
Soldiers and Sailors Plot -Oakwood Cemetery - Syracuse, New York
Posted by:
ripraff
N 43° 01.834 W 076° 08.039
18T E 407616 N 4764833
This was dedicated by the Grand Army of the Republic Root post 151. It has 231 Civil War veterans.
Waymark Code: WMW6M5
Location: New York, United States
Date Posted: 07/17/2017
Views: 2
The original cemetery was vandalized. It was restored in 1999 by the 122nd NY Volunteers, a living history group.
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"The 122nd New York Volunteer Infantry known as the "Onondagas", was an infantry regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War."
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"The companies were recruited principally: A at Baldwinsville; B at Syracuse; C at Fayetteville and Farmersville; D at Syracuse, Onondaga, Spafford and Amber; E at Syracuse; F at Marcellus and Syracuse; G at Eldridge; H at Camillus and Syracuse; I at Syracuse, and K at Syracuse, Tully, Skaneateles and Cicero.
The regiment left the State August 31, 1862; "
The statue was stolen in 1951 and replaced in 2006.
There are two cannon by the graves. There is a Medal of Honor soldier, William Crossier.
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"In 1866, Union veterans of the Civil War formed a fraternal organization known as the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR), with both social and political goals, and with the stated principles of Fraternity, Charity and Loyalty. The organization was politically powerful; their General Order #11 (1868) established May 30 as "Decoration Day" which later evolved into Memorial Day, and they were active in passing legislation on pensions and retirement homes for veterans. These "Old Soldiers' Homes" eventually led to the current United States Department of Veterans Affairs."