205th Pennsylvania Infantry
205th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry | |
---|---|
Pennsylvania flag | |
Active | September 2, 1864 to June 2, 1865 |
Country | United States |
Allegiance | Union |
Branch | Infantry |
Engagements |
Siege of Petersburg Battle of Fort Stedman Third Battle of Petersburg |
The 205th Pennsylvania Infantry responded to President Lincoln's call for 500,000 volunteers during the final year of the American Civil War.[1][2] The Regiment joined the Third Division of the Union Army's IX Corps to reverse General Lee's final offensive thrust at Ford Stedman and attacked to breakthrough the Petersburg defenses one week before his final surrender at Appomattox. Parading on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., during the Grand Review of the Armies, the 205th Pennsylvania celebrated victory.
Organization
The 205th Pennsylvania was recruited during the late summer of 1864 in central Pennsylvania:
Company | County of Recruitment | Earliest Captain |
---|---|---|
A | Blair | George C. Gwinner |
B | Berks | Joseph G. Holmes |
C | Blair | Louis D. Spiece |
D | Huntingdon | Thomas B. Reed |
E | Berks | William F. Walter |
F | Mifflin | Jacob F. Hamaker |
G | Blair, Dauphin and Franklin | Erasmus D. Wilts |
H | Berks | Franklin Schmehl |
I | Blair | Ira R. Shipley |
K | Mifflin | F. B. McClenahen |
The Regiment was organized at Camp Curtin in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania on September 2, 1864. Joseph Ard Mathews was selected to be Colonel, William F. Walter Lieutenant Colonel, and B. Mortimer Morrow Major. Many of the officers and men, including all three field officers, had previously fought in the war.
Petersburg Campaign
The regiment was sent to the siege lines at Petersburg, Virginia, first as part of the Army of the James, and then reassigned to the Army of the Potomac. Five other Pennsylvania regiments with the 205th comprised a provisional brigade of the IX Corps and were commanded by Brigadier General John F. Hartranft. Two months later, the brigade was redesignated as the Corps' Third Division, and Hartranft was promoted to command the division. The 205th became part of the 2nd Brigade, commanded by Mathews, along with the 207th and 211th Pennsylvania. The new troops of the Third Division attacked the veterans of Confederate General John B. Gordon twice within a span of only eight days.
Battle of Fort Stedman
The pre-dawn and early morning phases of the final offensive thrust of General Lee's Army had broken the Union line at Fort Stedman, capturing the Fort and several adjacent batteries. Arriving on the field and quickly recognizing the severity of the situation, General Hartranft organized and executed a highly effective counter-attack which reversed the outcome of the Battle.
For their part in the Battle of Fort Stedman on March 25, 1865, the Division was commended for good conduct in their first major engagement by the IX Corps Commander, Major General John B. Parke. The 205th captured several prisoners and one battle flag, losing only ten wounded.
Petersburg Breakthrough
General Grant's primary plan for the morning of April 2, 1865, was to push forward his own left flank and to break General Lee's right flank. Aware of the possibility for troop shifting from far distant points to resist his primary assault, Grant found it necessary to order a simultaneous assault on Lee's center at Fort Mahone although the Confederate fortifications were considered impregnable.[3]
During the breakthrough at Petersburg, the 205th assaulted Battery 30, capturing more prisoners and another battle flag. Morrow was wounded during the attack and Captain Holmes took command of the regiment.
Appomattox Campaign
During the Appomattox Campaign, the 205th repaired the South Side Railroad as far as Burkesville. After the Confederate surrender at Appomattox Court House, the regiment was moved to City Point, Virginia, and then to Alexandria, Virginia. It participated in the Grand Review of the Armies on May 23 and was mustered out on June 2.
Casualties
- Killed and died of wounds: 3 officers, 37 enlisted men
- Wounded: 5 officers, 91 enlisted men
- Captured or missing: 0 officers, 5 enlisted men
- Died of disease: 0 officers, 17 enlisted men
- Total: 8 officers, 150 enlisted men
Notes
- ↑ Bates, Samuel P (1871). History of Pennsylvania Volunteers, 1861-5 V. Harrisburg, PA: B. Singerly, State Printer. pp. 636–654.
- ↑ "Proclamation 116-Calling for 500,000 Volunteers-July 18, 1864". The American Presidency Project. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
- ↑ Embick, Milton A. (1913). History of the Third Division. Ninth Corps, Army of the Potomac. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: C.E. Aughinbaugh, State Printer. p. 17.