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was commanded by
Colonel Allabach, leaving his regiment, the 131st, to be commanded by
Lieutenant-Colonel Shabt; the 133d, commanded by
Colonel Speakman; the 135th, commanded by
Colonel Clark, and the 155th, commanded by
Colonel Allen.
Two notable charges.
The advance charge was made by
Colonel Allabach's brigade, closely followed by the First Brigade, under
General Tyler, the whole commanded in person by
General Humphreys.
The aggregate number of the two brigades engaged in this assault was about 4,000 men, and fully one-fourth of them were numbered among the dead and wounded, although neither was in action over thirty minutes. Hopeless as it seemed to the soldiers who made this assault with the officers in advance of the men, either to gain the heights or to hold them if gained, these
Pennsylvania brigades started with hearty cheers to face the grim reaper of death.
Next to
Pickett's charge at
Gettysburg, it was the most bloody and disastrous assault of our Civil War.
We are not here to discuss the wisdom of army commanders.
Only what were accepted as supreme military necessities made
Pickett's charge at
Gettysburg and
Humphrey's charge at
Fredericksburg, but they both stand in history, and will ever so stand, as high-water marks of the heroism of American soldiery.