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Verplanck Van Antwerp
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Verplanck S. Van Antwerp (8 June 1807 – 2 December 1875) was a Brevet Brigadier General in the Union Army during the American Civil War and served as U.S. Land Office Receiver and Secretary to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs.

Biography
Van Antwerp was born 8 June 1807 in Coeymans, New York.[1] In the 1830s and 1840s, he was a United States General Land Office Receiver and Secretary to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, in Keokuk, Iowa.[citation needed] During the civil war, he served as a Major and aide-de-camp to Major General James G. Blunt from 29 January to 21 March 1862 and was aide-de-camp to John C. Frémont from 19 April 1862. He became assistant inspector-general of the Department of Kansas in May 1862 and became inspector-general of the Army of the Frontier in December. He was promoted to the brevet rank of brigadier-geeneral on 13 February 1865 and mustered out of the army on 1 July 1866. On 28 July he re-enlisted as a captain and military storekeeper.[1]
While serving as a captain and military storekeeper he died at Upper Marlborough, Maryland, on 2 December 1875.[2] He is buried in Trinity Episcopal Churchyard in Upper Marlborough.[1]
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Family
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Verplanck Van Antwerp.
Van Antwerp married Jane Maria Yates (1815-1870), daughter of John Van Ness Yates, of Albany, and granddaughter of Robert Yates. They had 4 children:[citation needed]
- Catharine Van Antwerp, born c. March 1831, died c. 1863
- Caroline Van Antwerp, born 16 January 1843, died 15 Jan 1925
- Yates Van Antwerp, born c. 1847
- Jesse F Van Antwerp, born c. January 1850
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References
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