• Casualty list, 42nd New York Infantry at Antietam

    From the New York Daily Herald of Thursday, 25 September 1862. Parked here for reference and as yet another go-back-and-check project: a list of those killed, wounded, and missing among the soldiers of the 42nd New York Infantrythe Tammany Regiment – at Antietam in September 1862.

    (touch for the full list)

    First on that list is the Adjutant, Lt Patrick James Downing. He’s seen below, at left, in a photo taken later in 1862 or early in 1863 with his brother Denis (1841-1871).

    The picture, of unknown provenance, was shared online by the American Fenians blog in 2017.

  • Lt. & Capt. Poinsett Cooper, 82nd and 42nd New York Infantry (c. 1861, 1863)

    Seen here with Captain Louis Schaffner of Company A is 2nd Lieutenant Poinsett Cooper (standing) of Company G, 82nd New York Infantry (formerly 2nd New York State Militia), in a photograph probably taken soon after their respective commissioning in September and October 1861.

    Poinsett was First Lieutenant of Company D, 42nd New York Infantry when he was wounded in combat at Antietam in September 1862.

    Here’s Cooper again, a little older and wiser, probably in mid-1863, by which time he had been promoted to Captain and assigned as acting Assistant Inspector-General on the staff of Brigadier General Alexander Webb. They saw action together at Gettysburg.

    Cooper was wounded 3 more times but survived his tour of duty and returned to his native Brooklyn in 1864, where he married and later opened his own express business.


    Notes

    The 1861 image at the top is from the Medford (Mass.) Historical Society Civil War Photograph Collection, shared online on the Digital Commonwealth.

    The later picture, a carte-de-visite, was among a set of Webb and his officers sold by Heritage Auctions in December 2014.

  • Hospital lists after Antietam

    On 12 October 1862 the New York Times printed lists of soldiers who died at several field hospitals near the battlefield in the 2 weeks immediately after Antietam. They contain some excellent detail I’ve not seen elsewhere, and I’m saving them here [PDF] for current and future reference.

  • Philip H Foster (1862)

    Private Philip Henry Foster of the ill-fated 16th Connecticut Infantry was killed by a bullet to the chest at Antietam on 17 September 1862. This photograph, probably taken in July or August 1862 shortly after his enlistment, is thanks to collector Guy DeMasi and was forwarded to me by John Banks – thanks to you both!

  • Peter F. Stevens (c. 1860)

    This stunning portrait of Major Peter Fayssoux Stevens (1830 – 1910), Superintendent of the South Carolina Military Academy – the Citadel – was painted by his granddaughter Grace Annette DuPré (1894 – 1984, NYT obit).

    Miss DuPré and grandson Paul Stevens donated the painting to the Citadel in 1959. The original resides in the archives there and a copy hangs on campus in Bond Hall. Thanks to Citadel Archivist Major Tessa Updike for kindly providing this.

    The plaque at the bottom reads:

    Peter Fayssoux Stevens
    Class of 1849 – Superintendent 1859-1861
    Colonel Confederate States Army
    ◄ • ►
    Directed the fire against the Federal steamer Star of the West
    in Charleston Harbor January 9, 1861. This being
    the first shot of the War Between the States
    Painted by Grace Annette Du Pre
    ◄ • ►
    Presented to the Citadel May 31, 1959 by
    Grace Annette Du Pre and Paul Stevens, grandchildren of Colonel Stevens