Stone Sentinels, battlefield monuments of the American Civil War

128th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment

The monument to the 128th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment at Antietam is on Cornfield Avenue. it was dedicated in 1905 by the State of Pennsylvania. see location

 

The regiment was commanded at the Battle of Antietam by Colonel Samual L. Croasdale. The 128th was a recently formed unit signed up for nine months service which had been hurried into action with little drill or training.

 

Colonel Croasdale was killed in the Cornfield early in the day. Lieutenant Colonel William W. Hammersly took over, but was almost immediately severly wounded in the arm. Major Joel B. Warner then took command and rallied the regiment, which held its position until relieved. Captain William Andrews of Company E, who had commanded the regiment when it left Pennsylvania for Washington before any field officers had been commissioned, was also killed.

 

Corporal Ignatz Gresser of Company D earned the Medal of Honor at Antietam for carrying a wounded comrade from the field under fire.

 

 

From the monument:

 

128th

Pennsylvania

Volunteer

Infantry
1st Brigade 1st Division

12th Corps


Location 315 feet North

 

Casualties at Antietam
Killed 26
Wounded 86
Missing 6
Total 118

 

Recruited in Berks, Lehigh

and Bucks Counties

Battles participated in
Antietam
Chancellorsville

 

 

See more on the 128th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment during the Civil War

128th Pennsylvania Infantry monument at Antietam