|
James Burridge was
born on March 23, 1847 at Crediton, Devon, England.
The
1851
census for Devon lists a James Burridge, age 3, living and
born in Crediton on Fordtown Road. It lists his father as one
John Burridge, age 50 and a farm labourer, his mother as Mary
A. Burridge at age 45 and a flax weaver, a sister Emma
Burridge age 20 and unmarried, a brother John age 15, a sister
Mary A. at age 12 and a brother George at age 6; all born at
Crediton. |
|
Burridge
arrived in America and according to his enlistment records,
roll 19 No. M551, he enlisted in the 33rd.
Independent Battery of New York Artillery on July 15, 1863.
The 33rd Independent
Battery Light Artillery, however,
according to regimental histories and governmental records,
was organized at
Buffalo, New York and mustered in at Elmira,
New York on September 4, 1863.
So if he joined in July, he would have had to
have enlisted during the time the regiment was actually being
organized and have been mustered into it upon its
organizational completion. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The regiment then left New York for Washington,
D.C. on September 4, 1863 and was attached to Camp Barry and
the Defences of Washington, 22nd Army Corps until February
1864. The 33rd saw duty at Yorktown and Gloucester
Point, Virginia, Butler's operations on south side of the
James River and against Petersburg and Richmond, operations
against Fort Darling, the occupation of City Point and Bermuda
Hundred, Virginia, the Battle of Drury's Bluff, the
siege operations against Petersburg and Richmond, saw duty in the
Defences of Bermuda Hundred, Virginia, participated in operations
resulting in the fall of Petersburg and Richmond and stood duty at
Petersburg until June when it was mustered out on June 25, 1865.
Records reveal James Burridge was discharged on June 25, 1865. |
| |
|
33rd Indiana
Battalion Guidon Flag |
|
|
|
After the war Burridge again enlisted in
the U.S. military, on August 12, 1865 at Rochester, New York,
into Company C, 1st. Battalion, 14th.
Infantry. The 14th Infantry
was originally activated in
July 1798, soon after the Revolutionary War but was disbanded
in June of 1800, activated again at the outset of the War of
1812, again called to arms in 1847 for the Mexican War and
when the Civil War
broke out in 1861, the
Fourteenth was again called to fight against the Confederacy.
It did so with conspicuous gallantry and its colors bear
twelve battle streamers reflecting participation in some of
the most famous battles of the Civil war; including
Manassas,
Antietam,
Fredricksburg,
Chancellorsville,
Gettysburg,
The
Wilderness,
Cold
Harbor,
and
Petersburg. |
|
| At the termination of
his 3 year enlistment with the 14th Burridge was
discharged at Camp Lincoln, Arizona Territory on August 12,
1868.Less than 3 months later Burridge again enlisted; on
November 6, 1868 at San Francisco, California, in Company L, 9th
Infantry and six month later on May 7, 1869, he was
transferred to Company L, 12th. Infantry;
eventually being discharged at Fort Yuma, California, on
November 6, 1871. Burridge then
returned to Crediton, England, his home, where he married Miss.
Eliza Mogridge at Crediton, on March 24, 1874; sailing to Australia
the following year. Upon arriving in Adelaide, South Australia
Burridge became a shoe-maker. Sixteen years after arriving in
Australia and his health failing, Burridge applied for an invalid
pension; in 1890. He said in his application that his reason for
applying was that during his service at Jamestown, Virginia in
December 1863 with the
33rd
Independent Battery of Light Artillery, he had
“-
--contracted the fever and ague and also rheumatism, which disease I
am still suffering at the present time and have been partially unfit
to perform manual labour
and am in a state of poverty” I never had the chance in those days
to be treated in a hospital as we were always fighting or running
and had to do our duty”.
|
| |
|
His original pension
application, under number 722681 wasn’t granted, but a pension
was later granted, under pension number 1074220, and a sum of
$50 per month was awarded; due to “fever, ague and rheumatism”
acquired during his duty at Jamestown. He and his wife lived
in Adelaide, South Australia where they lived largely on his
pension, until his death in 1905. He was survived by his wife
and five children.
James Burridge
died on July 29, 1925 and was buried Pioneer Park Section,
West Terrace Cemetery, Adelaide, South Australia.
|
|
|
|
| Many years later a bronze
plaque was acquired from the American Veterans Administration in
Washington D.C. and erected in the Pioneer Section of West
Terrace Cemetery, in commemoration of his service to the United
States. |
|
|
|
The former
home of James Burridge - 21 Little Sturt St., Adelaide,
South Australia |
| |
|
|
|
The unmarked grave of James
Burridge
33rd. Battery of New York
Independent Artillery
West Terrace Cemetery, Adelaide,
S.A. |
|
|
A
Compendium of the War of the Rebellion. Frederick H. Dyer, Dayton,
Ohio, 1978.
Brown,
Fred R. History of the Ninth US Infantry, 1799-1909. Chicago:
Donnelley & Sons, 1909
Burridge Discharge Records - Crediton Parish Archives, England
Crediton Parish Library, England - New York Regimental Histories
“Infantry Regiments of the US Army”,
James A. Sawicki, Dumfries, Va., 1981
Report
of the Adjutant-General, New York
“The Ninth Regiment of Infantry”,
Captain E. B. Robertson, 9TH U. S. Infantry
“The Twelth Regiment of Infantry”,
Lieut. Charles W. Abbot, Jr., Adj. 12TH U. S.
Infantry
U.S. Pensions, Washington, D.C. -
West Terrace Cemetery Records,
Adelaide
John Brunton,
Principal Archivist, Devon Record Office, Great Moor House, Sowton, Exeter, UK
Royal Australian Historical Society Library
Collection Files |