On the 6th of November, 1861, Robert
E. Patterson, of Philadelphia, having received authority to raise a regiment,
selected officers and commenced recruiting. On the 28th of January, 1862,
Captain John P. Dunne, of company B, was ordered to proceed with all the
men then enlisted, to Hestonville, and establish there a camp of rendezvous
and instruction. After remaining a little more than a month, the command
was ordered to Camden, New Jersey, and went into camp near Diamond Cottage.
The field officers were as follows: Robert E. Patterson, Colonel; Robert
Thompson, Lieutenant Colonel; Frank A. Lancaster, Major. The men were principally
from Philadelphia, with the exception of companies D and G, which were
recruited in the counties of Cambria, Lebanon, and Lancaster. While in
camp, the officers were regularly instructed, and the men properly drilled.
On the 31st of May, the regiment broke camp and proceeded by rail to Harrisburg,
where it was employed in guarding a body of about five hundred rebel prisoners.
On the 25th of June, the regiment
was ordered to the Peninsula to join the army of General MClellan, now
in close proximity to the city of Richmond, and about to commence his celebrated
change of base. Lieutenant Colonel Thompson, with company C as an
escort, took the prisoners which the regiment had been guarding, to Fort
Delaware, re-joining the command at Baltimore. On the 28th it arrived at
Fortress Monroe, and settled at Camp Hamilton, where it awaited the direction
of the commanding general. On the 4th of July it was ordered to Harrison's
Landing, where the entire army was assembling. Company B, under command
of Captain Dunne, was left to bring up the camp equipage and quartermaster's
stores, which were embarked on the steamer Juniata. When this vessel had
arrived within about seven miles of the Landing, the enemy opened on her
from a light battery posted on a commanding bluff, threatening her entire
destruction, as she had run aground and could not be got off without lighting,
or awaiting the rise of the tide. A gunboat, lying just below, came up
to her assistance, and with its ponderous shells soon drove the enemy away.
The Juniata was finally got afloat by throwing overboard the equipage and
stores, and proceeded on its way without further molestation, having been
struck by the enemy's fire eleven times. Upon its arrival, the regiment
was assigned to General Francis E. Patterson's Brigade,(2)
of New Jersey troops. On the 4th of August, Hooker's Division was ordered
back to Malvern Hill, where a body of the enemy was met and driven. In
this affair, the regiment was commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Thompson,
Colonel Patterson being in temporary command of the brigade. On the 15th,
the regiment marched to Yorktown, and on the 23d embarked for Alexandria,
where, upon its arrival, two days later, it encamped on the outskirts of
the town, the entire army being now on its way from the Peninsula, to join
General Pope, in command of the Army of Northern Virginia.
On the 26th, the division moved by
rail to Warrenton Junction, and on the following morning marched to Bristoe
Station, where the enemy under Jackson had suddenly made his appearance,
far in the rear of Pope's Army. The regiment, in command of Lieutenant
Colonel Thompson, Colonel Patterson, from sickness, being unable to lead,
was brought into position on the left of the Fifth New Jersey, under a
heavy fire of shot and shell. For two hours the position was held with
great gallantry, when a charge was ordered, before which the enemy could
no longer stand, but retreated rapidly towards Bull Run. Major Lancaster
was severely wounded in the left arm, and Lieutenant R. L. Thompson in
the neck. A number of the men were killed and wounded.
The regiment bivouacked upon the
field at night, and early on the following morning, started in pursuit,
arriving at Centreville in the afternoon, and continuing on towards Bull
Run. At the opening of the battle on the morning of the 29th, the regiment
was brought up to the front, by Lieutenant Colonel Thompson, and placed
in position on the left of the Seventh New Jersey, where for five hours
it held its ground, making two charges across an unfinished railroad cut,
near the line of battle. The regiment was relieved at the front by the
Second Maryland, at five in the afternoon, and retired to the second line.
The loss in this days fighting was five officers and thirty-four men in
killed, wounded, and missing. On the morning of the 30th, along with the
brigade, the regiment moved in pursuit of the enemy, who was supposed to
be retreating. On reaching the Sudley Spring Road, he was, however, found
in force, and the brigade was immediately formed to support batteries,
where it was exposed to a hot fire of shot and shell. Towards the close
of the day, the brigade was ordered to the left, and while passing across
the field, came under a torrent of deadly missiles hurled from the enemy's
artillery. At sunset Hooker's Division moved from the field, and at midnight
bivouacked near Centreville. On the following day it marched to Chantilly,
where, in the fierce battle which was fought near the close of the day,
Hooker supported the division of Kearny.
After this disastrous campaign, the
regiment was ordered into the defences of Washington, where it remained
until after the return of the army from Maryland. Early in November it
re-joined the army, and was encamped at Catlett's and Bristoe Stations,
and at Manassas Junction. On the 8th of November, Colonel Patterson was
ordered to Philadelphia, to have charge of drafted men, and in the absence
of the Lieutenant Colonel and Major, the former on account of physical
disability, having lost his hearing, the latter from wounds received at
Bristoe Station, Lieutenant Colonel Olmstead, of the Second New York, was
placed in command of the regiment. On the 16th the brigade was ordered
to join the army near Falmouth, and upon arriving at Wolf Run Shoals, went
into camp. Here the commander of the brigade, General Francis E. Patterson,
died.
On the morning of 13th of December,
the battle of Fredericksburg opened, and the brigade, now in the centre
grand division, under Hooker, crossed the river on Franklin's pontoons,
below the town. Moving to the front, it formed line of battle on the Fredericksburg
Road, the regiment on the extreme left of the brigade, connecting on its
right with the Eighth New Jersey. As the line advanced across the plain,
south of the road, it came under a terrific enfilading fire of shot and
shell, from which it was forced to fall back to the road. Reforming, it
again advanced and maintained its position. At midnight of the 15th it
commenced falling back, it having been decided to abandon the contest,
and with the army re-crossed the river, encamping near Falmouth. In Burnside's
second campaign, which had to be abandoned on account of impassable ways,
the regiment was employed in building corduroy roads, and in severe fatigue
duty, in moving the artillery and trains. On the 15th of January, 1863,
Adjutant William C. Ward was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, and Captain
John P. Dunne to Major, the former relieving Colonel Olmstead. Lieutenant
Colonel Lancaster had been promoted to Colonel, upon the resignation of
Colonel Patterson, but was still incapable of returning to duty on account
of his wounds. On the 3d of February, in pursuance of orders, the division
moved out to Rappahannock Station and destroyed the bridge nearby, the
regiment sustaining no loss, and returning to camp when the destruction
was complete. In April Colonel Lancaster re-joined the regiment, and Lieutenant
Colonel Ward resigned.
Upon the opening of the Chancellorsville
campaign, the Third Corps, now under command of General Sickles, was at
first moved to the river below Fredericksburg, to cover the crossing of
the Sixth Corps, but afterwards joined the main body of the army. The regiment
left camp on the 28th of April, and marched to the crossing of the Rappahannock
below Fredericksburg, where it remained until the morning of the 30th.
It then marched to the United States Ford, and bivouacked for the night,
picketing the river in its front. Crossing the river it moved out to the
front, and with the brigade took position on the left of the plank road,
and in rear of the First Division. At daylight on the morning of the 3d,
the first line was attacked, and after maintaining its position for an
hour, was driven back upon its supports. The second line was then ordered
to advance. With alacrity it sprang forward, driving the enemy, when Colonel
Lancaster fell, pierced through the temple by a minie ball, the command
devolving on Major Dunne. Without faltering, the line pressed forward,
re-capturing the breast-works, and taking four hundred prisoners and two
stands of colors. Not satisfied with this success, it crossed the works
and pushed the enemy back through the woods in front. Here he was strongly
reinforced, and returning to the charge, drove the brigade back about four
hundred yards, where it rallied to the support of Dimicks Battery, of the
First Regulars. Emboldened by his temporary success, he came on, to within
two hundred yards of Dimick's guns, when the brigade, though fearfully
decimated, charged and drove him back into the woods again. Again he advanced,
and again he was driven before the steady fire and cool courage of the
men of this brigade. The position was held against the desperate efforts
made to carry it, and the guns faithfully protected until relieved, when
it retired a short distance to the rear. The regiment had not rested long
before it was again ordered to the front, where a new line of battle having
been formed, and where until the close of the engagement, on the night
of the 6th, it was exposed to an almost constant fire. With the army it
fell back, and re-crossing the river, returned to its former camp near
Falmouth. The regiment entered the battle with fourteen officers and two
hundred arid thirty men; of these, Colonel Lancaster, and Captains John
J. Connelly and George Cromley, were killed, and Captains Richard Dillon
and Wm. A. Reilly, and Lieutenants William J. Ashe, James Malloy and Evan
Davis, were wounded, the two latter mortally. Captain Dillon lost his left
arm. Eight men were killed, seventy-three wounded, and twenty-two missing;
an aggregate loss of one hundred and eleven.
The monotony of camp life was little
varied until the opening of the Gettysburg campaign, about the middle of
June. On the 29th, it was at Taneytown, where it was engaged in provost
duty, and at Emmettsbnrg on the following day, again in the same duty.
The corps arrived on the battle-field on the evening of the 1st of July,
after the fighting of the first day was over. The regiment, in command
of Major Dunne, joined its brigade on the morning of the 2d, and was posted
at ten A. M., near, and in front of Round Top; but the position being considerably
in advance of the line of battle, was untenable. The enemy, seeing its
exposure, poured in his shells in a merciless torrent, and forced it to
fall back to tile main line. The regiment was then posted along a wooded
eminence to the southeast of the wheat-field, under cover of a low stone
wall, the Eighth New Jersey joining it on the right At 3 P. M., the enemy
advanced to the attack, and succeeded in breaking through the lines to
the right and left of the ground where the regiment stood. Still it held
its position, preserving its ranks intact. Finally the enemy poured through
the breach which he had made, upon other parts of the line, and came upon
its flank, compelling it to fall back. It retired in good order to a point
where a Union battery was hotly engaged, and in imminent danger of being
lost. Halting and quickly forming, it checked the mad onset of the enemy
until the guns could be limbered and taken away, when it was ordered to
kneel in the tall wheat and again open fire. Thus the foe was held at bay,
until relieved by Caldwell's Brigade, of the Second Corps. But before retiring,
it was again called on to charge, which was gallantly executed, driving
the rebels, now swarming out on all sides, back into the woods. It was
then withdrawn, and re-joined the brigade at the rear. On the morning of
the 3d, it was early brought to the front, and formed in battle-line. At
three o'clock in the afternoon, it was hurried away at double-quick to
the support of the Irish Brigade upon the left centre, but did not reach
the threatened point in time to render any assistance. On the following
day the enemy retreated, and the Union army joined in pursuit The loss
in this battle was severe.
After re-crossing the Potomac, the
two armies moved on south, and at Wapping Heights, near Front Royal, the
Third Corps encountered a body of the enemy, which was driven, after a
slight skirmish. Moving forward, the regiment reached Warrenton on the
26th, and Bealton Station on the 30th, where it went into camp. A month
later, it advanced to Culpepper, where it again encamped. On the 10th
of September, Major Dunne was commissioned Lieutenant Colonel, and Captain
William A. Reilly, Major. In October, General Meade, finding that the enemy
was endeavoring to turn his right flank, retreated rapidly to Centreville.
On the 15th, the regiment was sent forward to M'Laines Ford, on Bull Run
Creek, to the support of the Sixth New Jersey, which was across and entrenched
on its right bank, and took position behind an old breast-work on the heft
bank. The enemy attacked the Sixth in its entrenchments, and drove them
out, making strenuous efforts to cut it off from retreat to the ford. Unperceived
by the enemy, the One Hundred and Fifteenth awaited until he had come within
easy musket range, when it sent a volley into his ranks, throwing his forces
into confusion, killing and wounding several, and driving the rest back
into the woods until the Sixth had retired and safely crossed. A steady
fire was kept up by the regiment until it was relieved. It lost several
wounded.
In the advance, which followed hard
upon the retrograde, the corps, under Birney, met the enemy near Kelly's
Ford, where a brisk skirmish ensued. On the 26th of November, while following
up the retreating enemy, the brigade was ordered to Mitchell's Ford to
hold it, lest the enemy should make a dash upon the flank of the army.
On the 27th, having re-joined the division, now under General French, it
crossed the Rapidan at Culpepper Mine Ford. During the afternoon, the regiment
was engaged in skirmishing through the wood that skirts Mine Run for the
purpose of finding the right of the enemy's works. At midnight it marched
and took up position in line of battle in Warren's lines, in readiness
for the intended assault on the enemy entrenched behind Mine Run, on the
following morning. The assault was not made, and the campaign was abandoned.
Returning, the regiment went into winter-quarters at Brandy Station.
With ten officers and one hundred
and forty men, the regiment broke camp on the 3d of May, 1864, and with
the brigade commanded by General Mott, now forming part of Birney's Division,
of Hancock's Corps, marched for the Wilderness. On the 5th it met the enemy,
having three men wounded; on the 6th, having one man killed, and two officers
and eight men wounded; and on the 7th, two men missing. Moving on to Spottsylvania,
the enemy was again found in strong works, and fighting re-commenced more
stubborn and sanguinary than ever. In the charge of the corps on the morning
of the 12th, the regiment lost six wounded; in the fighting of the following
day, one killed, four wounded, and one missing; and in the struggle which
was kept up until the 20th, it met some loss almost daily. Again taking
up the march, it passed Bowling Green and Milford, and on the 23d reached
the North Anna River. Shortly after daylight on the following morning,
the enemy being observed in his works on the opposite side of the stream,
the brigade was ordered across to attack. The wooden bridge over which
it passed was raked by the enemy's artillery, which was kept in full play;
but it succeeded in gaining the opposite bank, when the enemy retreated
rapidly, and the division occupied his intrenchments. Re-crossing the river
on the 26th, it moved on until again stopped at Tolopotomy Creek, on the
south bank of which the enemy was strongly intrenched. His advanced lines
were carried, but his main works proving too strong to be overcome by direct
assault, the army again moved by the left to Cold Harbor. At dawn of the
3d of June, Gibbon's and Barlow's divisions assaulted the enemy's works
here, supported by Birney's, of which the One Hundred and Fifteenth formed
a part, and carried them, capturing several hundred prisoners, one color,
and three guns. Being reinforced, the enemy in turn assaulted, and compelled
the corps to withdraw about seventy-five yards, where it intrenched.
On the 15th, the regiment crossed the James, and with the corps moved up in front of Petersburg. It was immediately ordered out on the skirmish line, and at four in the afternoon of the 16th, simultaneously with the enemy, the corps advanced, when a fight opened which lasted until after dark, the enemy being driven back along the whole line. He made several attempts during the night to re-gain his lost ground, but all to no purpose. The regiment lost one officer, Captain Robert M. Jeffries, killed, three men wounded, and one missing. On the 18th, the enemy having retired from his first line of works, the division again advanced to the attack, in two lines of battle, but was repulsed, the regiment losing four wounded. On the 21st the corps moved to the left, to the Jerusalem Plank Road, taking position on the west side, and connecting with Griffin's Division of the Fifth Corps. On the following morning it advanced, and commenced throwing up breast-works; but before they were completed, the enemy attacked Barlow's Division on the left, and drove it back, thus exposing the left of the Third Division of the Second Corps, to which the regiment belonged, compelling it to fall back to the position of the previous evening. The loss was one man killed. The regiment had now become greatly reduced, having but seven officers and eighty-four men present for duty. Accordingly, by special order of the War Department, it was consolidated into three companies, and incorporated with the One Hundred and Tenth Regiment, with which it served until the close of the war, and was mustered out of service with that organization on the 28th of June, 1865. The company officers were retained in service, but the field and staff were mustered out on the 23d of June, 1864.
Back to 115th Homepage.
1. Excepted from Bates, History of the Pennsylvania Volunteers, Vol. VI, pp. 1208-1213 (1870). Scanned and proofread by Kenneth P. Woodington.
2. Organization
of Third Brigade, Hookers Division, Third Corps. Fifth Regiment New
Jersey Volunteers, Colonel Samuel H. Starr; sixth Regiment New Jersey
Volunteers, Colonel Gersham Mott; Seventh Regiment New Jersey Volunteers,
Colonel Joseph W. Revere; Eighth Regiment New Jersey Volunteers, Colonel
Adolphus J. Johnson; One Hundred and Fifteenth Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers,
Colonel Robert E. Patterson.