ICHABOD
CARTER
133rd New York Infantry
Company A
Private
Yaphank
Ichabod Carter
133rd New York Infantry
Private, Company A
Yaphank
Ichabod Carter was born in 1829. He married his wife,
Amanda, on August 25, 1851. The couple settled in Yaphank
and lived there until 1871. They had five children:
Parker, born in 1854; John, born in 1856; Alvin, born in
1858; Benjamin, born in 1861; and Frederick, born in
1874.
During the early years of the war, Carter was not needed
to fight because he was married and had four children. As
enlistments fell, however, the government instituted a
draft. On May 11, 1863, Carter was drafted along with 201
men from Brookhaven Town into the Union Army.
Carter was mustered in on September 23, 1864, in Jamaica
on Long Island. From there, he was sent to Hart's Island,
New York, for training. When he was drafted, Carter was
thirty-five years old, had blue eyes, auburn hair and was
five feet ten inches tall.
Carter trained at Hart's Island until October 14, 1864,
when he was assigned to Company A of the 133rd New York
Infantry. He was sent to join the regiment in Cedar
Creek, Virginia. As soon as he arrived, Carter was given
orders to dig rifle pits. By this time, there were only
seven months left in the war, so the 133rd was involved
in only minor skirmishes with the Confederates. The
regiment finished out the war by serving in the defense
of Washington.
After the war, Carter returned to his family in Yaphank.
He suffered from piles, and claimed on his application
for a disability pension that it was a result of digging
rifle pits, hard marching, and exposure. He was sent to
the regimental hospital where he was treated by the
regimental surgeon.
In 1871, the Carter family left Yaphank and began a long
series of moves to different states. The first stop was
Delevan, Minnesota, where they operated a farm for three
years. Next, they went to the Dakota Territory where they
homesteaded. In 1878, Mrs. Carter died and the family
moved to Sioux City. In 1882, Carter married Jane
Newcomb. Their marriage was short-lived, ending in
separation. Carter took a third wife, Mary Craig, in
1892. Unfortunately, Mary died three years later.
Carter then moved to Elm Springs, Arkansas, in 1895 and
took up farming again. He moved one last time to Dover,
Delaware, where he worked as a storekeeper. He met and
married his fourth wife, Mary Tasker.
On February 8, 1902, Carter died in Dover of a heart
ailment.
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