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Born on September 30, 1825, a native of Scotland.
Campbell arrived in New York City on June 30, 1828, and was
naturalized on October 20, 1848. He resided in Watertown, NY and
when he was 37 years old he enlisted at Watertown, New York on
September 11, 1862, as a Captain in the 10th New York Heavy
Artillery, and was commissioned into Co. "M" New York 10th
Heavy Artillery on September 11, 1862.
He was later promoted to the rank of Major, one source says
on January 14, 1863, another says on February 4, 1863, and
then to Lieutenant Colonel on June 27, 1865; but was not
mustered. On February 4, 1865 Campbell was
transferred within the regiment from Company M to Field and
Staff and Campbell was wounded in action on April 2, 1865.
On July 18, 1865 Campbell was transferred out of Field and Staff of
his Regiment into the Field & Staff of the New York 6th
Heavy Artillery. He was finally mustered out of service completely
on August 24, 1865 at Washington, DC. The 10th New York Heavy
Artillery in which a 3-years enlistment was standard,
was organized in December 31, 1862 at Sackett’s Harbor, New York,
under Colonel Alexander Piper, of the 4th, 5th and 7th Battalions of
Artillery.
The consolidation came about from orders of the War
Department, on December 27, 1862. Companies A, B, C, D, E, F, G and
M were consolidated and mustered into the service on September 11th,
with H and I following on September 12th. On November 12th
Company K was mustered at Staten Island, followed by Company L on
December 27, 1862 at Fort Schuyler. They began their
tour in March 1863 with the defence of the Potomac under the
Department of Washington D.C..
The 4th Battalion served at Fort Richmond and Sandy Hook in
New York Harbour from September 1862 until June 1863, when
it left to join the other battalions.
The 5th and 7th Battalions left New York on September 17, 1862, and
served in the Defences of Washington, D. C. along with the 3rd
Brigade, Haskins' Division, 22nd Corps.
The regiment left Washington on May 24, 1864 and in June
1864 was assigned to the Army of the James and served in the
4th Brigade, 1st Division, 18th Corps, from June 5, 1864; in
the 1st Brigade, 2d Division, 18th Corps, from June 24,
1864; in the 1st Brigade, DeRussy's Division, transferred
back to the defence of the Potomac in July 1864, to the 22d
Corps, from August, 1864; in the 2d Brigade, Provisional
Division, with the Army of the Shenandoah, from September
27, 1864; back again to defending the Potomac in December
1864 and in the 2d Brigade, Ferrero's Division, Army of the
James, at Bermuda Hundred, from December, 1864, as heavy
artillery and infantry; with the Army of the James in April
1865 and Campbell wound up the war in an Infantry Division
Defending Bermuda Hundred. Campbell’s battalion remained in
service until June 23, 1865. On June 23d, 1865 the
regiment, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel George DePeyster
Arden, was honorably discharged and mustered out of service
at Petersburg, Virginia. Those men not entitled to a
discharge were transferred to Companies E, F and G which
were assigned to the 6th New York Volunteer Artillery, a
second organization, as Companies E, F and G; on July 19,
1865. During their tour of duty the New York 10th
Heavy Artillery lost none of its officers but had 47
enlisted men killed or mortally wounded and 218 die of
disease or accidents.
Like many soldiers James Brown
Campbell returned home after the war remaining in and around New
York State until his appearance in Melbourne in1878 or 1879.
Not much is known about his life after the war, except that he
resided in Melbourne and was scalded by hot water at the City
Bath, on March 19, 1905 and died of shock on March 30, 1905.
James Brown Campbell today is buried in Boroondara Cemetery in
Kew,
a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria,
Australia. His obituary
stated that he was a widower, with a grown up family in Chicago,
Illinois. |
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Boroondara Cemetery, Kew, Victoria
Dyer, Frederick H.
A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion. vol 1.
Lyman Baker,
Commander, Sydney Camp 41, Ithaca, NY
The Union Army,
Vol. 2
War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official
Records of the Union and
Confederate Armies, Washington, Series I, Vol.
36 & 46
PHOTOS
Tom Jones & Floyd DeWitt
Lyman Baker,
Commander, Sydney Camp 41, Ithaca, NY |