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Anthony M. Richley

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Anthony M. Richley

Birth
Varick, Seneca County, New York, USA
Death
1921 (aged 76–77)
Hilo, Hawaii County, Hawaii, USA
Burial
Honolulu, Honolulu County, Hawaii, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
(BPOE Symbol)
G.A.R.
ANTHONY RICHLEY
1844-1921
75TH N.Y.V.INF.CO.K.

American Civil War Soldiers Record

Name: Anthony Richley
Enlistment Date: 21 February 1862
Distinguished Service: DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
Side Served: Union
State Served: New York
Unit Numbers: 1574 1574 1296
Service Record: Enlisted as a Private on 21 February 1862 at the age of 18
Enlisted in Company K, 75th Infantry Regiment New York on 25 June 1862.
Transferred Company K, 75th Infantry Regiment New York on 10 February 1864
Transfered in Company L, 14th Cavalry Regiment New York on 10 February 1864.

Name: Anthony Richley
Enlistment Date: 10 February 1864
Distinguished Service: DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
Side Served: Union
State Served: New York
Unit Numbers: 1296 1296
Service Record: Promoted to Full Private (Reduced to ranks)
Enlisted as a Corporal on 10 February 1864
Transferred 75th Infantry Regiment New York on 10 February 1864
Transfered in 14th Cavalry Regiment New York on 10 February 1864.
Wounded on 08 April 1864 at Sabine Cross Roads, LA
Discharged 14th Cavalry Regiment New York on 22 May 1864 in New Orleans, LA

Civil War Pension Record

Name of Soldier: Richley, Anthony
Name of Dependent: Richley, Margaret A.
Service: K75 NY Inf / L14 NY Cav
Filing as invalid: 1864 June 6
Filing as widow: 1921 Jan 21
Both filed in Territory of Hawaii

1920 US Federal Census

Honolulu, TH (Terr. of Hawaii), S. Beretania St.
Richley, Anthony, 76, b. NY, father b. Germany, mother b. PA, occupation unreadable / wife Margaret, 57, b. NY, father and mother b. Ireland.

Buried in the "Grand Army of the Republic" GAR) section of O'ahu cemetery.

After the end of the American Civil War, veterans formed fraternal groups to continue bonds formed in the war, ultimately gaining political power. The GAR emerged as the most powerful among the various organizations, by 1890 numbering 409,489, and aligned with the Republican Party. Founded in Decatur, Illinois on April 6, 1866 by Benjamin F. Stephenson, membership was limited to honorably discharged veterans of the Union Army, Navy, Marine Corps or the Revenue Cutter Service who had served between April 12, 1861 and April 9, 1865.
(BPOE Symbol)
G.A.R.
ANTHONY RICHLEY
1844-1921
75TH N.Y.V.INF.CO.K.

American Civil War Soldiers Record

Name: Anthony Richley
Enlistment Date: 21 February 1862
Distinguished Service: DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
Side Served: Union
State Served: New York
Unit Numbers: 1574 1574 1296
Service Record: Enlisted as a Private on 21 February 1862 at the age of 18
Enlisted in Company K, 75th Infantry Regiment New York on 25 June 1862.
Transferred Company K, 75th Infantry Regiment New York on 10 February 1864
Transfered in Company L, 14th Cavalry Regiment New York on 10 February 1864.

Name: Anthony Richley
Enlistment Date: 10 February 1864
Distinguished Service: DISTINGUISHED SERVICE
Side Served: Union
State Served: New York
Unit Numbers: 1296 1296
Service Record: Promoted to Full Private (Reduced to ranks)
Enlisted as a Corporal on 10 February 1864
Transferred 75th Infantry Regiment New York on 10 February 1864
Transfered in 14th Cavalry Regiment New York on 10 February 1864.
Wounded on 08 April 1864 at Sabine Cross Roads, LA
Discharged 14th Cavalry Regiment New York on 22 May 1864 in New Orleans, LA

Civil War Pension Record

Name of Soldier: Richley, Anthony
Name of Dependent: Richley, Margaret A.
Service: K75 NY Inf / L14 NY Cav
Filing as invalid: 1864 June 6
Filing as widow: 1921 Jan 21
Both filed in Territory of Hawaii

1920 US Federal Census

Honolulu, TH (Terr. of Hawaii), S. Beretania St.
Richley, Anthony, 76, b. NY, father b. Germany, mother b. PA, occupation unreadable / wife Margaret, 57, b. NY, father and mother b. Ireland.

Buried in the "Grand Army of the Republic" GAR) section of O'ahu cemetery.

After the end of the American Civil War, veterans formed fraternal groups to continue bonds formed in the war, ultimately gaining political power. The GAR emerged as the most powerful among the various organizations, by 1890 numbering 409,489, and aligned with the Republican Party. Founded in Decatur, Illinois on April 6, 1866 by Benjamin F. Stephenson, membership was limited to honorably discharged veterans of the Union Army, Navy, Marine Corps or the Revenue Cutter Service who had served between April 12, 1861 and April 9, 1865.


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