Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 49

Captain George A. Deering, Co. F, 16th Maine-POW Gettysburg, CDV

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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 49

Captain George A. Deering, Co. F, 16th Maine-POW Gettysburg, CDV

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Nicely ink signed beneath portrait, Yours Truly/Geo. A. Deering/ Capt. 16th Me. Vols., no back mark. Deering was commissioned 2nd Lieut. 8/62; captured at Gettysburg (7/1/63), confined at Libby, Macon, and Columbia Prison; promoted Captain (8/64 while in captivity; escaped Columbia 12/10/64; returned 5/65; m/0 6/65. 16th Maine, 1st Brigade, 2nd Division, 1st Corps The 16th Maine was organized at Augusta in August 1862 and was assigned to the 1st Corps. In its first major action the regiment was nearly annihilated at Fredericksburg during an indomitable charge against well entrenched Rebels that cost “in killed wounded and missing two hundred thirty-one—more than one-half the number engaged.” Over two hundred rebel prisoners were taken and the men of the 16th Maine had to be restrained as they surged toward the enemy’s second line. At Gettysburg, the 16th Maine was heavily engaged during the stand of the 1st Corps on the afternoon of July 1st. Part of Paul’s (1st) Brigade, the regiment held a portion of General Robertson’s 2nd Division line against Robert Rode’s attack on the salient north of the Chambersburg Pike. Desperately holding a hill overlooking the Pike without support, the 16th Maine was finally outflanked and overwhelmed by superior numbers. The regiment fell back, cut off from the rest of the brigade, losing a large number of men as prisoners. At Gettysburg, the 16th Maine suffered 11 killed, 62 wounded, and 159 captured out of 275 men on the field. Reassigned to the 5th Corps in March 1864, the 16th Maine saw continuous combat during the opening phase of Grant’s Overland Campaign, taking particularly heavy casualties at the Wilderness, Laurel Hill, and Spotsylvania in May 1864. The regiment was also prominent in the see-saw fighting on the Weldon Railroad in August 1864 and emerging from the Petersburg trenches, again, in February 1865. The 16th Maine participated in the Appomattox Campaign and witnessed the surrender of the army of Northern Virginia. It mustered out on June 5, 1865 having lost 181 men killed and wounded. Provenance: The Tom MacDonald Maine Civil War CDV Collection Condition: Carte near VG., slightly light with dented corners.

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 49
Beschreibung:

Nicely ink signed beneath portrait, Yours Truly/Geo. A. Deering/ Capt. 16th Me. Vols., no back mark. Deering was commissioned 2nd Lieut. 8/62; captured at Gettysburg (7/1/63), confined at Libby, Macon, and Columbia Prison; promoted Captain (8/64 while in captivity; escaped Columbia 12/10/64; returned 5/65; m/0 6/65. 16th Maine, 1st Brigade, 2nd Division, 1st Corps The 16th Maine was organized at Augusta in August 1862 and was assigned to the 1st Corps. In its first major action the regiment was nearly annihilated at Fredericksburg during an indomitable charge against well entrenched Rebels that cost “in killed wounded and missing two hundred thirty-one—more than one-half the number engaged.” Over two hundred rebel prisoners were taken and the men of the 16th Maine had to be restrained as they surged toward the enemy’s second line. At Gettysburg, the 16th Maine was heavily engaged during the stand of the 1st Corps on the afternoon of July 1st. Part of Paul’s (1st) Brigade, the regiment held a portion of General Robertson’s 2nd Division line against Robert Rode’s attack on the salient north of the Chambersburg Pike. Desperately holding a hill overlooking the Pike without support, the 16th Maine was finally outflanked and overwhelmed by superior numbers. The regiment fell back, cut off from the rest of the brigade, losing a large number of men as prisoners. At Gettysburg, the 16th Maine suffered 11 killed, 62 wounded, and 159 captured out of 275 men on the field. Reassigned to the 5th Corps in March 1864, the 16th Maine saw continuous combat during the opening phase of Grant’s Overland Campaign, taking particularly heavy casualties at the Wilderness, Laurel Hill, and Spotsylvania in May 1864. The regiment was also prominent in the see-saw fighting on the Weldon Railroad in August 1864 and emerging from the Petersburg trenches, again, in February 1865. The 16th Maine participated in the Appomattox Campaign and witnessed the surrender of the army of Northern Virginia. It mustered out on June 5, 1865 having lost 181 men killed and wounded. Provenance: The Tom MacDonald Maine Civil War CDV Collection Condition: Carte near VG., slightly light with dented corners.

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 49
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