Philadelphia
(1811)
On March 30, 1811, a law was passed authorizing
a regimental organization of the cavalry; existing
troops were to retain their respective uniforms.
The provisions of this law were accepted by the
officers of the several units of the city and county
of Philadelphia. Troop Captain Robert Wharton was
elected Colonel of the Regiment's combined troops.
The War
of 1812 with Great Britain (1812 - 1814)
The differences that existed following the War of
Independance between the United States and Great Britain
resulted in a declaration of war by Congress on June
18, 1812, and four days later the regiment of cavalry
offered its services to the Government. During 1812
and 1813 the Troop drilled several time a month.
On August 25, 1814, news came of the Battle of Bladensburg
and the capture of the city of Washington. A requisition
was made on Pennsylvania for fourteen thousand men.
The Troop under Captain Charles Ross tendered its
services on August 27th and was ordered to act as
vedettes on the line between the Delaware River and
the Chesapeake Bay, protecting Philadelphia from the
expected advance of the British forces north from
Washington.
On September 11th eight ships were seen heading for
Baltimore, and on September 13th the firing of heavy
guns was reported. The enemy was repulsed on September
15th. That day the Troop received an order from the
Committee of Defense in Philadelphia to establish
an extra line of scouts to Baltimore to bring intelligence
of the movements of the enemy's ships in the bay.
Former Brigadier General Robert Wharton, who had been
Captain of the Troop from 1803 to 1811, was serving
once again with the Troop for the campaign as a private
Trooper. He was taking his scheduled turn as one of
the Troop's cooks when news reached him, on October
16th, the he was being called back to the city to
serve for the fourth time as the Mayor of Philadelphia.
By December 7th, 1814, the threat to the City of Philadelphia
had passed. The camp at Mount Bull was struck and
on December 12th the Troop was discharged from service
in the campaign.
Philadelphia
(1821 - 1842)
By the time, on November 17th, 1824, that the Troop
celebrated its 50th anniversary with a dinner at the
Franklin House, the Troop had seen much action both
in the defense of the colonies against foreign threats
and in recurrent duty to suppress civilian unrest
and insurrection. It had become increasingly clear
that the organization would carry on in the less spectacular
times of peace as well.
Conforming to drill regularions and the expanding
militia's requirements, it proved itself ready on
numerous occasions to serve either the Commonwealth
or the Nation. It had set standards that influenced
and encouraged the growth of similar units. Many members
helped to organize or served in military organizations
of a like nature.
In civilian and pubic life the membership carried
on the traditions begun by the Troop's founders. By-laws
and uniform regulations were adopted and closely attended
to. The claim of the Troop that it take the right
of the line in all parades was legally established
in the Militia Act of April 2, 1821. Efforts were
made to record the organization's early history, and
the "Donnaldson Narrative" was prepared and original
documents filed for preservation in the archives.
In the autumn of 1826, the copper plate still used
today for the printing of membership certificates
was engraved by Cephas A. Childs and first put to
use.
November 17th - the anniversary of George Washington's
birthday - had long since been defined as "the day
we celebrate," and the Sunday nearest the anniversary
of Washington's death had become the occasion of an
annual church service. The dinner celebrations were
held in rented halls (the Troop possessing no permanent
facilities at the time) and the services were traditionally
held at St. Peters on Pine Street or Christ's Church
on Second Street -- places where founding Troopers
often worshiped with General Washington during and
after winning of the Nation's independence. The fifteen
years under Captain William H. Hart, 1827 to 1842,
were to see these ceremonies mellow into traditions
which are still upheld today, while at the same time,
the pattern of the organization's military duties
became even more clearly defined.
The War
with Mexico (1845 - 1846)
The Republic of Mexico declared war against the United
States on June 4th, 1845, but hostilities did not
begin until the following spring, when a proclamation
of a state of war was issued by President Polk. Although
there was no call for cavalry, Captain John Butler
raised a volunteer company of dragoons in Philadelphia
for the regular United States Service that served
in the Mexican Campaign. Several individual members
of the Troop served with distinction during the campaign.
First
Facilities
An armory of sorts was established in 1853 by the
renting and furnishing of a front room on the third
floor of a building at Eighth and Chestnut Streets.
Up to this time, there had been no permanentl meeting
place for the Troop. Business meetiings had been held
in the "Captain's quarters," or in rooms hired in
various hotels and taverns. Some were held "in the
saddle" and a number at the "castle" on the grounds
of the State in Schuylkill. It was not until 1863
that the Troop was to build its first permanent armory
at Twenty-first and Ludlow Streets (then Ash Street).
The Civil
War (1861 - 1864)
The drift of political affairs in 1861 made it evident
that the Troop might be called into active service.
When the call for volunteers was made by the federal
government on April 15th 1861, the Troop at once tendered
its services. As a unit, First City Troop was the
only volunteer cavalry organization accepted under
President Lincoln's first ninety-day call up of state
militia units. Ultimately, First City Troop played
an integral part in the Civil War, both as a Pennsylvania
militia unit and by the actions of individual First
City Troopers serving with other units. The impact
of their involvement was deep and far-reaching.
In accordance with time-honored custom, Divine Service
was attended at St. Peter's Church on the Sunday preceding
departure for active duty and on May 13th, 1861, the
Troop was mustered into service for ninety days. Each
man was equipped at his own expense with the uniform
of the United States Dragoons. The War Department
agreed to supply arms, horse furniture and camp equipage,
but horses and many other necessities were unavailable
from Washington. To meet these needs, $4,050 was contributed
by members and friends of the unit.
The unit left on May 30th to join the 2nd U.S. Cavalry
at Carlisle. and by June 7th it had reached Williamsport
on the Potomac. The Troop led the main body across
the river to Falling Water, VA. On reconnaisance the
following day, the Troop encountered a small body
of mounted Confederates who retreated without offering
resistance. After a day of uneventful maneuvering,
the Troop was again near Falling Water, when skirmishers
on the front and right flank became engaged with the
enemy. The forces of the Confederacy on that field
were infantry commanded by Colonel "Stonewall" Jackson
and cavalry commanded by Colonel J.E.B. Stuart. On
the Union side the First Wisconsin, Eleventh Pennsylvania
Rangers, McMullin's Rangers, Perkins' Battery and
the First City Troop were brought to bear.
As the battle was joined, the Troop was hurried to
the top of a hill in support of one section of Perkins'
Battery. There a brisk fire was opened upon the enemy.
Although the encounter was brief and losses not heavy
on either side, it was the first engagement of the
Civil War in which troops had been used in any numbers
in a systematic manner. Colonel J.J. Abercrombie,
the brigade commander, wrote: "Captain Hudson's second
Light Battery and the City Troop under Captain (Thomas
C.) James aided materially in driving the enemy from
the field."
Following this first battle, the Troop saw duty at
Bunker Hill, Charlestown, Harper's Ferry, Key's Ferry
and Sandy Hook, Maryland, as well as keeping pickets
on the south side of the Potomac. Upon the expiration
of its three month's service the organization was
ordered home. It was complimented in orders by its
Commanding General and Colonel George H. Thomas, who
commanded the Brigade, as well as by General Robert
Patterson. In retrospect, as a "school for cavalry
officers," the Battle of Falling Water was invaluable.
As the war increased in scope and ferocity, many additional
cavalry units would be formed for federal service.
Ultimately, forty-nine members of the Active Roll
of April 15, 1861, as well as eight members of the
Honorary and Non-Active Rolls, would serve as officers
in these new federal units.
After federal service was complete, the Troop returned
to Philadelphia and mustered out on August 17th, 1861.
Many members of the Troop subsequently volunteered
to join the Union Army. Concurrently, the Troop recruited
new members to fill the vacancies of those marching
off to battle in federal ranks. The Troop - as a unit
- would continue its traditions and its service to
the Commonwealth throughout the war.
In early May of 1862 the Troop offered its services
to protect the City of Washington which again appeared
to be in peril. Before the Troop's offer could be
accepted, however, the Confederate forces fell back.
The subsequent disasterous campaign of the Virginia
Peninsula caused alarm in the North and the Troop
met daily to recruit and to train new members. In
September, when the Confederate Army had crossed the
Potomac and encamped at Frederick, the Troop planned
to organize a cavalry regiment which would by officered
by its current members. A large storeroom was rented
as a recruiting station, and five hundred men were
promptly enlisted. The project had to be abandoned
however, because at this stage in the war, horses
and other requisite equipment were unavailable from
the state and difficult to procure in such numbers
on the civilian economy.
On April 4th, 1863, The Governor of Pennsylvania signed
the Act of Incorporation of the First Troop Philadelphia
Cavalry, which had previously been approved by the
State Legislature.
Gettysburg
On June 15th, 1863, following the advance of the Confederate
Army into the Cumberland Valley, President Lincoln
called out 50,000 militia. At this stage, most members
of First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry were serving
with other federal units or had already become casualties
of the war. The thirty one remaining members organized
under Cornet Samuel J. Randall, furnished themselves
with horses and equipment, and rode for Harrisburg,
arriving there on June 19th. They were immediately
accepted into service without swearing in and ordered
to Gettysburg. At 4:00 AM on the 21st of June, the
Troop was the first military unit to arrive on the
scene of what was about to become the pivotal battle
of the Cival War. The residents of Gettysburg, relieved
to see Union soldiers, were extremely generous to
the Troop, then and throughout the campaign. Given
the paucity of the Troop's commissary supplies, this
generousity was greatly appreciated and long remembered.
At Gerrysburg, Cornet Randall reported to Major Granville
O. Haller. In that no one was certain where General
Lee and his vast force might be, Cornet Randall was
immediately ordered to take a detail of ten men to
reconnoiter the Chambersburg Turnpike toward Cashtown.
There they captured two Confederate soldiers who were
sent to the rear under the escort of three Troopers.
The reconnaissance established the presence of Jenkins'
Brigade of Stuart's Cavalry Corps, operating between
Williamsport and Chambersburg, which was military
intelligence of significant import at this preliminary
stage of the battle.
The same afternoon, in response to rumors of a force
approaching Fairfield, the remainder of the Troop
was ordered out to reconnoiter, accompanied by Major
Haller and Captain Bell with an additional squad of
cavalry which had arrived. Just east of Fairfield
they observed about one hundred and sixty Confederate
mounted infantry scouting the countryside for forage
and remounts. The main Confederate body was stationed
on the outsikirts of the town while detachments were
sent out in various directions. Major Haller left
Captain Bell and his cavalry squad in place and cautiously
led the First City Troopers to within a half mile
of the town. From that point he ordered a charge that
swept through the town, driving the enemy back to
a nearby mountain pass.
For the next few days the Troop was employed on patrols
covering roads leading in the direction of the enemy.
Split into three detachments on June 25th, the Troop
continued to live in the saddle, observing and reporting
on the enemy's movements. Shots were frequently exchanged
on these missions as Troopers swung close to ememy
formations or galloped in even closer in quest of
prisoners needed for intelligence purposes.
In one instance, operating together on a mission to
York, the entire Troop was nearly enveloped, narrowly
escaping capture by riding long and hard. The Troop
reached York so covered with mud and grime as to be
unrecognizable as either Union or Confederate. From
York the Troop moved to Wrightsville and from there
across the Susquehanna to Columbia, where it spent
the night. The next day it recrossed to observe the
enemy advancing in force under General John B. Gordon.
A formation of recently raised militia infantry, operating
in that area, was engaged by Gordon's force. Many
of the Union militia were quickly enveloped and captured
by the battle-hardened Confederate regulars. The Troop's
efforts were essential in preserving order among the
many others who were near panic, particularly as the
last of these companies approached the bridge over
the Susquehanna with Gordon's infantry hot on their
heels. The military authorities on the scene determined
to destroy the bridge which, with it's twenty-one
spans across the Susquehanna, was more than a mile
long. Four Troopers detailed under the supervision
of Major Knox of the 9th New York CIty Cavalry set
to work setting fire to the bridge at sundown of June
28th. This heroic task took place under the guns of
the Confederate soldiers. When the Confederates drove
the Troopers from the bridge and attempted to extinguish
the fires it was too late. The bridge was fully engulfed
by the flames and, by midnight, the destruction was
complete. General Gordon, writing years later, stated
that the destruction of that single bridge at that
moment in the battle eliminated any possibility of
a march on Philadelphia.
A scouting party of twenty-one men crossed the Susquehanna
on July 2nd in flat boats and proceeded toward York.
Betrayed by an informer, the unit was forced to break
off its march and take up defensive positions in a
cemetary near Heidelburg. The men slept with sentries
posted at the extremeties of a short crossroads, their
horses tethered nearby, saddled and ready. In the
early evening a thunder of hooves was heard on the
main road from Harrisburg to Gettysburg and on a parallel
road that branches off from York Springs and runs
to Hunterstown. About 6,000 of J.E.B. Stuart's cavalry
were observed traversing these roads far into the
night. During their passage they completely surrounded
the cemetary but never discovered the squad. Sergeant
Robert E. Randall hovered with this small command
on the outskirts of the ensuing battle at Rommel's
Farm, taking a number of stragglers and sixty horses.
The detachement rejoined the Troop on July 6th near
Harrisburg. On July 15th the entire Troop was ordered
to Philadelphia, where a riot was threatened, opposing
the draft newly ordered by President Lincoln. The
Troop was discharged on July 31, after remaining on
duty during the draft.
Although the Troop did not participate directly in
any of the grinding and colossal battles which changed
the course of the Civil War, history duly notes that
the efforts of the First City Troop and Bell's Cavalry
alerted the Union forces to the presence and intentions
of the Confederate formations, providing Union General
Meade the insight he needed to correctly move and
position his forces in the critical hours leading
up to the historic engagement. In addition, historians
agree that the various cavalry skirmishes which involved
the Troop in the eastern gorges delayed the Confederate
movement in force across South Mountain. In fact,
so well did these "irregular" forces meet the enemy
advance, Confederate leaders believed they were already
confronting the battle tested forward security elements
of the Army of the Potomac. This gave Federal troops
much needed time to move into the Gettysburg area.
The difference of a single day could have changed
the outcome of the campaign in the Confederate's favor.
First City Troop received the prestigious honor of
escorting President Lincoln in June of 1864 on his
visit to Philadelphia, but less than one year later
an assassin's bullet compelled the grief-stricken
Troopers to don their uniforms for their President
again, this time as escort and honor guard for the
funeral procession of the slain Commander-in-Chief.
Many First City Troopers performed admirably throughout
the war in Federal service, providing outstanding
examples of sacrifice and duty. Captain James, commander
of First City Troop during the first ninety-day call-up,
later commanded the 9th Pennsylvania Cavalry Regiment
and was considered to be among the best of the Union
cavalry commanders. Lieutenant Price, another First
City Troop officer, recruited the 2nd Pennsylvania
Cavalry and became their Lieutenant Colonel, and much
of the officer corps of the 6th Pennsylvania Cavalry
(Lancers) was comprised of First City Troopers.
The men of First City Troop acquitted themselves with
honor, skill and courage throughout the Civil War
and provided the country a shining example of the
role of the citizen-soldier during one of the darkest
periods in United States history.
At the October meeting of the Troop in 1865, Generals
Grant, Meade, Sheridan, Thomas, Torbert and Crawford,
as well as Admirals Farragut and Porter were elected
to the Honorary Roll of the First Troop Philadelphia
City Cavalry. Generals Meade and Torbert were present
as guests of the Troop at the Anniversary Dinner on
November 17th, along with Generals Patterson and Cadwalader.
In 1867, the Militia Act of 1864 was amended and this
secured for the Troop its "original vested rights,
priveleges and immunities." During these years the
unit was reorganized with the strong backing of Generals
Patterson, Meade and Cadwalader and the many members
who had served as officers under other guidons during
the War Between the States returned to the ranks of
the Troop.