Showing posts with label Peter E Borst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peter E Borst. Show all posts

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Peter E. Borst, First Lieutenant, 3rd New York Cavalry

Company D.

Cobleskill — Farmer; single; age 24; enlisted August, 1861; injured by dislocation of right shoulder, while on drill at Poolsville, Md.; wounded by gunshot through right elbow joint, during the "Wilson raid;" treated at Foster Hospital, Newberne; rejoined his company on detached service at Deep Gulley, N. C; received sabre cut on left shoulder at Little Washington, N. C; discharged as corporal, for re-enlistment, December 15, 1863; promoted to sergeant, to second lieutenant, to first lieutenant and to captain; mustered out as first lieutenant, July 12, 1865, at Suffolk, Va.; Albany, N. Y.; capitol orderly; married. Children, Lyra, Lansing, Guy, Kittie, Leland, Carlton.

SOURCE: George H. Warner, Compiler, Military Records Of Schoharie County Veterans Of Four Wars, p. 182-3

Peter E. Borst, 3rd New York Cavalry

Age 23 years. Enlisted June 10, 1861, at Cobleskill; mustered in as private, Company D, August 13, 1861, to serve three years; appointed corporal, no date recorded; re-enlisted December 16, 1863; promoted sergeant, date not recorded; mustered in as second lieutenant, Company K, January 9,1865; mustered out July 12,1865, at Suffolk, Va.; also borne as Peter E. Bust; commissioned as second lieutenant, December 7, 1864, with rank from November 30, 1864, vice Jeffries, discharged.

New York State Legislature, Documents of the Assembly of the State of New York, Volume 13,  p. 742

Only One Volunteer

A paper published at the county-seat of Schoharie county, N. Y., speaks of Peter Borst as the only volunteer from that town in the army.  We hear a great deal about Democrats making up our army, some saying there are 500,000 of that stripe in the service – others, more modest, claim twenty-five to one, two-thirds and a bare majority.  Here is a commentary on these pretensions.  One of the strongest Democratic counties in the State of New York, which can always be counted on by that party, furnishes one man from its county-seat for the army.  Now, we have no desire to underrate the patriotism of Democrats or any other portion of the people; men of all parties and factions have rallied to the help of the Union, and we would cast no reflections on any.  But Democratic papers are continually harping on the number of their party friends in the army, and casting slurs on the patriotism of their political opponents; and Republican papers, anxious for the success of our arms, and having no desire to create party bickering in the army, have allowed these insinuations generally to go unnoticed; knowing that time would show their falsity.  But in order to remind the partisan press that they are not invulnerable to criticism, we submit to their consideration the above item.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Monday Morning, February 17, 1862, p. 2