Anderson's Battery | Photography Collection | Historic Charleston Foundation
Menu

Subscribe to our Newsletter

* indicates required
Gender
Please subscribe me to the monthly newsletter.
Please email updates about the following events:
Please email alerts on the following subjects:
« Back to Results

Photography Collection

Anderson's Battery

Description

Identified as Anderson's Battery marching on East Bay Street (near Market Street). Shop signs include Geo. W. Steffens Sons, Wm. E. Holmes and Co., H. Bischoff and Co. Wholesale ______, located at ca. 199-211 East Bay Street.

When the President of the United States made his first call for volunteers for the Spanish-American War, Governor Ellerbe called a conference of the Brigadier Generals and Colonels of the State Troops at Columbia on April 27th, and stated that South Carolina expected to furnish one Regiment and one Battalion of Infantry and one Battery of Heavy Artillery. At this conference the duty of raising the Battery of Heavy Artillery was assigned to General Edward Anderson, of Charleston, then commanding the Fourth [4th] Brigade of State Troops. Upon his return from Columbia, General Anderson called a meeting of the officers of the Brigade, and stated that the Governor expected Charleston to furnish the Battery, and asked their assistance in raising it. Finding the officers lukewarm, General Anderson immediately issued a call through the newspapers, asking for volunteers without regard to whether or not they had been members of militia organizations, which met with a ready response, and on the evening of May 3rd, at a meeting held at the Carolina Rifles Armory, the Battery was organized. (Source: "A Brief History of the Heavy Battery, South Carolina Volunteer Artillery," website)

Item Details

Object ID: 2004.021.102
Creator: Sams, Franklin Frost
Date: ca. 1898-1912
Subjects:
Commercial Buildings--South Carolina--Charleston
Commercial Streets--South Carolina--Charleston
Marching
Soldiers
Spanish-American War, 1898