History of the 1st Ma Cavalry
Battle of Aldie, VA
Company B
Olney Pierce Newell
On May 4, 1842, Olney Pierce Newell was born. His parents, Hiram and Clarissa Newell, were
farmers in Franklin, Massachusetts. He helped his parents work their land until
he signed up for the Cavalry. On September 22, 1861, Olney Pierce Newell was
assigned to the 1st Massachusetts Volunteer Cavalry and put into
Company B, which was one of twelve companies. He was then forwarded to Camp
Brigham in Readville, Massachusetts for training. Olney’s 1st
Massachusetts was one of the first of the 272 volunteer cavalry regiments to be
accepted for federal service.
The
men and officers trained throughout the fall of 1861. They learned to be disciplined and had to do drills perfectly.
They had to learn how to ride and care for horses. Olney’s Mass Cavalry was
lucky enough to be riding horses that were brought in from Canada. These horses were known as “canucks,” The
horses were great for cavalry service.
Olney
Pierce Newell served under Colonel Robert Williams of Virginia. He was in charge to command the regiment. It
was organized into three battalions that were led by Majors Greely S. Curtis,
John H Edson, and William F. White. He left to serve in the Civil War on
December 25 under Major Curtis’ command and they went to Annapolis, Maryland,
where they camped for two months. In February, he moved to Hilton Head, South
Carolina. In May, he took part in the
James Island Demonstration against Charleston, South Carolina. About August 19,
he was ordered to Fort Monroe and then to Alexandria, Virginia.
On
September 2, 1862, the men and horses were in very poor condition, the men were
not properly clothed and many of the horses were tired and cold because of
winter and the fatigue from constant duty. Olney was sent to Maryland (or
Sharpsburg, as the South called it). On
September 17, 1862, he participated in the Battle of Antietam. This was the first major Civil War engagement
on Northern land. It was also the bloodiest single day battle in American
history. The loss of soldiers at
Antietam was a surprise to both sides battling that day. General Robert E. Lee
almost lost his entire army because they turned their backs to the Potomac
River and therefore they were trapped. They were almost captured by the
stronger Union forces.
The Battle of Antietam also became a turning point
that changed the entire course of the Civil War. Antietam stopped Lee's bold
invasion of the North and provided Lincoln with the victory he needed to
announce the abolition of slavery in the South during his famous Emancipation
Proclamation. And with that proclamation of Emancipation, the battle sealed the
fate of the Confederacy.
On
October 1, 1862, Olney went
to Maryland to recuperate. Colonel
Williams resigned and left the regiment on November 2. Lieutenant Colonel
Sargent then became colonel. His
regiment remained in Maryland until November 14. Olney joined the Federal Army of the
Potomac, 115,000-strong, and raced to Fredericksburg, arriving on November 17.
They were delayed until
December 11. By December 13, they were prepared to launch an attack to drive
Lee's forces out of Fredericksburg.
Misunderstandings and bad leadership led to many deaths at the
Battle of Fredericksburg. On December 15, they ordered the beaten army back
across the Rappahannock River. The Union lost 13,000 soldiers and morale was
low. The morale of the Confederacy reached a peak. Their casualties were much
less because they only lost 5,000 men. Lee's victory at Fredericksburg
increased the confidence of the Confederate Army, which lead to the invasion of
the North during the summer.
Even before the Battle of Gettysburg
started, Sargent was wounded at the Battle of Aldie, Virginia. This may have
negatively affected Olney and his regiment’s morale. However, the 1st
Mass Cavalry joined other Union troops on the second day of the third day
Battle of Gettysburg. On the 2nd day, July 2nd, 1863, Lee
ordered an attack against both Union flanks, one of which must have included
Olney, whose regiment had just joined the Union effort. The Confederate troops’
lack of communication would lead to their failure, so this may have helped
Olney to feel as if his efforts were paying off.
On the third day, July 3, 1863, the
Battle of Gettysburg came to its climax. The Confederate troops failed to break
the Union’s line, so the battle was over and the Union was saved. This meant
victory for the soldiers like Olney. By the time this famous battle was over
more men had fought and died in it the in any other battle ever fought in
America. The violence Olney experienced as a soldier during the Civil War
probably took its toll on him.
Nevertheless, he returned home to
his wife as a farmer. On January 4, 1865, Olney Pierce Newell married Elisabeth
Lawrence. They lived in Franklin, Massachusetts until he died in June of 1903.
Company H
Edwin A. Jordan - buried in City Mills Cemetary, Franklin, MA
Henry A. Jordan - also joined 3rd Ma Cavalry
A member of the 1st
regiment of the H Company from the state of Massachusetts, Henry A Jordan left
behind his family and friends in Franklin to defend our country. Before the war
he lived with his father and two sons on a farm in Franklin. His brothers Albert and Samuel also took
part in the war. Being one of the
furthest states from the actual battlefields of the war it is heroic that Henry
risked his life for our country.
Through his travels he was a part of the unions “Anaconda Plan.” Being in the war for three years with two
different regiments Henry took part in two pieces of the plan. Not only was he used in blockading the
exports leaving South Carolina he also was involved in attacking the
confederates greatest general at the capital, the second part of the plan. A hero is someone who takes risks for the
greater cause. This proves Henry A.
Jordan as being a hero, not because he was the best general in the war, but
because he was an individual who left his safe lifestyle in Franklin,
Massachusetts to the hardships of defending our country in war.
Henry A. Jordan was the son of
Franklin native Alfred Jordan. The
Jordan’s owned a farm in Franklin and lived a comfortable life. Although the
reasons for enter the war could not be found, Henry along with others in the
Massachusetts volunteers were just going off to protect their country. Although never actually serving in the same
regiment Henry’s two brothers, Albert and Samuel also took part in defending
our nation.
Henry started off in the 1st
Regiment Massachusetts’s cavalry and was a part of several important battles in
the civil war. The regiment he was in
joined with Pleasanton’s cavalry to form the Army of the Potomac. The first of his travels took him to
different training factions where he learned how to fight. The first major battle that this regular man
from Franklin took place in was the Battle of Secessionville. This is the first
Federal attempt to take Charleston. The battle was fought in June of 1862 and
was Henry’s first true taste of the long road he had in front of him. The idea
of the attack was part of the Anaconda Plan.
The plan was to shut off exports for the confederacy and South Carolina
was one of the biggest exporters of cotton during the time. The reason the wanted to stop the exporting
of goods was so the south would stop profiting from the cotton. With out the money from the cotton coming in
the south was short money and resources to win the war. Although the plan was a
good one it did not work this time. If
it had worked and the union forced the confederacy out of Charleston the war
might have ended two years earlier.
This was not the out come, one-hundred-seven Federals died to only
fifty-two Confederate deaths. The first
taste Henry Jordan had of the glorious war was defeat.
On September 14 Henry Jordan took
part in one of the biggest battles of the civil war. The battle of Antietam is now referred to as the “bloodiest day
of the Civil War.” Luckily Henry
escaped the battle with his life, that is more then most men could say. Jordan now a year into his enlistment was no
longer the same man who had left Franklin.
The battle ended with 11,172 Confederates either dead, wounded or
missing with 12,410 of the Union soldiers dead, wounded or missing. Although
the numbers were against the union this was a victory for them. The Union out numbered the Confederacy
nearly two to one. Thus meaning a
higher percentage of the men from the Confederacy dead rather then the percent
of the Union. With over a total of
twenty-three thousand deaths, injuries or captives Henry Jordan was not one of
those numbers. This small town farm boy
was lasting in the biggest war the nation had ever seen.
Jordan then was moved to the 3rd
Regiment where he was ordered to go on to New Orleans. This is another part of the Anaconda plan
because he was sent down the Mississippi River where he along with the Calvary
divided the confederation in hopes to concur it. Shortly after several small
battles in New Orleans and along the south Henry A Jordan returned home.
After returning back to Franklin a
completely new man, having seen and experienced war first hand and surviving
the “Bloodiest Day in the Civil War” he settled down. He settled down on a farm with his wife, a Foxboro born woman
named Josephine. The settled down and lived in a nation that he just came home
from defending.
Company K
Now under Major Curtis they took part in the James Island demonstration
against Charleston, South Carolina. Major Atherton A. Stevens, in July 1862,
was placed in command of the third battalion; this battalion included company K
which Kingsbury was in. They were left at Beaufort and Hilton Head, S.C.
February 12, 1864, the third
battalion was assigned to the 4th Regiment Massachusetts Cavalry and
became the 1st battalion in that regiment. This Regiment went to the Alexandria Va. Battle, September 2,
1862. By this time men and horses alike were in very poor condition. From this
battle the men departed directly to the Antietam campaign. Here 40 men were
taken as prisoners at Poolesville, and in general 5,000 men died in the battle.
The south retreated.
In January 1863, the regiment
participated in Burnside’s “Mud March”. Then went to Potomac Creek. His
regiment became part of Duffie’s 1st Brigade, Averall’s second
division, in February of 1863. The most severe engagement in which the regiment
ever participated in was fought June 17, 1863; it was the Battle of Aldie, VA.
The regiment alone lost 88 to prison, 24 to death, and 42 were wounded. From
here Kingsbury along with his fellow troops would march on to Gettysburg. Day
one they were not in action. Day two they brought up the 6th Corps.
And Day three they were guards at the army headquarters in stopping stragglers
and in guarding prisoners. Following the Confederates, they engaged at Jones’
Cross Roads on July 11.
Kingsbury’s regiment experienced
major loss in the Mine Run campaign in November. Around December 11 the
regiment went to their winter quarters in Warrenton, Va. Towards late April the
Wilderness campaign began. In 1863, under the command of L. M. Sargent, they
reached the camp at Warrenton in an unfortunate snowstorm. From here the entire
cavalry was sent on a raid towards Richmond following Lee’s army. During this
attack 12 men were captured.
After stalking Lee’s army the
regiment engaged in the Cold Harbor Battle quickly followed by the Trevillian
raid, and not long after that they engaged in the Deep Bottom Campaign. To do
provost duty, the regiment was sent to City Point on March 17, 1865, this
occurred during the assault on Petersburg. This siege of Petersburg was the
last mission for Kingsbury’s regiment. Therefore, Henry D. Kingsbury himself
left the service, missing the Appomattox.
Assuming Henry D. Kingsbury made it
this far through the Civil War with the rest of his regiment it may be assumed
that when he was discharged maybe he went back up to Franklin, Massachusetts.
Maybe he continued to be a Bootmaker. He may have been married, or for all is
known he may have died shortly after.