- David Lang (colonel)
David Lang (May 9, 1838 – December 13, 1917) was a land surveyor,
Confederate States Army officer during theAmerican Civil War ,civil engineer , andFlorida politician.Biography
Lang was born in
Camden County, Georgia . He attended the Georgia Military Institute in Marietta, graduating in the Class of 1857 and ranked 4th of 16. He moved toSuwannee County, Florida , and became a surveyor.With the secession of
Florida and the outbreak of the Civil War, Lang enlisted in the Confederate Army on April 2, 1861, as a private in Company H of the 1st Florida Infantry. Barely over a month later, he was promoted to sergeant. He was discharged in April 1862 after his term of enlistment expired. In May, Lang enrolled in the 8th Florida Infantry and was commissioned as captain of Company C. He was wounded at the Battle of Sharpsburg in September and again at theBattle of Fredericksburg in December. Stationed in the town of Fredericksburg, Lang's men stubbornly contested Federal attempts to laypontoon bridge s across theRappahannock River . An artillery shell fragment struck the chimney of the building that Lang occupied, and a large chunk ofmasonry struck him in the head, gravely injuring him.Recovering from his wounds, Lang was promoted to Colonel of the 8th Florida on April 30, 1863, and fought at the
Battle of Chancellorsville , where his brigade commander, Brig. Gen.Edward A. Perry , was stricken withtyphoid fever . Lang led Perry's Brigade during theGettysburg Campaign . On July 2, 1863, he attacked the center of the Union defensive line onCemetery Ridge , advancing past the Codori farm before being repulsed by troops from the II Corps. On the following day, the brigade supportedPickett's Charge , but failed to advance very far under heavy fire fromFreeman McGilvery 's line of artillery.With General Perry's return, Lang returned to command of the 8th Florida, leading it in the Bristoe and
Mine Run Campaign s, as well as in the 1864Overland Campaign . By the end of the war, Lang was again leading Perry's Brigade, surrendering it atAppomattox Court House on April 9, 1865.After the cessation of hostilities, Lang returned to Florida and became a civil engineer. He married Mary "Mollie" Quarles Campbell on February 28, 1866, and fathered four children. He was elected as a state representative from
Tallahassee, Florida , from 1885 until 1893. He served an eight-year tenure as Florida'sAdjutant General during the administrations of Governors Perry and Fleming (1885–1894). He was influential in the reorganization and training of Florida's statemilitia troops, which contributed to the creation of Florida's modern National Guard. Serving as major general, he led efforts in increase funding and pay rates for the troops.Lang returned to the
Gettysburg Battlefield in 1895 to help stake out the location for the Florida state monument. He resumed his political career, serving in the legislature until 1901, then served as a private secretary to Florida GovernorsHenry L. Mitchell andWilliam D. Bloxham . Lang was also Cashier of the Florida State Hospital.Lang was among the last brigade commanders of the Third Corps of the
Army of Northern Virginia to die. He was buried in the Old City Cemetery in Tallahassee.The David Lang Camp #1314 of the
Sons of Confederate Veterans in Tallahassee was named in his honor.References
* [http://www.civilwarflorida.com/site/soldiers/soldier_detail.php?soldierREF=156 Civil War Florida]
* [http://www.nostalgiaville.com/travel/florida/tallahassee/190522.jpgState of Florida Historical Roadside Marker for Lang]Persondata
NAME= Lang, David
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SHORT DESCRIPTION= Confederate Army officer
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