MainSocietyHistoryBy Region › 44th New York Infantry

44th New York Infantry

Edit Page
Report
Scan day: 28 February 2014 UTC
20
Virus safety - good
Description: Ellsworth's Avengers. A brief history of the regiment, plus sources.
44th New York Infantry Regiment & Colonel E. Elmer Ellsworth 44th New York Infantry Regiment & Colonel E. Elmer Ellsworth     Colonel E. Elmer Ellsworth was a well-known militia commander before the Civil War and a friend of Abraham Lincoln. Following the attack on Fort Sumter, Ellsworth quickly organized a regiment of New York City firemen as the First New York Zouaves (later the 11th New York Volunteers). After arriving in Washington, D.C., the regiment was dispatched to Alexandria, Virginia and, noticing a Confederate flag flying above the Marshall House hotel, Ellsworth and a few of his men climbed to the roof and removed the offending flag. As they descended the hotel staircase, Ellsworth was confronted and shot by the hotel keeper, who was immediately killed by Ellsworth's men. Colonel Ellsworth was the first Union officer to be killed in the war, and his death triggered an outpouring of grief in the North. Ellsworth had been born in 1837 near Albany, New York, and a call went out from a number of the prominent citizens of that city to avenge his death by raising a regiment made up of one man from each town and ward in the Empire State. Each soldier was to be unmarried, not less than 5' 8" in height and not more than thirty years old. The men selected for the regiment arrived in Albany from the four corners of New York State on August 8, 1861, and the regiment was quickly formed. The regiment joined the Army of the Potomac in late October 1861 in Virginia, and settled into camp with the assistance of the 83rd Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry Regiment, beginning a relationship that would keep these two regiments together throughout the war. In the spring of 1862, the 44th New York Infantry participated in the Peninsula campaign, suffering significant casualties during the battles of the Seven Days including Hanover Court House, Gaines' Mill and Malvern Hill. Several men were captured at Gaines' Mill, including Private Julian Knowlton of Company A, who later was paroled
Size: 2048 chars

Contact Information

Phone&Fax:
Address:
Extended:

WEBSITE Info

Page title:44th New York Infantry Regiment & Colonel E. Elmer Ellsworth
Keywords:genealogy, quaker, genealogy exchange, revolution, revolutionary, research, Civil War,Civil,Revolutionary War,Patriots,cemetery,1812,war of, tombstone, shipbuilding, ship, genealogical, genealogies, genealogist, ancestor, ancestry, surname, family history, family tree research, pedigree, History, Historical, Biography, Biographies, NY, New York, US, United States, Nassau, Nassau County, Suffolk, Suffolk County, Long Island, LI, New York genealogy, Long Island genealogy, surnames, software, shareware, family, research, lineage, tree, pedigree chart, descendant, forename, generation, heraldry, Smith, Rock, Nan, Raynor, Raynere, Tangier, Titmus, Howell, Morris, Carman, Carter, Pearsall, Robinson, Floyd, Hallock, Wilson, Woodhull, Young, Tuthill, Toothill, Dayton, Deighton, Denton, Davis, Green, Conklin, Mott, Ketcham, Hart, Gardiner, Carpenter, Cowperthwaite
Description:
IP-address:64.8.104.91

WHOIS Info

NS
Name Server: DNS1.INFINOLOGY.NET
Name Server: DNS2.INFINOLOGY.NET
WHOIS
Status: clientTransferProhibited
Date
Creation Date: 04-dec-1998
Expiration Date: 03-dec-2015