The war was not carried on for the purpose of oppression, of trampling upon a section. It was not a war 432 Pennsylvania at Getty shurg. for the purpose of giving grandeur and glory to any one man or set of men. It was not a war to make one part of this country greater than another part. It was a war that barbarism might cease, and that liberty and civilization in its purest form might be established by the American people. It was a war that this Union might be moulded into fellowship, that out of it might be fused all the guilt and all the shame which so long stained it. The battles of the war were won for the whole country ; and the beauty of this government shines alike over every foot of American soil. Its benefits, like the dews of heaven, fall equally uppn every citizen's head beneath the flag of our country. The wounds of the war are healing, and as you look about you to-day, over our vast country and all its in- creased population and its prosperity, we may truly thank God that slavery was wiped out, the only cause of dissension that had ever existed. And in this feeling of thankfulness we are joined by the people of the South. We have nothing more that can divide us as a nation. To-day we all glory in having but one flag, one country, one nation and one destiny. There iS no sectional feeling that animates us on this occa- sion, nor do we feel any pride of race or color. We are here as American citizens. All i-aces have contributed their share for the attainment of the glorious result. The Irishman and the Scotchman, the Englishman and the Scandinavian, the Anglo-Saxon and the African. And, my friends, we, as Gernians, have done our share. We are assembled here to-day to dedicate this monument to the valor and patriotism of the Seventy-fourth Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, exclusively a German regiment. When the news of the firing on Fort Sumter, April 14, 1861, reached Pittsburg, the excitement among the entire population became intense, and two days afterward, on the 16th of April, Company B, German Turners, left Pittsburg for Harrisburg, commanded by Captain H. Amlung. Sei- grist's company was K, alsd mostly Germans. These two companies, com- manded by Captains H Amlung and G. Seigrist, were incorporated as Companies B and K, Fifth Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, three months' service. These men formed the nucleus of the Seventy-fourth, which was organized a few mouths afterwards. The command of the regiment was given to Colonel A. Schimmelpfennig, a brilliant and thor- oughly educated Russian officer, who had seen service in the war against Denmark, and in 1848 and 1849 in the revolution in Baden. Colonel Schimmelpfennig, made of the regiment a model organization in drill and' discipline, and the excellent record made by the regiment is due to the exertion of that model soldier and gentleman . To have been a member of the Seventy-fourth Pennsylvania is a prouder distinction than any patent of nobility that king or potentate might confer. And, as Germans, we are all proud of their record. No part of our population has manifested greater readiness to risk their lives for the preservation of our beloved country, than the Germans and their descend- ants. In those days that tried men's souls, adopted German citizens gave their best blood for the salvation of the Union. The great sacrifices of the Germans in the Revolutionary war, the bravery of the German is Pennsylvania at Getti/shurf/. 433 ignored or forgotten. History tallis about the Hessians, that fought on the side of oppression, but says little or nothing of the Germans that fought with AVashington. It is ignored or forgotten what the Germans have done for the prospei-ity of our Commonwealth. Pennsylvania Dutch were often scoffed at — their wives, mothers, daughters, were often designated as being clumsy, ignorant, unrefined, but when the war broke out, history tells us that among all the German women of Pennsylvania, there was not one who brought up a traitor. It has become fashionable for Angluiuaniacs to belittle everything that does not come from England, and call England the mother country. Noth- ing is further from the truth. It was disputed a century ago. It is less true now. The whole world is the mother country of this land. We Ger- mans are not here since yesterday. Three-fifth of the population of Penn- sylvania are German or of German descent. When the war of the Rebellion broke out, the great fact became evi- dent (and the American people are ever open to receive facts), that these so-called "foreigners," that these Germans, whose hearts were thought to dwell on the Rhine, the Elbe and the Danube, were head and heart for this their beloved land. They came from city and hamlet, from the work-shop, the office and the school- room ; they came from the north, the east and the west, and some even from the south ; they honej'corabed the whole Federal forces, for there was scarcely an organization that had not its German representa- tive. Shoulder to shoulder Germans fought with their comrades of other nationalities as well as with those to the manor born. It is due to the Germans that at the breaking out of the war the city of St. Louis and the largest part of Missouri remained faithful to the Union. The first victory of the Union troops was gained at Carthage, Mis- souri, by General Sigel and his Germans. It was Blcnker's Division, that after the battle of Bull Run retained its discipline and at Centreville barred the way to the victorious Confederates. Who does not remember the names of Sigel, Bleuker, GUsa, Steinwehr, Stahel, Schimmelpfennig, Mahler, Max Weber, Bohlen, Koltes, Hccker, Osterhaus, Salomon, Matthies, Hassendeubel, Captain. Dilger and a host of others. Thousand less prominent, but not less valiant, bared their bosoms to hostile bullets. Loyally and faithfully they served their country in the winter's cold, and during the summer's heat you find them inhaling the poisoned breath of the swamp; you meet with them on the lonely picket — everywhere in the field you find men from all parts of Germany and from all conditions in life. In camp and on the march you might have heard them singing German songs — songs from the Rhino, the Danube, the Weser and the Main; they sang of spring time and love, old melodies, they sang songs of their native land, also songs of their adopted country — but always cheer- ful and ready for any service reiiuired of them ; their songs were often heard in the rebel camp, and their meaning was not misunderstood. As free men, not as hirelings, did they offer their life for the preserva- tion of this laud, and thus paid off a long-standing debt. Thus they paid old debts to the great patriots who sowed also for us the seed of freedom. 434 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. Were these soldiers less patriotic because they spoke German and sang German songs? Were they as defenders of our glorious flag less valiant, wfere the blows dealt by them less vigorous because they were given by German arms? Let the deeds of the Seventy-fourth Pennsylvania, on the first day's fight at Gettysburg, answer these questions. Of the fourteen officers and one hundred and twenty men who advanced on the first day's battle, one ofiicer and six men were killed, four officers and forty men wounded and fifty-two missing, leaving but four officers and eighteen men, a total loss of one hundred and twelve. I tell you, my friends, twenty-five or fifty years hence the descendants of those men who fell or fought at Gettysburg will be as proud of the deeds of his ancestor and of his Americanism, as are to-day the children of those who fought at Bunker Hill, or Lexington, and looking back at the history of our time, these Americans will wonder that there ever could be any jealousy or Knownothingism, because the ancestor of one landed at Castle Garden or East Boston. We should measure the worth of the American citizen by his honesty, his capacity, his patriotism and his sympathies, independent of whether he or his father entered the family of the republic yesterday or :! few decades before ; our dead heroes have furnished us the criterion of the true American, for he cannot be called an American, who, though he came down from the signers of the Declaration of Independence itself, stirs up ill feeling among his fellow-citizens. Look over the face of the globe and find me a powerful nation, and I will show you one where na- tional feeling is paramount. We, as German-Americans, familiar with the history of the past, glory in a united Germany which stands to-day among the galaxy of European nations of the foremost. If loyalty and faithfulness to one's country is to be proven by bloody sacrifices, then the loyalty of the German to his adopted country cannot be questioned . We love this land : it is our land and the home of our children and children's children. We may differ politically, but in the love of our country and institutions, we arc one. Henceforth, your country is our country, your people our people, your destiny our destiny, your flag our flag, and your God our God. Whenever in the future the cr^untry shall call upon her children, we believe and know that this dear land shall not call in vain. The fallen heroes sleep in this beautiful cemetery : they sleep the sleep that knows no waking, but thoir fame is as fadeless as the beauty of the rise of the sun. They live in our hearts and in our memories. This nation is to-day a Union baptized in the best blood of the American people. It is a Union that has been tried in the fire of steel, and has come forth brilliantly and imscathed . The best way for us to appreciate the devo- tion of those who died for their country in the war of the rebellion is to make it our duty to preserve what thty sacrificed their lives to save. The value of a thing generally depends upon what it costs. To show the wortli of this it is only necessary to imagine the Union broken into dis- jointed and discordant fragments; the States antagonized and inimical to each other. The Union, as saved, is the reverse of all this, and stands proudly before the world the synonym of national greatness, power and glory . Pcnnsijlvdnia at (IcttijshKr;/. 435 DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 75™ REGIMENT INFANTRY* OCTOHKK 8, 1888 ADDRESS OF FIRST SERGEANT H. NACIITKJAI.L COMRADES of the Seventy-fifth Regiment Pennsylvauiii Volunteeis:— I extend to you a hearty welcome upon the historic battlefield of Gettysburg. We are assembled here upon consecrated ground, con- secrated by the blood of our brethren, and shed in a great struggle for the preservation and maintenance of the high principles of liberty and humanity. More than a quarter of a century has ebbed away into the abyss of eternity since one of the most eventful dramas recorded in the annals of history was enacted upon this field ; a drama in which you with thousands of sons of this our glorious country were destined to assume a role. Your ranks have been considerably depleted since those memorable July days of 1863, and of that once magnificent Seventy-fifth Resiment, which, a just pride of the German population of Philadelphia, left that city in Sep- tember, 1861, but a small remnant has remained. To-day you are less strong and vigorous, your limbs are less pliant and active than in those days, when to the sound of the orchestra of war, amidst the thunder of cannon and the deafening roar of battle, you quickened j'our steps in order to take up your assigned position in the line of battle and the never- melting snow of years has settled upon the heads of many of you. For seventeen years Carthage with its wealth of heroism,' its art and its navigation, directed by the genius of Hannibal, struggled against the pro- gressive institutions of Rome ; for sixteen years the regal despotism of France, directed by the genius of Napoleon, endeavored to crush the liberal institutions of England; and for four years the spirit of secession, directed by the genius of Robert E. Lee, struggled to deal a death blow at the free institutions of the American Republic. Hannibal perished in Lama, Napoleon died at Waterloo and Lee found his Appomattox ; but, my dear friends, when in the lapse of time the names and memories of these luminaries shall have perished in the whirlpool of revolution and despotism, the vision of the nations of the earth will be directed hither to Gettysburg, the bulwark and Mecca of the regenerated liberty of the American Republic, and from here the lesson will be taught that liberty and humanity are not mere quibbles of the brain or the outgrowth of an over-excited fancy, and as we trace the war history of the world and raise in admiration our wondering gaze to the human genius, which like a brilliant meteor appears in the heavens, but soon vanishes from our sight, institutions having for their object the advancement of humanity will live forever, and the free institution of free government for which those men fought •Orgnuizfd at Ili'h'ili'liliia. S( I'tfiubi-r as, ISijl, to serve tliree years. On the expiration of Us term of service the original members (except veterans) were mustered out and the organization comi osed of veterans and recruits retained In service until September 1, 1S66, when It was mustered out. 436 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. in whose memory this monument has been erected, shall not perish, but they will grow brighter and stronger as year after year will roll on. The ground upon which we now stand and the scenes by which we are surrounded within viewing distance, recall to our memories events of world-historic note, and in obedience to a longing impulse of our hearts we have gathered here to-day to commemorate those events. What patriotic heart would not throb with enthusiasm when reviewing the state of affairs in the dark and gloomy days in the history of our country, when treason hung like the sword of Damocles over the life of this nation, when the people of the northern States, in the face of impend- ing danger, arose in their full majesty, like one mighty impulse, when, regardless of political party affinities, station in life or age, whether repub- licans or democrats, rich or poor, young or old, came forward in response to the exigency of the hour, and in vindication of the cause of liberty, eager to enter into and swell the ranks of an army about being organ- ized, without expectation of emolument or official honors, facing dangers, exposure and privations calculated to try the patience of the most h«arty and valiant; and a proud thought it is to know that they fought to a suc- cessful ending the mightiest war struggle for human liberty known in the world's history. These thoughts and the ceremonies of this day bring us into the presence of hallowed memories. When we unravel the years which time has woven into our life we love to pause here and there at events that have more than others engrafted themselves upon our memory. Among others we are reminded of that solemn hour when the noble, magnanimous Andrew Curtin, the Governor of this great State of Pennsylvania, presented to us the flag of our coun- try, when we are reminded of those patriotic words he then spoke, words by which boys were transformed into men, citizens into soldiers and heroes in the course of a single hour. Governor Curtin entrusted that flag to the Seventy-fifth Regiment with the confidence that you would carry it into the thickest fight, that you would defend it to the last, and that in your hands it would never be disgraced. To-day we have met here to render an account of our stewartship, and to answer the query: Have we justified the confidence imposed upon us? The responsibility of that trust might well make reckless men hesitate and brave men falter, but the Seventy-fifth Regiment accepted that trust, and, oh, what a proud, what a glorious satisfaction to know that it fully justified that trust, and after four years of war, during which time it has been borne aloft by patriotic hands, it was returned to the place from whence it came, the State capitol at Harrisburg, unsullied and untarnished, aye! covered with glory and fame, and when at times amid shot and shell it may have fallen to the ground, consecrating the same with the blood of a dead color-bearer (as in the case of Sergeant Jordan at the second Bull Run battle), it soon rose again, only to arouse you to increased heroism and valor. The blow struck by the enemies of human liberty against the integrity of the Union, and the haughty slaveholders' vow that the free mechanic and the la- borer of the northern States were destined to succumb to his power and influence, received upon this field its sentence and death blow, and it may Pennsylvania at Oettysbury. 437 well be snid that the true charter of Americuu liberty was here written with the sword and sealed with the blood of her sons. To-day, my friend and comrades, you stand, a small remnant of that once magnificent and glorious Seventy-fifth Regiment, beneath the shadow of this monument visible witnesses of a great historic period. Oh, my friends and comrades, were I possessed with the eloquence of a Cicero or Demosthenes my tongue, would be too feeble to express in befitting terms those feelings which at these sacred moments fill my heart and which I feel confident also penetrate yours, and cause them to beat responsive to the occasion of the present hour, but what words could more adequately echo our feelings, and be more in unity with the earnestness and solemnity of this occasion than those words spoken by the great and good Abraham Lincoln upon the occasion of the dedication of the National Cemetery yonder on Cemetery Hill, in November, 1863: Rut in larger sense we cannot dedicate, we cannot Uallow this ground; the brave men, livins and dead, have consecrated it far above our power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us tlio livin;; rather to be dedicated here for the un- finished work that they have thus far so nobly carried on. It Is rather for us to be dedicated to the great task remaining before us— that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to the cause for which they gave the last full measure of their de- votion— that we, here, highly resolve that the dead shall not have died In vain— that the nation shall under Uod, have a new birth of freedom, and that government of the people, by the people and for the people shall not perish from the earth. Those of our brethren who fell upon this field did not live to behold the dawn of the golden morn of liberty — they died for us and for their country. In grateful remembrance we approach their last resting place. Rest in peace, ye noble patriots ! History will forever accord to you the fame and glory you so richly deserved, but to us, the living, your patriotism and your valor shall forever remind us of the grand legacy you have be- queathed to us. In grateful appreciation we decorate your graves every year — we speak of you as of dear beloved members of our own families, and the numerous monuments and tablets erected upon this field to your memory will proclaim to coming generations that here upon this field the unity of a great nation was cemented by your blood ; that here upon the soil of Pennsylvania a now Keystone was inserted in the magnificent structure of American liberty by the heroism and sacrifice of her sons, and in mute admiration will coming generations cherish and revere the memory of that Titan race which here secured the greatest triumph to liberty and hu- m;inity, a government system of the people, for the people, and by the people. And now, my friends and comrades, we will deliver this monument to the Battlefield Memorial Association, whose charge it will be to preserve it. Let a benediction of heaven fall upon the heroes of 1S63, and when the last of the boys in blue shall have descended from the stage of this life, and the ranks of the Grand Army have vanished from our sight, then children and children's children will twine wreaths of garlands around this stone and the babe upon the mother's lap will be taught to lisp the story of how and why their grandsires have fought here. 29 438 Pennsylvania at Oettyshurg. ACCOUNT OF THE PART TAKEN BY THE SEVENTY-FIFTH REGIMENT PENNSYLVANIA INFANTRY IN THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG, JULY 1, 2, AND 3, 1863, BY FIRST SERGEANT H. NACHTIGALL. THE Seventy-fifth Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers of the Second Brigade, Third Division, Eleventh Corps, having bivouacked at Emmitsburg, Maryland, broke camp early on the morning of July 1, with orders to march to Gettysburg. Having arrived within five miles of that town, further orders were received to advance at double-quick, the First Corps, Major-General Reynolds, having encountered and engaged the enemy. The regiment upon reaching Gettysburg, marched through the town, aud from its northern extremity proceeded in a northeasterly direction in the proximity of the county almshouse to the west side of the Carlisle road, where it took up its position, its left wing leaning on the right of the Eighty-second Ohio Regiment. Before the regiment reached that position it lost its colonel, Francis Mahler, who had fallen mortally wounded and been taken to the field hospital, where he died on the morn- ing of July 5. Lieutenant Hauschild formerly a resident of Gettysburg, was also kUled, after having received, but a short time previous, while marching with the regiment through the town, from the windows the salutations of his friends and former fellow citizens. It was about half- past one o'clock when the regiment reached the aforesaid position, and was for several hours severely pressed by the enemy who appeared in out- numbering forces from the north and west, while at the same time it was subjected to the intense cannonading of several well-posted Con- federate batteries, until, on account of the pressure brought to bear upon the comparatively small Eleventh Corps by the enemy, the order for re- treat was given. Unconscious of the danger to be flanked and captured, the Seventy-fifth Regiment reluctantly obeyed, and not any too soon, for, in order to obtain a place of safety, garden fences had to be torn down, since all the roads and avenues were already in the possession of the enemy. Of the wUd disorderly retreat the Eleventh Corps has maliciously been accused, the Seventy-fifth Regiment at least was not guilty; on the contrary, thanks to the collected forethought of Major A. Ledig, who, as the senior oflicor, had succeeded Colonel Mahler in the command, the regi- ment retreated in good order. After passing thi-ough the town, it was assigned its new position upon the plateau of Cemetery Hill, which forms the northern extremity of the ridge of the same name, where it remained during the course of the battle. In the engagement of the first day, it suffered a loss of fifty-five per cent. No other regiment in the Eleventh Corps met with a similar loss. Owing to the gallant conduct of the Sev- enty-fifth Regiment, the advance of the enemy was checked, enabling Gen- eral von Steinwehr, whose military eye had at once recognized the great advantage of such a position as Cemetery Hill, to post his batteries and fortify himself. The wisdom of this measure soon became evident, as Cemetery Hill proved the key of the Federal army during the battle, and had the Eleventh and First Army Corps done nothing else during the 8I?J PENNA JNTANTRY. Pennsylvania at Oettysburg. 439 entire course of the battle than to maintain that position, it would have covered itself with undisputable glory. In the night of the second day of the battle the Eleventh Corps was surprised by an attack of the Louisi- ana Tigers on the northeastern dedevity of the hill, which resulted in a liand-to-hand encounter in which the Tigers, who never before had met with defeat, were disastrously beaten and routed. The following were the casualties of the Scverty-fifth Regiment at the Gettysburg battle: Killed, three officers and sixteen men; wounded, five officers and eighty-four men; missing or captured, three men; total, one hundred and eleven. DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 81ST REGIMENT INFANTRY* Septembee 12, 1889 ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN HARRY WILSON MR. President, comrades of the Eighty-first Pennsylvania and friends: — In almost all human lives, even the most commonplace that have reached maturity and responsibility, there occur circum- stances, and happen events, unforseen, unexpected, it may be, but which have so important a bearing and influence upon those lives as to become startling epochs; which stand out prominently, marking them with a dis tinctuess than can be felt like iron that has been broken and welded to- gether ; like hard tangle knots in the otherwise smooth and even thread of life. Assembled upon the famous battle-ground made sacred a quarter of a century ago by a baptism of blood and sacrifice of precious life on the alter of liberty, and now santified by a nation's preservation and a na- tion's gratitude; assembled to dedicate this beautiful tribute — a lasting memorial to the dead heroes who fought and fell, and arose not again to behold the flying foe and feel the thrill of victory or participate in the after blessings of peace secured and the Union perpetuated, it is highly appropriate, my comrades, to speak of some of those events of the past which we shared with them and with each other. Feeling down along the thread of life twenty-eight years ago, we come to the greatest event which up to that time had marked their lives and yours and mine. A mighty knot in the life history of the nation. A ter- rible jumble and tangle, and culmination of discordant elements into one fearful, sudden, horrifying realization — War I "Grim-visaged war," with hideous and defiant front, was on us ; and from Fort Sumter the roar of cannon like an electric shock boomed out the story of insult to our countrv's •Organized nt riiiladeliibin, (Jc t\ell the plumed troop and the big wars That make ambition virtue. Farewell the neighing steed and the shrill trump The spirit-stirring drum, the ear-piercing fife, The royal banner; and all quality, Pride, pomp and circumstance of glorious war." But it is still left to us, from our military experience, to instruct our sons in the knowledge we have acquired and the principles formed in our martial life, that the honorable character and military practices of the .'joldier may be familiar to the rising generations, should they have need of their exercise. But though the physical strength and capacity of endurance of the sol- dier is gone from us, the moral vigor of our position, as defenders of the flag, gives our sentiments upon ever?" question relating to the welfare of our country, a stronger claim for acceptance to all, both young and old. It will, in this view, not be considered presumptions to remind the people of the State and Nation, that principle for whid'i you fought was the "Union of the States," and to say that though the Union was attacked during the late war upon the pretext of the preservation of the institution of slavery, that hereafter the furtherance of some other object, popular with large portions of the people, may be made by designing and ambitious men the ostensible reason for its attempted overthrow. And let us remind them that the Union, founded ">n popular attachment to its principles, will be 45G Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. coDstantly imperilled, unless a sentiment of kindly and fraternal feeling exists among all classes of our citizens, whatever may be their business pur- suits or means of livelihood. In furtherance of these views, therefore, let us endeavor by our counsels to hasten the day when every shade of bitterness between the North and the South, shall have passed away, so that, if not in the present, at least in the next generation, if possible, nothing of the incidents of the war be remembered without regret, except the achievements of the soldiers of both armies. And let us teach that their achievements are the common herit- age and glory of all the people of all sections of the country. And let us not forget to say, that the men of the North fought for the Union, not for our section alone, but that its benefits and blessings should belong to and be the heritage of the whole country, south and north, as well for those who fought against it ; and that the surrender at Appomattox established popular liberty for the whole country, as well for them as for us. So that future generations though remembering, with pride the gallant achievements of their southern ancestors on this and other fields, will yet regard as a blessing their defeat as securing to all (by the preservation of the Union), the inestimable boon of personal and political liberty, and the right to manage their own domestic affairs subject only to the necessary restraints of the Federal Constitution. And we, too, the people of the North, will claim a part of the glory of the deeds of our then enemies (not so now) . For with our country fully reunited, their achievements will be recognized as the work of the American nation, and the sons of the North will claim a share of the glory of the Confederate conduct of battle, as well as the southern born, for its gallantry was the heroism of the people of the United States, and as such it belongs to all, the North as well as the South. Then shall we in all sincerity feel that "we are not enemies but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it has not burst the bonds of our affection. The mystic chords of memory stretching from every battlefield and every patriot's grave to every heart and hearth- stone all over this broad land, have swelled the chorus of the Union, touched as they have been by the better angels of our nature." And now, resting on the field to-day, we view, after twenty-five years of absence, the scene of one of the most glorious achievements of your .voulh. The distant hills and mountains present the same appearance as they did a quarter of a century since ; but how altered the rest ! In place of the long lines and glittering musketry of the infantry, the booming of cannon, whistling of bullets and the galloping clang of horsemen, we look upon a gladdening scene of husbandry. The fields are covered with grain, and the cheerful cry of the farmer to his team has supplanted the stern and determined military command. The ring of the mower's instru- ment takes the place of the clang of the military sabre. The puff of the locomotive supplants the smoke of the cannon, and its whistle, the booming of the discharge. On the spot in the rear of Round Top (where you rested among the boulders from your tired march of the night of the first of July) is heard l*ennsylvania at Gettyshurg. 457 among the trees, when summer sunshine renders cheerful dnys, the pleasing harmonies of the flute and viol, and youths and maidens lightly trip the mazy dance or whirl the aflectionate waltz. On the ridge fronting your position flourishes the grape, and the wine pressed upon the spot cheers the heart alike of Union and Confederate, as they view the place of their former exploits. Pleased, we survey the scene, for thi.s spectacle, the epitome of our couu try's prosperity, in agriculture, manufactures, and social life, is your work. Without your victories on this and other fields the Union, the source of this happiness of all, would be a thing of the past, and desolation have taken the place of the cheerfulness we now behold. Let them the dancers, as they wind their graceful movements, give one thought to the tired men, who, a quarter of a century ago, so soundly slept upon and gallantly defended the place of their present festivities, and the traveler, who, viewing the battlefield, pauses in his survey for a goblet of native wine, remember the soldier parched and thirsty from the dust and smoke of battle, who, no matter whether he fought on the right or the wrong side, whether he wore the blue or gray, still sacrificed himself for a patriotic sentiment, and in regretful memory of the past "Quaff a cup to the dead already," and, thankful for the present one, to "the health of the next man that dies." ADDRESS OF CAPTAIN G. W. WATERHOUSE COMRADES: — For a quarter of a century the summer's sun has shone, and the winter's snows have fallen upon this historic spot since that event in the past which we of the present come to-day to emphasise to the future, by the dedication of this historic stone. To-day, surrounded by all the blessings of peace, it is my privilege to extend to you, my comrades, a heartfelt greeting, on the ground where in deadly fray we were gathered so many years ago ; and where so many of our comrades gave testimony to their loyalty to the land of their birth and adoption, by baptizing this soil with their blood. What memories! Memories that time has but made more hallowed, crowd upon us, as we are here assembled, in this work of love I How that toilsome march of thirty-seven miles, under the hot sun of the 2d of July, come vividly back to us, ending as it did with our arrival on the battle- field at about one o'clock in the afternoon . How well old uncle John Sedgwick kept his word to the commander of the Army of the Potomac, when he promised him to have tho Sixth Corps on the field of Gettysburg at two o'clock, you all know. How well we re- member our first assignment to position in the rear of the Third Corps, and our movement later on the next day to this spot on whioli we now stand, where we relieved the gallant Geary's boys, supporting the Twelfth Corps; and in that fearful conflict which made Culp's Hill historic ground. I might go on for some time and try to recall other facts ; but our time 458 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. is limited to a space. And now, my comrades, our duties for this occa- sion are done, our mission performed. This will be the Mecca to which our thoughts and our footsteps, as long as life is with us, will ever tend, and may future generations, looking upon this stone, learn lessons of loyalty which will lead them to strive to emulate the patriotism and devotion of those who had the honor to be known as the Eighty-second Regiment of Pennsylvania Volunteers, Shaler's Brigade, Wheaton's Division, Sedg- wick's Corps, Army of the Potomac. REMARKS OF CORPORAL WILLIAM H. REDHEFFER, SECRE- TARY OF THE EIGHTY-SECOND ASSOCIATION OF PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS. COMRADES :— When a proper history of the grand old Army of the Potomac, of its many severe struggles, marches and hard-fought battles to get possession of its great objective point— Richmond— and the heroic deeds of its valorous commanders and soldiers, shall have been written, no one name of that galaxy of heroes will stand out brighter or more prominent than that of George Gordon Meade. That grand old army that was so often out-generaled, and whose com- manders were so often out-manoeuvered, but whose soldiers were never whipped. You all remember the Peninsular Campaign under that (then) idol of the army, McClellan, with our marches and counter-marches, fa- tigues, hardships and battles, and our many reverses, and yet the old army was never defeated, discomfited or discouraged. These to be succeeded by the Maryland Campaign, under the old commander, McClellan, with Antietam and the various other victorious battles — to be succeeded in turn by Burnside and the reverses at Fredericksburg, and the "Mud March," with the toils, hardships and privations incident to those compaigns; and then "Fighting Joe" Hooker, with Chancellorsville, Marye's Heights and Salem Church ; to be followed by the second invasion of Maryland and the penetration of the loyal soil of our own State of Pennsylvania. You, comrades of the old "Shaler's Brigade," remember how, in the latter part of June, 1863, while on the march, we were informed of the displacement of Hooker and the substitution of that grandest of all our commanders, General Meade, to the command of our grand old army. You remember, too, the grumblings and feelings of disappointment and distrust amongst the rank and file at the placing of, as we then thought, a new man at the head of the army, and one who was then comparatively unknown beyond the limits of his own (Fifth) corps. The first day's fight at Gettysburg, the fall of that gallant soldier, Rey- nolds, and the sending for our division commander, Newton, to go to the front, to take Reynolds' place, in command of his corps, are still fresh in your minds. You remember, also, the night march of the first day of the fight, to reach the field of battle in time to take part therein. Wherever Pennsylvania at Qettyshurff. 459 the nation most needed ii soldier, there some of tlie Rniiid old Sixth Corps were sent. After our victory here at GettysbiirR, then tin- .li.irKe ;it Funkstnwn . :iiiy anotlier regiment, on the Gth July, when It reported to me for duty wiiile at Williamsport. The duty performed by tlie Eighty-fourth Regiment during the three days' fighting was as essential and important as that of any other regiment of my command; it was a duty they were ordered to perform over which tliey had no control, but as good sol- diers ol)oy('d tlie command. When Colonel Ojip reci'ivcd the order he sent liis adjutant, Lieutenant Mather, to me with a request to have the order rescinded, which of course was not granted. Tlio Eighty-fourth Regiment was one of ray best and most reliable commands. The otticerir and men were always ready and willing to do their duty. To deprive this regiment of the recognition it is Entitled to, upon that memorable battli'field, ■.vouil, iu my opinion, be a very great injustice. 1 would respectfully sug- gest that the monument be erected at a point near where my headquarters were, pre- vious to the second days' engagement. It was near the Emmitsburg road, directly In front of tlie Roger's House, as you will see upon the map of the field. The inscription should state the whoroahouts of the regiment on the 1st, 2d and 3d of July, 1S63, and the actual duty it was performing. I am, very respectfully, Joseph B. Carr. This statement is a monument in itself. No regiment ever received, or could have had, more emphatic endorsement of its service. The State Commission on Gettysburg monuments had no doubt of the full right of the Eighty-fourth to participate with all other Pennsylvania regiments that took part in the batle of Gettysburg, and promptly said so. On the night of the 4th, the regiment was ordered from AVestmiuster to rejoin the brigade, and reported to General Carr on the Gth. While at Westminster, there was constant apprehension of attack by rebel cavalry, and the Picket guards were under strict orders to be continu- ally on the alert to avoid surprise. During the night of the 13th and the morning of the lith Lee crossed his army over the Potomac at Williamsport, closely followed by the Union cavalry, the advance of the Army of the Potomac. [Here followed a detailed account of the movements of the regiment from Gettysburg to Appomattox.] December .31st, 1864, regiment was consolidated into a battalion of four companies. This formation was preparatory to the consolidation of the regiment with the Fifty-seventh Pennsylvania, which had been made a battalion of six companies. The consolidation took place on January IS, 1865. The consolidation was not a merger, save as to number. The Fifty-seventh 476 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. composed the right six companies aud the Eighty-fourth the left four companies. I will venture what I think the explanation of the dropping of the number eighty-four and the retention of the number fifty-seven, notwith- standing it was known that the colonel, major and adjutant of the con- solidated regiment would be from the Eightj'-fourth . But it was also known that the retention of the number eighty-four would work great in- justice to officers who had earned further promotion, and therefore the natural course of the command of the regiment determining the number, must give way to the necessity which justice prompted. [Here followed accoimt of marches from Appomattox to near Washing- ton.] From camp near Washington to Harrisbui-g, there a closing of accounts with the government that had, with the loss of 400,000 loyal lives and the crippling of 300,000 Union soldiers, and the agonies of the sorrow which never could be told off, been made altogether free. Into the hands of each comrade was placed a printed copy of the follow- ing paper: I'iuting as a baud of brothers, let us cling to the memory of those tattered banners, under which we have fought together, and which, without dishonor, we have just now restored to the authorities who placed them in our hands. Till we grow gray-headed aud pass away, let us sustain the reputation of this uoble regiment. Fortune threw together two organizations, the Eighty-fourth and Fifty-seventh, to make the present command. Both regimeuts have been in the service since the begin- nin;ir of the strife, and the records of both will command respect in all coming time. Very many of those who were enrolled with us have fallen, and their graves are scat- tered here and there throughout the South. We shall not forget them, aud the people of this nation must and will honor their memory. Comrades, farewell. Then with certificates of honorable muster-out, all matters of detail faithfully completed, and the 8th daj' of July, 1865, at hand, the "Old Regi- mental Home" was gone, and forever. The war is over! But not so its splendid achievements, its grand and far-reaching results. Never was conflict waged to a better and surer end. Never a result at- tained bearing so completely upon true governmental economy. To the revolution of '75 we are indebted for the rebellion of '61. The revolution stands out the more grandly because of the resulting text — the rebellion. The rejection of the latter was the upholding of the principles of the former ; posterity's emphatic endorsement of a valuable ancestry. Victories may be great but not always just. Conquerors have vanquished peoples and thereby encompassed countries within their toils, and then regretted there was not more to do on the same line. But their dping was only the ac- complishment of personal gain, the satisfaction of selfish purpose. With them war was a thing sought after, not a calamity to be avoided. Justice was not their polar star, nor did they seek the moral sphere as the place of their habitation. With them war was a vocation ordinary, and life and morals consideration secondary. Public standing and landed interests were made to depend upon military record. Conquered terri- tory was divided as would be now the spoils of the theft, among the par- ticipators in the act and in proportion to the extent of the service done. What a mistake, how grievous a wrong, to review on the printed page Pennsylvania at Oettyshurg. 477 the tenacity of an Alexander, or the vigor nl a Napoleon, for the purpose of comparing the wars of their armies with the deeds of patriotism and of valor that moved the six fighting years of the revolution, or the four years of the rebellion. No man this side of the Atlantic forced the revolution. It was the outcome of oppression that ill-fitted a people who had crossed from the other shore, not to bear greater burden, but that they might be full free from the crush of wrong. In its beginning not aggressive, but defensive. A year passed by before it was determined that the yoke should be fully thrown oil" and absolute independence moved for. And so it was, when along in the after years came the overt acts of treason that were to force states into rebellion, against the will of their people, every effort, reasonable and unreasonable, was made to conciliate the men whose only desire was not Union, but disintegration. So far did some of the most prominently active, and, I may add, patriotic men of our country, go in their determination to avoid a resort to arms, that the very amendment to the Constitution of these United States that forever forbids the institution of slavery, would have been, in number, the amend- ment that would have fastened slavery upon the country forever, had it not been that just then treason grasped for too much and thereby lost all. Now, when all is safe, it moves us to a condition of agony to recall that in the winter of '60 and '61, so weighty was the power of the then South, that among the men of our country, those of best repute, were found so many, who, to avert war, were ready to surrender everything, save the theory of a central government for all the States, and the bare privilege to look at the old flag. Our country is great, our government is powerful, but no thanks are I'wing to compromise for the greatness of the one or the power of the other. Treason's eagerness for the capture of all saved one generation from the commission of a wrong that the good deeds of all the coming generations could not have atoned for. It is well to be on guard always. And what of the present? The once soldiers of the Confederacy are entitled, as individuals, to every manly consideration at our hands ; as individuals they are as we are, -men walking the journey of life, reaching out to one common goal. LJut their organized bodies have no claim upon us for recognition. The government should have taken the life from every "camp" at its birth, and its strong arm should have swept from its soil the first monument to rebellion, with the warning that the placing of the second would be known as treason. They have been asking that the war be forgotten, and yet they would keep as daily reminded by the flaunting of the Confederate bars. No monument to treason should have been permitted a place on this or other field, and being here should be returned to the donors, not to be erected elsewhere. No government is strong enough to glorify treason against itself, nor to encourage it anywhere. 478 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. The individual I would take most heartily by the hand, the organization I discard. There can be no true call for a union of the blue and the gray. Let all don the blue. In place of waiting for the chasm to be closed, flank it and locate upon our side. The chasm itself can do no harm. It will be a thing well to look upon at times, and take warning from as the divider of great depths and impassable width. As in Heaven, so in earth, to dwell together as brothers, all must be of one mind, patriots upholding the one flag, standing fast by the red, white and blue. When true history of our day comes to be written, all things will be made plain. With the faithful historian, it is not the question of the doing, but of the thing done. Just as when we look upon the completed work of the sculptor, or the finished touch of the painter, it is not of the marble, or the canvas and the material laid upon it that we think, but of the figure before us, as we note perfection in every line, and see life in the seeming light of the eye, and apparent movement of muscle. History gives little heed to men, save to designate the moral character of the age. And now, comrades, for the part taken by the Eighty-fourth Regiment Pennsylvania Veteran Volunteers in the setting of the page which will commemorate the work of our time, a grateful Commonwealth has placed upon this spot this weight of granite. To the living it is, and to the people yet to come it will be, the visible proof of the deeds of heroism which located a part of the life of the men who bore the names that make up the roll of a command, whose record among the archives of the Nation is without the semblance of a blur or particle of a stain. Clear, positive, clean cut all the way through. Do we advance sentiment only, when we say that such a body did not, could not, have died in '65? Is there nothing of substance, nothing real, to come out of the thought, that as our country lives, so we as a regiment go on, living in the freedom of a land and the stability of a government, neither of which would now be, without sentiment, the spring of human life? The memorial which is here placed speaks from all along the line, from Bath to Appomattox. For the moment it moves aside, and where it was, and within the length- ening of its shadow, we see them all and as we glance from right to left, from front to rear, one is taken from here, another from there, one by one, from the highest in rank to the lowest, from the oldest in years to the youngest, the man and the boy ; first the two hundred and thirty in the time of the war, then the many who have left us in the days that have inter- vened ; and then comes the shaft into the space which was made for it. We look upon it now, and know that it stands for them. The time is coming when it will stand for all whose names made up a regimental roll. Then, and n^t till then, shall we know that our work hero is fully dtpniber 1S61 to April, 1S62, to serve three years. On the expiration of. Its term of service the original members were mustered out and the organization composed of veterans and recruits retained in service until June 30, 1865, when it was mustered out. 480 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. all — the immortal Grant, who, by his ponderous blows, brought annihila- tion to our enemies and gave us blessed peace. I congratulate you, men of the Eighty-eighth, on your share in these mighty achievements ! Let us rejoice that we," the survivors, have lived to see the day when the people of this great Commonwealth, through their Governor and other chosen officials and representatives, assemble to do honor to an organization of which we were part, and to drop a tear, with us, to the memory of the many of our comrades who fell by the wayside during those terrible days now happily past. Since the eventful. days in July, 1863, that made this spot historic, many pages have been written to describe what happened here, all of which have been more or less colored, because of the standpoint of the writers. Some would have us believe that Pickett's charge was the only event in the battle worthy of particular record ; others unduly extol the fight in the Peach Orchard; others, again, think that Devil's Den and Round Top were the vital points in the fight, while still another class claim that the neaviest and most important fighting of all was at Gulp's Hill, in the en- trenchments of the Twelfth Corps, on the right of the line. We of the First Corps have been entirely too modest, or, if not too modest, have lacked spokesmen ; for to our minds it is a fact beyond dispute that there was no heavier or harder fighting on any day, or on any part of the field, than right here on this line on the first day of the battle. The fighting at Peach Orchard, Devil's Den, Round Top, Gulp's Hill, Pickett's charge was like sudden summer storms, while the battling for the possession of this ridge was like a steady all-day rain. The summer's storm, gather- ing abruptly, bursts in fury with a heavy downpour, and perhaps flood, but ceases as quickly as it came, while the steady pour of the whole day swells rivulets into angry streams and carries all before it. So it was on the field of Gettysburg. The storms of the second and third days broke suddenly and with great fury, and, while they lasted, could not be ex- celled for fierceness or destruction, but soon they ceased; while here, on the first day, on this ridge, the steady downpour on our devoted heads began early in the morning, lasted throughout the day until sundown, when we were completely overwhelmed by the flood and carried away. At this date (July 1, 1863), the Eighty-eighth was attached to Baxter's Brigade, Robinson's Division, First Army Corps, all commanded by Gen- eral Reynolds, who also had under his command the Third and Eleventh Corps; the whole forming the left wing of the Army of the Potomac. The movements of the Army of Northern Virginia and the Army of the Potomac bring the advance of each to Gettysburg on June 30, our cavali-y under General Buford reaching there but a short time before the infantry division of Heth, of Hill's Corps, of the rebel army; the advance of the First Corps of our army being about five miles from the town, the Eleventh Corps at Emmitsburg, Maryland, about eleven miles distant, and the other corps at still greater distances, up to the forty miles of the Sixth Corps at Manhester. The fight opened early in the morning of July 1, by an advance of Heth's infantry to occupy the town. They were met and engaged by Buford's cavalry; the latter were greatly outnumbered, but by skilful manoeuvering Pennsylvania at Gctti/sburfj. 481 they concpalcd the smnlliioss of their f(irco, and kopt up a brilliant and suc- cessful defense until reinforcements arrived — Wadsworth's Division, First Corps. Ileth was reinforced by Pender's Division. The rebel line was now extended, and overlapped the flanks of Wadsworth ; Rowley's Division of the First Corps arriving, one brigade was sent to the right of Wads- worth, and the other to the left. Robinson's Division was held in reserve. Meanwhile Rodes' Division of Hill's Corps, and Early's Division of Ewell's Corps, arrived and prolonged the rebel line to the left, still overlapping our richt flank. Two divisions from Eleventh Corps (Schimmelpfonnig's and Barlow's) arrived in extension of our right ; this was the full line of battle, as finally developed, the other division (Steinwehr's) of the Eleventh Corps having taken position as a reserve on Cemetery Hill. The whole force upon the field, on the first day, was about 30,000 of the rebel army, and about 17,000 of ours. Meanwhile the fighting was constant on different parts of the line, there being charges and counter-charges, in which the rebel brigades of Archer, O'Neal and Iverson were badly worsted and nearly annihilated. In these movements the Eighty-eighth Regiment, of Baxter's Brigade, Robinson's Division, had full share. Bates, the historian of Pennsylvania regiments, says: "As there was a gap between the First and Eleventh Corps, Doubleday ordered Robinson to send one of his brigades, that of Baxter, to fill it. The latter arrived in time to meet the enemy's advance, but his small brigade proved in- sufficient to measure the open space, and, though fighting gallantly, driving back the enemy, and taking many prisoners and three battle-flags, he was constantly outflanked and exposed to a hot and enfilading fire." Again he says: "And when the troops of Baxter dashed gallantly forward, the rebels, seeing themselves pushed on three sides, surrendered in large numbers, and were swept into the Union lines." And again: — "Repeated assaults were made upon Paul and Baxter, with ever fresh troops, as if determined to break through and bear down all before them. But more daring and skilful leaders than Baxter, Paul and Robinson were not in the whole army, and their men were of the same spirit, and though suffering grievously at every fresh onset, hurled back the foe and main- tained their ground intact." The portion of the battle referred to in these quotations, occurred upon the spot upon which we now stand. On arriving here, we first faced to the north on the Mummasburg road; then we changed front, to the left, at right angles to this road, facing west. The charge referred to was led by the Eighty-eighth, Company D to the front, down that declivity to the small stream in the hollow, where our granite tablet now mark.=< the limit of advance. Many prisoners were taken; and two of the three bisttle- 482 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. flags spoken of were taken by this regiment, that of the Twenty-third North Carolina and that of the Twenty-sixth Alabama.* Upon this spot the fight raged long and fiercely, but our line was not broken; unfortunately, that was not the case across the Mummasburg road, where stood the men of the Eleventh Corps. Their line was badly extended and very thin ; the distance to be covered being too long for the number of men available to occupy it. Heavy masses of the enemy were thrown against it, breaking through and threatening our right and rear. The First Corps had now been in the fight from five to six hours, and had success- fully maintained itself against repeated and constant assaults without support or relief; but when it was known that the right of the corps had been turned, and that the Eleventh Corps was falling back, it became evident that the position that had been so long and gallantly defended must be given up. "Baxter's Brigade, which had fought with stubborn bravery upon the right, was brought to the rear of the ridge, at the rail- road cut, where it defended a battery, and still held the enemy advancing from the north in check." General Doubleday, the commander of the First Corps, describcb the situation at this time in these words: "So far I had done all that was pos- sible to defend my front, but circumstances were becoming desperate. My line was very thin and weak, and my last reserves had been thrown in. As we had positive infonnation that the entire rebel army was coming on, it was evident enough that we could not continue any longer unless some other corps came to our assistance. I had previously sent an aide to ask General Howard to reinforce me from Steinwehr's Division, but he declined to do so. I now sent my adjutant-general to reiterate my request, or to obtain for me an order to retreat, at is was impossible for me to remain where I was in the face of the constantly increasing forces which were approaching from the west. Howard refused to order me to retire. The First Corps had suffered severely in these encounters, but by this additional delay and the overwhelming odds against us it was almost totally sacrificed. General Wadsworth reported half of his men killed or wounded, and Rowley's Division suffered in the same proportion. Gen- eral Robinson had two horses shot under him. He reported a loss of 1,667 out of 2,500. About this time the Eleventh Corps gave way on the right, the Confederate forces made their final advance in double lines backed by strong reserves, and it was impossible for the few men left in the First Corps to keep them back, especially as Pender's large divi- sion overlapped our left for a quarter of a mile. Robinson's right was turned. Under these circumstances it became a serious question how to extricate the First Corps and save its artillery before it was entirely sur- rounded and captured. Each brigade was flanked and assailed in front and on both flanks. Robinson was forced back towards the seminary, but ♦General Ivcrson, of the rebel army, whose brigade we encountered here, says, in his ofllcial report, "The enemy » » » charged in overwhelming force upon and captured nearly all that were unhurt in three regiments of my brigade. When I saw white haudlverchiefs raised and my line of battle still lying down in position I characterized the surrender as disgraceful; but when I found afterward that 500 of my men were left lying dead and wounded in a line as straight as a dress parade, I exonerated the sur- vivors and claim for the brigade that they nobly fought and died, without a man run- ning to tlie rear. No greater gallantry and heroism has been displayed during the war." Pemisylvaiiia at Gettysburff. 483 halted, uutliwitlistiimling tlio pressuro upon him, and formed line to save Stewart's Battery north of the railroad cut, which had remained too long and was in danger of being captured. As the enemy was closing in upon us, and crashes of musketry came from my right and left, I had little hope of saving my guns, but I threw my headquarters' guard into the seminary and kept the right of Scales' Brigade back twenty minutes longer, while the left was held by Baxter's Brigade of Robinson's Division. Soon, however, we were assailed in front and on both flanks, which caused a re- treat along the railroad bed into and through the town to Cemetery Hill, where the line was once more reformed and established." Thus ended the first day's fight. The First Corps, composed of three divisions of two brigades each — in all six brigades of twenty-nine regiment.s — had resisted for many hours the repeated and constant attempts made to dislodge it from its position by portions of two corps of the rebel army containing the divisions of Heth, Pender and Rodes, of thirteen brigades of fifty-eight regiments, while the Eleventh Corps had two divisions of two brigades each — in all four bri- . gades of eighteen regiments — in its line of battle, engaging Early's Divi- sion of Ewell's Corps, of four brigades of sixteen regiments. How many men were in these different divisions, brigades and regiments, is not ascertainable, but good authorities estimate that the First Corps had in this fight about 8,200 men, and that the Eleventh Corps had about 6,500, which, with Buford's Cavalry of about 2,500 men, would make our total force on the field of battle about 17,000 men, not including the reserve di- vision of Steinwehr, which remained on Cemetery Hill and did not get into action. At this time the whole rebel army was composed of three corps of three divisions each, or in all nine divisions of 69,000 men, making an average of 7,666 to a division; or, say for the four divisions in the first day's fight, a total of 30,666. What the losses were, on this day, of the troops engaged, it is impossible to say, as there is no separate return for the first day's battle; the aggre- gate for the whole battle for three days being the only record that shows the losses of these troops. These aggregate as follows: Union Army: First Corps (excluding Staunard's Brigade),* 5,673 Eleventh Corps (except Steinwehr's Division"),* 2,855 Buford's Cavalary (except Sixth United States Cavalrj-),* 176 8,704 Rebel Army: Ewell's Corps, Early's Division, 1,188 " Rodes' Division 2,853 Hill's Corps, Heth's Division, 2,850 " Pender's Division , 1 ,690 8,581 The Union loss includes 3,882 prisoners, most of whom were captured after both flanks of our line had been turned. The rebel loss includes 1,580 *Not engaged on firsf day. 484 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. prisoners, mainly of Archer's, Iverson's, O'Neal's and Daniel's brigades, who were captured in the various assaults made. The total forces engaged during the three days' battle, according to the best authorities, were: On the Union side, 83,000 On the rebel side, 69,000 • Total, 152,000 The total casualties were: Union army, 22,900, or about 27 per cent. Rebel army, 20,488 " 29 Total, both armies, 43,388, " 28^ While the First Corps shows a loss of about 69 per cent, of the number engaged . These figures clearly tell the story of the persistent valor of the First Corps, and answer those in doubt as to whether there was "much of a fight" on the first day; in fact, they prove that the heaviest fighting of all was on the 1st day, because of the total loss of the troops of the First and Eleventh Corps and Buford's Cavalry, that fought on that day, nearly all were sustained along this line and on that day, and showing a total of 8,704 out of the whole loss of the Union army of 22,900, or 38 per cent., while the number engaged were but 20 per cent, of the whole force. The First Corps had engaged about 8,200 men, out of a total of the Union army of 83,000, or say less than 10 per cent., while its total losses during the battle were 6,024 out of a total in the army of 22,900, or over 26 per cent. In other words, had the whole Union army suffered in the same proportion as the First Corps, the loss would have been 60,590, in- stead of 22,900. There was "right smart" ("as our friends, the enemy, would say") of a fight on the first day of July, 1863, at Oak Ridge and Seminary Hill, and you, men of the Eighty-eighth, bore your full share of the perils and glories of that day. In further illustration of the severity of the fighting on the first day, a table of comparison of the casualties is herewith annexed. The evening of the Jtily 1 found the remnants of the First and Eleventh Corps on Cemetery Hill. Meanwhile General Hancock had arrived and relieved General Howard of the command, which had fallen to him. as senior officer present, on the death of General Reynolds. A new line of battle was at once formed. Wadsworth's Division of the First Corps being posted on Gulp's Hill, to the left of him, on Cemetery Hill, stood the Eleventh Corps, then came Doubleday's Division of the First Corps, and then Robinson's Division of the same corps. Divisions had by this time been reduced in numbers to less than small brigades, brigades to less than regiments, and regiments to less than ordinary full companies. My com- pany, for example, when we arrived at the hill, consisted of three enlisted men and myself; by the next morning I had, however, managed to gather up enough to show eleven good fighting men. Pennsylvania at (ictti/shitr;/. 48") Ou the arrival of twu divisions of tlie Third Cor[)s, they prolon^^cd the line to the left; later came the Twelfth Corps, which for the time being was held in reserve, but was afterwards put on the right of Wadsworth, and extended our line in that direction. Early on the morning of July 2, the Second Corps arrived, also two divisions of the Fifth Corps (the other division of said corps reached the field about noon) ; also two brigades of the Third Corps; the Artillery Reserve arrived at 10,30 a. m., while the Sixth Corps (the largest in the army, which was at Manchester, nearly forty miles away, did not reach the field until 4 o'clock in the afternoon On July 2, the line was as follows: The First and Eleventh Corps, as posted on the ni^ht of the 1st, occupying Culp's Hill and Cem^^tery Hill; then, to the left, came the Second Corps; then the Third Corps; the Twelfth Corps on the extreme right of the line, its left touching Wads- worth's Division; the Fifth Corps temporarily in reserve, but in the after- noon advanced into line on the left of the Third Corps, and extending to Round Top. Meanwhile the rebel line had also gotten into position. Ewoll's Corps was formed on our front, opposite the Twelfth, Eleventh and First Corps of our army; then, to his right (our left), came Hill's and Longstreet's Corps, facing the Second, Third and Fifth corps of our army; Pettigrew's Division of Hill's Corps in reserve, and Law's Brigade of Hood's Division and Pickett's Division not yet arrived. The morning and the early part of the afternoon of the second day were spent in. getting into position and planning forms of attack. General Meade, at dawn, commenced to form his lines for an attack from our right on Ewell's Corps of the rebel left, but that being finally decided inadvisable, changed his plans and began posting his troops on our left, with the view of attacking the enemy's right. Meanwhile, Lee was con- centrating his forces for an attack by Longstreet's Corps (his right) on our left ; Ewell's Corps, on the extreme rebel left, to attack our extreme right at the same time, in order to help Longstreet. These movements were slow, but the attack was finally delivered with great force and spirit on the Third and Fifth Corps, which resulted m the fighting at Wheatfield,' Peach Orchard, Devil's Den and Round Top. Our troops were driven from the Peach Orchard, and our line was pierced; but reinforcements arriving from the right, the tide was driven back and the rebel attacks repulsed. These reinforcements included portions of the First, Second and Twelfth corps, and among them was Robinson's Di- vision, in which was the Eighty-eighth, which did its full share in the re- pulse. The position of the regiment on that line is marked by a granite tablet. The stripping of the right of the line to reinforce the left, was Ewell's opportunity. Johnson's Division cro.ssed Rock Creek, and soon discovered that the strong breastworks thrown up on our right were empty ; he at once occupied them and endeavored to turn our right flank, but was re- pulsed; pushing further to the right, he found nothing to oppose him, and advanced steadily far to the rear of our right flank, but darkness had come on and Johnson halted, fearing a trap. This halt wn.s our salvation. The attack of rx)ngstreet having been repulsed, the Twelfth Corps endeavored 32 486 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. to return to its former position, on our right, which had been occupied by Johnson in its absence. Finding their entrenchments in the hands of the enemy, the men slept upon their arms, and at the break of day at- tacked the rebel line, and after a long and vigorous fight succeeded ; and by 11 o'clock had retaken their fortified positions and restored the line of battle. We have now come to the third and last day of this battle, resulting in a complete victory for the Union forces. The Eighty-eighth has returned from the left, and is now posted in Ziegier's Grove, in the rear of Ceme- tery Hill; the spot being now marked by a granite tablet. About 1 o'clock p. m. there opens a perfect pandemonium of artillery firing, the like of which was probably never heard before or since. About one hundred and fifty of the rebel cannon are playing at once on a point in our line, and that point is the brigade joining our left. About one hundred and fifty of our cannon are vigorously returning the salute ; the air is thick with shot, and mother-earth has suddenly become very dear, and is embraced most ardently by the brave "boys in blue" that are in range of this ter- rific hail of lead and iron ; but this was but a prelude to a more terrible scene to come. Cannonading at long range, such as this, is more terrifying to the nerves than damaging to the body ; tons of balls go over our heads harmlessly, few do damage — the main object of it all is to "knock out" and .silence our batteries, for an assault is to be delivered on our line by infantry, and batteries firing grape and canister at short range on attack- ing columns are very destructive. The cannonading having ceased, the infantry column comes into sight; steadily but surely it approaches our line, our firing plows great gaps through them, but still they come-— oui* line is reached, and with a rush and a spring they are on us. Now comes a hand-to-hand conflict between Pickett's Division of Virginians with Webb's Philadelphia Brigade. For a moment the line appears to be lost, but reinforcements from the right and left are quickly thrown in (among them the Eighty-eighth) ; the attack is repulsed, and Pickett's Division of Longstreet's Corps, supported by Wilcox's Brigade and Pettigrew's Bri- gade, both of Hill's Corps, are hurled back by Gibbon's and Hays' divisions of the Second Corps, and Doubleday's and Robinson's divisions of the First Corps; and the battle of Gettysburg is practically at an end. It will be seen by this narrative, that the Eighty-eighth did its full share on the different days and in the various stages of this great battle. On the night of June 30, it was on picket duty; on July 1, with Baxter's Bri- gade, Robinson's Division, First Army Corps, at Oak Hill and Seminary Ridge; on July 2, it was, part of the day, at Cemetery Hill, and in the afternoon went on the "double-quick" as part of Robinson's Division, and assisted in the repulse of Longstreet's attack on the Third and Fifth Corps, between Peach Orchard and Round Top; on July 3, at Ziegier's Grove, in the rear of Cemetery Hill, and from there, on the "double-quick." to assist in the repulse of Pickett's charge on the left of Cemetery Hill. Men of the Eighty-eighth, every duty that you were called upon to perform on these eventful days, you did to the utmost, without complaint, but cheerfully and freely ; but at what a sacrifice it was ! The regiment went into action two hundred and ninety-six strong; ten were killed and Pennsylvnniii at (hlti/shnr;/. 487 one hundred wounded or captured. Let me reiul the names of the heroic dead: Company A, William Beaumont; Company P>, Herseant Henry Evans; Company C, Michael Hollicher and Charles A. Zazier ; Company E, Jacob Andrews and Joseph R. ]'>runer; Company H, Robert Simons; Company I, David Ilarland and John I.,iiik ; Company K, John Corn. The officers commanding the regiment during the engagement were, first, Major B. F. Foust, who was wounded soon after the beginning of the fight; the command then devolved on, second, Captain (since lieutenant- colonel) E. A. Mass, who wfft captured during the charge made on Iverson's Brigade on the first day; third. Captain Henry Whiteside, Company A, who assumed command after the capture of Captain Mass, and directed the operations of the regiment towards the close of the first day, and also during the remaining days of the battle. The company commanders, were. Company A, Captain Henry White- side; Company B, Captain Edmund A. Mass, who, together with both of his lieutenants (George W. Grant and Samuel G. Boone), were captured and carried south. Company C, Lieutenant Alexander Gardiner, Jr. Com- pany D, Lieutenant George E. Wagner; Company E, Captain Joseph H. Richards; Company F, Captain George B. Rhoads ; Company G, Captain Henry Korn ; Company H, Lieutenant Henry E. Quimby ; Company I, Captain George L. Schell (who was captured); Company K, Lieutenant Sylvester H. Martin. The patriotic impulses of the people of this great Commonwealth, as exemplified by their legislature of 1887, paved the way to this form of ever keeping in remembrance the suffering and sacrifice of her citizen sol- diers. During the session of that year, a general law was passed making an appropriation of $l,.50O for a memorial for each Pennsylvania regiment that fought on this field. The Survivors' Association of the Eighty-eighth had submitted to it many designs, and adopted the one that has resulted in the beautiful memorial that stands before us. Having chosen the design which required an ex- penditure far in excess of the State appropriation, energetic and success- ful action was immediately taken to supply the funds that were needed To-day we are assembled to dedicate this memorial in commemoration of the heroic deeds of this valiant regiment; and, as we look upon it and see heaped there the emblems of grim and ghastly strife and war, let us express the fervent hope that never again may this land be called upon to send its sons to follow the rattling drum or the piercing fife, nor to hear the whistling minie bullet or the belching cannon, but rather that peace, blessed peace, shall be ours and the inheritance of our children and our children's children unto the remotest day of time. Gettysburg! A name, before the eventful days of July, 1863, known only to the people of this locality, but then made famous and renowned to all parts of the earth — a name that will be celebrated to the mos*' dis- tant ages of the world — a name that will be forever historic, made so by the brave men who here stood in the defense of their country's laws and flag. Where are these men? Some lie dead beneath your feet; the bones of others lie bleaching upon many other southern battlefields ; others have 488 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. fallen a prej- to disease or age, whilst but a remnant of the grand old Army of the Potomac is left to* participate in the reunion of this day. Gettysburg I The slaughter on your fields was not in vain ; from your green slopes the tide of rebellion ebbed and shrank, until, month by month, it sunk lower and lower, and finally disappeared, and at last the old flag floated once more over "a union, one and inseparable." Comparative Table slioicing Losses of the Army of the Potomac, of the Army of Northern Virginia, of the Troops uho fhvght the first day, and their several ratios. ■a a K Killed .^nd WOU.SDED. 5 « 3 a o "a o o Troops. 0) g 2 +- o C3 ,O0O 4,822 12,903 28.3 19.5 21.3 3,882 1,371 5,253 8,704 14,286 B1.2 21.6 Total 17,727 22,990 27.7 Army of 'Sorthern Virginia: Troops onsrased on first day 7,001 S,297 23.3 21.2 1,580 3,570 5,150 8,581 11,867 20,448 28.6 30.4 Total 69,0OC 152,000 15,298 32,985 3,483 1,178 161 22.1 29.6 21.7 10,408 43,388 28.5 Union tiocps engaged on first day: 8,200 6,500 2,500 7,300 42.2 18.1 6.1 28.3 2,190 1.677 15 5,673 2,855 176 39.2 Eleronth Corps, t 43.9 7.1 Total, 4,822 3,8S? 8,704 51.2 •Explnnins Stannard's Br'gade. tExeludncr Stoinwohr's Division. JExcluding Sixth Regiment U. S I- Nono of ■nliich were engaged on first day. Cavalry. J Taking the aggregate loss of both armies as a basis, the ratio of loss, as between their several parts, shows as follows: — Ratio. Whole loss, both armies, 28.5 of number engaged— 100.0 Army of the Potomac, 27.7 " " 97.1 Army of Northern Virginia, 29.6 " " 103.8 Union side, first day, 51.2 " " 179.6 Rebel side, first d.iy, '. 28.6 " " 100.3 Union army, first day: Ratio. First Corps, 69.2 of number engaged=^242.8 Eleventh Corps, 43.9 " " 154.0 Buford's Cavalry, 7.1 " " 24.9 Pennsylvania at Gcttysbanj. -189 DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 90'^H REGIMENT INFANTRY* September 3, 1888 ADDRESi^OF BREVET-COLONEL A. J. SELLERS COMRADES, ladies and gentlemen: — Gettysburg! If ever there be con- secrated ground, then you can well say, naught is more hallowed ex- cept the path the Savior of tlie world wended, as he ascended the rugged heights of Calvary. As he died for the salvation of men, so our com- rades died to make men free. Gettysburg, so often quoted as the high water-mark of the rebellion, was truly the turning point in the war for the preservation of the Uuion. The magnitude of the conflict, and its far-reaching consequences, give it rank among the world's greatest battles. As the years roU by its interest increases, and these memorial shafts are erected in commemoration of the great deeds of the heroes who here gave their all, their lives, that the Nation should, under God, have a new birth of freedom, and that the government of the people, by the people and for the people should not perish from the earth. So spoke the immortal Lincoln, on yonder hill, iu 1S63. "If General Lee wants provisions, let him go and look for them in Penn- sylvania," was the reply sent from the Richmond authorities; and this was the popular Southern feeling. For this purpose did we find General Lee massing his forces in Pennsylvania, July, 1863, concentrating in the vicinity of Gettysburg. Ewell and Pearly had passed through the town a few days before apparently marching on Harrisburg, with Philadelphia and Washington as objective points. Ascertaining that the Union army was in closer promixity than he had anticipated, he intended to seek a defensive position, and so assured his lieutenants — thinking he would have ample time to select and occupy such a one. Gettysburg was the point of concentration decided upon, by way of the southern and western routes. General Meade was equally desirous of securing the advantage of a defensive position, and he selected for the advance two of his subord- inate men, noted for quickness of perception, promptness of decision and gallantry on the battlefield — Reynolds and Buford — to operate his left flank. Buford took in the situation at once, and on the early morning of July 1, dismounted his two brigades. Gamble's and Devin's reducing thereby his command one-fourth to care for the horses ; and at about 8 o'clock in the morning the cavalry engaged Heth's Division of Hill's Third Corps In- fantry, Archer's and Davis' brigades, they supposing their opponents were infantry. A severe struggle took place on the banks of Willoughby Run. Buford had his artillery admirably posted . His object was simply to •Organized nt Pliiladclrhi,! from October 1, ISCl to Mr.rcb 10, 1S62, to serve three years. It was consolidated with the 11th Penna., November 26, 1S64. , 490 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. retard the enemy until Reynolds' First Corps, which was near at hand, could be placed in position ; they having that morning made a forced march from Marsh Creek, about live miles from Gettysburg. The gallant Reynolds, having been informed of the opening of the battle by Buford, proceeded in advance of his infantry column, following the sound of battle, at full gallop, to bring the assurance of speedy relief to our cavalry and its valiant chieftain. And here I desire to speak of the magnificent stand made by our gallant troopers, pitted against Hill's veteran infantry. The First Corps was on the lead in the march from Marsh Creek and Emmitsburg, where it had bivouacked for the night of June 30 ; the Nine- tieth that day having made a march of twenty-three miles, through mud and rain. General Reynolds commanded the First Corps and the ad- vance of the Army of the Potomac — the First, Eleventh and Third Corps. Soon after his arrival, about 9.45 o'clock a. m., in making disposition of his command, he was too early made immortal, and in the glory of his manhood (but forty-three years of age), rapidly rising to the zenith of fame — he fell upon his native soil, a martyr to his country, and lamented throughout every loyal state of the land he loved. The position selected for the First Corps, under the direction of General Reynolds, was an in- ferior one, in comparison to the strategic one of Cemetery Hill, and know- ing that the enemy were in advance of us, and that Lee's forces could be concentrated somewhat sooner, he chose the more indefensible one to iight upon, so that in the event of disaster, our advancing troops could occupy and fortify Cemetery Hill, a powerful line of defense, with Gulp's and Powers' Hills on the right and the two Round Tops on the left. As he approached Gettysburg he noticed the magnificent position of Cemetery Hill; it could not, in fact, have escaped his trained military eye. Had he occupied that position on the first day, the overwhelming numbers of Ewell's and Hill's Corps, would have driven the First and Eleventh Corps from it, and perhaps precipiitated a disaster dreadful to contemplate. Cutler's Brigade of Wadsworth's Division (Seventy-sixth and One hun- dred and forty-seventh New York and Fifty-sixth Pennsylvania Volun- teers) led the advance of the First Corps, facing the west, north of the then unfinished railroad. The Ninety-fifth New York, Fourteenth Brook- lyn, with Hall's Second Maine Battery, were located south of the railroad cut. The Fifty-sixth Pennsylvania Volunteers, Colonel J. W. Hofmann, of Philadelphia, delivered the first infantry volley. On their left was the road from Chambersburg to Gettysburg, and still further to the left was the Hagerstown road; upon these roads Hill's Corps was moving. Be- • tween these roads is the historic Reynolds' Grove, extending westward to Willoughby Run. Both armies wanted possession of these woods to cover their movements. General Reynolds ordered the Iron Brigade to enter. They pushed forward and were confronted by Archer's Tennessee Brigade, who had just crossed the run, and by a brilliant movement of Fairchild's Second Wisconsin and Colonel Morrow's Twenty-fourth JNIichi- gan, of the Iron Brigade, turned the right flank of the Confederates, cap- turing several regiments (upwards of five hundred men), including their Ptnn.si/l I'd Ilia at (Jcttyshiinj. 491 brigade comruanclor. General xVrcher, driving the remainder of the brigade beyond the stream at the bayonet's point. Pending this movement is when the gallant Reynolds fell, supposed to have been shot by a sharpshooter. Heath's Division now pressed forward upon our right flank and attacked Cutler's Brigade, front and flank, they having located en echelon. Hall's Second Maine Battery here lost a gun, which was subsequently recaptured. Tv/o regiments of Davis' Mississip- pians, to avoid a withering concentrated fire, were forced into the railroad cut and there captured, with their colors. This fortunate occurrence par- tially relieved Cutler's Brigade. During a lull, Heth reorganized his shat- tered division to await the assistance of Pender's Division, for a fresh attack. Four weakened brigades had been contending with eight well filled Confederate brigades, who here found out that their sudden attacks en masse were more dangerous and more difficult of execution along the open C()uutry of Pennsylvania, than among the thickly wooded settlements of Virginia, where they did not stand in dread of slanting fires. The remainder of the First Corps were marching into position on the right, it being Doubleday's and Robinson's divisions, the former commanded by General Rowley, Doubleday having succeeded Reynolds. At the same time Pender's Confederate Division was being deployed and the en.^age- ment renewed with increased vigor. The Bucktail Brigade, under Colonel Roy Stone, was now placed north and adjoining the Reynolds' Grove, fighting with conspicuous bravery, shouting "we have come to stay," and Riddle's Brigade, located south of the grove (facing the west), with no wood to rest upon to disguise its weak- ness, was our extreme left, where they felt the power of the immense force arrayed against them. Rowley's Brigade, under Colonel Biddle, confronted what seemed to be a division coming down upon their front from the west and south in heavy lines, and upon his flank Brockenbrough's Virginians emerged under cover of the woods. Cooper's Union battery was wheeled into position. Terrible rents were made in the advancing lines, but closing up they came on undaunted. Hill at this time had Pender's Division of four brigades, and Hetb's four, making eight large brigades to six of the First Corps. Pender and Heth by this time de- veloped their full strength and faced the First Corps with nearly three times as many men, and their line connected on their left with Rodes' Division of Ewell's Corps, who had so opportunely arrived from Carlisle. At this juncture our regiment, the Ninetieth Pennsylvania Volunteers, went into position under the fire of the guns stationed on Oak Hill, and we, being on the extreme right of the First Corps, were obliged to in part refuse, or face the north. Our general line of battle was facing the west, frequently en echelon, and upon our regimental front was O'Neal's Alabama Brigade, and Page's Virginia Batterj- stationed at the red barn, where they suffered so severely, losing fully one-half their men in killed and wounded. Upon Oak Hill, enfilading our line of battle, was Carter's Battalion of Artillery, Rodes' line of battle facing the south and east, Iverson on our left, Daniel and O'Neal in the center, and Doles far be- yond, whose direct line of fire was to the left of the Eleventh Corps; Ram- seur's Brigade was in reserve, but subsequently engaged. A portion of 492 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. our brigade took advantage of a stone fence, which protected us from view, and as Iverson's North Carolinans advanced, which was about 2.30 o'clock, we delivered such a deadly voUey at very short range, that death's mission was with unerring certainty, and so destructive were the volleys we rapidly delivered that we followed it up with a charge, ordered by the plucky Baxter, which resulted in the capture of three regiments of the brigade. This was a decisive blow, but we could not withstand the suc- ceeding lines of battle, and the enfilading artUlery fire from Oak Hill. Confederate Rodes, in his report, speaks of his command being subjected to a murderous enfilade and direct infantry fire from the time it com- menced its advance. O'Neal's troops felt confident of turning our right — the force uf the attack fell upon the Ninetieth Pennsylvania Volunteers, your regiment- but they were repulsed with heavy loss and the remnants thereof hurled back ; no longer did they attempt an advance, untU we were later on ordered to a position near the seminary, under cover of the woods. The brigade of North Carolinans, under Ramseur, and O'Neal's Alabamians were held in check by the undaunted courage of the gallant Robinson and his troops. The unusually large number of Confederate oflicers killed and wounded, as well as our own, attest to the severity of the conflict and the daring of the First Corps. Six brigades constituted the corps, commanded by Meredith, Morrow, Robinson, Cutler, Biddle, Roy Stone, Paul, Wister, Dana, Leonard and Baxter, and repeatedly thwarted the brilliant charges made by an equally valiant foe. Six of these brigade commanders were wounded. For over five hours the corps held the enemy in check. At last another desparate attack by Daniel, of Rodes' Division, was made on Roy Stone's Brigade. The enemy, unable to make any impression upon Baxter's and Paul's Brigades of Robinson's Division, the blow fell with withering effect upon Roy Stone, shortly before 3 o'clock. In two lines the enemy moved forward, parallel to the pike, but the One hundred and forty-ninth Pennsylvania • Volunteers sheltered themselves behind the railroad cut, the One hundred and forty-third Pennsylvania Volunteers, Colonel Dana, on the right and rear of the One hundred and forty-ninth. The One hundred and forty -ninth. Colonel Dwight, poured two terrific volleys, and by a brilliant bayonet charge, magnificently supported by the remainder of the brigade, broke their lines, and in dismay they feU back, a beaten foe. Davis' Brigade, of HUl's Corps, failed to co-operate. Wister succeeded to the command. Colonel Roy Stone being wounded. Once more they moved against the Bucktails (Daniel's and Davis, brigades), from the northwest, only to be again repulsed; as also in a subsequent attack, the One hundred and fiftieth Pennsylvania Volun- teers, under command of Colonel Huidekoper, distinguishing itself by bril- liant fighting, ending in a bayonet charge. Huidekoper, though badly wounded, held his position. Here Colonel Wister, of the One hundred and fiftieth Pennsylvania Volunteers, commanding the brigade, was wounded, Colonel Dana succeeding him. Frequent assaults were made upon Paul's and Baxter's brigades (the latter including the Ninetieth Pennsylvania Volunteers"), but they stub- bornly held the ground, and would not be driven from their position, until Pitinsi/lvaitid at (Uiijishitnj. 493 their Jimmuiiitidii l><";::in to grow .scaro', some having lired tlicir last (•art- ridge, and were siiijplied from tlie boxes of their killed and wounded com- rades. Their position uow became untenable, from the numerically over- whelming superiority of our foes, wiio were taking advantagi; of the gap in our line of battle on our right. It was then shortly after 3 o'clock, and the two divisions of the Eleventh Corps had been routed ; the First Corps was still continuing the struggle in the position it had been defending since morning. I)oul)lcday, appre- ciating the new danger to which he was about to be exposed, sent to Gen- eral Howard for immediate reinforcements, or the order of retreat. The only support he offered Doubleday was Buford's cavalry, who at the time was covering with dilliculty the retreat of his corps on the extreme right. Reynolds' men can never forget how near they were to being sacri'iced. Howard was subsequently superseded by Hancock, a junior officer, who had arrived upon the field of action, about 4.30 o'clock. Pender's Divi- sion of eighteen regiments replaced Heth's Divisioli of exhausted and dis- couraged troops. Pender, about 3.30 o'clock, assails the three small bri- gades of Stone, Morrow and Biddle, now reduced to 1,500. Rodes' Divi- sion of Ewell's Corps, no longer assailed by the Eleventh Corps, turn in for a general attack, supported by thirty pieces of artillery, and make a rai)id descent upon the stone wall, behind which a portion of Robinson's Division was posted, and thus apparently hemmed in, the order was given to abandon the position we so gallantly had maintained. It was at this time that General Paul, who commanded the First Bri- gade, was so severely wounded in the head, losing both eyes, and the ad- jutant of our regiment, David P. Weaver, acting brigade adjutant-general, was so severely wounded; and for all this undaunted courage, the First Corps was, by a general oflicer of another corps, unfairly criticised, be- cause two regiments of Cutlei*'s Brigade, sooner than be annihilated or captured, were ordered to fall back early in the fight, under cover of Sem- inary Ridge; but they subsequently returned, achieved brilliant lustre by their heroic conduct and manfully held their position with the brigade. Our men made a firm resistance around the seminary, to which point we withdrew, under cover of the woods, and by the aid of our batteries under Colonel Wainwright, chief of First Corps artillery, beat back the first lines of Scales' North Carolina Brigade, wounding both Generals Scales and Pender. Scales says that he arrived within seventy-five feet of our guns, and adds that every field ofiicer but one was killed or wounded . General Doubleday, in his report, gives to Baxter's Brigade of Robinson's Division, of which the Ninetieth Pennsylvania Volunteers was a part, the credit of holding in check the left of Scales' North Carolina Brigade, while our artillery withdrew along the railroad embankment; a portion of the 'Nine- tieth having been in support of Stewart's Battery B, Fourth United States Artillery, north of the railroad cut. With all our casualties, the First Corps lost but one gun (Reynolds' New York Battery), the horses having been shot, and there being no time to disengage them. About 4.15 p. m. General Doubleday ordered us to fall back from the seminary into the town, the Eleventh Corps having been already driven 494 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. therein, and many captured in the streets of Gettysburg. It was a stub- born retirement— Scales', Daniel's Ramseur's and O'Neal's Brigades almost surrounded us— Robinson's men being the last to vacate Seminary Ridge. The First Corps was broken, but not dismayed, showing the true spirit of soldiers. They reached the gate of the cemetery on the hill, which was our rallying point. I call to your mind that this magnificent fighting by the First Corps was a single line, unsupported, unrenewed — artillery on its front and right flank — and chiefly unprotected by breastworks It was a series of brilliant charges and counter-charges. Could there have been a corps up at that time to support the First, how decisive might have been the results. A gallant resistance was made by it between Wil- loughby Run and Seminary (or Oak) Ridge, against superior numbers, viz., Heth's and Pender's Divisions of Hill's' Confederate Corps, who by their own vastly underestimated report of 15,000, and four brigades of Rodes' Division of Swell's Corps of 8,000, in all 23,000, marched against the gallant First Corps', numbering 8,200 maximum (three to one), and not until 4 o'clock p. m., did they succeed in dislodging the First Corps from their position. The records of war present no instance of more gal- lant, stubborn and persistent fighting than that offered by Reynolds' men. You will observe that the series of repeated assaults on our lines were iso- lated attacks by brigades, and changes of front were frequent. Open ma- noeuvi-ing of troops was more fully carried out on the first day's battle than is usual, on account of the topography of the country; and the captures made by the First Corps were by brilliant manoeuvers — chiefly whole regiments, and including the only captured Confederate, unharmed, general officer (Archer) at Gettysburg, while our losses were isolated men, mostly in the falling back from Seminary Ridge, of mixed and indiscriminate commands, in the streets and immediate suburbs of Gettysburg, where we were hemmed in and the avenues of escape so well guarded. The losses sustained by the First Corps after as brilliant fighting as was done at Gettysburg (with all due deference to the valor of other corps), attest to the verification of my as- sertion. The First Corps lost 5,750 out of 8,200 (70 per cent.); Robinson's Division losing 1,600 out of 2,500 engaged. These figures tell eloquently of the terrible ordeal through which they passed. The Confederates admit a loss on the first day of 7,500, and only a loss of 829 in front of the Eleventh Corps ; almost as many casualties as we had effective strength in the entire corps. Our loss, however, was proportionately greater by far, than that of any other corps engaged, and it inflicted greater damage upon their oppo- nents. Its beloved leader fell, but his keen sagacity and military genius gave us the advantage of position, which finally resulted in a glorious victory. Very diverging figures as to the respective strength of the two armies have been given by different authorities ; therefore it is difficult to clearly establish the fact. The Comte de Paris, who is considered as an impartial historian, places the Union forces engaged — not what was carried on the rolls, as more tolerance was shown in the Union army, as to keeping up the effective strength, than in the Southern army — at from 82,000 to 84,000 actual fighting strength, and 327 guns, including cavalry and artillery, making proper allow- ance for the sick, stragglers, detached men and the like. The Sixth Corps, the largest in the army, under Sedgwick, did not arrive I'onisi/lviniid (it Gettysbunj. 495 on the field until late in the iifteriiuon iuid eveuing of the seeond day, havinj; made a forced march of forty miles, being that far away when the battle commenced ; consequently they did not all receive the shock of battle like unto the other corps. Corse's Brigade, of Pickett's Division, and a regiment of Pettigrew's Brigade were left at Hanover Junction ; also three regiments of Early's Division at Winchester, and tf\e ratio of deduction, on account of sick, etc., like unto our own, made the Confederates* effective force at *i9,00() men and 2-30 guns, a difference of about 14,000 men. There has been too much exaggeration as to the tijrhting strength of both armies. One peculiarity in the organization of the Confederate forces was that troops of the same State almost invariably formed entire brigades; this was rarely the case in our army. A finer body of disciplined veterans n(>ver followed tlie stars and bars at any previous period ; its morale was of the finest — flushed with victory just before at Chaucellorsville. Our army had scarcely recovered from that ter- rible shock, where our casualties were 17,197, and the Confederates 13,019. The losses on this field to both sides were nearly equal, about 2.'3,000 each The number of belligerents at the world-renowned Waterloo, June 18, 1815, was 140,000: Under Napoleon, 72,000; under Wellington, 68,000. The timely arrival of Blucher's Prussian corps (fully 50,000) decisively crushed out Napoleon's failure to defeat Wellington. At Gettysburg, the combined forces aggregated 152,000, with a joint loss in killed and wounded of 31,800, in compari.sou with a joint loss at Waterloo of 30,600, which occupied but eight hours, while Gettysburg lasted three days, but not continuous fighting, owing to the battle being precipitated ere the arrival of our entire army. Waterloo and Gettysburg rank as the two greatest battles of modern times. Gettysburg was conspicuous for hand-to-hand fighting, stalwart men were cut down in the saddle ; Confederate General Wade Hampton received a severe saber wound. The Union and Confederate cavalry on the right hew each other with sabers, amid demoniac yells, and on the left, Kilpatrick des- perately fought his cavalry, lo,sing one of the bravest cavalry officers that ever drew a sword, Farnsworth, who fell at the head of the First Vermont, and the Confederate accounts say, though sevei'ely wounded, he, by his own hand, severed his existence, sooner than surrender. In charge, generally one or the other of opposing ranks break before the touch of weapons. The desperate but unsuccessful charge, on the evening of the 2d, by Averys and Hays' Brigade of "Louisiana Tigers," on the Elev- enth Corps, and the batteries of Ricketts and Wiedrich, who expended five hundred rounds of canister, was a terrible hand-to-hand conflict, on the north side of Cemetery Hill. Individual bravery was here never surpassed. Car- roll's Brigade of the Second Corps charged and saved the day. The assault by Wilcox, Perry and White, on the second day, penetrating our Third Corps line on Cemetery Ridge, where the First Minnesota was almost annihilated, equals almost the desperate, but brilliant, attack of Pickett's Division on the third day, which history has immortalized. On the left, during the second day, the whole space from the Peach Orchard to the Devil's Den had been fought over and over; thousands fell in that bloody arena. The Ninth Massachusetts Battery particularly distinguished itself in 496 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. a stubborn hand-to-hand encounter with Humphrey's Forty-first Mississip- pians — the only regiment that actually cross'^d Plum Run, dealing death with fearful pace. The battery sacrificed itself for the safety of our line; its losses being unequaled by any light battery engaged in any battle of the war save one, at luka, Mississippi. Its guns were that evening recaptured. In the wheat field Colonel Jeffords, of the Fourth Michigan (Fifth Corps), was killed by a bayonet thrust. And when, at 1.15 p. m., on the third day, one hundred and fifty Confederate guns opened upon our position from Seminary Ridge, I shall never forget that artillery cannonade just previous to Pickett's charge, which presented one of the most magnificent battle scenes witnessed during the war. The hills on either side were capped with crowns of flame and smoke, as about three hundred guns, equally divided between the two ridges, launched their iron hail upon each other. Dense clouds of smoke set- tled over the valley, assisting thereby to cover the subsequent advance of Pickett's and a portion of Hill's command. The shells went hissing and screaming on their errand of death, through the dense vapor; numbers ex- ploded over the valley, apparently with venomous impatience, as they met each other in mid-air, lighting up the clouds with smoke-like flashes of lurid lighting. While this grand artillery duel was in progress, with the ther- mometer indicating eighty-s.even degrees in the shade, Pickett's the last divi- sion to reach the field, and the only Confederate division that had not been engaged, followed with his world-renowned charge of Virginia troops, and a portion of Hill's Corps. In three lines, with inadequate support, they press forward on their fatal march, taking and dealing death at every blow. Like leaves in autumn gales, they drop along the line. The summit is reached! Meade's line is broken in the very center of our position, crown- ing Cemetery Heights with the flag of Virginia and the Confederacy ; they bear themselves with a gallantry that cannot be surpassed. Into their ranks we pour a deadly fire, before which the Confederate line curls and withers like leaves in the flames. No panic seized the Union troops; with one spontaneous effort officers and men fell upon them like an avalanche, and the flag of the Confederacy drops on the high tide of the rebellion — Get- tysburg is Avon ! A desperate attempt was made to drive us from Culp's Hill on the morn- ing of the 3d, after we had recaptured our vacated works, and from the Round Tops on the afternoon of the 2d ; and while all efforts to turn our flanks failed the Confederates, notwithstanding, exhibited a degree of valor unsurpassed by any troops of modern times. It was truly, jointly, American valor. The fighting of our batteries throughout was of the grandest and most fearless character, frequently hand-to-hand, an example of which is seen in Cushing's grand defense and noble sacrifice. The brilliant manoeuvring and charges to and from, on the field of the First Corps, resulted in the capture of entire rebel regiments and a general officer; and when overwhelmed, the disciplined withdrawal of the First Corps, fighting and disputing the ground foot by foot, won for them the admiration alike of friend and foe. The contest of the first day, I am sorry to say, has by some been underesti- mated, who prate that the battle of Gettysburg was fought only by the con- Pennsylvania at Gettijshnnj. 41)7 tcstants of the second iiud third days. The First Corps opened the batth- and was in at the final blow. On the second day it was divided. Wadsworth's Division at Gulp's Hill, prolonging the line of the Twelfth Corps on the evening of the 2d, assisted in the repulse of a ferocious attack by Ewell. Robinson's Division was in support of the Third Corps, after their repulse early on the evening of the 2d. On that eventful Friday of the 3d, Doubleday's Division was on the left of the Second Corps, where the stalwart Green Mountain boys, under Stannard, received their baptismal fire and so brilliantly crushed in the flanks of Pickett's and Wilcox's men, at that most decisive hour, leaving no silver lining in the clouds that hung so darkly over the field, to cheer the drooping spirits of the foemcn worthy of our steel. Who can measure the evils that would have resulted had our erring breth- ren succeeded. Possibly we should now have a dismembered republic, slav- ery still in existence, and woe and humiliation beyond conjecture; but it was decreed otherwise. To an All-wise Providence we ascribe praise and thanksgiving. The war is over. In a day the two armies returned to peaceful citizen- ship, and no punishment was inflicted on the vanquished. Against a foreign foe the blue and the gray would merge wholly into the red, white and blue. True, the resentments of the war linger here and there, but chiefly, like the scattered flashes of the lightning on the edge of a thunder-cloud just passed by. The Confederate soldier believed equally with us that he was fighting for the right, and maintained that faith with a courage that fully sustained the reputation of "American" valor, and yet, one side or the other was wrong. The God of battles decided for liberty and nationality. The outgrowth of their failure has been the magnificent development of the South, and the hills and mountains are yielding up their treasurers, to the founding and building of new Birminghams and Sheflields. Take, for instance, the construction of railroads during the present year. The South is far ahead. California first, but Georgia next, with one hun- dred and ninetj'-five miles; then .Alabama, one hundred and forty-six miles. The greatest activity is thus to be seen in the South. These enterprises open and develop territory, and invite emigration to a new agriculture and to mines of wealth. The youth of the land are now taught and imbued with the sentiment that this republic is not a confederacy of independent States, but a Nation, with power to use the last dollar and enlist the last man to maintain the authority of the Constitution and the supremacy of the flag. It required complete and utter exhaustion, so as to leave no truce to recuperate for subsequent agita- tion; hence to close the conflict in the early years of the rebellion, would have left an unconverted and unreconstructed people. I call to mind, how often do we hear that the "pensioner" is a term of re- proach, instead of honorable recognition of the country's gratitude. These men, at a compensation of $13.00 a mouth, left behind them prospect* for promotion in their respective vocations ; in most cases gave the best period of their life, and for three years or more, marched under blazing suns, slept upon the ground, breathed the miasma of the swamps, racked with fevers, endured the horrors of the prison-pen, and amidst shot, shell, and saber- 498 Pennsylvania at Gettysburg. thrust, kept their colors aloft to eventual triumph, which secured for the people of the Republic and their descendants, civil and religious rights and business opportuntiies unsurpassed, if even equaled, by any other nation. The spirit of patriotism will ever continue and protect these grand results. We are a Republic ! a tried Republic — tried in the crucible of fire — enduring to the end of time. Comrades, age, disease and death are fast thinning our ranks. Our active service will soon be only glorious memories for the inspiration of others. Our story will be the recruiting sergeant of coming generations. Two grand facts stare us in the face, facts standing like monuments at the beginning and close of our grand old Army of the Potomac. It owes its existence to the masterly organizing abilities of McClellan and ended the war under the superb generalship of Grant. As we recall the memories of the dead, the spirits of all the warrior heroes of the past come floating before us. Wash- ington and his generals ! Enrolled in their company and encircled with their glory, are Grant and McClellan, Meade and Reynolds, Hooker and Han- cock, Burnside and Kearny, Thomas and McPherson, Sedgwick and Sum- ner, Warren and Sykes, Custer and Kilpatrick, Farragut and Foote and last, our lamented Sheridan, who so gallantly plucked victory from defeat. Let us recall to mind that noblest of historical groupings, when Lee, the brilliant strategist, surrendered to the greatest soldier of his time, the la- mented Grant, and there sealed anew the life of the nation ; and last, but not least, the rank and file — whose glittering walls of steel environed and encompassed that brave and fearless band of Southern soldiery at Appomat- tox. But who shall tell of the unknown heroes who have fallen, unmarked, un- honored and unsung? What bright hopes may there be buried, Who the slain, "no one can say;" Yet we know "somebody's darling" Sleeps on yonder hill to-day. On his grave the sunlight lingers, And the slivery moon-beams fall; Though he sleeps far, far from kindred- Sleeps until the last great call. Who shall eulogize those of lower rank, who, upon the field of battle, have in their places displayed a degree of courage rarely excelled, seldom equaled? Who shall record the sacrifices of the humble and lowly soldier or sailor? While much depended upon the commander of an army, yet the personal ef- forts would avail nothing if not seconded by the heroism and devotion of their men. Twenty-five years have passed since you stood in battle array on this sacred spot, consecrated by the blood of many a true and valiant soldier. The echoes and passions of war have faded away. The charm of your sol- dier life, its bonds of friendship and its glorious memories still linger We have met to-day to dedicate two monuments to mark the two positions of the old Nintetieth Pennsylvania Volunteers, in which you so faithfully served — your watchword, "one country and one flag." Those sacred folds that we followed in war and cherish in peace, are now in the hands of the gallant de- fenders, Sergeants William H. Paul, Thomas E. Berger and Johnson Roney, Pvnn.sijlvaniii at (iciti/sbiirf/. 499 who carried tlu-m ou hard-foiight battlcliold.s, aud beueath their precious folds foil S('r},'oant Koiioy, inaiincd fur lifo. Comrade Johu C. IJowon toucht'S elbows with us here, uuder the same old brigade flag that he so bravely car- ried aloft a quarter of a century ago. I iiunte — "Proud memories of many fields * * * Sweet memories of valor and friendship. • « • Sad memories of fallen brothers aud sons, whose dying eyes looked last upon their flaming folds. « • • Grand memories of cherished virtues, sublimo by grief. * • ♦ Exultant memories of the great and final victory of our country, the Union and the righteous cause. * ♦ * Thankful memories of a deliverance wrought out for human nature, unexampled by any former achievement of arms. ♦ * » Immortal memories, with immortal honors blended, twine around the splintered staffs and weave themselves amidst the fabrics of our country's flag, war-worn, begrimed, and baptized with pre- cious blood." The statistics of the War Department show that you entered the tiyht with two hundred and eight officers and men, and after a contest of three hours, exhausted your cartridges. We left the field, when commanded, with a list of casualties amounting to ninety-four, equal to forty-eight per cent. Your position was one of great danger, and, in military parlance, the post of honor, being on the extreme right of the First Corps. Rodes' Division of Ewell's Corps kept you ac- tively engaged, and you in turn did not forget to help take good care of Iver- son's North Carolina Brigade, and grandly repulsed the onslaught naade by O'Neal's Alabama Brigade. Page's Confederate Battery, located on your front, at McLean's red barn, lost very heavily; and frequently Carter's Bat- talion of Artillery, stationed on Oak Hill, reminded us that we were in range. Our position was a trying one, and when the Eleventh Corps, who failed to connect their left with our right by almost one-half mile, were hurled back by Ewell's command, our position was truly then a precarious one. As I have already described, after taking up a position with our de- pleted numbers upon Cemetery Hill, we supported batteries on the second day, and late in the afternoon moved to the left in support of the Third Corps, our regimental skirmish line bringing in the Confederate General Barksdale, who fell mortally wounded but a short time before, in making that brilliant charge with his Mississippi Brigade. On the morning of the third day we lay between Cemetery Hill and Gulp's Hill, ready to support the Twelfth Corps and a portion of our First Corps under Wadsworth, who repulsed the formidable attack of Ewell's to turn our right flank ; and Stuart with his Confederate cavalry repulsed by Pleasonton, trying to capture the Baltimore pike, so that in the event of disaster, our retreat would be cut off,— adroitly conceived, but, through the indomitable bravery of our gal- lant soldiers, frustrated. During Pickett's famous charge, on the afternoon of the 3d, you were brought over on the double-quick to support the Second Corps, and arrived just in time to witness the collapse, many of the vanquished Confederates passing through our line to the rear. We were then placed in position in front of Ziegler's Grove. So accurate was the fire of the Whitworth funs from the Confederate left, that we temporarily withdrew under cover of the 500 Pennsylvania at Gettyshurg. t grove, from whence we furnished details to the skirmish line, some of whom took shelter in Those low green tenta. Whose curtains never outward swing. At the recent reunion on yonder hill, a now much-distinguished citizen, who fought as a general officer on the other side, manfully proclaimed, in all sincerity, that the cause for which they fought was eternally wrong, and that we were eternally right. Swords will never again be drawn to sever the Union. The graves o<' the fallen on both sides now bind the nation together, and there is a grand future before us. A broader and healthier sentiment prevails, and we look back upon the scenes with wonder and amazement. In front of Ziegler's Grove you have erected a second monument, whereon is inscribed your record in more extended phrase than this representative of the stalwart oak tree will warrant us doing. The war is over! The dove, which brought the glad tidings of a regene- rated world, here is used to symbolize the era of peace and good will between man and man. The wearers of the blue and the gray have met each other in the field, have manfully fought out their differences, accepted the situa- tion, discarded the bitterness and animosities of the war, and now recognize that we are all of one country and one flag, desirous only to increase our country's greatness and prosperity. We have no enmity for those Who, by their acts not ours, were foes — But charity; and from malice free, Would cherish with sincerity. The roll-call shortens fast ; the list of casualties is not yet complete : the strain of that long struggle is fast laying even our strongest low; we close up our thinner ranks, shoulder to shoulder, heart to heart, holding nearer and dearer together. May the God of heaven bless this day's work, and may it add to the sanc- tity of a wedded affection for the land we love, "the land of the free and the home of the brave." DEDICATION OF MONUMENT 91ST REGIMENT INFANTRY* September 12, 1889 ADDRESS OF CHAPLAIN JOSEPH WELCH THE Ninety-first regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, was recruited in the city of Philadelphia, and mustered into the service of the United States December 4, 1861, with the following staff: Colonel Edgar M. Gregory; lieutenant-colonel, Edward E. Wallace; major, George W. Todd; adjutant, Benjamin F. Tayman ; quartermaster. Lieutenant George W. *Organzied at Philadelplila from September 9 to December 4, 1S61, to serve three years. On the expiration of its term of service the original members (except veterans) were iim;-tcred out and the organization composed of veterans and recruits retained In service until July 10, 1SG5, when it was mustered out. '^ Pennsylvania at Oettysburg. 501 Eyro ; surgeon, Isaac D. Knight, M. D.; assistant-surgeon, Charles W. Houghton, and chaphiin, Joseph Woldi. The regiment camped on the west bank of the Schuylkill river, at Camp Chase, until January 21, 1862, when it embarked for the front, and went into camp north of the city of Washington on the Bladensburg turnpike, at Camp Stanton. March 22 it occupied the Franklin Square barracks, and was employed in provost and other duty under the military governor until April 26 when it was ordered to Alexandria, Virginia, Colonel Gregory being appointed mili- tary governor, and Captain Joseph H. Sinex, of Company D, being provost marshal. Severe and unenviable service now kept the regiment fully occupied for four months. On the 23d of August the regiment was assigned to the First Brigade, Gen- eral E. B. Tyler, in the Third Division, General A. A. Humphreys, of the Fifth Army Corps, General Fitz John Porter, and went into camp at Cljud's Mills. The brigade at this time being composed of the Ninety-first Pennsylvania Volunteers, Colonel E. M. Gregory; One hundred and thirty-fourth Pennsyl- vania Volunteers, Colonel M. S. Quay; One hundred and twenty-sixth Penn- sylvania Volunteers, Colonel J. G. Elder, and One hundred and twenty- ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers, Colonel J. G. Frick. In consequence of the excitement following the second battle of Manassas, the command was kept in motion in the vicinity of the capital, south of the Potomac, until September 15 when it joined the pursuit of the enemy I'.nder Lee, who had crossed the river into Maryland; pushing on, by a night march of the 17th, it reached the battlefield of Antietam on the morning of Septem- ber 18 with headquarters at a rail fence crossing a part of the field. Remaining in camp here, till the forward movement of the middle of Oc- tober, it reached Warrenton, Virginia, October 30; by the middle of Novem- ber the division reached and encamped at Stoneman's switch on the Aquia Creek railroad, and remained here until the movement for the attack on the position of the enemy at Fredrioksburg. Taking up the line of March, the regiment crossed the river by the upper pontoon bridge, marching through the town, and formed in line behind a graveyard, the stone wall of which afforded some protection against the fire of the enemy ; from this point, through the various changes of its po«?ition on the field, its losses were severe. Lieutenant Murphy and a number of men were killed on the field. Major Todd and a large number were wounded, the major dying very shortly after- wards; the final charge led by Generals Humphreys and Tyler, which was made with the cheers of the men, proved in vain, and met with a heavy loss. The last company to recross the river (Company E) made the passage as the skirmishers of the enemy entered the town ; with all the experience*^ the regiment was destined to have in the subsequent history of the army, it never forgot those of the battle of Fredericksburg. The camp of the army was practically continuous varied by an ineffectual attempt to move in January, 1863, until April 28, when the manoeuver«! took place, resulting in the battle of ChancellorsviUe. Here the colonel was 33 502 Pennsylvania at Oettysiurg. severely -wounded; from the effects of this wound he never entirely recovered, and ultimately died. The expiration of the term of enlistment of the regiments of the division, except the Ninety-first and One hundred and fifty-fifth Pennsylvania Volun- teers, caused the assignment of these to the Second Division composed largely of regulars. General George Sykes commanding. The command was sta- tioned at Stoneman's switch guarding the railroad about two weeks, and then moved to United States Ford on the river, where it remained tiU June 7. On the night of June 7, the regiment moved during a heavy rain storm, marching all night, halting about 4 o'clock the next morning at Mount Holly Church for breakfast. At 7 o'clock the march was resumed, continuing till night, and halted at Catlett's Station on the Orange and Alexandria railroad. On the morning of the 9th the march began at 2 o'clock and continued under a hot sun till 3 o'clock, going into camp at Manassas Junction, ("oing picket duty for three days. ^ From this point to Gum Springs, halting two or three days, at which time General Weed took command of the brigade, thence to Aldle In support of the cavalry who were skirmishing with the cavalry of the enemy ; from here to Leesburg where the regiment formed picket line, guarding the flank of the army as It passed northward. Leaving Leesburg about 3 p . m . , crossing the Potomac river at Edwards' Ferry, it marched to Poolesvllle, Jfaryland, arriving about 9 o'clock: the march was resumed the following morning about 4 o'clock, reaching Fred- erick City, Maryland, and halting for two days. While the regiment was at this point. General Meade took command of the Army of the Potomac, General Sykes taking the corps and General R. B. Ayres the division. From Frederick City the regiment marched to Union- town, bivouacking here In the rain, crossing the South Mountain and halting at Boonesboro, on ground rendered familiar by the campaign of Antletam the previous year. Here a welcome Issue of shoes was made, which had become badly needed. Marching thence to Union Mills. Having been mustered for pay, the regiment left Union Mills on the morn- ing of July 1, marching to Hanover, Pennsylvania, where it halted for a brief rest for dinner. As soon as coffee was disposed of, the march was re- sumed for Gettysburg, where fighting had already begun ; the tidings of which began to arrive In the evening ; at midnight a rest was taken on the side of the road over which the march lay. On the morning of July 2, an early move was made and the regiment was thrown Into line east of the Baltimore turnpike, a short distance below Get- tysburg, at which point Captain Hall of Company E was wounded; it was then moved to a position of support In the center of the line, from which In a short time the brigade was taken as a support to the Third Corps which was being flanked by the enemy. The brigade marched up one side of Round Top, as the enemy charged up the other side, too late to capture a position that became of inestimable worth to us in a few hours. The regiment was then ordered to the right at double- quick to support Battery I of the Fifth U. S. Artillery. This position had barely been reached when the rogimont was ordered back to Round Top, and I'tnnsijliaiiid tit Hell ij.shiir;/. 503 driiwu up iu liue iu frout of Uattery I), l''ifth U. S. Artillery which fired over it. After collecting the wounded lying in frout of the line, the regiment during the night threw up a stone wall as a protection from the enemy's sharpshooters, who, from Devil's Den, were harrassing the men; General Weed commandiiif; the brigade and Captain Ilazlett of the battery were both killed here. On the morning of July 3, the enemy's batteries opened on this position pre- paratory to further attempts, our own battery making no reply at the time. After various changes which occupied the morning had been made, the artil- lery of the enemy opened at 1 o'clock all along the line. This was the pre- lude of the serious and decisive efifort of the grand charge which began about 3 o'clock. The enemy advanced in three lines, iu splendid order and de- terminated persistence. Out battery opened on them with a flanking fire that was terrible iu its power and fearful iu destruction. Three times was the attempt made in the face of murderous musketry aud artillery that literally mowed them down in heaps. The effort was then abandoned and the posi- tion was left in our undisputed possession. In the evening our pickets wei-e advanced beyond the Devil's Den, meeting no opposition. A heavy rain set in during the night, continuing part of the following day, in which the regi- ment remained in the position it occupied. A memorable fourth of July to us, but whose full significance could not then be foreseen. On the morning of the 5th, the skirmish line advanced over the enemy's breastworks, capturing a number of prisoners, until they came up with the rear guard of the retreating army, when they were called into the regiments, which were already on the march along the Emmitsburg turnpike. A heavy rain coming on in the afternoon, rendered the camp ground at night literally a field of mud. At 5 o'clock on the morning of the 7th, the march was resumed, reaching Utica. On the 8th, crossed South Mountain and camped near Middletown. On the 9th marched to near Boonesboro. On the 10th to near Antietam creek. On the 11th and 12th having heavy skirmishing. Marched in line of battle aud reached Williamsport, Maryland, where the enemy crossed the river. July 14, marched to Berlin where the regiment crossed the Potomac. A detail was now made of three oflicers and six men for recruiting service who were sent to Philadelphia. The regiment marched to Wapping Heights, skirmishing through the gap in time to see the rear of the enemy's army on its retreat. From Wapping Heights to Stony creek, halting for the night. Passing Warrentou, it camped three miles beyond the town where it re- mained till August 3, when it marched to Beverly Ford on the Rappahan- nock and there going into camp. September 16, marched to Brandy Station, halted for the night, thence marched beyond Culpeper, where it camped till October 10. From this date the regiment was almost continually on the march for forty-five days, in a series of movements that in detail alone, would seem aimless and inexplic- able, but were part of a whole, both needful aud wise, that for hard work varied with a spice of fighting, would be eminently satisfactory to the most ardent campaigners. From Culpeper to Raccoon Ford on the Rapidan, thence back the following day. In the old camp one night, then to Brandy 504 Pennsylvania at Oettys'burg. Station, halting a few hours, then to Rappahannock Station, crossing the river and moving up to Beverly Ford. The next day the command re-crossed and advanced in line of battle to near Brandy Station. At 2 a. m. it fell back and recrossed the river to Beverly Ford. In a few hours the regiment was deployed as flanker.s and reached Manassas Plains. About dusk the enemy attacked the Second Corps at Bristoe Station, and the regiment went on double-quick to its assistance. The attack being repulsed, the march was resumed, lasting all night, and in the morning the command reached Centreville. Resting a few hours, it then resumed the march by the Fairfax road to near Fairfax Court House. On the afternoon of the following day, it marched back about five miles and bivouacked for the ni