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50th New York Engineer Regiment

The 50th New York Engineer Regiment was an engineer regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. The regiment was initially raised as the 50th Volunteer Infantry, but was converted to an engineer regiment after it arrived in Washington DC. It served as an engineer unit for the Army of the Potomac (AoP) from the Peninsula Campaign through the Appomattox Campaign.

50th New York Engineer Regiment
ActiveAugust 26 - September 20, 1861 (as 50th Infantry)
October 22, 1861 - June 13 - 14, 1865
CountryUnited States
AllegianceUnited States of America
Union
BranchEngineers
Size873 (1861), 830 (1862)[1][note 1]
Nickname(s)Stuart's Engineers; Independent Engineers; Sappers, Miners And Pontoniers
EquipmentModel 1822 Musket (069 Cal., smoothbore)[1][note 2]
Engagements
Commanders
ColonelCharles B. Stuart
Insignia
Volunteer Engineer Brigade
Rappahannock Station, Va. Canvas pontoon boat, 50th New York Engineers

Organization and muster edit

COL Charles B. Stuart had received, July 26, 1861, authority to recruit a regiment of infantry, which he organized at Elmira,[2] and which was designated September 20, 1861, the 50th Regiment of Infantry. The companies were mustered in the service of the United States for three years at Elmira:

In 1860 the army Corps of Engineers consisted of just 44 officers and 100 soldiers for an army of 15,000 soldiers. After the formation of the Confederacy and the Battle of Fort Sumter, Congress authorized a massive increase in the number of specialized engineer troops on August 3, 1861, to complement the growing Union Army.[4] On October 22, 1861, in Virginia, the regiment was converted into and designated the Fiftieth, Regiment of Engineers.[3]

Two new companies, L and M, mustered in the United States service for three years in December, 1863, and January and February, 1864, joined the regiment in December, 1863, and February, 1864, respectively.[5] They were recruited from:

Quite a number of men enlisted for this regiment in 1864 were assigned to the 15th N. Y. Volunteer Engineers. At the expiration of its term of service the men entitled thereto were discharged and the regiment continued in service.[6]

Service edit

When the regiment was converted by special orders from the war department into a regiment of engineers, it was ordered to Washington, where instruction was received by the men in their new duties.[7] They were joining a Corps of Engineers that would play a significant role in the American Civil War. Many of the men who would serve in the top leadership in this organization were West Point graduates. Several rose to military fame and power during the Civil War. Some examples include Union generals George McClellan, Henry Halleck, and George Meade; and Confederate generals Robert E. Lee, Joseph Johnston, and P.G.T. Beauregard.[8] The Corps were responsible for building pontoon and railroad bridges, forts and batteries, destroying enemy supply lines (including railroads), and constructing roads for the movement of troops and supplies. Both sides recognized the critical work of engineers. On 6 March 1861, once the South had seceded from the Union, its legislature passed an act to create a Confederate Corps of Engineers.[9]

One of the main projects for the Army Corps of Engineers was constructing and reconstructing railroads and bridges. Union forces took advantage of such Confederate infrastructure because railroads and bridges provided access to resources and industry. The Confederate engineers, in contrast used slave labor,[10] on their engineering projects. Through the war, the United States used these Engineer troops as a cadre, adding regular troops, and hiring former slaves to bolster them as needed.[10][11][12]

1862 edit

In March, 1862, the AoP, commanded by the engineer, McClellan, embarked on the Peninsula Campaign. With the volunteer engineers' brigade under BGEN Henry Washington Benham, the 50th moved to Yorktown and worked digging trenches, constructing bridges, and earthworks until the evacuation of that city. At White House, the command was divided into several detachments, which were engaged in escort duty and bridge building until reunited at Dispatch Station on June 1, when the regiment was employed in providing for the passage of the troops over the Chickahominy. It accompanied the army through the Seven Days' battles to Harrison's landing, where it was again separated, one detachment being sent to Hampton. When the regimental headquarters was transferred to Hampton in August, a detachment was left behind at Harrison's landing, but on Sept. 3 the regiment was reunited at Washington.[6]

Until July 17, 1862, the 50th was enrolled on the state records as an infantry regiment, but an act of Congress of that date accepted it as a regiment of the volunteer engineer corps, of the same rank as the regular army engineer corps.

Four companies were detached on Sept 12 and ordered to Harper's Ferry, where they were engaged in constructing pontoons and later returned in charge of two of the pontoons to Washington, leaving a part of the detachment behind.[13] Another detachment was sent to the vicinity of Fredericksburg with these boats, and the headquarters of the regiment were transferred to Acquia creek, leaving one company at Washington. After Antietam. the 50th threw two pontoon bridges over the Potomac at Berlin, for the AoP's crossing in pursuit of Lee.[14]

The Bridges at Fredericksburg edit

After McClellan failed to pursue Lee's retreat from Antietam, Lincoln fired McClellan on Wednesday, November 5, 1862,[15] and replaced him with MGEN Burnside on Friday. Formally taking command on Sunday, November 9, 1862, Burnside immediately received pressure from Lincoln to take aggressive action. In response to prodding from Lincoln and general-in-chief MGEN Halleck, Burnside planned a late fall offensive that the relied on quick movement and deception. Concentrating his army in a visible fashion near Warrenton, feigning a movement on Culpeper Court House, Orange Court House or Gordonsville, he would then rapidly shift southeast and cross the Rappahannock River to Fredericksburg, hoping to steal a march on Lee.[16] The AoP would then move rapidly south along the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad (RF&P) against Richmond.He chose this course lest he strike directly south from Warrenton, exposed to a flanking attack from LTGEN Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley and because he felt the Orange and Alexandria Railroad (O&A) would be an inadequate for logistics as well as the fact that Lee had blocked the O&A.

While Burnside began assembling a supply base at Falmouth, Washington reviewed the plan. Lincoln, correctly, saw the main goal was the destruction of Lee and his army and not Richmond, but despite this when Burnside presented his plan on Thursday, November 14, Lincoln reluctantly approved it.[17] Halleck wired Burnside, "The President has just assented to your plan," adding for emphasis: "He thinks that it will succeed if you move rapidly; otherwise not."[18][19][20]

Burnside saw the rapid movement of his army as key to catching Lee, off guard, and that the river crossing could be made before Lee could concentrate his forces at Fredericksburg and contest the crossing. The Rappahannock, a short river rising in the mountains, is not much more than a mountain stream until Warrenton where several tributaries swell it into a river, the principal one being the Rapidan. At Fredericksburg it is quite deep below the falls and can be crossed only by bridges. Opposite the northern end of Fredericksburg was a smaller town, Falmouth. They were both mill towns that had prospered grounding the local grains into flour. Powered by canals as well as the river, the mills tapped the river above the dam. In the antebellum era, bridges had connected the two towns but they had been destroyed during Johnston's withdrawal a year before. Any crossing would need to be done at a ford or with pontoon bridges. The 50th, like the other AoP engineers, were well-practiced in assembling pontoons as well as manipulating canals for various purposes.[21]

Burnside went into action immediately. On Friday, November 15, he began to pull his army out of the Warrenton, Virginia area and head southeast towards Fredericksburg. That morning, AoP artillery roused the Confederates. IX Corps struck the Rappahannock River at Warrenton Springs, and I Corps demonstrated focusing on Freeman's and Beverly's fords to the east. Cavalry and infantry attacked Rebels at Rappahannock Station and captured the bridge there intact.[22]

The sudden action on a wide front surprised Lee who began a pullback from his position in front of the Army of the Potomac. Unsure of the Federals’ destination, Lee had to hold back and see how the situation developed before he could make a countermove. Unsure about Burnside's movements, he sent an infantry regiment and an artillery battery to strengthen a small force stationed at Fredericksburg. If Burnside had already crossed and occupied the town, Lee would withdraw North Anna River. Anticipating that Fredericksburg could not be held, Lee got permission to destroy the railroad between Fredericksburg and Hanover Junction. Lee had yet to hear intelligence that AoP was rebuilding the wharves at Aquia Creek, so as Sumner’s troops approached Falmouth, Lee still thought it likely that Burnside would transfer his army south of the James River.[23][24]

Burnside had moved rapidly on Friday and Saturday without Lee discovering his intent. On Sunday evening, when he heard Sumner’s men were approaching Falmouth, Lee immediately had Longstreet send two of his divisions toward Fredericksburg. As these units left their camps the next morning, Monday, November 18, Stuart’s scouts forded the Rappahannock arriving at Warrenton just as the last U.S. troops were departing.[25]

In the meantime, when the AoP started from Warrenton, Sumner's grand division was given the advance; II Corps arrived on Sunday evening, the 17th at Falmouth, opposite the upper edge of Fredericksburg. Burnside had fooled Lee made it opposite Fredericksburg almost undetected. Next, he needed to get the army across the Rappahannock and push on to Richmond.

When Sumner arrived at Falmouth, Fredericksburg was occupied only by a small force. As soon as the Union troops appeared on the Stafford Heights, an artillery duel began. The Rebels were soon driven from the guns. Standing unmanned, the Rebel guns tempted Sumner to cross the river and capture them. Lest he incur Burnside's wrath,Sumner would not permit volunteers to go over and get them, but he did ask permission to take Fredericksburg, if he (Sumner) could find a crossing.[note 3] Burnside turned him down as he felt it unwise to take Fredericksburg before he had fully established his communications. He was also concerned that the increasing autumn rains would make the fording points unusable and that Sumner might be cut off and destroyed. He ordered Sumner to wait in Falmouth ending the matter, and the troops went into camp waiting for orders.[26]

When the rest of the AoP arrived two days later, Hooker also suggested crossing, this time at United States Ford, just a few miles upriver. Burnside, mindful of McClellans problems when a river divided his forces in the Peninsula campaign, again worried that the high water would do the same to him and chose to wait.[27]

Burnside became anxious, concerned that the increasing autumn rains would make the fording points unusable and that Sumner might be cut off and destroyed, ordering Sumner to wait in Falmouth.[28]

Transporting the Pontoons to Fredericksburg edit

Before beginning his campaign, Burnside had arranged for the shipment of the pontoon wagon trains through the Union Army’s General in Chief, Henry Halleck.[note 4] Burnside had planned for the pontoons to arrive the same time as his first elements on Sunday evening, November 17, however, his plans began failing for the pontoon bridges and bridging materials had not arrived and were just leaving Washington.[29][30]

The plan called for both riverine and overland movement of the pontoon trains to Falmouth. On November 14, MAJ Ira Spaulding of the 50th reported the pontoons ready to move but lacking the 270 horses needed to move them.[31] Unknown to Burnside, most of the bridging was still on the upper Potomac. Communications between Burnside's staff engineer Cyrus B. Comstock and the Engineer Brigade commander Daniel P. Woodbury indicate that Burnside had assumed the bridging was en route to Washington based on orders given on November 6.[18][32]

When Halleck visited Burnside it was agreed that they were to be rapidly transported south, to be used in crossing the Rappahannock. Halleck returned to Washington and resumed the duties of his office, evidently not understanding that he was to charge himself with this special duty, therefore neither Halleck nor Quartermaster General Montgomery Meigs, who was responsible for supplying necessary equipment and supplies for the pontoon trains, acted with the urgency needed.[33] Just before he cut his communications with Washington on Sunday, November 17, to make his move, he had tasked his Chief Engineer LT Cyrus B. Comstock to check the status of the pontoons' movement.[34] Receiving no answer before beginning his march, it would be two days before he found out where they were. In fact, when Sumner had army arrived opposite Fredericksburg, they were still at Washington, Burnside supposing that Halleck would forward them without delay.[26]

Due to the miscommunication between Burnside and Washington in the planning stages, Comstock's queries caused confusion followed by sudden urgency. The 50th New York Engineers left Washington with one of two pontoon trains on November 19, traveling overland to Falmouth.[35]

Lee, expecting an imminent advance across the Rappahannock, assume the next defensible position to the south, the North Anna River. But when he saw how slowly Burnside was moving (and Confederate President Jefferson Davis expressed reservations about planning for a battle so close to Richmond), he directed all of his army toward Fredericksburg. By November 23, the corps commanded by LTGEN James Longstreet had arrived and Lee placed them on the ridge known as Marye's Heights to the west of town, with Anderson's division on the far left, McLaws's directly behind the town, and Pickett's and Hood's to the right. He sent for Jackson on November 26, but his Second Corps commander had anticipated the need and began forced-marching his troops from Winchester on November 22, covering as many as 20 miles a day. Jackson arrived at Lee's headquarters on November 29 and his divisions were deployed to prevent Burnside crossing downstream from Fredericksburg: D.H. Hill's division moved to Port Royal, 18 miles down river; Early's 12 miles down river at Skinker's Neck; A.P. Hill's at Thomas Yerby's house, "Belvoir", about 6 miles southeast of town; and Taliaferro's along the RF&P Railroad, 4 miles south at Guinea Station.[36]

Heavy rains turned the roads to mud and slowed progress. A second pontoon train had been sent down the Potomac River to the town of Aquia Landing; from there, the train would travel overland the last few miles. With the roads impassable due to the mud, the overland train was diverted to the Potomac River, the pontoon boats were formed into rafts, and towed down river to Aquia Landing. The engineers and equipment did not arrive at Falmouth until November 25. By this time Lee’s army was arriving, and the opportunity to cross the Rappahannock River uncontested was gone. Burnside still had an opportunity, however, because by then he was facing only half of Lee's army, not yet dug in, and if he acted quickly, he might have been able to attack Longstreet and defeat him before Jackson arrived. Once again he squandered his opportunity. The full complement of bridges arrived at the end of the month, but by this time Jackson was present and Longstreet was preparing strong defenses.[37]

Burnside originally planned to cross his army east of Fredericksburg at Skinker's Neck, but an advance movement by Federal gunboats to there was fired upon and drew Early's and D.H. Hill's divisions into that area, a movement spotted by Union balloon observers. Now assuming that Lee had anticipated his plan, Burnside guessed that the Confederates had weakened their left and center to concentrate against him on their right. So he decided to cross directly at Fredericksburg. On December 9, he wrote to Halleck, "I think now the enemy will be more surprised by a crossing immediately in our front than any other part of the river. ... I'm convinced that a large force of the enemy is now concentrated at Port Royal, its left resting on Fredericksburg, which we hope to turn." In addition to his numerical advantage in troop strength, Burnside also had the advantage of knowing his army could not be attacked effectively. On the other side of the Rappahannock, 220 artillery pieces had been located on the ridge known as Stafford Heights to prevent Lee's army from mounting any major counterattacks.[38]

On Tuesday evening of 9 December, Burnside presented his plan of attack to his subordinate. The army would cross at three sites simultaneously. Sumner’s Right Grand Division would cross on two pontoon bridges at the northern end of town and a third at the southern end. Once across, Sumner would clear Fredericksburg and advance to drive the Rebels from Marye’s Heights. Franklin’s Left Grand Division would cross on two bridges two miles below town. Hooker’s Center Grand Division would remain in reserve, ready to exploit any success. His artillery chief, BGEN Hunt, placed the army’s 312 guns, with 147 of them on the advantageous high ground of Stafford Heights, to support the crossing.[39] Burnside was scant on specifics regarding follow-on actions, rebuffing his subordinates' lack of confidence in the plan.[40] Despite the lack of detail, they reluctantly left the meeting with their reservations and began moving their troops into position Monday evening, December 10.

Constructing the Bridges edit

The engineer brigade moved out after dark. The 15th New York left camp at 20:00, the regulars at 22:00, and the 50th at 23:00. The engineers stopped briefly at the pontoon park and outfitted their trains for the night's assignment. The teams started for their assigned bridge sites by 23:50. As soon as the engineers stirred, the army "knew that the moment for action had arrived for the Pontoons were moving for the river." The 50th New York left the pontoon park first, followed by the U.S. Engineers and the 15th New York. For some unknown reason, the 50th New York started its march first even though the other engineers had farther to go to get into position.[41] On the night of December 10, the 15th New York Engineers and the U.S. Regular Engineer Battalion quietly moved to a position about a mile down river from Fredericksburg. The engineers built two bridges at this site, facing little opposition. When the bridges were nearly complete, a small Confederate force charged the engineers and inflicted some casualties, but Union artillery fire drove the attackers away. The two bridges were finished by 11:00.

The 50th New York Engineers were charged with the task of building three bridges in two locations; one at the southern end of town and two at the northern end. The 50th New York Engineers rumbled along heavily rutted dirt roads with three bulky pontoon trains. With so many men, horses, and equipment in motion, secrecy was impossible as each caravan toted 34 pontoon boats on wheels accompanied by 29 support vehicles laden with lumber, tools, and forges. 189 wagons lurched into a ravine behind the Lacy house. [42]

At the river's edge with no light to work, the men of the 50th settled down for quick a nap before building the bridges. The night was cold with the temperature in the mid-twenties and thin ice along the riverbanks. A thick fog covered the river.[43] Brainerd rested in the parlor of the Lacy house, listening to the bell from Saint George's Episcopal Church toll 03:00, and wrote his goodbyes to his family. As soon as he was done, with the bell still ringing the hour, got his command moving.[44]

Work began as the 50th moved the heavy pontoon boats down the muddy banks of Stafford Heights and into the icy waters of the Rappahannock. The 50th divided into three sections. CAPT Wesley Brainerd and CAPT George W. Ford kept two trains behind the Lacy house, while CAPT James H. McDonald led the third train south to the lower end of the city. MAJ Spaulding accompanied McDonald's crew to a point below the burned railroad bridge of the RF&P Railroad. Surgeons set up hospitals on Claiborne Run, while assistants selected forward aid stations closer to Stafford Heights.[31]

On the opposite shore, BGEN William Barksdale alerted his commander, MGEN Lafayette McLaws, that Federal bridge building had commenced. McLaws instructed Barksdale to allow the construction to continue until the engineers were within close range. Barksdale moved his brigade, consisting of the 13th, 17th, 18th, and 21st Mississippi Infantry regiments, along with some reinforcements from the 8th Florida Infantry into position along the river. The men took cover in buildings, behind fences, and in rifle pits.[45]

As the 50th went to work on the pontoons, they could make out the flickering campfires more than 400 yards away on the opposite bank but also noticed them being extinguished. Shortly after 05:00, the Confederates opened fire on the engineers working on the bridges and on the opposite riverbank. Initially, fog on the water provided some cover for the 50th, but as the light increased and fog dissipated three hours later, with one of the upper bridges and the middle bridge about two-thirds complete and the other upper bridge about one-quarter finished, Rebel fire increased at the engineers. The bullets the engineers, and a minié ball instantly killed CAPT. Augustus Perkins of the 50th.[31] Wounded soldiers dove into the boats while others crawled back to safety to avoid the heavy musketry of the rest of Barksdale’s Mississippians. With Union infantry able to offer little support, the engineers retreated, regrouped, and tried again on the upper bridges.[45] The Confederate musket fire killed one officer and two enlisted men on the northern bridge site, and wounded several others. The unarmed engineers ran for the shore and took cover as the enemy fire raked the Federal positions.[46][41][31][47]

At the middle bridge, downstream from the ruined rail bridge, crews ventured out to complete the bridge four times but came scurrying back, and by 10:00 a.m. the 50th had suffered fifty casualties, including a seriously wounded CAPT Brainerd.[48][46][41][31][47] BGEN Woodbury led 40 volunteers from the 8th Connecticut onto one of the bridges, but soon lost 20 men and hastily retreated. Two regiments in Hancock’s division also suffered casualties near the upper bridges.[49]

Brigadier General Henry Hunt, the Army of the Potomac’s Chief of Artillery, had placed his batteries on Stafford Heights, east of the town. The artillery began firing at the Confederate positions in Fredericksburg. After considerable bombardment, the cannonade stopped and the engineers attempted to resume their work, only to be hit by more Confederate fire and again driven back. The artillery resumed blasting Fredericksburg, and when the firing eased, the engineers again tried to resume work, and were again driven back by Barksdale’s determined riflemen. Union infantry across the river also exchanged fire with the Mississippians.[48][46][41][31][47]

This continued well into the afternoon. To break the stalemate, General Hunt suggested to Burnside that infantrymen be sent across the river in boats to secure a small bridgehead and rout the sharpshooters. Burnside agreed to the idea if Hunt would find volunteers for the risky venture. COL Norman J. Hall volunteered his brigade[note 5]for this assignment. Burnside suddenly turned reluctant, lamenting to Hall in front of his men that "the effort meant death to most of those who should undertake the voyage." When his men responded to Hall's request with three cheers, Burnside relented. At 15:00, the Union artillery began a preparatory bombardment and 135 infantrymen from the 7th Michigan and 19th Massachusetts crowded into the small boats, and the 20th Massachusetts and 42nd New York followed soon after. They crossed successfully and spread out in a skirmish line to clear the sharpshooters. Although some of the Confederates surrendered, fighting proceeded street by street through the town as the engineers completed the bridges.[50]

With Hall's attack, the 50th were able to complete their bridges rapidly. Sumner's Right Grand Division began crossing at 16:30, but the bulk of his men did not cross until December 12. Hooker's Center Grand Division crossed on December 13, using both the northern and southern bridges.[51].

The Regulars and the 1st New York detachments who had a comparatively easier time saw much less eventful crossings south of the city by Franklin's Left Grand Division. They had both bridges were completed by 11:00 on December 11 while five batteries of Union artillery suppressed most sniper fire against the engineers. Franklin was ordered at 16:00 to cross his entire command, but only a single brigade was sent over before dark. Crossings resumed at dawn and were completed by 13:00 on Thursday, December 12. Early on December 13, Jackson recalled his divisions under Jubal Early and D.H. Hill from down river positions to join his main defensive lines south of the city.[52]

The clearing of the city buildings by Sumner's infantry and by artillery fire from across the river began the first major urban combat of both the war and American history. Union gunners sent more than 5,000 shells against the town and the ridges to the west. By nightfall, four brigades of Union troops occupied the town. These troops fresh from the bitter street fighting looted with a fury that had not been seen in the war up to that point. Most of the slaves left behind by the townsfolk, their erstwhile masters, took action and emancipated themselves by crossing the pontoon bridges in the other direction.[53][note 6] This behavior enraged Lee, who compared the AoP's looting with those of the ancient Vandals. The destruction and the escape of slaves also angered the Confederate troops, many of whom were native Virginians. Many on the Union side were also shocked by the destruction inflicted on Fredericksburg. Civilian casualties were unusually low given the widespread destruction; George Rable estimates no more than four civilian deaths.[54]

The 50th had suffered all the fatalities of the Volunteer Engineer Brigade, 1 officer and 7 enlisted men killed with a further 3 officers and 39 enlisted men wounded.[55] This was a heavy loss for the highly-trained men of the 50th, but they managed to persevere and complete the bridges. The 50th had learned a lot from the experience that would inform their tactics as well as those of the AoP in the future.

The next day was the scene of one of the AoP's most horrendous defeats on Marye's Heights.[56][15]

1863 edit

After passing the winter in the neighborhood of Fredericksburg, the regiment joined in the Chancellorsville campaign, where it aided effectively in conveying the army across the river and was highly praised by their commander, BGEN Benham. At Deep Run in June, the 50th suffered the loss of 11 in killed, wounded and missing, while engaged in laying a bridge. [57] The end of the month saw an engineer again in command of the AoP, Meade when they moved with the army through the Gettysburg Campaign. After the repulse of the Rebels, companies A, C, F, G, H and K remained in the field with the AoP during the summer and fall of 1863 and the others were stationed in Washington. In Dec., 1863, about three fourths of the regiment reenlisted and received their veteran furlough. In the winter of 1863-64 two new companies (companies L and M) were added to the regiment and the ranks filled with new recruits.[57]

1864 edit

The new year also brought a new commander to the eastern theater, Ulysses S. Grant. The victor of Fort Donelson, Shiloh, Vicksburg, and Chattanooga had been promoted on March 2, 1864, lieutenant general, and given command of all Union Armies.[58] Grant established his headquarters with Meade in Culpeper, north-west of Richmond, and met weekly with Lincoln and Stanton in Washington.[59][note 7] He planned five coordinated U.S. offensives, so the Rebels could not shift troops along interior lines.[61] Grant and Meade would make a direct frontal attack on Lee's Army of Northern Virginia, while Sherman—now chief of the western armies—was to destroy Joseph E. Johnston's Army of Tennessee and take Atlanta.[62] MGEN Butler would advance on Lee from the southeast, up the James River with the Army of the James (AoJ), while Major General Nathaniel Banks would capture Mobile.[63] MGEN Franz Sigel was tasked with taking the fertile Shenandoah Valley and denying all its supplies to Lee's forces.[64]

At the opening of the Overland Campaign in May, 1864, the 50th was again divided, one detachment assigned to the II Corps, one to the V Corps, and one to the VI Corps, one company remaining in Washington. The campaign kept the 50th, now commanded by LTC Ira Spaulding, constantly busy. By this point of the war, it was a seasoned, efficient regiment of engineers. Through continual recruitment, its eleven companies were organized into four battalions, with 40 officers and 1,500 enlisted men.[65] The engineers in the AoP were organized into a Volunteer Engineer brigade[note 8] consisting of the 50th and the 15th New York Volunteer Engineers and a battalion of regulars in four companies.[note 9] These special troops had already accomplished much since the beginning of the campaign, erecting 38 pontoon bridges with an aggregate length of 6,458 feet.[66] Of note, To expedite the evacuation of wounded from the Battle of the Wilderness, three Companies made a forced march to Fredericksburg on May 10, starting at 11:30. On arrival, they built bridge over the Rappahannock at Fredericksburg Lower Crossing, having it completed and ready for use at 16:30, having marched eight miles and built bridge 420 feet long in 5 hours.[14]

Bridging the James edit

Grant realized he was again in a stalemate with Lee and additional assaults at Cold Harbor were not the answer. He planned three actions to make some headway. First, in the Shenandoah Valley, MGEN David Hunter was making progress against Confederate forces, and Grant hoped that by interdicting Lee's supplies, Lee would send reinforcements to the Valley. Second, on June 7 Grant sent Sheridan with the cavalry to destroy the Virginia Central Railroad near Charlottesville. Third, he planned a stealthy operation to withdraw from Lee's front and move across the James River. He planned to cross to the south bank of the river, bypassing Richmond, and isolate the capital by seizing the railroad junction of Petersburg to the south.

Lee reacted to the first two actions as Grant had hoped, sending Breckinridge's division from Cold Harbor and toward Lynchburg against Hunter following on June 12 assigning Jubal Early permanent command of the Second Corps and sending them to the Valley as well. He also two of his three cavalry divisions in pursuit of Sheridan, leading to the Battle of Trevilian Station.[67]

For his third act, he would need to maneuver around Lee's left flank. Grant's complex plan was a coordinated effort between MGEN Meade's AoP Butler's AoJ. Army engineers would play a vital role.[note 10] His plan was to send AoJ's XVII Corps[note 11] from White House Landing on the Pamunkey, steam 150 miles around the James Peninsula, and lead the attack on Petersburg from Bermuda Hundred. II Corps would cross the James further downstream at a place giving them the shortest line of march while staying out of Lee's reach.[68]

 
Crossing the James River, 12–16 June 1864.

Grant delegated the planning to Meade who had his chief of staff, MGEN Humphreys draft the operations order.[69] The AoP would leave the lines at Cold Harbor in four coordinated columns. To start, Hancock's II and Warren's V Corps would cross the Chickahominy River at Long Bridge. The men of the 50th would play a key role in putting a 1,200-foot-long pontoon bridge across it. Due to the marshy ground leading to the bridgehead, the 50th would also build corduroy approaches.[69]

V Corps would be the first in line and once across, they would turn west to screen and block reinforced by Wilson's 3rd Cavalry Division, which did not accompany Sheridan on his raid. This was also intended to make Lee think that Grant would make an advance on Richmond north of the James.[69] At the same time, Wright's VI and Burnside's IX Corps would pull out and take separate routes to Jones’ Bridge on the Chickahominy River continuing on to Charles City Court House. BGEN Ferrero’s division of United States Colored Troops would take a third column with the army’s trains across the Chickahominy east of Jones’ Bridge.

On Thursday, June 9, Meade ordered the construction of a new line of entrenchments in the army's rear, extending northward from Elder Swamp to Allen's Mill Pond. On June 11, Saturday, the construction was complete and he issued orders for a movement to the James River, beginning after dark on June 12.[note 12]

On Sunday morning, Butler's chief engineer, BGEN Weitzel[note 13] had sent Lieutenant Peter S. Michie to select a crossing site near Fort Powhatan.[69] He chose Wilcox Landing, three-quarters of a mile upriver from the fort as a ferry site and Weyanoke Point and Windmill Point at Flowerdew Hundred, three miles downstream, for the bridgehead . The engineers would have their work cut out for them as the river was 1,992 feet at that point and the landward approach would needed considerable tree clearage and an extensive trestle ramp.[69] Michie also chose an entrenched bridgehead position to cover the crossing sites.

The 50th had completed the bridge across the Chickahominy at Jones’ Bridge on Sunday morning, and the Engineer Battalion moved out at 17:00, crossing first. On the far side, they awaited the passage of VI Corps and then marched into camp at Charles City Court House, where they made camp leaving a detachment of the 50th at the bridge.

 
Pontoon bridge across the James River

As darkness fell on Sunday, II and VI Corps took up positions on the new entrenchment line. V Corps cleared the roads heading south, advancing over Long Bridge and White Oak Swamp Bridge, taking up a blocking position just east of Riddell's Shop, facing toward Richmond while IX Corps and Smith's XVIII Corps withdrew from the original line of entrenchments. COL George H. Chapman's brigade from 3rd Cavalry Division screened the roads heading toward Richmond. Burnside headed south, followed by Wright and Hancock. XVIII Corps marched to White House, where on the morning of June 13 they embarked on steamers for Bermuda Hundred. They arrived at Point of Rocks on the Appomattox River the night of June 14.[70]

Most of the three infantry corps began ferrying across the James at Wilcox Landing on the morning of June 14. The engineers moved out at 11:00 from Charles City Court House stopping at Weyanoke Point for lunch at 14:00. Companies B, F, and G under MAJ Brainerd were sent to the Wilcox Landing ferry site to repair the wharves. Later that evening, he was ordered across the river to Windmill Point to construct an additional wharf for the use of follow-on troops.[71]

At 15:00, the rest of AoP's engineers fell in without arms and went a short distance down the bank to meet Weitzel and their AoJ counterparts, the 1st New York.[71] They found no work had been done and in a SNAFU, the pontoon material which had been sent to Bermuda Hundred in early June, had been sent back to Forts Monroe on Sunday. The equipment would not be back to Weyanoke Point until the next day. The engineers did not wait; they went right to work and within an hour built a 150-foot long abutment of trestle through the soft marshes—arguably the hardest part of the entire project. The battalion then went across the river to work on the opposite shore, with volunteers taking up the work at Weyanoke Point.

Benham arrived around noon from Fort Monroe with portions of the 15th New York and bridge materials in tow. The detachment bridge train of the 50th New York soon arrived. Benham took charge of the construction. Work started at 16:00 on June 15 and was completed seven hours later. As they could be unloaded from the vessels, the materials were made into “rafts” of six pontoon boats and rowed into position. While Lee remained unaware of Grant's intentions, the engineers constructed the longest pontoon bridge of the war. Upon completion, it stretched 2,200 feet (670 m) over deep water, across the James from Weyanoke to Windmill Points. Although most of Grant's infantry crossed the river by boats, IX Corps, one division of VI Corps, the animals and supply wagons, and a part of the artillery crossed on the bridge on June 15 and 16. By Friday morning, June 17, more than 100,000 men, 5,000 wagons and ambulances, 56,000 horses and mules, and 2,800 head of cattle had crossed the river without alerting the Confederates. Before the entire army had crossed, Smith's XVIII Corps, followed by Hancock's II Corps, became engaged in the next campaign, Richmond–Petersburg (the siege of Petersburg), with attacks on Petersburg on June 15.[72]

1865 edit

At Petersburg the regiment was in demand at all points for work of construction and repair on the fortifications, and it also assisted in destroying railroads. [73]

During its long service the men became very proficient in engineering and through its steadiness under fire is said to have lost during the last year of its service no bridge material of any kind. The original members not reenlisted were mustered out at New York in Sept., 1864, and after participation in the grand review at Washington, the veteran organization was there mustered out on June 13–14, 1865.[3]

Affiliations, battle honors, detailed service, and casualties edit

Organizational affiliation edit

Attached to:

  • Woodbury's Brigade. AoP, to April, 1862
  • Engineer Brigade, AoP, to June, 1865.

List of battles edit

The official list of battles in which the regiment bore a part:[74]

Detailed service edit

1861[5] edit

  • Left New York for Washington, D.C., Sept 21.
  • Duty at Alexandria, Va., until October
  • Converted by special orders from the war department into a regiment of engineers and ordered to Wash- ington, where instruction was received.[7]
  • Duty at Washington, D.C., until March 18, 1862

1862[5] edit

  • Moved with Army of the Potomac to the Virginia Peninsula.
  • Siege of Yorktown April 5-May 4.
  • Advance up the Peninsula and constructing bridges on the Chickahominy River May.
  • Battle of Fair Oaks, Seven Pines, May 31-June 1.
  • Seven days before Richmond June 25-July 1.
    • Battle of Seven Pines June 27.
    • White Oak Swamp and Charles City Cross Roads June 30.
    • Malvern Hill July 1.
  • At Harrison's Landing until August 16.
  • Moved to Washington, D.C., August 16–22.
  • Maryland Campaign September–October.
    • Operating at and about Harper's Ferry, W. Va., and Berlin, Md., during and after the battle of Antietam.
    • Threw two pontoon bridges over the Potomac River at Berlin, Md., for the crossing the Army of the Potomac in their pursuit of Lee from Antietam.
  • Rappahannock Campaign November, 1862, to June, 1863.
  • Battle of Fredericksburg December 11–15. (Construction of three pontoon bridges for Sumner's Grand Division)
  • Duty at Falmouth, Va., until April 1863.

1863[5] edit

  • "Mud March" January 20–24, 1863.
  • Chancellorsville Campaign April 27-May 6.
    • Operations at Franklin's Crossing April 29-May 2.
    • Maryes Heights, Fredericksburg, May 3.
    • Salem Heights May 3–4.
    • Banks' Ford May 4.
  • Operations at Deep Run Ravine June 5 13.
  • Gettysburg Campaign June 13-July 24.
  • Battle of Gettysburg July 1–4.
  • Bristoe Campaign October 9–22.
  • Bristoe Station October 14.
  • Advance to line of the Rappahannock November 7–8.
  • Mine Run Campaign November 26-December 2.

1864[5] edit

  • Campaign from the Rapidan to the James May 3-June 15
  • Laid all bridges for Army of the Potomac during the Campaign. Battles of the Wilderness May 5–7
  • Spottsylvania Court House May 8–21.
  • To expedite the transportation of wounded three Companies made a forced march to Fredericksburg on May 10, starting at 11:30 a.m. Built bridge over the Rappahannock at Fredericksburg Lower Crossing, having it completed and ready for use at 4:30 p.m., having marched 8 miles and built bridge 420 feet long in 5 hours.
  • North Anna River May 23–26.
  • On line of the Pamunkey May 26–28.
  • On line of the Totopotomoy May 28–31.
  • About Cold Harbor June 1–12.
  • Crossing of James River June 15.
  • Before Petersburg June 16–18.
  • Siege operations against Petersburg and Richmond June, 1864, to April, 1865.
  • Jerusalem Plank Road June 22–23, 1864.
  • Demonstration on north side of James River July 27–29.
  • Deep Bottom July 27–28.

1865[5] edit

  • Hatcher's Run, February 5–7, 1865.
  • Appomattox Campaign March 28-April 9.
  • Fall of Petersburg April 2.
  • Appomattox Court House April 9. Surrender of Lee and his army.
  • (Co. "I" march to Danville with 6th Army Corps April 23–27.
  • Mustered out at Washington, DC, June 13, 1865.

Casualties edit

The loss of the regiment during its service was, killed in action, 1 officer, 9 enlisted men; of wounds received in action, 7 enlisted men; of disease and other causes, 1 officer, 213 enlisted men; total, 2 officers, 229 enlisted men; aggregate, 231; of whom 1 enlisted man died in the hands of the enemy.[5][57]

Armament edit

Since the men of the 50th were specialists, they were not given first-tier weapons. They were armed with 872 Model 1822 Muskets.[75] By the first quarter of 1863, after an effort to get most of the companies to be armed with the same weapon to make supply easier, the regiment reported the following survey:[76]

  • A — 54 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 Cal)[note 14], leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)
  • B — 75 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)
  • C — 106 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)
  • D — 57 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)
  • E — 104 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)
  • F — 8 model 1855, 1861, National Armory (NA)[note 15]; 119 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)
  • G — 95 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)
  • H — 123 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)
  • I — 85 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)
  • K — 52 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets, leaf and block sights, Quadrangular bayonet (.54 and .55 Cal)

Rifle-muskets edit

See also edit

Notes/References edit

Footnotes

  1. ^ As reported for their departure from the state on September 21, 1861 and in annual report December 31, 1862.
  2. ^ These were converted from flintlock to percussion cap during the 1840s. 873 were reported for their departure from the state on September 21, 1861. 830 were reported a year later. and drawn from existing militia stocks.
  3. ^ In fact, Sumner and his men later wrote that they could have crossed at the dam, or a few miles above it without trouble.
  4. ^ Burnside first ordered them a week before Lincoln's approval (along with many other provisions) on November 7.
  5. ^ This was 3rd Brigade of MGEN Howard's 2nd Division of MGEN Couch's II Corps. It consisted of the 19th and 20th Massachusetts, the 7th Michigan, and the 42nd and 59th New York
  6. ^ The AoP had first come by Fredericksburg in the spring of 1862, and many slaves had freed themselves by crossing the river. This time was the start of an occupation that would last four months until AoP left for the Antietam campaign. During that four months, over ten thousand slaves escaped the area, making this one of the largest self-emancipations in the war. Many soldiers in the AoP were struck by the contrast in the fear and bitterness of the white townsmen who had not left and the joy of the slaves who took control of their own destiny and crossed over to Falmouth.
  7. ^ Meade had followed Halleck's cautious approach to fighting, and Grant was there to give him direction and encourage aggressiveness.[60]
  8. ^ Per Person, Benham’s Volunteer Engineer Brigade, like the Regular battalion, had served with the Army of the Potomac since late 1861. It was a seasoned unit of volunteers, originally consisting of the 50th and the 15th New York Volunteer engineer regiments. Soon after Chancellorsville in May 1863, most of the 15th New York mustered out of service after their two-year enlistments expired. Its few remaining companies, composed of three-year enlistees, were detailed to behind-the-lines duties.
  9. ^ These regulars were CAPT George H. Mendell’s United States Engineer Battalion.
  10. ^ Benham and most of the 15th New York were Washington at the beginning of the campaign and shifted to Fort Monroe on April 15, to act as the engineer base for Grant who had told him to gather water transports sufficient to tow enough bridge-building materials to span the James. The AoJ'ss engineers were eight companies of the 1st New York Volunteer Engineer Regiment, commanded by Colonel Edward W. Serrell.
  11. ^ Commanded by MGEN “Baldy” Smith, it had been reinfoced AoP and was in the lines at Cold Harbor.
  12. ^ Also on June 11, Lee ordered Early's Second Corps to depart for Charlottesville, likewise on June 12.
  13. ^ Witzel had graduated 2nd in the USMA class of 1855 behind his roommate, Cyrus Comstock, who was his counterpart at the AoP.
  14. ^ The Lorenz rifle was the third most widely used rifle during the American Civil War. The Union recorded purchases of 226,924. Its quality was inconsistent. Some were considered to be of the finest quality (particularly ones from the Vienna Arsenal), and were sometimes praised as being superior to the Enfield; others, especially those in later purchases from private contractors, were described as horrible in both design and condition. Lorenz rifles in the Civil War were generally used with .54 caliber cartridges designed for the Model 1841 "Mississippi" rifle. These differed from the cartridges manufactured in Austria and may have contributed to the unreliability of the weapons. Many of the rifles were bored out to .58 caliber to accommodate standard Springfield rifle ammunition.
  15. ^ 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. [77][78]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Hillhouse (1862), p. 15; Hillhouse (1863), pp. 1055–1056.
  2. ^ Dyer (1908), p. 1404; Federal Publishing Company (1908), pp. 86–7; Phisterer (1912), pp. 1669–1670.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Phisterer (1912), pp. 1669–1670.
  4. ^ Thienel (1955), p. 34.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Dyer (1908), p. 1404.
  6. ^ a b Dyer (1908), p. 1404; Federal Publishing Company (1908), pp. 86–87.
  7. ^ a b U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 5, p. 24 - Extract,embracing the "First Period," from Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan's report of the operations of the Army of the Potomac from July 21, 1861, to November 97 1862, August 4, 1863, pp. 5-66
  8. ^ HQ, US Army Corps of Engineers Brief History.
  9. ^ Martin, Confederate Engineers in the American Civil War(June 30, 2021).
  10. ^ a b DeCredico (2018).
  11. ^ National Archives, Confederate Slave Payrolls,(2020).
  12. ^ Kluskens, Confederate Slave Payrolls,(2020).
  13. ^ Hawks , Civil War in the East, 50th New York Engineer Regiment.
  14. ^ a b NPS 50th Regiment, New York Engineers.
  15. ^ a b Rafuse (2021).
  16. ^ NPS Why Fredericksburg?.
  17. ^ Jamieson & Wineman (2015), p. 40.
  18. ^ a b U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 19/2, p. 579 - Order to Burnside from Halleck, November 14, 1862, p. 579
  19. ^ HNN, Wheeler, How the Telegraph Helped Lincoln Win the Civil War, (2006).
  20. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 399–400; Marvel (1991), pp. 164–165; O'Reilly (2003), pp. 14–23; Welcher (1989), p. 700.
  21. ^ Jamieson & Wineman (2015), pp. 39–41; Stine (1892), pp. 250–252.
  22. ^ O'Reilly (2003), p. 25; Rable (2002), p. 77.
  23. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 19/2, p. 723 - Orders to Whiting and Lee, November 17, 1862, p. 723
  24. ^ Rable (2002), p. 77.
  25. ^ O'Reilly (2003), p. 25-26; Stine (1892), pp. 248–252.
  26. ^ a b Stine (1892), p. 249.
  27. ^ Jamieson & Wineman (2015), p. 39; Rable (2002), p. 77; Stine (1892), pp. 248–252.
  28. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 397; Kennedy (1998), p. 145; O'Reilly (2003), pp. 25–32; Rable (2002), pp. 81–82; Salmon (2001), p. 145; Welcher (1989), p. 700.
  29. ^ Jamieson & Wineman (2015), p. 39.
  30. ^ NPS A Fateful Delay.
  31. ^ a b c d e f U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 21, pp. 175–179 - Reports of Maj. Ira Spaulding, acting commander, Fiftieth New York Engineers, December 12 & 17, 1862, pp. 175-179
  32. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 21, p. 170 - Report of Brig. Gen. Daniel P. Woodbury, U.S. Army, commanding Engineer Brigade, December 12, 1862, pp. 169-171
  33. ^ Jamieson & Wineman (2015), p. 39; Rable (2002), p. 77; Stine (1892), p. 249.
  34. ^ O'Reilly (2003), p. 27; Stine (1892), p. 253.
  35. ^ O'Reilly (2003), p. 25-26; Rable (2002), p. 77-78; Stine (1892), pp. 251–252.
  36. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 397; Goolrick (1985), pp. 39; O'Reilly (2003), pp. 33–34; Welcher (1989), pp. 701–702.
  37. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 397–398; Jamieson & Wineman (2015), p. 39; Marvel (1991), p. 168.
  38. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 686–687; Esposito (1959), p. 72; Goolrick (1985), pp. 39–40; Marvel (1991), pp. 169–0
    Esposito's Map 72
  39. ^ Stine (1892), p. 256.
  40. ^ Jamieson & Wineman (2015), pp. 40–41.
  41. ^ a b c d U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 21, p. 169-171 - Report of Brig. Gen. Daniel P. Woodbury, U.S. Army, commanding Engineer Brigade, December 12, 1862, pp. 169-171
  42. ^ Jamieson & Wineman (2015), pp. 41–42; Jamieson & Wineman (2015), pp. 38–42.
  43. ^ Brainerd (1997), p. 110; Jamieson & Wineman (2015), p. 39; O'Reilly (2003), pp. 56–60.
  44. ^ Brainerd (1997), p. 110.
  45. ^ a b Jamieson & Wineman (2015), p. 43-45.
  46. ^ a b c U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 21, p. 167-169 - Report of Lieut. Cyrus B. Comstock, U. S. Corps of Engineers, Chief Engineer, December 20, 1862, pp. 167-169
  47. ^ a b c U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 21, pp. 179–180 - Reports of Lieut. Michael H. McGrath, Fiftieth New York Engineers, December 13, 1862, pp. 179-180
  48. ^ a b Brainerd (1997), p. 112.
  49. ^ Rable (2002), pp. 158–160.
  50. ^ NPS The River Crossing.
  51. ^ Esposito (1959), p. 72; Goolrick (1985), pp. 50–52; O'Reilly (2003), pp. 67–85; Welcher (1989), pp. 703–704
    Esposito's Map 72
  52. ^ Jamieson & Wineman (2015), p. 3; Welcher (1989), pp. 703–704.
  53. ^ ABT, Henderson, Self-Emancipation, (November 2, 2020).
  54. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 398–399; Goolrick (1985), pp. 53–58; O'Reilly (2003), pp. 57–126; Rable (2002), pp. 166–167.
  55. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 21, p. 129 - Return of casualties the Union forces ... at the battle of Fredericksburg, Va., December 11–15, 1862, pp. 129-145
  56. ^ McPherson (1988), p. 571; Federal Publishing Company (1908), pp. 86–87.
  57. ^ a b c NYSMM, 50th Engineer Regiment (2019).
  58. ^ Catton (1968), p. 47; Cullum (1891), p. 172; Flood (2005), p. 232; McFeely (1981), p. 148.
  59. ^ Chernow (2017), p. 352; McFeely (1981), p. 156.
  60. ^ Smith (2001), pp. 292–293.
  61. ^ Chernow (2017), pp. 356–357; Simon (2002), p. 243; Wheelan (2014), p. 20.
  62. ^ Catton (1960), pp. 190, 193; Chernow (2017), pp. 348, 356–357; Wheelan (2014), p. 20.
  63. ^ Chernow (2017), pp. 356–357; McFeely (1981), p. 157; Wheelan (2014), p. 20.
  64. ^ Chernow (2017), pp. 356–357; McFeely (1981), pp. 157–175; Smith (2001), pp. 313–339, 343–368; Wheelan (2014), p. 20.
  65. ^ Person (2012), p. 14.
  66. ^ Person (2012), pp. 14–15.
  67. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 686–687; Esposito (1959), p. 136; Grimsley (2002); McPherson (1988), p. 737; Person (2012), p. 15; Salmon (2001), pp. 258–259; Trudeau (1989), p. 23
    Esposito's Map 136
  68. ^ Person (2012), p. 16.
  69. ^ a b c d e Person (2012), p. 17.
  70. ^ Welcher (1989), p. 994.
  71. ^ a b Person (2012), p. 18.
  72. ^ Salmon (2001), p. 396; Welcher (1989), pp. 998–999.
  73. ^ CWA, 50th Regiment Engineers(2016).
  74. ^ Dyer (1908), p. 1404; Phisterer (1912), p. 1670.
  75. ^ Hillhouse (1862), p. 15.
  76. ^ Mink, Armament in the Army of the Potomac, (2018), p.89.
  77. ^ Smithsonian, Civil War symposium, (2012).
  78. ^ NPS, Springfield Armory NHS, (2010).

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50th, york, engineer, regiment, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, messag. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The 50th New York Engineer Regiment was an engineer regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War The regiment was initially raised as the 50th Volunteer Infantry but was converted to an engineer regiment after it arrived in Washington DC It served as an engineer unit for the Army of the Potomac AoP from the Peninsula Campaign through the Appomattox Campaign 50th New York Engineer RegimentActiveAugust 26 September 20 1861 as 50th Infantry October 22 1861 June 13 14 1865CountryUnited StatesAllegianceUnited States of AmericaUnionBranchEngineersSize873 1861 830 1862 1 note 1 Nickname s Stuart s Engineers Independent Engineers Sappers Miners And PontoniersEquipmentModel 1822 Musket 069 Cal smoothbore 1 note 2 EngagementsSiege of Yorktown Seven Days Battles Battle of Malvern Hill Battle of Fredericksburg Pollock s Mill Creek Battle of Chancellorsville Second Battle of Fredericksburg Bank s Ford Battle of Deep Run Battle of Gettysburg Mine Run Campaign Battle of the Wilderness Battle of Spotsylvania Court House Battle of North Anna Battle of Totopotomoy Creek Battle of Cold Harbor Second Battle of Petersburg Battle of Jerusalem Plank Road First Battle of Deep Bottom Battle of Hatcher s Run Battle of White Oak Road Fall of Petersburg Battle of Appomattox Court HouseCommandersColonelCharles B StuartInsigniaVolunteer Engineer Brigade Rappahannock Station Va Canvas pontoon boat 50th New York Engineers Contents 1 Organization and muster 2 Service 2 1 1862 2 1 1 The Bridges at Fredericksburg 2 1 1 1 Transporting the Pontoons to Fredericksburg 2 1 1 2 Constructing the Bridges 2 2 1863 2 3 1864 2 3 1 Bridging the James 2 4 1865 3 Affiliations battle honors detailed service and casualties 3 1 Organizational affiliation 3 2 List of battles 3 3 Detailed service 3 3 1 1861 5 3 3 2 1862 5 3 3 3 1863 5 3 3 4 1864 5 3 3 5 1865 5 4 Casualties 5 Armament 5 1 Rifle muskets 6 See also 7 Notes ReferencesOrganization and muster editCOL Charles B Stuart had received July 26 1861 authority to recruit a regiment of infantry which he organized at Elmira 2 and which was designated September 20 1861 the 50th Regiment of Infantry The companies were mustered in the service of the United States for three years at Elmira A September 18 3 from Addison Bath Lodi Painted Post and Savona B August 16 3 from Auburn Elmira Geneva Syracuse Waterloo and Honesdale Pennsylvania C September 17 3 from Chemung Elmira Rome and Union D September 18 3 from Elmira Fulton Geneva Ogdensburgh Oswego Syracuse and Watkins E August 29 3 from Buffalo Elmira Maine Niagara Falls North Hector Penn Yan and Rome F September 17 3 from Geneva Elmira Oswego Potsdam and Union and at Scranton Honesdale Mt Pleasant and Moscow Pennsylvania G September 16 3 from Caroline Elmira Greece Hornellsville Maine and Millport H September 16 3 from Elmira Maine Malone Ogdensburgh Potsdam Watkins and at Williamsport Pennsylvania I August 26 3 from Elmira Geneva Owego and Union and at Hancock and Scranton Pennsylvania K September 30 3 from Elmira Ovid Savona Seneca Falls and Union In 1860 the army Corps of Engineers consisted of just 44 officers and 100 soldiers for an army of 15 000 soldiers After the formation of the Confederacy and the Battle of Fort Sumter Congress authorized a massive increase in the number of specialized engineer troops on August 3 1861 to complement the growing Union Army 4 On October 22 1861 in Virginia the regiment was converted into and designated the Fiftieth Regiment of Engineers 3 Two new companies L and M mustered in the United States service for three years in December 1863 and January and February 1864 joined the regiment in December 1863 and February 1864 respectively 5 They were recruited from L 3 Rochester Buffalo Canandaigua Elmira and Phelps M 3 Albany Buffalo Canandaigua Elmira and Oswego Quite a number of men enlisted for this regiment in 1864 were assigned to the 15th N Y Volunteer Engineers At the expiration of its term of service the men entitled thereto were discharged and the regiment continued in service 6 Service editWhen the regiment was converted by special orders from the war department into a regiment of engineers it was ordered to Washington where instruction was received by the men in their new duties 7 They were joining a Corps of Engineers that would play a significant role in the American Civil War Many of the men who would serve in the top leadership in this organization were West Point graduates Several rose to military fame and power during the Civil War Some examples include Union generals George McClellan Henry Halleck and George Meade and Confederate generals Robert E Lee Joseph Johnston and P G T Beauregard 8 The Corps were responsible for building pontoon and railroad bridges forts and batteries destroying enemy supply lines including railroads and constructing roads for the movement of troops and supplies Both sides recognized the critical work of engineers On 6 March 1861 once the South had seceded from the Union its legislature passed an act to create a Confederate Corps of Engineers 9 One of the main projects for the Army Corps of Engineers was constructing and reconstructing railroads and bridges Union forces took advantage of such Confederate infrastructure because railroads and bridges provided access to resources and industry The Confederate engineers in contrast used slave labor 10 on their engineering projects Through the war the United States used these Engineer troops as a cadre adding regular troops and hiring former slaves to bolster them as needed 10 11 12 1862 edit In March 1862 the AoP commanded by the engineer McClellan embarked on the Peninsula Campaign With the volunteer engineers brigade under BGEN Henry Washington Benham the 50th moved to Yorktown and worked digging trenches constructing bridges and earthworks until the evacuation of that city At White House the command was divided into several detachments which were engaged in escort duty and bridge building until reunited at Dispatch Station on June 1 when the regiment was employed in providing for the passage of the troops over the Chickahominy It accompanied the army through the Seven Days battles to Harrison s landing where it was again separated one detachment being sent to Hampton When the regimental headquarters was transferred to Hampton in August a detachment was left behind at Harrison s landing but on Sept 3 the regiment was reunited at Washington 6 Until July 17 1862 the 50th was enrolled on the state records as an infantry regiment but an act of Congress of that date accepted it as a regiment of the volunteer engineer corps of the same rank as the regular army engineer corps Four companies were detached on Sept 12 and ordered to Harper s Ferry where they were engaged in constructing pontoons and later returned in charge of two of the pontoons to Washington leaving a part of the detachment behind 13 Another detachment was sent to the vicinity of Fredericksburg with these boats and the headquarters of the regiment were transferred to Acquia creek leaving one company at Washington After Antietam the 50th threw two pontoon bridges over the Potomac at Berlin for the AoP s crossing in pursuit of Lee 14 The Bridges at Fredericksburg edit After McClellan failed to pursue Lee s retreat from Antietam Lincoln fired McClellan on Wednesday November 5 1862 15 and replaced him with MGEN Burnside on Friday Formally taking command on Sunday November 9 1862 Burnside immediately received pressure from Lincoln to take aggressive action In response to prodding from Lincoln and general in chief MGEN Halleck Burnside planned a late fall offensive that the relied on quick movement and deception Concentrating his army in a visible fashion near Warrenton feigning a movement on Culpeper Court House Orange Court House or Gordonsville he would then rapidly shift southeast and cross the Rappahannock River to Fredericksburg hoping to steal a march on Lee 16 The AoP would then move rapidly south along the Richmond Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad RF amp P against Richmond He chose this course lest he strike directly south from Warrenton exposed to a flanking attack from LTGEN Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley and because he felt the Orange and Alexandria Railroad O amp A would be an inadequate for logistics as well as the fact that Lee had blocked the O amp A While Burnside began assembling a supply base at Falmouth Washington reviewed the plan Lincoln correctly saw the main goal was the destruction of Lee and his army and not Richmond but despite this when Burnside presented his plan on Thursday November 14 Lincoln reluctantly approved it 17 Halleck wired Burnside The President has just assented to your plan adding for emphasis He thinks that it will succeed if you move rapidly otherwise not 18 19 20 Burnside saw the rapid movement of his army as key to catching Lee off guard and that the river crossing could be made before Lee could concentrate his forces at Fredericksburg and contest the crossing The Rappahannock a short river rising in the mountains is not much more than a mountain stream until Warrenton where several tributaries swell it into a river the principal one being the Rapidan At Fredericksburg it is quite deep below the falls and can be crossed only by bridges Opposite the northern end of Fredericksburg was a smaller town Falmouth They were both mill towns that had prospered grounding the local grains into flour Powered by canals as well as the river the mills tapped the river above the dam In the antebellum era bridges had connected the two towns but they had been destroyed during Johnston s withdrawal a year before Any crossing would need to be done at a ford or with pontoon bridges The 50th like the other AoP engineers were well practiced in assembling pontoons as well as manipulating canals for various purposes 21 Burnside went into action immediately On Friday November 15 he began to pull his army out of the Warrenton Virginia area and head southeast towards Fredericksburg That morning AoP artillery roused the Confederates IX Corps struck the Rappahannock River at Warrenton Springs and I Corps demonstrated focusing on Freeman s and Beverly s fords to the east Cavalry and infantry attacked Rebels at Rappahannock Station and captured the bridge there intact 22 The sudden action on a wide front surprised Lee who began a pullback from his position in front of the Army of the Potomac Unsure of the Federals destination Lee had to hold back and see how the situation developed before he could make a countermove Unsure about Burnside s movements he sent an infantry regiment and an artillery battery to strengthen a small force stationed at Fredericksburg If Burnside had already crossed and occupied the town Lee would withdraw North Anna River Anticipating that Fredericksburg could not be held Lee got permission to destroy the railroad between Fredericksburg and Hanover Junction Lee had yet to hear intelligence that AoP was rebuilding the wharves at Aquia Creek so as Sumner s troops approached Falmouth Lee still thought it likely that Burnside would transfer his army south of the James River 23 24 Burnside had moved rapidly on Friday and Saturday without Lee discovering his intent On Sunday evening when he heard Sumner s men were approaching Falmouth Lee immediately had Longstreet send two of his divisions toward Fredericksburg As these units left their camps the next morning Monday November 18 Stuart s scouts forded the Rappahannock arriving at Warrenton just as the last U S troops were departing 25 In the meantime when the AoP started from Warrenton Sumner s grand division was given the advance II Corps arrived on Sunday evening the 17th at Falmouth opposite the upper edge of Fredericksburg Burnside had fooled Lee made it opposite Fredericksburg almost undetected Next he needed to get the army across the Rappahannock and push on to Richmond When Sumner arrived at Falmouth Fredericksburg was occupied only by a small force As soon as the Union troops appeared on the Stafford Heights an artillery duel began The Rebels were soon driven from the guns Standing unmanned the Rebel guns tempted Sumner to cross the river and capture them Lest he incur Burnside s wrath Sumner would not permit volunteers to go over and get them but he did ask permission to take Fredericksburg if he Sumner could find a crossing note 3 Burnside turned him down as he felt it unwise to take Fredericksburg before he had fully established his communications He was also concerned that the increasing autumn rains would make the fording points unusable and that Sumner might be cut off and destroyed He ordered Sumner to wait in Falmouth ending the matter and the troops went into camp waiting for orders 26 When the rest of the AoP arrived two days later Hooker also suggested crossing this time at United States Ford just a few miles upriver Burnside mindful of McClellans problems when a river divided his forces in the Peninsula campaign again worried that the high water would do the same to him and chose to wait 27 Burnside became anxious concerned that the increasing autumn rains would make the fording points unusable and that Sumner might be cut off and destroyed ordering Sumner to wait in Falmouth 28 Transporting the Pontoons to Fredericksburg edit Before beginning his campaign Burnside had arranged for the shipment of the pontoon wagon trains through the Union Army s General in Chief Henry Halleck note 4 Burnside had planned for the pontoons to arrive the same time as his first elements on Sunday evening November 17 however his plans began failing for the pontoon bridges and bridging materials had not arrived and were just leaving Washington 29 30 The plan called for both riverine and overland movement of the pontoon trains to Falmouth On November 14 MAJ Ira Spaulding of the 50th reported the pontoons ready to move but lacking the 270 horses needed to move them 31 Unknown to Burnside most of the bridging was still on the upper Potomac Communications between Burnside s staff engineer Cyrus B Comstock and the Engineer Brigade commander Daniel P Woodbury indicate that Burnside had assumed the bridging was en route to Washington based on orders given on November 6 18 32 When Halleck visited Burnside it was agreed that they were to be rapidly transported south to be used in crossing the Rappahannock Halleck returned to Washington and resumed the duties of his office evidently not understanding that he was to charge himself with this special duty therefore neither Halleck nor Quartermaster General Montgomery Meigs who was responsible for supplying necessary equipment and supplies for the pontoon trains acted with the urgency needed 33 Just before he cut his communications with Washington on Sunday November 17 to make his move he had tasked his Chief Engineer LT Cyrus B Comstock to check the status of the pontoons movement 34 Receiving no answer before beginning his march it would be two days before he found out where they were In fact when Sumner had army arrived opposite Fredericksburg they were still at Washington Burnside supposing that Halleck would forward them without delay 26 Due to the miscommunication between Burnside and Washington in the planning stages Comstock s queries caused confusion followed by sudden urgency The 50th New York Engineers left Washington with one of two pontoon trains on November 19 traveling overland to Falmouth 35 Lee expecting an imminent advance across the Rappahannock assume the next defensible position to the south the North Anna River But when he saw how slowly Burnside was moving and Confederate President Jefferson Davis expressed reservations about planning for a battle so close to Richmond he directed all of his army toward Fredericksburg By November 23 the corps commanded by LTGEN James Longstreet had arrived and Lee placed them on the ridge known as Marye s Heights to the west of town with Anderson s division on the far left McLaws s directly behind the town and Pickett s and Hood s to the right He sent for Jackson on November 26 but his Second Corps commander had anticipated the need and began forced marching his troops from Winchester on November 22 covering as many as 20 miles a day Jackson arrived at Lee s headquarters on November 29 and his divisions were deployed to prevent Burnside crossing downstream from Fredericksburg D H Hill s division moved to Port Royal 18 miles down river Early s 12 miles down river at Skinker s Neck A P Hill s at Thomas Yerby s house Belvoir about 6 miles southeast of town and Taliaferro s along the RF amp P Railroad 4 miles south at Guinea Station 36 Heavy rains turned the roads to mud and slowed progress A second pontoon train had been sent down the Potomac River to the town of Aquia Landing from there the train would travel overland the last few miles With the roads impassable due to the mud the overland train was diverted to the Potomac River the pontoon boats were formed into rafts and towed down river to Aquia Landing The engineers and equipment did not arrive at Falmouth until November 25 By this time Lee s army was arriving and the opportunity to cross the Rappahannock River uncontested was gone Burnside still had an opportunity however because by then he was facing only half of Lee s army not yet dug in and if he acted quickly he might have been able to attack Longstreet and defeat him before Jackson arrived Once again he squandered his opportunity The full complement of bridges arrived at the end of the month but by this time Jackson was present and Longstreet was preparing strong defenses 37 Burnside originally planned to cross his army east of Fredericksburg at Skinker s Neck but an advance movement by Federal gunboats to there was fired upon and drew Early s and D H Hill s divisions into that area a movement spotted by Union balloon observers Now assuming that Lee had anticipated his plan Burnside guessed that the Confederates had weakened their left and center to concentrate against him on their right So he decided to cross directly at Fredericksburg On December 9 he wrote to Halleck I think now the enemy will be more surprised by a crossing immediately in our front than any other part of the river I m convinced that a large force of the enemy is now concentrated at Port Royal its left resting on Fredericksburg which we hope to turn In addition to his numerical advantage in troop strength Burnside also had the advantage of knowing his army could not be attacked effectively On the other side of the Rappahannock 220 artillery pieces had been located on the ridge known as Stafford Heights to prevent Lee s army from mounting any major counterattacks 38 On Tuesday evening of 9 December Burnside presented his plan of attack to his subordinate The army would cross at three sites simultaneously Sumner s Right Grand Division would cross on two pontoon bridges at the northern end of town and a third at the southern end Once across Sumner would clear Fredericksburg and advance to drive the Rebels from Marye s Heights Franklin s Left Grand Division would cross on two bridges two miles below town Hooker s Center Grand Division would remain in reserve ready to exploit any success His artillery chief BGEN Hunt placed the army s 312 guns with 147 of them on the advantageous high ground of Stafford Heights to support the crossing 39 Burnside was scant on specifics regarding follow on actions rebuffing his subordinates lack of confidence in the plan 40 Despite the lack of detail they reluctantly left the meeting with their reservations and began moving their troops into position Monday evening December 10 Constructing the Bridges edit The engineer brigade moved out after dark The 15th New York left camp at 20 00 the regulars at 22 00 and the 50th at 23 00 The engineers stopped briefly at the pontoon park and outfitted their trains for the night s assignment The teams started for their assigned bridge sites by 23 50 As soon as the engineers stirred the army knew that the moment for action had arrived for the Pontoons were moving for the river The 50th New York left the pontoon park first followed by the U S Engineers and the 15th New York For some unknown reason the 50th New York started its march first even though the other engineers had farther to go to get into position 41 On the night of December 10 the 15th New York Engineers and the U S Regular Engineer Battalion quietly moved to a position about a mile down river from Fredericksburg The engineers built two bridges at this site facing little opposition When the bridges were nearly complete a small Confederate force charged the engineers and inflicted some casualties but Union artillery fire drove the attackers away The two bridges were finished by 11 00 The 50th New York Engineers were charged with the task of building three bridges in two locations one at the southern end of town and two at the northern end The 50th New York Engineers rumbled along heavily rutted dirt roads with three bulky pontoon trains With so many men horses and equipment in motion secrecy was impossible as each caravan toted 34 pontoon boats on wheels accompanied by 29 support vehicles laden with lumber tools and forges 189 wagons lurched into a ravine behind the Lacy house 42 At the river s edge with no light to work the men of the 50th settled down for quick a nap before building the bridges The night was cold with the temperature in the mid twenties and thin ice along the riverbanks A thick fog covered the river 43 Brainerd rested in the parlor of the Lacy house listening to the bell from Saint George s Episcopal Church toll 03 00 and wrote his goodbyes to his family As soon as he was done with the bell still ringing the hour got his command moving 44 Work began as the 50th moved the heavy pontoon boats down the muddy banks of Stafford Heights and into the icy waters of the Rappahannock The 50th divided into three sections CAPT Wesley Brainerd and CAPT George W Ford kept two trains behind the Lacy house while CAPT James H McDonald led the third train south to the lower end of the city MAJ Spaulding accompanied McDonald s crew to a point below the burned railroad bridge of the RF amp P Railroad Surgeons set up hospitals on Claiborne Run while assistants selected forward aid stations closer to Stafford Heights 31 On the opposite shore BGEN William Barksdale alerted his commander MGEN Lafayette McLaws that Federal bridge building had commenced McLaws instructed Barksdale to allow the construction to continue until the engineers were within close range Barksdale moved his brigade consisting of the 13th 17th 18th and 21st Mississippi Infantry regiments along with some reinforcements from the 8th Florida Infantry into position along the river The men took cover in buildings behind fences and in rifle pits 45 As the 50th went to work on the pontoons they could make out the flickering campfires more than 400 yards away on the opposite bank but also noticed them being extinguished Shortly after 05 00 the Confederates opened fire on the engineers working on the bridges and on the opposite riverbank Initially fog on the water provided some cover for the 50th but as the light increased and fog dissipated three hours later with one of the upper bridges and the middle bridge about two thirds complete and the other upper bridge about one quarter finished Rebel fire increased at the engineers The bullets the engineers and a minie ball instantly killed CAPT Augustus Perkins of the 50th 31 Wounded soldiers dove into the boats while others crawled back to safety to avoid the heavy musketry of the rest of Barksdale s Mississippians With Union infantry able to offer little support the engineers retreated regrouped and tried again on the upper bridges 45 The Confederate musket fire killed one officer and two enlisted men on the northern bridge site and wounded several others The unarmed engineers ran for the shore and took cover as the enemy fire raked the Federal positions 46 41 31 47 At the middle bridge downstream from the ruined rail bridge crews ventured out to complete the bridge four times but came scurrying back and by 10 00 a m the 50th had suffered fifty casualties including a seriously wounded CAPT Brainerd 48 46 41 31 47 BGEN Woodbury led 40 volunteers from the 8th Connecticut onto one of the bridges but soon lost 20 men and hastily retreated Two regiments in Hancock s division also suffered casualties near the upper bridges 49 Brigadier General Henry Hunt the Army of the Potomac s Chief of Artillery had placed his batteries on Stafford Heights east of the town The artillery began firing at the Confederate positions in Fredericksburg After considerable bombardment the cannonade stopped and the engineers attempted to resume their work only to be hit by more Confederate fire and again driven back The artillery resumed blasting Fredericksburg and when the firing eased the engineers again tried to resume work and were again driven back by Barksdale s determined riflemen Union infantry across the river also exchanged fire with the Mississippians 48 46 41 31 47 This continued well into the afternoon To break the stalemate General Hunt suggested to Burnside that infantrymen be sent across the river in boats to secure a small bridgehead and rout the sharpshooters Burnside agreed to the idea if Hunt would find volunteers for the risky venture COL Norman J Hall volunteered his brigade note 5 for this assignment Burnside suddenly turned reluctant lamenting to Hall in front of his men that the effort meant death to most of those who should undertake the voyage When his men responded to Hall s request with three cheers Burnside relented At 15 00 the Union artillery began a preparatory bombardment and 135 infantrymen from the 7th Michigan and 19th Massachusetts crowded into the small boats and the 20th Massachusetts and 42nd New York followed soon after They crossed successfully and spread out in a skirmish line to clear the sharpshooters Although some of the Confederates surrendered fighting proceeded street by street through the town as the engineers completed the bridges 50 With Hall s attack the 50th were able to complete their bridges rapidly Sumner s Right Grand Division began crossing at 16 30 but the bulk of his men did not cross until December 12 Hooker s Center Grand Division crossed on December 13 using both the northern and southern bridges 51 The Regulars and the 1st New York detachments who had a comparatively easier time saw much less eventful crossings south of the city by Franklin s Left Grand Division They had both bridges were completed by 11 00 on December 11 while five batteries of Union artillery suppressed most sniper fire against the engineers Franklin was ordered at 16 00 to cross his entire command but only a single brigade was sent over before dark Crossings resumed at dawn and were completed by 13 00 on Thursday December 12 Early on December 13 Jackson recalled his divisions under Jubal Early and D H Hill from down river positions to join his main defensive lines south of the city 52 The clearing of the city buildings by Sumner s infantry and by artillery fire from across the river began the first major urban combat of both the war and American history Union gunners sent more than 5 000 shells against the town and the ridges to the west By nightfall four brigades of Union troops occupied the town These troops fresh from the bitter street fighting looted with a fury that had not been seen in the war up to that point Most of the slaves left behind by the townsfolk their erstwhile masters took action and emancipated themselves by crossing the pontoon bridges in the other direction 53 note 6 This behavior enraged Lee who compared the AoP s looting with those of the ancient Vandals The destruction and the escape of slaves also angered the Confederate troops many of whom were native Virginians Many on the Union side were also shocked by the destruction inflicted on Fredericksburg Civilian casualties were unusually low given the widespread destruction George Rable estimates no more than four civilian deaths 54 The 50th had suffered all the fatalities of the Volunteer Engineer Brigade 1 officer and 7 enlisted men killed with a further 3 officers and 39 enlisted men wounded 55 This was a heavy loss for the highly trained men of the 50th but they managed to persevere and complete the bridges The 50th had learned a lot from the experience that would inform their tactics as well as those of the AoP in the future The next day was the scene of one of the AoP s most horrendous defeats on Marye s Heights 56 15 1863 edit After passing the winter in the neighborhood of Fredericksburg the regiment joined in the Chancellorsville campaign where it aided effectively in conveying the army across the river and was highly praised by their commander BGEN Benham At Deep Run in June the 50th suffered the loss of 11 in killed wounded and missing while engaged in laying a bridge 57 The end of the month saw an engineer again in command of the AoP Meade when they moved with the army through the Gettysburg Campaign After the repulse of the Rebels companies A C F G H and K remained in the field with the AoP during the summer and fall of 1863 and the others were stationed in Washington In Dec 1863 about three fourths of the regiment reenlisted and received their veteran furlough In the winter of 1863 64 two new companies companies L and M were added to the regiment and the ranks filled with new recruits 57 1864 edit The new year also brought a new commander to the eastern theater Ulysses S Grant The victor of Fort Donelson Shiloh Vicksburg and Chattanooga had been promoted on March 2 1864 lieutenant general and given command of all Union Armies 58 Grant established his headquarters with Meade in Culpeper north west of Richmond and met weekly with Lincoln and Stanton in Washington 59 note 7 He planned five coordinated U S offensives so the Rebels could not shift troops along interior lines 61 Grant and Meade would make a direct frontal attack on Lee s Army of Northern Virginia while Sherman now chief of the western armies was to destroy Joseph E Johnston s Army of Tennessee and take Atlanta 62 MGEN Butler would advance on Lee from the southeast up the James River with the Army of the James AoJ while Major General Nathaniel Banks would capture Mobile 63 MGEN Franz Sigel was tasked with taking the fertile Shenandoah Valley and denying all its supplies to Lee s forces 64 At the opening of the Overland Campaign in May 1864 the 50th was again divided one detachment assigned to the II Corps one to the V Corps and one to the VI Corps one company remaining in Washington The campaign kept the 50th now commanded by LTC Ira Spaulding constantly busy By this point of the war it was a seasoned efficient regiment of engineers Through continual recruitment its eleven companies were organized into four battalions with 40 officers and 1 500 enlisted men 65 The engineers in the AoP were organized into a Volunteer Engineer brigade note 8 consisting of the 50th and the 15th New York Volunteer Engineers and a battalion of regulars in four companies note 9 These special troops had already accomplished much since the beginning of the campaign erecting 38 pontoon bridges with an aggregate length of 6 458 feet 66 Of note To expedite the evacuation of wounded from the Battle of the Wilderness three Companies made a forced march to Fredericksburg on May 10 starting at 11 30 On arrival they built bridge over the Rappahannock at Fredericksburg Lower Crossing having it completed and ready for use at 16 30 having marched eight miles and built bridge 420 feet long in 5 hours 14 Bridging the James edit Grant realized he was again in a stalemate with Lee and additional assaults at Cold Harbor were not the answer He planned three actions to make some headway First in the Shenandoah Valley MGEN David Hunter was making progress against Confederate forces and Grant hoped that by interdicting Lee s supplies Lee would send reinforcements to the Valley Second on June 7 Grant sent Sheridan with the cavalry to destroy the Virginia Central Railroad near Charlottesville Third he planned a stealthy operation to withdraw from Lee s front and move across the James River He planned to cross to the south bank of the river bypassing Richmond and isolate the capital by seizing the railroad junction of Petersburg to the south Lee reacted to the first two actions as Grant had hoped sending Breckinridge s division from Cold Harbor and toward Lynchburg against Hunter following on June 12 assigning Jubal Early permanent command of the Second Corps and sending them to the Valley as well He also two of his three cavalry divisions in pursuit of Sheridan leading to the Battle of Trevilian Station 67 For his third act he would need to maneuver around Lee s left flank Grant s complex plan was a coordinated effort between MGEN Meade s AoP Butler s AoJ Army engineers would play a vital role note 10 His plan was to send AoJ s XVII Corps note 11 from White House Landing on the Pamunkey steam 150 miles around the James Peninsula and lead the attack on Petersburg from Bermuda Hundred II Corps would cross the James further downstream at a place giving them the shortest line of march while staying out of Lee s reach 68 nbsp Crossing the James River 12 16 June 1864 Grant delegated the planning to Meade who had his chief of staff MGEN Humphreys draft the operations order 69 The AoP would leave the lines at Cold Harbor in four coordinated columns To start Hancock s II and Warren s V Corps would cross the Chickahominy River at Long Bridge The men of the 50th would play a key role in putting a 1 200 foot long pontoon bridge across it Due to the marshy ground leading to the bridgehead the 50th would also build corduroy approaches 69 V Corps would be the first in line and once across they would turn west to screen and block reinforced by Wilson s 3rd Cavalry Division which did not accompany Sheridan on his raid This was also intended to make Lee think that Grant would make an advance on Richmond north of the James 69 At the same time Wright s VI and Burnside s IX Corps would pull out and take separate routes to Jones Bridge on the Chickahominy River continuing on to Charles City Court House BGEN Ferrero s division of United States Colored Troops would take a third column with the army s trains across the Chickahominy east of Jones Bridge On Thursday June 9 Meade ordered the construction of a new line of entrenchments in the army s rear extending northward from Elder Swamp to Allen s Mill Pond On June 11 Saturday the construction was complete and he issued orders for a movement to the James River beginning after dark on June 12 note 12 On Sunday morning Butler s chief engineer BGEN Weitzel note 13 had sent Lieutenant Peter S Michie to select a crossing site near Fort Powhatan 69 He chose Wilcox Landing three quarters of a mile upriver from the fort as a ferry site and Weyanoke Point and Windmill Point at Flowerdew Hundred three miles downstream for the bridgehead The engineers would have their work cut out for them as the river was 1 992 feet at that point and the landward approach would needed considerable tree clearage and an extensive trestle ramp 69 Michie also chose an entrenched bridgehead position to cover the crossing sites The 50th had completed the bridge across the Chickahominy at Jones Bridge on Sunday morning and the Engineer Battalion moved out at 17 00 crossing first On the far side they awaited the passage of VI Corps and then marched into camp at Charles City Court House where they made camp leaving a detachment of the 50th at the bridge nbsp Pontoon bridge across the James River As darkness fell on Sunday II and VI Corps took up positions on the new entrenchment line V Corps cleared the roads heading south advancing over Long Bridge and White Oak Swamp Bridge taking up a blocking position just east of Riddell s Shop facing toward Richmond while IX Corps and Smith s XVIII Corps withdrew from the original line of entrenchments COL George H Chapman s brigade from 3rd Cavalry Division screened the roads heading toward Richmond Burnside headed south followed by Wright and Hancock XVIII Corps marched to White House where on the morning of June 13 they embarked on steamers for Bermuda Hundred They arrived at Point of Rocks on the Appomattox River the night of June 14 70 Most of the three infantry corps began ferrying across the James at Wilcox Landing on the morning of June 14 The engineers moved out at 11 00 from Charles City Court House stopping at Weyanoke Point for lunch at 14 00 Companies B F and G under MAJ Brainerd were sent to the Wilcox Landing ferry site to repair the wharves Later that evening he was ordered across the river to Windmill Point to construct an additional wharf for the use of follow on troops 71 At 15 00 the rest of AoP s engineers fell in without arms and went a short distance down the bank to meet Weitzel and their AoJ counterparts the 1st New York 71 They found no work had been done and in a SNAFU the pontoon material which had been sent to Bermuda Hundred in early June had been sent back to Forts Monroe on Sunday The equipment would not be back to Weyanoke Point until the next day The engineers did not wait they went right to work and within an hour built a 150 foot long abutment of trestle through the soft marshes arguably the hardest part of the entire project The battalion then went across the river to work on the opposite shore with volunteers taking up the work at Weyanoke Point Benham arrived around noon from Fort Monroe with portions of the 15th New York and bridge materials in tow The detachment bridge train of the 50th New York soon arrived Benham took charge of the construction Work started at 16 00 on June 15 and was completed seven hours later As they could be unloaded from the vessels the materials were made into rafts of six pontoon boats and rowed into position While Lee remained unaware of Grant s intentions the engineers constructed the longest pontoon bridge of the war Upon completion it stretched 2 200 feet 670 m over deep water across the James from Weyanoke to Windmill Points Although most of Grant s infantry crossed the river by boats IX Corps one division of VI Corps the animals and supply wagons and a part of the artillery crossed on the bridge on June 15 and 16 By Friday morning June 17 more than 100 000 men 5 000 wagons and ambulances 56 000 horses and mules and 2 800 head of cattle had crossed the river without alerting the Confederates Before the entire army had crossed Smith s XVIII Corps followed by Hancock s II Corps became engaged in the next campaign Richmond Petersburg the siege of Petersburg with attacks on Petersburg on June 15 72 1865 edit At Petersburg the regiment was in demand at all points for work of construction and repair on the fortifications and it also assisted in destroying railroads 73 During its long service the men became very proficient in engineering and through its steadiness under fire is said to have lost during the last year of its service no bridge material of any kind The original members not reenlisted were mustered out at New York in Sept 1864 and after participation in the grand review at Washington the veteran organization was there mustered out on June 13 14 1865 3 Affiliations battle honors detailed service and casualties editOrganizational affiliation edit Attached to Woodbury s Brigade AoP to April 1862 Engineer Brigade AoP to June 1865 List of battles edit The official list of battles in which the regiment bore a part 74 Siege of Yorktown Seven Days Battles Battle of Malvern Hill Battle of Fredericksburg Pollock s Mill Creek Battle of Chancellorsville Second Battle of Fredericksburg Bank s Ford Battle of Deep Run Battle of Gettysburg Mine Run Campaign Battle of the Wilderness Battle of Spotsylvania Court House Battle of North Anna Battle of Totopotomoy Creek Battle of Cold Harbor Second Battle of Petersburg Battle of Jerusalem Plank Road First Battle of Deep Bottom Battle of Hatcher s Run Battle of White Oak Road Fall of Petersburg Battle of Appomattox Court House Detailed service edit 1861 5 edit Left New York for Washington D C Sept 21 Duty at Alexandria Va until October Converted by special orders from the war department into a regiment of engineers and ordered to Wash ington where instruction was received 7 Duty at Washington D C until March 18 1862 1862 5 edit Moved with Army of the Potomac to the Virginia Peninsula Siege of Yorktown April 5 May 4 Advance up the Peninsula and constructing bridges on the Chickahominy River May Battle of Fair Oaks Seven Pines May 31 June 1 Seven days before Richmond June 25 July 1 Battle of Seven Pines June 27 White Oak Swamp and Charles City Cross Roads June 30 Malvern Hill July 1 At Harrison s Landing until August 16 Moved to Washington D C August 16 22 Maryland Campaign September October Operating at and about Harper s Ferry W Va and Berlin Md during and after the battle of Antietam Threw two pontoon bridges over the Potomac River at Berlin Md for the crossing the Army of the Potomac in their pursuit of Lee from Antietam Rappahannock Campaign November 1862 to June 1863 Battle of Fredericksburg December 11 15 Construction of three pontoon bridges for Sumner s Grand Division Duty at Falmouth Va until April 1863 1863 5 edit Mud March January 20 24 1863 Chancellorsville Campaign April 27 May 6 Operations at Franklin s Crossing April 29 May 2 Maryes Heights Fredericksburg May 3 Salem Heights May 3 4 Banks Ford May 4 Operations at Deep Run Ravine June 5 13 Gettysburg Campaign June 13 July 24 Battle of Gettysburg July 1 4 Bristoe Campaign October 9 22 Bristoe Station October 14 Advance to line of the Rappahannock November 7 8 Mine Run Campaign November 26 December 2 1864 5 edit Campaign from the Rapidan to the James May 3 June 15 Laid all bridges for Army of the Potomac during the Campaign Battles of the Wilderness May 5 7 Spottsylvania Court House May 8 21 To expedite the transportation of wounded three Companies made a forced march to Fredericksburg on May 10 starting at 11 30 a m Built bridge over the Rappahannock at Fredericksburg Lower Crossing having it completed and ready for use at 4 30 p m having marched 8 miles and built bridge 420 feet long in 5 hours North Anna River May 23 26 On line of the Pamunkey May 26 28 On line of the Totopotomoy May 28 31 About Cold Harbor June 1 12 Crossing of James River June 15 Before Petersburg June 16 18 Siege operations against Petersburg and Richmond June 1864 to April 1865 Jerusalem Plank Road June 22 23 1864 Demonstration on north side of James River July 27 29 Deep Bottom July 27 28 1865 5 edit Hatcher s Run February 5 7 1865 Appomattox Campaign March 28 April 9 Fall of Petersburg April 2 Appomattox Court House April 9 Surrender of Lee and his army Co I march to Danville with 6th Army Corps April 23 27 Mustered out at Washington DC June 13 1865 Casualties editThe loss of the regiment during its service was killed in action 1 officer 9 enlisted men of wounds received in action 7 enlisted men of disease and other causes 1 officer 213 enlisted men total 2 officers 229 enlisted men aggregate 231 of whom 1 enlisted man died in the hands of the enemy 5 57 Armament editSince the men of the 50th were specialists they were not given first tier weapons They were armed with 872 Model 1822 Muskets 75 By the first quarter of 1863 after an effort to get most of the companies to be armed with the same weapon to make supply easier the regiment reported the following survey 76 A 54 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 Cal note 14 leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal B 75 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal C 106 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal D 57 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal E 104 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal F 8 model 1855 1861 National Armory NA note 15 119 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal G 95 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal H 123 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal I 85 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal K 52 Austrian Lorenz Rifled Muskets leaf and block sights Quadrangular bayonet 54 and 55 Cal Rifle muskets edit Issued weapons nbsp Model 1822 Flintlock smoothbore musket nbsp Springfield Model 1855 nbsp Springfield Model 1861 nbsp Lorenz Rifle Model 1854See also edit nbsp American Civil War portal nbsp New York state portal List of New York Civil War regiments New York in the Civil WarNotes References editFootnotes As reported for their departure from the state on September 21 1861 and in annual report December 31 1862 These were converted from flintlock to percussion cap during the 1840s 873 were reported for their departure from the state on September 21 1861 830 were reported a year later and drawn from existing militia stocks In fact Sumner and his men later wrote that they could have crossed at the dam or a few miles above it without trouble Burnside first ordered them a week before Lincoln s approval along with many other provisions on November 7 This was 3rd Brigade of MGEN Howard s 2nd Division of MGEN Couch s II Corps It consisted of the 19th and 20th Massachusetts the 7th Michigan and the 42nd and 59th New York The AoP had first come by Fredericksburg in the spring of 1862 and many slaves had freed themselves by crossing the river This time was the start of an occupation that would last four months until AoP left for the Antietam campaign During that four months over ten thousand slaves escaped the area making this one of the largest self emancipations in the war Many soldiers in the AoP were struck by the contrast in the fear and bitterness of the white townsmen who had not left and the joy of the slaves who took control of their own destiny and crossed over to Falmouth Meade had followed Halleck s cautious approach to fighting and Grant was there to give him direction and encourage aggressiveness 60 Per Person Benham s Volunteer Engineer Brigade like the Regular battalion had served with the Army of the Potomac since late 1861 It was a seasoned unit of volunteers originally consisting of the 50th and the 15th New York Volunteer engineer regiments Soon after Chancellorsville in May 1863 most of the 15th New York mustered out of service after their two year enlistments expired Its few remaining companies composed of three year enlistees were detailed to behind the lines duties These regulars were CAPT George H Mendell s United States Engineer Battalion Benham and most of the 15th New York were Washington at the beginning of the campaign and shifted to Fort Monroe on April 15 to act as the engineer base for Grant who had told him to gather water transports sufficient to tow enough bridge building materials to span the James The AoJ ss engineers were eight companies of the 1st New York Volunteer Engineer Regiment commanded by Colonel Edward W Serrell Commanded by MGEN Baldy Smith it had been reinfoced AoP and was in the lines at Cold Harbor Also on June 11 Lee ordered Early s Second Corps to depart for Charlottesville likewise on June 12 Witzel had graduated 2nd in the USMA class of 1855 behind his roommate Cyrus Comstock who was his counterpart at the AoP The Lorenz rifle was the third most widely used rifle during the American Civil War The Union recorded purchases of 226 924 Its quality was inconsistent Some were considered to be of the finest quality particularly ones from the Vienna Arsenal and were sometimes praised as being superior to the Enfield others especially those in later purchases from private contractors were described as horrible in both design and condition Lorenz rifles in the Civil War were generally used with 54 caliber cartridges designed for the Model 1841 Mississippi rifle These differed from the cartridges manufactured in Austria and may have contributed to the unreliability of the weapons Many of the rifles were bored out to 58 caliber to accommodate standard Springfield rifle ammunition 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 77 78 Citations a b Hillhouse 1862 p 15 Hillhouse 1863 pp 1055 1056 Dyer 1908 p 1404 Federal Publishing Company 1908 pp 86 7 Phisterer 1912 pp 1669 1670 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Phisterer 1912 pp 1669 1670 Thienel 1955 p 34 a b c d e f g Dyer 1908 p 1404 a b Dyer 1908 p 1404 Federal Publishing Company 1908 pp 86 87 a b U S War Dept Official Records Vol 5 p 24 Extract embracing the First Period from Maj Gen George B McClellan s report of the operations of the Army of the Potomac from July 21 1861 to November 97 1862 August 4 1863 pp 5 66 HQ US Army Corps of Engineers Brief History Martin Confederate Engineers in the American Civil War June 30 2021 a b DeCredico 2018 National Archives Confederate Slave Payrolls 2020 Kluskens Confederate Slave Payrolls 2020 Hawks Civil War in the East 50th New York Engineer Regiment a b NPS 50th Regiment New York Engineers a b Rafuse 2021 NPS Why Fredericksburg Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 p 40 a b U S War Dept Official Records Vol 19 2 p 579 Order to Burnside from Halleck November 14 1862 p 579 HNN Wheeler How the Telegraph Helped Lincoln Win the Civil War 2006 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 399 400 Marvel 1991 pp 164 165 O Reilly 2003 pp 14 23 Welcher 1989 p 700 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 pp 39 41 Stine 1892 pp 250 252 O Reilly 2003 p 25 Rable 2002 p 77 U S War Dept Official Records Vol 19 2 p 723 Orders to Whiting and Lee November 17 1862 p 723 Rable 2002 p 77 O Reilly 2003 p 25 26 Stine 1892 pp 248 252 a b Stine 1892 p 249 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 p 39 Rable 2002 p 77 Stine 1892 pp 248 252 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 397 Kennedy 1998 p 145 O Reilly 2003 pp 25 32 Rable 2002 pp 81 82 Salmon 2001 p 145 Welcher 1989 p 700 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 p 39 NPS A Fateful Delay a b c d e f U S War Dept Official Records Vol 21 pp 175 179 Reports of Maj Ira Spaulding acting commander Fiftieth New York Engineers December 12 amp 17 1862 pp 175 179 U S War Dept Official Records Vol 21 p 170 Report of Brig Gen Daniel P Woodbury U S Army commanding Engineer Brigade December 12 1862 pp 169 171 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 p 39 Rable 2002 p 77 Stine 1892 p 249 O Reilly 2003 p 27 Stine 1892 p 253 O Reilly 2003 p 25 26 Rable 2002 p 77 78 Stine 1892 pp 251 252 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 397 Goolrick 1985 pp 39 O Reilly 2003 pp 33 34 Welcher 1989 pp 701 702 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 397 398 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 p 39 Marvel 1991 p 168 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 686 687 Esposito 1959 p 72 Goolrick 1985 pp 39 40 Marvel 1991 pp 169 0Esposito s Map 72 Stine 1892 p 256 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 pp 40 41 a b c d U S War Dept Official Records Vol 21 p 169 171 Report of Brig Gen Daniel P Woodbury U S Army commanding Engineer Brigade December 12 1862 pp 169 171 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 pp 41 42 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 pp 38 42 Brainerd 1997 p 110 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 p 39 O Reilly 2003 pp 56 60 Brainerd 1997 p 110 a b Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 p 43 45 a b c U S War Dept Official Records Vol 21 p 167 169 Report of Lieut Cyrus B Comstock U S Corps of Engineers Chief Engineer December 20 1862 pp 167 169 a b c U S War Dept Official Records Vol 21 pp 179 180 Reports of Lieut Michael H McGrath Fiftieth New York Engineers December 13 1862 pp 179 180 a b Brainerd 1997 p 112 Rable 2002 pp 158 160 NPS The River Crossing Esposito 1959 p 72 Goolrick 1985 pp 50 52 O Reilly 2003 pp 67 85 Welcher 1989 pp 703 704Esposito s Map 72 Jamieson amp Wineman 2015 p 3 Welcher 1989 pp 703 704 ABT Henderson Self Emancipation November 2 2020 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 398 399 Goolrick 1985 pp 53 58 O Reilly 2003 pp 57 126 Rable 2002 pp 166 167 U S War Dept Official Records Vol 21 p 129 Return of casualties the Union forces at the battle of Fredericksburg Va December 11 15 1862 pp 129 145 McPherson 1988 p 571 Federal Publishing Company 1908 pp 86 87 a b c NYSMM 50th Engineer Regiment 2019 Catton 1968 p 47 Cullum 1891 p 172 Flood 2005 p 232 McFeely 1981 p 148 Chernow 2017 p 352 McFeely 1981 p 156 Smith 2001 pp 292 293 Chernow 2017 pp 356 357 Simon 2002 p 243 Wheelan 2014 p 20 Catton 1960 pp 190 193 Chernow 2017 pp 348 356 357 Wheelan 2014 p 20 Chernow 2017 pp 356 357 McFeely 1981 p 157 Wheelan 2014 p 20 Chernow 2017 pp 356 357 McFeely 1981 pp 157 175 Smith 2001 pp 313 339 343 368 Wheelan 2014 p 20 Person 2012 p 14 Person 2012 pp 14 15 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 686 687 Esposito 1959 p 136 Grimsley 2002 McPherson 1988 p 737 Person 2012 p 15 Salmon 2001 pp 258 259 Trudeau 1989 p 23Esposito s Map 136 Person 2012 p 16 a b c d e Person 2012 p 17 Welcher 1989 p 994 a b Person 2012 p 18 Salmon 2001 p 396 Welcher 1989 pp 998 999 CWA 50th Regiment Engineers 2016 Dyer 1908 p 1404 Phisterer 1912 p 1670 Hillhouse 1862 p 15 Mink Armament in the Army of the Potomac 2018 p 89 Smithsonian Civil War symposium 2012 NPS Springfield Armory NHS 2010 References Brainerd W 1997 Malles Ed ed Bridge Building in Wartime Colonel Wesley Brainerd s Memoir of the 50th New York Volunteer Engineers Voices of the Civil War series Knoxville TN University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 0 87049 977 7 OCLC 247826177 Retrieved 2023 04 24 Catton Bruce 1960 The Civil War New York American Heritage ISBN 978 0 618 00187 3 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Catton Bruce 1968 Grant Takes Command 2015 ed Boston Little Brown ISBN 978 0 316 13210 7 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Chernow Ron 2017 Grant New York Penguin Press ISBN 978 1 59420 487 6 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Cullum George W 1891 Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U S Military Academy Vol 2 Boston Houghton Mifflin And Company ISBN 978 0 608 42862 8 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Dyer Frederick Henry 1908 A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion PDF Des Moines IA Dyer Pub Co pp 29 187 282 1404 1405 LCCN 09005239 OCLC 1403309 Retrieved 2023 04 17 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Eicher David J McPherson James M McPherson James Alan 2001 The Longest Night A Military History of the Civil War PDF 1st ed New York NY Simon amp Schuster p 990 ISBN 978 0 7432 1846 7 LCCN 2001034153 OCLC 231931020 Retrieved 6 July 2020 Esposito Vincent J 1959 West Point Atlas of American Wars New York City Frederick A Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 8050 3391 5 OCLC 60298522 Retrieved 6 July 2020 Federal Publishing Company 1908 Military Affairs and Regimental Histories of New York Maryland West Virginia And Ohio PDF The Union Army A History of Military Affairs in the Loyal States 1861 65 Records of the Regiments in the Union army Cyclopedia of battles Memoirs of Commanders and Soldiers Vol II Madison WI Federal Publishing Company pp 86 87 OCLC 1086145633 Retrieved 2023 04 17 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Flood Charles Bracelen 2005 Grant and Sherman The Friendship That Won the Civil War New York Harper Perennial ISBN 978 0 06 114871 2 Goolrick William K 1985 Rebels Resurgent Fredericksburg to Chancellorsville PDF Time Life The Civil War Alexandria VA Time Life Books pp 1 176 ISBN 0809447495 OCLC 11370282 Retrieved 2023 04 21 Grimsley Mark 2002 And Keep Moving On The Virginia Campaign May June 1864 Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press pp 1 282 ISBN 978 0 8032 2162 8 OCLC 49610962 Retrieved 2023 04 19 Hillhouse Thomas January 15 1862 Adjutant General s Report 1861 PDF Annual Reports of the Adjutant General of the State of New York Albany NY New York State Adjutant General s Office pp 1 735 LCCN sn94095328 OCLC 1040003486 Retrieved 2020 04 10 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Hillhouse Thomas January 27 1863 Adjutant General s Report 1862 PDF Annual Reports of the Adjutant General of the State of New York Albany NY New York State Adjutant General s Office pp 1 735 LCCN sn94095328 OCLC 1039942785 Retrieved 2020 04 10 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Jamieson Perry D Wineman Bradford Alexander 2015 The Maryland and Fredericksburg Campaigns 1862 1863 PDF The U S Army Campaigns of the Civil War Washington D C Center of Military History United States Army OCLC 932255899 CMH Pub 75 6 GPO S N 008 029 00594 8 Kennedy Frances H ed 1998 The Civil War Battlefield Guide Kindle 2nd ed Boston MA Houghton Mifflin Co ISBN 0 395 74012 6 Retrieved June 24 2020 Marvel William 1991 Burnside Civil War America Series Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press pp 1 514 ISBN 978 0 8078 1983 8 OCLC 1086143786 Retrieved 2023 04 21 McFeely William S 1981 Grant A Biography Norton ISBN 978 0 393 01372 6 Retrieved 2023 04 17 McPherson James M 1988 Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era PDF Oxford History of the United States 1st ed Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 904 ISBN 978 0 19 503863 7 OCLC 7577667 Retrieved 2023 04 17 O Reilly Francis Augustin 2003 The Fredericksburg Campaign Winter War on the Rappahannock PDF Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 5852 4 OCLC 869282204 Retrieved 2003 04 19 Person Gustav 2012 Union Army Engineers PDF Military Heritage 14 4 Sovereign Media Company 14 19 ISSN 1524 8666 Retrieved 2023 04 19 Phisterer Frederick 1912 Tenth Regiment of Cavalry Seventh Regiment of Infantry PDF New York in the War of Rebellion 1861 1865 Vol 2 3rd ed Albany NY J B Lyon Company State Printers pp 1669 1688 LCCN 14013311 OCLC 1359922 Retrieved 2023 04 17 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Rable George C 2002 Gallagher Gary W ed Fredericksburg Fredericksburg PDF Civil War America 1st ed Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press pp 1 671 ISBN 978 0 8078 6793 8 OCLC 701718794 Retrieved 2023 04 20 Salmon John S 2001 The Official Virginia Civil War Battlefield Guide Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole Books ISBN 0 8117 2868 4 Mink Eric J May 2018 Armament in the Army of the Potomac During the Chancellorsville Campaign PDF Mysteries amp Conundrums Fredericksburg amp Spotsylvania NMP Staff Retrieved November 14 2020 Simon John Y 2002 Ulysses S Grant In Graff Henry ed The Presidents A Reference History 7th ed pp 245 60 ISBN 978 0 684 80551 1 Smith Jean Edward 2001 Grant New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 684 84927 0 Retrieved 2023 04 19 Stine James Henry 1892 A History of the Army of the Potomac PDF 1st ed Philadelphia PA J B Rodgers Print Co pp 1 898 LCCN 02012887 OCLC 679356481 Retrieved 2023 04 20 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Thienel Phillip Jan Feb 1955 Engineers in the Union Army 1861 1865 The Military Engineer 47 Trudeau Noah Andre 1989 Bloody Roads South The Wilderness to Cold Harbor May June 1864 PDF 1st ed Boston MA Little Brown amp Co pp 1 392 ISBN 978 0 316 85326 2 LCCN 89032817 OCLC 19673322 Retrieved 2023 04 19 U S War Department 1881 Operations in Maryland Northern Virginia and West Virginia Aug 1 1861 Mar 17 1862 The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Vol V XIV Washington DC U S Government Printing Office hdl 2027 coo 31924080772233 OCLC 857196196 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain U S War Department 1887 Reports September 20 November 14 1862 Correspondence etc Sept 3 Nov 14 1862 The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Vol XIX XXXI II Washington DC U S Government Printing Office hdl 2027 coo 31924080772233 OCLC 857196196 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain U S War Department 1889 Operations in Northern Virginia West Virginia Maryland and Pennsylvania November 15 1862 January 25 1863 The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Vol XXI XXXIII Washington DC U S Government Printing Office pp 49 129 170 175 180 792 925 hdl 2027 coo 31924077723017 OCLC 857196196 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Welcher Frank J 1989 The Union Army 1861 1865 The Eastern theater PDF 1st ed Bloomington IN Indiana University Press pp 1 1084 ISBN 978 0 253 36453 1 OCLC 1089613807 Retrieved 2023 04 19 Wheelan Joseph 2014 Bloody Spring Forty Days that Sealed the Confederacy s Fate Boston Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 82206 3 Retrieved 2023 04 19 Hawks Steve A 2016 50th New York Engineer Regiment The Civil War in the East Retrieved 3 March 2012 50th Engineer Regiment New York National Guard New York State Military Museum and Veterans Research Center New York Division of Military and Naval Affairs 2019 Retrieved 2020 04 08 50th Regiment Engineers The Civil War Archives American Civil War Archive 2016 Retrieved 2017 04 08 50th Regiment New York Engineers nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2007 Retrieved February 15 2008 A Fateful Delay Crossing the Rappahannock nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2007 Retrieved February 15 2008 Making a Plan Why Fredericksburg nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2007 Retrieved February 15 2008 Battle of Fredericksburg History The River Crossing nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2007 Retrieved February 15 2008 Henderson Steward 2020 11 02 Self Emancipation The Act of Freeing Oneself From Slavery American Battlefield Trust Retrieved 2023 04 24 Wheeler Tom 2006 How the Telegraph Helped Lincoln Win the Civil War History News Network Retrieved 2023 04 24 Brief History of the Corps Headquarters U S Army Corps of Engineers Headquarters U S Army Corps of Engineers Retrieved 2023 04 18 Martin Shaun 2021 06 30 Confederate Engineers in the American Civil War IndexArticles Retrieved 2023 04 18 DeCredico Mary February 22 2018 Confederate Impressment During the Civil War Encyclopedia Virginia Virginia Foundation for the Humanities OCLC 298460602 Retrieved 2023 04 18 Rafuse Ethan S February 12 2021 Fredericksburg Battle of Encyclopedia Virginia Virginia Foundation for the Humanities OCLC 298460602 Retrieved 2023 04 18 Confederate Slave Payrolls Shed Light on Lives of 19th Century African American Families National Archives 2020 03 03 Retrieved 2023 04 18 Kluskens Claire Prechtel 2020 07 09 Confederate Slave Payrolls The Twelve Key Retrieved 2023 04 18 Springfield Armory National Historic Site NPS gov National Park Service US Govt Retrieved 13 September 2010 Merritt Roe Smith 9 November 2012 Northern Weapons Manufacturing during the Civil War keynote address of the 2012 Smithsonian Institution s Technology and the Civil War symposium C SPAN via C SPAN Manassas Second nps gov U S National Park Service 2005 Archived from the original on 2005 11 26 Retrieved 2023 08 12 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 50th New York Engineer Regiment amp oldid 1202492061, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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