5th United States Artillery, Battery C

Alternate Designations: Hascall’s.

Commander: Lt. Gulian V. Weir (1837-1886).

Numbers: Six 12-lb Napoleons, 123 men. 2 killed, 14 wounded.

Raised: Northampton County, Pennsylvania. Organized in Harrisburg, Sept. 1861.

Erected between 1907 and 1908.

Location: Located east side Hancock Avenue, north of Vermont Monuments.

Description: One of 45 monuments erected to units of the United States regular army on the battlefield. A red polished Jonesboro granite monolith that is set upon a concrete foundation with a descriptive 3’6’x3’7′ bronze tablet with the coat of arms of the United States in bronze.

Inscription reads:

ARMY OF THE POTOMAC
ARTILLERY RESERVE
FIRST REGULAR BRIGADE
BATTERY C FIFTH U. S. ARTILLERY
Six 12 Pounders
Lieut. Culian V. Weir Commanding

July 2. Arrived at Gettysburg from near Taneytown and in the afternoon was ordered to the front and by direction of Major General W. S. Hancock took position 500 yards further to the front and by order of Brig. General John Gibbon opened fire on the Confederates on the left front. The Confederates in front advanced to within a few yards no infantry opposing. Three of the guns were captured by the Confederates and drawn off to the Emmitsburg Road but were recaptured by the 13th Vermont and another regiment.

July 3. In the rear of the line until Longstreet’s assault was made when the Battery was moved up to Brig. General A. S. Webb’s line and opened with canister at short range on the advancing Confederates. At 6.30 P. M. returned to the Artillery Reserve.

Casualties Killed 2 men Wounded 2 Officers and 12 Men

Army of the Potomac > Artillery Reserve >First Regular Brigade