HISTORY
The Eighth Regiment was organized under the
provisions of an Act of Congress, approved July 22,
1861, as set forth in an official letter from the
President of the United States, dated Washington, D.
C., July 24, 1861, and from War Department, Washington,
D. C., dated July 29, 1861. The Regiment was fully
organized, officered and equipped by the 14th day of
September, at which time it was duly mustered into the
service of the United States, for three years, at Camp
Olden, Trenton, N. J., by Charles H. Brightly, First
Lieutenant Fourth Infantry, U. S. Army. It left the
State, October 1, 1861, with a full complement of men.
Officers, 38; Non-Commissioned Officers and Privates,
851. Total, 889.
Upon arrival at Washington, the Regiment went into
Camp at Meridian Hill, D. C., and there remained until
the early part of December, 1861, at which time, in
connection with the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Regiments,
they were ordered to report under command of Colonel
Samuel H. Starr, Fifth Regiment, (the senior officer,)
to General Joseph Hooker, U. S. Volunteers, near Budd's
Ferry, Md., where they were brigaded and designated the
Third Brigade, Hooker's Division.
Under the provisions of General Orders, No. 191, War
Department, Adjutant General's Office Washington, D.
C., June 25, 1863, a large number of the enlisted men
re-enlisted in the field, for three years, or during
the war. Those who did not re-enlist and whose term of
service having expired, reported by order at Trenton,
N. J., and were mustered out by James W. Long, Captain
Second Infantry, U. S. Army, September 21, 1864. Those
who remained were consolidated into and were known as
the Eighth Battalion, and so remained until the 12th of
October, 1864, at which time the Sixth Battalion was
joined to it by transfer. The command was then re
organized and resumed its regimental organization.
At different times during the years 1864 and 1865
the strength of the Regiment was augmented by the
joining from Draft Rendezvous, Trenton, N. J., of large
numbers of substitutes. Under the provisions of Special
Orders, No. 194, Par. 45, War Department, Adjutant
General's Office, Washington, D. C., April 29, 1865,
all unassigned recruits and substitutes on duty with
the Regiment, were organized into a Company, and were
designated Company K.
The Regiment continued its organization until the
close of the war, and those coming under the provisions
of General Orders, No. 26, Head Quarters Army of the
Potomac, dated May 17, 1865, were discharged at
Washington, D. C., June 4, 1865, the remainder were
mustered out of service near Washington, D. C., July
17, 1865, by Timothy W. Kelly, Captain 164th Regiment
Infantry, New York Volunteers, Assistant Commissary of
Musters, Second Division, Provisional Corps, Army of
the Potomac, in compliance with orders from War
Department, Adjutant General's Office, Washington, D.
C., July 7, 1865.
This Regiment constituted one of the Four Regiments
composing what was generally known as the Second
Brigade, New Jersey Volunteers, and was first attached
to the Third Brigade, Hooker's Division; afterward to
the Third Brigade, Second Division, Third Corps; then
to the First Brigade, Fourth Division, Second Corps;
then to the Third Brigade, Third Division, Second
Corps; and at the close of the war was attached to what
was known as the Provisional Corps, Army of the
Potomac.
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