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Brig Genl James Ricketts |
This division originally was formed in the Department of the
Rappahannock in May of 1862. The first division commander was Brigadier General
Edward O.C. Ord (USMA 1839). Ord previously had commanded the 3rd
Brigade of the Pennsylvania Reserves division. He assumed his new command on May 16, 1862. Ord however soon left for the west to
command a division in the Army of the Tennessee on June 10, 1862. James Ricketts
(USMA 1839) moved up from brigade command to succeed Ord in command of the division. Ord and Rickets
were classmates at West Point ranking 15th and 16th
respectively in the Class of 1839.
Ricketts, an old regular, commanded Battery I, 1st U.S.
Artillery at First Bull Run where he was severely wounded and captured.
Released in December he was promoted to brigadier general U.S.V. effective back
to July 21, 1861. He held brigade
command for only three weeks before moving up to division command.
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Brig Genl Abram Duryee |
The division initially had four brigades. Two were new
brigades of troops recently joined to the Washington defenses. Command of the first of the new brigades was given
to Abram Duryee a militia officer from New York State. Duryee had significant
pre-war militia training and had organized the 5th New York Zouaves
at the beginning of the war.
Previously commanding a brigade of garrison troops, Duryee received
command of what became the 1st Brigade on April 16, 1862. James
Ricketts (USMA 1839) assumed command of the other brigade of new troops that
had also come out of the Washington defenses. George Hartsuff commanded the third brigade. The core of
this brigade was originally Abercrombie’s brigade. It had been part of
Nathanial Bank’s division and operated in the Shenandoah Valley. After Abercrombie was reassigned to a
brigade in the Third Corps on the Peninsula, George Hartsuff, assumed command shortly
before the brigade was assigned to the division.
Its regiments were some of the first 3-year regiments raised in the
summer of 1861 but they had not yet seen serious combat. The fourth brigade of the division would
no longer a part of the Second Division by the time of the Maryland
Campaign. Prior to assignment to
the 2nd Division, it was a part of James Shield’s division for much
of the spring of 1862. Commanded
by Colonel Samuel S. Carroll (USMA 1856), all but one regiment were transferred
to the Washington defenses just prior to the Maryland campaign. That regiment, the 7th
Indiana was reassigned to Hofmann’s brigade in the 1st Division of
the corps.
At the beginning of June, 1862 the command structure of the
division was:
Division Commander Brigadier
General Edward O.C Ord (USMA 1839)
·
1st Brigade - Brigadier Generals
Abram Duryee
·
2nd Brigade - Brigadier General James
Ricketts (USMA 1839)
·
3rd Brigade - Brigadier General
George Hartsuff (USMA 1852)
·
4th Brigade - Colonel Samuel S.
Carroll (USMA 1856)
On June 26, 1862 the division was designated as the Second
Division, Third Corps, Army of Virginia.
With the reassignment of Ord to Tennessee and elevation of Ricketts to
command the division, Brigadier General Zealous B. Tower (USMA 1841) assumed
command of Rickett’s brigade. The
new brigade command structure would look like this:
Division Commander Brigadier
General James Ricketts (USMA 1839)
·
1st Brigade - Brigadier Generals
Abram Duryee
·
2nd Brigade - Brigadier General
Zealous B. Tower (USMA 1841)
·
3rd Brigade - Brigadier General
George Hartsuff (USMA 1852)
·
4th Brigade - Colonel Samuel S.
Carroll (USMA 1856)
The division would participate in the Battle of Cedar
Mountain but would not suffer serious casualties. Total losses for the division would be 68 wounded. It would suffer more severe casualties
during the Second Battle of Bull Run.
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Brig Genl George Hartsuff |
There it would suffer 1,812 casualties at the Battle of
Second Bull Run. The 2nd Brigade had the largest number of
casualties with 696 killed, wounded and missing. Additionally General Tower was wounded and two regimental
commanders were casualties as well (Lieutenant Colonel McLean of the 88th
Pennsylvania killed, and Colonel Root of the 94th New York
wounded. Colonel Christian of the
26th New York would ascend to command of the brigade. The 3rd Brigade had nearly
as many casualties with 657 men falling.
The brigade lost Colonel Fletcher Webster of the 12th
Massachusetts as well. Duryee’s
brigade lost 291 men to the action but with no loss in regimental
commanders. The four artillery
batteries lost 54 men total. The
division lost a fair amount of its strength at the end of the Bull Run campaign
when its 4th Brigade was added to the defenses of Washington DC.
Under West Point-trained George Hartsuff and with the
longest amount of army service, the 3rd Brigade despite the heavy
casualties at Second Bull Run was probably in the best condition. It was chosen to lead the advance of
the division on the day of battle at Antietam. (The scheme of maneuver would change with the wounding of
Hartsuff on the field.) Duryea’s brigade followed it into action. The 2nd Brigade lost heavily
in men and leaders at Second Bull Run and was now lead by the unproven William
Christian. (Unlike Walter Phelps
in the 1st Division, Christian would not fare so well at
Antietam). That brigade
would bring up the rear.
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Colonel William Christian |
As the division entered the Maryland Campaign, it looked
like this:
Division Commander Brigadier
General James Ricketts (USMA 1839)
·
1st Brigade - Brigadier Generals
Abram Duryee
·
2nd Brigade – Colonel William
Christian, 26th New York
·
3rd Brigade - Brigadier General
George Hartsuff (USMA 1852)
Rickett’s division was severely under strength in the
artillery category. While assigned
four batteries, there were only two four-gun batteries present at Antietam and
no designated artillery chief.
None of these units were regular army. Captain Ezra Matthew’s Battery F, 1st Pennsylvania
Light Artillery was a veteran battery raised at Philadelphia in August 1861. It
had served so far in the Shenandoah Valley as part of Banks command and moved
over to the new division with Hartsuff’s brigade. Matthew’s battery contained
four 3-inch ordnance rifles and around 76 gunners. Captain James Thompson commanded Independent Battery C,
another Pennsylvania unit. It was
organized at Pittsburgh in November of 1861 and been with the 2nd
division since its creation. Thompson
had 3-inch ordnance rifles as well but only around 44 enlisted men. They “recruited” at least some men from
the 105th New York. Two
Maine batteries were missing at Antietam. The 2nd Maine battery of
Captain James Hall was retained in the Washington defenses after the Second
Bull Run campaign. The 5th
Maine battery was also ordered to Washington to refit.
NOTE:
Information on the make up of the artillery batteries comes from Artillery Hell – The Employment of
Artillery at Antietam by Curt Johnson and Richard C. Anderson (College
Station Texas: Texas A&M University Press, 1995).
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