History
Mustered in: July to October 1861
Mustered out: June 29, 1865
The following is taken from
New York in the War of the Rebellion, 3rd ed. Frederick Phisterer.
Albany: J. B. Lyon Company, 1912.
This regiment was organized at Camp Decker, Staten. Island, under the
special authority granted by the War Department to Gen. Daniel E. Sickles,
and July 25, 1861, to Col. William R. Brewster by the consolidation of men
recruited by Col. James Fairman, under authority from the War Department,
dated August 19, 1861, for the Fourth Excelsior Regiment, and the men
recruited for the Second Fire Zouaves by Col. John Baulch, succeeded by
Colonel Brewster. It received its State numerical designation December 11,
1861, in accordance with the orders of the Secretary of War of December 5,
1861. The regiment was recruited principally in New York City and of members
of the fire department, and it was mustered in the service of the United
States for three years at Camp Decker, between July 8 and October 8, 1861.
In the fall of 1862, a new company joined the regiment and took the letter
C; January 20, 1863, Company G was transferred to E, and the members of the
163d Infantry, six companies, 375 men, received by consolidation as follows:
the men of Company C, 163d Regiment, went to Companies A and B, 73d
Regiment, those of D to A, F and I; of F to C, D and K; of A to D and G; of
B to G; of E to F and I. At the expiration of its term of service the men
entitled thereto were discharged, and the remainder consolidated into seven
companies, A, B, E, F, G, H and I, and retained in service. June 1, 1865, it
received by transfer the enlisted men of the 120th Infantry, not mustered
out with their regiment.
The regiment left the State October 8, 1861; served in Sickles' Brigade,
Hooker's Division, Army of the Potomac, from October, 1861; in same, 2d,
Brigade, 2d Division, 3d Corps, Army of the Potomac, from March, 1862; in 2d
Brigade, 4th Division, 2d Corps, Army of the Potomac, from April, 1864; in
4th Brigade, 3d Division, 2d Corps, Army of the Potomac, from May 13, 1864;
in 1st Brigade, 3d Division, 2d Corps, Army of the Potomac, from July, 1864;
and it was honorably discharged and mustered out, under Col. Michael W.
Burns, June 29, 1865, near Washington, D. C.
During its service the regiment lost by death, killed in action, 12
officers, 107 enlisted men; of wounds received in action, 5 officers, 29
enlisted men; of disease and other causes, 2 officers, 74 enlisted men;
total, 19 officers, 260 enlisted men; aggregate, 229; of whom 15 enlisted
men died in the hands of the enemy.
The following is taken from
The Union army: a history of military affairs in the loyal states,
1861-65 -- records of the regiments in the Union army -- cyclopedia of
battles -- memoirs of commanders and soldiers. Madison, WI: Federal
Pub. Co., 1908. volume II.
Seventy-third Infantry.—Cols., William R. Brewster, Michael W. Burns, James
Fairman; Lieut.-Cols., William McCanley, Michael W. Burns, James McKenna,
Lewis Benedict, Jr.; Majs., Michael W. Burns, John P. Lawrence, Lawrence H.
Thompson, John D. Moriarty. The 73d, the 4th regiment of the Excelsior
brigade, was sometimes known. as the 2nd Fire Zouaves, having for its
nucleus, the New York fire department. It was recruited principally in, New
York city and mustered into the U. S. service at Staten island, July 8 to
Oct. 8, 1861. It left New York for Washington Oct. 8; was assigned to
Sickles' brigade, Hooker's division, which became-in March, 1862, the 2nd
brigade, 2nd division, 3d corps of the Army of the Potomac, and served
during the first winter at Good Hope, Md. It moved to the Peninsula with
McClellan's army in April, 1862; participated in the siege of Yorktown and
the battle of Will-iamsburg, meeting with its first severe loss in the
latter engagement, where 104 of the regiment were killed, wounded or
reported: missing and the troops displayed great courage and steadiness. At
Fair Oaks and during the Seven Days' battles the 73d was constantly in
action and was much in need of rest by the time it reached the camp at
Harrison's landing. On its way from the Peninsula to join Pope's forces the
brigade had a sharp engagement at Bris-toe Station, in which the regiment
lost 46 killed or wounded. It was active at the second Bull Run, was then
withdrawn to the defenses of Washington with the Excelsior brigade to
recuperate, and left for Falmouth in November. In the autumn of 1862 a new
company joined the regiment and in Jan., 1863, it received the members of
the 163d N. Y. infantry into its ranks. The 73d was active at
Fredericksburg; returned to its quarters at Falmouth; engaged at
Chancellorsville in May, 1863, but met its greatest losses at Gettysburg on
the second day of the battle, where 51 were killed, 103 wounded and 8
missing out of 324 engaged, or 50 per cent. The loss of the regiment at
Gettysburg included 4 officers killed and I wounded, and during its term of
service it lost 18 officers killed or mortally wounded, a loss only exceeded
by four other regiments in the army. It was engaged at Wapping heights,
Catlett's station, Brandy Station, at Kelly's ford and Locust Grove, and
went into winter quarters at Brandy Station. During the winter of 1863-64 a
sufficient number of men reenlisted to secure the continuance of the
regiment in the field as a veteran organization and in April, 1864, camp was
broken for the Wilderness campaign, in which the regiment served with the
2nd brigade, 4th division, 2nd corps until May 13, when it was assigned to
the 4th brigade, 3d division, 2nd corps. It lost 66 in the first two days'
fighting in the Wilderness, 30 at Spottsylvania, and continued in service
during the battles leading up to Petersburg. At the expiration of their term
of service the original members not reenlisted were mustered out and the
veterans and recruits consolidated into seven companies, which served from
July in the 1st brigade of the same division before Petersburg, where the
regiment participated in the various engagements of the brigade, the final
assault and pursuit to Appomattox. The 73d was mustered out at Washington,
June 29, 1865, having received on June 1, the veterans and recruits of the
120th N. Y. infantry. The total enrollment of the regiment was 1,326, of
whom 153 died from wounds and 76 died from accident, imprisonment or
disease. The regiment sustained its part nobly in a brigade which became
famous for its fighting qualities and well deserves its reputation as a
crack fighting regiment.New York State Division of Military and Naval
Affairs: Military History
From: http://www.dmna.state.ny.us/historic/reghist/civil/infantry/73rdInf/73rdInfMain.htm
Read the
full text of an article
published in the 1961 New-York Historical Society Quarterly about Frank
Ridgway and his exploits during the Civil War 1861 to 1864, based on
Ridgway's diary.
See the
surgical set of
Frank Ridgway, which was donated to New York University Medical College