Daniel Chaplin

Deceased Person

1820 – 1864

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Who was Daniel Chaplin?

Col. Daniel Chaplin was a Union officer in the American Civil War who died in battle and was posthumously made a Major General. Under Chaplin's command, the ill-fated charge of the 1st Maine Heavy Artillery Regiment against Confederate breastworks during Siege of Petersburg resulted on the greatest single loss of life by a Union Regiment in a single action. A total of 7 officers and 108 men were killed, and another 25 officers and 464 men wounded. These casualties constituted 67% of the strength of the 900-man force. Chaplin survived the action but was subsequently shot by a sharpshooter at Battle of Deep Bottom in 1864, and died four days later in a Philadelphia hospital.

Chaplin was born in Red Bank, New Brunswick, Canada, on 22 Jan 1820. He moved with his family to Bridgton, Maine when he was about three years of age. There he lived until he was about twenty-one, when he became a clerk for Thurston and Metcalf, ship chandlers, of Bangor, Maine. When the Civil War broke out, he enlisted as a private in Company F of the Second Maine Regiment, which was raised in Bangor. He was chosen captain of the company 28 May 1861, and was promoted to the rank of Major, 13 September of that year. On 11 July 1862, he was appointed colonel of the Eighteenth Maine Regiment, which became in January 1863, the First Maine Heavy Artillery.

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Born
1820
Died
1864

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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