THE first
demand upon her patriotism was in the alarm following the surrender
of General Hull at Detroit, Aug. 16, 1812. Of the part
taken by the citizens of Ashtabula County in the defense of the
frontier but little will be found in
-------------------------
* By Rollin L. Jones.
Page 50 -
history. From the adjutant-general's office at Columbus the
records are missing. At the War Department, of what pertained
to the volunteer service, but little escaped the conflagration of
1814. The actors are dead.
We have traditionary evidence of the alacrity
with which the inhabitants of Ashtabula gathered together for the
defense of the frontier settlements, after the northwestern army was
sacrificed by the surrender of Hull. The Trump of
Fame, published at Warren, dated Sept. 2, 1812, says, "As soon
as the news of the fall of Detroit was confirmed every man rushed to
arms. Old and young, without distinction of politics, repaired
to the post of danger. None waited for the formality of
orders; but every one whether exempt from military duty or not put
on his armor. Most of the women and children fled to the
interior settlements, spreading the appalling news, which was taken
up by couriers, riding night and day, calling for help. Those
who were able to bear arms prepared to march, in many cases before
the general orders were known."
The militia act of 1803 was a very efficient one,
enacted by men who had seen service in Indian wars. Under it
the executive of the State had war powers, with authority to order a
draft, seize supplies, and impress transportation. An order
from General Wadsworth, commanding the Fourth division of
Ohio militia, was received by Colonel Richard Hayes, of
Hartford, directing him to assemble the members of his regiment at
Kinsman for military service on the 24th of August, 1812.
The regiment was composed of eight
companies. The men were variously equipped, and poorly
prepared to meet an army and officered as veterans. Some had
the common hunting-rifles, with powder-horn and bullet-pouch, and
others pikes and stout hay-forks. From Kinsman the regiment
marched northward, reaching Williamsfield the first day, and at
night the men built the campfires and cooked their rations from the
supply-wagons, and slept upon the ground as best they could.
The second night was spent in the same manner at Jefferson. At
Austinburg the next day the regiment found teams with public
supplies for their use. At Harpersfield, on the third days,
received orders from General Wadsworth to send back half of
the volunteers. The reason for the order was the general
destitution and defenseless condition of the infant settlements left
behind. In determining who should go and who should return,
some regard was had to home affairs and to the age and condition of
different ones. The drafted men were generally retained, and
assigned to the company commanded by Captain Joshua Fobes, of
Wayne. After the reorganization of the regiment at
Harpersfield it moved west on the Ridge road to Cleveland, where
supplied were found and a considerable body of soldiers had been
gathered. From Cleveland the regiment marched westward to the
township of Avery. The log cabins along the route had been
abandoned, as the news of Hull's surrender had brought with
it the expectation that the Indians would soon be upon the
inhabitants. At Avery a large block-house was built. The
troops remained at Abbott's farm on the Huron river until
November, when they were ordered to unite with the forces at Fort
Stephenson, Lower Sandusky. The exposure and hardships of that
campaign were severe, but the loss in action was slight. Some
of the soldiers from Ashtabula County were engaged in skirmishes
with the Indians upon the Peninsula at Sandusky, in September, 1812,
in which the loss upon the side of the Ohio troops was six killed
and ten wounded. On the 24th of February, 1813, the
period for which enlistments had been made then expired, and the men
were discharged and sent home.
The mails failing between Fort Stephenson and Fort
Meigs, Colonel Stephenson, commander of the former fort,
called for volunteers to carry the mails through the black swamp to
Fort Meigs. Titus Hayes, of Wayne, Dr. Coleman
of Ashtabula, and Captain Burnham, of Kinsman, offered their
services. Horses were provided, and they started with the mail
on their perilous expedition. The first night they encamped on
the bank of Portage river. They were aroused early the next
morning by the distant firing of guns, and, as they thought, an
occasional Indian whoop. As they drew near the fort the firing
of cannon and the Indian yells became louder and more frequent, and
it was evident that something unusual was in progress.
Hayes was detached to go forward, reconnoitre, and return within
an hour. The hour had nearly expired, and the cannonading and
firing of guns became louder, when the silence was broken by the
crack of a rifle, and Coleman's hat was shot from his head by
an Indian, who had pursued them. Coleman saw the Indian
dodge behind a tree. He drew up his gun to fire, but the
Indian war was out of sight, and in the haste of the moment he
dropped his gun to the ground, where the water was so deep as to wet
the priming. Having only a pistol left, it was thought best to
retreat. Captain Burnham cut open the mail-bag, took
out the report of their situation at Fort Stephenson, which was then
regarded as critical, and placed it in his bosom, threw away the
balance of the mail, and, leaving their horses, they started towards
Fort Meigs. After passing through many dangers from the
Indians, and in crossing swollen streams, Captain Burn-
Page 50 -
ham and Dr. Coleman reached Fort Stephenson, having
been four days without anything to eat, and under extreme fatigue
and excitement. Hayes had encountered the Indians, who
were numerous in the vicinity of Fort Meigs. Shifting his
course, he came across another company, which he avoided, and
deeming it a hopeless effort again to meet his companions, struck
for Fort Stephenson, which he reached in two days. After their
return dispatches were received showing the cause of this danger.
The British general, Proctor, with two thousand men, had
commenced bombarding Fort Meigs, and the Indians had been let loose
upon the surrounding country, to aid, by means of plunder, burning,
and massacre, in subduing the fort and prosecuting the war.
The following letter from Titus Hayes, of Wayne,
bet explains the nature of the service in the northwestern army
during the War of 1812:
|
"LOWER SANDUSKY, May 17,
1812. |
"I have been with the army since the 22d of August last; have been
home in march on furlough; expect a discharge soon. My health
has been good since I have been with the army. Ere this
reaches you, you will no doubt have an official account of the siege
of Fort Meigs, situate at the rapids of the Miami of the lake.
This affair has cost the British more than the surrender of
General Hull's army and our western post have benefitted them.
The Indians are disheartened, and call them cowards. Our loss
in killed at the fort and at the different sallies is about eighty
men; the number of wounded I do not know, but probably is very
considerable. Major Stoddard, of the artillery, has
died of his wounds. I have been in company with a captain of
the Ohio troops, who was sent by General Harrison as a guide
to the Kentuckians to storm the batteries opposite our fort, on the
opposite side of the river. From him I have the particulars of
that engagement. Our loss, notwithstanding they succeeded in
carrying the batteries and spiking the cannon, is very great; but
few got safe into our fort. This disaster is imputed to
disobedience of General Harrison's orders and the want of
discipline in the troops. About four hundred and fifty of the
unfortunate captives lately landed at Huron. Both officers and
soldiers had been stripped of their clothing and were in a most
destitute situation; many of them without shirts, and scarcely a hat
or a shoe amount them. The captain above mentioned was
severely wounded and taken prisoner, but escaped the gauntlet of the
savages by the friendly treatment of the British regulars. The
savages killed - says my informant - ninety-nine of our men after
they surrendered. Two British soldiers were killed and several
wounded in attempting to stop the inhuman butchery. Since the
battle of Tippecanoe, in 1811, the number of our savage foe has
increased nearly tenfold. It will now require a formidable
army to contend with them, but it is to be hoped that the
communication between the British and their savage allies will soon
be cut off, which will of course stop the progress of these
ferocious creatures.
|
"Your most affectionate
brother,
"TITUS HAYES. |
|
|
"To Noah and STATIRA
MERRICK,
"Wilbraham, Mass." |
|
Our thanks are due E. A. Wright, Esq., of Rock Creek, for
roll of Captain James Stones's company, and for the
following incidents of War of 1812:
At the
battle of River Raisin, General Winchester, entered into the
engagement contrary to General Harrison's orders, not waiting
for reinforcements; consequently, there was great slaughter.
General Harrison called for volunteers to go and get permission
from the British to bury the dead. Robert Lamont, of
this county, stepping from the ranks, said he would carry the flag
of truce if necessary. The flag was put over the door of the
cabin where he was to remain during the night. The Indians
broke open the door and shot him.
Guy Humphrey, of this county, was on guard at
the mouth of Cuyahoga river, when in the dim light he saw, as he
supposed, a canoe, containing an Indian, approaching. Watching
it closely, he thought it prudent to hail him. "Who comes
there?" was shouted to the supposed enemy. No response being
given he fired his musket, but that producing no effect, he reloaded
and fired again. By this time all was commotion in camp, and
preparations were made for an attack. Colonel King set
out a squad of men to reconnoitre, who found the cause of alarm to
be a large black log that was washed ashore by the dead swell of the
lake. Humphrey was duly commended for his prompt
discharge of duty and for his courage as a soldier.
David Wright, first sergeant under Captain
James Stone, was at a barn-raising, when a messenger rode up,
inquiring if the captain of the militia company was present.
The reply was, "No, but the lieutenant is." The messenger
said, "I am General Hull having surrendered to General
Brock, who has threatened with his twenty-five hundred regulars
and a horde of Indians to sweep the shore of Lake Erie from Detroit
to Buffalo. I give you orders to call out the Second Company,
Second Battalion, Third Regiment, Fourth Brigade, to report at
Cleveland fourthwith, to repel the enemy." Lieutenant
Atkins, turning to Sergeant Wright, said, "You are
commanded to notify our company to meet at your home at ten o'clock
to-morrow morning, armed and equipped for active service."
Leaving for home immediately, he mounted his horse and notified very
man before he slept, it being nearly sundown when he started, having
to go over the townships of Morgan and Rome to execute his orders.
The next morning, which was that of Sunday, the old men were early
at work making cartridges with bullets, - something that many of the
men had never before seen. A barrel of powder, with lead, had
previously been obtained from Pittsburgh. At about noon the
boots were mended, the old flint-lock muskets were put in order, the
farewells were spoken, and the line of march was taken for the seat
of action. The first night the men encamped under the broad
heavens, for they were without tents, without cooking utensils, with
food only that each man carried in his pocket from home. At
Austinburg they were joined by another company. The second
night they encamped at Painesville, and on the next night marched
into Cleveland to the sound of fife and drum.
In the war for the Union during the great Rebellion,
Ashtabula was prompt, patriotic, and decisive. Her citizens
were in the first fire upon the Confederates at Philippi, and at the
surrender at Appomattox. They were with Fremont in
Missouri, with Banks in the Shenandoah valley, and with
Roscrans in Western Virginia. They fought with Hooker
at Lookout Mountain, with Grant at Vicksburg, and marched
with Sherman through Georgia and the Carolinas. Their
blood stained the way from the Potomac to the James, from the Ohio
to the Tennessee, from the Missouri to the Arkansas. At
Kernstown, Port Republic, Cedar Mountain, Chancellorsville,
Gettysburg and Antietam at Resaca, Kenesaw, and Chickamauga; before
Atlanta; Stone River, Shiloh, Perryville; Pea Ridge, Murfreesboro',
and Malvern Hill; Cloyd Mountain, Cedar Creek, and Five Forks;
Spottsylvania, North Anna, and Petersburg, - whatever a glorious
record was made, there Ashtabula had brave men, who bore aloft her
colors through the gloom of defeat as well as in the flush of
victory. They trailed not in disgrace, but were borne forward
by earnest and determined men. Northway, Luce, Kee,
Stanhope, Spaulding, Manchester, Paulis, and Grant paid
the penalty demanded of gallant officers who lead where brave men
dare to follow. Ashtabula's dead lie in almost every
battle-field strewn with the sons of the Republic, who died that it
might live and be indeed the "land of the free." They suffered
in the trench and in the hospital; they starved in the prison-pen at
Andersonville, at Libby, Belle Isle, and Salisbury; they fell in the
skirmish, on the picket-line, and in the charge, amid the roar of
cannon and the rattle of musketry. Whatever sacrifice was
demanded by the bloody Moloch of war, Ashtabula had a victim who was
offered to the insatiable monster. Many are sleeping in
unknown graves, where no family devotion can find them out, and
where the Almighty only can cover them year by year with his
grasses, and plant above them in the spring-time His beautiful
flowers. The are
"Home at last.
. . . . . . . . . .
Tents on the Infinite Shore,
Flags in the azuline sky,
Sails on the sea once more,
To-day in the heaven on high,
All under arms once more!" |
About the time the Geneva Artillery was ordered to the frontier of
the State the "wave of excitement" broke upon this county. The
President's proclamation calling for seventy-five thousand men was
made public in this county on Monday evening, April 15, 1861.
The people at once responded by a general movement for raising men.
Captain Darius Cadwell, then holding a commission as
brigadier-general in the old militia organization repaired to
Columbus to ascertain the best method of proceeding, when he found
the quota of the State probably filled; yet he received assurance of
the acceptance of some companies into regiments then organizing.
At a meeting at the court-house in Jefferson, April 20, General
Cadwell and Hon. Able Krum then a representative in the
general assembly of Ohio from this county, made statements of the
condition of affairs, there being the plainest indication that more
men would be wanted as rapidly as they could be enlisted. This
was the first meeting worthy of note in the county called for the
purpose of procuring three-months' volunteers for the war. It
was presided over by Judge N. L. Chaffee, Rev. T. G. Lamb and
Gillett Fowler acting as vice-presidents, and J. D. Ensign
as secretary. At the close of the meeting a call was
made for volunteers, when sixty names were enrolled, Hon. B. F.
Wade heading the list. This company organized and made
choice of the following officers: Captain, Henry L. Hervey; First
Lieutenant, D. S. Wade; Second Lieutenant E. E. Ward.
After attending the meeting previously mentioned, Hon. Abel Krum
visited Cherry Valley, Wayne, and Andover, announcing at the
churches on Sunday the demand of the country for men, and calling
for volunteers. The result of this labor was the enlistment of
a large number of
Page 51 -
men in that section of the county, and shortly after a company was
formed at West Andover, composed of ninety-four men, with E. D.
Chapman, of Andover, as captain, John B. Rice, of
Andover, first lieutenant, and Rollin L. Jones, of Wayne, as
second lieutenant. A company was also organized at Kingsville,
Apr. 27, 1861, seventy-seven names being enrolled, and officered as
follows: Samuel Hayward captain, W. Stevens
first lieutenant, and L. G. Bannister second lieutenant.
Five full companies of good men were ready to march from this county
(not including the Geneva Artillery, already in the field) at the
earliest hour that they could be received and equipped, amounting in
the aggregate to four hundred and thirty-three men. Of
these companies but two could be accepted, as the quota of the State
had been filled. The companies accepted were organized at
Ashtabula and Rock Creek, and served in the Nineteenth Ohio
Infantry, while the remainder disbanded.
THE WOMEN'S WORK.
It would
be ungallant to pass by the heroic women of Ashtabula without paying
them a tribute of praise and gratitude for their labors of love and
mercy during the terrible years of 1861-65. Aid societies
sprang up all over the county, wherein noble and self-sacrificing
women banded together and prepared comforts for the well, dainties
for the sick, and necessaries for the wounded. Fair hands were
busy throughout the whole dreadful struggle. Early and late in
season and out of season, these angels of mercy toiled and gathered
forwarded to the soldiers at the front every comfort in their power
to bestow. Too much praise cannot be given to the women of the
north for their effort to cheer and sustain the armies of the
nation. It was the remark of gallant General Joseph Hooker
that, during the Crimean war, England furnished but one Florence
Nightingale, while here one was to be found in every northern
household. On the same roll containing the name of the English
heroine we are pleased to place the names of Misses Elizabeth A.
Tuttle, Rebecca P. Dean, Laretta H. Cutler and Ellen
Udell, who shared in the dangers of war as nurses in army
hospitals in the south.
The following history of the regiments and batteries in
which one organized company or more was incorporated we have
compiled from Whitelaw Reid's "Ohio in the War."
We are also under great obligations to the editors of the
Ashtabula Sentinel for the use of valuable files of their paper,
containing extensive correspondence from soldiers in the field and
their "Soldiers' Record of Ashtabula County." Also Major H.
J. Covell, Captain L. C. Reeve, and A. W. Stiles,
of Rome, Captain M. B. Gray, of Cleveland, Herbert H.
Tourgee, of Ida, Iowa, and others of the soldiers of Ashtabula.
NINETEENTH OHIO INFANTRY (THREE
MONTHS)
This
regiment numbered about one thousand men, and was mustered into the
service at Camp Jackson, Columbus, the last week in May, 1861.
Companies D and I were from Ashtabula County, the former under
command of Captain R. W. Crane, and the latter of Captain
W. B. Hoyt. These companies were ordered to rendezvous at
Ashtabula, and await further orders. They remained at
Ashtabula about three weeks, when they were removed to Camp Taylor,
at Cleveland, and moved to the field via Columbus and
Zanesville. After the organization of the regiment they went
into the West Virginia campaign under General McClellan.
The Confederate army, under General Robert S. Garnett, was
concentrating in northwest Virginia, with a view to a junction with
General H. A. Wise on the Kanawha. After the skirmish
at Philippi, General Garnett took a position at Laurel Hill,
where he fortified. General McClellan planned a flank
movement that was successful in getting Garnett into a proper shape
for an attack to be made by General Rosecrans' brigade,
composed of the Eighth, Tenth, and Thirteenth Indiana, and
Nineteenth Ohio Regiments. At Rich Mountain General Garnett
had posted Colonel Pegram with a strong force. It was
decided to attack this position first, and Colonel Rosecrans
was sent to make a detour of eight or nine miles through the
mountains to gain the turnpike in Pegram's rear. This
much was successfully accomplished, but dispatches sent from
McClellan to Rosecrans were captured, and the plan
discovered. The Confederates were prepared for the attack,
made on the 11th of July, and fought with great obstinacy. The
position of the Nineteenth in this battle was a most trying one, but
the men stood their first fire like veterans.
The following is from the report of General
Rosecrans: "The Nineteenth Ohio distinguished itself for the
cool and handsome manner in which it held its post against a flank
attack, and for the manner in which it came into line and delivered
its fire near the close of the action." The Nineteenth was not
mustered out of the service until September, 1861, on account of
delays at the War Department.
TWENTY-THIRD OHIO INFANTRY
At the
commencement of the war, Grotius R. Giddings, son of Hon.
J. R. Giddings, was acting as vice-consul at Quebec, but as soon
as the call for volunteers was made he resigned his post, returned
home, and recruited a company, with a view of joining the infantry
service as riflemen. The company was accepted, and received
marching orders on the 1st of June, 1861, and on the 4th arrived at
Camp Chase, and united with this regiment. Before leaving
Jefferson it was presented with a splendid silk banner, in front of
the court-house, by Miss Adeliza Hawley, who addressed the
company on behalf of the ladies who had prepared it. On the
arrival of the company at Camp Chase, it was organized as Company B
into the Twenty-third Regiment, which was officered as follows:
Company B into the Twenty-third Regiment, which was officered as
follows: colonel, William S. Rosecrans; lieutenant-colonel,
Stanley Matthews; major, Rutherford B. Hayes.
The position of these officers has been quite different
since those days, - in fact, too well known to need repetition.
Under command of Colonel E. P. Scammon, the Twenty-third went
into active service in West Virginia, meeting with the new and
exciting events common to inexperienced soldiers, which were almost
forgotten amid the sterner and sad realities of active warfare.
The regiment participated in the battles of Carnifax
Ferry, Virginia, Sept. 10, 1861; Giles Court-House, May 10, 1862;
and had the honor of opening the battle of South Mountain, Sept. 14,
1862, where it lost thirty-three men killed and eighty wounded,
among the latter being Rutherford B. Hayes, now President of
the United States. As an incident of this battle it is said
that the Twelfth and Twenty-third Ohio and Twelfth and Twenty-third
North Carolina - Companies B on each side - were directly engaged
with each other. The Twenty-third under command of
Lieutenant-Colonel Hayes was in the advance on that day.
It was ordered at an early hour to advance up the mountain and
attack the enemy. From behind stone walls the enemy poured a
destructive fire into the Federal ranks at very short range.
The command of the Twenty-third fell upon Major Comley after
Lieutenant-Colonel Hayes was wounded, the latter again making
his appearance on the field, with his wound half-dressed, and
fought, against the remonstrances of the whole command, until
carried off. Near the close of the day at Antietam a charge
was made by the division to which the Twenty-third belonged, and was
exposed to a large force of the enemy posted in a corn-field in rear
of the left. Its colors were shot down, and at the same time a
fcint was made
in its front. The colors were planted on a new line at right
angles with its former front, and the regiment formed a line in the
new direction, and opened fire upon the enemy, who retired.
The division withdrew, but no order reached the Twenty-third, and it
remained on the field until the division commander returned and
ordered it to the rear. The Twenty-third assisted in heading
off Morgan's command at Buffington's Island, and then
returned to Charlestown, West Virginia, and afterwards joined
General Crook's forces for a raid on the Virginia and Tennessee
railroad. May 9, 1864, the Twenty-third fought at Cloyd
Mountain. The enemy occupied the first crest of the mountain,
defended by artillery and rudely-constructed breastworks. The
hill was steep, thickly wooded, and difficult of ascent, and skirted
by a stream of water two or three feet deep. At the word of
command the regiment advanced across the stream to the foot of the
mountain, under a heavy fire of musketry and artillery, without
returning the fire of the enemy. A furious assault was made
upon the enemy's works, carrying them, with two nieces of artillery.
The struggle at the guns was of the fiercest description. The
Confederate artillerymen attempted to reloac their picces
when the Federal liue
was not more than ten paces distant. The Twenty-third was with
Hunter in the attack on Lynchburg, and in numerous skirmishes
and battles in the Shenandoah valley. At Winchester, July 24,
1864, it lost one hundred and fifty-three men. At the battle
of Opequan, September 19, Hayes' brigade had the extreme
right of the infantry. Moving forward under fire, the brigade
came upon a deep slough, forty or fifty yards wide, and nearly
waist-deep, with soft mud at the bottom, overgrown with a thick bed
of moss. It seemed impossible to get through it, and the whole
line was staggered for a moment. Just then Colonel Hayes
plunged in with his horse, and under a shower of bullets and shells
he rode, waded, and dragged his way through, - the first man over.
The Twenty-third was ordered by the right flank over the slough.
At the same place men were suffocated and drowned; still the
regiment plunged through, reformed, charged forward again, driving
the cnemy.
The division commander was wounded, leaving Colonel Hayes in
command. He was everywhere, exposing himself as usual; mcn
were falling all around him, but he rode through it all as though he
had a charmcd
life. No reinforcements as promised; something must be
done to stop the fire that is cutting the force so terribly.
Selecting some Saxony rifles in the Twenty-third, pieces of
seventy-one calibre, with a range of twelve hundred yards,
Lieutenant McBride was ordered forward with them to kill the
enemy's artillery horses, in plain sight. At the first shot a
horse drops, immediately another is killed, and a panic seems to
seize the artillerymcn, and they commence limbering up.
The infantry take the alarm, and a few commence, running fro the
intrenchments, and the cavalry, which had been hovering upon the
flanks, swept down upn the enemy, capturing them by
Page 52 -
regiments, and the battle was at an end The Twenty-third
fought at North Mountain, Sept. 20, 1864, and at Cedar Creek,
October, 19, - a day that is a household word over a whole nation.
The Twenty-third was mustered out on the 26th day of July, 1865, at
Cumberland, Maryland, and was paid and disbanded at Camp Taylor,
Cleveland, Ohio.
TWENTY-NINTH OHIO INFANTRY.
Soon
after the disaster at Bull Run, a little knot of citizens were
gathered together in front of the post-office at Jefferson, waiting
for details of the battle, when the Hon. J. R. Giddings, who
was then at home from Canada, came up and entered into the subject
of conversation, which of course was the late battle, its effect,
and the prospect before us. He said, "We must raise a regiment
in this county, and I am ready to do anything and all in my
power to promote it. We can raise the men beyond doubt, and
they ought to be ready for the field in sixty-days. This
reverse is necessary to excite us to action, and now is the time for
us to move." He immediately procured an order from the War
Department for the enlistment and organization of a regiment from
the northeast part of the State. The orders provided for this
regiment designated it as the Twenty-ninth, and Jefferson as the
place of rendezvous, the camp to be known as Camp Giddings.
This camp was located on the grounds of the County Agricultural
society. The first company of the Twenty-ninth was organized
on the 11th of August, 1861, and went into camp on Monday, August
19. By the 1st of December the regiment was fully organized,
with Lewis P. Buckley, colonel; Thomas Clark,
lieutenant-colonel; and John S. Clemmer, major. While
in camp a splendid stand of colors was presented to the Twenty-ninth
by the ladies of this and adjoining counties, on which occasion
Hon. J. R. Giddings addressed the members of the regiment as
follows:
"Officers
and soldiers: The ladies have prepared a splendid national and
regimental stand of colors, and have imposed on me the pleasant duty
of presenting them to the regiment. In all past ages civilized
nations have gone forth to war under their own banner, on which was
inscribed some device, figure, or emblem peculiar to such nation.
Thus each tribe among the Israelites had their particular banner.
The early Christians fought under the cross; the Romans under the
golden eagle; the Mohammedans under the crescent. The founders
of our government selected for their colors a groundwork of blue,
representing immutable justice and unlimited power, on which the
stars represented light, twinkling in the vaulted heavens, while in
mid ether the bird of Jove is floating, a fitting representation of
the ease and power with which liberty and civilization are gliding
over the earth, while the stars, with the stripes of red and white,
represent the vital principles and purity of our institutions."
(Addressing Colonel Buckley.) "To you, sir, as
commanding. I present these beautiful standards, for the use
and benefit of the regiment. ON behalf of the fair donors I
confide these national and regimental standards to the care of
yourself, your gallant officers, and men. Wherever you go, let
them be borne aloft and respected as the emblem of universal freedom
to all who seek your protection. Preserve them unstained.
Bear in mind that you go forth to fight the battles of the human
race for all coming time. Remember the cause in which you are
engaged. Your own heroic deeds shall be cushrined in
our memories, recorded in our history, admired by coming
generations, and approved by a holy and just God.!"
Colonel Buckey replied, "I receive this stand of
colors in behalf of the Twenty-ninth Regiment. I return, our
grateful thanks, and whenever and wherever it is unfurled to the
breeze, and we look upon its stars and stripes, may we then remember
the generous donors and the vow we this day make! This flag,
the flag of our country, which has been our pride and our boast, and
which is respected by all civilized nations, - this flag, thank God,
shall yet wave triumphantly wherever it has been struck down!
Companions, when we look upon this beautiful flag, may it inspire us
to redouble our energies to do our duty to our beloved country; and
if God, in his providence, permits us to return to home and
kindred, may this flag come back with us to bear witness that the
Twenty-ninth Ohio Volunteers were in the thickest of the fight!"
On Christmas morning, December, 1861, the Twenty-ninth
left Camp Giddings, via Ashtabula, for Camp Chase, remaining
at the latter camp until Jan. 17, 1862, when it was ordered to
Virginia, in consequence of the Confederate advance, under Jackson,
upon Romney. At Patterson's creek, Virginia, the regiment was
assigned to the division of General Landor, and to the
brigade of Colonel E. B. Tyler, of the Seventh Ohio.
After the death of General Landor, General James Shields
assumed command of the division, and the march commenced towards
Winchester. The enemy were met on the 23d of March, at
Kernstown. Here the Twenty-ninth fought its first battle,
losing three killed and ten wounded, and afterwards following in the
pursuit of Jackson as far as Strasburg. It marched with its
division to Falmouth, where General McDowell's army was
reviewed by President Lincoln. After a long march, the
Twenty-ninth again met the enemy at Port Republic, June 9, 1862,
where a severe battle was fought, in which it lost fourteen killed
and thirty-six wounded, with over one hundred missing.
Captain Horatio Luce fell in this battle. Aug. 9, 1862,
the Twenty-ninth fought at Cedar Mountain, Virginia, losing six men
killed and fifty-two wounded. The Twenty-ninth next met the
enemy at Chancellorsville, May 1, 1863, fighting through the three
terrible days following, and was posted near the Chancellor House,
in the rear of a line of rude earthworks, was posted near the
Chancellor House, in the rear of a line of rude earthworks, where
solid shot plowed the ground near its position. The enemy had
gained a part of the works to the right, where an assault was made
upon them, in which the Twenty-ninth was closely engaged. At
this battle the Twenty-ninth lost seventy-two killed and wounded.
At Gettysburg, July 1, 2, and 3, the Twenty-ninth was next engaged,
losing thirty-seven killed and wounded. It was ordered to
relieve the One Hundred and Thirty-seventh New York Infantry in the
works, which had nearly expended its ammunition. In passing
over a slight elevation, swept by the musketry of the enemy, the
principal loss was sustained. From Gettysburg the Twenty-ninth
marched with the army southward, and early on the morning of the
31st of July crossed the Rappahannock river at Kelly's ford, in the
face of the enemy. August 16 the Twenty-ninth, with the Ohio
regiments of its brigade, started for New York city, to aid in
enforcing order during the draft. Returning to Virginia, it
was soon sent with Hooker's army to Tennessee, and engaged in
the battle of Lookout Mountain, Nov. 24, 1863. December 22 it
was re-mustered into the service as a veteran organization, and
furloughed for thirty days. Returning to the field, it fought
at Dug Gap, Georgia, May 8, 1864, losing over one hundred men in
killed and wounded. This was a strong pass in the Chatooga range;
its sides are steep, covered with forests and rocks, rising eight
hundred feet above Mill creek. Along the top, facing westward,
rise palisades, impossible to scale. In addition to the
natural strength of the position were breastworks, occupied by the
enemy. The Twenty-ninth came withiu
range of a destructive fire from the enemy in this stronghold.
Sixty rounds of ammunition were soon exhausted, but by emptying the
cartridge-boxes of the dead a desultory fire was kept up until near
dark, when the command was given to retire. At this battle
Colonel Fitch, Lieutenant-Colonel Hayes, and Adjutant Stover
were wounded, and Lieutenant Grant killed. In this
terrible assault twenty-one were killed and eighty-four wounded.
May 15, at Resaca, the Twenty-ninth had three men wounded. At
New Hope Church, Georgia, May 25, the regiment fought at night until
darkness ended the contest. Here it was under fire until June
1. June 15, at Pine Hill, the Twenty-ninth was engaged in an
assault upon the enemy's earthworks, and its loss was severe.
The next morning it could stack but seventy muskets. It fought
at Peach-Tree Creek and engaged in the siege of Atlanta, marched
with Sherman down to the sea, participated in the siege and
capture of Savannah, and in the marches through the Carolinas.
The Twenty-ninth participated in the great review at Washington, May
24, and soon afterwards was sent to Louisville, Kentucky, where it
was mustered out soon afterwards was sent to Louisville, Kentucky,
where it was mustered out July 13, 1865. July 22 it was
disbanded at Cleveland, Ohio. The rolls of the Twenty-ninth
Ohio Infantry bear the names of fifteen hundred and thirty-two men,
of whom five hundred and forty were killed, wounded, or missing.
FIFTIETH OHIO INFANTRY.
This
regiment was recruited from the State at large, Captain Oscar C.
Pratt's company being principally from Ashtabula County.
The Fiftieth was early sent to the front, and first met the
enemy at Perryville, Kentucky, Oct. 8, 1862, where it lost three
officers and one hundred and sixty-two men killed and wounded.
From February, 1863, until September, 1863, the
regiment was engaged in building fortifications and in constructing
trestles on various rivers in Kentucky, and in December of the same
year was ordered to Knoxville, Tennessee. In the severe winter
weather the men dragged the artillery and wagons over the mountains
by hand, slept on the frozen ground, in rain and snow, without
shelter, and partially subsisted on parched corn. In the
Atlanta campaign of 1864 the Fiftieth was in the Third Brigade,
Second Division, Twenty-third Corps, and was in line of battle
almost constantly. It participated in the actions at
Pumpkinvine Creek, Dallas, New Hope Church, Lost Mountain, Pine
Mountiain, Kenesaw Mountain, Culp House, Nicojack Creek,
Chattahoochie River, Howard House, Atlanta, and Jonesboro'.
The Fiftieth was in the pursuit of Hood's army, and marched
to the Coosa river, in Alabama. At Spring Hill, Tennessee, the
enemy had formed a line across the road near that place. The
Fiftieth on the left and the remainder of the brigade upon the
right drove the Confederates from their position, and formed a
junction with the Fourth Corps, which had held Spring Hill against
the attack of Cheatham's Corps. At the battle of
Franklin, Tennessee, November 30, 1864, the Fiftieth was placed upon
the right of the Columbia pike. In this it received and
repelled eleven successive charges. It went into battle with
two hundred and twenty-five men, and came out with one hundred and
twelve. It
Page 53 -
fell back with the army to Nashville, and participated in the
battles at that place, December 15 and 16, 1864, and followed the
defeated enemy to Columbia, Tennessee. The Fiftieth was
consolidated with the Ninety-ninth Ohio Infantry. The
consolidated regiment constituted the Fiftieth. At the time of
the consolidation the Fiftieth numbered only about one hundred men.
The Fiftieth moved to Clifton, Tennessee, and thence via
Cincinnati and Washington to Fort Fisher, North Carolina. June
26, 1865, it was mustered out at Salisbury, North Carolina, and July
17, 1865, it was paid and disbanded at Camp Dennison, Ohio.
SIXTIETH OHIO INFANTRY.
MORE TO COME
ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTH OHIO
INFANTRY.
MORE TO COME
ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIFTH
INFANTRY.
MORE TO COME
ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-SEVENTH
OHIO INFANTRY.
This
regiment was organized at Cleveland, Ohio, during he month of
October, 1864, for one year's service. Two companies of this
regiment were from Ashtabula County. It proceeded to
Nashville, Tennessee, under orders to report to Gen-
Page 54 -
eral Thomas. The day after its arrival at Nashville it
was ordered to Tullahoma, and constituted a part of its garrison,
under command of General Milroy. It occupied the town
until the Confederate army under General Hood advanced
northward, when the garrison at Tullahoma was ordered to
Murfreesboro', where the One Hundred and Seventy-seventh arrived
after a severe march of three days. December 5, the
Confederates appeared before Murfreesboro', and skirmishing occurred
almost every day until Hood's defeat at Nashville.
December 7 a portion of Milroy's command, including the One Hundred
and Seventy-seventh, made a reconnoissance for the purpose of
learning the strength of the enemy, who were found in considerable
force, strongly posted behind a hastily-constructed work of logs and
dirt. Milroy's command assaulted the works, drove the
enemy back, and captured two pieces of artillery and over two
hundred prisoners. A few days later, while on a foraging
expedition, the One Hundred and Seventy-seventh was in a skirmish,
in which it lost eleven men wounded, two of them mortally.
After Hood was driven from Tennessee, the One Hundred and
Seventy-seventh was ordered to Clifton, and joined the Twenty-third
Army Corps. In January, 1865, the Twenty-third Corps was
ordered to North Carolina, via the Tennessee and Ohio rivers
to Cincinnati, where it took the cars for Washington. The One
Hundred and seventy-seventh embarked at Annapolis, and, after a
stormy passage, arrived at Fort Fisher, February 7. The
regiment was engaged in two attacks upon the enemy's works, from
Cape Fear river to the coast, and afterwards crossed the river and
participated in the flank movement which compelled the enemy to
evacuate Fort Anderson. The One Hundred and Seventy-seventh
was next engaged at Twin Creek, where it took one stand of colors
and many prisoners. It remained at Wilmington for a short
time, and then joined General Cox at Kinston, and proceeded
to Goldsboro', where it joined Sherman's army. After
the surrender of Johnson's army, the One Hundred and
Seventy-seventh was sent to Greensboro'. Its muster-out rolls
were prepared, and it proceeded to Cleveland, Ohio, where it was
paid and discharged July 7, 1865.
FIRST REGIMENT OHIO LIGHT
ARTILLERY.
Under the
Ohio militia law of 1860, an organization was formed called the
First Regiment of Light Artillery, and consisted of six companies,
having one gun to each company, under command of Colonel James
Barnett. This organization was ready, if necessary, to
take the field. Five days after the fall of Sumter, the
following telegram was received:
|
"COLUMBUS, April 20,
1861. |
"COLONEL JAMES BARNETT, Cleveland, Ohio"
"Report your six pieces, caissons and full battery,
including the Geneva company, at Columbus, forthwith. Monday,
if possible. You can hire horses for the guns here, or at your
point of service. Bring harness and everything else.
Twenty men to each gun. You retain colonel's rank. By
order.
|
"H. B. CARRINGTON,
Adjutant General. |
The command reported to
Columbus on Monday night, April 22, and was immediately sent forward
to Marietta, and the guns placed in position to cover the place from
an anticipated attack from the opposite shore of Virginia. In
July, 1861, this regiment was ordered to Columbus, Ohio, where it
was paid and disbanded.
Under orders from the War Department this regiment,
with twelve light batteries, was mustered into the service of the
United States for three years, to date from Sept. 3, 1861, and, as
each battery was filled and equipped, it was sent to the field.
The record of the long and faithful service of the First Ohio Light
Artillery occupies many pages in Ohio history, and nothing surpasses
the fame of Cotter's, Standart's, Kenny's
Edgerton's, Huntingdon's, Hyman's, and Heckman's
batteries.
Company F (three months). - The first men sent
to the field from Ashtabula County were those who composed the
Geneva artillery, under command of Captain Dennis Kenney, Jr. This
company had been organized two years before the war began, as a part
of the militia of Ohio. They had drilled regularly, were well
equipped, and furnished with one of the brass pieces that were then
the admiration of the whole State.
Being militia, they were regarded as State troops, and
in that capacity, in April, 1861, they were ordered to report to
Marietta, to protect the frontier at that point. This company
was organized into the command of Colonel James Barnett.
While the company was at Marietta, an order was received late at
night from General McClellan directing two companies of
artillery to proceed to Parkersburg, Virginia, and join the column
of Colonel Steedman. Precedence was given by seniority
of companies, and two companies from another part of the State were
ordered to prepare for active service. Company meetings were
held, and it was decided that the organizations were for the defense
of the State, and the companies ordered into danger declined to
entertain the propositions, and returned the order with objections
to Colonel Barnett. General McClellan
telegraphed again more urgently for the prompt movement of the
artillery against the Confederates then concentrating near Grafton
and Philippi. Colonel Barnett concluded to try "special
order" again upon a company with "rural" antecedents in connection
with one of the most splendid "make up" from the city, and in twelve
hours after receiving the order Companies D and F were fifteen miles
away. The company left Camp Putnam May 30, by steamboat, for
Parkersburg, and the next morning took the train for Grafton, moving
slowly for fear of accidents. Arriving at Clarksburg, the
companies were ordered to clear their pieces for action. The
guns were on a flat car in front of the engine, shotted, and ready
to repel any attack that might be made. From Webster the
command, uniting with the Fourteenth Ohio and Seventh Indiana
Regiments, were ordered to march across the country and capture a
Confederate camp at Philippi. The march commenced at eleven
o'clock at night, continuing for twelve miles in a drenching rain,
through an anemy's
country, and at daybreak on the morning of the 3d of June, 1861, the
attack was commenced upon the enemy, which was returned by them for
a few moments, when they turned and fled. Thus was opened the
campaign in Western Virginia. This artillery company remained
in the servicc
for three months, and on the 28th day of July, 1861, at Columbus it
was mustered into the service of the United States, and on the same
day mustered out and disbanded. The attack upon the
Confederate camp at Philippi was made by this company, and the first
shotted gun, after the attack at Fort Sumter, fired in the war was
the old brass piece from Geneva, Ashtabula County.
Battery C was organized by
Captain Dennis Kenney, Jr. It was mustered into the three
years' service at Camp Dennison, Ohio, Sept. 9, 1861, with one
hundred and sixty men. The battery was with the very first
troops that crossed into Kentucky, where it was organized into
a division, composed of Ohio, Kentucky, and Indiana troops, under
command of General George H. Thomas, at Camp Dick Robinson.
It joined an expedition under General Albin Schoepf, for the
purpose of relieving East Tennessee, and performed effective service
at the battle of Mill Spring, Kentucky. It came up with
Thomas' division too late to engage in the battle of Shiloh, but
performed hard service in the advance on Corinth. Oct. 13,
1863, Battery C was placed in the Fourteenth Corps. At Rolling
Fork, Kentucky, Dec. 31, 1862, in an engagement with Morgan's
men it lost Lieutenant Henry W. Paulus. At Chickamauga
it fought all day Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 19 and 20, under the
immediate direction of General Thomas. On at least two
occasions of that most memorable and important battle the battery
received verbal compliments from that officer. With Thomas
it was in the last struggle of Sunday evening, which resulted in
sending the enemy back into that terrible valley of death, where lay
not less than thirty thousand dead and wounded American soldiers.
In this action it lost thirteen men of Mission Ridge the battery
re-enlisted, and was furloughed for thirty days. At the
organization of the army for the Atlanta campaign the battery was
assigned to General Hooker's Twentieth Corps.
Captain Gary was assigned to duty as chief of artillery of
General Butterfield's Third Division. The command of the
battery then devolved upon Lieutenant Stevens, a fine
artillery officer from Geneva. The battery participated in the
battles of Resaca, Cassville, New Hope Church, Peach-Tree Creek, and
Siege of Atlanta. In the summer's campaign the battery lost
twenty men in killed and wounded, and in the campaigns through the
Carolinas, it fought at Averysville and Bentonville. It was
the fortune of this battery to have lost but one gun, - seldom ever
to have been engaged in a retreat. It was always with the
active troops in the field, and had the honor of being the only Ohio
battery that completed the entire march from the Ohio river to the
Potomac. It marched through Richmond to Washington,
participated in the great review, and was disbanded June 15, 1865,
at Cleveland, Ohio.
SECOND OHIO INDEPENDENT BATTERY.
This
battery was organized by Captain Thomas J. Carlin, of
Conneaut, and was mustered into the
service at Camp Chase, Ohio, on the 6th of August, 1861, and left
that camp on the 15th of the same month, under orders to report to
Major General Fremont, at St. Louis, Missouri. On the
8th it was dispatched by rail for the relief of Colonel Mulligan,
at Lexington, Missouri, but disembarked at Jefferson City.
Colonel Mulligan having surrendered, it received orders to
march to Springfield, but halted at Tipton, where it was reviewed
with General Fremont's forces by Secretary of
War Cameron and Adjutant-General Lorenzo Thomas.
Springfield was reached on the 1st of November, but Price's
army had fled, and the campaign ended for the winter. The
battery remained at Rolla until the 24th of February, 1862, when it
marched against Price's Confederate army, and was engaged in the
battle of Pea Ridge, on the 6th and 7th of March, where it was
closely engaged, and lost one man killed and twelve wounded.
The
Page 55 -
battery lost oue caisson, but in turn captured one from the
enemy, and though closely pressed drew from off the field all of its
pieces in safety. The battery marched with General Curtis'
command through Arkansas to Helena, on the Mississippi river, where
it lay until Jan. 23, 1863, when it accompanied an expedition to
Duvall's Bluff. The battery was taken by transports to the
mouth of the Yazoo river, where it joined Grant's army in the rear
of Vicksburg. It took part in the battles of Black River
Bridge, Raymond and Champion Hills, and was on duty until the
surrender of Vicksburg, when it was ordered to report to General
Banks at New Orleans, and accompanied the disastrous expedition
up Red river. Feb. 23, 1864, the battery re-enlisted, and was
reorganized. It was then ordered to Ship Island, Mississippi,
to guard Confederate prisoners, and remained there on that duty
until July, 1865, when it was ordered to Columbus, Ohio. In
the ranks of the second Battery were two hundred and nineteen men,
of whom forty-two were killed in battle or died from disease.
It was mustered out July 21, 1865, after near four years' service.
FOURTEENTH OHIO INDEPENDENT
BATTERY.
This
battery was mustered into the service at Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 20,
1861, by Lieutenant J. W. P. Neil, Eighteenth United states
Infantry. It was mainly recruited in the counties of
Ashtabula, Trumbull, Lake, and Geauga, under authority from the
Secretary of War, empowering Hon. B. F. Wade and Hon. John
Hutchins to raise the regiment of cavalry and a battery of
artillery. In its ranks were two hundred and forty-nine men
and ten commissioned officers. The battery reported for
service at Camp Dennison, on the 1st of January, 1862, and on the
5th of February left that camp, destined for Kansas. It was
ordered by General Halleck to remain in St. Louis for orders,
and on the 13th of February left for the theatre of war in
Tennessee. At Paducah it was attached to the command of
General Hurlbut. On the 7th day of March it embarked with
the army up the Tennessee river, and disembarked at Pittsburg
Landing, and was transferred to General McClernand's
division. On the 9th of April, 1862, the battery participated
in the battle of Pittsburg Landing, losing four men killed and
twenty-six wounded, also fifty horses killed and wounded, and all
their guns were left on the field, but were recovered on the
following day without damage. The battery participated in the
advance on Corinth, and also performed garrison duty at Jackson,
Tennessee, until June 2, 1863, and afterwards remained in camp at
Lynnville, Tennessee, until March, 1864. The battery
participated in the battle of Resaca, Georgia, where it expended
three hundred and forty-two rounds of ammunition, without casualties
on its side. At Dallas, Georgia, it was engaged in shelling
the enemy's works from the 28th until the 30th day of May, and took
an active part in repelling the attack of the enemy upon the Federal
lines on the evening of the 28th. On the evening of the 19th
of May the battery took a position before Kenesaw mountain, and was
constantly under fire from that date to the 2d of July, losing two
men wounded. On the 3d of July it participated in the
engagement of Ruff's Mills. A section of the battery was
detached with General Stoneman's Cavalry, where it performed
good service, silencing the enemy's batteries on two occasions at
river crossings. At the siege of Atlanta the battery was
located within thirteen hundred yards of the enemy's heavy guns,
behind casemated works. Eight men of the battery were wounded,
two horses killed, and four wounded during these twenty-eight days
of almost continuous firing. The battery marched northward
with the army in pursuit of the Confederate General Hood, and
reached Gaylesville, Alabama, on the 21st of October, where orders
were received to report at Nashville, Tennessee, where it was
assigned to the Seventh Cavalry Division. A new supply of
horses and harness was drawn, and the battery was constituted horse
artillery. It participated in the battle of Nashville, Dec.
15, 1864, and in the pursuit of Hood's demoralized army.
From Eastport, Mississippi, the battery was sent to New Orleans, and
from thence to Mobile, Alabama, landing near Spanish Fort, and
occupying a position upon the left of the Federal line. The
battery was assigned to the Second Brigade of the Cavalry Division
of Mississippi, and marched to Greenville and Montgomery, Alabama.
The battery remained at Columbus, Mississippi, until the 27th of
July, when it was ordered to Cairo, Illinois, to be mustered out,
and from thence it was sent to Camp Dennison, where it was
discharged Aug. 17, 1865.
SECOND REGIMENT OHIO HEAVY
ARTILLERY.
In 1863
it became necessary to recruit a class of troops whose duty it
should be to fortify, garrison, and hold many important forts and
strongholds that had been captured from the enemy. For this
purpose the Second Ohio Heavy Artillery, consisting of twenty-four
hundred men, rank and file, was then authorized.
Company M, commanded by Captaiu
William H. H. Crowell, and other companies of the regiment were
largely recruited from Ashtabula County. Company M was
mustered into service Sept. 9, 1863, at Covington Barracks, and on
18th of the same month it moved to Fort Willich, Mumfordsville,
Kentucky. Jan. 10, 1864, it was transferred to Fort Taylor, at
Camp Nelson, Kentucky where it remained on duty until May 26, 1864.
From Camp Sedgwick, at Cleveland, Tennessee, it participated with
the rest of the regiment in various expeditions, and was engaged in
a skirmish at Strawberry Plains, where the Union forces were in a
critical position. Feb. 1, 1865, it was at Athens, Tennessee.
It was there mustered out of the service, Aug. 23, 1865, and on the
29th of the same month was paid and disbanded at Camp Chase, Ohio.
SECOND OHIO CAVALRY.
This
regiment was recruited and organized in the summer and autumn of
1861, at Camp Wade, near Cleveland, Ohio. It was the first
cavalry regiment raised in the northern part of the State, drew into
its ranks men of intelligence, culture, and capacity, and
represented every trade and profession. In January, 1862, the
Second Cavalry procceded by rail to Platte City, Missouri,
reported to General David Hunter, and was quartered in the
town. In February, the Second marched through the border
counties of Missouri to Fort Scott, Kansas. On the 22d of
February a scouting-party of one hundred and twenty men of the Sccond
Cavalry were attacked in the strects of Independence,
Missouri, by an equal force of the enemy under command of the famous
Quantrill. As thc results of the Second's first fight,
Quantrill was routed in fifteen minutes, losing fourteen men.
The Second lost one man killed and thrce wounded. The
Second Cavalry moved with the army into the Indian Territory in
June. At Baxter Springs three regiments of loyal Indians,
mounted on ponies and armed with squirrel rifles, joined the
command. During the summer one hundred and fifty men were
detailed from the Second Cavalry to man, temporarily, a light
battery, and six months later the detail was made a transfer by
order of the War Department, and constituted the Twenty-fifth Ohio
Battery. In September, the Second, with the battery mentioned,
marched with the army of General Blunt into Missouri and
Arkansas, sharing in the campaign which ended in the victory of
Prairie Grove, Arkansas, Dec. 2, 1862. In the autumn campaign
the Second fought at Carthage and Newtonia, Missouri, camped on the
battle-field of Pea Ridge, and fought at Cow Hill, Wolf Creek, and
White River. Captain August V. Kautz, Sixth United
States Cavalry, was appointed colonel of the Second, and soon after
it was transferred to Camp Chase, Ohio, to remount and refit for the
field. In February, 1863, the original twelve companies were
consolidated into eight, and a battalion of four companies of the
Eighth Ohio Cavalry was added to the Second. In April the
Second moved into Kentucky. In May and June the Second fought
twice at Steubenville, twice at Monticello, and once at Columbia,
Kentucky. The Second joined in the pursuit of John Morgan,
following the great raider twelve hundred miles, through the States,
and shared in the capture at Buffington's Island.
The work of the Second in East Tennessce was
active and honorable, where skirmishes occurred too numerous to
record. During the siege of Knoxville, the Second operated on
the enemy's flank, and joined in the pursuit of Longstreet's
army. On the 2d of December, 1862, it fought
Longstreet's cavalry, at Morristown, and on the 4th of the same
month the Second lost forty men killed and wounded at Russellville.
On the 6th it was at the front five hours at the battle of Beam
Station. The Second re-enlisted in January, 1864, and was
furloughed for thirty days. It was ordered to Annapolis,
Maryland, and moved out of camp May 1, eight hundred strong,
crossing the Long Bridge into Virginia. The Second was
transferred from the Ninth Army Corps to Sheridan's Cavalry Corps.
Its duties following were arduous, and its losses severe. From
the Army of the Potomac the Second marched to the Shenandoah Valley.
Several companies of the Second, acting as a rear-guard, fought an
hour in dense darkness in the streets of Winchester. The
Second Ohio Cavalry, with the aid of the Third New Jersey Cavalry,
captured an entire regiment of Confederate infantry near Winchester,
special mention being made by the Secretary of War of the gallantry
of these two regiments.
On the 19th of October the Second fought at Cedar
Creek, being in the saddle from daybreak until nine o'clock P.M.
It occupied the centre on the Valley pike, while the infantry formed
in the rear of the cavalry, was present on the pike when Sheridan
came to the front on his immortal ride, assisted to raise the shout
of welcome, and joined in the charges that decided the victory.
On the 27th of February, 1865, the Second started with Sheridan on
the last raid of the war, sharing in the capture of Early's army at
Waynesboro', March 2. In this action the Second captured five
picces of artillery with caissons. For this it received
the thanks of General Custer up the field. The Second
joined the Army of the Potomac with Sheridan's cavalry, at
Petersburg, entering the campaign that closed the war. From
the 27th of March to the surrender of Lee the Second captured and
turned over to the provost-marshal eighteen pieces of artillery.
Soon after the grand review at Washington, the Sccond was
ordered to St. Louis, Missouri, and from thence to Springfield.
The order for mustcr-out was soon received, when the Second
proceeded to Camp Chase, Ohio, and on the 11th of September, 1865,
was paid and disbandcd.
Page 56 -
The
following is the closing paragraph of the sketch of the Second Ohio
Cavalry, in Whitlaw Reid's "Ohio in the War":
"The Second fought under the following general
officers: Buell, Wright, Hunter, Denver, Sturgis, Blunt, Salomon,
Curtis, Schofield, Burnside, Carter, Sheridan, Gillmore,
Shackelford, Foster, Kautz, Sedgwick, Wilson, McIntosh, Torbert,
Custer, Meade, and Grant. Its horses have drank
from, and its troopers have bathed in, the waters of the Arkansas,
Kaw, Osage, Cygues, Missouri, Mississippi, Ohio, Scioto, Miami,
Cumberland, Tennessee, Holston, Potomac, Shenandoah, Rappahannock,
Rapidan, Bull Run, Mattapony, Pamunky, Chickahomony, James,
Appomattox, Blackwater, Nottaway, and Chesapeake. It has
campaigned through thirteen States and the Indian Territory.
It has traveled, as a regiment, on foot, horseback, by railroad and
steamboat, on land, river, bay, and ocean. It has marched an
aggregate distance of twenty-seven thousand miles; has fought in
ninety-seven (97) battles and engagements. It has served in
five different armies, - the Army of the Frontiers, of the Missouri,
of the Potomac, of the Ohio, and of the Shenandoah, - forming a
continuous line of armies from the headwaters of the Arkansas to the
mouth of the James, and its dead, sleeping where they fell, form a
vidette-line half across the continent, a chain of prostrate
sentinels two thousand miles long. Even in their graves, may
not their patriot dead still guard the glory and the integrity of
the Republic for which they fell?"
SIXTH OHIO CAVALRY.
In
September, 1861, Amander Bingham, of Orwell, received orders
to raise a company of cavalry. The company was organized with
the purpose of joining the Third Ohio Cavalry, then forming at
Monroeville, Ohio. Another regiment of cavalry was ordered to
be recruited on the Reserve about this time, and the company decided
to go into the Sixth Regiment, to be organized at Warren, Trumbull
county. In January, 1862, the Sixth Regiment moved from Camp
Hutchins to Camp Dennison, and from thence to Camp Chase, to assist
in guarding Confederate prisoners. On the 13th of May, 1862,
it was sent to Wheeling, Virginia, where it was equipped for the
field, and ordered to join General Fremont at Franklin, but
instead joined him at Strasburg, in his pursuit of Jackson down the
Shenandoah valley. At Strasburg the Sixth had its first fight,
when seven men were wounded. It skirmished with the Second and
Sixth Virginia Cavalry, forming the Confederate rear-guard, under
General Turner Ashby. June 7, 1862, the Sixth was engaged,
losing a number in killed and wounded. The Sixth was under
fire fourteen days in contesting the passage of the Rapidan river,
and in doing good service at the second battle of Bull Run. In
March, 1863, it fought at Kelley's Ford, where fifteen men were
killed and wounded. At the battle of Aldie, Virginia, June 17,
General Kirkpatrick ordered Colonel Steadman to
charge, with one squadron, a Confederate column. Captain
Northway, of Company A, was ordered to make the charge, which he
did, only seven men returning unharmed out of thirty engaged, nearly
every one being wounded in a hand-to-hand conflict. At the
battles of Middleburg, Upperville, and Gettysburg the Sixth Cavalry
acted well its part. September 1, Major Cryer, with a
patrol of fifty men, were ambushed by about two hundred dismounted
Confederate cavalry, and, after sharp fighting, only seven men
reached camp unharmed. At the battle of Bristoe Station,
Captain Leeman, with one squadron, was ordered to charge through
the enemy's lines, and report to the rear-guard that the enemy had
obtained possession of the road, a feat which he successfully
accomplished. He returned the next day, having reached the
command by taking another road. The Sixth spent the winter of
1863-64 at Warrenton, Virginia, in picketing the right and rear of
the Federal army, and in protecting it from raids from the notorious
Mosby. Hardly a day passed without an encounter of some kind,
and many were the midnight marches made to surprise Mosby in
his camp. The Sixth re-enlisted in January, 1864, and was
recruited in the spring nearly again to its maximum number.
The Sixth accompanied Sheridan in his attempt on Richmond. It
was rear-guard the first day out, and as such received several
charges from Stuart's chosen regiments, all of which were
repulsed. It fought, May 11, at Yellow Tavern, where
General Stuart fell, and May 12 it fought a severe battle inside
the defenses of Richmond. May 28 it fought at Owen Church,
where Captain Northway and thirteen men were killed and
thirty-five wounded. At Cold Harbor and Trevilian Station the
Sixth lost heavily, and as Gregg's division was driven from the
field at Trevilian, it was ordered to form the rear guard, in which
duty it performed excellent service. Crossing the James river
with Grant's army, the Sixth pushed around to the left of the
Federal line to Ream's Station, for the purpose of reinforcing
General Wilson, who was being defeated. The Sixth was in
the cavalry battle of Malvern Hill; at Hatcher's Run Oct. 27, 1864,
and again, Feb. 3, 1865; and at Cold Harbor, May 31, 1864; at
Dinwiddie Court-house, Five Forks, Weldon Railroad, Sailor's Creek,
and Farmville. At the battle of Appomattox Court House the
Sixth had the honor of opening the engagement, having marched during
the night to a position across the only road left for the retreat of
the Confederate army. Soon after day-light on that memorable
morning an attack was made upon the Federal line, which had been
fortified by a rail breastwork, and after a spirited resistance the
regiment fell back, only to show to the pursuing army our strong
lines of infantry who had come up during the early morning.
The attack ended, a white flag was flying in the Confederate front,
and the work as accomplished. The next day the Sixth was
detailed to escort General Grant from Appomattox to
Burkesville. When Johnson's surrender was announced the
Sixth was sent to Petersburg, and soon after sent in detachments to
different counties comprising the "Sub-District of the Appomattox."
In August, the Sixth was ordered to Cleveland, Ohio, where it was
mustered out of service.
SEVENTH KANSAS CAVALRY.
In
August, 1861, John Brown, Jr., of this county, obtained
authority to recruit and transport a company of riflemen to Kansas.
The men of his company were recruited chiefly among the hunters of
western Pennsylvania, from Ashtabula County, and from northwestern
Michigan. Nov. 12, 1861, at Leavenworth, Kansas, they were
mustered into service as Company K, Seventh Kansas Cavalry,
commanded by Colonel Jennison. Their first services
were fighting bushwhackers in western Missouri, along the borders of
Kansas and the Indian Territory. In May, 1842, the Seventh was
ordered south, and commcnced the summer's campaign after the
battle of Corinth. While stationed at Rienzi, Mississippi, the
men suffered severely from the effects of the climate, and many died
in hospitals. The Seventh campaigned in Mississippi, Alabama,
and Tennessee until September, 1864, when it was sent to Missouri,
and engaged in the memorable "Price's raid," following the
cnemy
nearly twice across that State. The Seventh performed
effective service fighting guerrillas in Missouri and Arkansas, and
in August, 1865, was ordered to the plains to fight Indians.
At Fort Kearney the Seventh was ordered to Fort Leavenworth for
muster-out, and was disbanded Sept. 29, 1865. The Seventh
fought at Iuka, Mississippi, in August, 1862; second battle of
Corinth, Mississippi, October, 1862; Water Valley and Coffceville,
in December, 1862; Grenada and tupelo, Mississippi; Buzzard Roost
and Tuscumbia, Alabama; and many cavalry skirmishes.
ELEVENTH NEW YORK INDEPENDENT
BATTERY.
On the
17th of September, 1861, Robert C. Warmington, of Ashtabula,
received a commission from an old friend, General G. A. Scroggs,
of Buffalo, New York, authorizing him to recruit a battery of
artillery, and nine days later he left Ashtabula with a company of
about eighty men. At Albany, Jan. 6, 1862, the command of
Captain Warmington was consolidated with Captain Von
Puttkammer's command, with the designation of Eleventh New York
Independent Battery. It garrisoned Fort Ellsworth, at
Alexandria, Virginia, until August 24, 1862, when it marched to
Manassas Junction, by order of General McClcllan.
While encamped at the Junction, four guns of this battery, without
proper support, where attacked at about eleven o'clock at night by
Jackson's forces. Five rounds each per gun of grape and
canister were fired from the guns engaged. Twenty-nine men and
the four guns were captured. The following morning the balance
of the battery, with two guns, with the assistance of a New York
regiment, held Jackson's forces in check long enough to
enable the trains to escape to Alexandria. The battery was
engaged in the actions at Fredericksburg, Virginia, Dec. 13, 1862;
Chancellorsville, Virginia, May 2 and 3, 1863; Gettysburg, Pa., July
3, 1863; Mine Run, Virginia, Nov. 26, 1863; North Anna River,
Virginia, May 23 to 26, 1864; Tolopotomy Creek, Virginia, May 28 to
31, 1864; Cold Harbor, Virginia, June 3 to 12, 1864; Petersburg,
Virginia, June 16 to 19, 1864; Jerusalem Plank-Road, Virginia, June
23 and 24, 1864; and second battle at Deep Bottom, Virginia, Aug.
14, 1864. Nine Ashtabula County soldiers who enlisted in this
battery were killed in action or died in the service.
THE SQUIRREL HUNTERS.
During
the autumn of 1802, the Confederate General Kirby Smith
advanced upon Cincinnati with a large army. Governor Tod
issued a proclamation calling upon all who would furnish themselves
with rations and arms to turn out, organize under their own
officers, and rendezvous at Cincinnati, transportation over the
railroads to be provided by the government. Three hundred and
sixty-six citizens of Ashtabula County responded to the all of the
governor. These men, of course, saw no fighting, but their
work was cheerfully performed because they thought their services
were needed. Governor Tod caused lithograph discharges
to be forwarded to those whose names could be obtained. These
discharges may be found in many homes in the county, where they are
properly prized.
To G. F. Lewis, Esq., of Cleveland, Ohio, we are
indebted for rolls of the companies of Captains Joshua Fobes,
Jedediah Burnham, John R. Reed, John and Jacob Bartholomew, War
of 1812. The roster of Ashtabula's soldiers during the War of
the Rebellion was compiled from the muster rolls in the office of
Adjutant General Meilly at Columbus, and from files of the
Ashtabula Sentinel.
Page 57 -
ROSTER OF
SOLDIERS FROM ASHTABULA COUNTY.
__________
WAR OF 1812.
CAPTAIN JACOB BARTHOLOMEW'S
COMPANY
THIRD REGIMENT, COLONEL NATHAN KING, FRONTIER SERVICE.
Captain, Jacob Bartholomew, a resident of Geneva, and died in
Geneva in 1825.
Sergeant, Truman Watkins, enlisted
in Geneva, and died in that town in 1864.
Sergeant Lorrin Cowles, enlisted in
Geneva; moved to Baraboo, Sauk county, Wisconsin, in 1844, and died
there in 1846; was probate judge of Sauk county at the time of his
death.
Corporal, Dan'l. T. Bartholomew, enlisted in
Geneva, and died in Michigan.
Fifer, Benjamin Bartholomew,
enlisted in Geneva, and died in Northfield, Minnesota, about 1862.
Corporal, George Hewins,
enlisted in Harpersfield, and died in Sturgis, Michigan, about 1838.
Benjamin Custin, enlisted in
Harpersfield, and died in that town.
David Allen, no record.
Squire B. French, enlisted in
Geneva, and died in Warrick county, Ind.
Abraham Bartholomew, enlisted in
Geneva, and died in that town about the yea r1849.
John B. Bartholomew, enlisted in
Harpersfield, and died in Winnebago county, Illinois, about 1851.
Samuel Bartholomew, enlisted in
Harpersfield, and died about the year 1821; was killed by his wife
while she was insane.
Zadock Brown, enlisted in Saybrook.
Lodowick Brakeman enlisted in
Harpersfield, and removed after the war to near Port Huron, Ohio,
where he was drowned about the year 1828.
Adna Cowles, enlisted in
Harpersfield, and died in that town in 1837; he would accept no
compensation for his services, not even the value of one of his
horses, which was pressed into the service, and valued at fifty
dollars.
Alpheus Cowles, enlisted in Geneva,
removed west and settled in Sauk county, Wisconsin, and is still
living at a very advanced age at this writing - April, 1878.
Reynolds Cahoon, Jr., enlisted in Harpersfield;
afterwards became a Mormon convert, moved west, and is thought to
have died in Utah.
Levi Gaylord, enlisted in Geneva, and died at
his home in that town in 1876. He was a son of Major Levi
Gaylord, a soldier of the Revolution, and one of the earliest
settlers in Geneva.
Flavel Williams, enlisted in Geneva, and died in
the service, at Detroit, Michigan.
William A. Harper, enlisted in Harpersfield;
died near Cleveland. He was a member of the Ohio legislature.
William Miller, enlisted in Harpersfield; was
wounded by being shot through the hips; died in Harpersfield.
Barzilla N. Spencer, enlisted in Geneva; removed
to Minnesota, where he died about the year 1871, near Shackopee, in
that State; was an elder brother of the late P. R. Spencer, of
Geneva.
Elisha Wiard, enlisted in Geneva,
and died in that town.
Abram Webster, enlisted in Geneva;
born in 1778, and died in Geneva in 1865.
William Hewins, enlisted in
Harpersfield, and died in that town in 1824.
Norman Webster, enlisted in Geneva, and died in
that town in 1867.
Samuel Williams, enlisted in Harpersfield.
Isaac Bartholomew, enlisted in Harpersfield, and
died in that town in 1852.
John Hartwell, enlisted in Harpersfield.
Daniel Gregory, enlisted in
Harpersfield, and died in Indiana.
Elihu S. Gaylord, enlisted in
Geneva, and died in that town about 1850.
Otis Johnson, enlisted in Harpersfield, and died
in Geneva in 1857.
Joseph Williams, enlisted in Harpersfield, and
died in that town.
Strowbridge Morrison, enlisted in
Geneva, and died in Indiana.
Samuel Wright, Jr., enlisted in
Austinburg, and died in that town.
Henry T. Moore, enlisted in Harpersfield, and
died in Kingsville, Ohio, about 1870.
Eli Montgomery enlisted in Harpersfield; about
1838 he was a resident of and clerk of Sandusky county, Ohio.
Enoch Barnum, enlisted in Geneva, and died in
Oberlin, Ohio, about 1874. This soldier was wounded by the
accidental discharge of his own gun, in Madison, while the company
were halting on their way to Cleveland. He lost one arm and a
part of his nose by the discharge.
Walter Jackson, enlisted in Harpersfield.
John Kinsley, enlisted in
Harpersfield.
Calvin S. Parker, enlisted in Harpersfield, and
died in Columbus, Ohio.
Jacob Hull, enlisted in Geneva.
Isaac H. Phelps, enlisted in Harpersfield, and
died there.
Stephen A. Smith, enlisted in Harpersfield.
James Wright, Jr., enlisted in
Harpersfield, and died in that town about 1855.
V. Wright, no record.
Harding Gay, no record.
CAPTAIN JAMES STONE'S COMPANY.
WHO VOLUNTEERED, AUGUST 24, 1812,
TO MEET THE BRITISH AND INDIANS AT THE WEST. MUSTER-ROLL,
SECOND COMPANY, SECOND BATTALION, THIRD REGIMENT, FOURTH BRIGADE,
OHIO MILITIA, COLONEL NATHAN KING.
Captain, James Stone.
Lieutenant, Quintus F. Atkins.
Ensign, Daniel Hall.
1st sergt., David Wright (still living, 1878, in
Morgan, Ohio, aged ninety-one years and eight months.
2d sergt., John Crowell.
3d sergt., David Stone.
1st corp., Orison Cleveland.
2d corp., Martin Mills.
3d corp., Roger Foot.
4th corp., John D. Foot.
PRIVATES.
William Crowell, Jr., Seba Brownson, Philentus Atkins, Arad Hinman,
Luman Trail, Edward Fitzgeralds, Sylvester Rogers, Guy Humphrey
(died in Austinburg), Stephen Knowlton, Jr., Ira Tuttle, Ara
Tuttle, David Walkley, Seth Walkley, Eliel Crosby, Henry Brown,
Benjamin Bailey, Erastus Flowers.
All of the above were out fourteen
days, and then mustered home for draft. None of them are
living at this time (1878) but David Wright, of Morgan.
CAPTAIN JOHN R. REED'S COMPANY.
COLONEL RAYEN, JANUARY, FEBRUARY, AND MARCH, 1813.
Captain, John R. Reed.
Lieutenant, Alexander Harper.
Ensign, Samuel Johnson.
Sergeants, Joseph Kerr, John C. Chase, Sebastian Adams,
Daniel Castle.
Corporals, David Burroughs, William Harper,
Epaphras Lyman (died at West Andover, Apr. 1, 1852, aged
fifty-eight years), David Doughton.
Drummers, William Harrison, David Bartram
(aged sixteen; died in Trumbull).
PRIVATES.
Adam All, Luman Beach
(drafted from Captain James Stone's company; was in the
skirmish with the Indians on the Sandusky peninsula; died in
Wadsworth, Medina county, Ohio), Peter Bartholomew, John
Bartholomew, Robert Lamont (killed by the Indians while under a
flag of truce), James Brooks, Samuel Brown, William Baldwin,
James G. Curtis, Calvin, Crosby (served the time for which he
was drafted, went back to his labors on the farm, and was drowned
while bathing in Grand river), David Coon, Jacob Coon, Asahel
Cleveland, Thomas Dunbar, Sullivan Griffin, John Gordon, John Gould,
John R. Gage, Thomas Gordon, Benjamin Hawks, Joseph D. Hall
(served under Captain James Stone, first company of
volunteers, as cook; was afterwards drafted, and served three months
in Captain Reed's company; died in Rome, Ohio),
Rufus Houghton (enlisted in Harpersfield; company wagoner; died
in Andover, Feb. 23, 1834), Eldad Harrington, Ezra Heally, David
Hitchcock, John G. Joslin, Datus Kent, Elisha Kent, Amos Lamberton,
Abishai Lawton, John H. Montgomery, Jabez D. Maranville, James G.
McElroy, James Morgan, Andrews Parker, Orrin F. Paine (still
living, 1878, in Morgan), Jonas Proctor, Thomas Silverthorn,
Jabez Strong, John Spooner, Philip Swift, Edward P. Spencer (was
on the staff of General Harrison, and was executed by the
British at Malden, Canada, as a spy, having been captured by them
near the Detroit river, with a map of the fortifications in his
possession), Merrit Stone, Ambrose Stewart, Abraham Tappan,
Samuel Strong, Jasper Vidito, Collins Wetmore, William Whitmore,
Servis Sweet, John Wood, Nathan Strong, John Wright, Joshua White,
Solomon Wright, William Watrous.
DETACHMENT OF CAPTAIN JOHN R.
REED'S COMPANY, LIEUTENANT-COLONEL NATHAN KING, OHIO MILITIA, AUGUST
AND SEPTEMBER, 1812.
All nineteen days, except where otherwise stated.
Corporal, William Jones.
PRIVATES.
James
Curtis, Comfort Chapman, Anau Harmon, Manoah Hubbard, Jr., John
Mowery, Warner Mann, Benjamin A. Nofer, John Norton, Daniel Noyce,
William Nofer, Joshua Rockwell, Phineas L. Rogers, Peleg Sweet, Jr.,
Pelatiah Shepard.
CAPTAIN JOSHUA FOBES' COMPANY.
COLONEL RICHARD HAYES' REGIMENT, OHIO MILITIA, PART OF MUSTERS
OF AUGUST, SEPTEMBER, OCTOBER, AND NOVEMBER, 1812.
All over
one month, except those noted less.
Captain, Joshua Fobes (died in Wayne Sept. 16, 1861, aged eighty
years).
Ensign, Simon Fobes (six days; died in Wayne,
Feb. 8, 1861, aged seventy-seven years).
Lieutenant, Nathan Hopkins
Sergeant, James W. Foster (died in Wayne, Mar. 20,
1856, aged eighty-three years).
Corporal, Jabez Fobes (died in Wayne, Apr. 16,
1857, aged seventy-three years).
Corporal, Justice Fobes.
Fifer, Nathan Fobes (died in the service, in
February, 1813).
Drummer, Walter Thorington (six days).
PRIVATES.
Nathaniel Coleman (appointed quartermaster of the regiment; died
in Wayne, July 22, 1868), Noah Coleman (died in Greene,
Trumbull county, Ohio, Nov. 11, 1868), Jesse Drake, David
Doughton, Samuel Foster, Noah Folsom, David Fobes, Elias Fobes
(still living in Williamsfield, 1878, aged eighty-five years),
Titus Hayes (appointed wagon-master; died in Wayne, Feb. 8,
1832), Nathaniel Hubbard, Daniel W. Inman, Samuel Phillips
(six days), Philip Waldorf (discharged at Lower Sandusky,
Ohio, in January, 1813), Moses Folsom.
CAPTAIN JEDEDIAH BURNHAM'S
COMPANY.
COLONEL WILLIAM RAYEN, FROM DECEMBER, 1812, TO FEBRUARY, 1813,
ALSO FROM NOVEMBER TO DECEMBER, 1812.
Joshua
R. Giddings (died at Montreal, Canada, May 27, 1864), Samuel
Tuttle (died in Williamsfield, Apr. 23, 1865, aged eighty-two
years), Samuel Clark, Robert King, Henry Mapes, Albigence
Woodworth (died in Wayne, May 30, 1874), Diodate Woodworth
(still living, 1878), Jacob Ford, Silas Babcock (died in
Wayne, Aug. 10, 1843, aged seventy-three years), John L. Cook
(died in Kinsman, Ohio, Sept. 1, 1834), Chester Allen
(substitute for Jonathan Tuttle), Samuel Raldall.
Orderly Sergeant, Aaron Rice
(was in the skirmish with the Indians on the Sandusky peninsula in
1812).
CAPTAIN JOHN BARTHOLOMEW'S
COMPANY
FROM JULY 31 TO SEPTEMBER 9, 1813.
COLONEL, JOHN WILLIAMSON'S REGIMENT
Captain, John Bartholomew.
Lieutenant, Jeremiah Johnson.
Ensign, Samuel Hull.
Lieutenant, George Hull.
Sergeants, Abra Bennett, Peter Ord, James Cunningham,
James Ward, Jonah Fry, George Cregor.
Corporals, Wm. Sain, George Hall, Samuel Murphy, Levi
Duke, Henry Trout, Joshua Brown.
PRIVATES.
Samuel
Elliott, William Green, James Keyman, John Young, John Green, Isaac
Harris, Peter Livingston, John Sutton, Daniel Stotts, John Par, John
Harter, Uriah Hull, John Harris, John Carson, John Harbert, Samuel
Farmer, Thomas Par, R. Cake, James Critten, Joseph Baker, John
Gilmore, Isaac Cool, James Shepherd, Isaac Harris, Samuel Wheeler,
Alexander Ellet, Eli Hoover, Samuel Hoover, William Sellers, Ephraim
Baker, Jeremiah Cokely, John Evans, Daniel Beam, William Harris,
John Rood, Peter Coffman, Michael Green, Thomas Alberry, Benjamin
Beam, John Beam, William Chapman, Willis Lake, William Johnson,
Jacob Pickering, David Howell, David Spragg, Adam Winebarger, Robert
Orr, Henry Johnson, James Brown, Samuel Wilkins, William Debolt,
Peter Zigler, John Iler, William Clabaugh, George Neff, Ephraim
Lipinsitt, Joseph Hanes, Jacob Hamel, Samuel Harbert, James Hull,
Jacob Gaylor, Samuel Prigle, William Howe, Jacob Brown, William
Clark, Adam Harter, John Fidler, Isaac Fanner, John Dickeson.
Page 58 -
WAR OF
THE REBELLION.
__________
FIRST OHIO INFANTRY
COMPANY E (CLEVELAND GRAYS)
Omar
Gillette, was in the first battle of Bull
Run, Va.; discharged at Columbus, Ohio, Aug. 3, 1861.
FIFTH OHIO INFANTRY.
Assistant-Surgeon Curtis J. Bellows.
COMPANY B.
Charles
Brown, discharged at the close of the war.
COMPANY K.
Howard
King, discharged at the war.
SEVENTH OHIO INFANTRY.
Assistant-Surgeon Elizur Hitchcock,
resigned June 2, 1863.
COMPANY D.
Reuben H.
Burnham, killed in action, Winchester,
Va., Mar. 23, 1862.
Sylvanus E. Cone, wounded at Chancellorsville,
Va.
Benjamin W. Belden, discharged Sept. 13, 1865.
George W. Henderson, discharged at the close of
the war.
William B. Hoag, discharged for disability, June
25, 1862.
Vanness Sherwood, discharged for disability,
July 21, 1862.
Norton B. Holcomb, discharged at New York
harbor, Jan. 9, 1863, on account of wounds.
COMPANY H.
Ambrose
C. Trimmer, wounded and missing at Chancellorsville, Va., May 2,
1863.
Horace H. Downs, discharged at Columbus, Ohio,
July 30, 1862.
Seth J. Coon, discharged at Cleveland, Ohio,
July 7, 1864.
COMPANY K.
Lawson Hibbard,
killed in action of Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862.
FIFTEENTH OHIO INFANTRY.
Surgeon D. S. Hall,
resigned July 1, 1862.
EIGHTEENTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY H.
Elmer A. Gowdy,
discharged Oct. 17, 1865.
Ceylon Gowdy, discharged October, 1865.
NINETEENTH OHIO INFANTRY.*
COMPANY D.
Captain Robert W.
Crane, discharged at expiration of term of service.
1st lieut. John J. Hoyt, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
2d lieut. Orrin Copp, discharged at expiration
of term of service.
Charles D. Hannum, discharged at expiration of
term of service.
Samuel Barrett, discharged at expiration of term
of service.
__den Crowell, discharged at expiration of term
of service.
Frank D. Kaiser, Jr., discharged at expiration
of term of service.
Homer D. Lattimer, discharged at expiration of
term of service.
G. W. Montgomery, discharged at expiration of
term of service.
Wilbur F. Thompson, discharged at expiration
term of service.
William H. Tyler, discharged at expiration term
of service.
Frank R. Sharp, discharged at expiration term of
service.
Augustus Thompson, discharged at expiration term
of service.
John Windram, discharged at expiration of term
service.
Charles Sloat, discharged at expiration of term
service.
Ferdinand M. Cutler, discharged at expiration
term of service.
Gains W. St. John, discharged at expiration term
of service.
Stephen H. Crane, discharged at expiration term
of service.
Robert Kinghorn, discharged at expiration term
of service.
Gains S. Harvey, re-enlisted in 125th O. V. I.,
killed at Chattanooga, Tenn.
James O. Lattimer, re-enlisted in 29th O.
V. I., and wounded in front of Atlanta, Ga.
COMPANY I.
Capt. W. B. Hoyt,
discharged at expiration of term of service.
1st lieut. John P. Manning, discharged at
expiration term of service.
2d lieut. M. _. Haskell, discharged at
expiration term of service.
John J. Wiley, discharged at expiration term of
service.
James A. Clark, discharged at expiration term of
service.
C. D. Hunt, discharged at expiration term of
service.
Jay Hathaway, discharged at expiration term of
service.
Charles M. Mitchell, discharged at expiration
term of service.
Horace Cook, discharged at expiration of term of
service.
Oscar Fowler, discharged at expiration term of
service.
W. C. Haskell, discharged at expiration term of
service.
Russell T. Stewart, discharged at expiration
term of service.
Gaylor C. Tower, discharged for disability, July
1, 1861.
Charles O. Benton, discharged at
expiration term of service.
Marlon (or Marion) D. Rockwell, died July
14, 1862.
TWENTIETH OHIO INFANTRY.
Surgeon H. P. Fricker,
discharged July 18, 1865.
TWENTY FIRST OHIO INFANTRY.
Surgeon William M.
Eames, resigned Oct. 3, 1862.
TWENTY-THIRD OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
Oscar Asque,
killed in action at Opequan, Va., Sept. 19, 1864.
Elbridge M. Rawdon, died while a prisoner of war
at Andersonville.
--------------------
*Three months
William H. Smith,
died Oct. 14, 1861.
Joab M. Runyan, died Dec. 2, 1861.
Henry Heath, died Dec. 16, 1861.
Lorin Wilson, died Dec. 28, 1861.
Hoyt C. Tenney, killed in action at Giles
Court-House, Va., May 10, 1862.
Silas S. Collar, killed in action at South
Mountain, Md., Sept. 14, 1862.
Hart E. Loomis, died July 20, 1863.
George Udell, died July 28, 1863.
Corporal David D. Austin, killed in action at
Cedar Creek, Va., Oct. 19, 1864.
Thomas D. Greenfield, killed in action at Cloyd
Mountain, Va., May 9, 1864.
Corporal Rylan S. Rawdon, killed in action at
Opequan, Va., Sept. 24, 1864.
Henry C. Simonds, killed in action at Cloyd
Mountain, Va., May 9, 1864.
Alfred West, killed in action at Cloyd Mountain,
Va., May 9, 1864.
John Ray, killed in action, Cloyd
Mountain, Va., May 9, 1864.
Corporal George Hughes, killed in action at
Cedar Creek, Va., Aug. 15, 1864.
Delavan Cook, killed in action at Cloyd
Mountain, Va., May 9, 1864.
Emory Piper, died while a prisoner of war.
Alonzo Decker, killed in action at Lynchburg,
Va., June 18, 1864.
Captain Grotius (Grotlus) R. Giddings,
promoted major 14th U. S. Infantry, July 23, 1861.
Captain C. A. Sperry, discharged June 11, 1864.
Captain William E. Sweet, discharged Feb. 14,
1865.
1st lieut. Bri Hill, discharged July 26, 1865.
2d lieut. De Witt C. Sperry, wounded; discharged
July 26, 1865.
2d lieut. William W. Shepherd, resigned Sept.
18, 1862.
Sergeant James A. Gillis, wounded; discharged
July 26, 1865.
Sergeant Charles P. Barnum, wounded; discharged
July 26, 1865.
Sergeant Daniel G. Ives, discharged July 26,
1865.
Sergeant Charles A. Matteson, discharged July
26, 1865.
Sergeant Addison A. Udell, promoted first
lieutenant in U. S. C. T.
Sergeant Joseph W. Foster, wounded.
Corporal Henry Ward, discharged July 26, 1865.
Corporal Joel A. Proctor, discharged July 26,
1865.
Corporal Archelaus D. Parker, discharged July
26, 1865.
Corporal Benjamin L. Asque, discharged July 26,
1865.
Corporal William H. McCormick, discharged July
26, 1865.
Corporal Cyrus B. Holcomb, discharged July 26,
1865.
Corporal Allen E. Simmons, discharged July 26,
1865.
Corporal James J. Waters, wounded;
discharged July 26, 1865.
Corporal Hart L. Stuart, discharged July 4,
1865.
Elijah Kearns, musician; discharged July 26,
1865.
Austin S. Parker, wagoner, discharged July 26,
1865.
Wilbur W. Allen, discharged July 26, 1865.
George W. Allen, discharged July 26, 1865.
Ethan A. Alderman, discharged July 26, 1865.
Zalmon Allee?, discharged July 26, 1865.
Hiram Burgett, wounded; discharged July 26,
1865.
Oliver P. Burgett, discharged July 26, 1865.
William H. Clark, discharged July 26, 1865.
Charles Cassady, discharged July 26, 1865.
William A. Clemens, wounded; discharged July 26,
1865.
Robert Duff, discharged July 26, 1865.
Charles A. Tanner, wounded; discharged July 26,
1865.
Linus R. Tanner, discharged July 26,
1865.
Spencer R. Udell, discharged July 26, 1865.
Nahum W. Ward, discharged July 26, 1865.
Dallas Ward, discharged July 26, 1865.
Philander Wolcott, discharged July
26, 1865.
John W. Weaver, discharged July 26, 1865.
Sergeant Robert L. Bowdre, discharged July 28,
1861.
Ralph O. Twitchell, wounded;
discharged June 21, 1864.
Henry Warren, discharged Sept. 15, 1862.
John W. Fellows, discharged Oct. 8, 1863.
Asa Goodrich, discharged June 11, 1864.
Edward N. Day, discharged June 11, 1864.
John Brickman, transferred to First U. S. Reg.
Cav., Oct. 15, 1862.
Aristo A. Clark, wounded; transferred to First
U. S. Reg. Cav., Oct. 15, 1862.
Albertus J. Smith, transferred to First Reg. U.
S. Cav., Oct. 15, 1862.
John C. Sawyer, transferred to First Reg. U. S.
Cav., Oct. 15, 1862.
Samuel S. Spencer discharged Sept. 16, 1861.
William A. Vandusen, discharged Feb. 1, 1862.
Frank Dickinson, discharged Feb. 1, 1862.
Joseph Clark, discharged June 11, 1864.
S. M. Jackson, discharged June 11, 1864.
Eugene K. Loomis, discharged July 4, 1865.
George Robinson, discharged Feb. 21, 1862.
Luman Heath, discharged Apr. 17, 1862.
Luther W. Hoyt, discharged Apr. 17, 1862.
Charles Dewey, discharged July 25, 1865.
Edward Dillon, discharged July 25, 1865.
William E. Daniels, discharged July 26, 1865.
Birney G. Evans, discharged July 26, 1865.
Alvin C. Frazier, discharged July 26, 1865.
Charles H. Frazier, discharged July 26, 1865.
Wallace G. Graves, wounded, discharged July 26,
1865.
James Green, wounded, discharged July 26, 1865.
Sanda Giles, discharged July 26, 1865.
Edwin W. Lockhart, discharged July 26, 1865.
Orrin Montgomery, discharged July 26, 1865.
Levi Montgomery, discharged July 26, 1865.
John McCormick, discharged July 26, 1865.
John Mapes, discharged July 26, 1865.
Lawrence Meaney, discharged July 26, 1865.
Alonzo A. Marsh, discharged July 26, 1865.
Fayette Moorehouse, discharged July 26, 1865.
Edward A. Morse, discharged July 26, 1865.
George E. Olmstead, discharged July 26, 1865.
James L. Potter, discharged July 26, 1865.
Daniel Piper, discharged July 26, 1865.
Fernando S. Pond, discharged July 26, 1865.
Watson C. Rood, discharged July 26, 1865.
Lucien Rawdon, discharged July 26, 1865.
Freelon D. Snow, discharged July 26, 1865.
Elijah R. Stewart, discharged July 26, 1865.
Daniel Squires, discharged July 26, 1865.
Ithiel A. Smith, wounded; discharged July 26,
1865.
James M. Thompson, wounded; discharged July 26,
1865.
Jefferson J. Tanner, discharged July 26, 1865.
Cyrenus M. Potter, discharged August 10, 1862.
Emory Higley, discharged.
Benjamin F. Udell, discharged Sept. 15, 1862.
August Herthnick, wounded; discharged Dec. 1,
1862.
Benjamin F. Kilbourn, discharged Feb. 28, 1863.
Edward P. Shepherd, discharged Sept. 10, 1862.
Harrison Brown, discharged at expiration of term
of service.
Lewis H. Gillett, transferred to regimental
band.
Frank Hunt, discharged at expiration of term of
service.
Bird H. Mead, discharged at expiration of term
of service.
John S. Marsh, discharged at expiration of term
of service.
Philo P. Twitchell, discharged at expiration of
term of service.
Abner Owen, wounded; discharged at expiration of
term of service.
Hiram Aldridge, discharged July 26, 1865.
COMPANY G.
2d lieut. George C.
Warren, resigned Dec. 20, 1862.
TWENTY-FOURTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
Jay J. Rice,
discharged June 22, 1865.
Cassius M. Giddings, discharged June 22, 1865.
TWENTY-NINTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
Colonel William T.
Fitch, discharged Oct. 13, 1864, on account of wounds received
in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Lieut. - Colonel Everson J. Hulburt, wounded in
actions of Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862, Cedar Mountain, Va.,
Aug. 9, 1862, and Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863; discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865; died at his home in August, 1865.
Major Edwin B. Woodbury, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Surgeon A. K. Fifield, resigned Aug. 12, 1864.
Assistant Surgeon Sylvester S. Burrows, resigned
Jan. 26, 1863.
Chaplain R. H. Hurlburt, resigned Aug. 4, 1862.
Chaplalin Lyman D. Ames, resigned June 26, 1865.
Captain Oscar F. Gibbs, resigned Apr. 13, 1865.
Adjutant Comfort T. Chafee, resigned Apr. 13,
1862.
BAND.
Charles N. Bancroft,
musician, discharged May 16, 1862.
Calvin Crane, musician, discharged May 2, 1862.
COMPANY A.
1st lieut. Leverett
Grover, resigned Feb. 6, 1862.
1st lieut. Seth E. Wilson, resigned Apr. 30,
1862.
1st lieut. Winthrop H. Grant, killed in action
at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
1st lieut. Thaddeus E. Hoyt, wounded in action
at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864; discharged at Cleveland, Ohio, July
22, 1865.
Sergt. Andrew L. Rickard, killed in action at
Pine Knob, Ga., June 15, 1864.
Sergt. Lafayette M. Johnson, discharged at the
close of the war.
Sergt. Emery J. Maltby, discharged at the close of
the war.
Corporal Ammi B. Benjamin, wounded in front of
Atlanta; discharged July 13, 1865.
Corporal Gillespie B. Morey, wounded; discharged
June 5, 1865, at Cleveland, Ohio.
Corporal Henry C. Rood, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Lorin M. Coon, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Albert H. Frayer, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal John A. Exceen, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Almond Dalrymple, died at Winchester, Va., May
2, 1862.
Elizur Wilder, died in 1863.
A. Mortimer Knowlton, killed in action at Dug
Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Wallace B. Hoyt, died while a prisoner of war at
Andersonville, Ga., in 1864.
George A. Root, died at Dumfries, Va., in 1863.
Cyrus Roth, killed in action at Pine Knob, Ga.,
June 15, 1864.
Edward J. Brown, died at Jefferson, Ohio, from
wounds received in action at Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863.
William C. Ives, died at Cumberland, Md., Mar.
5, 1862.
Emerson Richerson, died at Cumberland, Md., Mar.
10, 1862.
Seth N. Hubbard, died at Winchester, Va., Apr.
8, 1862.
Frank Potter, killed in action at Dug Gap, Ga.,
May 8, 1864.
Henry G. Clafflin, discharged at the close of
the war.
Horace E. Wooden, discharged at the close of the
war.
Page 59 -
John Shears, discharged for
disability, Sept. 12, 1863.
William B. Shears, discharged July
13, 1865.
William Frisbie, discharged in November, 1864,
on account of wounds received in action.
George W. Jones, discharged to re-enlist as
veteran, Dec. 21, 1863.
William L. Wood, discharged at Cleveland, Ohio,
July 22, 1865.
Loren H. Dalrymple, discharged by order, June 5,
1865.
Robert E. Woodbury, discharged June 25, 1865, at
Camp Dennison, O.
James E. March, discharged Feb. 4, 1863, on
account of wounds received in action.
Thaddeus W. Simmons, discharged June 20, 1862,
at Washington, D. C.
Nelson W. Simmons, discharged July 17, 1862, at
Columbus, Ohio.
Oscar J. Parkill, wounded; discharged Apr. 10,
1865, at Cleveland, O.
Franklin B. Morey, wounded; discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Chauncy H. Coon, discharged by order, from
hospital, at Alexandria, O.
Isaac E. Haggitt, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Volney Wilson, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
James M. Bronson, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Henry E. Roberts, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Charles Covert, transferred to Veteran Reserve
Corps, Aug. 14, 1863.
William A. Thompson, discharged at
Frederick City, Md., Oct. 9, 1862.
Silas R. Thompson, discharged for disability, at
Dumfries, Va., Apr. 5, 1863.
Burdett L. Roberts, discharged Aug. 4, 1862, at
Washington, D. C.
John Sylvester, discharged Feb. 18, 1863, at
Dumfries, Va.,
Abram B. Durfee, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Edwin F. Wiley, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Charles Babb, discharged Aug. 5, 1865.
Edwin W. Herrick, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Samuel Ray, discharged June 2, 1865.
Henry P. Turner, wounded in action at Port
Republic, Va., June 9, 1862; discharged at expiration of time of
service, ct. 18, 1864.
Christopher C. Bugby.
Walter S. St. John.
Frank Wilbur, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July
13, 1865.
John D. Ensign.
Isaac Munger, wounded in action at
Chancellorsville, Va.; discharged at close of the war.
Reuben J. Smith.
Nathaniel Wilder, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
June 13, 1865.
Wilbur Sloat, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July
13, 1865.
COMPANY B.
Captain W. F. Stevens,
discharged Sept. 9, 1864.
Captain Andrew Wilson, discharged
Oct. 30, 1864.
1st lieut. Alfred Bishop, discharged
Feb. 13, 1863.
1st lieut. George McNutt, discharged
July 13, 1865.
1st lieut. Rush Griswold, discharged July 13, 1865.
Sergt. Perry O. Warren, discharged by order Sept.
24, 1862.
Sergt. Spencer Atkin, discharged July
13, 1865.
Sergt. Henry F. Brainard, discharged
July 1, 1865.
Sergt. Henry Clark, discharged July 1, 1865.
Sergt. Byron A. Isham, discharged Sept. 14, 1864.
Sergt. Nathan A. Germond, wounded; discharged July
13, 1865.
Corporal Henry Hicks discharged July 13, 1865.
Corporal Elbridge Potter, discharged by order Nov.
27, 1862, at Alexandria, Va.
Corporal Albort H. Benham, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Albert Bishop, killed in action at Cedar Mountain,
Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Edward Phillips, died Apr. 1, 1862.
Albert Rogers, died Dec. 28, 1861.
Alonzo Kinney, killed in action at
Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
William Potter, died July 16, 1864, from wounds
received in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
John Marvin, died at Cumberland, Md., in May, 1862.
Albert W. Atkin, killed on the
skirmish line at New Hope Church, Ga., May 29, 1864.
Clark Hall, died at Alexandria, Va., July 14, 1862.
Robert Sills, missing near Winchester, Va., May 14,
1862.
Jacob Kohler, died at Mount Jackson, Va., May 14,
1862.
Franklin R. Ackley, discharged by order June 12,
1862.
Sidney B. Wilder, discharged by order Feb. 13,
1863.
Robert Stewart, discharged at the close of the war.
F. S. Case, discharged by order Feb. 13, 1863, at
Dumfries, Va.,
Isaac Conklin.
Newell Hicks, discharged at
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 9, 1864.
J. H. Le Cheverell, taken prisoner on Banks'
retreat; discharged June 12, 1862.
Daniel Potter, discharged at Philadelphia, Oct. 25,
1862.
Milton B. Hoskins, discharged at the expiration of
term of service at Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 9, 1864.
George W. Atkiu, discharged July 13, 1865.
Ralph Hartwell, discharged Oct. 26, 1862.
Lewis C. Baur, discharged for disability.
Daniel J. Baur, wounded at
Chancellorsville, Va.; discharged at the close of the war.
Isaiah Brainard, discharged Sept. 9,
1864.
Jerome Doe, discharged in September,
1862.
Dudley Brown, discharged at the
close of the war.
Joh Brazee, discharged July 13,
1865.
Sterling Chapman, discharged for
disability June 3, 1862.
Andrew J. Curtice, discharged for
disability Dec. 4, 1863.
W. F. Hallett, transferred to Veterau
Reserve Corps, Jan. 14, 1864.
William P. Johnson, discharged at
the close of the war.
Charles W. Matthews, discharged for
disability Aug. 15, 1862.
George Wright, discharged at the
close of the war.
Henry Harden, discharged June 5,
1865.
Seth Pierce, discharged for
disability in September, 1862.
Alhert (or Albert)
Grate, transferred to Veteran Reserve Corps.
Jerome Phinney killed on the
skirmish line at New Hope Church, Ga., May 29, 1864.
Alhert (or Albert) Rodgers,
died at Camp Giddings, Ohio, Jan. 7, 1862.
Charles L. Baur, died while a
prisoner of war at Richmond, Va., in March, 1862.
John W. Baur, missing in action at
Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862.
Conant Brainard, died at
Martinsburg, Va., Apr. 15, 1862.
George Gale, died at Frederick City,
Md., Apr. 14, 1863.
Harvey W. Beckwith, killed in action
at Winchester, Va., Mar. 23, 1862.
Darius B. Peck, discharged at
Columbus, Ohio, in August, 1862.
COMPANY C.
Capt. Rollin L. Jones,
taken prisoner at battle of Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862;
wounded in action at Pine Hill, Ga., June 15, 1864; discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
1st lieut. Benjamin F. Perry,
resigned June 20, 1862.
1st lieut. Frank T. Stewart, wounded in action
at Cedar Mountain, Aug. 9, 1862; discharged Dec. 12, 1864.
1st lieut. Giles R. Leonard,
discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
2d lieut. Honry (or Henry)
M. Ryder, wounded in action at Chancellorsville, Va., May 3,
1863; died Sept. 25, 1863.
Sergt. Warren A. Baker, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergt. Charles C. Fitts, wounded in
action at Chancellorsville, May 3, 1863; discharged at Louisville,
Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergt. Obed K. Phelps, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergt. George Chappell, discharged
on account of wounds received at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Corp. Algernon Kingsley, discharged
on account of wounds received at Cedar Mountaiu, Va., August
9, 1862.
Corp. Joel W. Lee, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corp. William H. Runyon, wounded at
Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862; discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Corporal John Warren, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Joseph Wimby, wounded in
action at Port Republic, Va.; discharged at Louisville, Ky., July
13, 1865.
Corp. Allen Masou
(or Mason), died from wounds received in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May
8, 1864.
Alhert (or Albert) H.
Beardsley, died at Cumberland, Md., Feb. 17, 1862.
John Yokes, killed in action at
Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Charley E. Dudley, died at
Cumberland, Md., Feb. 4, 1862.
Wellington Gillett, died at Mount
Jackson, May 20, 1862.
Julius Leavalee, killed in action at
Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862.
David B. Parker, died from wounds
received in action at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
John Williams, killed in action at
Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863.
Sherman W. Bronson, discharged for
disability, Jan. 15, 1862.
Thaddeus R. Brown, discharged for
disability, Nov. 26, 1862.
George Enos, discharged for
disability, Aug. 5, 1862.
Marvin E. Fobes, discharged for
disability, Oct. 29, 1862.
John A. Frazier, discharged for
disability, June 27, 1864.
Edwin Gihhs (or Gibbs),
discharged for disability Apr. 3, 1863.
Joseph Hall, discharged on account
of wounds received at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Daniel S. Halstead, discharged for
disability, July 21, 1862.
Hiram Lyous (or Lyons), discharged
for disability, Aug. 15, 1862.
Norman Merrills, discharged for
disability.
Byron H. Phelps, discharged for disahility,
Apr. 3, 1863.
Wellington Palmer, discharged for
disability.
David Ryckmon, discharged for disahility,
Oct. 30, 1862.
James F. Rowley, discharged for
disability, July 8, 1862.
Sylvester G. Stricklaud (prob.
Strickland), discharged for disability, Feb. 18, 1863.
William Yokes, discharged on account
of wounds received in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Erwin F. Mason, discharged on
account of wounds received at Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863.
Russell W. Cross, transferred to
Veteran Reserve Corps, Aug. 1, 1863.
Thomas J. Merrills, wounded in
action at Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863; transferred to Veteran
Reserve Corps, Dec. 1, 1863.
Truman Kellogg, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Charles J. Galpin, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Dryden C. Lindsley, discharged on
account of wounds received in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Andrew W. Mann, transferred to the United States
Navy.
Michael Maloney, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Charles E. Parkill, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Henry C. Rice, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Benjamin F. Sperry, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
John C. Shaw, missing at Peach-Tree Creek, Ga.,
July 28, 1864.
Henry C. Carey, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
Ohed (prob. Obed) Knapp,
discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Samuel E. Fay, discharged May 26,
1864.
Beneville Miller, wounded at
Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863; discharged at expiration of term of
service.
Edgar O. Miller, wounded at
Gettysburg, Pa; discharged at expiration of term of service.
Hiram O. Morgan, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
COMPANY D.
1st lieut. Marcus F.
Roherts (prob.
Roberts), discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Capt. Horatio Luce, killed in action
at Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862.
COMPANY E.
Captain Ebenezer B.
Howard, resigned.
Capt. Silas G. Elliott, wounded in
action at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862; discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
1st lieut. George Hayward, killed in
action at Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863.
1st lieut. Addison J. Andrews,
discharged July 13, 1865.
1st lieut. T. S. Winship, discharged
Mar. 28, 1863.
2d lieut. William B. Quirk,
discharged Nov. 1, 1862.
2d lieut. Theodore L. Gould,
discharged Oct. 1, 1863.
2d lieut. Albert Durkee, resigned
July 9, 1862.
Sergeant Addison E. Tracy,
discharged at the close of the war.
Sergeant William E. Sterling,
discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergeant Charles Howard, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergeant William G. Buss, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Steadman J. Rockwell,
discharged at Fort Delaware, Nov. 10, 1862.
Corporal Isaac Dalrymple, killed in
action at Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862.
Corporal Alhcrt (prob. Albert)
Blanchard, discharged in October, 1864.
Corporal Lewis Harper, discharged
July 13, 1865.
Corporal Hiram Dalrymple, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Herman Dewey, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Hiram Thorunton (prob.
Thornton), discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Thomas Shultz, died from wounds, May
12, 1863.
James C. Jones, discharged July 13,
1865.
Frederick Rounds, wounded;
discharged Jnly 13, 1865.
Frank D. Lovejoy, transferred to
Fiftb U. S. Cavalry; discharged June 5, 1865.
Joseph R. Lynn, transferred to the
navy Apr. 15, 1864.
George W. Light, discharged at the
close of the war.
Lorenzo Norton, discharged Jan. 1,
1864, on account of wounds received in action at Chancellorsville,
Va.
William A. Robinson, discharged Nov.
4, 1862, on account of wounds received in action.
David B. Goodwill, killed at Kenesaw
Mountain, June 27, 1864.
Truman H. Williams died at
Bridgeport, Ala., Feb. 29, 1864.discharged at Louisville, Ky., July
13, 1865.
Ethan David, died at Cumberland,
Md., Mar. 8, 1862.
Andrew Beardslee, died at Alexandria, Va., July
20, 1862.
Harvey A. Reeves, died at
Washington, D. C., June 26, 1862.
Albert N. Atwater, died at Monroe,
Ohio, July 4, 1864.
James P. Bagley, missing at battle of Cedar
Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
George W. Bachelor, died at Dumfries, Va., Mar. 8,
1863.
William O. Johnson, died at
Cumberland, Md., Mar. 22, 1862.
James C. Greenlce (prob. Greenlee),
discharged Oct. 18, 1864.
George J. Putney, discharged, Oct. 16, 1864.
Charles P. Rhodes transferred to Co. B, 1st Regt.
V. R. C., Aug. 12, 1863.
Benjamin F. Holton, discharged Dec. 8, 1864, on
account of wounds.
Henry Warren, discharged July 13, 1865.
Sherman Tuttle, discharged Apr. 2, 1865.
William L. Holden, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Hamilton Hill, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July
13, 1865.
Robert Van Scoick, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
John W. Kinnear, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Daniel W. Platt, Jr., discharged Oct. 11, 1864.
Loren Dalrymple
Orlando Gunn, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Francis Culver, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July
13, 1865.
Charlos (maybe Charles) Luce,
musician, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Calvin Robinson.
James M. Henry.
Carlisle W. Kinnear, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
David W. Hall, paroled prisoner of
war, Mar. 15, 1865.
David B. Franklin, wounded; discharged May 3, 1863.
John Ford, discharged Feb. 18, 1863.
Lewis Shores, transferred to Company D, 13th U.
S. V. R. C.
COMPANY F.
Sergeant Decatur E.
Humphrey.
Corporal Irenus M. Foot, discharged June 5, 1865.
Elson Reed, Jr., died at
Washington, D. C., Nov. 1, 1862.
George Neno, died Aug. 12, 1862,
from wounds received in action at Cedar Mountain, Va.
Justin Townsley, deac.
Charles Cook, discharged at
Cumberland, Md., Aug. 12, 1862.
Lorin Frisbie, wounded; discharged at the close of
the war.
Alphonzo W. Hardy, discharged for disability.
Luther Hawley, discharged for
disability.
Jehiel Maltby, discharged for disability.
Henry Stowe, discharged at the close of the war.
Caleb S. Beebe, discharged Mar. 4, 1863.
John W. Beede, discharged Dec. 30, 1862.
William S. Crosby, discharged Mar. 16, 1863.
COMPANY G.
Corporal George Guest,
wounded; discharged July 13, 1865.
Corporal Thomas White, wounded at Chancellorsville;
discharged at the close of the war.
Henry Edson, wounded;
transferred to Veteran Reserve Corps, Aug. 15, 1864.
Charles E. Griffin, discharged July
13, 1865.
William Hartley, died July 15, 1864, from wounds.
James L. Smith, dead at Dumfries, Va., Mar. 4,
1863.
James Wright.
R. G. Wiley.
Andrew S. Holman, missing from hospital Feb. 14,
1865.
COMPANY H.
Captain William H.
Wright, discharged at Louisville, Kentucky, July 13, 1865.
2d lieut. William Nelson, discharged Dec. 8, 1862.
Jeremiah S. Congdon, discharged on account of
wounds received in action; died iu 1877.
Henry J. Knapp, discharged May 8,
1865, on account of wounds received in action.
James C. Hammond, died at Dumfries,
Virginia, Mar. 14, 1863.
Eli C. Joles, mortally wounded in
action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Merrick Smith, discharged Sept. 25,
1865.
COMPANY I.
Sergeant Almon A.
Woodruff, discharged July 13, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Sergeant Newton B. Adams, wounded; transferred to
Veteran Reserve Corps Jan. 23, 1865.
Sergeant Ransom D. Billings, killed
in front of Atlanta, Georgia, July 28, 1864.
Sergeant Thomas F. Henderson, died at Chattauooga,
(Chattanooga), Tennessee, Oct. 10, 1864.
Sergeant Martin G. Owen, discharged for disahility
September, 1862.
Corp. Lucius K. Woodbury, discharged July 13,
1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Page 60 -
Horatio W. Horton, transferred to Veteran
Reserve Corps July 1, 1863.
James R___, discharged June
__, 18__,
at ____burg, Maryland.
James Perkins, wounded, discharged May 5, 18___,
at Camp Dennison, Ohio
Albert Alderman, discharged July 13, 18__, at
Louisville, Kentucky
T___Phinney, killed in action at Dug Gap,
Georgia, May 8, 1864.
____
__ Wakeman, died at Winchester, Virginia.
William W___er, died at Morgan,
Ohio, Dec. 15, 1861.
Joseph Baker, killed
___f_43 Atlanta, Georgia,
July 2, 1864.
David N. Hubbard, died at Winchester, Virginia,
Mar. 21, 1862.
Aaron
_ Baker, discharged for
disability.
W___rd Tra_l.
Roswell Tra__.
Reuben Wilson.
Michael McN__rmy, wounded, discharged July 13,
1865.
M_nde__rt Manly, discharged for
disability in October, 1862.
Sydney A. Kennedy, discharged on account of
wounds received at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July _, 1863.
J. H. Kennedy, discharged for disability Apr. 4,
18636.
Orville A. Rockwell, discharged for
disability Aug. 9, 1863.
Thomas Sharkey, discharged Sept. 5, 1863, on
account of wounds received at Chancellorsville, Virginia.
William Eldred, discharged July 13,
1865.
William E. Dockery, discharged July
13, 1865.
Adelbert W. Holdridge, wounded,
discharged Aug. 4, 1865.
Reuben Rounds, discharged June 5,
1865.
COMPANY K.
Captain David E.
Hulburt, wounded at Chancellorsville, Va., May 3, 1863; resigned
Aug. 29, 1864.
Captain Charles W. Kellogg, discharged July 13,
1865.
Captain Alden P. Steele, resigned
Apr. 13, 1863.
1st lieut William Neil, resigned Jan. 26, 1863.
Sergt. Joseph H. Marsh, killed in
action at Dallas, Ga., May 25, 1864.
Sergt. William E. Gray, shot by
Provost Guard at Frederick City, Md., Dec. 10, 1862.
Sergt. Luther L. Kinney, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergt. Geo. C. Judd, discharged Mar.
2, 1863, at Alexandria, Va.
Sergt. Charles Potter, discharged
June 19, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Sergt. Michael F. Alderman, discharged July 13,
1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Sergt, Ans_l O. Benjamin, discharged
Mar. 3, 1863, at Columbus, Ohio.
Sergt. C. C. Johnson, wounded at the battles of
Port Republic and Cedar Mountain, Va.; discharged Mar. 3, 1863.
Sergt. Cornelius O. Hinkle, discharged July 13,
1865.
Corporal A. D. Eddy, discharged July
13, 1865.
Corp. James C. McCleary, discharged
June 19, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Corp. Frederick A. Rounds,
discharged July 13, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Corp. Lafayette N. Johnson,
discharged at expiration of term of service.
Philander M. Griggs, died at
Alexandria, Va., Oct. 3, 1872.
Orra McGee, died July 4, 1862.
Daniel Phillips, killed in action at
Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Martin Banny, died at Alexandria,
Va., July 11, 1862.
Byron Bulfinch, died at Frederick
City, Md., Oct. 28, 1862.
Matthias Sodom, killed in action at
Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863.
Martin G. Hammond, discharged at
Frederick City, Md., Dec. 2, 1862.
Hezekiah Davenport, discharged Dec.
6, 1864.
Charles W. Wilson, discharged for disability in
August, 1862.
Luther Fowler, discharged for
disability in April, 1862.
Harlow H. Fenton, discharged by order June 7,
1865, at Cleveland, Ohio.
James Alexander, discharged June 19, 1863, at
Columbus, Ohio.
Al_en M. Alderman, wounded in action
at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862; discharged Sept. 28, 1864.
Foster W. Eggleston, discharged Jan. 3, 1863, at
Providence, R. I.
Henry C. Farnsworth, discharged June
19, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Edson G. Holcomb, discharged June
19, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
William Norris, discharged June 19,
1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Reuben W. Alderman, discharged Apr. 4, 1863, at
Dumfries, Va.
Harmon Wilder.
John McCloud.
William D. Elliott, discharged for disability.
Martin Elliott, discharged for disability.
William Fletcher, discharged for
disability Sept. 28, 1862.
Franc_s J. Hibbard, discharged to
re-enlist as veteran, Dec. 21, 1863.
George W. Weeks, discharged for
disability Nov. 2, 1862.
Horace Holcomb, discharged for
disability June, 1862.
Joseph B. Parch, discharged for
disability June 30, 1862.
Joseph Matthews, discharged for
disability July 31, 1862.
James M. Goldsmith, discharged for
disability July 9, 1862.
John Joslin, discharged July 13,
1865.
George W. Light, discharged July 13,
1865.
John Sarsfield, discharged at the
close of the war.
John Swinton, discharged in
December, 1862.
William Knox, discharged Aug. 15, 1862.
James Spaim, discharged July 13,
1865.
THIRTY-NINTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY D.
Smith Bennett,
died Mar. 25, 1863.
COMPANY E.
Harrison P. Ives,
died at Newbern, N. C., Apr. 19, 1865.
COMPANY F.
Luther Wilson,
discharged July 9, 1865.
COMPANY G.
Daniel H. Palmer,
discharged at the close of the war.
COMPANY H.
Jo__h T. Grant,
discharged July 9, 1865.
Adam R__y, discharged July 9, 1865.
Lewis D. Thurber, died at Camp
Dennison, Ohio, July 15, 1865.
S. W. Tyler, discharged July _,
1865.
Almon R. Thurbur, discharged at the
close of the war.
Morris Colby discharged July 19,
1865.
FORTY-FIRST OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
John Good___,
discharged at the close of the war.
COMPANY C.
Surgeon John C.
Hubbard, resigned Aug. 30, 1862.
Charles Ellsworth, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
FORTY-SECOND OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
COMPANY F.
Thomas Heath, died
at Memphis, Tenn., Aug. 22, 1863.
George Hallam, discharged at
Carrolton, La., Aug. 21, 1863.
Edward Morrison, discharged Nov. 19,
1864.
FORTY-FOURTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
Sergeant Jerome J. Van
Naurce, discharged by order Mar. 18, 1865.
FIFTIETH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
Captain Oscar C. Pratt,
resigned May 15, 1863.
Lieutenant Sidney H. Cook,
discharged June 26, 1865.
Sergeant Eugene O. Piper, discharged
for disability Dec. 18, 1862.
Corporal Samuel R. Large, discharged
at the close of the war.
William S. Carpenter, died May 11,
1865.
Kingsbury Smith, died from wounds
Feb. 14, 1863.
John Wickham, died at Lebanon, Ky.,
Feb. 17, 1863.
Abraham Garrison, killed in action
at Franklin, Tenn., Nov. 30, 1864.
George A. Collins, transferred to
navy, on gunboat "Benton."
John Jones, discharged for disability Sept. 23,
1863.
George V. French, discharged in
April, 1863.
John Fox, discharged May 20, 1865.
John Douglass, died at Louisville,
Ky., in August, 1863.
Addison A. Baldwin, discharged Dec.
18, 1862.
Hiram Boyle, discharged at the close of the war.
Israel Ferguson, transferred to U.
S. Navy, discharged July 2, 1865.
Hardin C. Downing, discharged June
7, 1865.
John D. Bugby, discharged for
disability June 10, 1863.
John Cartney, discharged October,
1865.
Perry Hoskins, discharged in June,
1865.
Amos Spiller, died of disease in
December, 1863.
Darling Wilson, discharged for
disability in March, 1864.
Wm. A. Wiley, killed in a skirmish near
Kingston, Ga., May 31, 1864.
Charles O. Giddings, died n_ Lebanon, Ky., Nov.
28, 1862.
Elmer Dayton, did Dec. 7, 1864, from
wounds received in action at Franklin, Tenn.
William B. Larrabee, discharged July
17, 1865.
COMPANY B.
Amos E. Baldwin,
died Jan. 22, 1863.
FIFTY-FIRST OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
COMPANY G.
Oliver H. P. Wing,
discharged by order in June, 1865.
FIFTY-SECOND OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
Smith E. Gleason,
discharged June 20, 1865.
COMPANY H.
Arthur D. Palmer,
died at Chattanooga, Tenn., Nov. 6, 1864.
COMPANY K.
Sargeant James Steele,
discharged Aug. 25, 1865.
Orson L. Smith, discharged June 18,
1865.
Alonzo Fuller, discharged at the
close of the war.
L. C. Raymond, discharged for
disability in November, 1862.
William Thompson, died Apr. 27, 1863.
FIFTY-FOURTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY E.
Sergeant Americus
Potter, discharged July 12, 1862, on account of wounds received
in action at Shiloh, Tenn.
SIXTIETH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY C.
2d lieut. Charles
Austin, died from wounds received at Ny River, Va., May 9, 1864.
Sergeant Giles H. Cowles, killed
before Petersburg, Va., June 17, 1864.
Sergeant Erwin Bulen, discharged at
the close of the war.
Sergeant Harmon B. Hunt, discharged at Washington,
D. C., June 28, 1865.
Corporal Edward S. Snow, discharged
at the close of the war.
Corporal Arthur H. Pierce,
wounded; discharged at the close of the war.
Warren Churchill, died at
his home in Trumbull, Ohio.
Alexander R. Eastman, discharged at the close of
the war.
Edgar P. Hubbard, wounded; discharged at the close
of the war.
James F. Nye, discharged at the close of the war.
Henry D. Jeffords, discharged at the close of the
war.
William W. Root, killed in action at North Anna
River, Va., May 25, 1864.
Amlel E. Mills, died at
Philadelphia, July 24, 1864.
Willard N. Hawks, killed before
Petersburg, Va., June 25, 1864.
Charles W. Holbrook, died while a
prisoner of war at Richmond, Va., July 12, 1864.
William A. Root, killed near North
Anna River, May 25, 1864.
Joseph H. Arnold, died while a
prisoner of war near Richmond, Va.
Albert N. Hubbard, died of disease
Sept. 14, 1865.
Amiel Mills, died at Alexandria,
Va., Aug. 1, 1864.
John T. Sidley, died of disease Oct.
1, 1864.
Fayette G. Hubbard, discharged May 26, 1865.
Peter G. Blanchard, wounded and missing at
Petersburg, Va., Jnly 16, 1864
Randall _. Blanchard, discharged Aug. 5, 1865.
Edwin F. Thompson, discharged at the
close of the war.
Otto H. Gaylord.
Frauk (Frank) A. Rich.
David S. Gardner.
Franklin B. Holman.
COMPANY I.
Frank Hickok,
discharged Sept. 1, 1865.
SIXTY-FIRST OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
Daniel Shnltz
(Shultz), died at Washington.
William H. Shultz, died at Washington.
SIXTY-SEVENTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY D.
Frank Wilson,
discharged for disability.
EIGHTIETH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
Rollin Hotchkiss,
died at Clear Creek, Miss., July 26, 1862.
EIGHT-SECOND OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY F.
Patrick Sharkey,
discharged at the close of the war.
John Marr, discharged in July, 1865.
EIGHT-FOURTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
Victorian D. Lattimer,
discharged at expiration of term of service.
Augustus M. Barker, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
COMPANY C.
Sergt. Horace Miner,
Jr., discharged Sept. 20, 1862.
Alfred G. Sturgiss, discharged Sept.
20, 1862.
Lucien R. Fobes, discharged Sept.
20, 1862.
Flavel E. Jones, discharged Sept.
20, 1862.
Alvin Wilcox, discharged Sept. 20,
1862.
EIGHTY-FIFTY OHIO INFANTRY.
Frank F. Pope.
EIGHTY-SIXTH OHIO INFANTRY.*
COMPANY B.
Daniel M. Smith,
discharged at expiration of term of service.
COMPANY D.
Frank A. Giddings,
discharged Sept. 25, 1862.
EIGHTY-SEVENTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY I.
Henry C. Webster,
died Oct. 8, 1862, at Philadelphia, Pa.
William E. Jewett, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
COMPANY K.
Norman W. Spellman,
discharged in September, 1862.
Lynds C. Tinker, discharged Oct. 3,
1862.
Jame J. Pinney, discharged at
expiration of terms of service.
ONE HUNDRED AND THIRD OHIO
INFANTRY.
COMPANY D.
Dighton R. Gleason,
discharged on account of wounds, Jan. 1, 1865.
COMPANY F.
William W. Watkins,
discharged at Raleigh, N. C., June 12, 1865.
John J. Shaffer, discharged at
Raleigh, N. C., June 12, 1865.
Alfred O. Briggs, discharged at
Raleigh, N. C., June 12, 1865.
ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTH OHIO
INFANTRY.
Captain Marshall W.
Wright, resigned in April, 1864.
COMPANY A.
Daniel A. Smith,
transferred to Veteran Reserve Corps. Sept. 4, 1863.
COMPANY B.
Henry Heath, died
at Nashville, Tenn., July 9, 1864.
COMPANY D.
Corp. John C. Britton,
killed in action at Mission Ridge, Tenn., Nov. 26, 1863.
Albert Hall, died at Chattanooga,
Tenn., in November, 1863.
Elmer H. Ward, died at Murfreesboro,
Tenn., Mar. 1, 1863.
Alfred A. Knowles, discharged June
3, 1865.
COMPANY E.
John E. Baker,
discharged at the close of the war.
COMPANY F.
G. J. Squires,
discharged for disability Dec. 2, 1862.
COMPANY G.
Captain E. Abbott
Spaulding, died Sept. 25, 1863, from wounds received in action
at Chickamauga.
Captain William S. Crowell, resigned
Aug. 2, 1864.
1st lieut. Albion W. Tourgee,
wounded and captured in action at Bull Run, Va. (27th N. Y. Inf.),
July 21, 1861; resigned Dec. 6, 1863.
2d lieut. William C. Olds, discharged July 2,
1865.
Sergt. Joseph H. George, wounded and
missing in action at Perryville, Ky., Oct. 8, 1862.
Sergeant William B. Brayman,
discharged on account of wounds received in action at Perryville,
Ky., Oct. 8, 1862.
Sergeant Benjamin Thomas Cushing,
wounded in action at Chickamauga, Tenn.; discharged June 28, 1864;
died Nov. 4, 1872, at Chatfield, Minn.
-------------------------
* Three months
John McCormick,
discharged July 26, 1865.
John Mapes, discharged July 26, 1865.
Lawrence Meaney, discharged July 26, 1865.
Alonzo A. Marsh, discharged July 26, 1865.
Fayette Morehouse, discharged July
26, 1865.
Edward A. Morse, discharged July 26,
1865.
George E. Olmstead, discharged July 26, 1865.
James L. Potter, discharged July 26,
1865.
Daniel Piper, discharged July 26, 1865.
Fernando S. Pond, discharged July 26, 1865.
Watson C. Rood, discharged July 26, 1865.
Lucien Rawdon, discharged July 26, 1865.
Freelon D. Snow, discharged July 26, 1865.
Elijah R. Stewart, wounded; discharged July 26,
1865.
Daniel Squires, discharged July 26, 1865.
Ithiel A. Smith, wounded; discharged July 2,
1865.
James M. Thompson, wounded;
discharged July 26, 1865.
Jefferson J. Tanner, discharged July
26, 1865.
Cyrenus M. Potter, discharged Aug.
10, 1862.
Emory Higley, discharged.
Benjamin F. Udell, discharged Sept.
15, 1862.
August Herthnick, wounded; discharged Dec. 1,
1862.
Beujamin
(Benjamin) F.
Kilbourn, discharged Feb. 28, 1863.
Edward P. Shepherd, discharged Sept. 10, 1862.
Harrison Brown, discharged Apr. 23, 1863.
Robert W. Jones, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
Lewis H. Gillett, transferred to
regimental band.
Frank Hunt, discharged at expiration
of term of service.
Bird H. Mead, discharged at expiration of term
of service.
John S. Marsh, discharged at expiration of term
of service.
Philo P. Twitchell, discharged at expiration of
term of service.
Abner Owen, wounded; discharged at
expiration of term of service.
Hiram Aldridge, discharge July 26,
1865.
COMPANY G.
2d. lieut. George C.
Warren, resigned Dec. 20, 1862.
TWENTY-FOURTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
Jay J. Rice,
discharged June 22, 1865.
Cassius M. Giddings, discharged June
22, 1865.
TWENTY-NINTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
Colonel William T.
Fitch, discharged Oct. 13, 1864, on account of wounds received
in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Lieut.-Colonel Everson J. Hulbert, wounded in
actions of Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862, Cedar Mountain, Va.,
Aug. 9, 1862, and Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863; discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865; died at his home in August, 1865.
Major Edwin B. Woodbury, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Surgeon A. K. Fifield, resigned Aug.
12, 18643.
Assistant Surgeon Sylvester S. Burrows,
resigned Jan. 26, 1863.
Chaplain R. H. Hurlburt, resigned
Aug. 4, 1862.
Chaplain Lyman D. Ames, resigned
June 26, 1865.
Captain Oscar F. Gibbs, resigned
Apr. 13, 1865.
Adjutant Comfort T. Chaffee,
resigned Apr. 13, 1862.
BAND.
Charles N. Bancroft,
musician, discharged May 16, 1862.
Calvin Craue (maybe Crane),
musician, discharged May 2, 1862.
COMPANY A.
1st lieut. Leverett
Grover, resigned Feb. 6, 1862.
1st lieut. Seth E. Wilson, resigned Apr. 30,
1862.
1st lieut. Winthrop H. Grant, killed in action
at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
1st lieut. Thsddeus (probably
Thaddeus) E. Hoyt, wounded in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8,
1864; discharged at Cleveland, Ohio, July 22, 1865.
Sergt. Andrew L. Rickard, killed in action at
Pine Knob, Ga., June 16, 1864.
Sergt. Lafayette M. Johnson,
discharged at the close of the war.
Sergt. Emery J. Maltby, discharged at the close
of the war.
Sergt. J. Burney Dalrymple, wounded;
discharged July 13, 1865.
Corporal Ammi B. Benjamin, wouuded
in front of Atlanta; discharged July 13, 1865.
Corporal Gillespie B. Morey, wounded; discharged
June 5, 1865, at Cleveland, Ohio.
Corporal Henry C. Rood, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Lorin M. Coon, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Albert H. Frayer, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal John A. Exceen, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Almond Dalrymple, died at Winchester, Va., May
2, 1862.
Elizur Wilder, died in 1863.
A Mortimer Knowlton, killed in
action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Wallace B. Hoyt, died while a prisoner of war at
Andersonville, Ga., in 1864.
George A. Root, died at Dumfries,
Va., in 1863.
Cyrus Roth, killed in action at Pine Knob, Ga.,
June 15, 1864.
Edward J. Brown, died at Jefferson,
Ohio, from wounds received in action at Gettysburg, Pa., July 3,
1863.
William C. Ives, died at Cumberland,
Md., Mar. 5, 1862.
Emerson Richerson, died at Cumberland, Md., Mar.
10, 1862.
Seth N. Hubbard, died at Winchester,
Va., Apr. 8, 1862.
Frank Potter, killed in action at Dug gap, Ga.,
May 8, 1864.
Henry G. Claffin, discharged to
re-enlist as veteran, Dec. 21, 1863.
Horace E. Wooden, discharged at the close of the
war.
Page 59 -
John Shears, discharged for disability, Sept.
12, 1863.
William B. Shears, discharged July
13, 1865.
William Frishie, discharged in
November, 1864, on account of wounds received in action.
William L. Wood, discharged at
Cleveland, Ohio, July 22, 1865.
Loren H. Dalrymple, discharged by order, June 5,
1865.
Robert E. Woodbury, discharged June
25, 1865, at Camp Dennison, O.
James E. March, discharged Feb. 4, 1863, on
account of wounds received in action.
Thaddeus W. Simmons, discharged June 20, 1862,
at Washington, D. C.
Nelson W. Simmons, discharged July 17, 1862, at
Columbus, Ohio.
Oscar J. Parkill, wounded; discharged Apr. 10,
1865, at Cleveland, O.
Franklin B. Morey, wounded;
discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Chauncy H. Coon, discharged by
order, from hospital, at Alexandria, Va.
Isaac E. Haggitt, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Volney Wilson, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
James M. Bronson, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Henry E. Roberts, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Daniel B. Alderman, discharged at Louisville,
Ky., July 13, 1865.
Charles Covert, transferred to Veteran Reserve
Corps, Aug. 14, 1863.
William A. Thompson, discharged at Frederick
City, Md., Oct. 9, 1862.
Silas R. Thompson, discharged for disability, at
Dumfries, Va., Apr. 5, 1863.
Burdett L. Roberts, discharged Aug. 4, 1862, at
Washington, D. C.
John Sylvester, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Edwin F. Wiley, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Charles Babb, discharged Aug. 5, 1865.
Edwin W. Herrick, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Samuel Ray, discharged June 2, 1865.
Henry P. Turner, wounded in
action at Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862; discharged at expiration
of time of service.
Christopher C. Bugby.
Walter S. St. John
Frank Wilbur, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July
13, 1865.
John D. Ensign.
Isaac Munger, wounded in action at
Chancellorsville, Va.; discharged at close of the war.
Reuben J. Smith.
Nathaniel Wilder, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
June 13, 1865.
Wilbur Sloat, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
COMPANY B.
Captain W. F. Stevens,
discharge Sept. 9, 1864.
Captain Andrew Wilson, discharged
Oct. 30, 1864.
1st lieut. Alfred Bishop, discharged
Feb. 13, 1863.
1st lieut. George McNutt, discharged
July 13, 1865.
1st lieut. Rush Griswold, discharged
July 13, 1865.
Sergt. Parry O. Warren, discharged
by order Sept. 24, 1862.
Sergt. Spencer Atkin, discharge July 13, 1865.
Sergt. Henry F. Brainard, discharged
July 1, 1865.
Sergt. Henry Clark, discharged July
1, 1865.
Sergt. Byron A. Isham, discharged
Sept. 14, 1864.
Sergt. Nathan A. Germond, wounded;
discharged July 13, 1865.
Corporal Henry Hicks, discharged
July 13, 1865.
Corporal Elbridge Potters,
discharged by order Nov. 27, 1862, at Alexandria, Va.
Corporal Alhort
(prob. Albert)
H. Benham, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Albert Bishop, killed in action at
Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Edward Phillips, died Apr. 1, 1862.
Albert Rogers, died Dec. 28, 1861.
Alonzo Kinney, killed in action at Cedar Mountain,
Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Alonzo Potter, died July 26,
1864, from wounds received in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
John Marvin, died at Cumberland,
Md., in May, 1862.
Alhert
(prob. Albert) W.
Atkin, killed on the skirmish line at New Hope Church, Ga., May
29, 1864.
Clark Hall, died at Alexandria, Va.,
July 14, 1862.
Robert Sills, missing near
Winchester, Va., May 14, 1862.
Jacob Kohler, died at Mount Jackson,
Va., May 4, 1862.
Franklin R. Ackley, discharged
hy order June 12,
1862.
Sidney B. Wilder, discharged by
order Feb. 13, 1863.
Robert Stewart, discharged at
the close of the war.
F. S. Case, discharged by order
Feb. 13, 1863, at Dumfries, Va.,
Isaac Conklin.
Newell Hicks, discharged at
Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 9, 1864.
J. H. Le Cheverell, taken prisoner ou
Banks' retreat; discharged June 12, 1862.
Daniel Potter, discharged at
Philadelphia, Oct. 25, 1862.
Milton B. Hoskins, discharged at the expiration of
term of service at Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 9, 1864.
George W. Atkiu
(prob. Atkin),
discharged July 13, 1865.
Ralph Hartwell, discharged Oct. 26,
1862.
Lewis C. Baur, discharged for
disability.
Daniel J. Baur, wounded at
Chancellorsville, Va.; discharged at the close of the war.
Isaiah Brainard, discharged Sept. 9,
1864.
Jerome Doe, discharged in September,
1962.
Dudley Brown, discharged at the close of the
war.
Joh Brazee, discharged July 13, 1865.
Sterling Chapman, discharged for disability June 3,
1962.
Andrew J. Curtice, discharged for disability
Dec. 4, 1863.
W. F. Hallett, transferred to
Veteran Reserve Corps., Jan. 14, 1864.
William P. Johnson, discharged at
the close of the war.
Charles W. Matthews, discharged for
disability Aug. 15, 1862.
George Wright, discharged at the
close of the war.
Henry Harden, discharged June 5,
1865.
Seth Pierce, discharged for
disability in September, 1862.
Alhert
(probably Albert)
transferred to Veteran Reserve Corps.
Charles L. Baur, died while a
prisoner of war at Richmond, Va., in March, 1862.
John W. Baur, missing in action at
Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862.
Conant Brainard, died at
Martinsburg, Va., Apr. 15, 1862.
George Gale, died at Frederick City,
Md., Apr. 144, 1863.
Harvey W. Beckwith, killed in action
at Winchcster,
Va., March 23, 1862.
Darius B. Peck, discharged at
Columbus, O., in August, 1862.
COMPANY C.
Capt. Rollin L. Jones,
taken prisoner at battle of Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862;
wounded din action at Pine Hill, Ga., June 15, 1864; discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
1st lieut. Benjamin F. Perry,
resigned June 20, 1862.
1st Lieut. Frank T. Stewart, wounded
in action at Cedar Mountain, Aug. 9, 1862; discharged Dec. 12, 1864.
1st lieut. Giles R. Leonard,
discharged at Louisville, Ky, July 13, 1865.
2d lieut. Honry
(probably Henry)
M. Ryder, wounded in action at Chancellorsville, Va., May 3,
1863; died September 25, 1863.
Sergt. Warren A. Baker, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergt. Charles C. Fitts, wounded in
action at Chancellorsville, May 3, 1863; discharged at Louisville,
Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergt. Obed K. Phelps, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergt. George W. Beckwith, promoted
to q. m. sergt May 1, 1862.
Corp. John Chappell, discharged on
account of wounds received at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Corp. Algernon Kingsley, discharged
on account of wounds received at Cedar Mountaiu,
Aug. 9, 1862.
Corp. Joel W. Lee, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corp. William H. Runyon wounded at
Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862; discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Corporal John Warren, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Joseph Wimby, wounded in
action at Port Republic, Va.; discharged at Louisville, Ky., July
13, 1865.
Corp. Allen Masou
(probably Mason),
died from wounds received in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Alhert
(probably Albert)
H. Beardsley, died at Cumberland, Md., Feb. 17, 1862.
John Yokes, killed in action at
Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Cbarley (probably Charley)
E. Dudley, died at Cumberland, Md., Feb. 4, 1862.
Wellington Gillett, died at Mount
Jackson, May 20, 1862.
JulIus Leavalee, killed
in action at Chancellorsville, May 3, 1863.
Luroff A. Monta, killed in action at
Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862.
David B. Parker, died from wounds
received in action at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
John Williams, killed in action
at Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863.
Sherman W. Bronson, discharged for
disability, Jan. 15, 1862.
Thaddeus R. Brown, discharged for
disability, Nov. 26, 1862.
George Enos, discharged for
disability, Aug. 5, 1862.
Marvin E. Fobes, discharged for
disability, Oct. 29, 1862.
John A Frazier, discharged for
disability, June 27, 1864.
Edwin Gibbs, discharged for disahility,
Apr. 3, 1863.
Joseph Hall, discharged on account
of wounds received at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Daniel S. Halstead, discharged for
disihility,
July 21, 1862.
Hiram Lyous (probably Lyons)
discharged for disahility,
Aug. 15, 1862.
Norman Merrills, discharged for
disahility.
Byron H. Phelps, discharged for disahility,
Apr. 3, 1863.
Wellington Palmer, discharged for
disability.
David Ryckmon, discharged for disahility,
Oct. 30, 1862.
James F. Rowley, discharged for disahility,
July 8, 1862.
Sylvester G. Strickland, discharged
for disability, Feb. 18, 1863.
William Yokes, discharged on account of wounds
received at Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863.
Erwin F. Mason, discharged on
account of wounds received at Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863.
Russell W. Cross, transferred to
Veteran Reserve Corps., Aug. 1, 1863.
Thomas J. Merrills, wounded in action at Gettyshurg,
Pa., July 3, 1863; transferred to Veteran Reserve Corps, Dec. 1,
1863.
Truman Kellogg, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Charles J. Galpin, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Dryden C. Lindsley, discharged on account of
wounds received in action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Andrew W. Maloney, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Charles E. Parkill, discharged at Louisville,
Ky., July 13, 1865.
Henry C. Rice, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Benjamin F. Sperry, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
John C. Shaw, missing at Peach-Tree
Creek, Ga., July 28, 1864.
Henry C. Carey, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
Ohed
(probably Obed)
Knapp, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Samuel E. Fay, discharged May 26,
1864.
Beneville, Miller, wounded at
Gettysburg, Pa., Juy 3, 1863; discharged expiration of term of
service.
Edgar O. Miller, wounded at
Gettysburg, Pa.; discharged at expiration of term of service.
Hiram O. Morgan, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
COMPANY D.
1st lieut. Marcus F.
Roherts (probably
Roberts), discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Capt. Horatio Luce, killed in action
at Port Republic, Va,, June 9, 1862.
COMPANY E.
Captain Ebenezer B.
Howard, resigned.
Capt. Silas G. Elliott, wounded in
action at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862; discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
1st lieut. George Hayward, killed in
action at Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863
1st lieut. Addison J. Andrews,
discharged July 13, 1865.
1st Lieut. T. S. Winship, discharged
Mar. 28, 1863.
2d lieut. William B. Quirk,
discharged Nov. 1, 1862.
2d lieut. Theodore L. Gould,
discharged Oct. 1, 1863.
2d lieut. Albert Durkee, resigned
July 9, 1862.
Sergeant Addison E. Tracy,
discharged at the close of the war.
Sergeant William E. Sterling,
discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergeant Charles Howard, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergeant William G. Buss, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Steadman J. Rockwell,
discharged at Fort Delaware, Nov. 10, 1862.
Corporal Isaac Dalrymple, killed in
action at Port Republic, Va., June 9, 1862.
Corporal Alhert
(probably Albert)
Blanchard, discharged in Oct. 1864.
Corporal Lewis Harper, discharged
July 13, 1865.
Corporal Hiram Dalrymple, discharged
at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Herman Dewey, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Corporal Hiram Thoruton
(probably Thornton)
discharged at Louisville, Ky, July 13, 1865.
Corporal Lewis Harger, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Thomas Shultz, died from wounds May
12, 1863.
James C. Jones, discharged July 13,
1865.
Frederick Rounds, wounded;
discharged July 13, 1865.
Frank D. Lovejoy, transferred to
Fiftb U. S.
Cavalry; discharged June 5, 1865.
Joseph R. Lynn, transferred to the navy Apr. 15,
1864.
George W. Light, discharged at the
close of the war.
Lorenzo Norton, discharged Jan. 1,
1864, on account of wounds received in action at Chancellorsville,
Va.
William A. Robinson, discharged Nov.
4, 1862, on account of wounds received in action.
David B. Goodwill, killed at Kenesaw
Mountain, June 27, 1864.
Truman H. Williams, died at
Bridgeport, Ala, Feb. 29, 1864.
Ethan Davis, died at Cumberland,
Md., Mar. 8, 1862.
Andrew Beardslee, died at
Alexandria, Va., July 29, 1862.
Harvey A. Reeves, died at
Washington, D. C., June 26, 1862.
Albert N. Atwater, died at Monroe,
Ohio, July 4, 1864.
James P. Bagley, missing at battle
of Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
George W. Bachelor, died at
Dumfries, Va., Mar. 8, 1863.
William O. Johnson, died at
Cumberland, Md., Mar. 22, 1862.
John C. Greenlce
(probably Greenlee),
discharged Oct. 18, 1864.
George J. Putney, discharged Oct.
16, 1864.
Charles P. Rhodes, transferred to
Co. B, 1st Regt. V. R. C., Aug. 12, 1863.
Benjamin F. Holton, discharged Dec.
8, 1864, on account of wounds.
Henry Warren, discharged July 13,
1865.
Sherman Tuttle, discharged Apr. 2,
1865.
William L. Holden, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Hamilton Hill, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July
13, 1865.
Robert Van Scoick, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
John W. Kinnear, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Daniel W. Platt, Jr., discharged
Oct. 11, 1864.
Loren Dalrymple
Orlando Gunn, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Francis Culver, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
Charlos
Luce, musician, discharged at Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Calvin Rohinson
James M. Henry
Carlisle W. Kinnear, discharged at Louisville, Ky.,
July 13, 1865.
David W. Hall, paroled prisoner of
war, Mar. 15, 1865.
David B. Franklin, wounded;
discharged May 3, 1863.
John Ford, discharged Feb. 18, 1863.
Lewis Shores, transferred to Company
D, 13th U. S. V. R. C.
COMPANY F.
Sergeant Decatur E.
Humphrey
Corporal 1renus
M. Foot, discharged June 5, 1865.
Elsou
Reed, Jr., died at Washington, D. C., Nov. 1, 1862.
George Neno, died Aug. 12, 1862, from wounds
received in action at Cedar Mountain, Va.
Justin Townsley, dead.
Charles Cook, discharged at
Louisville, Ky, July 13, 1865.
James Thorp, discharged at
Cumberland, Md., Aug. 12, 1862.
Lorin Frishie, wounded; discharged at the close
of the war.
Alphonzo W. Hardy, discharged at the
close of the war.
Luther Hawley, discharged for disahility.
Jehiel Maltby, discharged for
disability.
Henry Stowe, discharged at the close
of the war.
Caleb S. Beede, discharged Mar. 4,
1863.
John W. Beede, discharged Dec. 30, 1862
William S. Croshy,
discharged Mar. 16, 1863.
COMPANY G.
Corporal Thomas Guest,
wounded; discharged July 13, 1865.
Corporal Thomas White, wounded at
Chancellorsville; discharged at the close of the war.
Henry Edson, wounded; transferred to Veteran
Reserve Corps., Aug. 15, 1864.
Charles E. Griffin, discharged July
13, 1865.
William Hartley, died July 15, 1864,
from wounds.
James L. Smith, died at Dumfries,
Va., Mar. 4, 1863.
John Wright.
R. G. Wiley.
Andrew S. Holman, missing from hospital Feb. 14,
1865.
COMPANY H.
Captain William H.
Wright, discharged at Louisville, Kentucky, July 13, 1865.
2d lieut. William Nelson, discharged Dec. 8,
1862.
Jeremiah S. Congdon, discharged
on account of Wounds received in action; died iu
1877.
Henry J. Knapp, discharged May 8,
1865, on account of wounds received in action.
James C. Hammond, died at Dumfries,
Virginia, Mar. 14, 1863.
Eli C. Joles, mortally wounded in
action at Dug Gap, Ga., May 8, 1864.
Merrick Smith, discharged Sept. 25,
1865.
COMPANY I.
Sergeant Almon A.
Woodruff, discharged July 13, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Sergeant Newton B. Adams, wouuded;
transferred to Veteran Reserved Corps Jan. 23, 1865.
Sergeant Ransom D. Billings, killed
in front of Atlanta, Georgia, July 28, 1864.
Sergeant Thomas F. Henderson, died
at Chattauooga,
Tennessee, Oct. 10, 1864.
Sergeant Martiu
G. Owen, discharged for disahility
September, 1862.
Corp. Lucius K. Woodhury,
discharged July 13, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Page 60 -
Horatio W. Horton, transferred to Veteran
Reserve Corps. July 1, 1863.
James R__d, discharged June 18__, at
Bladensburg, Maryland
James Perkins, wounded, discharged
May 5, 18__, at Camp Dennison, Ohio
Albert Alderman, discharged July 1_, 18__, at
Louisville, Kentucky.
T____ Phinney, killed in action at Dug Gap,
Georgia, May 8, 1864.
Orlard O. Wakeman, died at
Winchester, Virginia.
W____am W___er, died at Morgan, Ohio, Dec. 15,
1861.
Joseph Baker, killed before Atlanta, Georgia,
July 2, 1864.
David N. Hu___d, died at Winchester,
Virginia, Mar. 21, 1862.
Aaron C. Baker, discharged for
disability.
Willard Trall.
Roswell Trall.
Reuben Wilson.
Michael McN_rmy, wounded,
discharged July 13, 1865.
M_ndelbert Manly, discharged for
disability in October, 1862.
Sydney A. Kennedy, discharged on
account of wounds receive at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July 3, 1863.
J. H. Kennedy, discharged for disability Apr. 4,
1863.
Orville A. Rockwell, discharged for
disability Aug. 9, 1863.
Thomas Sharkey, discharged Sept. 5,
1863, on account of wounds received at Chancellorsville, Virginia.
William Edred, discharged July 13, 1865.
William E. Dockery, discharged July
13, 1865.
Adelbert W. Holdridge, a wounded,
discharged Aug. 4, 1865.
Reuben Rounds, discharged June 5,
1865.
COMPANY K.
Captain David E.
Hulburt, wounded at Chancellorsville, Va., May 3, 1863; resigned
Aug. 29, 1864.
Captain Charles W. Kellogg,
discharged July 13, 1865.
Captain Alden P. Steele, resigned
Apr. 13, 1863.
1st lieut. William Neil, resigned
Jan. 26, 1863.
Sergt. Joseph H. Marsh, killed in action at
Dallas, Ga., May 25, 1864.
Sergt. William E. Gray, shot by
Provost Guard at Frederick City, Md., Dec. 10, 1862.
Sergt. Luther L. Kinney, discharged at
Louisville, Ky., July 13, 1865.
Sergt. Geo. C. Judd, discharged Mar. 2, 1863, at
Alexandria, Va.
Sergt. Charles Potter, discharged
June 19, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Sergt. Michael F. Alderman,
discharged July 13, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Sergt. Ans_l O. Benjamin, discharged
Mar. 3, 1863, at Columbus, Ohio.
Sergt. C. C. Johnson, wounded at the battles of
Port Republic and Cedar Mountain, Va.; discharged Mar. 3, 1863.
Sergt. Cornelius O. Hinkle,
discharged July 13, 1865.
Corporal A. D. Eddy, discbarged
July 13, 1865.
Corp. James C. McCleary, discharged
June 19, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Corp. Frederick A. Rounds,
discharged July 13, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Corp. Lafayette N. Johnson,
discharged at expiration of term of service.
Philander M. Griggs, died at
Alexandria, Va., Oct. 3, 1872.
Orra McGee, died July 4, 1862.
Daniel Phillips, killed in action at
Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862.
Martin Banny, died at Alexandria,
Va., July 11, 1862.
Byron Bulfinch, died at Frederick
City, Md., Oct. 28, 1862.
Matthias Sodom, killed in action at
Gettysburg, Pa., July 3, 1863.
Martin G. Hammond, discharged at
Frederick City, Md., Dec. 2, 1862.
Hezekiah Davenport,
discharged Dec. 6, 1864.
Charles W. Wilson, discharged for
disability in August, 1862.
Luther Fowler, discharged for
disability in April, 1862.
Harlow H. Fenton, discharged by
order June 7, 1865, at Cleveland, Ohio.
James Alexander, discharged June 19,
1863, at Columbus, Ohio.
Alben M. Alderman, wounded in action
at Cedar Mountain, Va., Aug. 9, 1862; discharged Sept. 28, 1864.
Foster W. Eggleston, discharged Jan.
3, 1863, at Providence, R. I.
Henry C. Farnsworth, discharged June
19, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Edson G. Holcomb, discharged June
19, 1865, at Louisville, Ky.
William Norris, discharged June 19,
1865, at Louisville, Ky.
Reuben W. Alderman, discharged Apr.
4, 1863, at Dumfries, Va.
Harmon Wilder.
John McCloud.
William D. Elliott, discharged for disahility.
Martin Elliott, discharged for disability.
William Fletcher, discharged for
disability Sept. 28, 1862.
Franc_s
J. Hibbard, discharged to re-enlist as veteran, Dec. 21, 1863.
George W. Weeks, discharged for
disability Nov. 2, 1862.
Horace Holcomb, discharged for
disability June, 1862.
Joseph B. Parch, discharged for
disability June 30, 1862.
Joseph Matthews, discharged for
disability July 31, 1862.
James M. Goldsmith, discharged for
disability July 9, 1862.
John Joslin, discharged July 13,
1865.
George W. Light, discharged July 13,
1865.
John Sarsfield, discharged at the
end of the war.
John Swinton, discharged in
December, 1862.
William Knox, discharged Aug. 15,
1862.
James Spaim, discharged July 13,
1865.
THIRTY NINTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY D.
Smith Bennett,
died Mar. 25, 1863.
COMPANY E.
Harrison P. Ives,
died at Newbern, N. C., Apr. 19, 1865.
COMPANY F.
Luther Wilson,
discharged July 9, 1865.
COMPANY G.
Daniel H. Palmer,
discharged at close of the war.
COMPANY H.
Jo__ah T. Grant,
discharged July 9, 1865.
Adam R___y, discharged July 9, 1865.
Lewis D. Thurber, died at Camp
Dennison, Ohio, July 15, 1865.
S. W. Tyler, discharged July ), 1865
Almon R. Thurbur, discharged at the
close of the war.
Morris Colby, discharged July 19,
1865.
FORTY-FIRST OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
John Good__l,
discharged at the close of the war.
COMPANY C.
Surgeon John C.
Hubbard, resigned Aug. 30, 1862.
Charles Ellsworth, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
FORTY-SECOND OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY.
COMPANY F.
Thomas Heath, died
at Memphis, Tenn., Aug. 22, 1863.
George Hallam, discharged at
Carrolton, La., Aug. 21, 1863.
Edward Morrison, discharged Nov. 19,
1864.
FORTY-FOURTH OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY.
Sergeant Jerome J. Van
Naurce, discharged by order Mar. 18, 1865.
FIFTIETH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
COMPANY B.
Amos E. Baldwin,
died Jan. 22, 1863.
FIFTY-FIRST OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY
COMPANY G.
Oliver H. P. Wing,
discharged by order in June, 1865.
FIFTY-SECOND VOLUNTEER INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
Smith E. Gleason,
discharged June 20, 1865.
COMPANY H.
Arthur D. Palmer,
died at Chattanooga, Tenn., Nov. 6, 1864.
COMPANY K.
FIFTY-FOURTH OHIO INFANTRY
COMPANY E.
Sergeant Americus
Potter, discharged July 12, 1862, on account of wounds received
in action at Shiloh, Tenn.
SIXTIETH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY C.
COMPANY I.
Frank Hickok,
discharged Sept. 1, 1865.
SIXTY-FIRST OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
Daniel Shnltz,
discharged at the close of the war.
William H. Shultz, died at Washington.
SIXTY-SEVENTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY D.
Frank Wilson, dlscharged
for disability.
EIGHTIETH OHIO INFANTRY
COMPANY A.
Rollin Hotchkiss,
died at Clear Creek, iss., July 26, 1862.
EIGHTY-SECOND OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY F.
Patrick Sharkey,
discharged at the close of the war.
John Marr, discharged in July, 1865.
EIGHTY-FOURTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
Vicorian D. Lattimer,
discharged at expiration of term of service.
Augustus m. Barker, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
COMPANY C.
Sergt. Horace Miner,
Jr., discharged Sept. 20, 1862.
Alfred G. Sturgiss, discharged Sept.
20, 1862.
Lucien R. Foges, discharged Sept. 20, 1862.
Flavel E. Jones, discharged Sept. 20, 1862.
Alvin Wilcox, discharged Sept. 20,
1862.
EIGHTY-FIFTH OHIO INFANTRY
Frank F. Pope.
EIGHTY-SIXTH OHIO INFANTRY *
COMPANY B.
Daniel M. Smith,
discharged at expiration of term of service.
COMPANY D.
Frank A. Giddings,
discharged Sept. 25, 1862.
EIGHTY-SEVENTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY I.
Henry C. Webster,
died Oct. 8, 1862, at Philadelphia, Pa.
William E. Jewett, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
COMPANY K.
Norman W. Spellman,
discharged in September, 1862.
Lynds C. Tiner, discharged Oct. 3,
1862.
James J. Pinney, discharged at
expiration of term of service.
ONE HUNDRED AND THIRD OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY C.
Dighton R. Gleason,
discharged on account of wounds, Jan. 1, 1865.
COMPANY F.
William W. Watkins,
discharged at Raleigh, N. C., June 12, 1865.
John J. Shaffer, discharged at Raleigh, N. C.,
June 12, 1865.
Alfred O. Briggs, discharged at
Raleigh, N. C., June 12, 1865.
ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTH OHIO INFANTRY.
Captain Marshall W.
Wright, resigned in April, 1864.
COMPANY A.
Daniel A. Smith,
transferred to Veteran Reserve Corps. Sept. 4, 1863.
COMPANY B.
Henry Heath, died
at Nashville, Tenn., July 9, 1864.
COMPANY D.
Corp. John C. Britton,
killed in action at Mission Ridge, Tenn., Nov. 26, 1863.
Albert Hall, died at Chattanooga,
Tenn., in November, 1863.
Elmer H. Ward, died at Murfreesboro,
Tenn., Mr. 1, 1863.
Alfred A. Knowles, discharged June
3, 1865.
COMPANY E.
John E. Baker,
discharged at the close of the war.
COMPANY F.
G. W. Squires,
discharged for disability Dec. 28, 1862.
COMPANY G.
-------------------------
* Three months.
Page 61 -
COMPANY H.
Albert A. Sherman,
died at Murfreesboro, Tenn., Apr. 9, 1863.
COMPANY I.
COMPANY K.
ONE HUNDRED AND FOURTEENTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
Surgeon Asa A. Bean,
died Apr. 26, 1863.
ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTEENTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY
Surgeon Walter R.
Gilkey, died at Winchester, Va.
ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTEENTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
1st Serg. Alexander F.
McMillan, promoted to captain 1st United States Colored
Artillery; discharged Apr. 12, 1865.
Edward H. Chapman died of disease Mar. 8, 1863.
ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SECOND OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
COMPANY E.
James Shepherd,
discharged July 1, 1865.
ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIFTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
COMPANY C.
Ralph Porter, discharged
at the close of the war.
Harvey W. Lamb, discharged for disahility
Feb. 20, 1865.
COMPANY G.
Johanis Brantherbonch,
died Jan. 12, 1863.
COMPANY H.
COMPANY K.
ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-EIGHTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
Sylvanus F. Matson,
discharged for disability Sept. 29, 1862.
ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY-SIXTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY A.
George D. Parker,
discharged Sept. 9, 1865.
ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-FIRST OHIO INFANTRY*
COMPANY A.
H. H. King,
discharged at expiration of term of service.
COMPANY G.
Ebenezer Tidd,
discharged Aug. 23, 1864.
John W. Tidd, discharged Aug. 23, 1864.
Robert Wallace, discharged Aug. 23,
1864.
John Wallace, discharged Aug. 23,
1864.
Albert F. Bradley, discharged Aug.
30, 1864.
-------------------------
* One Hundred Days.
Page 62 -
ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-SIXTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY.
COMPANY I.
ONE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-SEVENTH OHIO VOLUNTEER
INFANTRY
COMPANY B.
COMPANY C.
COMPANY D.
COMPANY D.
COMPANY F.
Romanzo E. Fay,
died at Nashville, Tenn., Mar. 14, 1865.
COMPANY G.
COMPANY I.
COMPANY K.
ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY-EIGHTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
Ezekiel Y. Flower,
discharged at Nashville, Tenn., Aug. 31, 1865.
COMPANY D.
Corporal William R.
Harper, discharged at the close of the war.
Henry Gerald, died at Camp Chase,
Ohio, Mar. 23, 1865.
ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY-FIFTH OHIO INFANTRY.
Charles G. Auderson,
discharged Sept. 22, 1865.
Alouzo
A. Kent, discharged Sept. 11, 1865.
ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY-SIXTH OHIO INFANTRY
Captain Francis M.
Baker, wounded while with 6th Ohio Cavalry on Sherican's raid to
Richmond; discharged at Baltimore, Md., Sept. 16, 1865.
COMPANY D.
COMPANY I.
Sergeant Milo G. Heath,
discharged Sept. 11, 1865.
COMPANY K.
ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY-SEVENTH OHIO INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
William H Hess,
discharged Aug. 7, 1865
COMPANY D.
ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY-EIGHTH OHIO INFANTRY
COMPANY B.
Walter Tickner,
discharged at the close of the war.
William H. Straight, discharged May
8, 1865.
Page 63 -
MORE TO COME
Page 64 -
MORE TO COME
Page 65 -
MORE TO COME
Page 66 -
EIGHTEENTH UNITED STATES
INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
James A.
Howard?, died Nov. 4, 1864.
THIRD UNITED STATES CAVALRY.
COMPANY D.
John F.
Jefferson?, discharged at expiration of term of service.
SIXTH UNITED STATES CAVALRY
Brevet-Major Adna R. Chaffee.
NINTH UNITED STATES CAVALRY.
Brevet Brigadier General James F. Wade.
LINCOLN NATIONAL GUARDS OF
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Sergeant
Imri Smalley, discharged at Cleveland, Ohio, June 14, 1865.
FIRST MISSISSIPPI UNION
REGIMENT.
Lieutenant Henry H. Vernon, discharged at
the close of the war.
SECOND UNITED STATES COLORED
ARMY.
Darius
Johnson, died in February, 1863.
FIFTH UNITED STATES COLORED
TROOPS.
Captain
E. R. Bl___
SIXTH UNITED STATES COLORED
TROOPS.
Major H.
J. Covell, wounded in action at New Market
Heights, Va., Sept. 29, 1864; discharged for disability Apr. 25,
1865; appointed aid-de-damp, with rank of colonel, in 1868, on staff
of Governor R. B. Hayes.
TWENTY SEVENTH UNITED STATES
COLORED INFANTRY.
Captain
Frank K. Larrabee.
COMPANY C.
Sergeant
John P. Swan, discharged Sept. 12, 1865.
EIGHTY-FIRST UNITED STATES
COLORED INFANTRY.
2d lieut.
Eugene S. Linn.
ONE HUNDRED AN D SIXTH UNITED
STATES COLORED INFANTRY.
Lieutenant Harrison A. Udell.
ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVENTH UNITED
STATES COLORED INFANTRY.
Colonel
and Brevet Brigadier-General Joel A. Dewey,
dis. Jan. 31, 1866.
SECOND UNITED STATES COLORED
LIGHT ARTILLERY.
1st
Lieut. John P. Hoyt.
UNITED STATES NAVY.
George w.
Dockery, drowned off the gunboat
"Springfield," Nov. 22, 1864.
Edward Allen, on board gunboat "Fair Play", died
at Smithland, Ky., Nov. 29, 1864.
Charles S. Taylor, died from wounds received in
action at Decatur, Ala., Oct. 31, 1864.
Albert Bentley, died at home, Sept. 6, 1864.
Frederick J. Brown, missing.
George Young, on board gunboat "General Grant."
Charles G. Harris, on board gunboat
"General Sherman"; discharged at the close of the war.
Albert N. Hillard, discharged at expiration of
term of service.
Jasper Brockway, on board gunboat
"General Thomas"; discharged June 25, 1865.
Daniel Beckwith, on board gunboat "General
Thomas"; discharged at the close of the war.
Allnon? Beckwith, on board gunboat "General
Thomas"; discharged at the close of the war.
Henry C. Fulford, discharged at the close of the
war.
Henry M. Hickok, on board gunboat "General
Sherman"; discharged at the close of the war.
Samuel Berridge, on board gunboat "General
Thomas"; discharged June 24, 1865.
Russell
__rlew, discharged at the
close of the war.
Eli M. Holcomb, on board gunboat "General
Thomas"; discharged at the close of the war.
William Q. Lockwood, on board gunboat "General
Thomas"; discharged at the close of the war.
Christopher Mason, on board "Little Rebel";
discharged Nov. 5, 1865.
Charles M. Prescott, discharged at the close of
the war.
Francis H. Sharp, on board "Portsmouth";
discharged Sept 9, 1865.
John T. Stimson, discharged June 25, 1865.
George E. Tower, second engineer.
George P. Larew, on board gunboat "General
Sherman"; discharged May 1_, 1865
Charles D. Pr_t_r
Ensign Joseph B. Petty, United States Steamer
"Little Rebel"; discharged Nov. 21, 1865.
F. W. Smith, on board gunboat "General Grant";
dis. June 20, 1865.
Elijah H. Stevens, discharged Aug. 1, 1865.
Alfred W. Williams, on board gunboat "Fair
Play."
SEVENTH KANSAS CAVALRY.
COMPANY C.
Margin V.
Blanchard, discharged Nov. 17, 1864.
COMPANY K.
Captain
John Brown, Jr.
Captain William R. Allen
Captain Burr H. Bostwick
1st Lieut. Wm. W. Crane, discharged Sept. 30, 1865.
Sergeant John Morris Thompson, killed in action
at Coffeeville, Miss, Dec. 5, 1862.
Sergeant Seymour S. Slater, discharged,
re-enlisted in Eighty-fourth Illinois Infantry; died Jan. 31, 1863,
from wounds received in action at Stone River, Tenn.
Sergeant Hezron? A. Harmon, discharged Sept. 2,
1865.
Alfred A. Blanchard, killed by the enemy while
on a scouting expedition in Missouri, Jan. 8, 1862.
Isaac Holcomb, died at Corinth, Miss., Sept. 28,
1862.
Henry Harmon, discharged May 1, 1862, died at
Lebanon, Ky., Feb. 22, 1864.
William H. H. Reeve, died while at home on
furlough, July 25, 1862.
Herbert H. Tourgee, discharged Sept. 29, 1865.
Luther G. Evans.
Daniel H. Williams, discharged Nov. 24, 1864.
Ledyard B. Holman, discharged Nov. 18, 1864.
Elnathan S. Harmon, discharged for disability
Dec. 12, 1862.
John S. Thatcher, wounded, discharged Dec. 14,
1863.
E. E. Ward, promoted captain Eighty-eighth
Regiment, United States Colored Infantry.
Oscar Evans, discharged Sept. 29, 1865.
Sergeant Merrick Pulsifer, discharged at the
close of the war.
Birney G. Evans, discharged for disability Mar.
18, 1863.
Darwin G. Brockway, discharged for disability.
Ira Slater, discharged May 9, 1862.
Clarkson A. Coleman, discharged at the close of
the war.
Amos Slater, discharged for
disability Mar. 14, 1863.
Ulysses H. Carey, discharged Sept. 30, 1865.
Ala Evans, wounded; discharged Oct., 1862.
George W. Evans, discharged Sept. 29, 1865.
Truman L. Creesey, discharged at Corinth, Miss.
TENTH KANSAS CAVALRY
COMPANY C.
Sidney B.
Smith, discharged Oct. 8, 1864.
James W. Huntley, discharged Oct. 8,
1864.
Charles A. Belknap, discharged Oct. 8, 1864.
SIXTEENTH KANSAS CAVALRY.
COMPANY B.
Henry H.
Bruce, discharged Dec. 8, 1865.
TENTH PENNSYLVANIA RESERVE.
Major
Sion B. Smith, resigned July 16, 1862.
COMPANY I.
Sergeant
George L. Beach, wounded; discharged June 20, 1864.
Hiram Kile, killed in action in
front of Richmond, Va.
Berosus B. Strickland, killed in action at South
Mountain, Md., Sept. 14, 1862.
Arden B. Ferris, transferred to Veteran Reserve
Corps.
Oscar A. Marvin, drowned from transport
"Commodore," off West Point, Va., July 22, 1862.
Thomas J. Root, discharged for disability Dec.
30, 1863.
FIFTY-SEVENTH PENNSYLVANIA
INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
John A.
Owens, wounded in action at the Weldon Railroad, Va., May 7,
1864; discharged at Johnson's Island, Ohio, July 5, 1865.
FIFTY-NINTH PENNSYLVANIA
INFANTRY.
COMPANY K.
R. G.
Thompson, discharged Aug. 9, 1865.
EIGHTY-THIRD PENNSYLVANIA
INFANTRY.
COMPANY D.
William
Chadwick, wounded; discharged Nov. 24, 1865.
COMPANY F.
Alonzo M.
Warren, discharged for disability in October, 1862.
COMPANY I.
Freeman
R. Ring, discharged on account of wounds in October, 1862.
COMPANY K.
George
Bishop, died at Newark, N. J., Feb. 10, 1862.
Charles H. Wetherwax, discharged Feb. 3, 1864,
on account of wounds received in action at Gaines' Mills, Va.
George Stevenson, discharged on account of
wounds received in action at Malvern Hill, Va, July 1, 1862.
ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SEVENTH
PENNSYLVANIA INFANTRY.
COMPANY H.
Charles
H. Phelps, musician, aged fourteen years, taken prisoner in
action at Auburn Hills, Va., Oct. 14, 1863; discharged at Braddock's
Field, Pa., May 31, 1865.
SECOND PENNSYLVANIA CAVALRY.
A. H.
Pettitt.
FOURTEENTH PENNSYLVANIA CAVALRY.
Sergeant
Dorance B. Garey, discharged at the close of the war.
COMPANY I.
Alonzo B.
West, discharged Aug. 5, 1865.
EIGHTEENTH PENNSYLVANIA CAVALRY.
Lieutenant-Colonel John W. Phillips, discharged July 21, 1865.
Captain James W. Smith, discharged
Feb. 6, 1865.
PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENTAL
TROOPS.
COMPANY A.
Leander
H. Means, discharged at Pittsburgh, Pa., July 21, 1864.
FIRST NEW YORK SHARPSHOOTERS.
Sergeant
Morton Twitchell, discharged June 26, 1865.
TENTH NEW YORK INFANTRY.
Michael
Barrett, died at St. Louis, Mo., Dec. 21, 1865.
TWENTY-SEVENTH NEW YORK
INFANTRY.
COMPANY F.
Daniel W.
Witheral, discharged May 31, 1863.
FIFTY-FIRST NEW YORK INFANTRY.
COMPANY B.
John H.
Polhamus?, died while a prisoner of war at Salisbury, N. C.
SEVENTIETH NEW YORK INFANTRY.
COMPANY F.
Captain
Morris J. Foote, severely wounded in front of Petersburg, Va.,
June 17, 1864.
ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTEENTH NEW
YORK INFANTRY
Corporal
Almont Cravton,, discharged June 12, 1865.
Delos Armstrong, discharged Feb. 11, 1863.
ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SIXTH NEW
YORK INFANTRY.
Michael
Cunningham, discharged at the close of the war.
FIFTEENTH NEW YORK CAVALRY.
COMPANY F.
John F.
Miles, discharged June, 3, 1865.
ELEVENTH NEW YORK INDEPENDENT
BATTERY.
Capt.
Robert C. Warmington's command consolidated with this battery;
mustered as 1st lieut; wounded in action at Manassas Junction, Va.,
Aug. 26, 1862; dis. at Falmouth, Va., Dec. 9, 1862.
1st lieut. Galen A. Knapp, discharged at
Washington, D. C., Jan. 2, 1863.
2d lieut. John Gifford, mustered out by
consolidation.
2d lieut. Wadmore Redhead, discharged Nov. 1,
1864.
Sergeant John Richard Warmington, killed in
action at Chancellorsville, Va., May 3, 1863.
Sergeant Roger F. Fowler, died at his home in
Ashtabula, Aug. 27, 1862.
Sergeant Samuel Boyles, discharged at the close
of the war.
Sergeant C. H. Brooks, discharged for
disability, Apr. 17, 1863.
Serg. Orlando H. Cheney, wounded; dis. at the
close of the war.
Corporal John Fowler, died at his home in
Ashtabula, Mar. 4, 1863.
Corporal John L. Castle, discharged June 14,
1865.
Corporal William H. Broughton, killed before
Petersburg, Va., Sept. 28, 1864.
Corporal Adrian Gillett, transferred to Battery
K, 1st N. Y. Artillery.
William St. Clair, died in Virginia in May,
1862.
John Johnston, died at Washington, D. C.
Alfred C. Elwell, killed before Petersburg, Va.,
in June, 1864.
John H. Metcalf, killed in action at Deep
Bottom, Va., Aug. 14, 1864.
Cyrus W. Andrews, died at Washington, D. C.,
Nov. 28, 1863.
Marcus L. Murray, died while a prisoner of war
at Andersonville, Ga., Aug. 20, 1864.
Henry D. Calloway, killed in action at
Chancellorsville, May 3, 1863.
James A. Manning, wounded; discharged at the
close of the war.
William A. Mines discharged at the close of the
war.
Robert Johnson, discharged July 1, 1865.
Charles S. Barnes, discharged June 13, 1865.
Joel Horton, discharged in December, 1863.
Samuel Cooper, discharged Oct. 8, 1864.
Samuel P. Johnson, discharged for disability, in
March, 1862.
Henry Starkweather, discharged Feb. 5, 1863.
Andrew Witheral, discharged Nov. 22, 1864.
Albert Beckwith, discharged June 13, 1865.
Charles T. Bennett, discharged at expiration of
term of service.
Charles A. Bierce, discharged for disability, in
May, 1862.
Billings Coleman, discharged Nov. 22, 1864.
George Carley, discharged at the close of the
war.
Valentine Dittler, discharged in October, 1864.
Edgar C. Fox, discharged in October, 1864.
Azariah A. Grant, discharged June 15, 1865.
William J. Grant, discharged for disability, in
March, 1864.
Heber R. Hollis, discharged June 15, 1865.
Reuben W. Scoville, bugler.
Stephen J. Moody, discharged; died at home in
Ashtabula.
Horace Wetmore, discharged to re-enlist as
veteran in January, 1864.
David Ham, discharged at Albany, N. Y.
Merritt Woodruff, discharged in September, 1862.
Andrew Wetherell, discharged Oct. 5, 1864.
Charles A. Megnes, discharged at the close of
the war.
Patrick Regan, discharged Oct. 5, 1864.
Seth Patterson, wounded; discharged Sept. 21,
1864.
Lewis Shepherd, transferred to the navy.
William H. Sammes transferred to the navy.
Chauncey S. Leonard, discharged at the close of
the war.
Willard D. Turner, died at his home in Saybrook.
William W. Armstrong, discharged June 20, 1865.
Edward M. Mann, wounded in action at
Chancellorsville, Va., May 3, 1863.
SIXTH WISCONSIN INFANTRY
COMPANY C.
Luke E.
Parsons, discharged at Madison, Wisconsin, July 15, 1864, at
expiration of a term of three years' service.
COMPANY G.
Randolph
O. Wright, missing in action at Antietam, Md., Sept. 17, 1862.
THIRD WISCONSIN CAVALRY.
COMPANY A.
George C.
Cosby, discharged at Madison, Wisconsin, Jan. 30, 1865.
FIRST MICHIGAN LIGHT ARTILLERY.
LOOMIS' BATTERY "A"
Sergeant
Henry H. Kellogg, wounded in action at Chickamauga, Ga., Sept.
20, 1863; discharged May 31, 1864.
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