Frederick E. Camp

{{Infobox military person

|honorific_prefix = General

|name = Frederick E. Camp

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|caption = Frederick E. Camp

|birth_date = {{birth date|1832|07|01}}

|death_date = {{death date and age|1891|10|08|1832|07|01}}

|birth_place = Durham, CT

|death_place = Middletown, CT

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|allegiance = {{flagicon|United States}} United States

|branch = {{Army|United States}}

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|rank = Major General

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|commands = Connecticut State Militia
Second Brigade, Connecticut Militia

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|website = {{url|www.ct.gov/mil}}

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Frederick E. Camp, was born in Durham, Connecticut on July 1, 1832, was the twenty-fifth Adjutant General of the State of Connecticut. He was a treasurer of the soldier's hospital board. He also worked in the office of Boston and New York Air line Railroad Company at New Haven, Connecticut. Camp also became secretary and treasurer of the Middletown Gas Light Company, which he held until he died. Camp was a republican and a member of the state central committee from 1884 to 1888. In 1877 until 1881 he was a city clerk and treasurer of Middletown, Connecticut.{{citation needed|date=March 2025}}

Military career

At the outbreak of the rebellion Camp enlisted in Company F. Twenty- fourth Connecticut Volunteers and at the muster on November 18, 1862, became second lieutenant of the company. On April 16, 1862, Camp was promoted first-lieutenant. On June 14, 1863, Camp was wounded at Port Hudson. LA and mustered out of the service. January 26, 1864, Camp was appointed captain of Company D. Twenty Ninth Connecticut Volunteers and was later promoted to major on November 24, 1864. He was appointed lieutenant –colonel of the Twenty-ninth United States Colored Infantry on January 1, 1865, and then discharged on November 6, 1865. When Camp became second lieutenant, later that day he also became first lieutenant of the Fourteenth Regiment of the United States Infantry. Camp was transferred to Thirty-second United States Infantry on September 21, 1866. He was appointed to captain, December 12, 1866. From April 19, 1868, to January 1, 1871, Camp was unassigned due to army being reorganized. Camp was assigned to Second United States Infantry, with this regiment he served in Arizona and in Alabama. He was resigned on July 30, 1871. On August 11, 1876, he was appointed captain of Company 11, Second Regiment C.N.G., and was resigned March 10, 1880. On April 15, 1880, he was appointed adjutant of the Second Regiment and was resigned January 6, 1881, to accept the office of pay master-general on Governor Bigelow's staff from which he was discharged on January 3, 1883. Camp's last appointment was Connecticut Adjutant General by Governor Lounsbury'staff from 1887 to 1888.{{Cite news |author=Camp, Frederick E |date=10 October 1888 |title=Military Exemptions |newspaper=The Hartford Courant |id={{ProQuest|554344974}}}}

Personal life

Frederick E. Camp never got married. Camp died on October 8, 1891, in Middletown, Connecticut due to long and painful illnesses. He was a companionable man and had many friends.{{Cite news |date=9 October 1891|title=General F. E. Camp: An Old Soldier Dead at Middletown |newspaper=The Hartford Courant |id={{ProQuest|554478069}}}}

References

{{Reflist}}

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{{s-mil}}

{{s-bef|before= Stephen E. Smith}}

{{s-ttl|title=Connecticut Adjutant General|years=1887–1888}}

{{s-aft|after= Lucius A. Barbour}}

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{{Connecticut Adjutant Generals}}

{{Portal |Connecticut|Biography}}

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Category:Military personnel from Connecticut

Category:Adjutants General of Connecticut

Category:1832 births

Category:1891 deaths