12th New York Infantry Regiment (original) (raw)

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12th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment
Active May 8, 1861 to June 2, 1864
Country United States
Allegiance Union
Branch Infantry
Size 778,[1][note 1] 720[2][note 2], 772[3][4][note 3]
Nickname(s) Onondaga Regiment, Independence Guard
Equipment Model 1842 Springfield Muskets (.69 caliber, smoothbore and rifled)[5][note 4], 1861,[6][7] Model 1861 Springfield Rifles
Engagements Battle of Blackburn's Ford First Battle of Bull Run Battle of Upton's Hill Siege of Yorktown Battle of Hanover Court House Seven Days Battles Battle of Gaines's Mill Battle of Malvern Hill Second Battle of Bull Run Battle of Antietam Battle of Shepherdstown Battle of Fredericksburg Battle of Chancellorsville Battle of Gettysburg Bristoe Campaign Mine Run Campaign Battle of the Wilderness Battle of Spotsylvania Court House Battle of North Anna Battle of Totopotomoy Creek
Insignia
1st Division, V Corps

Military unit

The 12th New York Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War.

3 Month Service of the 12th New York State Militia

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The 12th New York Volunteer Infantry is sometimes confused with the 12th New York State Militia, a distinguished regiment formed in 1847 and which left New York City on April 21, 1861, for three months' service under the command of Colonel Daniel Butterfield.[8]

The 12th New York State Militia was not the same regiment as the 12th New York volunteers, though in February 1862 it did furnish a five-company battalion for the 12th Volunteers, and Henry A. Weeks of the militia regiment took command of the 12th Volunteers as a result. Remaining 12th New York militiamen stayed in New York City with their regiment, which was activated for federal service twice more during the war. Compounding the 12th Volunteers/12th Militia confusion is the fact that Butterfield at one point commanded the brigade in which the 12th New York Volunteers served. Also, as indicated by inscriptions on the 12th New York's monument at Gettysburg, at least some of its veterans considered the two 12th New York regiments to be one and the same.[9]

The 12th New York Volunteer Infantry was organized at Elmira, New York and mustered in May 8, 1861 for two years' state service under the command of Colonel Ezra L. Walrath. On May 13, 1861 the regiment was re-mustered for three months' federal service and again re-mustered on August 2, 1861 for two years' state service.

The regiment was attached to Richardson's Brigade, Tyler's Division, McDowell's Army of Northeast Virginia, June to August 1861. Richardson's Brigade, Division of the Potomac, to October 1861. Wadsworth's Brigade, McDowell's Division, Army of the Potomac, to March 1862. Butterfield's 3rd Brigade, Porter's 1st Division, III Corps, Army of the Potomac, to May 1862. 3rd Brigade, 1st Division, V Corps, to May 1863. Headquarters, V Corps, to June 1864.

The 12th New York Infantry mustered out of the service on May 17, 1863. Men who had enlisted for three years' service were consolidated into two companies and served duty as Provost Guard for Headquarters of V Corps under the command of Captain Henry W. Ryder. These two companies ceased to exist on June 2, 1864 when their members were transferred to the 5th New York Infantry as Companies E and F. Although transferred to the 5th, the two former 12th New York companies remained on duty at corps headquarters.

Affiliations, battle honors, detailed service, and casualties

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Organizational affiliation

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Attached to:[10]

The official list of battles in which the regiment bore a part:[11]

Detailed description as follows:[12]

The regiment lost a total of 124 men during service; 3 officers and 61 enlisted men killed or mortally wounded, 1 officer and 59 enlisted men died of disease.

Soldiers in the 12th were armed with 778 National Armory (NA)[note 5] and contract manufactured Model 1842 Springfield Muskets smoothbore muskets drawn from state arsenals.[note 6] At some point in the fall of 1861, the regiment, like others in its division, exchanged the smoothbore muskets for newer Model 1861 Springfield rifled muskets at the Washington DC arsenal. By the end of the first full year of hard campaigning, the regimented returned 720 Model 1842 smoothbore percussion muskets to the Adjutant General.[2] By theFredericksburg, the regiment reported the following survey result to U.S. War Department:[6][note 7]

At the end of the next quarter, just before the Chancellorsville campaign, the regiment reported the following:[7]

On April 23, D and E Companies on duty at V Corps headquarters reported:

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  1. ^ As reported back to Adjutant General Hillhouse upon departure from New York on June 27, 1861

  2. ^ As reported back to Adjutant General Hillhouse, on December 31, 1862

  3. ^ As reported back to Adjutant General Sprague, on December 31, 1863

  4. ^ On 18 Sep 1861, 846 Harper's Ferry rifled Model 1842s, percussion locks from manufacture and rifled. As reported back to Adjutant General on December 31, 1863. This was the number turned in when issued Springfields.

  5. ^ In government records, National Armory refers to one of three United States Armory and Arsenals, the Springfield Armory, the Harpers Ferry Armory, and the Rock Island Arsenal. Rifle-muskets, muskets, and rifles were manufactured in Springfield and Harper's Ferry before the war. When the Rebels destroyed the Harpers Ferry Armory early in the American Civil War and stole the machinery for the Confederate central government-run Richmond Armory, the Springfield Armory was briefly the only government manufacturer of arms, until the Rock Island Arsenal was established in 1862. During this time production ramped up to unprecedented levels ever seen in American manufacturing up until that time, with only 9,601 rifles manufactured in 1860, rising to a peak of 276,200 by 1864. These advancements would not only give the Union a decisive technological advantage over the Confederacy during the war but served as a precursor to the mass production manufacturing that contributed to the post-war Second Industrial Revolution and 20th century machine manufacturing capabilities. American historian Merritt Roe Smith has drawn comparisons between the early assembly machining of the Springfield rifles and the later production of the Ford Model T, with the latter having considerably more parts, but producing a similar numbers of units in the earliest years of the 1913–1915 automobile assembly line, indirectly due to mass production manufacturing advancements pioneered by the armory 50 years earlier. [13][14]

  6. ^ The smoothbore version was produced without sights (except for a cast one on the barrel band). Using a Buck and Ball cartridge, the smoothbore version of the 1842 musket was very effective during the American Civil War.[15]

  7. ^ Interestingly, G Company, the largest, still had the 1842 smoothbores at Fredericksburg.

  8. ^ Hillhouse (1862), p. 11.

  9. ^ a b Hillhouse (1863), p. 1034.

  10. ^ Sprague, (1864), Vol. I, p. 7.

  11. ^ Sprague, (1864), Vol. II, p. 11.

  12. ^ Hillhouse (1862), p. 11; Hillhouse (1863), p. 1034.

  13. ^ a b Mink, Armament in the Army of the Potomac, (2008), p.76.

  14. ^ a b Mink, Armament in the Army of the Potomac, (2018), pp.77-78.

  15. ^ "12th Regiment, New York National Guard :: New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center".

  16. ^ "Monument to the 12th & 44th New York at Gettysburg".

  17. ^ Dyer (1908), p. 1410; Federal Publishing Company (1908), pp. 56–57.

  18. ^ Dyer (1908), p. 1410; Phisterer (1912), p. 1874.

  19. ^ Dyer (1908), p. 1410.

  20. ^ Smithsonian, Civil War symposium, (2012).

  21. ^ NPS, Springfield Armory NHS, (2010).

  22. ^ Davide Pedersoli, .69 Ball, Buck and Ball, and Buckshot Cartridges (2014).

  23. ^ Martell, Scott (2015). The Madman and the Assassin: The Strange Life of Boston Corbett, The Man Who Killed John Wilkes Booth. Chicago: Chicago Review Press, chapter 2.

  24. ^ a b Hughes, Stefan. Catchers of the Light, Volume 1 - Catching Space, ArtDeCiel Publishing, 2012, pages 546-546. ISBN 978-1-4675-7993-3