Colonel Hiram Berdan

Robert Gray

Sergeant Major
Joined
Jul 24, 2012
Colonel Hiram Berdan (left) with famed sharpshooter, Truman ("California Joe") Head.
New York Public Library

Hiram Berdan (September 6, 1824 – March 31, 1893) was an American engineer, inventor and military officer, world-renowned marksman, and guiding force behind and commanding colonel of the famed United States Volunteer Sharpshooter Regiments during the American Civil War. He was the inventor of the Berdan rifle, the Berdan centerfire primer and numerous other weapons and accessories. In the summer and fall of 1861, he was involved in the recruiting of eighteen companies, from eight states, which were formed into two sharpshooter regiments with the backing of General Winfield Scott and President Abraham Lincoln. Berdan was named as Colonel of the resultant 1st and 2nd U.S. Sharpshooters on November 30, 1861. His men, who had to pass rigorous marksmanship tests, were dressed in distinctive green uniforms and equipped with the most advanced long-range rifles featuring telescopic sights. At the Battle of Gettysburg, his two regiments of sharpshooters played an important role in delaying Confederate attacks on Devil's Den and the Peach Orchard. In a sharp encounter in Pitzer's Woods on Seminary Ridge, the 1st U.S. Sharpshooters stalled the advancing Alabama brigade of Cadmus Wilcox. He was considered by many to be a crack marksman and innovator, but unfit for field command. Berdan subsequently invented numerous engines of war, including a twin-screw submarine gunboat, a torpedo boat for evading torpedo nets, a long-distance rangefinder and a distance fuse for shrapnel. Berdan died unexpectedly on March 31, 1893 and was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. (Wikipedia)

NY Public Library.jpg
 
According to the regimental history of the 11th Alabama, during the afternoon assault on the second day at Gettysburg; they received heavy fire on their right flank and rear from Berdan's 1st U.S.S.S and the 3rd Maine who were located in Pitzer's Woods. After receiving this fire, the 10th Alabama came up and assisted the 11th in driving the Union troops from the woods.
 
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