Strike The Tent...
21 March 2007
  New Civil War Book Depicts Pennsylvania's Luckiest Regiment
LANCASTER, PA, MARCH 7, 2007: The summer of 1862 saw the Union army in the midst of a potential crisis that might well have left the supporters of the Federal Government despairing the outcome of the war. Thousands of Union troops who had enlisted the previous summer were about to be mustered out of the service, their one-year term of enlistment complete. State and Federal governments scrambled to replace these men, and to maintain the balance of military power. Fifteen emergency regiments were raised in the state of Pennsylvania, in July and August of 1862, enrolled to serve for a period of nine months. These 15,000 men would go a long way toward filling the vacancies that were threatening to cripple the Army of the Potomac. Though their numbers would help to swell the ranks of the army, these green volunteers were replacing men who had become veterans on many hard-fought battlefields of the war.

With only the scantest of military training, they would be called upon to turn back Robert E. Lee's invasion of Maryland, during the Antietam Campaign, learning the school of the soldier on the battlefield rather than in a camp of instruction. The 137th Pennsylvania was one of the fifteen emergency regiments raised by the Commonwealth. The Luckiest Regiment in the Army of the Potomac - With Corporal John A. Rhode and the 137th Pennsylvania Infantry from South Mountain Through The Gettysburg Campaign tells the history of the regiment through the diary entries of one of its members, Corporal John A. Rhode. During the time of its enlistment, the 137th Pennsylvania saw service at South Mountain, Antietam, Fredericksburg, and Chancellorsville, being several times under fire from enemy artillery and musketry. It took part in several of the bloodiest battles of the war, while sustaining only one casualty attributed to combat, that being a wounded man in their last battle, at Chancellorsville, where their brigade was a victim of friendly fire. Indeed, the 137th Pennsylvania was extremely lucky to have faced the elephant on so many fields without ever being bloodied by the enemy.
Following the expiration of its tour of duty, many members of the regiment volunteered in the Pennsylvania Minute Men to oppose the advance of Robert E. Lee's Army during the Gettysburg Campaign. Without pay, provisions or military status, they manned the fortified passes in the mountains east of Altoona,

Pennsylvania to guard against a Confederate movement against the Pennsylvania Railroad or the Railroad shops, at Altoona. The book also follows the military career of Corporal Rhode through his second enlistment, with the 9th Pennsylvania Cavalry. Rhode's personal luck finally failed him, in Georgia, during the Atlanta Campaign. Robert P. Broadwater of Blair County, Pennsylvania edited and compiled the book. He is the author of more than 20 books and dozens of articles on the American Civil War. Quaker Hills Press published Broadwater’s book as part of its growing titles about Pennsylvania history and the Civil War. The Luckiest Regiment in the Army of the Potomac With Corporal John A. Rhode and the 137th Pennsylvania Infantry From South Mountain Through The Gettysburg Campaign(ISBN978-1-881204-00-8; 1-881204-00-6) is now available for $9.95 in most bookstores or directly from Quaker Hills Press Incorporated at www.quakerhillspress.com.
 
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Location: Gordonville, Pennsylvania, United States
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