USA > New York > Kings County > Brooklyn > The civil, political, professional and ecclesiastical history, and commercial and industrial record of the county of Kings and the city of Brooklyn, N. Y., from 1683 to 1884, Volume II > Part 135
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Upon the retirement of Col. Smith, Lt .- Col. R. B. Clark was elected Colonel, with John B. Woodward as Lt .- Col., and S. K. Boyd as Major. May 2, 1863, the Regiment again responded to the call of the Federal Government, and pro- ceeded to Baltimore, where, after a march of four miles, it encamped just outside of Fort McHenry. The camp was christened "Camp Crescent." June 6th, four companies of the Regiment embarked for Fortress Monroe, thence to Nor- folk. The remaining four companies, which left Baltimore June 7th, went direct to Portsmouth, Va., and the entire Regiment, a few days later, arrived at Suffolk, Va. Here it was brigaded with the 2d, 4th, and 25th N. Y., and the 1st Del., Gen. Max Webber, commanding, relieving veteran regiments, which were sent at once to the Peninsula. The country around was held by the Confederates, and the duty was both arduous and fraught with danger. The camp at Suffolk was called "Camp Crooke," after the commander of the 5th (N. Y.) Brigade, General Philip S. Crooke, recently de- ceased. It formed a part of the extreme left wing of McClellan's army, and rendered very effective and valuable service. At a review by Gen. Dix, commanding the Corps, accompanied by Gen. Mansfield, the Division, and Gen. Webber, the Brigade Commander, Gen. Dix complimented the organization as a "superior Regiment." Picket duty and the usual accessories of war, except actual collision with the enemy, occupied the time until the expiration of the term of service, when, on August 31st, the men turned their faces homeward, and again received a most cordial welcome.
Again, in June, 1863, and for the third time, the Regiment was called into active service, and, with other New York militia, was hurried to the front. Col. John B. Woodward was in command, with W. A. McKee as Lt .- Col. The pres- ence of the militia organizations in Pennsylvania enabled veteran regiments to go to the immediate front, and, al- though no one of them was under fire, their service was of incalculable benefit to the Union cause. They had many weary marches, and suffered privations hard for unseasoned troops to bear. The overwhelming defeat of the Confeder- ates, at Gettysburg, and their final retirement across the Potomac, rendered the services of the militia no longer in- dispensable, and, in consequence of the draft riots in New York, in July, 1863, the 13th was ordered home, and during August did guard duty in the city while the draft proceeded, preventing further outbreak.
In 1866, Col. Woodward was succeeded by Col. James Jourdan, late commanding the Second Division. He, in turn, was succeeded by Col. Thomas S. Dakin, in 1869, and upon the latter's election as Brigadier-General, Lt .- Col. Frederick A. Mason was chosen Colonel. In 1870, Philip H. Briggs (Inspector-General on the Staff of Governor Grover
Cleveland) was Lt .- Col .; Edward S. Daniell, Major, and Samuel Richards (late Asst. Adj .- Gen. of the Second Division), Adjutant. The Drum Corps Association was organized in 1869.
Col. Jourdan was re-elected in February, 1872. The last parade from the old armory took place at the Prospect Park Parade-ground, October 12, 1875, with a review by the Com- mander-in-Chief, and the Regiment was mustered and in- spected in its present armory, corner of Hanson place and Flatbush avenue, on October 26th of that year.
Lt .- Col. Briggs was elected Colonel in Jan., 1876, vice Gen. Jourdan, elected Commander of the Fifth Brigade. Capt. Harry H. Beadle was elected Lt .- Col., and William R. Syme, for some time Adjutant, was made Major. Lt. William A. McKee succeeded Major Syme as Adjutant.
Since the war, the Regiment has rendered some practical duty worthy of special mention. It was ordered out to pre- vent the threatened lynching of the murderer of Mr. Van Voorhis, a popular builder of South Brooklyn. On the oc- casion of the Orange riots in New York, July 12, 1871, it was called into service to repress disorder in Brooklyn, and was then sent to New York, where it assisted in the maintenance of order until relieved by Gen. Shaler, of the First Division. When the duties consequent upon the terrible catastrophe at the Brooklyn Theatre (December, 1876) had nearly exhausted the police, the 13th volunteered its services, and remained on guard at the Morgue, and the buildinge on Adams street, where the remains of the burned were collected.
On July 23, 1877, the Regiment was ordered under arms by the Governor, together with all the State troops, and the prompt action of Governor Robinson, undoubtedly, preserved the State from the devastation which befell Pennsylvania and Maryland in the destructive railroad riots of that year.
Col. David E. Austen was commissioned July 13, 1877. He was a national guardsman of long experience, having en- listed in Co. H, 7th Regiment, in February, 1859, accompany- ing that Regiment in its campaign at the opening of the war. In Nov., 1862, he was elected First Lieutenant, Co. I, 47th Regiment, and was made Adjutant, August, 1863 (promoted while crossing the Long Bridge); Captain of Co: I, March, 1864; Major, October, 1865 ; Lieutenant-Colonel, January, 1868 ; and Colonel, May 9, 1868, which position he retained until his election to the command of the 13th. In the sum- mer of 1863, he accompanied the 47th Regiment to Virginia, in response to the call of the government. He was relieved at his own request Dec. 3, 1883, and was succeeded in com- mand by Gen. A. C. Barnes, April 20, 1884.
Lieut. George A. Phelan was Adjutant of the 13th on the accession of Col. Austen, and was succeeded by Lieut. Henry D. Stanwood. The latter resigned, and was followed by Lieut. Cyrus A. Hubbard; and, at the decease of Lieut. Hub- bard, the present Adjutant, George B. Davis, was selected.
Rev. Henry Ward Beecher was appointed Chaplain in March, 1878. Among Mr. Beecher's predecessors were Rev. Edward Taylor, Rev. J. Halstead Carroll, and Rev. Dr. Henry M. Storrs. In May, 1876, Brevet-Col. Horatio C. King was elected Major. In June was commenced, in the lecture- room of Plymouth Church, the recruiting for Co. G, com- monly known as the Plymouth Company, the largest of the companies, and Capt. W. L. Watson, a veteran of the war of the Rebellion, was elected Captain in July, 1878. An import- ant acquisition was made, also, in the selection of the "veteran " Harvey B. Dodworth, in September of the same year, as band-master, which position he still holds.
May 15, 1879, a parade and review, by Maj .- Gen. Alexander Shaler, commanding the First Division, were had in Madison Square Garden, New York, preparatory to the departure of
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MILITARY ORGANIZATIONS.
the Regiment, on May 22d, on its ever memorable trip to Mon- treal, Canada, to assist in the celebration of the Queen's birth- day. The reception by our Canadian neighbors was unprece- dentedly enthusiastic and hospitable. The Regiment partici- pated in the sham-battle and the grand review by the Governor-General (the Marquis of Lorne) and the Princess Louise, and the banquet tendered the officers at the Windsor House, at which the Governor-General presided, will long be remembered for the generous utterances of the speakers respectively, concerning the cordial relations existing be- tween the United States and Great Britain and her colonies. A magnificent flag-one side Canadian, the other American, the gift of the ladies of Montreal-is treasured with peculiar pride.
In July, 1879, Bvt. Brig .- Gen. C. T. Christensen was elected Major vice King, appointed Judge Advocate on the staff of Gen. E. L. Molineux, 11th (now 4th) Brigade, and subse- quently Lt .- Col., vice Beadle, honorably discharged. Capt. J. Frank Dillont (Co. F) was chosen Major and subsequently Lt .- Col., and resigned in the spring of 1881.
October 15th, 1881, it started for Yorktown; remained three days, eliciting the warmest praise for completeness as a militia organization.
Attached to the Regiment is a fine cadet corps, now num- bering over seventy members, mainly from the Polytechnic and Adelphi academies.
A Veteran Association, formed about ten years ago, has proved a valuable aid to the Regiment. Its past commanders were: Col. Henry Heath, Gen. J. B. Woodward, Col. Adam T. Dodge, and Col. Willoughby Powell. Its present officers are: Frederick A. Baldwin, Col .; Michael Chauncey, Lt .- Col .; Smith H. Wing, Major; Henry R. Darby, Adj .; William H. Welsh, Quartermaster; and Burdett S. Oakes, Commissary. It usually parades with the Regiment on occasions of cere- mony, and accompanied it to Montreal, Boston and Yorktown. In this body, and also in the Regiment proper, there are many war veterans.
Present status of the Thirteenth Regiment-Ten companies. Third Brigade, Second Division. Armory at corner of Flat- bush avenue and Hanson place, Brooklyn.
Colonel, Alfred C. Barnes, April 20, 1884. (See page 878).
Lieutenant-Colonel, Theodore B. Gates, May 10, 1881; Bvt. Major-Gen., May 23, 1881; Lt .- Col., 20th mil. (80th N. Y. vols.), June 15th, 1861; Col. Sept. 29, 1862; res. Nov. 24, 1864; Bvt. Brig .- Gen., U. S. vols., March 26, 1865. First Lt. and Paymaster, 20th mil., Sept. 11, 1854; Cap. and Eng., 20th mil., Dec. 5, 1854; Maj., May 19, 1855; Lt .- Col., June 15, 1861; Col., Sept. 29, 1862; res. Nov. 24, 1864; Maj .- Gen., 5th Div., Feb. 6, 1867; res. March 26, 1873; Lt .- Col., 13th Regt., May 10, 1881.
Major, William H. H. Tyson, May 10, 1881.
Adjutant-First Lieutenant, George B. Davis, Sept. 3, 1880.
Quartermaster-First Lieutenant, J. Fred Ackerman, July 22, 1880; Bvt. Capt., Dec. 13, 1880.
Commissary of Subsistence-First Lieutenant, Lewis M. Reed, June 18, 1883.
Surgeon-Major, James J. Terhune, April 23, 1883.
Assistant Surgeon-First Lieutenant, Chas. E. De La Vergne.
Chaplain-Captain, Henry Ward Beecher, Feb. 8, 1878.
Inspector of Rifle Practice -Captain, Theodore H. Babcock, March 10, 1881.
Captains-William L. Watson, July 8, 1878, Co. G. George B. Squires, Aug. 15, 1879, Co. K. Edward Fackner, Aug. 12, 1881; Bvt. Major, Oct. 26, 1881, Co. E. William J. Collins, Aug. 12, 1881, Co. A. Charles P. Kretchsmar, July 5, 1882,
Co. H. Frank B. S. Morgan, June 8, 1883, Co. C. William H. Courtney, Aug. 3, 1883, Co. F. William A. Brown, Feb., 1884, Co. B. David M. Demarest, Co. D. J. DeMandeville, Co. I.
First Lieutenants-A. Fuller Tomes, December 5, 1878, Co. G. John T. Jennings, Co. B. William Kerhy, June 17, 1881, Co. E. Chas T. Snow, Co. K. Chas. O. Davis, Co. A. Rus- sell Benedict, Co. H. Samuel W. Smith, Co. C. Robt. L. Sillman, Co. T.
Second Lieutenants-Samuel T. Skinner, Mar. 3, 1879, Co. G. Chas. W. Held, Co. B. Chas. Bradshaw, Co. A. Henry J. Jordan, Mar. 29, 1883, Co. K. Geo. W. Hunt, Co. C.
C. F. Stagg, Co. I. Charles W. Topping, Co. E. Sergeant-Major, William F. Seymour.
Quartermaster-Sergeant, Chas. Werner.
Com. Sergeant, H. P. Smith.
Ordnance-Sergeant, Jas. McNevin.
Hospital Steward, Chas. G. Curtis.
Color Sergeants, Heyward Smith, W. L. Conley.
Drum Major, Edward McIntyre.
Band Master, Harvey B. Dodworth,
Right General Guide, Arthur Genns.
Left General Guide, W. Roch.
The Fourteenth Regiment, N. G., S. N. Y.,is an old mil- itia regiment, first known as the Brooklyn Chasseurs, organ- ized in 1846, with Gen. Philip S. Crooke of Flatbush, its first Colonel; he was succeeded Jan., 1852, by Col. Jesse C. Smith, and he by Col. Alfred M. Wood. Like the other old regiments it was composed of separate companies, each of which had its own uniform, and it was not until 1861, that a common uniform was adopted; i. e., the red zouave dress, in which the regiment won such renown, and from which, and its valor, it received its popular name in the civil war, "red- legged devils." The 14th has a glorious record of service dur- ing the late sectional struggle; having early won a reputation for gallantry and intrepidity, it was always put in the front when any arduous or dangerous duty was to be done; thus it lost heavily. It enlisted for three years as the 84th N. Y. Vols.
It was mustered into the service of the United States from May to July, 1861, and took part in the following battles: Bull Run, Falmouth, Spottsylvania C. H., Aug. 22, Rappahan- nock Station, Sulphur Springs, Gainesville, Groveton, Manas- sas Plains, Chantilly, South Mountain, Antietam, Fredericks- burg, Port Royal, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Mine Run, Wilderness, Laurel Hill, Spottsylvania C. H., besides many skirmishes. On the expiration of its term of service the ori- ginal members (except veterans) were mustered out, and the veterans and recruits transferred to the 5th New York Volunteers.
Colonels-A. M. Wood, dis. Oct. 18, 1862. E. B. Fowler (Bvt. Brig .- Gen., U. S. V.), mustered out June 1st, 1864.
Lieutenant-Colonels-E. B. Fowler, promoted Col., Oct. 24, 1862. W. H. De Bevoise, dis. May 11, 1863. Robert B. Jordan, mustered out June 1, 1864.
Majors-James Jourdan, dis. Jan. 2, 1862. Wm. H. De Bevoise, promoted Lt .- Col., Oct. 24, 1862. C. T. Baldwin, dis. Dec. 24, 1862. R. B. Jordan, promoted Lt .- Col., June 23, 1863. H. T. Head, mustered out June 1, 1864.
Adjutants-H. T. Head, promoted Maj., June 23, 1863. John Vliet, mustered out June 1, 1864.
Surgeons-Jas. L. Farley (Bvt. Lt .- Col., U. S. V.), dis. June 10, 1863. David Larrabee, dis. March 16, 1864. O. Smith, mustered out June 1, 1864.
Captains-A. B. Jordan, promoted Maj., March 19, 1863. J. W. Redding, mustered out June 1, 1864. G. B. Mallery, killed in battle. I. Uffendill (Bvt. Maj., U. S. V.), mustered
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HISTORY OF KINGS COUNTY.
out June 1, 1864. David Myers, died Sept. 25, 1862. Chas. B. Toby, res. Feb. 1, 1863. T. A. Burnett, mustered out June 1, 1864. C. F. Baldwin, promoted Maj., Oct. 24, 1862. W. M. Baldwin (Bvt. Maj., U. S. V.), mustered out June 1, 1864. W. L. B. Stears, res. Dec. 11, 1861. A. G. A. Harwickle, dis. Sept. 29, 1862. Jas. H. Jordan, dis. Jan. 13, 1863. W. A. Ball, mustered out June 1, 1864. G. Plass, dis. Nov. 10, 1863. S. Mandeville, mustered out June 1, 1864. J. McNeil (Bvt. Maj., U. S. V.), mnstered out June 1, 1864. A. W. H. Gill (Bvt. Maj., U. S. V.), dis. March 12, 1863 (prisoner of war). C. H. Morris, dis. Jan. 18, 1863. W. F. Twibill, mustered out. G. S. Elcock, mustered out June 1, 1864. W. M. Bennett, res. June 30, 1861. G. R. Davey, killed in battle, Aug. 29, 1862.
Immediately after the attack upon Fort Sumter, the 14th was placed upon a war footing; vacancies among officers and in the ranks were filled so quickly that on April 18, 1861, the Regiment was reported to head-quarters as ready to march to the front. Until May 18, it remained in Brooklyn, awaiting orders; by this time the Government declined to receive any more militia regiments, accepting only such organizations as enlisted for three years or the war. Accordingly the com- panies of the 14th were assembled in camp at Fort Greene, and terms of enlistment into the U. S. service proposed to them, which were enthusiastically received, and without a dissenting voice. May 18, 1861, eight companies of the line and an Engineer Corps (aggregating 825 officers and men), under command of Col. Alfred M. Wood, started for Wash- ington, amidst great enthusiasm. They were encamped on Meridian Hill, two miles north of the city of Washington, where they were regularly mustered into the United States service, May 23, by Gen. Irwin McDowell, as the 84th Regt., N. Y. Vols. A detachment from the Regiment was among the first to cross into Virginia. July 2, the regiment crossed the Potomac and camped near Arlington House, where two com- panies were added, making a total of 960 men, and the 14th was assigned to the Brigade of Gen. Andrew Porter. It took part in the battle of Bull Run, July 21, and suffered severe loss. Col. Wood was wounded and taken prisoner; afterward exchanged and honorably discharged, Sept. 28. The Regi- ment, under Lt .- Col. E. B. Fowler, participated in the ad -. vance upon Munson's and Hall's Hills; afterwards went into winter quarters on Upton's Hill, until the Spring of 1862. April 16 it marched to the Rappahannock, before Frede- ricksburg, and engaged with the enemy. Through the Sum- mer, the 14th was on the march much of the time, following the enemy and repelling attacks. Aug. 28 occurred the sharp battle of Groveton, near Gainesville, in which Col. Fowler, Col. (then Capt.) McLeer, and Lt. Schurig were severely wounded, and Surg. Farley was taken prisoner; Aug. 30 was the second battle of Bull Run, in which the Regiment suffered severely. The capture of South Mountain followed, Sept. 14, where the Regiment lost 30 per cent. of the men engaged; three days later it was again badly cut up on Antietam Creek; after several months of marching and skirmishing, it crossed the Rappahannock, Dec. 12, 1862, under heavy fire; fighting was continued for three successive days. Dec. 23 the Regiment returned to camp at Belle Plains, and Col. Fowler returned to command. Feb. 24, 1863, a handsome stand of colors, sent from Brooklyn, was presented to the Regiment. Apr. 9, the Corps under Gen. Reynolds was received by Pre- sident Lincoln. Apr. 27, The 14th assisted in crossing the Rappahannock at Port Royal and driving the enemy from their entrenchments. May 2, 4 and 5, occurred the battle of Chancellorsville, where the 14th was on the right of the line. It was continually in active service and pushed northward to Gettysburg, where it took part in the engagements of July 1,
2 and 3, losing fifty per cent. of the men engaged. The Regi- ment then returned to Virginia, and through the Summer, Fall and Winter of 1863, was marched from place to place in the Rappahannock and Rapidan Valleys. May 4, 1864, the Regiment left Culpepper, on the memorable Campaign of the Wilderness. May 6, orders came for every available man to proceed to the front. Col. Fowler reported to Gen. War- ren 383 officers and men fit for duty. On the 8th the Regiment lost sixty-five men, near Spottsylvania C. H .; Lieut. Schurig was wounded in the arm; on the 10th, 61 officers and men were killed or wounded, Gen. Rice and Lieut. Rae killed, and Capt. Baldwin and Adj. Vliet wounded. May 22, 1864, came the orders that those of the 14th who had en- listed in 1861 should be honorably diecharged and return home; those who had enlisted later were transferred to the 5th N. Y. Veteran Vols., and afterwards distinguished them- selves. The returning regiment was most heartily wel- comed with roar of cannon and cheers of the multitude, ex- pressing Brooklyn's pride in the " fighting 14th,"
After the war the Regiment was reorganized. Col. Fowler remained in command until 1873, when Col. McLeer was commissioned.
Lt .- Col. Schurig was a member of the 14th long before the civil war; at the beginning of the conflict he enlisted with his old Regiment and went to the front as 4th Serg. of Co. H; was afterwards promoted for gallantry and good conduct to be 1st Lieutenant. He was with the 14th in all its engage- ments, except when wounded and in hospital; his first wound (in the breast) was received at Groveton in 1862, but he returned to the front as soon as recovered. At Laurel Hill, while the 14th made a desperate charge on the enemy's bat- teries, he was shot through the arm, which had to be amputa- ted at the shoulder. After the war, he rejoined the 14th and served as Lieutenant, Captain, Major and Lieutenant-Colonel. In 1867 he was elected Register on the Republican ticket; two years later he was nominated for County Treasurer, hut was not elected. In 1880 he was appointed Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue in this District. He died in June, 1883, and was buried with military honors.
Present status of the Fourteenth Regiment-Ten com- panies. Third Brigade, Second Division. Armory at corner of North Portland avenue and Auburn place, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Colonel, James McLeer, June 6, 1873 (see page 867); Brevet Capt., N. Y. S. vols .; 1st Lt., Co. C, 14th Regt., May 27, 1865; Quartermaster, 14th Regt., Sept. 9, 1867; Major, Aug. 16, 1869; Lt .- Col., Nov. 7, 1870; Col., June 6, 1873; Commanding 3d Brigade since Sept. 17, 1883.
Lieutenant-Colonel, Harry W. Michell, Oct. 29,1883; Private, 14th N. Y. S. militia (84th N. Y. vols.), April 18, 1861; Corporal, Aug. 1, 1861; Serg., Nov. 1, 1861; 2d Lt., Feb. 11, 1863; 1st Lt., July 27, 1863; honorably discharged March 12, 1865; Capt., May 25, 1865; Major, 14th Regt., Mar. 25, 1875; Lt .- Col., Oct. 29, 1883.
Major, Selden C. Clobridge, Oct. 29, 1883; Private, Co. G., 115th N. Y. vols., Aug., 8, 1862; Corp., Aug., 1862; Serg., Jan. 15, 1863; 1st Lt., April 29, 1865; discharged (loss of right arm), June 5, 1865; Brevet Major, N. Y. S. vols .; Adj., 14th Regt., . May 1, 1878; Major, Oct. 29, 1883.
Quartermaster-First Lieutenant, Alexander Barnie, Jr., Feb. 11, 1876.
Commissary of Subsistence-First Lieutenant, Alexander R. Samuels, July 1, 1873.
Surgeon-Captain, James L. Farley, Sept. 5, 1864; Brevet Colonel.
Assistant Surgeon-Captain, George R. Fowler, June 4, 1877.
Chaplain-Captain, J. Oramel Peck, May 22, 1882.
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1199
MILITARY ORGANIZATIONS.
Inspector of Rifle Practice-Captain, Edwin S. Browe, June 17, 1878.
Captains-John McNeill, Aug. 27, 1862; Brevet Major, Co. H. Ramon Cardona, July 17, 1865, Co. I. Benjamin S. Steen, Nov. 22, 1872, Co. C. Augustus D. Limberger, Mar. 11, 1879, Co. D. Joseph R. K. Barlow, Mar. 22, 1880, Co. E. William V. Peacon, Co. F. William Wendell, April 11, 1881, Co. G. John J. Dixon, Co. A.
First Lieutenants-John Cutts, Dec. 17, 1872, Co. H. Has- sell Nutt, July 26, 1876, Co. I. John J. Dixon, Mar. 29, 1878, Co. C. James M. White, Sept. 2, 1879, Co. B. William F. Morris, April 27, 1881, Co. K. John H. Curran, May 26, 1882, Co. E. Owen Lewis, June 19, 1882, Co. D. G. Edward Ben- net, Co. G.
Second Lieutenants-Peter Erick Erickson, Mar. 9, 1876, Co. G. Peres A. Packard, Mar. 29, 1878, Co. C. John F. York, Sept. 16, 1879, Co. H. Adolph L. Kline, Jan. 23, 1882, Co. E. Austin O. Crane, Apr., 1884, Co. I.
The Twenty-Eighth Regiment, N. G., S. N. Y., was organ- ized in 1860, with Michael Bennet, Colonel, who was suc- ceeded, at his resignation in 1864, by David Bokee, and in 1865 by Caspar Urban. In 1869 Major Burger was elected Colonel.
The Regiment was ordered April 21, 1861, to march to Washington, D. C., where it arrived, under Col. Michael Ben- nett, eight days later; was quartered in the Capitol building; participated in the advance into Virginia, built "Fort Ben- net" and several redoubts; did guard duty, and was mustered out Aug. 5, 1861, many of the men then enlisting in the volunteer service. It was again ordered out in 1862, but did not leave Brooklyn. June 16, 1863, the Regiment was ordered to Harrisburgh Pa .; was held in reserve at Gettysburgh, and summoned home by the Governor on account of the Draft riots in New York, with Lt. Col. Bokee in command; July 22, the Regiment was mustered out, Lt .- Col. Schepper being in command. Col. Caspar Urban was afterwards must ered in as Colonel. It has since been disbanded.
When the old 70th disbanded, that portion which was cav- alry formed the nucleus of the Second Regiment Cavalry. N. G. S. N. Y., under command of Col. Wm. J. Cropsey, with about 400 men in the regiment, but has since disbanded.
The Third (Gatling) Battery was first organized as Co. "A," 1st Battalion Light Artillery, August 15th, 1864, Brig .- Gen. Jesse C. Smith, then commanding the 11th Brigade, de- tailing Major E. O. Hotchkiss, of his staff, to organize it, and that officer remained in command for some time after. It was armed with howitzers, and made its first public parade in New York City at the funeral obsequies of the lamented President Lincoln.
Major Hotchkiss was succeeded by 1st Lt. Joseph S. Amoore. In 1868 Capt. Amoore resigned. 1et Lt. Ira L. Beebe was elected Captain, who, early in 1870, was appointed upon the 2d Division Staff as Chief of Artillery, giving place to 1st Lt. Wm. H. H. Beebe, but the latter subsequently resigned, and 1st Lt. Julius F. Simons was elected Captain, who re- signed in 1872, and Capt. Ira L. Beebe was re-elected to the Captaincy. During this time the organization was quartered in the old State Arsenal in Portland avenue. the site of the present 14th Regiment Armory. In May, 1875, the Battery having been supplied with Gatling guns and complete horse equipments, it was re-organized into a Gatling Battery, and changed its name to Gatling Battery, Eleventh Brigade. In the fall of 1875 the Battery changed its quarters to the old City Armory in Henry street, previously occupied by the 13th Regiment. Capt. Beebe being shortly afterward elected Brigadier-General of the 11th Brigade, was succeeded in the Captaincy by 1st Lt. John A. Edwards. The Battery served during the railroad labor riots, July, 1877.
About Jan. 1st, 1878, the name of the Battery was changed by the Adjutant-General of the State to "Battery N;" Jan. 1st, 1882, its name was again changed to Third Battery, and it was detached from the 11th Brigade and attached to the 2d Division.
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