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Civil War Blog

A project of PA Historian

Camp Brandywine and the DuPont Powder Mills

Posted By on June 22, 2012

File:Camp Brandywine Historic Marker.jpg

Camp Brandywine

In the Civil War the first camp of this name was at Wilmington Fair Grounds [Delaware] for the First and Second Delaware Regiments.  The same name was given this site in September, 1862 for a camp of Pennsylvania troops sent to guard the powder mills.  They were relieved by the Fourth Delaware Regiment the next month when the site was known briefly as Camp DuPont and then later as Camp Brandywine.

The above-pictured Delaware historical sign marks the site of Camp Brandywine which was the place Pennsylvania troops were sent to guard the duPont Powder Mills during the Civil War.  The Pennsylvania regiments who were sent there were not named on the plaque and the Civil War Research Project is seeking to determine their identity.  Readers who can identify these regiments are urged to contact the Project or submit a comment to this blog entry.

From the book, DuPont:  The Autobiography of an American Enterprise, written by the E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, Wilmington, Delaware, 1952, and distributed by Charles Scribner’s Sons, the following brief explanation of the role of the duPont mills is given:

The Civil War transformed the mills on the Brandywine literally into an armed camp.  Tradition and sentiment in Delaware inclined it toward the South.*  Secession was averted by the narrowest of margins, and many residents were Confederate sympathizers and supporters.

The DuPont mills, however, were again placed at the disposal of the Federal Government.  As the Union’s most reliable source of supply their safety became an important project.  The premises were guarded day and night.  Two companies of workmen were mobilized as volunteer militia to patrol the area.  An unusual number of explosions and fires were attributed to enemy sabotage, but no major elements were destroyed.  Day and night, the mills devoted themselves to supplying gunpowder while civilian work stopped.  It is notable that the shift to military production was purely voluntary, for total war, in the North, at least, was a concept yet to come.  A company did war work, or not, as it chose, just as draftees often hired substitutes.

Aside from large-scale production, DuPont made two other contributions that had much to do with the outcome of the war.  Working with the Army’s Ordinance Department, it finished the development and produced for the first time a special “Mammoth Powder” that made feasible the firing of the heavy artillery was was to revolutionize warfare.  And Lammot duPont, hastily dispatched to England, persuaded the British to rescind their embargo on India saltpeter that threatened to silence every Northern gun.  Failure, on any account, might well have re-written history.

*There were no slaves on the Brandywine, but Delaware was a slave state and they were fairly prevalent in the southern counties.

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Lamott duPont (1831-1884)

Lammot du Pont I was an important member of the Du Pont family in the mid-nineteenth century and in the Civil War period. His father was Alfred V. du Pont, the eldest son of DuPont’s founder. Armed with a chemistry degree from the University of Pennsylvania, he joined the family business after graduation. In 1857, he patented “B Blasting Powder” which used the inexpensive South American sodium nitrate.  This led to the cheap manufacture of black powder which made the DuPont company a potent force in the blasting powder industry. During the American Civil War, he accepted a commission as Captain of Company B, 5th Delaware Regiment and served at Fort Delaware on Pea Patch Island. After the war, he helped the company enter the high explosives business. Unfortunately, he was killed in a nitroglycerin explosion in March 1884.

According to information provided in the official duPont history, powder leaving the mills during the Civil War was shipped by rail on the Philadelphia and Baltimore central railroad via a connecting spur build from Montchanin near the yards.  This rail spur enabled the shipment directly from the mills to the sites where it was used.  Prior to the construction of the railroad spur, powder was shipped via wagon but the sheer quantities required for the war effort required rail transport.  After the war, wagon transport was resumed because the railroads didn’t welcome powder shipments because of the danger.  The above photo, from page 35 of the history, was taken at Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, in 1865, a few miles up the Brandywine from the powder mills.

Lamott duPont’s death was reported in the Harrisburg Patriot on 31 March 1884:

EXPLOSION OF NITRO-GLYCERINE

Six Men Killed at Thompson’s Point, New Jersey

Chester, Pennsylvania, 29 March 1884 — The nitro-glycerine house of the Repaune Chemical Works at Thompson’s Point, N.J., across the river from this city, exploded at 10:30 o’clock this morning.  The explosion is supposed to have been caused by too much heat being generated by the nitric acid.  This supposition is based on the fact that the six occupants of the building were seen to rush for the door and were jammed in the passage when the explosion occurred.  The six were instantly killed, their bones being broken and twisted and their heads crushed in a frightful manner.  Their names were as follows:  Lamott duPont, vice president of the company, and connected with the duPont powder works in Delaware; W. N. Hill, superintendent of the works; Edward Norcross, compounder of nitro-glycerine; George Norton, an employee; Lewis Lay, also an employee; and a visitor supposed to be a Mr. A. S. Ackerson, a chemist of St. Louis.  Mr. Ackerson arrived in Philadelphia late last night and stopped at the Continental Hotel.  This morning he inquired of the hotel clerk the way to reach Thompson’s Point, and upon being directed, left the hotel about 8:30 a.m.  Norcross, Morton, and Lay lived at Thompson’s Point, where the works are situated, and duPont and Hill lived elsewhere.  The bodied of the dead were placed in boxes and the deputy coroner of the county began an inquest, after the conclusion of which the bodies will be removed to their respective homes.

The photograph of the historical marker is from Wikipedia and is attributed to contributor Littleinfo with granted permission to re-publish as stated on the web site.  The photograph of duPont is from Wikipedia and is in the public domain.  The news article on the explosion resulting in duPont’s death is from the on-line resources of the Free Library of Philadelphia.

 

Children of Daniel Riegle, Dauphin County Commissioner (Part 2 of 2)

Posted By on June 21, 2012

The three sons of Daniel Riegle and one son-in-law all saw Civil War service.

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ELIAS ETZWEILER (1829-1909) son-in-law of Daniel Riegle, who is also found in the records as Elias Etsweiler, was mustered into the 172nd Pennsylvania Infantry, Company G, as a Private, on 28 October 1862.  He served until 31 October 1863, when he was mustered out of service with his company.  On 30 August 1864, he was mustered into the 208th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company A, as a Private.  He served until 1 June 1865 when he was mustered out with his company.  At the time of the 1890 Census, Elias reported no Civil War-related disabilities, but in the same year, he made his first application for an invalid pension, which he eventually received and collected until his death in 1909.  Since he survived his wife Elizabeth, who had died in 1885, there was no widow’s pension.

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JOSIAH R. RIEGLE (1829-1886) first served in the Gratztown Militia which was called into service on 4 July 1863 as the 36th Pennsylvania Infantry (Emergency Force), Company C.  Probably, because of his experience in the militia, he entered the emergency force at the rank of Corporal.  The militia was discharged on 11 August 1863, when it was concluded that the emergency was over.  Near the end of the war, Josiah, along with younger brother Harrison, joined the 103rd Pennsylvania Infantry and was mustered into service on 14 March 1865.  During this latter service, he primarily did guard duty at Fortress Monroe and Roanoke Island.  His discharge came at New Bern, North Carolina, on 25 June 1865, and he returned to Harrisburg to receive his final pay.  After the war, Josiah worked as a laborer and lived in Gratz.  Josiah died in 1886, and his widow, Amanda, applied for benefits in 1890, which she received and collected until her death in 1897.

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JONAS P. RIEGLE (1835-1889) joined the 50th Pennsylvania Infantry, Company K, as a Private on 9 September 1861.  In September 1864, he was confined to Hickman Bridge General Hospital, Camp Nelson, Kentucky, with typho-malarial fever.  Later that month, he was transferred to Company A at the rank of Corporal, but he was discharged about the same time.  when he returned home, he worked various jobs including a clerk in a store and a butcher.  He died in Schuylkill County on 1 November 1889 and is buried in Grace Evangelical Cemetery, Muir, Schuylkill County.  Jonas was an early pension applicant because of the illness he sustained during his war service.  After he died, his widow Rebecca, who lived in Pottsville, collected the pension until her death in 1921.

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HARRISON RIEGLE (1840-1899), the youngest son, stayed with his mother until her death in 1864, and not long afterward, joined his older brother Josiah in enlisting in the 103rd Pennsylvania Infantry, Company G, as a Private.  The brothers had similar experiences in serving guard duty at Fortress Monroe and Roanoke Island between their muster in on 14 March 1865 at Harrisburg and muster out at New Bern, North Carolina.  On return from the war, Harrison married Hannah Rickert of Lykens Township and proceeded to raise a family.  Their first three children died as infants and the first to survive was born in 1870.  Harrison was the school tax collector for Lykens Township in 1890 and in addition was a farmer and a miner.  As a miner, he contracted asthma but on the 1890 census he claimed “body disabled” as a result of his war service.  Harrison’s Civil War pension was collected by him until his death on 31 July 1899.  He is buried in Gratz Union Cemetery.  The widow, Hannah, collected until her death in 1919 and she is buried in the same place as Harrison.  See:  The Unknown Military Musician.

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This concludes a brief summary of the military experiences of the three sons and one son-in-law of Dauphin County Commissioner, Daniel Riegle.  Other members of the extended family will be featured in future posts.

Pension Index Cards are from Ancestry.com and reference records in the National Archives in Washington, D.C.

Children of Daniel Riegle, Dauphin County Commissioner (Part 1 of 2)

Posted By on June 20, 2012

In the post yesterday, the origins of the Riegel family in Pennsylvania were noted, with the first settlers of this name in the Lykens Valley being Andreas Riegel (1750-1815) and his sons, who came to the valley from Berks County, Pennsylvania.  Andreas and his wife Catherine [Hoffman] Riegle (1751-1819) are believed to be buried in the graveyard at the foot of Short Mountain in Lykens Township – which today is marked by a single stone monument to the pioneer settlers of the area [Note: The monument, erected by the Hoffman Association in 1924, replaced the original grave markers, which over time were lost].

John Daniel Riegle (1774-1839)

One of the sons of Andreas Riegel and Catherine [Hoffman] Riegel who came with him to the Lykens Valley from Berks County was John Daniel Riegle (1771-1839), most often referred to as Daniel Riegle.  Daniel was born on 21 September 1774 in Upper Tulpehocken Township, Berks County.  Through his mother, he was a grandson of Johann Peter Hoffman.(1709-1797).  Daniel was a farmer who lived in the area of Lykens Township near Short Mountain.  In politics, he was an old-line Whig.  He had several brothers and sisters, also living in  the area, but for now, only the direct line of Daniel Riegle (1771-1839) will be followed to the Civil War generation.  Daniel Riegle married Catherine Harmon (1780-1857) whose name is also found in the records as Hermann.  Their children included Daniel Riegle (1804-1855), John Riegle (1806-1838) and Jacob Riegel (1808-1838).  Daniel died 8 February 1839 and is buried in the St. Peter (Hoffman) Church Cemetery, which is located on the Crossroads in Lykens Township, at the site of the old Hoffman Church, very near where the Crossroads joins Route 25.  His grave marker is pictured above.

 

Daniel Riegle (1804-1855)

 

Catherine [Hoffman] Riegle (1807-1864)

Daniel Riegle (1804-1855) is the subject of this post.  He was born on 1 June 1804 in Lykens Township, Dauphin County, on the farm of his parents.  On 24 December 1826, he married Catharine Hoffman (1807-1864), his second cousin, and the great granddaughter of Johann Peter Hoffman (1709-1797).  Four children were born of this marriage:  Elizabeth Riegle (1827-1885); Josiah R. Riegle (1829-1886); Jonas P. Riegle (1835-1889); and Harrison Riegle (1840-1899).  In 1839, Daniel’s father died leaving his mother as a widow.

In the early part of his life, Daniel was primarily a farmer, working a farm of about 50 acres in Lykens Township, but in 1850 he purchased an old mill property that had been part of the Hoover estate.  He then sold the farm and moved to the mill property.  In 1852, he began serving a three year term as a Dauphin County Commissioner, which concluded at the end of 1854.  His venture into politics also included a term as a county director for the poor and an unsuccessful candidacy for sheriff of the county.   For whatever reason, Daniel decided to move to Gratz Borough in 1855 and open a blacksmith shop, which he purchased and readied that same year.  However, he died before the shop could open.  His widow, Catharine, supposedly remained in Gratz for a short time and then moved back to Lykens Township (by 1860) with her 30-year old daughter, Elizabeth, who was unmarried, and her 20-year old son, Harrison, also unmarried.  It is believed that the mill property, originally purchased by Daniel in 1850, was at first worked by the son, Josiah, who was listed in the 1850 census as a miller, but by 1860, Josiah had moved into Gratz Borough and was working as a laborer.

Daniel Riegle lived long enough to see only one of his children marry.  Josiah R. Riegle, the oldest son, married Amanda Kissinger in 1853.  At the time of Daniel’s death, only one child had been born to Josiah and Amanda, so Daniel only knew one grandchild.

Daniel Riegle died 2 June 1855 and is buried in Gratz Union Cemetery.  Catharine [Hoffman] Riegle died 2 September 1864, during the Civil War, and is buried next to her husband in Gratz Union Cemetery.  Their grave markers are pictured above.

At the time the Civil War began in 1861, Elizabeth Riegle had recently married Elias Etzweiler (1829-1909) of Jackson Township and Jefferson Township, Dauphin County.  Elias was a laborer.  No known children came of this marriage.  Josiah R. Riegle was working as a laborer and living in Gratz with his wife Amanda and children Lewis Riegle (born about 1854), Mary Riegle (born about 1856), and Emma Riegle (born about 1858).  Jonas P. Riegle, who had married Rebecca Holtzman, 28 December 1856, was also living in Gratz Borough, along with their two young children, Mary Riegle (born about 1857), and Sarah Riegle (born about 1859).  Harrison Riegle was working as a laborer and living in the household of his widowed mother in Lykens Township.

In the concluding post tomorrow, the Civil War service of the sons of Daniel Riegle, as well as the one son-in-law he didn’t know [Elias Etzweiler], will be noted.

 

The Riegel Family Origins

Posted By on June 19, 2012

The Riegel family in the Lykens Valley can be traced to Mattheis Riegell (born about 1615) of Bad Muenster, Palatinate, Germany, who married Maria Werner.  They had a son, Jost Riegell (1615-1687) who married Maria Honen (or Hoenen).  Their son, Cornelius Riegel (1674-175) was the immigrant who arrived in Philadelphia in 1733, with his wife Anna Gertrude Ehrmann, and their family.  Two of the sons of Cornelius and Anna Gertrude had preceded the family by arriving in Philadelphia in 1732.

From Philadelphia, the members of this family migrated first to Berks County and later westward, with many of the descendants ending up in the Lykens Valley while others went to Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Iowa.

The many variations of the spelling of the surname cause problems in tracing the branches.  The name is found as Riegel, Riegle, Reigel, Reigle, Riggle, Rigle, Rigel, Rigal, Regal, Riggels, as well as all the possible variations with a double “L.”  There doesn’t appear to be any consistency in the German records either – except for the “ie” configuration (which is correct in the German) as opposed to the “ei” configuration which in German would be pronounced as the English “long I.”  While it can’t be known for sure what the correct pronunciation of the name should be, it usually is pronounced today about the same as the English word, “regal.”

Johann Daniel Reigell (1713-1786), born in Germany, was one of the sons of Cornelius Riegel (1674-175) and Anna Gertrude Ehrmann (1680-1760) who came to Berks County, Pennsylvania.  Johann Daniel Reigell married Maria Dorothea Beitler (1716-1786).  Their son, Andreas Riegel (1750-1815), born in Berks County, was a pioneer settler of the Lykens Valley.

http://d2.o.mfcreative.com/f1/file08/objects/4/8/f/848fd6ec-22fa-451e-b524-2ab29cd1a471-0.jpg

Lykens Valley Pioneer Monument

Andreas Riegel married Catherine Hoffman (1751-1819), a daughter of Johann Peter Hoffman (1709-1797).  Andreas served as a private in the Revolutionary War.  As a carpenter, he was one of the builders of the old Hoffman Church.  Both Andreas and Catherine are believed to be buried in the old Hoffman graveyard at the foot of Short Mountain (shown in the above picture) along with about 26 contemporaries including Johann Peter Hoffman.  The monument, erected by the Hoffman Association in 1924, replaced the original grave markers, which over time were lost.  It is located in a field on the Bush Farm along the Crossroads between Loyalton (on Route 209) and the Crossroads Auction (on Route 25).  A prior post described the monument.  This old graveyard should not be confused with the Hoffman Church Cemetery which is located on the Crossroads near the junction of Route 25.

Nearly all the Civil War soldiers with the Riegel name who are from the Lykens Valley are descendants of Andreas Riegel and Catherine [Hoffman] Riegel.

The post tomorrow will look at the children of Daniel Riegle (1804-1855), Dauphin County Commissioner, and their Civil War service.

Much credit must be given to Dr. Samuel A. Riegel who compiled the family genealogy.

 

 

Popular Men’s Names of the Civil War (Part 1 of 3)

Posted By on June 18, 2012

What were the most popular given names during the Civil War period? This is the first part of a three part study of that question. Today we will look a the most popular men’s names of U.S. men born during the period 1811-1850, the broad period that made up the vast majority of Civil War Soldiers. We will also look at the most common boy’s names of babies born during the civil war (1861-1865) and compare that with the most popular boy’s names from 2011, 150 years later. 

Part 2 of the series will focus on Women’s names of the same period, and is scheduled to be published July 2. Part 3 will take a look a the names on the Lykens Valley soliders list to see which names were most popular locally. Part 3 is scheduled to be published on July 30. 

The following tables are taken from the website http://www.galbithink.org/names/us200.htm which took data from the 1850 Census and analyzed the most popular male names. Shown are the top 10 in each category for the decades including 1811-1850, since virtually all Civil War Veterans were born during that period.

Born 1811-1820
41-50 at start of Civil War (1861)
  1. John
  2. William
  3. James
  4. George
  5. Samuel
  6. Thomas
  7. Joseph
  8. Henry
  9. Charles
  10. David

(more…)