Before & After: Palmer

Mike Serpa

Lt. Colonel
Joined
Jan 24, 2013
John Palmer (1842-1905) - 91st NY Volunteers. Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic 1891-1892. Secretary of State of New York 1894-1898.
John Palmer.jpg

John Palmer.jpg

Souvenir program, G. A. R., 26th national encampment, Washington, D. C., September 20th, 1892
https://archive.org/stream/souvenirprogramg00wash#page/n5/mode/2up

I posted this photo on Find A Grave. His current wikipedia photo is horrible. Does anyone here post on wikipedia and want to add this photo?
 
His record.... He is from Albany

PALMER , JR. , JOHN.—Age , 19 years. Enrolled, September 10, 1861, at Albany, to serve tliree years; mustered in as corporal, Co. B, September 19, 1861; promoted sergeant prior to April , 1863; sergeant-major, October 11, 1863; re-enlisted as a veteran, January 1, 1861; mustered in as second lieutenant, Co. D, September 3, 1861; transferred to Co. G, March 12, 1865; severely injured in action, Apri l 1, 1865, at Five Forks , Va. , while in command of Co. G ; mustered in as first lieutenant, Co. H , to date March 1, 1865; mustered out with company, July 3, 1865, near Washington, D. C , captain, New Yor k Volunteers, by brevet. Commissioned second lieutenant, June. 20, 1861, with rank from June 13, 1861, vice J . Reilly promoted; first lieutenant, March 30, 1865, with rank from March 1, 1865, vice A . Dodds promoted.

More Bio. He died at home in Albany, NY...


From Albany City Historian Virginia Bowers:
Hon. John Palmer, Secretary of State, is a son of John who died in the Civil war in 1863. He was
born to English parentage in Stapleton, Staten Island, N.Y., March 22, 1842, and in 1843 went
with his parents to England, were he lived ten years, two of which were spent with his
grandfather on the Black Sea, where he witnessed the siege of Sebastopol. He spent three years
in a semi-military school near Liverpool and in 1853 returned with the family to America and
learned the trade of fresco painting, meanwhile finishing his education at Bryant and Straton's
Business College in Albany. September 10, 1861, he enlisted as a private in Co. B. 91st N.Y.
Vols., was commissioned Captain March 1, 1865, and mustered out with the regiment July 3,
1865, being brevetted Captain N.Y.V. His first service was in the Department of the Gulf, where
he displayed great bravery at Port Hudson in the River Campaign. He was afterward transferred
to the Army of the Potomac and at Five Forks received injuries from a falling horse, from which
he never recovered. In 1865 he resumed his trade as a painter and a frescoer, in Albany, which he
has since followed. In 1866 he became a Charter Member of Lew Benedict Post No. 5, G.A.R.
and in 1875 was Department Commander. He was elected Commander-in-Chief of the G.A.R. in
1891, when he led a column of 60,000 veterans through the streets of Washington. He was
prominent in the erection of the Solder's Home at Bath, N.Y., and is President of the Board of
Trustees and has been indefatigable in promoting the interests of veterans of the war. He has
always been an active Republican, casting his first vote for Lincoln in 1860, and in 1893 was
unanimously nominated by his party for Secretary of State and elected over Cord Meyer, a
Democrat, by a 24,484 plurality. In 1895 he was re-elected to this office over Horatio C. King
by a majority of 90,146.

In 1867 Mr. Palmer married Maggie Moore of Albany and they had one daughter and three sons.

Mr. Palmer died at his home on Madison Ave, Albany on April 15, 1905.

Research and information provide by City of Albany Historian Virginia Bowers.

His GAR Bio...

John Palmer was the 20th Commander-in-Chief
of the Grand Army of the Republic.

He enlisted September 10, 1861 as a Corporal
in Company B, 91st New York Volunteers. His
father and brother were also in the Civil War.
He was wounded in battle April 1, 1865 and
after the war he returned to Albany. He was a
Charter Member of Post No. 5 and was the
New York Department Commander in 1875.

When he was Commander-in-Chief of the GAR
he marched at the head of a column of 80,000
veterans in the nation's capital at the 26th
National Encampment.

He was Secretary of State of New York State
from 1894 to 1897 and helped establish the the State Soldiers Home at Bath, New York.

He died at his home in Albany on April 15, 1905.
 
How is was wounded at Five Forks... Avoid a Horse...

John Palmer of Albany Company H, 91st New York Infantry, Brevet Captain
Elected New York Department Commander at Rochester, January 21, 1875
Elected Commander-in-Chief at Detroit, August 6, 1891
Died at Albany, New York April 15, 1905

Albany, April 15.- Captain John Palmer died in this city today after a long illness, death resulting from a wound in the spine which he received in the Civil War. He was Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic in 1892. He was elected Secretary of State of New York on the Republican ticket in 1893 and held that office for four years.

Captain Palmer was born in Staten Island on March 22, 1842, his father being a man of very moderate means. Prior to 1860 the family moved to Albany, where the opened a small paint shop, in which the son worked. When the Civil War broke out the Palmers were among the first to enlist. The father was killed on the battlefield before Petersburg, Virginia and the son taken off for dead.

At the battle of Five Forks, the horse ridden by Adjutant of Major Garrison's commander was shot from under him and fell on Captain Palmer's back and nearly severing the spine but a delicate operation and careful nursing brought him around again.

After returning from he war he started in the painting business for himself. Palmer was one of the founders of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Home at Bath, Steuben County and through his efforts $50,000 was raised.
 

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