Siege of Jackson July 1017. Thirty-sixth annual reunion Twenty-eighth regiment New York state volunteers, held at Eldorado, on Grand island, near Buffalo, N. Y., August 26th, 1897. The 34th Massachusetts Infantry mustered out of service on June 16, 1865 and was discharged July 2, 1865. It then returned to Harrison's Landing, and resumed picket and camp duties until the 15th of August, when it struck tents for the march to Newport News, where it arrived on the 21st. Moved to Pass Cavallo, Texas, December 23, 1863 January 8, 1864, and duty there until February 21. At 7:30 on the morning of September 17, 1862, the Thirty-fourth Regiment left camp near Keedysville, crossed the Antietam Creek and marched westward into the East Woods, now extinct. Surrender of Lee and his army. The 34th Massachusetts Infantry was organized at Worcester, Massachusetts and mustered in for a three-year enlistment on August 1, 1862 under the command of Colonel George D. Wells. Thank you to Steve Glazer for pointing out this resource. 1st Brigade, Independent Division, XXIV Corps, Army of the James, to June 1865. Moved to Memphis, Tenn., June 1415. On the 14th it marched to "Camp Sedgwick," Charlestown ; on the 22d, crossed the river at Harper's Ferry on pontoon bridge and marched to Sandy Hook, from which it took the cars at 2 P. M., for Washington; reached Washington at 2 A. M. on the 23d; stopped at the Soldier's Rest, and from thence to quarters in a building in rear of the capitol. On the 18th, the regiment supported batteries; on the 19th, buried its dead; on the 21st, marched for Harper's Ferry; on the 22d, arrived at Sandy Hook, and, there being no bridges, forded the Potomac; on the 29th, marched to Bolivar Heights and went into camp. 1st Brigade, 2nd Cavalry Division, West Virginia, 3rd Brigade, 2nd Cavalry Division, West Virginia, 2nd Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, West Virginia, To West Virginia. The Thirty-fourth thus left alone, received a deadly infantry fire from front and on both flanks and artillery fire on the left. The enemy, from buildings on the opposite shore, kept up a constant fire upon the working party. On the 21st of October the regiment started for Poolsville, but while on the road received orders to march to Edward's Ferry, where it crossed the Potomac in scow boats. It arrived at Harrison's Landing at 12 M. on the 2d, entirely exhausted with its seven days marching and fighting. Siege and capture of Island Number Ten, Mississippi River, March 15-April 8. It Surrendered 9 April 1865 at Appomattox Court House, Virginia. Moved to Cumberland Gap and duty there until November 8. This duty was assigned to the divisions commanded by Generals French and Howard. Pages 1 - 10
Department of the Gulf to March 1864. Duty at Kernstown until December. Total strength and casualties Mustered out: June 30, 1863.
Unit bibliograhy from the Army Heritage Center. The field officers were Colonel John T. Goode, Lieutenant Colonel Randolph Harrison, and Major John R. Bagby. Occupation of Staunton June 6. All rights reserved. At Arlington Heights, Va., until August 22, 1862.
34th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry Militia FamilySearch It was supplied with United States Remission muskets, model of 1842, calibre 69 (subsequently exchanged for Enfield rifles), uniforms, &c, and caused an expenditure by the State of $44,679.81, exclusive of subsistence and quarters. Corcoran, Laflin, Brown, Sponable, Beverly, Doolittle, Baldwin, King, Oswald and Rich, be formed into a regiment, to be numbered No. Expedition up White River, Ark., June 26-July 14. At New Iberia until December 19. It mustered out July 12 and was discharged at Chicago, Illinois, July 17, 1865. Moved to Tazewell, Tenn., December 5, and duty there until January 26, 1864. Description: 167 pieces. It returned to the Maryland side on the 23d, and resumed its march to Poolsville, where it established " Camp McClellan." After many battles, companies might be combined because so many men were killed or wounded. Martindale's Command, Garrison of Washington, XXII Corps, to July 1863. At daybreak the enemy commenced shelling the city from the heights, our men lying down upon the sidewalks, close to the buildings, to prevent casualties. Service Gen. Howard was transferred to the Eleventh corps, and Gen. Gibbons was placed in command of the Second division.
Battle Unit Details - The Civil War (U.S. National Park Service) The 34th Massachusetts Infantry was organized at Worcester, Massachusetts and mustered in for a three-year enlistment on August 1, 1862 under the command of Colonel George D. Wells. Pages 41 - 42
It was then ordered to report to General Sumner, the enemy having attacked our troops at Charles City Cross Roads.
34th Infantry Regiment (United States) - Wikipedia General Tyler then came upon the field and massed his brigade in four lines in the rear of the Thirty-fourth. [Buffalo, Press of Peter Paul book co., 1894]. On the 11th of December the Second corps broke camp and proceeded to the Lacey House, opposite Fredericksburg, where the engineer corps was constructing pontoon bridges. killed and three wounded. On the 7th it was assigned a site on Kalorama hill, where it received tents of the common A pattern and began the first lessons in camp life. The attack was very costly, with the mounted Union force taking fire from the houses as it advanced into town. The early part of March, 1862, was spent in camp at Berryville, Va., and later in the month the regiment moved to Washington, where it was ordered to the Peninsula. Pages 31 - 40
It fought mostly with the Army of Northern Virginia . 2:1 7-10. The 34th New York Infantry Regiment, the "Herkimer Regiment", was an infantry regiment of the Union Army during the American Civil War . The regiment reformed and served dutifully during the Second Battle of Fredericksburg two days later. At 11 P. M. the working party was called in, and at 1 A. M., on the 16th, it evacuated the city, crossed the river, and reached its old camp at 3 P. M. Camp and picket duties were resumed and continued, with occasional reviews and inspections, until January 20th, 1863, when the regiment moved with its corps to the right, and reached Banks' ford. March to Lynchburg April 1215, then to Farmville and Burkesville Junction April 1519, and to Richmond April 2225. To West Virginia. On the 27th, late in the afternoon, was ordered to Chain bridge; marched all night and arrived at Fort Ethan Allen about daylight. The regiment was mustered out on August 15, 1865. It had the distinction of fighting in the last land action of the war, the Battle of Palmito Ranch, Texas May 1213, 1865, and also of suffering the last soldier killed during the war, Private John J. Williams. Stahl, Joseph. Tyler's Brigade, District of Alexandria, XXII Corps, Department of Washington, to April 1863. It finally left the field without alarming the enemy ; marched rapidly to Turkey Bend, and from thence to Malvern Hill. Sedgwick's division went into the fight at 11, A. M., in three lines, the First brigade in the advance. Attached to Cox's Kanawha Brigade, West Virginia. Special Orders 218 (May 24), ordered on election of field officers, and Special Order 241 (May 30), confirmed the election of William La Due as Colonel, James A. Movement on Bruinsburg and turning Grand Gulf April 2530. On the 5th, the regiment marched to Yorktown, camped on the heights and occupied the tents left by the enemy. (Winslow Cossoul)The military and civil history of the county of Essex, New York : and a general survey of its physical geography, its mines and minerals, and industrial pursuits, embracing an account of the northern wilderness : and also the military annals of the fortresses of Crown Point and Ticonderoga. It is honored by a monument at Antietam. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. 3rd Brigade, 12th Division, XIII Corps, Army of the Tennessee, to February 1863. Picket duty was continued until near the close of April, with occassional reviews, among which was one by President Lincoln, and one by Gen. Hooker. JAVASCRIPT IS DISABLED. United States Regiments & Batteries > Ohio. Organized at Anderson, Indiana, and mustered in September 16, 1861. Appomattox Campaign March 28 April 9. Battles of Mechanicsville June 26; Gaines' Mill June 27; Charles City Cross Roads and Glendale June 30; National Park Service, The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System, is searchable by soldier's name and state. On the 7th, the Second corps took up its line of march; on the 8th, passed through Rockville, where its transportation was reduced to arms, blankets and shelter tents; 9th to Middleburg; 10th, to Clarksburg; 12th, to Urbanna; 13th, to Frederick City, and from thence to Turner's Pass in the South mountain; arrived at, Middletown on the evening of the 11th. On reporting, the Thirty-fourth was detached from the brigade and moved to the support of General Kearney, at Glendale. From Oct. 15, 1861, the regiment served in the 2nd brigade of Stone's division, which became in March, 1862, Sedgwick's division, 2nd corps, Army of the Potomac, and in May, 1862, the brigade became the 1st brigade, 2nd division, 2nd corps. On the 28th it was ordered to Seneca mills, and arrived at Great Falls on the 29th. A Guide to Military Organizations and Installations North Carolina 1861-1865, Beginning United States Civil War Research, The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System, https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/index.php?title=34th_Regiment,_North_Carolina_Infantry&oldid=5037641. At 8 P. M. it was relieved, and again returned to Princess Ann street. Ordered to Knoxville April 24, thence to Loudon, Tenn., and garrison duty there until June 20.
These are large files; however, they are exact images of the pages. "Desolating This Fair Country": The Civil War Diary and Letters of Lt. Henry C. Lyon, 34th New York. Expedition to Arkansas Post November 1622, 1862. Wolcott, Walter, 1859. Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - A, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - B, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - C, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - D, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - E, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - F, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - G, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - H, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - I, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - J, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - K, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - L, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - M, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - N, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - O, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - P, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - Q, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews -R, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - S, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - T, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - U-V, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - W, Oral History Program Veteran Interviews - X, Y, and Z, Finding Aids for selected archival collections, New York State Awards, Decorations, and Medals, Medal Of Honor Recipients Affiliated With New York, Research Guide: New York in the Revolutionary War, Research Guide: New York in the War of 1812, Research Guide: New York in the Mexican-American War, 1846-1848, Research Guide: New York in the Civil War, Research Guide: New York in the Spanish-American War, Research Guide: New York in the Mexican Punitive Campaign, 1916, Research Guide: New York in the World War One, Research Guide: New York in the World War Two, Research Guide: Guide to finding New York National Guard Records, Research Guide: Guide to finding US Military Records, Infantry, 1-48 (NY Volunteers & State Militia/National Guard), Welcome Home address by Hon. The 34th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Action at Berryville. It arrived at Harpers Ferry on the 27th of February, and took up quarters in a large stone building, formerly used as a cotton factory. Year: 1826-1934
District of South Central Kentucky, 1st Division, XXIII Corps, to October 1863.
It left Washington at 5 P. M. on the 26th, and reached Alexandria in the morning ; embarked for the Peninsula on the 29th, on the transport Richard Willing; reached Fortress Monroe on the 31st, and landed at Hampton at 1 P. M., on the 1st of April. A rest of two days was now granted. Moved to Camp Wicliffe, Kentucky, December 14, 1861, and duty there until February 7, 1862. This work they soon accomplished. The corps moved about one and a half miles to the rear of Falmouth and went into camp. 34th Regiment, Indiana Infantry Overview: Organized at Anderson, Ind., and mustered in September 16, 1861. On the 11th, it advanced to a position nearer the enemy's works, and encamped about five rods from the intrenchments thrown up by Lafayette dining the Revolution. This article about a specific military unit of the American Civil War is a stub. [1] [2]. On the morning of the 13th it was determined to storm the heights. On the 6th of May it returned to its old camping ground. Snicker's Ferry July 1718. For almost two years the unit served as heavy artillery attached to the Department of Richmond and was known as the 4th Heavy Artillery. Note(s): Bio/History: In 1857-1858, William Ladew was Colonel of the 38th Regiment of New York State Militia. It returned to the city and took up its old position on Princess Ann street. This is also available in PDF format. Department of Texas to February 1866. Gen John Gibbon, who commanded the division that the 34th New York was in, brought up the 18th Massachusetts and gave them orders to shoot the men of the 34th New York if they wouldn't fight. 34th New York Infantry Regiment's Civil War Newspaper Clippings, 61 Lake Avenue, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866
This is meant to be a comprehensive list. A portion of the regiment hero disembarked, but, immediately returned under orders to report at Alexandria. Ladew, William. The 34th Indiana Veteran Volunteer Infantry Regiment, nicknamed The Morton Rifles, was an Infantry Regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. Company A - "Laurel Spring [or Springs] Guard" - many men from Ashe County, Company B - "Sandy Run Yellow Jackets" - many men from Rutherford County, Company C - "Rutherford Rebeles" - many men from Rutherford County, Company D - "Oakland Guards" - many men from Rowan County, Company E - "Shady Grove Rangers" - many men from Lincoln County, Company F - "Floyd Rifles" - many men from Cleveland County, Company G - "Mecklemburg Boys" - many men from Mecklenburg County, Company H - "Rough and Readys" - many men from Cleveland County, Company I - "Rutherford Band" - many men from Rutherford County, Company K - "Montgomery Boys" - many men from Montgomery County[3]. On the 31st, it marched to Hillsborough; November 1st, to Woodgrove; 2d, to Snicker's gap -- General Sedgwick's (now General Howard's) corps in the advance. THIRTY-FOURTH REGIMENT INFANTRY, N. Y. S. V.
It was here occupied in picketing the Potomac,, building block houses, drilling, &c, until the 24th of February, when it was ordered to move to Harper's Ferry. The 34th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment lost 3 officers and 90 enlisted men killed or mortally wounded and 1 officer and 68 enlisted men to disease during the Civil War. Lincoln's Provost Marshal : The War Years of James Rowan O'Beirne. The information about the companies comes from A Guide to Military Organizations and Installations North Carolina 1861-1865. Battle of Port Gibson May 1. Ordered to Bowling Green, Ky., May 8, 1863, and duty there until July 1. He was killed during the last land engagement of the war, the Battle of Palmito Ranch Texas, on May 13, 1865.[1][2]. Attack on Tazewell January 24. 1st Brigade, 4th Division, District of East Tennessee, Department of the Cumberland, to March 1865. In this engagement, the Ohioans had one man killed and eight more wounded. On the 16th of April, tents were turned into the Quartermaster's department, and eight days' rations prepared. In this action the regiment lost one.
34th Indiana Infantry Regiment - Wikipedia 2nd Brigade, 4th Division, District of East Tennessee, to June 1865. Thirty-fourth Infantry.Cols., William La Due, James A. Suiter, Byron Laflin; Lieut.-Cols., James A. Suiter, Byron Laflin, John Beverly; Majs., Byron Laflin, Charles L. Brown, John Beverly, Wells Sponables. The 34th Infantry Regiment (special designation "Leyte Dragons" [1]) is a Regular Army infantry regiment of the United States Army. It was engaged in picket duties until the 16th, when it was assigned to the support of batteries, and continued in this duty almost without interruption during the remainder of the siege. Information about the companies and their rosters are in Manarin and Jordan, North Carolina Troops 1861-1865 A Roster. Battle of Champion's Hill May 16. Please enable JavaScript on your browser to best view this site. Brazos Santiago, Texas, U.S. Pages 44 - 51
Siege of New Madrid, Missouri, March 514. The Second corps was assigned to the right grand division under General Sumner.
34th Tennessee Infantry Regiment - Tennessee & the Civil War Duty at Harpers Ferry and Bolivar until December 10. Advance on Jackson, Mississippi, July 410. The regiment was organized in Albany, New York, on May 24, 1861,[2] and was mustered in for a two-year enlistment on June 15, 1861; it was composed of five companies from Herkimer County, two from Steuben, one from Albany, one from Clinton and one from Essex County. Howard's division reached Falmouth on the 21st of November, and discovered the enemy in small force on the south bank of the Rappahannock, with four pieces of artillery. Moved to Cumberland, Md., February 15. Here companies B, G and under command of Major Laflin, were detached for picket duty, and the remaining companies proceeded to Seneca mills, where they arrived on the 31st, and established "Camp Jackson." 1st Brigade, 12th Division, XIII Corps, Army of the Tennessee, to August 1863. All rights reserved. Part of the 38th Militia entered this regiment on June 8, 1863; the regiment was mustered out of service on June 30, 1863, and those men who had signed three year enlistments were transferred to the 82nd New York.
Battle Unit Details - The Civil War (U.S. National Park Service) Arrived at Helena July 14, and duty there until April, 1863. Attached to Stone's Brigade, Division of the Potomac, to October, 1861. UNION IOWA VOLUNTEERS 34th Regiment, Iowa Infantry Overview: Organized at Burlington and mustered in October 15, 1862. June 21, 2003. While giving this order he was wounded in the wrist and neck, too barely escaped capture. The 34th New York Infantry Regiment, the "Herkimer Regiment", was an infantry regiment of the Union Army during the American Civil War. Left State for Washington, D. C., July 3, 1861. Pettit's battery was immediately put into position, and a few shells dispersed the enemy. It moved to Tupelo, Mississippi, and was assigned to General Manigault's Brigade where it remained for the duration of the war. The 34th Indiana Veteran Volunteer Infantry Regiment, nicknamed The Morton Rifles, was an Infantry Regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. A short engagement ensued, and the enemy retired. On April 30, Lieutenant Colonel Bradshaw was reported in command of a field consolidation of the 34th Regiment and 24th Tennessee Infantry Battalion By June 30, the 19th Tennessee had been added to the brigade, and the 41st transferred to Strahl's Brigade. The Thirty-fourth was here sent on a reconnoissance, with a detachment of Pleasanton's cavalry, through the gap. Appomattox Court House April 9. Unattached, Bowling Green, Kentucky, 2nd Division, XXIII Corps, Department of the Ohio, to October 1863. White's Ranch May 13. Return to Harpers Ferry, then moved to Monocacy, Md., March 5, to Martinsburg, W. Va., March 7 and to Harpers Ferry April 2.
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