The regiment was organized at Camp Wilkins near
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in July 1861. George S. Hays served as
colonel, S. D. Oliphant as
lieutenant colonel, and J. B. Gardner as
major. After training, it was sent to
Washington, D.C. in late July, where it was assigned to the 1st Brigade of the
Pennsylvania Reserves division, which became the Second Division,
I Corps,
Army of the Potomac. In May, it followed the rest of the division to the Peninsula, where the division became the Third Division,
V Corps. On May 23, Gardner resigned and Captain S. M. Baily of company I was promoted to major in his place. The regiment first came under fire at the
Battle of Mechanicsville, where it lost nearly 100 men. When the rest of the army withdrew, Company F of the 8th Reserve, which had been sent forward as skirmishers, was not informed of the retreat and was left behind and captured by the Confederates. It also fought at the battles of
Charles City Cross Roads and
Glendale, losing over 200 additional men. After the regiment arrived at Harrison's Landing, both Hays and Oliphant resigned due to illness. Baily was promoted to colonel, Captain Lemon to lieutenant colonel, and Captain Robert E. Johnston to major. The Pennsylvania Reserves Division was sent to the
Army of Virginia in August as part of the
III Corps. The 8th Reserve fought at the
Second Battle of Bull Run, where it lost 52 out of 100 men, and again at
South Mountain, where it lost another 54 men. At the
Battle of Antietam, it fought on the Union right in the Cornfield, losing twelve killed and forty three wounded. It played a part in the Union breakthrough on the Confederate right at the
Battle of Fredericksburg but lost heavily, especially in officers. Twenty-eight were killed, eighty-six wounded, and twenty-two captured. Baily, five captains, and five lieutenants were among the wounded. In February 1863, the regiment was ordered to Washington, where it was rested and brought back up to strength. In the spring of 1864, the 8th Reserve, along with the rest of the division, was sent back to the army, as the Third Division,
V Corps. It fought in the initial battles of the
Overland Campaign, losing thirty three men at the
Battle of the Wilderness and another nineteen at the
Battle of Spotsylvania Court House. On May 17, it was relieved from duty since its term of service had expired. Those whose enlistments had not expired yet were transferred to the
191st Pennsylvania Infantry. The remainder of the regiment was sent back to Pittsburgh, where on May 24, it was mustered out of service. One of the members of the regiment who continued to serve after the war,
John A. Wiley, attained the rank of
major general as commander of the
28th Infantry Division. ==Organization==