Today in History:

714 Series I Volume XXVII-I Serial 43 - Gettysburg Campaign Part I

Page 714 N. C., VA., W. VA., MD., PA., ETC. Chapter XXXIX.

heaviest cannonade until 5 p. m., when it received orders to take a position about half a mile north from the above position, with the same front as the right wing of the army; but the rebel infantry being about to push back a division of the Twelfth Corps posted in the woods on our right wing, and threatening to attack us in the rear, we received the order to move 1, 000 steps backward and to keep the same front as before. The regiment was posted as follows: Five companies of the right wing connecting on the left with the right wing of the Seventh Regiment West Virginia Volunteers, which had connection with the Fourteenth Regiment Indiana Volunteers; four companies, under command of Captain Henry Arens, of Company K, connecting on their left with the One hundred and fifty-third Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, Sixty-eighth and fifty-fourth Regiments New York Volunteers. The five companies on the right wing had for their support the Thirty-third Regiment Massachusetts Volunteers. An attack was made by the enemy at 6. 30 p. m., but although the Seventh Regiment West Virginia Volunteers fell back a little in the first moment, this attack was repulsed with energy by our right wing without the assistance of the Thirty-third Regiment Massachusetts Volunteers. On the left wing, the enemy came so far as to break through the line, which was kept either by the Sixty-eighth Regiment New York Volunteers of Fifty-fourth Regiment New York Volunteers, and move on toward the batteries. In this critical moment, Captain Alfred Theinhardt, commanding Company I, Forty-first New York Volunteers, which he placed with some men of other regiments from the left wing behind a stone wall, and he succeeded in holding the enemy in check until a regiment of the Second Corps arrived, which was sent from the cemetery to support him. During the night the regiment remained in the same position as before the attack, putting out pickets in the front. On July 3, the five companies of the right wing remained in the same position, and skirmishers were sent out from the four companies of the left wing. The regiment stood between 12 m. and 1 p. m. under a very heavy fire of artillery without having considerable losses. In the morning of July 4, the brigade marched to Gettysburg, and two hours afterward the regiment took the same position again as it had on the previous days, near the cemetery. The loss of the regiment during July 1, 2, 3, and 4 is-

Officers and men.

Killed.

Wounded.

Missing.

Total

Commissioned officers.

1

8

....

9

Non-commissioned officers.

8

10

1

14

Enlisted men

11

40

2

53

Total

15

58

3

76

Respectfully submitted.

DETLEO VON EINSIEDEL,

Lieutenant-Colonel, Commanding.

Colonel LEOPOLD VON GILSA,

Commanding First Brigade.


Page 714 N. C., VA., W. VA., MD., PA., ETC. Chapter XXXIX.