158th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment

The 158th New York Infantry regiment[1] was organized in Brooklyn as one of the regiments of the Empire-Spinola Brigade, and on August 13, 1862 James Jourdan was appointed its Colonel. It was mustered in the service of the United States for three years at Norfolk, Virginia. The companies were recruited principally: A, B, D, E, F, G, H, I and K at Brooklyn, and C at Manhattan, Jamaica, and New York City.

158th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment
ActiveMustered in: November 10, 1862
Mustered out: June 30, 1865
CountryUSA
AllegianceNew York
BranchArmy National Guard
TypeVolunteer Regiment
SizeRegiment
Garrison/HQNew York, New York
EngagementsAmerican Civil War
Commanders
Colonel of
the Regiment
James Jourdan
William H. McNary

The 158th New York left the state on September 18, 1862; it served in Viele's Brigade at Norfolk, Virginia (September 1862), at Suffolk, Virginia (November 1862), at New Berne, North Carolina, 18th Corps (January 1863), in the 2nd Brigade, 5th Division, 18th Corps (February 1863), in Jourdan's Independent Brigade, Palmer's 1st Division, 18th Corps (May 1863), in the defenses of New Berne, N. C., Jourdan's Brigade, 1st Division, 18th Corps (July 1863), at Beaufort and Morehead, North Carolina (December 1863), in the 1st Brigade, 2nd Division, 18th Corps (August 1864), in the 4th Brigade, 1st Division, 24th Corps (December 1864), and in the 3rd Brigade, 1st Division, 24th Corps (March 1865); they were commanded by Col. William H. McNary.

The 158th New York was honorably discharged and mustered out June 30, 1865, at Richmond, Virginia. The men not to be mustered out with the regiment were transferred to the 100th Infantry.

Casualties

  • Killed in action: 2 officers and 29 enlisted men
  • Died of wounds received in action: 20 enlisted men
  • Died of disease and other causes: 83 enlisted men
  • Total: 2 officers, 132 enlisted men
  • Aggregate: 134 (5 enlisted men died in the hands of the enemy)
  • Death by an explosion of torpedoes at Bachelor's Creek, North Carolina, May 26, 1864: 4 enlisted men
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gollark: Oh hypermemetic bee tesseracts.
gollark: Thusly, ECPP/APR/PSW one?
gollark: > While the algorithm is of immense theoretical importance, it is not used in practice, rendering it a galactic algorithm. For 64-bit inputs, the Baillie–PSW primality test is deterministic and runs many orders of magnitude faster. For larger inputs, the performance of the (also unconditionally correct) ECPP and APR tests is far superior to AKS. Additionally, ECPP can output a primality certificate that allows independent and rapid verification of the results, which is not possible with the AKS algorithm.

References

  1. Phisterer, Frederick New York in the War of the Rebellion, 3rd ed. Albany: J. B. Lyon Company, 1912

See also

  • List of New York Civil War regiments
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