Up for auction a VERY RARE! "New York Militia" Major General Charles W. Sanford Hand Written 3 Page Document (Two Acre Land Deed) Civil War Era.
ES-8257
Major General Charles W. Sandford (May 5, 1796 – July 25, 1878) was
an American militia and artillery officer, lawyer and businessman. He was a
senior officer in the New York State Militia for over thirty
years and commanded the First Division in every major civil disturbance in New
York City up until the American Civil War, most notably, the New York Draft Riots in 1863. Charles W. Sandford was born in Newark, New Jersey to William B. Sandford, a
farmer and veteran of the American Revolutionary War, on May 5,
1796. He pursued a career in law, studying under Ogden Hoffman,
and enlisted as a private in the New York State Artillery. Assigned to the Third
Regiment, he remained with the unit as it became the Eighth
Regiment popularly known as the "Washington Grays". Rising
up the ranks as a non-commissioned officer, he commanded
Company F and was subsequently promoted to lieutenant colonel and to full
colonel. In 1834, he was elected brigadier general of the Sixth Brigade
Artillery. On May 10, 1839, Sandford was
commissioned major general of the First Division and held command for nearly
three decades. Although having a fine service record, Sandford kept an informal
atmosphere and sometimes lax discipline within his command. Units were also far
below regimental quotas. Brigadier generals were late reporting for duty and he
himself was very late organizing division formations on occasion. This often
resulted in delays such as military
parades being three or four hours overdue. These officers were
generally not held accountable for their negligence and courts-martial
were rarely held.
Sandford was fond of military pomp and often
organized celebrations and public events involving the militia. Among these
included a parade honoring visiting General José Antonio Páez, the former president of Venezuela,
in July 1850. His eldest son, 30-year-old Charles Sandford, accompanied Páez
back to South America where he died of fever shortly afterwards. The following
year, he also had the militia receive Louis Kossuth
upon his arrival in the city in October 1851, his formal reception at Castle Garden
in December and a third parade at his departure. On several occasions, he and
his men escorted American presidents when visiting the city and paraded at the
funerals of Henry Clay and Daniel
Webster. Sandford had a commendable military
record leading the militia in the Flour Riot of 1837, the Astor Place
Riot in 1849, the Dead Rabbits
and Municipal Police Riots of 1857 and the New York Draft Riot in 1863. General Winfield
Scott once said that "Sandford was one of the finest volunteer
service generals that he ever knew." He commanded the Seventh Regiment and
militia forces on behalf of Sheriff Westervelt and eventually confronted Mayor Fernando Wood,
his forces surrounding City Hall Park, and took him into custody. That
same year, he was asked by NYPD Police Commissioner Simeon Draper
for his assistance during the Dead Rabbits Riot. He sent the Eight and
Seventy-First Regiments, both at half strength but supported by two 75-man
police detachments, which marched down White and Worth Streets and confronted the gang
members driving them back to the Five Points. This action ended the
rioting, but police and soldiers continued to patrol the district that night
and all the next day. His command seriously weakened due
to manpower shortages during the American Civil War, Sandford served on active
duty with the Union Army from April 19 to July 25, 1861. In May
1861, he was ordered by Brigadier General Joseph K. Mansfield to oversee the capture of Alexandria, Virginia as the vast majority
the Union troops were from New York. He also served under Major General Robert
Patterson for three months and took part in the Battle of Hoke's Run. Returning to New York, he was
present during the New York Draft Riots in 1863 and managed
to organize a small force of scattered militia regiments, military troops and
home guards from his headquarters at the State Arsenal at Seventh Avenue and Thirty-Fifth Street. He was one of the
senior officers who directed police and military during the riots. When
receiving reports of the battle between police and rioters at the Union Steam
Works, with hundreds of rioters now armed with muskets, swords and pistols, he
sent Colonel H.J. O'Brien and 150 men to help police. Lieutenant
Eagleson, in command of two 6-pound cannons and 25 artillerymen, accompanied
O'Brien to the battle.
After the war, Sandford was relieved
of his command by Governor Reuben Fenton who appointed Alexander
Shaler to succeed him and officially took command on January 23,
1867. Sandford, who had been involved in the theater as early as 1847, ran the Lafayette Theatre on Sullivan Street. His success encouraged
him to open a second theater in The Bowery,
The Mount Pitt Theatre and Circus, but both buildings burned down within
the same week ending his career in the theater. He also built a number of
buildings on Canal Street although he lost these to
fire as well. Sandford would often experience success and disaster in his
business dealings, acquiring and then losing small fortunes two or three times,
however he was able to provide his family with a comfortable competency his
later years. He and his wife often entertained at their West Twenty-Second
Street residence whose social functions were often attended by prominent
citizens of the city. For over fifty years, he was a leading member in the old St. Paul's
Episcopal Church in Broadway. He was also an accomplished lawyer
and the one-time partner of John Bristed, son of author Charles Astor Bristed. Sandford also
served as counsel for the Harlem Railroad Company for twenty years
and later represented the company against inventor Ross Winans.
At the time of his death, he was vice president of the New York City Bar Association. In
late-July 1878, Sandford left the city for his annual summer vacation to Avon Springs in Livingston County, New York. A day after
his arrival however, he died suddenly on the morning of July 25, 1878. A
telegram was sent announcing his passing, occurring shortly after his 82nd
birthday, but the circumstances of his death were unknown to his family. His
body was brought back to the city by one of his daughters and buried shortly
afterwards.