See also

Family of Charles M. APPLEMAN and Lavindee Jane PUTNAM

Husband: Charles M. APPLEMAN

  • Name:

  • Charles M. APPLEMAN

  • Sex:

  • Male

  • Father:

  • William APPLEMAN (1800-1872)

  • Mother:

  • Rebecca BIDDLEMAN (1809-1860)

  • Birth:

  • c. Sep 12, 1835

  • Warren, New Jersey2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9

  •  

  • The record on the Veterans Burial cards is the only evidence that is not based on calculations of age as in the other records. The birth year ranges in these records from 1833 to 1835 and only one record includes the month and day of birth. Assuming that he was born on September 12th then there is one source for a 1832 birth year, four sources showing 1833, and two sources for 1834 ans two sources for 1835. The most likely year of birth is 1835, but until a birth record is located, this year remains subject to interpretation. See the genealogical proof report on his birth.

  • Residence:

  • 1840 (age 4-5)

  • Oxford, Warren, New Jersey10

  • Residence:

  • 1850 (age 14-15)

  • Oxford, Warren, New Jersey3

  • Residence:

  • 1860 (age 24-25)

  • Providence Borough, Luzerne, Pennsylvania4

  • Occupation:

  • 1860 (age 24-25)

  • laborer, living in the dwelling of Pulaski Carter. As listed in the pension file he was a blacksmith; Providence Borough, Luzerne, Pennsylvania2,4,11

  •  

  • In 1860 Charles is listed as living in the household of Pulaski Carter. It is likely he worked for Mr. Carter. He had been variously reporting he was a "laborer", "blacksmith" and working in an ax factory. He is also listed after the war on the census of 1870 of working in a "ax factory". It is likely he returned to work as a blacksmith . It is unclear as to where he worked but it is likely he returned to work with Mr. Carter. Mr. Carter notably acted as a witness to a court hearing for Charles Appleman establishing him as a personal witness to his for his pension claim

     

    http://www.pieroth.org/scwhite/kennedy/capouse.html

  • Military:

  • Oct 12, 1861 (age 26)

  • mustered into service in the 52nd Regiment, Company H of the Pennsylvania Volunteers.; Pennslyvannia2,8,9,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19

  •  

  • Address: at Camp Curtis in Harrisburg

    His unit was organized at Camp Curtain in Harrisburg on 7th of October, 1861 when the regimental leadership established. The men were described by Bates in his record of the regiment were "well formed and hardy, and accustomed to the use of the rifle". They camped first at Kalorama Heights then in January of 1862 moved camp to Meridian hill where they moved into barracks, 16 feet wide and eighty feet long. They continued to train and many became sick of typoid and smallpox.

     

    Left State for Washington, D. C., November 8. Attached to 1st Brigade, Casey's Division, Army Potomac, to March, 1862. 1st Brigade, 3rd Division, 4th Army Corps, Army Potomac, to June, 1862.

    Duty in the Defences of Washington, D. C., till March, 1862. Advance on Manassas, Va., March 10-15. Moved to the Virginia Peninsula March 28. Siege of Yorktown April 5-May 4. Battle of Williamsburg May 5. Bottom's Bridge May 19-20. Operations about Bottom's Bridge May 20-23. Reconnaissance to Seven Pines May 24-27. Skirmishes at Seven Pines, Savage Station and Chickahominy May 24. Battle of Fair Oaks (Seven Pines) May 31-June 1.

  • Military:

  • Dec, 1861 (age 26)

  • promoted to corporal15

  • Military:

  • frm Jan, 1862 to Mar 28, 1862 (age 26)

  • stationed; Washington, Dc.13,17

  •  

  • Address: Camp Kalorma and then Meridian hill

  • Military:

  • frm Mar 28, 1862 to Apr 1, 1862 (age 26)

  • transported on the vessel "Constitution" to Newport News12,13,17

  • Illness:

  • Mar 28, 1862 (age 26)

  • bronchitis2

  • Illness:

  • Jun, 1862 (age 26)

  • phthisis pulmonalis2,15

  •  

  • In July and August of 1862 the Union Army Muster Roll for Co. H, 52nd Regiment showed he was "absent sick". He was marked as present in May and June 1862.

  • Illness:

  • frm Jul 7, 1862 to Aug 17, 1862 (age 26)

  • pneumonia, (was likely TB); Rhode Island2,20

  •  

  • Address: Porstmough Grove Hospital

  • Military:

  • Sep 18, 1862 (age 27)

  • discharged from service in the 52nd Regiment, Company H of the Pennsylvania Volunteers.; Pennslyvania2,8,15,19,21

  • Medical:

  • Sep 18, 1862 (age 27)

  • Pennslyvania2,15,19

  •  

  • He received a Surgeons Certificate from the U.S. Army, during his service with the 52nd Regiment, Company H of the Pennsylvania Volunteers. On the certificate is is noted he was unfit for duty for 110 days during the las two months of service. This shows he was first unfit for duty around May 31st. This contradicts the Muster Roll for that time which shows him as "present" in May and June of 1862

  • Residence:

  • Jul 1, 1863 (age 27)

  • Plymouth, Pennsylvania9

  • Fact:

  • Sep 4, 1866 (age 30)

  • Appeared in court for Declaration of an Invalid Pension; Scranton, Pennsylvannia2

  •  

  • Charles appeared on this day to file paperwork for his invalid pension. With him were witnesses Pulaski Carter, his former employer and Thomas C. Appleman his brother. The application includes a description of the "wound" he suffered while in the military which states he "contracted disease of lungs near Yorktown in the month of June 1862 from exposure in the swamps. Was sent to hospital at Yorktown on about the first of July, from there he was sent to Rhode Island, to Portsmouth Grove Hospital in a few days where he recovered about four weeks, then sent to Hestonville Hospital Philadelphia PA. where he remained until discharged as fore said."

  • Occupation:

  • 1870 (age 34-35)

  • working in an ax factory; Scranton, Pennsylvannia5

  • Residence:

  • 1870 (age 34-35)

  • Scranton, Pennsylvannia5

  •  

  • The census record shows his home is worth $500 and his personal personal estate is worth $200.

  • Fact:

  • Mar 5, 1879 (age 43)

  • Charles appeared in court in front of alderman W.M. Miller to state his claim for invalid pension2

  •  

  • This declaration states "That while a member of the organization afresaid, in the service and in the line of his duty at Yorktown, in the State of Virginia on or about the 18th of April, 1862 he was disabled by sickness (Phthisis Pulmonalis) by a cold taken while laying in a swamp hear Lees ???. That he was treated in hospitals as follows: at Yorktown about 1st of May and at Rhode Island about 10th July 1862.

  • Residence:

  • 1880 (age 44-45)

  • Scranton, Pennsylvannia7

  • Occupation:

  • 1880 (age 44-45)

  • teamster; Scranton7

  •  

  • Originally, the term "<b>teamster</b>" referred to a person who drove a team of draft animals, usually a wagon drawn by oxen, horses, or mules. This term was common by the time of the Mexican–American War (1848) and the Indian Wars throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries on the American frontier. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teamster)

  • Residence:

  • Jun, 1890 (age 54)

  • Pierce City, Missouri22

  •  

  • Not sure how he wound up in Pierce City Missouri in 1890

  • Residence:

  • Nov, 1895 (age 60)

  • Green Ridge Pennslyvania

  •  

  • Address: 532 Deacon Street

  • Occupation:

  • 1898 (age 62-63)

  • carpenter2

  • Physical Description:

  •  

  • 5 feet 9 inches tall with sandy hair, blue eyes

  • Death:

  • Oct 29, 1898 (age 63)

  • Green Ridge Pennslyvania2,6,8

  •  

  • Cause: from an embolism from heart disease

  • Burial:

  • Nov 1, 1898

  • Dunmore, Pennsylvannia2,6,8

  •  

  • Address: Dunmore Cemetery

  • Military:

  •  

  •  

  •  

  • <b>History

    </b>Col. John C. Dodge, Jr., c. 1900.

    Formed in response to President Abraham Lincoln's calls, during the spring and summer of 1861, for volunteers to enroll for military service, the 52nd Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry was composed primarily of men from Bradford, Clinton, Columbia, Luzerne, Union and Wyoming counties of Pennsylvania. Authority to recruit men for the regiment had been granted by Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin on August 1, 1861, to Lycoming County resident John C. Dodge, Jr., who had performed his three months' service during the opening months of the American Civil War.[1][2][3]

    Following their muster-in at Camp Curtin in Harrisburg, Dauphin County, the members of this regiment engaged in basic training at this Union Army camp until November 8, 1861.[4][5] While stationed here, John C. Dodge, Jr., Henry M. Hoyt, and John B. Conyngham were commissioned as field and staff officers on October 7, and awarded the respective ranks of colonel, lieutenant colonel, and major. The 52nd Pennsylvania also initially had its own regimental band, a 16-piece ensemble staffed by members of the Wyoming Cornet Band from Wilkes-Barre, which was under the baton of Professor Fred Wagner. As the 52nd readied for departure, Governor Curtin presented regimental leaders with state and national flags to be carried by the regiment's color-bearer unit.[6][7]

    On November 8, 1861, the regiment marched to the train station at Harrisburg, and was then transported to Washington, D.C. by way of York, Pennsylvania, and Baltimore and Relay Junction, Maryland.[8] Upon arrival in Washington, the 52nd Pennsylvania Volunteers were marched to the Kalorama Heights in Georgetown, where they made camp at "Camp Kalorama," and received additional training.[9][10]

    <b>1862

     

    </b>Ordered into winter quarters, the 52nd Pennsylvania Volunteers were housed in barracks "on Meridian Hill, at Fourteenth street, in the rear of Columbia College," according to Bates. While here, they continued to perform in a series of dress parades as part of their ongoing training. Illness plagued the regiment during this phase of service with a number of 52nd Pennsylvanians contracting typhoid fever or variola (smallpox); several died. The regiment's ranks were further thinned when 10 men volunteered for gunboat service on detached duty (many of whom were then killed in June 1862 while serving aboard the steamer USS <i>Mound City</i> during the Battle of Saint Charles, Arkansas).[11][12]

    In March 1862, the regiment was assigned to the 1st Brigade, 3rd Division, IV Corps of the Army of the Potomac, and on the 28th of that month, moved out with its brigade. Marching for Alexandria, Virginia, the regiment boarded the steamship USS Constitution, which ran aground twice after departing from that city's docks. Following their arrival at Hampton Roads, the regiment transferred to a smaller steamer, the USS Hero, which took them to Newport News. During their trip, the 52nd Pennsylvanians were fired upon by a Confederate artillery battery stationed on Craney Island, but escaped without damage to the ship or injury to the men. According to Bates, on April 17, the 52nd Pennsylvania and its brigade "advanced and took position in front of the enemy's lines at Lee's Mills, Smith's Division on the right, and Couch's on the left" with the "main operations of the siege ... directed against his fortifications at Yorktown."[13][14][15]

    Now part of the Peninsula Campaign,[16] the 52nd Pennsylvania saw its first serious combat action in the Battle of Williamsburg on May 5, 1862. Assigned to point at the head of a Union Army column marching on Fort Magruder, part of the regiment was caught in an exposion of an improvised explosive device (IED). According to Bates, General Henry M. Naglee, his staff, and members of the 52nd's A Company had just crossed a parapet at the fort "when a torpedo, which had been skillfully planted in the way, exploded under Company F, instantly killing one man [Private John Pruyne of F Company], and horribly mutilating six [or nine] others."[17][18][19]

    On May 20, General Naglee selected one hundred men from the 52nd Pennsylvania, designated them as sharpshooters, and placed them under the command of Captain Greanleaf Davis, commanding officer of the 52nd's E Company. Although this detachment came under heavy musket and artillery fire while assigned to reconnaissance of Bottom's Bridge and neighboring rail lines, it was able to maintain control of its assigned area, enabling Union forces to cross the Chickahominy River just 14 miles outside of Richmond.[20][21][22]

    During the evening of May 23, General George B. McClellan ordered General Naglee to move his army toward Seven Pines with these words:[23]

    Your instructions for the reconnaissance today, are as follows: You will, if possible, advance to the Seven Pines, on the forks of the direct road to Richmond, and the road turning to the right into the road leading from New Bridge to Richmond, and hold that point if practicable.... You will push the reconnaissance as far towards Richmond as practicable, without incurring too much danger.

    In response, the 52nd Pennsylvania Volunteers, under the command of Colonel Dodge, departed early the next morning. They were accompanied by the 104th Pennsylvania, which was commanded by Colonel Davis. Joining up with them at 8 a.m. were the 1st New York Artillery's 2nd battery and Regan's 7th Independent New York battery. With the new column formed, the men moved out onto the Williamsburg road at 9 a.m. At Creek Run, roughly 1.5 miles from Bottom's Bridge, they encountered and chased off a group of Confederate pickets. As they progressed further, more CSA pickets were encountered, as were five regiments of Tennessee infantrymen who were part of Hatton's Brigade, and infantrymen and artillerymen under the command of General J. E. B. Stuart. Naglee ordered the 104th Pennsylvania to move to the left of the Williamsburg road and the 52nd Pennsylvania to the right of the road while also extending itself across the railroad. Advancing, they made it as far as a forested area just past Savage Station, where they encountered a much heavier enemy presence. Naglee then moved Regan's battery to the right at the front edge of the forest, from which it shelled the woods on the road's left side. The 52nd Pennsylvania, also on the right, was ordered to move forward to a farm and orchard nearby, where its men could take shelter in and behind the buildings and fence on the property. The shelling and troop movements "lessened materially the fire of the enemy on the left," according to Bates, enabling the 104th Pennsylvania to then also move forward. At 1 p.m., Gregg's Cavalry joined the Union force with Mink's artillery battery connecting with the group later that afternoon.[24][25]

    Roughly a half mile outside of Seven Pines Corner, both regiments were subjected to withering fire from the enemy. The wood in front of the 52nd Pennsylvania was particularly thick with CSA skirmishers. In response, Naglee ordered the 104th Pennsylvania to fire obliquely on the enemy while the 52nd Pennsylvania continued its direct fire on CSA troops. Directing the 85th Pennsylvania to move forward to a position behind the railroad, he then ordered the 52nd Pennsylvania to "advance from the fence and buildings directly into the wood in front of it," which "forced the enemy to leave precipitately the wood on the right." At 4 p.m., Naglee directed the sharpshooters of the 52nd Pennsylvania to target enemy artillerymen; within 30 minutes, the fire from CSA batteries was significantly reduced, prompting CSA forces to retreat. Naglee then moved Gregg's Cavalry, part of Mink's Battery, the 85th New York, 104th Pennsylvania, and 52nd Pennsylvania forward, further scattering CSA troops. Naglee was then ordered by General Keyes to have his men stand down in order to prevent a larger scale engagement with the enemy.[26][27]

    Ordering the sharpshooters from the 52nd Pennsylvania to advance during the early afternoon of May 25, Naglee then moved the 11th Maine, 104th Pennsylvania, two sections of Bailey's Artillery, and remainder of the 52 Pennsylvania forward in support of the sharpshooters who had advanced to a forested area 500 yards beyond Seven Pines in a "line extended perpendicular to the Williamsburg road, and across to the neighborhood of the Fair Oak Station," according to a report made later by Naglee, who added that he then "ordered the artillery to open upon the enemy," who were "forming in the open fields beyond the wood pile." Advancing his pickets toward the sharpshooters, Naglee then also moved the 11th Maine and 104th Pennsylvania forward, which prompted another CSA retreat. The next day, he continued his advance, moving his troops within five miles of Richmond. On May 27, he then ordered the sharpshooters of the 52nd Pennsylvania to advance yet again, which they did, reaching Garnett's field along the Chickahomony River. The 52nd Pennsylvania was then ordered to make camp "on the Nine Mile road, a half mile beyond Fair Oaks, as a support to the pickets along Garnett's field."[28][29]

    Sometime during the opening days of the aforementioned engagement, Private Dilton "Sid" Taylor of the 52nd Pennsylvania's G Company was wounded seriously enough to require medical treatment and a period of convalescence after which he was honorably discharged on a surgeon's certificate of disability on September 16, 1862.[30][31]

    The next major interaction with the enemy by the 52nd Pennsylvania came during the Battle of Seven Pines (also known as the Battle of Fair Oaks) from May 30 to June 1, 1862. Stationed a half mile in front of and to the right of Seven Pines, this location brought the 52nd "into action on a different part of the field from the other regiments of the brigade, and at a somewhat later hour," according to Bates, who noted that by the time the 52nd Pennsylvania was involved, CSA troops had already "turned the left flank" of the other Union troops at Fair Oaks, "broken through on the Williamsburg road," and opened up a "destructive cross-fire" on Naglee's main force. In response, the 23rd Pennsylvania arrived, freeing up part of the 52nd Pennsylvania to advance. As it did, that detachment sustained a significant number of casualties; the 23rd Pennsylvania and remainder of the 52nd Pennsylvania were then forced to retreat. As the 52nd Pennsylvanians regrouped at sheltering structures along the Nine Mile road, they were then able to render "most effective service." Crossing to the left of Couch's Union troops, they advanced again, and made their way through a forest near Seven Pines, "where they remained actively employed until dark." At that point, CSA troops advanced "rapidly in masses to the rear of Nine Mile road," forcing Union troops to retreat, but the 52nd Pennsylvania, "having their line of retreat cut off," were forced to find another route of retreat. Escaping "by passing through the woods to the left and rear of the saw-mill at the White Oak Swamp" and then on to another Union line, they were finally able to reconnect with the 1st Brigade. McClellan later commended the brigade for gallantry. According to Bates, "Of the two hundred and forty-nine officers and men who went into the conflict, one hundred and twenty-five ... were killed or wounded. Of the latter were Captains Davis, who lost an arm, Lennard, Chamberlain, Weidensaul, and Carskaden." As records were updated, the names of four more 52nd Pennsylvania Volunteers were added to the list, bringing the regiment's total number of casualties to 129.[32][33][34]

     

    <b>References

     

     

    </b>Bates, Samuel P. <i>History of Pennsylvania Volunteers, 1861-5</i>, Vol. II, pp. 47-91. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: B. Singerly, State Printer, 1869.

     

    <i>Luzerne in the Civil War–History of the Fifty-Second Regiment</i>, in <i>History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, PA. with Illustrations, and Biographical Sketches of Some of Their Prominent Men and Pioneers</i>, pp. 116-126. New York, New York: W. W. Munsell & Co., 1880.

     

    Mott, Smith B., editor. <i>The Campaigns of the Fifty-Second Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry First Known as "The Luzerne Regiment" Being the Record of Nearly Four Years' Continuous Service, from October 7, 1861, to July 12, 1865, in the War for the Suppression of the Rebellion</i>. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: J.B. Lippincott Company, 1911.

     

    Bates, p. 47.

     

    Fifty-Second Pennsylvania, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 116.

     

    Bates, p. 47.

     

    Mott, p. 25.

     

    Fifty-Second Pennsylvania, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 116.

     

    Bates, p. 47.

     

    Mott, pp.25-26.

     

    Bates, pp. 47-48.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 116.

     

    Bates, p. 48.

     

    Fifty-Second Pennsylvania, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 116.

     

    Mott, pp. 27-30.

     

    Bates, pp. 48-54.

     

    Bates, p. 48.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, pp. 116-117.

     

    Mott, pp. 30-34.

     

    Bates, p. 49.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, pp. 116-117.

     

    Mott, pp. 35.

     

    Bates, p. 49.

     

    Bates, pp. 49-50.

     

    Mott, pp. 35-36.

     

    Bates, pp. 50-51.

     

    Mott, pp. 36-41.

     

    Bates, p. 51.

     

    Mott, pp. 41-42.

     

    Bates, p. 82.

     

    Mott, p. 36.

     

    Bates, pp. 52-53.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    pp. 42-59.

     

    Mott, pp. 57-58, p. 77.

     

    Mott, p. 78.

     

    Bates, pp. 53-54.

     

    Bates, pp. 54-55.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Mott, pp. 79-91, 102-103.

     

    Mott, pp. 102-111.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Mott, pp. 111-114, pp. 122-124.

     

    Bates, pp. 55-58.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Mott, pp. 126-142.

     

    Bates, p. 58.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Mott, pp. 148-149.

     

    Bates, p. 58.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Mott, pp. 148-149.

     

    Mott, p. 150.

     

    Bates, pp. 59-60.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Mott, pp. 151-161.

     

    "The History of Fort Johnson," in "Marine Resources Center." Columbia, South Carolina: Marine Resources Research Institute, South Carolina Department of Natural Resources, retrieved online July 9, 2018.

     

    Bates, p. 60.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Bates, p. 60.

     

    Fifty-Second Regiment, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Bates, pp. 60-61.

     

    Fifty-Second Pennsylvania, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Mott, pp. 167-173.

     

    Bates, p. 61.

     

    Fifty-Second Pennsylvania, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    Mott, pp. 176-183.

     

    Bates, p. 61.

     

    Bates, p. 61.

     

    Fifty-Second Pennsylvania, History of Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, p. 117.

     

    "To Be Brigadier-Generals by Brevet", in "Brevet Appointments Confirmed." Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: The Daily Evening Telegraph, February 26, 1866.

     

    "Civil War Widows' Pensions." Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Archives and Records Administration and Fold3.com (subscription required), retrieved online July 8, 2018.

     

    Civil War Widows' Pensions, U.S. National Archives/Fold3.

     

    Civil War Widows' Pensions, U.S. National Archives/Fold3.

     

    Civil War Widows' Pensions, U.S. National Archives/Fold3.

     

    Col. Ezra H. Ripple. Find A Grave: retrieved online April 17, 2018.

     

    <i>Reading 2: Life as a Prisoner of War at Florence</i>, in <i>Comfortable Camps?, Archeology of the Confederate Guard Camp at the Florence Stockade</i>, in Teaching with Historic Places Lesson Plans. Washington, D.C.: U.S. National Park Service, retrieved online April 17, 2018.

     

    Mark A. Snell, editor. <i>Dancing Along the Deadline: The Andersonville Memoir of a Prisoner of the Confederacy</i>, p. 66. Novato, California: Presidio Press, 1996.

     

    Civil War Widows' Pensions, U.S. National Archives/Fold3.

     

    Mapp, Jerome. <i>The Civil War: The Origins of Veterans' Health Care</i>. Washington, D.C.: Veterans Health Administration, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, retrieved online April 17, 2018.

     

    <i>The Experience of a Wilkes-Barre Citizen</i>. Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania: <i>Wilkes-Barre Times</i>, August 3, 1896.

     

    Powell, George. <i>Sumter regained: dedicated to the Fifty-Second Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers, and read at their second annual re-union held at Scranton, Pa., September 25, 1889</i>. Bethesda, Maryland: University Publications of America, 1992.

     

    <i>The third annual meeting of the 52d Regimental Association: held at Tunkhannock, Wyoming County, Penn'a, Thursday, Sept. 25, 1890</i>. Bethesda, Maryland: University Publications of America, 1992.

    Mott, pp. 7-10.

Wife: Lavindee Jane PUTNAM

  • Name:

  • Lavindee Jane PUTNAM

  • Sex:

  • Female

  • Father:

  • Freeman PUTNAM (1810-1853)

  • Mother:

  • Lavinda BANKS (1810-1837)

  • Birth:

  • Aug 16, 1836

  • New York4,5,7,23,24,25,26

  •  

  • 1900 Census gives her month and year of birth as August 1835 being born in New York along with her parent also being born in New York.

    The 1800 census puts her birth year between 13 June 1836 and 12 June 1837, and having her born in New York, with her parents also being born in New York.

    The 1870 Census places her birth year between 10 Jun 1837 and 9 Jun 1838.

    The 1860 Census places her birth year between 22 June 1836 and 21 June 1837 and notes she was born in New York.

    The 1850 Census places an L. Jane Putnam's birth year between 14 August 1836 and 13 August 1837 and born in New York.

     

     

  • Residence:

  • 1850 (age 13-14)

  • Providence, Luzerne, Pennsylvania23

  •  

  • Not sure who is her mother, but she is living what is likely her father Freeman Putnam. I do not believe Maria is her mother.

  • Residence:

  • 1860 (age 23-24)

  • Providence, Luzerne, Pennsylvania4

  •  

  • Charles M. Appleman was also working in the same home as a laborer on this census record. He and Lavinda were working for a master tool maker Carter Pulaski.

  • Occupation:

  • 1860 (age 23-24)

  • domestic, working for Carter Pulaski4

  • Residence:

  • 1870 (age 33-34)

  • Scranton, Luzerne, Pennsylvania5

  • Residence:

  • 1880 (age 43-44)

  • Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania7

  • Residence:

  • 1900 (age 63-64)

  • Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania1,25

  •  

  • Address: 2223 Bouelvard Ave

    with her daughter and son in law as a widow

  • Residence:

  • 1907 (age 70-71)

  • Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania26

  •  

  • Address: 613 Deacon St.

  • Occupation:

  • 1907 (age 70-71)

  • housekeeper26

  • Death:

  • Feb 19, 1907 (age 70)

  • Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania24,26

  •  

  • Cause: of pleurisy

    Address: 613 Deacon St.

  • Burial:

  • Feb 22, 1907

  • Dunmore, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania24,26

  •  

  • Address: Forest Hill Cemetery

Child 1: Louis D. APPLEMAN

  • Name:

  • Louis D. APPLEMAN

  • Sex:

  • Male

  • Birth:

  • c. 1865

  • Pennsylvania5,7

  • Residence:

  • 1870 (age 4-5)

  • Scranton, Luzerne, Pennsylvania5

  • Residence:

  • 1880 (age 14-15)

  • Scranton, Luzerne, Pennsylvania7

  • Death:

  •  

  •  

Child 2: Jessie O. APPLEMAN

  • Name:

  • Jessie O. APPLEMAN

  • Sex:

  • Female

  • Spouse:

  • James Alfred Crane JR. (1865- )

  • Birth:

  • Mar, 1868

  • Pennsylvania5,7,25

  •  

  • The 1930 census shows her birthplace as Virginia.

    The 1900 Census shows her birthdate between 10 Jun 1857 and 9 Jun 1858 putting her age at 32.

  • Residence:

  • 1870 (age 1-2)

  • Scranton Ward 1, Luzerne, Pennsylvania5

  • Residence:

  • 1880 (age 11-12)

  • Scranton, Luzerne, Pennsylvania7

  • Residence:

  • 1900 (age 31-32)

  • Scranton, Luzerne, Pennsylvania25

  •  

  • Address: 2223 Bouelvard Ave

  • Death:

  • c. 1901 (age 32-33)

  •  

  •  

  • Reference for death date:

    Spears, Harold Putnam

    Title: Harold Putnam Spears, Personal Papers [unpublished] ied from family bibles, notes from interviews and other information. C opies in possession of Gary D. Putnam

    Name: Bibliography copied from family bibles, notes from interviews and other information. Copies in possession of Gary D. Putnam

Child 3: Stella A. APPLEMAN

  • Name:

  • Stella A. APPLEMAN

  • Sex:

  • Female

  • Birth:

  • c. 18737

  •  

  • Residence:

  • 1880 (age 6-7)

  • Scranton, Luzerne, Pennsylvania7

  • Occupation:

  • 1895 (age 21-22)

  • dressmaker27

  • Residence:

  • 1895 (age 21-22)

  • Scranton City, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania27

  •  

  • Address: 532 Deacon

  • Death:

  • Nov 10, 1895 (age 21-22)

  • Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania28

  •  

  • Cause: after an extended illness

    Miss Stella Appleman, daughter of Mr. And Mrs Charles Appleman of 532 Deacon Street, Green Ridge, died yesterday after an extended illness. Deceased was a well known young lady and beloved by all who knew her. The funeral will take place at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Services will be conducted at the nourse. Interment will be made in the Dunmore cemetery.

Note on Husband: Charles M. APPLEMAN (1)

Requested pension records and Civil War file.Found book The campaigns of the Fifty-second regiment, Pennsylvania volunteer infantry, first known as "The Luzerne regiment" ; being the record of nearly four years' continous service, from October 7, 1861, to July 12, 1865, in the war for the supression of the rebellion by Pennsylvania infantry. 52d Regt., 1861-1865; Mott, Smith B

Note on Husband: Charles M. APPLEMAN (2)

Research for military units in the Civil War29

Sources

1.

City Directory: Scranton, Pennsylvania City Directory, 1900, Ancestry.com, 70. Appleman, Lavendee.

2.

Widows Declaration for Pension, 5 Nov 1898, Lavendee J Appleman, widow's pension application no. 115,564, Certificate no. 478973; service of Charles M. Appleman (Pvt Co. H, 52 Regiment, PA. Volunteers, Civil War), Civil War and Later Pension Files, Record Group 15; Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs, National Archives and Records Administration.

3.

1850 U.S. Census, Oxford, Warren, New Jersey, pop. sch, Oxford Township, p.414B, 417, William Appleman Family; National Archives and Records Adminstration Film M432.

4.

1860 Federal Census (U. S), Luzerne, Pennsylvania, population, Providence Borough, p. 167, 288, William Appleman; digital, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com); citing 1860 U.S. census, population schedule. NARA microfilm publication M653, 1,438 rolls. Washington, D.C.

5.

1870 Federal Census (U.S.), Luzerne, Pennsylvania, population , 1st Ward, City of Scranton, p. 33, 260, Charles Appleman; digital, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com); citing 1870 U.S. census, population schedules. NARA microfilm publication M593, 1,761 rolls. Washington, D.C.

6.

U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600's - Current, (Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/). Pvt Charles M. Appleman; ID: 102411981. Cit. Date: September 20, 2021. Ancestry.com.

7.

1880 United States Federal Census, Scranton, Lackawanna, Pennsylvania, population, Ward 1, City of Scranton, p.26C, 437, Charles Appleman; National Archives and Records Adminstration Film T9.

8.

Harrisburg, Pennslyvania. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Pennsylvania Veterans Burial Cards, 1929-1990, Series Number: Series 1: Charles M. Appleman; October 28, 1898.

9.

Military: U.S., Civil War Draft Registrations Records, from 1863 to 1865, Ancestry.com, Charles M. Appleman.

10.

1840 United States Federal Census, Oxford, Warren, New Jersey, Oxford, Warren, New Jersey, p.307, William Appleman; Family History Library Film: 0016520.

11.

W. Munsell & Co., History of Luzerne Lackawanna and Wyoming Counties, PA: With Illustrations and Biographical Sketches : (New York, N.Y.: MacNamara, 1880), 410.

12.

Mott, Smith B., The Campaigns of The Fifty-Second Regiment - Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry: First Known at the "Luzerne Regiment" (Philadelphia, PA.: J.B. Lippincott, 1911).

13.

Bates, Samuel P., History of the Pennsylvania Volunteers: 1861-5 (Harrisburg, Pennslyvania: B. Singerly, 1869).

14.

PA Museums website; Camp Curtin Historical Society and Civil War Round Table.

15.

52nd Regiment of the Pennslyvania Volunteers, Certificate of Disability for Discharge, (National Archives and Records Administration). Charles M Appleman. Cit. Date: September 18, 1862. Roots and Trees Genealogy, Scottsdale, AZ. Email: genealogy@mkstahl.com.

16.

"U.S., Civil War Soldiers, 1861-1865," online database, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com: accessed December 3, 2021), Charles Appleman; citing National Park Service, Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System, online at http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/, acquired 2007.

17.

Military: U.S., American Civil War Regiments, 1861-1866, from 1997 to 2000, Ancestry.com.

18.

Mackay, Winnifred K., "Phildelphia During the Civil War, 1861-1865," The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography.

19.

Military: U.S., Civil War Pension Index: General Index to Pension Files., from 1861 to 1934, Ancestry.com, Charles M. Appleman.

20.

Grzyb, Frank, Rhode Island's Civil War Hospital: Life and Death at Portsmouth Grove, 1862-1865 (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc, 2012).

21.

1881 Census of Canada, Manitoba, Canada, population, Western Extension, Manitoba, p.16, 123, Joseph Kidd; Statistics Canada Fonds, Record Group 31-C-1. LAC microfilm C-13162 to C-13286.

22.

1890 Veterans Schedules of the U.S. Federal Census, Pierce City, Missouri, Veterans, Jefferson Township, p.8, Charles M Appleman; Microfilm Publication M123.

23.

1850 Federal Census (U.S.), Luzerne, Pannsylvania, population, Providence, Roll: 793; Page: 265b, Freeman Putnam; digital, Ancestry (www.ancestry.com); citing Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432, 1009 rolls); Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29; National Archives, Washington, D.C.

24.

U.S., Find a Grave Index, 1600's - Current, (Find a Grave. http://www.findagrave.com/). Lavina Appleman: ID 141761286. Cit. Date: February 19, 1907. Ancestry.com.

25.

1900 United States Federal Census, Scranton, Luzerne, Pennsylvania, population, Scranton Ward 1, Luzerne, Pennsylvania, p.13, 280, James Crane; FHL microfilm: 1241419.

26.

Pennsylvania Bureau of Vital Statistics, death 20866 (February 19, 1907), Lavindee J. Appleman; Ancestry.com.

27.

City Directory: Scranton City Directory, 1895, Ancestry.com, 73.

28.

"Death of Miss Appleman," The Times-Tribune, November 11, 1895, Afternoon (www.newspapers.com: accessed 2021), p 4 column 5; citing Ancestry.com. U.S., Newspapers.com Obituary Index, 1800s-current.

29.

Fredrick H Dyer, A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion: (Des Moines, IA: The Dyer Publishing Company, 1908).