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Sergeant Boston Corbett, 16th New York Cavalry, who shot John Wilkes Booth, April 26, 1865. From the Liljenquist Family Collection of Civil War Photographs, Prints and Photographs Division, Library of Congress. Photograph by Mathew Brady. The 16th New York Cavalry Regiment was a cavalry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American ...
New York Light Artillery, 16th Battery; 1st Pennsylvania Light Artillery, Battery A; Cavalry Division Col Robert M. West First Brigade Col George W. Lewis. 3rd New York; 5th Pennsylvania; Second Brigade Col Samuel P. Spear. 1st District of Columbia (Battalion) 11th Pennsylvania; Third Brigade Col Andrew W. Evans 1st Maryland
8th Va Infantry Cole's Cavalry Potomac Home Brigade Loudoun Rangers Union victory The Fight at Waterford: August 27, 1862 35th Battalion, Va. Cav Loudoun Rangers Confederate victory The Affair at Glenmore Farm: October 16, 1862 35th Battalion, Va. Cav 6th New York Cav. Union victory Skirmish at Hillsboro September 1, 1862 35th Battalion Va Cav.
The "largest encampment ever held by the" Union Veterans League was held "on this historic battlefield". 1901-07-01 Through July 31, the US cavalry and artillery camp commanded by General Witherspoon was on 320 acres (1.3 km 2) east of Rock Creek [23] and south of the York/Hunterstown Rd intersection. [G 2] 1902-07-02
Edward P. Doherty (1838-1897) Edward Paul Doherty (September 26, 1838 – April 3, 1897) was a Canadian-American American Civil War officer who formed and led the detachment of soldiers that captured and killed John Wilkes Booth, the assassin of US President Abraham Lincoln, in a Virginia barn on April 26, 1865, twelve days after Booth had fatally shot Lincoln.
Johannes Eberly House. Ewell's cavalry, a brigade under the command of Brig. Gen. Albert G. Jenkins, raided nearby Mechanicsburg on June 28. That same evening, receiving the unexpected news that the Federal Army of the Potomac was rapidly advancing through Maryland, Gen. Robert E. Lee was forced to consolidate his Army of Northern Virginia towards Gettysburg to counter this new threat.
16th New York Cavalry Regiment; 19th New York Cavalry Regiment; 22nd New York Cavalry Regiment; 26th New York Cavalry Regiment; 2nd New York Veteran Cavalry Regiment; D.
124th New York Infantry Monument Houck's Ridge, Sickles Avenue: Maurice J. Power P. B. Laird 1884 MN 129 Colonel Ellis was killed in the battle. Captain Henry V. Fuller Marker 64th New York Infantry Rose Woods, Brooke Avenue