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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Summer in Maryland and Virginia, by George
-Perkins
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A Summer in Maryland and Virginia
- Or Campaigning with the 149th Ohio Volunteer Infantry. A Sketch of Events Connected with the Service of the Regiment in Maryland and the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia
-
-
-Author: George Perkins
-
-
-
-Release Date: December 21, 2019 [eBook #60969]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A SUMMER IN MARYLAND AND
-VIRGINIA***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 60969-h.htm or 60969-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/60969/60969-h/60969-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/60969/60969-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/summerinmaryland00perk
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- The table of contents is unusual. Seven of the topics in the
- table do not refer to chapters but rather to sections of text
- between chapter headings. The book contains two chapter
- headings not listed in the table of contents. An editorial
- decision was made to leave the table of contents as it was
- printed in the original book.
-
-
-
-
-
-A SUMMER IN MARYLAND and VIRGINIA
-
-Or Campaigning with the 149th Ohio Volunteer Infantry
-
-A Sketch of Events Connected with the Service of the Regiment in
-Maryland and the Shenandoah Valley, Virginia
-
-Written by
-
-GEORGE PERKINS, a member of Company A, at the earnest request of his
-Comrades of the Regiment.
-
-CHILLICOTHE, OHIO
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Scholl Printing Company
-Chillicothe, Ohio
-
-
-
-
- FOREWORD
-
-
-In preparing this sketch of the 149th Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
-the author has depended upon the memory of events that made a lasting
-impression upon a young mind. He does not claim to have written a full
-history of this service, that is stored in the memories and experiences
-of the different members of the Regiment. He does claim, however, that
-the main facts and movements of the Regiment and the other bodies of
-troops associated with it in the field, are accurate.
-
-The writer was fortunate in making a record of dates and incidents, soon
-after his return, which record has been invaluable in the preparation of
-this sketch.
-
-If the little booklet will be interesting to my comrades, or of any
-value in a historical way, I shall feel amply repaid for the labor in
-preparing it.
-
- GEORGE PERKINS
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATION
-
-
-This book is dedicated to the memory of our beloved Colonel Allison L.
-Brown. A brave soldier, a Christian gentleman, and a good friend of
-every member of his Regiment. He died as he had lived, in the good
-esteem of the community, and the love of his comrades.
-
- “Peace to his ashes.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- COL. ALLISON L. BROWN
-
- (from a war time photograph)
-
- Enlisted as a private in Co. C 73d O. V. I., promoted to Sergeant;
- resigned for promotion; recruited a company for the 89th O. V. I.;
- commissioned Captain of Co. D 89th O. V. I.; resigned on account of
- ill health. Elected Colonel of the 2d Ross County Militia Regiment,
- afterward the 27th Regiment, Ohio National Guard. Commissioned
- Colonel of the 149th O. V. I.; elected State Senator in 1875, served
- four years; re-elected in 1879. Died October 26th, 1879.
-
- Colonel Ally.]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- CAPTAIN W. W. PEABODY
-
- Captain of Company A 149th O. V. I.; commander of the garrison of Fort
- No. 1, Baltimore, Md.; Major on the staff of Brigadier General John
- C. Kenley, commanding the Independent Brigade of the Eighth Army
- Corps.
-
- Our Captain “Billy”
- Died October 14th, 1910]
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- Page
-
- Organization of the Hundred Days Service 13
-
- 149th Ordered to Baltimore, Md. 16
-
- At Fort No. 1 17
-
- Gen. Early’s Invasion of Maryland 18
-
- Battle of Monocacy 19
-
- Edward’s Ferry 25
-
- Cattle in the Corn 25
-
- Night March to Washington 26
-
- Negro Cabin in Vale 27
-
- The Negroes 28
-
- Wreck of the Sutler 31
-
- Mosby’s Attack at Berryville, Va. 34
-
- Return to Camp Dennison 38
-
- My Capture and Prison, Wm. McCommon 39
-
- Note by George Perkins 45
-
- Memories of our Service, Major Rozell 46
-
- Incident in Unwritten History, Lt. McKee 48
-
- Personal Experiences in Prison, W. R. Browning 51
-
- Incidents 61
-
- Conclusion 65
-
- Roster 69
-
-
-
-
- Organization of the Hundred Days Service
-
-
-The winter of 1863–4 on the banks of the Rapidan was passed in
-preparation by both Grant and Lee’s armies for that wrestle of giants
-that was to begin in May in the wilderness and end at Appomattox in the
-following April.
-
-In the southwest Sherman had won Missionary Ridge and Chicamauga and was
-getting ready for his Atlanta campaign, and a great force was doing
-garrison duty at various points. General Grant told the President that
-if he could have thirty thousand new men to relieve the veterans, he
-could capture Richmond and push the war to an end during the summer.
-This was a difficult proposition on account of resistance to the draft,
-and the vigorous activity of the Knights of the Golden Circle and the
-copperheads in the North.
-
-President Lincoln, however, acting on the suggestion, called to
-Washington for conference the loyal Governors of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois
-and Iowa. At this meeting Governor John Brough of Ohio said he would
-furnish thirty thousand men to serve for one hundred days. Governor
-Morton of Indiana promised twenty-five thousand. Governor Yates of
-Illinois twenty thousand, and Stone of Iowa, ten thousand. Governor
-Brough returned to Ohio, and at once began active work.
-
-On April 23d he issued general order No. 12 calling the National Guard
-of Ohio into active service for one hundred days, unless sooner
-discharged, to rendezvous on Monday, May 2d, and to report on that day
-the number of men present for duty. This call was responded to with
-alacrity, reports coming in showing thirty-two thousand present. The
-27th Regiment of Ross County reported five hundred and ninety-six men.
-
-This Regiment had been organized under a law passed in 1863, forming the
-Militia into volunteer Companies and Regiments. The 27th was enrolled
-with the following roster of officers: Colonel, Allison L. Brown; Lt.
-Col., James H. Haynes; Major, Ebenezer Rozelle; Adjutant, Robert
-Larrimore; Quartermaster, D. C. Anderson.
-
-The North had suffered an enormous drain upon her resources, had seen
-her men sent home from the front, suffering from disease and wounds,
-pitiful survivors of battles in which thousands had gone down to death.
-The romance and glamor of war had gone, the horror of it remained. There
-was scarcely a family in the North who did not suffer sorrow that cannot
-be described, hardly a fireside that did not mourn for a husband or
-lover, brother or friend, who went forth with pride, never to return.
-Under such circumstances the men of the hundred days service, knowing
-just what to expect, hastily arranged their affairs, and from the
-stores, work-shops and farms, flocked to the defence of their country in
-the hour of its direst need.
-
-On Wednesday, May 4th, the 27th Regiment O. N. G. reported at Camp
-Dennison. It was a cold, disagreeable day. Snow fell that afternoon, a
-day on which men would rather have remained by their own fireside, but a
-firm determination of duty urged them on.
-
-It was found necessary now to have a reconstruction of the Regiments and
-Battalions. The eight companies of the 27th were by consolidation
-reduced to seven. Three companies of the 55th Battalion from Clinton
-County were added, making ten companies. By orders, the Lieut. Colonel
-and Adjutant were relieved, and returned to their homes. The Regiment
-entered the United States service as the 149th Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
-
-In the organization of the National Guard, it was generally understood
-that it was for state service only. The call for active service came at
-a time when to go entailed great personal sacrifice of business
-interests on the part of its members. Farmers with scarcity of help,
-turned over their work to their wives, who in this time of emergency
-proved themselves helpmeets indeed, carrying the business of the season
-thru. A few of the members of the Guard were discontented, and by the
-help of Southern sympathizers, endeavored to fan this sentiment into a
-flame, and to induce the men to refuse to enter the service. However, to
-the credit of the men, after an address, delivered by Governor Brough at
-Camp Dennison, only one Company of the Guard refused to go, and they
-were promptly and dishonorably mustered out. The officers of the 149th
-O. V. I. as re-organized were as follows: Colonel, Allison L. Brown;
-Lieut. Colonel, Owen West; Major, E. Rozelle; Adjutant, T. Q.
-Hildebrant; Q. M., D. C. Anderson; Surgeon, W. A. Brown; Assistant
-Surgeon, B. F. Miesse; Chaplain, W. Morris. Non-commissioned staff: Sgt.
-Major, George L. Wolfe; Quartermaster Sgt., Austin H. Brown; Commissary
-Sgt., Edward F. Beall; Hospital Steward, James F. Sproat.
-
-From May 4th until the 11th the Regiment remained at Camp Dennison,
-during which time they were uniformed, armed and equipped, and mustered
-into the United States service. On the night of May 11th orders came for
-the Regiment to report to Gen. Lew Wallace at Baltimore, Md., going by
-way of Columbus and Pittsburg. We started at midnight, being crowded
-into box cars, without a seat or bed except the floor. We rode in this
-manner for three days and four nights. Thursday noon found us still
-south of Xenia, and did not reach Pittsburg until Friday evening. There
-the Regiment was handsomely received. We marched to a hall where a
-bountiful supper was provided for us by the loyal ladies of that city.
-That supper to the tired, hungry soldiers was an event long to be
-remembered. The good people of Pittsburg fed every Regiment that passed
-through, going or returning. Early the next morning we passed Altoona,
-Pa., and the great “Horse Shoe Bend.” At this point one of the brakes on
-our car dropped to the track as we were descending the steep mountain
-grade; we could hear it “bump, bump,” on the track, but luckily it held,
-or the history of the 149th would have ended then and there. Nothing
-could have prevented the train rolling over the mountain side.
-
-However, the longest ride must have an end. Our train pulled into
-Baltimore at 3 o’clock Sunday morning. As soon as possible Col. Brown
-reported to General Wallace, and the Regiment was assigned to duty at
-several points in the city, relieving the 8th N. Y. Heavy Artillery,
-Col. Porter commanding. Col. Porter with his command, two thousand
-strong, immediately left for the front, and after six weeks but seven
-hundred remained, the Col. and all of his staff being killed.
-
-Companies A and F 149th were assigned to Fort No. 1 on the outskirts of
-Baltimore, Capt. Wm. W. Peabody of Co. A being appointed Garrison
-Commander.
-
-Between the days of May 4 and 16, 35,982 men, composing forty-one
-Regiments and one Battalion, were consolidated, organized, mustered,
-clothed, armed and turned over to the United States military authorities
-for assignment. The Guard was composed of the most substantial men left
-in the state, men of every department of trade, and of every profession.
-Ohio had at that time sent ten per cent of her entire population into
-the army. What a sacrifice on the altar of the country was this great
-outburst of patriotism.
-
-Companies A and F settled down to routine garrison duty at Fort No. 1.
-Cooks were detailed and the men assigned to barracks, Co. A occupying
-the first floor and Co. F the second. The duties of the day after roll
-call consisted of dress parade and guard mounting. Guard duty, was by
-detail, two hours on, and four hours off each being held for duty
-twenty-four hours. Time was given the men for many trips into the city,
-and this part of our service was very pleasant and safe. Many of our
-friends from Ohio came to visit us while we were there and brought
-money, and good things to eat for the boys. Four Companies of the
-Regiment were assigned to Fort Federal Hill, and Cos. D, K and I at
-Headquarters in Baltimore. On May 25th several companies were sent to
-the eastern shore of Maryland, with Headquarters at Salisbury. They had
-orders to quell the rebellion sympathizers, and to do Provost guard duty
-at that point, to guard the telegraph lines and to patrol the Bay for
-smugglers. The author’s service being with Company A, he is more
-conversant with the movements of the Regiment in which that Company took
-part. The memory of it all is dim. Like a dream in the night, it is
-misty and seems to have occurred ages ago. We who were just boys of from
-fifteen to eighteen years of age at that time, are now the aged and
-broken veterans, and the youngsters of today look upon us, just as we
-used to think of the old Revolutionary soldiers, when we were young. But
-we were having too good a time in Baltimore for it to last. The last
-opportunity we had to go down town was on the evening of the 4th of July
-when there was a grand display of fireworks.
-
-About this time we began to hear rumors of Gen. Early’s invasion of
-Maryland and Pennsylvania, and it was reported that he was marching on
-toward Baltimore. He came within four miles of the city and burned the
-residence of Governor Bradford. In Baltimore the excitement was intense.
-The bells of the city on that Sunday morning called the citizens to man
-the Forts, to dig ditches, and throw up earthworks, instead of the
-church service, and thousands responded to the all. Lieutenant Runkle of
-the regulars assumed command at Fort No. 1 and began a rigid drill in
-heavy artillery, our guns were manned, loaded with shell and sighted at
-prominent houses, groves, etc., that might give shelter to the enemy.
-This drill was kept up for two days and nights, the men sleeping at
-their posts, expecting the ball to open at any moment. But Early
-withdrew his forces and with haste, again entered the Shenandoah Valley.
-
-On July 1st General Early received orders to invade Maryland and advance
-on Washington. He began preparations by forcing General Siegel to
-retreat to Maryland Heights where he was cooped up. Early moved by
-flank, entered Maryland and advanced to Frederick City. On the 9th of
-July the battle of Monocacy was fought. We at Fort No. 1 began to see
-some of our soldiers come in from the battle field, among them being
-Assistant Surgeon Miesse and Chaplain Morris, who stopped at the Fort
-and gave us an account of the battle. Gen. Wallace had gathered a force
-of twenty-eight hundred men, consisting of one Maryland Regiment and the
-rest were hundred days men, among them being the 144th Ohio, and seven
-companies of the 149th. On the 8th of July a brigade of Ricketts’
-Division of the Sixth Corps came up on a train of cars bound for
-Harper’s Ferry. Wallace informed the Commander “that if he wanted to get
-to Harper’s Ferry he would have to get the consent of Jubal Early.” He
-stopped the Brigade and put it in position. During the night Ricketts
-came up with his other Brigade. He wanted to know what Wallace proposed
-to do, and was informed that he proposed to fight. Ricketts laughed and
-said, “with my division and your hundred day men you have only about
-6,000. Do you expect to whip Early?” “No,” replied Wallace, “but I
-propose to make him do two things, develop his strength and whither he
-is bound.”
-
-If bound for Washington he thought he could delay him at least
-twenty-four hours, and it would take him two more days to get to
-Washington, and in that time Grant could get troops from City Point in
-time to save the Capitol, but without that Early would be in Washington
-when there was not a man in the entrenchments. Gen. Ricketts agreed with
-him, and his division was placed. Colonel Brown was ordered to the Stone
-Bridge over the Monocacy where the Frederick and Baltimore turnpike
-crosses. His orders were to hold the bridge at all hazards, but if
-pressed too hard the men were to scatter and save themselves the best
-they could. The forces under Wallace numbered 5,500, while those of
-Early were 23,000 of the pick of the Confederate Armies.
-
-Long before daylight on July 9th the 149th was in position at the
-bridge. They did not have to wait long until Early’s troops were seen
-passing through Frederick, bound for Washington. Then came the tug of
-war. Gen. Wallace deployed his men as skirmishers and attracted the
-attention of the enemy, the object being to deceive him as to the
-numbers opposing him. They held him in check from daylight until late in
-the afternoon. During the last hour the only force opposing this veteran
-army of Earlys was the 149th Ohio. At four o’clock in the afternoon
-Wallace seeing that his army would be either captured or annihilated,
-ordered a retreat of all but the 149th. This Regiment was to cover the
-retreat, and to be sacrificed to save the rest of the army. This was
-shown by the orders sent to Col. Brown, which were as follows:
-
- 4:30 P. M., July 9th, 1864.
-
- Colonel:
-
- Major General Wallace directs me to say that he directs that you
- hold your position to the very last extremity, and, when nothing
- more can be done, that you fall back, and if pressed, direct
- your men to disperse and take care of themselves. This is to be
- done when nothing more can be done to retard the enemy’s
- progress.
-
- Respectfully,
- E. B. Tyler,
- Brig. Gen.
-
-Col. Brown was unaware of the retreat of the rest of the army and was
-left alone in advance of the stone bridge, beating back the repeated
-attacks of the enemy until 5:30. At that time a farmer living near
-informed him of the retreat of the whole Union army except his Regiment,
-and that they were a mile and a half away. So he gave the order to
-retreat. Adjutant Hildebrand was sent with three companies and deployed
-as skirmishers on the left. They showed such steadiness that Early
-stopped to reform his lines, and behind this thin curtain of skirmishers
-the Regiment cut its way through and escaped to the north and toward
-Baltimore.
-
-When Col. Brown and his brave little army overtook General Wallace, the
-latter was much affected. He embraced him, the tears starting from his
-eyes, and said, “Colonel, I never expected to see you again.”
-
-General Grant in his report says “they saved Washington.” The 149th in
-this engagement lost 130 men in killed, wounded and prisoners. The
-performance of the hundred days men was a revelation to the old
-soldiers, and a surprise to the enemy. They did not know when they were
-whipped. Everywhere their duty was well performed. On the long forced
-marches, sometimes hundreds of miles with insufficient rations,
-suffering from thirst, tramping the dusty roads with blistered feet, it
-was all done and suffered by the men cheerfully, and as well as by the
-veterans of long service. I heard one of the men of the 19th Corps say,
-“We have served for three years but have never seen campaigning like
-this.” Gen. Tyler in his official report of the battle of Monocacy says:
-
- “It seldom falls to the lot of veterans to be more tried than
- was the Ohio National Guard at the stone bridge, and none ever
- carried out trying and hazardous orders better, or with more
- determined spirit than did the 149th Ohio, and the men
- associated with it.”
-
-The enemy had seized the time when Grant had depleted the defensive
-forces of the Capitol, to endeavor to capture Washington. Early charged
-up to the very boundary of the city expecting to find the rich prize an
-easy prey, but the stubborn resistance of the Guard at Monocacy and
-their vigilance in the forts at Washington were more than a match for
-all the vaunted dash and daring of his veterans, and he was compelled to
-retire before the raw Militia of the Buckeye State. This was a source of
-deep humiliation to the dashing Rebel General which he never got over to
-the day of his death. Whether the hundred days man was on the alert in
-the entrenchments of the capital, battling at the front with the veteran
-forces of the Confederacy or skirmishing on the lines of supply with the
-wary foe in the rugged passes of the Alleghanies, they were each in his
-place doing their duty manfully toward the great and final victory which
-came a few months later.
-
-Lincoln and Grant both said that the services of the hundred days men
-shortened the war, and, that the President appreciated their service was
-shown by his issuing a special card of thanks, a copy of which was sent
-to every man in this service. This was a special favor from the hand of
-our great war President, that no other troops received, and one of which
-we can well be proud. It was a tribute to bravery from the great, noble
-heart of the kindest soul that ever lived on earth.
-
-Gen. J. B. Gordon of the Confederate army whose division was with Early
-in the fight at Monocacy, says:
-
-“The battle of Monocacy was short, decisive and bloody. While the two
-armies were contemplating each other from the opposite banks, my
-division was selected, not to prevent Wallace from driving us out of
-Maryland, but to drive him from our front. My movement was down the
-right bank of the Monocacy to a fording place below, the object being to
-cross the river, and then turn upon the Federal stronghold. My hope and
-effort were to conceal the movement from Wallace’s watchful eye, until
-my troops were over, and then to apprise him of my presence on his side
-of the river, by a sudden rush upon his left flank. But Gen.
-McClausland’s Cavalry had already attacked a portion of his troops, and
-he discovered the movement of my division before it could drag itself
-through the water and up the slippery banks. He at once changed front,
-and drew up his lines in strong position to meet the assault. This
-movement presented new difficulties. Instead of finding the Union forces
-still facing Early’s other divisions beyond the river, giving my
-isolated command the immense advantage of a flank attack, I found myself
-separated from all the Confederate infantry, with the bristling front of
-Wallace’s army before me.
-
-“In addition to this I found other troubles which mitigated against the
-success of my movement. Across the fields through which we were to
-advance, there were strong and high farm fences which my men must climb
-while under fire. Worse still these fields were full of grain stacks so
-high and close together that no line of battle could be maintained while
-advancing through them. The movement began, and as my men reached the
-first line of high fencing and began climbing over, they were met by a
-tempest of bullets, and many fell at the first volley. They pressed on
-and around the grain stacks, with no possibility of forming allignment
-or returning effective fire. The men, deprived of the support and
-strength of a compact line, pushed forward and drove the Federals back
-to their second line. The Union troops stood firmly in this second
-position, bravely defending the railroad and highway to Washington.
-Between the two hostile lines there was a narrow ravine, down which ran
-a stream of limpid water. In this ravine the fighting was desperate and
-at close quarters. To and fro the battle swayed across the little
-stream, the dead and wounded on both sides mingling their blood in its
-waters, and when the struggle was ended a crimson current ran toward the
-river. Nearly one-half of my men fell there. Wallace’s army, after the
-most stubborn resistance, was driven in the direction of Baltimore. The
-Confederate victory was won at fearful cost, but it was complete, and
-the way was opened for Gen. Early’s march to Washington.”
-
-On the 12th day of July Companies A and F under marching orders, left
-Fort No. 1 and Baltimore for Washington City, where we arrived early the
-next morning. We lay at the depot until ten o’clock, when we were
-ordered to “fall in” and with the balance of the Regiment marched up
-Pennsylvania Ave., greeted by the cheers of the crowds who lined the
-sidewalks and filled the windows of the buildings. We marched past the
-White House and the Treasury buildings. At the latter we saw President
-Lincoln on the steps waving his high hat as we marched by. We went over
-into Georgetown, where, after a short rest, we joined the 19th Corps in
-the chase of Early, who, after being repulsed at Fort Stephens retreated
-to the Shenandoah Valley. We marched to Edwards Ferry, on the Potomac,
-which we forded about five o’clock in the evening. Disrobing, we tied
-our clothes around our guns, and at “right shoulder shift arms” entered
-the water. It was an amusing sight to look up and across the river, at
-the boys struggling through the water. It was about waist deep and some
-current. The rocks on the river bottom were slippery, and every little
-while a boy would go down, gun, clothes and all under water, to struggle
-on again amid the cheers and laughter of his comrades. But we finally
-all crossed over and we were told not to dress until we had forded Goose
-Creek which entered the Potomac a short distance ahead. Early in his
-haste to get away had burned some of his wagons on the road, and we, in
-our bare feet had to pick our way carefully through the ashes, which
-were still glowing. It was amusing. We camped that night on the banks of
-Goose Creek. The next morning early the march was resumed and we went
-into camp at Leesburg, Va., where we rested the balance of the day and
-night. We were ordered to guard the wagon train, and by easy marches
-reached Snickers Gap on July 17. Our train was halted about a mile back
-of the Gap and our Regiment camped on a mountain side.
-
-
-
-
- CATTLE IN THE CORN.
-
-
-While resting in the camp on this mountain slope, from which the corn
-fields stretched away for miles, the army cattle were driven up, the
-fence bars were let down and the cattle turned in to a large field,
-beautiful in its waving green product. In one hour’s time that field
-looked like new ploughed ground, not a green blade was left. The army
-advanced to the Gap, and in crossing the ford the enemy opened fire upon
-them, and a brisk engagement followed. From our position we could hear
-the cannon and see the smoke of the battle. This continued until sunset.
-We were ordered out on picket, and took our posts in the woods, being
-cautioned to keep a sharp outlook. Our troops began to fall back, and
-our second sergeant brought in the pickets exclaiming in breathless
-haste “The army is cut to pieces and in full retreat.”
-
-Of course we hurried back into ranks, drew forty rounds of cartridges,
-and, guarding the wagon train started on the “double quick” for
-Washington. This was at nine o’clock at night. We marched without a stop
-until eight o’clock the next morning, when we halted at Leesburg. That
-night in passing through burning pine woods the train was fired upon
-from ambush and some were wounded. During this hard night march the men
-walked along nearly asleep on their feet, and if there was a temporary
-halt they dropped in the dusty road, asleep instantly. After a short
-rest at Leesburg we pushed on and went into camp near “Chain Bridge” at
-Washington. We arrived at night, completely worn out from our long
-forced march. The Regiment stacked arms, spread blankets on the ground
-and lay down to sleep. We lay upon our gum blankets and covered with the
-woolen ones. During the night it turned quite cool and rained hard. We
-were soaked through when we awoke in the morning. We started fires, made
-coffee, ate some hard tack, then wrapping our blankets around us, sat
-down in the mud to silent meditation. It rained hard until about noon,
-then began to break away. By night it was clear and we had a good sleep.
-
-The next morning, July 21st, we drew new shoes, formed ranks, crossed
-the bridge and followed the Sixth Corps who were just breaking camp as
-we came up. We marched through Maryland via Rockville to the battle
-field of Monocacy, which we passed over. We saw there the signs of the
-fierce fighting, the high fences full of bullet holes, and the grain
-stacks that obstructed Gordon’s advance. We forded the river and marched
-on through Frederick city. Some of the boys of Company A at this point
-“straggled” and slept in the fields just beyond the town. They came up
-with the regiment the next day in time to draw rations, and resumed the
-march until we reached Harper’s Ferry. Somewhere on this march an
-incident occurred that made an impression upon my mind that I will never
-forget. I call it
-
-
-
-
- THE NEGRO CABIN IN THE VALE
-
-
-The army had halted at noon for a little rest and dinner. Four of us,
-comrades, went into the woods in search of berries. Pushing along
-through the pines we came to a deep valley in which was a little
-clearing and a small log cabin. A tiny brook flowed down the vale, and
-the dark pine woods shut in a scene of beauty. It was the home of a
-negro family, who were all out in front, listening to the banjo played
-by one of our colored teamsters. He was a fat, oily, good natured
-fellow, black as ink. Seated on a stump with his eyes rolling in ecstacy
-and a broad grin showing his ivory teeth, he was an example of the
-happy, carefree contraband of those days. After listening awhile we
-passed on and after getting some blackberries we returned the same way.
-The family were seated at dinner and when we looked in, saw the white
-table cloth and the dishes, with the family and the banjo player seated
-around the table, eating, our mouths watered and we wished we could sit
-with them. Thoughts of home and of our friends, at their tables in the
-distant north, filled our minds as we made our way back to the dusty
-turnpike and again took up the weary march. This scene was an oasis in
-our desert of dust, and its memory is pleasant.
-
-
-
-
- THE NEGROES
-
-
-While marching one hot, dusty day, a little negro boy, about ten years
-of age, came out from a farm house and walked along with us, on his road
-to freedom. After marching awhile he became very thirsty and appealed
-from one soldier to another for a drink of water. He was refused by
-several but his thirst increased and he became desperate. Rolling his
-eyes in agony, with the tears streaming down his cheeks, he exclaimed,
-“Please sir! for the love of God, Massa, give dis heah poor nigga a
-drink of water.” We could not withstand such an appeal so we gave him a
-drink from our canteen. I suppose he became tired and went back home
-where there was plenty of water, at least we heard no more of him.
-
-We did not see many negroes during our service. They hid away when the
-army passed. Occasionally we would catch a glimpse of a colored woman
-peeping from a door or window grinning at us. Two boys came back with us
-from Virginia. By passing as body servants we brought them through to
-Chillicothe. One was a black, ignorant fellow, by the name of Henry. He
-was about town for several years, employed as a hosler. The other was a
-bright mulatto, intelligent in conversation, but unable to read or
-write. He was anxious to get an education. We afterward heard of him as
-a school teacher near Chillicothe.
-
-The negro could always be depended upon to assist Union soldiers in
-their efforts to escape from prison, and they approached their cabins
-with confidence, knowing that they would give them shelter and share
-their last morsel of food with him, and guide him along his way. Many a
-weary, hungry soldier has blessed the memory of his kind benefactors,
-with black faces and white hearts. This was the experience of our two
-boys, Cook and Martin, who escaped from Mosby, and has been the
-experience of hundreds of others, who, escaping from the prison pens of
-the south with the north star as a guide made their way through rugged
-mountains and trackless forests, back to “God’s country.”
-
-From Frederick, the army marched on to Harper’s Ferry. Crossing the
-“Pontoon bridge” we passed through the town and went into camp at
-Halltown. We reached this camp on July 23d and remained there two days.
-The Sixth and Nineteenth Corps having passed up the Shenandoah Valley in
-pursuit of Early. Gen. Crook’s forces engaged Early at Kernstown, but
-losing heavily, had been forced back to the Potomac. This reverse caused
-our forces to fall back to Maryland Heights. On July 25th our Regiment
-“fell in” on the left and began what is known as the terrific “hot
-march” The sun was blistering, the heat seemed concentrated in the
-valley, while the dust rising in clouds was suffocating. As we plodded
-along on this short march of four miles, men could be seen dropping from
-sunstroke. I saw an officer throw up his hands and fall backward off his
-horse. Comrades pulled them to the roadside and did what they could for
-them. It was reported that thirty-five men had suffered sunstroke on
-that hot afternoon.
-
-We crossed the Potomac and began the ascent of Maryland Heights,
-arriving at the summit about sunset. The view from the top of the
-mountain was grand. Tier after tier of blue mountains fading away in the
-distance, while a rebel wagon train moved slowly up the valley, shrouded
-in a cloud of dust that looked like it was a mile high. That night there
-came a welcome shower. The next morning we were ordered down and again
-took up the march back to Monocacy junction. Our Commanding General
-Kenley made the remark, “the boys were taken to the top of the mountain
-to see the sun set.” We arrived at the junction in the evening and
-rested. In the mean time our officers heard of the second invasion of
-Pennsylvania. General McClausland with a body of Confederate Horse
-crossed the river and pushed on to Chambersburg where he made a demand
-upon the citizens for the sum of $500,000, threatening that if it was
-not paid to burn the place. It was impossible for them to raise this
-amount of money so he fired the city, reducing it to ashes. This was one
-of the most cruel, wanton acts of the war, perpetrated upon defenceless
-citizens. While we were rushing frantically up and down the valley of
-the Shenandoah trying to find Early, his forces were marching through
-Pennsylvania marauding at their leisure. At this time Gen. Grant came
-over from Washington to consult with his Generals in regard to the
-situation. While standing on the station platform I heard the following
-conversation between Generals Grant and Hunter. Grant said, “General
-Hunter, where is the enemy?” Hunter replied, with a tremor in his voice,
-“I don’t know, General.” At this Grant in anger, exclaimed, “Move your
-troops back to Harper’s Ferry, cut off his line of retreat and you will
-find out.”
-
-Orders were immediately given to return to the Ferry and the infantry
-boarded a freight train and were rushed back to Harper’s Ferry.
-McClausland in the meantime retired from his raid and escaped to the
-south. We marched to our old camp ground at Halltown, arriving there
-July 28th. We remained quietly here for two weeks. During this time our
-boys, taking advantage of a well earned rest, engaged in all kinds of
-pranks and amusements. We were paid off while here so we had some money.
-The most striking event occurring here was
-
-
-
-
- THE WRECK OF THE SUTLER
-
-
-Sutlers, driving out from Baltimore, followed in the wake of the
-paymasters, striking the camps when the boys had money, would sell their
-wares at very high prices. A sutler drove up to the camp and had a
-lively trade all day. He was finally ordered to move on by our officers
-and toward dusk drove off. He was followed in the dark by a squad from
-the Sixth Corps and three boys of Company A. His outfit was new, with a
-fine team of horses. He drove along unconscious of danger. As he began
-to pull up a hill with a high bank of a creek on one side, the soldiers
-quietly unscrewed the nuts of the axletrees on that side, and horses,
-wagon and driver rolled over into the creek. That night the camp was
-full of delicacies, hams, cheeses, cakes, cans of condensed milk, etc.,
-all hidden in convenient bushes. The sutler made a great ado about it
-but the soldiers were all so innocent when brought before the officers
-that the sutler could not fix the blame upon any particular ones, so he
-was advised to return to Baltimore as quickly as possible. He went.
-
-At this time dissatisfaction with Hunter’s policies became acute, and he
-tendered his resignation. Gen. Grant had for some time been
-contemplating organizing a new department to be known as the Army of the
-Shenandoah with Gen. Phil. Sheridan at its head. Fears had been felt
-that Sheridan was too young for such an important position. Grant,
-however, had confidence that the right man had been found for the place.
-Accordingly Sheridan was placed in command on August 7th and at once
-began organizing his army. General Sheridan’s force consisted of the
-Sixth Corps, one division of the Nineteenth Corps and two divisions from
-W. Virginia under Crook, with Averell’s and Torbett’s divisions of
-Cavalry. The Sixth Corps was commanded by Major Gen. Horatio G. Wright,
-an engineer of high reputation but one of the few engineers who had
-shown marked competency for a high command in the field. The divisions
-of this Corps were commanded by those splendid officers, Gens. Geo. W.
-Getty, David A. Russell and James B. Ricketts. Gen. William H. Emory was
-in command of the Nineteenth Corps. Brigadier Gen. George Crook
-commanded the two small divisions which represented the army of West
-Virginia. Brigadier John C. Kenley’s independent brigade consisted of
-the 144th and 149th Ohio, the 3d Maryland Infantry, and Alexander’s
-battery of Light Artillery. It was an imposing army of young men,
-numbering 30,000 Infantry and 10,000 Cavalry. On the 12th of August
-Sheridan moved up the valley, passing along the road near our camp. The
-General and his staff rode at the head of the column. The cavalry came
-next riding in columns of four, followed by the Sixth and Nineteenth
-Corps, the army of West Virginia and the Artillery. Our brigade was
-detailed to guard the wagon train.
-
-The mere statement gives no idea of the magnitude of this force, but
-when I say that it took an entire day to pass our camp, the Cavalry and
-Infantry in column of fours, some idea may be had of the grandeur of
-this army. They were moving against Early, for the authorities at
-Washington had become tired of the harassing raids of the rebels into
-the north through the Shenandoah, which had almost become “the valley of
-humiliation” to them. Our brigade was distributed through the length of
-the train, each company in charge of thirty wagons. The day was pleasant
-when we started. We marched through Charlestown where they had hung John
-Brown. The place seemed deserted, the only sign of life being a negro
-woman peeping at us from a half closed door. We pushed on, we had orders
-to make Winchester by the next morning, for the army needed supplies.
-
-Soon after dark, in spite of warning from the officers, the men began to
-straggle, dropping out of ranks; some were getting into wagons, others
-climbing the fences and sleeping in the fields, expecting to overtake
-their command by morning. My chum, James Ghormley, and myself, after
-marching until eleven o’clock at night, concluded that we were too tired
-to go any longer that night, and that a good sleep was just what we
-needed. We were within two miles of Berryville when this notion entered
-our heads. When we awoke daylight was just visible, and we hurried on to
-overtake our Regiment, expecting to boil coffee at the first fire we
-came to. We walked on and soon came to where the train had “parked,”
-that is, had encamped for the night, and were just pulling out. It has
-been said that this stop was made without orders from our officers, but
-that the rebels, riding along during the night dressed in our uniform,
-saying they were aids, had given these orders, their object being to cut
-off the train and attack it for plunder. Our little squad soon came to
-where a company of the 144th Ohio were cooking breakfast. We asked
-permission to boil coffee at their fire. This was readily given. We
-stacked arms, and our coffee had just come to a boil when “bang! bang!”
-came two artillery shots at us, scattering the limbs of the trees above
-our heads. These shots were followed by a volley from a clump of woods.
-Then they charged, yelling as they came. They were Mosby’s Guerrillas,
-400 strong, made up of raiders, who disbanded when too hardly pressed
-and became the innocent farmers of the valley. We grasped our guns,
-leveled them over the stone wall, gave them one volley, when the Captain
-in command gave the order to scatter and save ourselves. Well, we ran.
-In the confusion Ghormley and I became separated and I saw him no more.
-I was with the most of the company going up a steep lane toward a farm
-house, about half a mile from the road, passed through a patch of corn
-and an orchard, and came to the house. A man was sitting on the porch,
-and he told me to run to the barn. I took his advice. The barn was a mow
-on stilts, open on every side, and stood on high ground. I stopped for a
-moment and looked over the field. The raiders were shooting our men down
-in every direction. I climbed into the hay mow. If I hadn’t this story
-would never have been written. Like the Irishman who was asked if he run
-at the battle of Bull Run. “Shure I did, them that didn’t run are there
-yet.” The fight was hot for a little while, but Mosby hurried for fear
-of the army ahead. He captured 200 prisoners, 600 head of cattle and
-burned 70 wagons. He expected to get the paymaster, who was with us,
-with money for the army. The paymaster was shrewd; he had packed the
-money in a cracker box and placed it in a wagon, keeping his strong box
-in his own vehicle. During the fight this cracker box was tumbled down
-the banks of a little creek that ran through the field. I saw it lying
-there and after the skirmish the paymaster came back and got it. This
-attack was a complete surprise and was a great loss to Sheridan’s army.
-I joined our boys who were gathering together on the field. As I passed
-through the house lot I saw lying on his face the body of a handsome
-young lieutenant, who was shot by one of our company. The ball entered
-his forehead and scattered his brains. He was Lieut. Eddy of Mosby’s
-men, a member of one of the good families in Richmond, Va. Gen. Mosby
-lamented his loss greatly, he being one of his most trusted men. Our
-Colonel and Adjutant came riding back in full gallop and hastily
-reformed the men, formed a skirmish line and scoured the field, picking
-up discarded arms and compelling an old man who had come to the field
-with a mule and cart, to pick up what he could and to haul them on to
-Winchester. We guarded the wagons that were left on to Winchester, where
-we found the Regiment. That night we slept on the stone pavements of the
-town and on the next day were sent out on picket, south of the town. We
-remained there two nights and a day. On the 15th of August we started on
-our return early in the morning. Before starting Col. Brown made a
-speech to the Regiment in which he berated them for straggling in the
-enemy’s country, said “he would punish severely any disobedience of his
-orders.” We reached Berryville at noon and camped at the farm where the
-fight had taken place. Two wounded men of the 144th were lying on the
-porch of the house. They informed us that almost every man of their
-company had been captured. The 144th lost 130 men in this engagement.
-Lieut. Eddy had been buried in a shallow grave in one corner of the
-house lot. We kept a sharp outlook for our missing comrades, hoping that
-they had made their way back to Harper’s Ferry.
-
-On this return march occurred one of those events that made an
-impression never to be forgotten.
-
-
-
-
- JOHN BROWN’S BODY
-
-
-It was nine o’clock at night on a beautiful summer night. The moon shone
-brightly through the dark pines on the mountains, and glistened across
-the guns of the great army that marched down the turnpike into old
-Charlestown. The men were weary and foot sore from their long marches
-and were swinging along carelessly. Suddenly someone started singing
-“John Brown’s body lies a moldering in the tomb.” Companies, Regiments
-and Corps took up the refrain, tired bodies straightened up, and took
-step to the music. The grand chorus rang out “Glory, glory hallelujah”
-until the mountains gave back the echo “Glory, glory hallelujah” as
-though the hosts of Heaven were joining in the refrain “His soul is
-marching on.” It was the song of triumph, and if the spirits of the
-departed know of things on earth surely the shade of old John Brown was
-gratified. Here he was hung, and in the graveyard his body was lying
-“Moldering in the tomb,” but his soul was marching on in the ranks of
-the thirty thousand soldiers who on that night marched through
-Charlestown keeping step to the grand chorus, “Glory, glory hallelujah.”
-
-We marched on and went into camp on Bolivar Heights, near Harper’s
-Perry. Here we were joined by John Cook and Jeff Martin of Co. A, who
-had been captured by Mosby but escaped the same day. They told us the
-story of the capture, how the others had been taken south and they had
-escaped. Mosby’s men after gaining the shelter of the mountains began to
-examine their plunder and stopped to array themselves in new Union
-officers’ uniforms. They were marching over a steep mountain road,
-guarding prisoners, when a portion of them stopped, while those in front
-passed on out of sight. This left the road clear without a guard in
-sight. The two boys took advantage of the opportunity and made a break
-for liberty. Down the mountain side they ran, stumbling and falling, but
-straining every nerve for freedom. They were not missed apparently, for
-the rebels did not pursue them. For three days they wandered through the
-mountains, only approaching the negro cabins by night, where they always
-found friends ready to feed them and help them on their way. Finally
-they reached Harper’s Ferry and waited until we came up.
-
-The two Regiments lay in Camp on Bolivar Heights for five days. The time
-of our enlistment had expired ten days before and now we were a waiting
-orders for returning to Ohio. We had served nearly four months and were
-anxious to get back home. When Gen. Sheridan read the application for
-our discharge he paid us the greatest compliment we had in our
-experience. He said “I did not know that I had any hundred days men in
-my army, they are all veterans.”
-
-It rained hard all the time we remained on Bolivar Heights, but we did
-not care, we were going home. At last orders came from headquarters for
-our discharge. We were to report at Camp Dennison for final muster out.
-Giving three cheers we started for Harper’s Ferry on a dark, rainy day.
-Here we found a train awaiting us, which we boarded and at night pulled
-out for Baltimore, getting there the next morning. We formed ranks and
-marched to the Northern Central depot, and took a train for home. We
-returned over the same route over which we came, with the same
-accommodations. We had another good supper at Pittsburg and reached
-Columbus, Ohio, at noon. We left our train, marched to Todd Barracks and
-remained over night. The next day we rode to Camp Dennison, were
-assigned to the same barracks that we had left four months previously.
-Cooks were detailed and we remained there a week, until Aug. 30th, the
-officers making out payrolls, discharges, etc. While there several
-citizens of Chillicothe came to see us and we received many boxes of
-good things to eat from home. Several of the boys left camp, walked to
-the next station and came up home, returning to camp the next day. To
-say that we were happy but faintly expresses it. We were finally
-discharged from the United States service and paid off.
-
-A special train was furnished, cars with seats in them, and we sped
-homeward. When we arrived at Chillicothe we were met by a large
-outpouring of the citizens, who, to music furnished by the German Brass
-Band, escorted us up town. We marched up Main street, and we stepped
-proudly, but were saddened as we passed the homes of James Ghormley and
-Edward Armstrong. We were coming home, but these, our friends and
-comrades, never returned. They starved to death in Salisbury, N. C.
-prison pen.
-
-The good people of Chillicothe had prepared a dinner for us in the
-market house, and we did justice to it. After dinner we “fell in” for
-the last time, marched up Paint street and drew up in front of the Court
-House, where after a few remarks by the Colonel we broke ranks, each
-went to his home, and the 149th Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry,
-became a memory.
-
-
-
-
- MY CAPTURE AND PRISON LIFE
-
- _By William McCommon, Co. A, 149th O. V. I._
-
-
-I was taken prisoner at Berryville, Va., on August 13th, 1864, at 4 A.
-M., together with James Ghormley, Edward Armstrong, Eldridge Whipple and
-George Fix, with one man by the name of Sayre of Co. P. These are all
-that I can recall now. We were cooking coffee by the roadside when all
-at once we heard the report of a cannon and the shell burst just over
-our heads and came down through the branches of the trees we were under.
-At that moment four hundred of Mosby’s mounted guerrillas came down on
-us demanding our money, watches, jewelry or anything else of value we
-had on our person. I had one dollar and forty cents. They told me to
-give them the dollar and I could keep the forty cents, as I would need
-that before we got back, which I found was the gospel truth. That rebel
-was honest, anyhow.
-
-They ordered us each to mount a mule and carry a six pound shell in each
-hand until we crossed the Shenandoah river and then they would provide
-some other way to carry them. I was riding a small mule and when about
-the middle of the stream myself, mule and shells dropped into a hole,
-and the shells are now lying on the bottom of the Shenandoah river. When
-we got across a rebel sergeant asked me where my shells were. I told him
-I did not know. He replied “I will report you to Col. Mosby and you will
-have to pay for them.” That would be the first whack at my lone forty
-cents. I heard no more about it until noon, when they drew us up in line
-to count us. The sergeant asked “who is you all men that lost the shells
-in the river?” Nobody knew anything about any shells and he did not
-recognize me. He said to me, “You look like the man” but of course I did
-not know anything about his old shells. That is the last I heard of
-them.
-
-Our dinner the first day was one loaf of bread cut in four pieces for
-four men. I can say that none of us had to let out our trouser straps.
-We marched thirty miles the first day and were pretty well tired out by
-night, when they issued to each of us one pint of flour. This we mixed
-with water and slapped it on a flat stone, which we propped up opposite
-the fire and baked it. This tasted good to us but I am afraid it would
-not pass muster at the Waldorf Astoria. Armstrong said he could not eat
-his without butter, but we told him his complexion would be better if he
-would abstain from butter. Finally he concluded that we were right and
-let it go at that. A Lieutenant came along and asked how we were making
-out. We told him that we were perfectly delighted with the menu. He said
-“I am glad you have nothing to complain of.” The next day’s ride took us
-to Culpepper C. H., the bracing air of Virginia still keeping our
-appetites in fine shape. No breakfast this morning but had a bounteous
-feast at noon. They cut a loaf in two for two men. It tasted good while
-it lasted but the time seemed so short.
-
-That afternoon Ghormley said he was going to make a break into the
-bushes and get away. He jumped off his mule and had not gone more than
-ten feet from the road when a guard spied him and fired six shots into
-the bushes, when Ghormley came back in a hurry. He told the guard that
-he only wanted to get some blackberries. He watched him closely after
-that and told him “the next berries _you_ get will be lead berries.” At
-the end of the third day we reached Lynchburg, Va., where we were put
-into an old tobacco warehouse. There were three hundred prisoners there
-when we arrived. We were quartered on the dirty floor, covered with
-tobacco dust. You could hear the men sneeze in all languages. Our fare
-was still one loaf of bread for two men. At this place our largest and
-strongest man, Henry Benner, a wagon maker from Chillicothe, said “Boys,
-we will never get out of this alive.” He began to weaken right there,
-and in three weeks from that time he died of home sickness. We tried to
-shame him out of it, saying, “You are the healthiest man in the bunch
-and you will live through it if any one will.” One morning I found him
-lying dead on the ground, the first one of our little party to go. They
-kept us at this place for four weeks and then moved us to Richmond, Va.
-As we marched past Libbey Prison we heard some one calling from an upper
-window, “Hey! there! old 149th.” It was Major Rozell who had been
-captured the same morning that we were. In the fight at Berryville the
-Major was wounded in the elbow and had been taken direct to Libbey. We
-were not allowed to speak to him and I have never seen him since. I hear
-that he is still living in Missouri, having received a letter from him
-some time ago.
-
-We remained in Richmond one night, when they took us across the river to
-Belle Island, where the hardest part of our prison life began. It was a
-bleak spot, bare of trees. Some few of the prisoners had tattered tents,
-the majority had none. It rained every day while we were there and the
-fog was so thick you could almost cut it until about noon, when it would
-fix for another rain. We had no protection whatever from this weather,
-and we would walk around in the night in the rain until we fell asleep
-on the muddy ground. We would lie there until awakened by the intense
-cold, to get up and walk again. Here they fed us on wild pea soup,
-flavored with ox tail, without dressing. No napkins went with this
-course, and the meals were never on time, as it took the cooks an hour
-or more to skim the maggots off the soup, as they wanted our meals to
-come to us perfectly clean, so we could not tell our folks at home that
-they did not understand their business.
-
-Here is where Armstrong told us “Boys we are never going to make it.” We
-answered “Now you commence and you will go like Benner.” All the sick
-men at Belle Isle were to be transferred to City Point, an order having
-been issued to that effect. Whipple was not feeling well so I told him
-that I would try to get him off on the boat. I told him as we neared the
-boat for him to fall down and I would call the officers attention to
-him. As we had not rehearsed the part, he fell down too soon. I said
-“You fell down too soon. Wait until I give the word and then fall.” We
-came near making a mess of it, as it was. He began to laugh about the
-time for him to fall, but the officers did not see him laugh. The doctor
-asked me “what is the matter with that man?” I told him “I did not know
-but he was awful sick.” He finally passed him to City Point. I heard
-after getting home that he got as far as Annapolis, Md., and had died
-there. I fully expected to see him when I got home, as I knew the others
-were dead. He was a baker by trade and worked in Chillicothe before his
-enlistment. We remained for seven weeks on Belle Isle, when we were sent
-to Salisbury, N. C. We thought Belle Island was awful, but this place,
-no man can describe it, only an ex-prisoner of war. The stockade, I
-think, contained twenty acres and was fenced with trees split in half,
-with several large gates. A large brick building occupied part of the
-ground, which was formerly the North Carolina Penitentiary. It had three
-stories, the upper story, when we were there, being used as a jail for
-rebel deserters and other outlaws from the rebel army. If there ever was
-a more villainous looking set of men, I never saw them. The first night
-I was there I went up to this third story to sleep, as it was raining
-hard, not knowing anything about the place. A man came to me and asked
-me if I knew what kind of a place I was in? I told him I did not. He
-said “get out of here as quietly as possible or they would throw me out
-of the window.” I went instanter.
-
-Within a month Ghormley and Armstrong both died. I was going around the
-grounds one morning (we had long lost all dates) when I saw Edward
-Armstrong lying dead on the ground. I scarcely recognized him, he was so
-black from stooping over the little pine knot fires. The dead wagon
-carried him away.
-
-About a week later James Ghormley died. I was talking with him the night
-before. He said “I cannot last but a day or two.” I tried to cheer him
-up but it was of no use. This left me the only one of our boys alive
-that I knew of. The last I saw of Armstrong and Ghormley they were piled
-on the dead wagon that came in twice a day to collect the dead. The
-corpses were piled in, one on top of another like so many logs, taken
-out and buried in trenches. I remained there three months longer and was
-just about ready to give up when one morning a rebel lieutenant came to
-me and said, “Here, you cussed Yank, get up to the gate, you are to be
-exchanged.” I told him that was an old story. He said “stay there then.”
-I told him I could not walk so he had me carried to the gate. There were
-a thousand loaves of corn bread lying on the ground. They told each man
-to take a loaf, as that would have to last us until we got into our
-lines. We were three days getting to the Union lines and our loaves
-looked very small when we arrived at Wilmington, N. C., where we were
-exchanged.
-
-We ran in on a foggy morning. One of our boys cried out “there is our
-flag.” You cannot realize how we felt, how we tried to raise a feeble
-cheer, when we knew that we were in God’s country once more. We were
-ordered to “pile off” which we did in short order. There were piles of
-broken crackers and scraps of meat lying on the ground, which had been
-tramped upon by men and horses, and we began to eat it greedily until we
-were stopped by our officers putting a guard around us. They told us not
-to eat that garbage, as Uncle Sam’s rations would be ready in a few
-minutes. It seemed like a dream to us, we were in a heaven of happiness.
-We were kept in a hospital at Wilmington for about a week, and then we
-were sent to Annapolis, Md., by transport. At Annapolis we were put in
-tent hospital after burning all our clothes and the “varmints” that went
-with them. They then cut our hair close, turned the hose on us, gave
-each man a good scrubbing and clothed us in _night gowns_ as our
-uniforms had not arrived from New York. We remained in hospital for two
-weeks, when we were sent to general hospital at Baltimore, Md., where
-our record was taken. My weight at that time being 85 lbs., having lost
-75 lbs. in rebel prisons, I could not well spare any more. I remained in
-hospital at Baltimore three months longer, when I was discharged and
-sent home. My own mother did not know me until I told her who I was.
-
-
-
-
- _Note by George Perkins_
-
-
-Comrade McCommon in his wonderful record states that he does not know
-the dates on which his comrades died. The records show that James
-Ghormley died December 24th, 1864, so counting back, Armstrong must have
-died about December 17th.
-
-Our boys are sleeping in unknown graves, but the government for which
-they died is not unmindful of them. Among the most noteworthy mementoes
-of the war is the memorial obelisk erected at Salisbury, N. C. to mark
-the burial place of the Union soldiers who perished in the adjacent
-prison pen. It has been estimated that eighteen trenches contain no
-fewer than 11,700 men, buried promiscuously, without the possibility of
-identification, from which circumstance this ground is known as the
-cemetery of the unknown dead. It lies about a half mile from the town of
-Salisbury on a sloping ground, and has an extent of about seven acres,
-surrounded by a massive stone wall. The cemetery proper contains about
-two acres, the other five being a lawn covered with trees. A neat lodge
-has been erected at the entrance over which our flag floats continually.
-The monument itself, a plain obelisk of New Hampshire granite,
-thirty-six feet in height, was erected at a cost of ten thousand
-dollars. The unknown names of the dead are poetically symbolized by a
-veiled shield. A sword and helmet typify the conflict, and a pair of
-broken fetters the bursting of prison bonds by death. Over all,
-surrounded by a laurel wreath is the inscription “Pro Patria.” The
-monument, standing on the highest point of the slope, forms a
-picturesque feature of the local landscape.
-
-
-
-
- MEMORIES OF OUR SERVICE
-
- _By Major Rozell_
-
-
- Maitland, Mo., 2–23–’11.
-
- Dear Comrade:
-
-As promised will write a few thoughts for your book, but as I will have
-to depend entirely upon memory, it may be imperfect.
-
-As a regiment, we have reason to be proud of our record, for there were
-regiments of one, two and even three years that did less real service
-than did the 149th O. V. I. one hundred day men. Our day’s work on right
-of Wallace’s little army on the 9th of July, ’64, at Monocacy, guarding
-the right flank of the army at Stone Bridge on Baltimore pike, resulted
-in more good than many other victories, as we helped to hold Early’s
-thirty thousand men one day, and this enabled Wright and Emery to reach
-Washington and save the city.
-
-The regiment on that May morning in 1864 left their business and farms
-at great sacrifices financially and otherwise, and went at call of
-Governor to Camp Dennison as O. N. G’s. and there volunteered for one
-hundred days as O. V. I. How proud I was of those noble boys, as we
-marched out that sunny May morning in front of Governor Brough in our
-blue uniforms, and arms glistening in the sun, keeping step to the
-music—listened to a short speech from the Governor—then heard the words
-“All who will volunteer in U. S. service for one hundred days step four
-paces to the front;” every man in the regiment stepped proudly to the
-front and was mustered in as 149th O. V. I. Grant in his history gives
-the author of “Ben Hur” great credit for his work at Monocacy, and
-Wallace complimented Col. Brown for work of his regiment. Well we had a
-weary tramp back to Baltimore—those of us who got back. From there we
-immediately took the train for Washington, and then it was tramp, tramp,
-tramp, up and down, back and forth, until “Little Phil,” (as he was
-affectionately called) came up and things began to move.
-
-Those were trying times and many a brave and patriotic boy became
-discouraged—but Gen. Sheridan soon cleaned up things in the “Valley,”
-although in doing so many brave boys lost their lives, and among the
-number were quite a good many of the 149th.
-
-Some of us remember a little “scrap” with Mosby at Berryville on an
-early morning (the 13th of Aug., ’64); I have only to look at my left
-arm to remind me that a rebel bullet went crashing through that arm and
-paralyzed it for the time, and had to grab rein of bridle with sword
-hand, but was soon surrounded by “Johnnies” and started for the “sunny”
-south. I might mention many incidents that would interest some of the
-boys, had I time and space, but as comrade McCommon is giving a paper on
-prison life, and was along, will leave that to him, but will add only
-that I was separated from the “boys” at Lynchburg, and never saw them
-more, except as they passed “Libby” a few days later.
-
-I was in luck to get out about a month later and home about a month
-after the regiment got back. I had, while in three year service, been
-shot through left lung, in right shoulder and face, and was discharged
-in the summer of 1863. The wound received at Berryville was enough to
-place me in what was called the hospital in Libby, and an order was made
-to examine inmates of hospital, and all who were considered permanently
-disabled were ordered paroled; I “fell back” on old wounds, and got out
-on that order; a very happy man I was, when at Aiken’s landing, I passed
-from under the rebel flag into our lines and under the “stars and
-stripes.”
-
-Long years have passed since those trying times—many of the dear boys
-never lived to get back—some sleep on field of battle at Monocacy—some
-at Berryville, and some at southern prisons; many have answered the last
-“Roll Call” since their return home; but a few weeks since I witnessed
-the burial of a member of Co. F, a dear and only brother; soon all of us
-will have to answer the final call. I am, with one exception, Lt. Col.
-West, the only Regimental officer left and almost all of the Company
-officers are gone, and a large per cent of the boys in the ranks are
-gone; Taps to all will come soon, and Lights out forever. Let us be
-ready, boys, for the “Grand Review” on the other shore.
-
- EB. ROZELL,
- _Major 149th O. V. I._
-
-
-
-
- AN INCIDENT IN THE UNWRITTEN HISTORY OF THE REBELLION
-
-
-In that portion of the Civil War history pertaining to the events in and
-around the city of Washington D. C. which occurred during the month of
-July, 1864, it will be shown that the Capitol was besieged as it were,
-by a rebel force under the command of the Confederate General Early, and
-known as “Early’s raid on Washington.”
-
-A true account of the prominent part taken by the 149th Regiment O. V.
-I. in the defence of the Capitol will be found in the foregoing pages of
-this book, written by a comrade and member of Company A of said
-Regiment.
-
-The writer of the following incident and a witness to the same, had the
-honor to hold a Commission, and in command of a company in the Regiment,
-and having been detailed by the General to store the surplus baggage of
-the Brigade of which our Regiment was a part (this preparatory to forced
-marches incident to the aforenamed campaign of defense) was on duty in
-the city when martial law was declared and was placed in charge of a
-company of Treasury Department Employees, and reported with the company
-out on Arlington Heights, and were assigned to a position behind the
-breast works previously thrown up, every sort of fighting force having
-been pressed into service for the city’s defense.
-
-The necessity demanding it, for be it understood that the Confederate
-army under General Early was encamped uncomfortably near the city, and
-plainly in view from the U. S. signal station on the Heights.
-
-The anxiety of the great president (Mr. Lincoln) for the safety of the
-Capitol was evidenced when he insisted in being taken to the very out
-post of the army in defense, giving a word of cheer to the soldiery as
-he passed along from one post to another, the president himself being
-actually under fire, as occasionally a bullet from the enemy’s
-sharpshooters would whiz past.
-
-General Ord in command urged his retirement to a place of safety, and
-finally under protest was about to enter his carriage, (his military
-escort in waiting) his attention was attracted to a young calf tied to a
-tree near a farm house seemingly in great distress. This earth work be
-it remembered at this time was built through a lawn surrounding a
-farmer’s house, and after the close of the war bought by the Government
-and is now the National “Arlington Cemetery.” Mr. Lincoln’s great heart
-was touched at the distress of the young animal, and stepping from the
-carriage he was about to enter, went to examine the cause, when it was
-found that a small bullet had been imbedded in the tail of the calf and
-bleeding from the fresh wound. Mr. Lincoln taking out his pocket knife
-cut the ball out, and with a gentle pat on the back of the calf placed
-the ball in his pocket. Being again advised to retire to safer quarters
-he reluctantly boarded his carriage and was driven back to the city amid
-the shouts of the army.
-
-This incident, a piece of unwritten history, proves the great
-sympathetic heart of the man. That while under the excitement and
-anxiety consequent on the danger of the besieged Capitol of the Nation,
-and his own life endangered, yet his sympathy and relief was extended to
-a poor dumb animal. ’Twas this spirit manifested and the ready relief
-extended to the boys in blue that entitled him to be called so
-affectionately “Father Abraham” by not only the boys of the army but the
-whole loyal North.
-
-Through all dangers and discomforts consequent in “War’s Alarms” ’twas
-the manifestation of this kindness of heart, courage and sympathy that
-won the hearts of his countrymen, and made him the greatest American.
-
- EDWARD R. MCKEE,
- _1st Lieut. Commander_,
- _Co. A 149th Regiment O. V. I._
-
-
-
-
- PERSONAL EXPERIENCE OF WM. R. BROWNING OF COMPANY I, 149TH O. V. I. AT
- MONOCACY AND AS A PRISONER OF WAR
-
-
-I was captured July 9th, 1864 at the battle of Monocacy, after fighting
-from early morn until 4:30 P. M., when, being hard pressed and nearly
-surrounded by the enemy, we received orders for every man to save
-himself. This order scattered our organization, and we broke for the
-rear. The rebels were fast closing in on us, leaving only one road open
-for our retreat. I took that route to escape, and went through all
-right, but many of the boys were captured before getting through. I
-followed the main body of the troops who were in full retreat toward
-Baltimore.
-
-I will not go into detail in regard to the capture of Philip Frank of my
-company, and myself, by a body of rebel cavalry, and taken back to
-Frederick, but will relate one incident. The cavalry who had captured
-us, met the infantry, who demanded of them, that they turn over the
-prisoners to them because they had done all of the fighting, and were
-entitled to take charge of the prisoners. A fierce quarrel arose, they
-drew guns on each other, and a fight was about to take place, when a
-cavalry officer rode up, ordered the infantry to march on, and the
-cavalry to take us to the rear. After marching a short distance they
-halted us and said that they would have to give us up soon, and that we
-would be searched when they turned us over, and that as they had
-captured us, we were their prisoners, it was their first search. They
-began, and took away what we had, that they wanted, combs, knives and
-some silver money that I happened to have, but they did not get rich,
-for we did not have much for them to get. We marched back to Frederick
-City, and were halted in the main street, where we were turned over to
-the infantry. While there, some of the loyal ladies of the town came
-with a basket of food, and gave some to us, which tasted very good, as I
-had only two hard tack and a pint of coffee that day. They would not
-give our guard any of it so they became angry and drove them away.
-
-While here, more prisoners were brought in, and we marched through the
-town, and went into camp for the night in a field outside the limits.
-The next morning we marched back through the town, and on about four
-miles to Monocacy Junction. We passed through the battle field, where
-the dead and wounded were still lying on the ground, where they had
-fallen. At the junction we were joined by five hundred prisoners, who
-had been captured and brought there the night before. These men had
-drawn two days’ rations from the rebels, but we did not get anything.
-However, there was no help for it, and we started on the Rockville road
-toward Washington, passing through part of the field of Monocacys battle
-of the day before. Some of the wounded were lying by the road side, and
-begged us piteously for water. My canteen was filled with water, and I
-stepped out of ranks to give the poor fellows a drink, but a rebel guard
-drew his gun on me and swore he would shoot if I did not get back into
-line. I told him I only wanted to give the wounded men a drink, when he
-said let some of the Yankee citizens round here give them water. At
-that, I took off my canteen and threw it over to the wounded men. My
-guard at that said, “I was a fool, and that I would need a canteen
-before I got one.” This was true for I never had another, but often
-needed one.
-
-We marched on to Rockville where dead horses were lying in the street.
-There had just been a fight here. We went into an orchard surrounding a
-house, and got water from the well. A lady came out and said, “If any of
-you boys want to write home, I will mail your letters for you. The
-rebels will soon retreat, and then I will send the letters.” Comrade W.
-W. McCracken wrote a letter telling our folks at home all the
-particulars of our capture. He left the letter with the lady, and it
-reached its destination.
-
-I told her I had no rations and that I was very hungry, and wanted
-something to eat. She gave me a big slice of home made bread and butter.
-I will never forget that loyal lady, and have often wished that I could
-go to Rockville to repay the kindness done to a poor boy, only fifteen
-years old, and a prisoner of war. We were then taken out to another road
-on our way toward Washington, and camped in a field for the night.
-
-The next morning we resumed the march toward Washington. About noon we
-began to hear heavy firing in front, and the rebel stragglers began
-passing us hurrying to the front so that they might be among the first
-to enter Washington and loot the city. One of the guards told me that
-the roar of the cannons was the sweetest music on earth to the rebels. I
-answered, “I think before you take Washington you will be accommodated
-with plenty of sweet music.” We marched on for three hours under heavy
-fire from siege guns. The stragglers who had rushed to the front in
-order to be the first to enter the city began to come back. We taunted
-them, asking, “Why didn’t you go on into Washington?” They replied, “We
-would, only the cursed Yankees are throwing flour barrels at us.” We
-were marched up until in full view of Fort Stephens, where we could see
-the stars and stripes floating above the fort.
-
-They placed us in an orchard so close to the fort that the shells would
-crash through the tree tops above our heads. This was not of long
-duration, until a rebel line of infantry came out of the woods and
-charged the fort. The fort reserved their fire until the rebels got
-close up to it, and I began to fear that it would be taken, when all at
-once it let loose with artillery, and a galling infantry fire from a
-line of troops that we had not seen. Such a noise I never heard. The
-smoke and the gathering twilight hid all the combatants from view, but
-we could tell from the sound of the guns that the rebels were falling
-back, and that the Union infantry was following them up. Directly all
-firing ceased, and we knew that the enemy had been repulsed. At this
-time we drew two days’ rations of beef and flour, but before we had time
-to cook it we were ordered to fall in, and under a heavy guard began
-marching to the rear. The whole rebel army came pell mell, almost a
-stampede. The cavalry and artillery filled the road, the infantry going
-through the fields. The cattle they had stolen in Maryland were also
-driven through the fields, the drivers yelling and swearing, making the
-air hideous with the din. A fine residence of a United States Senator
-was burned to the ground.
-
-All this made an impression upon my mind that I will never forget. I
-learned afterward that after their repulse at Washington, the word was
-passed that General Hunter was advancing from Harper’s Ferry to attack
-them in the rear. We marched all night and forded the Potomac at Edwards
-Ferry early the next morning. We waded the river, which came up to my
-arm pits. I being small. We camped near a big spring not far from the
-river, where we rested and cooked what little we had. The next morning
-two days rations were issued, and cooked, and we again took up the march
-passing through Leesburg, Va., and on through Snickers Gap, getting to
-the Shenandoah river after dark. Here we camped for the night. The next
-morning they allowed us to bathe in the river. We resumed the tiresome
-march and pressed on to Winchester where we halted in the edge of the
-town. While here we drank from a spring the coldest water I ever saw. We
-then marched to Kernstown where we encamped for two days. Here Joseph
-Rowland and Joseph Hays of my company made their escape. This left
-eleven of our squad still prisoners. Sergeants James Nichols and Rees
-McCall; Corporals James and William Harrison, brothers and Privates W.
-W. McCracken, Thomas Broaders, Philip Frank, Wm. Houser, James Cruit,
-Peter Garratt and myself. The stop here gave us a much needed rest, and
-we again drew our two days’ rations of beef and flour. Two days’ rations
-may sound big, but a hearty man could eat it all at one meal without
-discomfort. I do not remember the exact amount, but know that it was not
-near enough to satisfy our hunger.
-
-We again resumed our march bound for Staunton up through the beautiful
-Shenandoah valley, passing through New Market, Mt. Jackson and Willow
-Springs. At Staunton we boarded the cars and rode to Charlotte. Here we
-went into camp and drew what they called rye bread and tainted salt
-beef. The bread was the worst I ever saw. It was dough inside with a
-thick hard crust, that could hardly be broken, when it was broken the
-dough rolled out. The next morning we were again taken by the cars to
-Lynchburg. Here we were placed in a tobacco warehouse. The floor was
-covered with dried tobacco juice and licorice, at least that was what
-the boys said it was. I did not use the weed. We remained here a few
-days, I don’t remember how long, I only recollect the stinking meat
-issued to us.
-
-While here I passed my sixteenth birthday, the 26th of July. On the
-27th, we went on to Petersburg and Richmond Junction, thence to
-Danville, arriving there on the 28th. We were assigned to Prison No. 7,
-an old tobacco warehouse. The first floor was used as a hospital, the
-second, third and fourth stories for prisoners quarters. I was put in
-squad No. 7 on the second floor. We were fifty men to a squad in charge
-of a sergeant whose duty it was to draw rations for the men and to
-detail two comrades each day to carry water from the Dan river, about
-200 yards from the prison. Here the hard prison life began. There was a
-cook house near the prison, the cooks being Union soldiers. The rations
-were corn bread made of corn and cob ground together, sometimes with
-salt, often without. Once in a while we had bean soup made from black or
-nigger peas, as they called them. A little bacon in the soup full of
-skippers. I could not eat it, it was so filthy, I only ate a small piece
-of the corn bread each day.
-
-I cannot go into detail, each day was like another and very monotonous.
-We suffered from the heat when we first went into this prison. There
-were five squads of 50 on our floor, and when we all lay down at night,
-there was no room to spare, we were packed like sardines in a box. To
-economize space we would lie in rows across the building and when we
-turned over all would turn. On a hot night the stench was fearful. We
-remained here during July and August using water from the Dan river.
-This was stagnant, in pools, for the river had almost dried up in the
-summer. The rebels would march us past as nice a spring of good cold
-water as ever flowed and would not allow us to get it, but take us to
-the river, where we skimmed the green scum from the surface with our
-buckets and dip water from the hot, stinking pool. The hot weather
-created thirst, and the prisoners drank it as fast as it was carried to
-them and cried for more. If our guards were not in the humor we would
-have to wait until they were ready, consequently there was great
-suffering from thirst. About the last of August, Smith Miller of Company
-E of our regiment became suddenly insane, and was taken to the hospital
-where he afterward died. Philip Frank of my company was also sent to the
-hospital where he died. Many of the men became sick and we were all
-growing weaker day by day. In September an order came to exchange a
-certain number of the sick. When the doctor came to examine them, I took
-Samuel Jones to him, Jones could not walk, so Joe Shepard and I carried
-him down. The doctor passed him and then asked me, “Now what is the
-matter with you?” I told him, “Nothing, only I want something to eat.”
-The doctor replied, “If you would say so, I will pass you.” I said, “No,
-take some poor fellow that was sick, I am not sick, and I do not intend
-to die in prison.” The boys of my company that were released at this
-time were James Nichols, Reeves McCall, James and William Harrison and
-Peter Garrett. The two Harrison boys died at Annapolis, Maryland, on
-their way home. Disease and exchange now cut our number down, but our
-condition did not improve, we were growing weaker every day for want of
-food. In October I was sick with diarrhoea and went to the hospital. The
-sick were better cared for, and the nurses were detailed Union soldiers.
-The doctors were Rebels, and did not have much regard for the prisoners.
-I remained in the hospital but did not get any better. In October Thomas
-Broades was brought into the hospital, paroled on sick leave, and
-afterward died at Annapolis. Later in the year William Houser was
-brought over to the hospital, but only lived a few days.
-
-Between Christmas and New Years Day I took the pneumonia and the doctor
-told me, “Well, little Yank, you will have to die,” I told him, “I will
-never leave my bones in the southern confederacy.” He put a fly blister
-on my chest and the next morning I was better. Then I had inflammation
-of the bowels, and he swore I would die. He had no medicine to give me,
-but put another fly blister on my stomach. The blisters broke in the
-night and the water run all over me. In the morning I again felt better
-but soon erysipelas set in, where the blisters had been. He then said I
-must be painted with iodine. This the nurses refused to do, saying that
-I would die, and did not see the use of torturing me, but let the boy
-die in peace. The doctor said it must be done. They asked me about it, I
-told them if they would let Edgar Hulbert of the Twenty-third O. V. I.
-who was a nurse, paint me I would never say a word. He did the job and I
-kept my promise. About a week later I was up and walking around. I
-improved rapidly, and on the 25th of January I was returned to the
-prison. About this time the United States sent some clothing to us, but
-not enough to go round. I drew a blouse and my comrade McCracken a
-blanket.
-
-It was now very cold in the prison, some would sleep under blankets
-while others marched around to keep warm. We kept this up until becoming
-exhausted, we would rouse the sleepers and take their places. This was
-kept up continually day and night, as long as we remained at Danville.
-About the 10th of February we were placed in the cars and carried to
-Richmond, Va., and put in Libbey prison. We suffered terribly from the
-cold on this trip. We were weak and our clothes were worn out. I was
-dressed in the blouse spoken of, remnants of a pair of trousers and a
-pair of socks that I had taken off a dead man. My pants were so badly
-worn that I would not be presentable in good society. But comrade
-McCracken had his blanket and we snuggled under it in one corner of the
-car and done the best we could until we landed in Libbey.
-
-There has been a great deal said about Libbey prison, and truly too, but
-it was the best one I was in, we had a warmer place to stay and a
-greater variety of food, although the rations were extremely small. Here
-we talked about being exchanged, we thought we had been brought here for
-that purpose. On the morning of February 20th, a Rebel officer came to
-the prison and told us to get ready for parole. There was a glad lot of
-poor boys, all was excitement. The officer went away and did not return
-until afternoon when he returned with other officers and clerks and
-called us up in line. We took the oath of parole to do no duty for the
-United States Government until regularly exchanged. This we gladly took.
-That night we had a big time, nobody slept, in the morning we were going
-back to God’s country and home. Comrade McCracken sold his blanket for
-fifty dollars (confederate) and bought six pounds of flour with it. We
-made flap jacks and baked them on a stone, ate and talked about what we
-would eat when we got home.
-
-In the morning we were taken on board the rebel flag of truce boat, I
-was very weak, but Joe Shepard the good Samaritan of our regiment helped
-me aboard, and we started down the James river to Harrison Landing. Some
-one shouted “there is the old flag.” In an instant everybody was alert,
-and on looking down the river we caught a glimpse of “Old Glory” through
-the tree tops on one of the boats of our fleet. Such a time I never saw,
-we were the happiest boys on earth. We cheered, we shouted, we cried, we
-prayed, we were so happy. Many were going back to die, but they were
-glad to get where they could die under the dear old flag. We landed at
-Harrison Landing where the 25th Corps (colored) was stationed. It looked
-queer to me to see them on the skirmish line opposing the Rebels. Each
-fellow had his “gopher hole” to dodge in, one big black fellow picked me
-up like a baby and carried me back through the lines. They all came
-running to us with something to eat, those great black fellows with
-white hearts. My man carried me as far as he could go, and I walked a
-short distance to the river, where the transport “New York” was waiting
-for us. We went aboard and had a good meal of soft wheat bread, pickle
-pork, coffee with sugar and condensed milk, I thought I had never tasted
-anything so good. We arrived at Annapolis on Washington’s birthday,
-February 22, 1865.
-
-I have tried in my own feeble way to tell something about my prison
-life. I have written it from memory and there may be some errors of
-dates, and etc. An old man’s memory is sometimes faulty. I have not told
-of all the horrors that I have witnessed, no tongue can tell nor pen
-describe what I have seen in these hells. To tell all would make a book,
-what I have told is true. I was discharged March 29th, 1865, at Todd
-Barracks in Columbus, Ohio.
-
- WILLIAM R. BROWNING
- _Private, Company I. 149th O. V. I._
- _Chillicothe, Ohio._
-
-
-
-
- INCIDENTS
-
-
-While we were in camp at Chain Bridge we occupied the crest of a hill or
-ridge that sloped gradually to the south, making an ideal camping ground
-for the army. As night drew on camp fires were kindled and twinkled by
-thousands over the slope while the soldiers prepared their supper.
-Stories of their adventures and songs served to pass the evening. When
-the time came for “lights out,” a drum corps on the right began playing
-“The girl I left behind me.” A brass band in the centre struck up “Home
-Sweet Home.” These were all the tunes we recognized, for every band and
-drum corps in camp began playing. Pandemonium seemed to have broken
-loose, as the great volume of sound came up. Tunes could not be
-distinguished, the discord was terrific. It gradually died away as band
-after band ceased playing. A deep silence came over the plain, the stars
-blinked in the summer sky. The army was asleep.
-
-
-
-
- OBSERVATION ON THE MARCH.
-
-
-Once on our march toward Snickers Gap I saw a squad of soldiers taking a
-cow from a farm lot, they had tied a rope around her horns two were
-tugging at the rope, and others were pushing. The woman of the house and
-her children were crying and begging them to let her alone. The argument
-was still on as we marched along.
-
-On this same march we passed a field where a fight had taken place a day
-or two before. The dead had been buried and the wounded removed, but the
-field was full of dead horses. The stench from the swollen carcasses
-lying under the sweltering rays of the hot July sun was terrific. We
-hurried past as fast as possible, breathing a sigh of relief when we
-came again into the pure air of the mountains.
-
-
-
-
- HARPER’S FERRY.
-
-
-Harper’s Ferry was the gateway to the south. It was captured and retaken
-many times during the war by both Union and Confederate armies. Situated
-at the confluence of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers, with Loudon and
-Maryland Heights surrounding it, it was a natural fortress. The town was
-the target for both sides, and many of its homes carried the marks of
-shot and shell. The United States Arsenal which was burned early in the
-war, stood with roofless walls and tottering chimneys a silent monument
-of the ravages of the conflict.
-
-A pontoon bridge spanned the Potomac river a short distance above the
-railroad bridge, over which the armies passed. When we marched across
-the pontoon, orders were given to “break step,” least the swing of the
-time step would break the bridge. This bridge was laid on boats that
-were lashed together side by side, and anchored in the river, on these
-stringers were laid and a floor on the stringers, rails were placed on
-the edge to keep the wagons from slipping over. This, however did not
-prevent some from going over, for I saw two wagons with their teams
-lying overturned on the bottom of the river.
-
-While in the town we went into the old engine house called “John Brown’s
-Fort” where he put up his stubborn fight against the Virginia militia.
-The loop holes through which he fired were still there. Every time we
-passed through this town was on a Saturday, so we nick-named it
-“Harper’s Weekly.”
-
-
-
-
- SHOOTING DESERTERS.
-
-
-A chain of forts encircled Baltimore, Maryland, from Fort No. 1 on
-Baltimore street to Fort No. 12 in Druid Hill Park. Details were made
-from the men at our fort for guard duty at these outposts. One guard at
-each fort to remain all day, his duty being to keep a strict watch. One
-day, (I being on duty at Fort 11), a squad of twelve cavalrymen came on
-a full gallop down the road past the fort. Just as they came opposite to
-where I was standing guard, the officer in command shouted, “There they
-are, fire.” A volley from their carbines followed and two men who were
-in a field running through the high wheat threw up their hands and
-tumbled over dead. I heard afterward that they were deserters trying to
-escape from Lafayette Barracks. The discipline was severe, some may
-think too much so, but it was necessary in order to control the great
-variety of characters that made up the army. When our company first came
-to Fort No. 1 we found the guard house full of rough men of the New York
-Artillery, and we were detailed to guard them. Of all low, rough New
-York toughs, these were surely the worst. They took great pleasure in
-guying the boys fresh from home, and their actions were disgusting.
-Luckily they went away in a short time. One night two of them attempted
-to break guard and escape. Our boys who were on guard fired at them, and
-alarmed the garrison. A search squad was at once formed and the two men
-were found lying on their faces in the ditch surrounding the fort,
-nearly frightened to death. They were taken back to the guard house
-saying, “they did not think the century plants would shoot,” but they
-did. These fellows had a better opinion of us after that episode.
-
-During our first march the boys began to pick up from the fields various
-articles that they considered valuable as relics, intending to carry
-them home. Bayonets and cannon balls seemed to be favorite articles for
-collection. After carrying them for a few miles they began dropping them
-one by one. We found out in a very short time that the less we had to
-carry the better we could march.
-
-I was fortunate in bringing home, and still have my cap box, eagle
-plate, visor of my cap a tin flask and testament and hymn book. A
-testament and hymn book was given to every soldier. But the most prized
-is the engraved and engrossed card of thanks given by the president of
-the United States, under seal of the Government, and signed by the
-martyred friend of every Union soldier, Abraham Lincoln. A captain in
-our regiment brought home a beautiful sword that belonged to one of
-Mosbys’ men, and was found on the field after the fight at Berryville,
-Va. It was a beautiful piece of work, ivory hilt, gold mounted, with a
-scabbard inlaid with gold and silver designs. It was highly prized by
-the captain, and no doubt would be more highly prized by the man who
-lost it at Berryville.
-
-
-
-
- CONCLUSION.
-
-
-The hundred days service was hard, but it had a humorous side. Many were
-the pranks played by the boys. Many pleasant hours we spent together,
-and our experiences are told and laughed over today. At Fort No. 1 we
-had our own string band, and every evening we had dancing or singing led
-by Captain Peabody or Lieutenant McKee, some played cards, others went
-down into the city taking in the markets, theatres, etc. At one time
-down town a gentleman asked some of us, “Boys, what regiment do you
-belong to?” We answered, “The 149th Ohio.” He mused awhile and said,
-“One hundred and forty nine, that means a hundred and forty nine
-thousand, my goodness boys do men grow on trees in Ohio?”
-
-When we left Baltimore our hardships began, the first day’s march nearly
-used us up, starting from Washington at noon, we crossed the Potomac at
-Edwards Ferry at 5 o’clock, our feet were blistered as we hobbled along,
-the first night we sank to rest, a tired, discouraged body of men. Our
-accoutrements were heavy, our guns a burden, but a canteen filled with
-water seemed heaviest of all, the string over the shoulder felt like it
-would cut clear through. Our appearance after two or three marches would
-have made Rip Van Winkle on awakening look like a dude in comparison.
-
-We were ragged, tattered and torn, our shoes worn out, and the sacred
-soil of old Virginia was ground into our system, from the dust that we
-continually lived in. We thought the turnpikes of the Shenandoah valley
-were the hardest in the world. But they were not too hard to sleep on,
-when the weary soldier dropped in his tracks, the moment a halt was
-made. I have seen the men marching sound asleep only awakened when their
-heads came in contact with the tail board of the wagon in front.
-
-This was the common experience of all soldiers and we did not complain,
-we often said we would rather meet the enemy than to endure the fatigue
-of the march.
-
-The events I have tried to describe happened forty-seven years ago. Many
-who were with us then have answered the last roll call and passed over
-the majority. We who remain keep their memory green by strewing their
-graves with flowers on each recurring Memorial day, while those of our
-comrades who are sleeping in unknown graves in the south are not
-forgotten in our annual tribute of flowers. Soon the last old soldier
-will have gone to his rest, but his work will endure in a restored
-Union, a nation that commands the respect of the world. We did what we
-could, man or angels can do no more, we did not realize at the time in
-what a great work we were engaged. I am glad that I was permitted to
-live in those days, and take a little part in the great events that
-resulted in a reunited country, whose flag is honored wherever it flies.
-
-
-
-
- “OUR COMRADES”
-
-
- Where are the boys we marched with?
- Where is my old bunk mate?
- The majority crossed the river,
- The few on its margin wait,
- We will soon hear the call of the bugle,
- There is another river to cross,
- The boatman will ferry us over,
- May we all meet again without loss.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- GEORGE PERKINS
-
- _Adjutant A. L. Brown Post No. 162 Grand Army of the Republic._
-
- _Past Commander A. L. Brown Post No. 162 Grand Army of the Republic._
-
- _Past Chief Mustering Officer, Department of Ohio, G. A. R._]
-
-
-
-
- 149TH REGIMENT OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY ONE HUNDRED DAYS’ SERVICE
-
-
-This regiment was organized at Camp Dennison, O., from the 8th to the
-11th of May, 1864, to serve one hundred days. It was composed of the
-Twenty-seventh Regiment, Ohio National Guard, from Ross county, and the
-Fifty-fifth Battalion, Ohio National Guard, from Clinton county. On the
-11th of May the regiment left the state of Baltimore, Md. Upon arrival
-it was assigned to duty at various forts in and around the city, and
-remained there until the 29th of May, when it was ordered to the eastern
-shore of Maryland, and distributed at different points. About the 4th of
-July the regiment was ordered to Monocacy Junction, and on the 9th took
-part in an engagement with the enemy. The regiment lost in killed and
-wounded about thirty, and in prisoners over one hundred. After the
-battle of Monocacy it took part with the Sixth and Nineteenth Corps in
-the marches in Maryland and Virginia. Portions of the regiment were with
-the One Hundred and Forty-fourth when it was attacked by Mosby’s
-guerrillas, at Berryville, Va., August 13. The regiment returned to Ohio
-August 20, 1864, and was mustered out on the 30th, on expiration of its
-term of service.
-
-
- FIELD AND STAFF.
-
- Mustered in May 11, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ═════════════╤════════╤═══╤════════╤════════╤══════════════════════════
- Names │ Rank │Age│Date of │ Period │ Remarks
- │ │ │Entering│ of │
- │ │ │ the │Service │
- │ │ │Service │ │
- ─────────────┼────────┼───┼────────┼────────┼──────────────────────────
- Allison L. │Colonel │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with regiment
- Brown │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Owen West │Lt. Col.│.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with regiment
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ebenezer │ Major │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Prisoner of war; mustered
- Rozelle │ │ │ 1864 │ │ out Sept. 15, 1864, at
- │ │ │ │ │ Washington, D. C, by
- │ │ │ │ │ order of War Department.
- William A. │Surgeon │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with regiment
- Brown │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Benj. F. │ Ast. │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with regiment
- Miesse │ Surg. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- T. Q. │Adjutant│.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with regiment
- Hilderbrant│ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- David C. │R. Q. M.│.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with regiment
- Anderson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- William │Chaplain│36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted from private Co.
- Morris │ │ │ 1864 │ │ C May 18. 1864; mustered
- │ │ │ │ │ out with regiment Aug.
- │ │ │ │ │ 30, 1864.
- George L. │ Ser. │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted from private Co.
- Wolfe │ Maj. │ │ 1864 │ │ H May 8, 1864; mustered
- │ │ │ │ │ out with regiment Aug.
- │ │ │ │ │ 30, 1864.
- Austin H. │Q. M. S.│30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted from private Co.
- Brown │ │ │ 1864 │ │ C May 9, 1864; mustered
- │ │ │ │ │ out with regiment Aug.
- │ │ │ │ │ 30, 1864.
- Edward F. │ Com. │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted from Corporal Co.
- Beall │ Ser. │ │ 1864 │ │ A——; mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ regiment Aug. 30, 1864.
- James F. │ Hos. │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted from private Co.
- Sproat │ St’d. │ │ 1864 │ │ F May 11, 1864; mustered
- │ │ │ │ │ out with regiment Aug.
- │ │ │ │ │ 30, 1864.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY A.
-
- Mustered in May 8, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ═════════════╤════════╤═══╤════════╤════════╤══════════════════════════
- Names │ Rank │Age│Date of │ Period │ Remarks
- │ │ │Entering│ of │
- │ │ │ the │Service │
- │ │ │Service │ │
- ─────────────┼────────┼───┼────────┼────────┼──────────────────────────
- Wm. W. │Captain │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Peabody │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Edw. R. McKee│ 1st │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John W. │ 2d │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Purdum │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Leonidas H. │ 1st │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Ewing │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Frederick K. │Sergeant│26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Focke │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Edw. W. │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Pearson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- E. P. │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died July 7, 1864, at
- Robinson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Jarvis Hospital,
- │ │ │ │ │ Baltimore, Md.
- Jacob Wibly │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- T. W. │Corporal│18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Zimmerman │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Theodore Doty│ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John H. Ryan │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Felix Renick │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ferdinand │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Marzluff │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John T. │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Bratten │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fred. F. │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Bradley │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Benj. C. │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Appointed——; mustered out
- Follett │ │ │ 1864 │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Edw. F. Beall│ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted to Com.
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Sergeant——.
- Anderson, │Private │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Thom. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Armstrong, E.│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured Aug. 13, 1864. in
- F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ action near Berryville,
- │ │ │ │ │ Va.; died Jan. 9, 1865,
- │ │ │ │ │ in Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Salisbury, N. C.
- Armstrong, │Private │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jas. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Austill, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Newton │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bailey, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. D May
- Sherm. H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Baker, John │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Baker, Wm. F.│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bangs, Harry │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Barman, Wm. │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Benner, Henry│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured Aug. 13, 1864, in
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ action near Berryville,
- │ │ │ │ │ Va.; died Nov. 1, 1864,
- │ │ │ │ │ in Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Salisbury, N. C.
- Berry, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│No further record found.
- Harwood │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- Bivins, John │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bonner, Henry│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bonner, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Matthias │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Callendine, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Geo. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Campbell, │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out to date Aug.
- Chas. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 30, 1864, at Camp
- │ │ │ │ │ Dennison, O., by order
- │ │ │ │ │ of War Department.
- Campbell, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Sam’l. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Casad, Simeon│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Clark, John │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- M. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cook, John F.│ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Decamp, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Andrew │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Doyle, Wm. E.│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Evans, Wm. E.│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fernald, John│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Franklin, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Gates, Geo. │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Gerteisen, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. D May
- Augustus │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Gerteisen, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. C May
- Philip │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Ghormley, │Private │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured Aug. 13, 1864, in
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ action near Berryville,
- │ │ │ │ │ Va.; died Dec. 24, 1864,
- │ │ │ │ │ in Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Salisbury, N. C.
- Gorsuch, │Private │17 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Frank │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Gorsuch, Jas.│ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Grow, John H.│ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hamilton, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Sam’l. A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hanley, │ do │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Harmon, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Fletch. D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Heskett, John│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- M. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Higley, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Charles │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hill, Charles│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hiss, │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Ferdinand │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hunt, Jabez │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. D May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Hutchinson, │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wm. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kates, George│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Keezer, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Keller, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Valentine │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kellhofer, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jacob │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kennedy, Wm. │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lawhorn, John│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Sick——, in hospital. No
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Limley, Henry│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Limley, John │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lunbeck, Wm. │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McCommon, Wm.│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. H——;
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ captured Aug. 13, 1864,
- │ │ │ │ │ in action near
- │ │ │ │ │ Berryville, Va.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out May 15,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Cincinnati, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- McMasters, │Private │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Hugh │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- March, Joseph│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. E May
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Martin, │Private │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jefferson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mick, John E.│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Miesse, Benj.│ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted Assistant
- F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Surgeon.
- Miller, Moses│ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mitchell, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Orr, Presley │ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Perkins, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Peterman, J. │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Phillips, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Alonzo C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Phillips, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Charles │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Phillips, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- John │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Reid, Henry │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent, sick——. No further
- N. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Rice, Val. │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rittenour, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. E May
- Geo. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Rupel, Alfred│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. D May
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Schleyer, Wm.│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Seeney, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Warren L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Selby, Thomas│ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Shepherd, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- John H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Spencer, Edw.│ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Snyder, Henry│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sosman, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. C May
- Joseph S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Steel, James │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- R. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Stout, Elijah│ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Straus, David│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Stricker, Wm.│ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Thomas, Benj.│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. E May
- E. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- West, Henry │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- T. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Whipple, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured Aug. 13, 1864, in
- Eld’ge G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ action near Berryville,
- │ │ │ │ │ Va.; died Oct. 23, 1864,
- │ │ │ │ │ at Annapolis, Maryland.
- Wibley, │Private │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Wiltshire, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wm. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Young, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. E May
- Frederick │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Zimmerman, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jos. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY B.
-
- Mustered in May 9, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ─────────────┬────────┬───┬────────┬────────┬──────────────────────────
- John Talbert │Captain │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Colvin, │ 1st │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Genethan │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James │ 2d │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Gallaher │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Benj. J. │ 1st │40 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Darbyshire │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Geo. H. │Sergeant│38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Washington │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 29,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- George │ do │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Leverton │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Isham W. West│ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Allen Evans │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Genia Sutton │Corporal│33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864. at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Thom. V. │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wilson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Martin │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Plymire │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- David Taylor │ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wollas, │Corporal│33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Nicholas │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Gilbert │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Bentley │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wm. A. Wooley│ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fletcher │ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Johnson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Joseph Fields│ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Appointed——; mustered out
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- David White │Musician│15 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Arnold, │Private │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- Edward │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Ayers, Elkena│ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. H May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; captured July
- │ │ │ │ │ 9, 1864, at battle of
- │ │ │ │ │ Monocacy, Md.; mustered
- │ │ │ │ │ out April 6, 1865, at
- │ │ │ │ │ Columbus, O., by order
- │ │ │ │ │ of War Department.
- Barlow, │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Israel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Barlow, Wm. │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Becket, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Brewer, Bolen│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bryant, James│ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Cadwalader, │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Chance, David│ do │56 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Discharged——, on Surgeon’s
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ certificate of
- │ │ │ │ │ disability.
- Childers, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Geo. W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Clay, Henry │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 6,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Cline, Simon │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Darbyshire, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Morris │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Deffebaugh, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- John │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Douglas, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Milton │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Drake, Daniel│ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Eickelberger,│ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- J. T. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out May 22,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Ellis, James │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ellis, John │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ferguson, │ do │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Everett │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fristo, │Private │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- Richard C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Giffin, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Goodson, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Madison │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Green, Enoch │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Green, John │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Grubbs, │ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- George F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 6,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Haines, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Stephen P. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hankins, │ do │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- Musto │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Harlan, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Charles B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hartley, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Samuel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henderson, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jas. L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henry, Cyrus │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henry, Samuel│ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Killed July 9, 1864. in
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.
- Hickman, │ do │41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. H——;
- Zach. D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ captured July 9, 1864,
- │ │ │ │ │ at battle of Monocacy.
- │ │ │ │ │ Md.; mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hill, A. A. │ do │47 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Hodson, John │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Holmes, Zach.│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Howe, Thomas │ do │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Hubbard, │ do │16 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hubble, │ do │47 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Stineman │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hurley, │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Creighton │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hurley, Henry│ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Discharged——, by Surgeon.
- J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- Hurley, Isaac│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hutchinson, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- Sam’l. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Jeffries, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- Jeremiah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Jordan, │Private │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kennedy, │ do │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Lafetra, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Albert │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lamb, Jehu │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 11,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Lewis, Isaiah│ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Wounded July 8, 1864, in
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ discharged Feb. 2, 1865,
- │ │ │ │ │ at U. S. General
- │ │ │ │ │ Hospital, Frederick,
- │ │ │ │ │ Md., on Surgeon’s
- │ │ │ │ │ certificate of
- │ │ │ │ │ disability.
- Lindsey, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Isaiah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Madden, Moses│ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Madden, │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Solomon │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Martin, Robt.│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Miller, │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Dickinson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 29,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus O., by
- │ │ │ │ │ order of War Department.
- Mills, Daniel│ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mills, │ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Richard H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Sept. 19, 1864, in
- │ │ │ │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Murrel, James│ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- O’Donnell, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- Peter │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Oliver, │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Hezekiah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Oliver, │ do │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- Samuel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Parker, John │ do │50 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- K. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Feb. 17, 1865, in
- │ │ │ │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Patterson, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- John │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Plymire, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Reed, David │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Reynonds, │ do │41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- David │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rockhil, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. K——;
- Jonathan │ │ │ 1864 │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rooks, Amos │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rowe, John │Private │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Aug. 17, 1864, in
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ hospital at Baltimore,
- │ │ │ │ │ Md.
- Runnells, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Isaac │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 6,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Smith, Isaac │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- N. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- States, Ab. │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- H., Jr. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 6,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- States, Ab. │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H., Sr. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Surface, John│ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sutton, James│ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sutton, Wm. │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Vantress, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Fran. M. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wade, George │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wall, │ do │17 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Killed July 9, 1864, in
- Clarence │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.
- Whinnery, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- Calvin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Whitson, │ do │17 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- Oliver │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Wilson, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Thomas C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 6,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus.
- Woodmansee, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Amos │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Jan. 15, 1865, in
- │ │ │ │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Woodmansee, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- J. M. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Woodmansee, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY C.
-
- Mustered in May 8, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ─────────────┬────────┬───┬────────┬────────┬──────────────────────────
- Chas. W. │Captain │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- McGinnis │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Adam G. │ 1st │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Mallow │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wm. P. │ 2d │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Gossard │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John M. │ 1st │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wisehart │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lewis C. │Sergeant│24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Mallow │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Thomas A. │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Ware │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Audred J. │ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out to date Aug.
- Timmons │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 30, 1864, by order of
- │ │ │ │ │ War Department.
- William Young│ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Appointed from Corporal
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ June 1, 1864; mustered
- │ │ │ │ │ out with company Aug.
- │ │ │ │ │ 30, 1864.
- Geo. A. Hause│Corporal│41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- George C. │ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Rine │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Milton Lucas │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Adam Pearce │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Isaac Rowe │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Casper Nauman│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jacob Light │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cyrus Patch │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Appointed June 1, 1864;
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jos. B. │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Appointed June 1, 1864;
- Hannewalt │ │ │ 1864 │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Acton, Henry │Private │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Allemang, Wm.│ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Anderson, Wm.│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- E. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ault, Ambrose│ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Baker, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Horatio │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Briggs, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Sam’l. J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Brittenham, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wm. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Brown, Austin│ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted to Q. M. Sergeant
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ May 9, 1864.
- Cline, Samuel│ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Collier, │Private │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent, sick——. No further
- Joseph J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Cormean, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wilson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cory, William│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- N. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cory William │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Crawford. │ do │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Daily, Alonzo│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Davis, Daniel│ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Day, Joseph │ do │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dickison, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. F May
- Alexander │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Estle, Thom. │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- R. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fisher, Adam │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fox, William │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. F May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Gerteisen, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- Philip │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Gibson, James│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- K. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Goldsbury, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wesley │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Gossard, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Morris P. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Grimes, Henry│ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Harper, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Martin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hause, Job │ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hilbrecht, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. F May
- Fred │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Hoback, John │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│No further record found.
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- Jones, Samuel│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- O. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.
- │ │ │ │ │ No further record found.
- Junck, Milton│ do │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died May 16 1864, in
- P. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ hospital at Pittsburg,
- │ │ │ │ │ Pa.
- Kramer, Adam │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. F May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Lane, William│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Latta, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Alcetas │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lawrence, │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Daniel S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lease, Tedy │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lightel, │Private │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Nelson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Long, Elijah │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Long, James │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lucas, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ludwic, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Andrew │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McAdams, │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McNeill, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Arthur G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McNeill, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Felix │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Maddux, Wm. │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- R. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mahanan, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Florah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mallow, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Miller, John │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Morris, │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted to Chaplain May
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 18, 1864.
- Mowbray, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Elijah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Nauman, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Charles │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Negley, │ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Stanton │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Peck, Henry │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Plyley, │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Johnson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ratcliffe, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Isaac │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rine, William│ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rittenhouse, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Reduced from Sergeant——;
- Jno S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rose, John │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Roseboom, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Abr. F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Shepherd, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Daniel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Smithers, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Isaac P. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sosman, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- Joseph S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Stelle, John │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sutherland, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Dav. L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Whetstone, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Henry │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- White, John │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilkins, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Allen │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilkins, Owen│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY D.
-
- Mustered in May 8, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ─────────────┬────────┬───┬────────┬────────┬──────────────────────────
- Raymond │Captain │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Allston │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Austin Purdum│ 1st │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Robert Hanson│ 2d │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Charles A. │ 1st │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Shrader │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jeremiah Orr │Sergeant│36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Luke Douglas │ do │45 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John G. │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Cornwell │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henry R. │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Caldwell │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mahlon L. │Corporal│24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Dixon │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- George Day │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John A. │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Walker │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jeremiah │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Hanks │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Samuel W. │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Moore │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- William V. │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Dennon │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John Ortman │ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out Dec. 3,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864 at Columbus O., by
- │ │ │ │ │ order of War Department.
- Moses L. │ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Killed July 9, 1864, at
- Sutton │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.
- Boblett, John│Private │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bailey, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- Sherman H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Barclay, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bryant, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Arthur │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Byers, │ do │48 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Abraham │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Calver, Jacob│Private │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- T. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Calver, │ do │41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Marion │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Carroll, John│ do │17 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Clark, Perry │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Climer, David│ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cole, George │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1884.
- Cutright, │ do │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Amaziah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cutright, │ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Elijah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cutright, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Jeremiah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cutright, │ do │17 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Aug. 12, 1864, at
- John L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Camp Parole, near
- │ │ │ │ │ Annapolis, Md.
- Cutright, │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Rufus │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cutright, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Simon B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dennin, Geo. │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dennin, Hiram│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dixon, George│ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Drummond, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Wesley │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Farabee, Wm. │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fletcher, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Harrison │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Gatwood, │ do │16 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- James A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Gerteisen, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- Augustus │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Goodchild, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- John │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Goss, James │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- M. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hanna, Robert│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hanson, Benj.│ do │25 │ May 8, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- E. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hanson, John │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hough, George│ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Huff, Thomas │ do │17 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Wounded July 9, 1864, in
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hunt, Jabez │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Jones, │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- Abraham │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jones, James │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jones, John │Private │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jones, Thomas│ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kleine, Adam │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company,
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Krick, Jacob │Private │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Liston, Ezra │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McGee, Jesse │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Masters, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Leonard │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Masters, │ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Moses │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Minear, Adam │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Moats, James │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Orr, Presley │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Orr, Zebulon │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Phillips, │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Thomas │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 16,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Pyle, John │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Pyle, William│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Quick, James │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ray, James H.│ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Nov. 15, 1864, in
- │ │ │ │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Ross, Adam │ do │28 │ May 8, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ross, Conrad │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ross, Jesse │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ruple, Alfred│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Sands, James │ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died March 5, 1865, in
- │ │ │ │ │ General Hospital No. 12,
- │ │ │ │ │ Richmond, Va., while a
- │ │ │ │ │ prisoner of war.
- Shepherd, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Joseph │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out to date
- │ │ │ │ │ Oct. 20, 1864, by order
- │ │ │ │ │ of War Department.
- Smallwood, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Truman │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Smith, Austin│Private │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Smith, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Somers, John │ do │17 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sowers, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Laurence │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Stanhope, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Stauffer, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Henry │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Stauffer, │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Samuel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out to date
- │ │ │ │ │ Oct. 20, 1864, by order
- │ │ │ │ │ of War Department.
- Stauffer, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Solomon │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Taylor, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Charles │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Vangundy, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Austin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Vangundy, │ do │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Chas. M. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Walker, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Christian │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Woodrow, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robert │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Zimmerman, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Antony │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 11,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY E.
-
- Mustered in May 8, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry. U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ─────────────┬────────┬───┬────────┬────────┬──────────────────────────
- Thomas B. │Captain │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jenkins │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henry Grubb │ 1st │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Daniel M. │ 2d │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Beard │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wm. H. Beard │ 1st │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James Henness│Sergeant│42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- William G. │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Aug. 15, 1864, in U.
- Stitt │ │ │ 1864 │ │ S. Hospital in
- │ │ │ │ │ Washington, D. C.
- Hamilton │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robinson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Robert W. │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Snyder │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Robert J. │Corporal│32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Banks │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Daniel Grubb │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John E. Mills│ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Tho. W. │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- McFarland │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Robert W. │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Earl │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Augustus Earl│ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wm. H. │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Michael │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Samuel B. │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Appointed——; mustered out
- Egleson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Acton, Lot │Private │40 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Aug. 14, 1864, in U.
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ S. Hospital at
- │ │ │ │ │ Baltimore, Md.
- Arnett, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jonathan P.│ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Augustus, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Reduced from Corporal Aug.
- John P. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 25, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Augustus, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Pres. T. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Augustus, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Thom. E. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Barrett, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Franklin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Binns, │ do │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Charles │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Blozer, Noah │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bostwick, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Clin. W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bowdle John │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bowdle, Wm. │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bullock, Geo.│ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Butler, John │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Daniels, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Abner W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dorn, Peter │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent, sick——. No further
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Doty, William│ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Earl, John │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Earl, Thomas │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Evans, John │Private │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Fenimore, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Chas. W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fenimore, │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Ebe. B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fenimore, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Hen. W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Finly, Moses │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Freeman, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Charles │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Freese, Isaac│ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- M. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Gaib, John E.│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Gill, Lewis │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Glass, George│ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Grubb, Andrew│ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Grubb, Jacob │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hankins, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Alex. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hankins, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hardy, David │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henness, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henness, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henness, Jas.│ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- A. Sr. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hodsden, │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Alex. L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hurt, Milton │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jenkins, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Roland Z. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Johnson, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Alexander │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Keller, Lucas│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kilgore, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kinnamon, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kinnamon, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Jere. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Sept. 25, 1864, in
- │ │ │ │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Lockwood, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Hen. C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mallow, Owen │ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- T. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- March, Joseph│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Michael, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Albert J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Miller, Smith│ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died March 24, 1865, at
- │ │ │ │ │ Annapolis, Md.
- Ogden, Edw. │Private │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- P. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out June 17,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Ogden, Levi │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Organ, │ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Stephen S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Plyley, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Leonidas T.│ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Plyley, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Morris J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Pursel, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Oregon C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Pursel, │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Presley │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rittenour, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Rittenhouse, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- J. G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rodgers, John│ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Rose, Lewis │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rout, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Nathaniel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- W. │ │ │ │ │
- Sanders, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Milton │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Slay, James │ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- E. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Thomas, Benj.│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- E. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11. 1864.
- Ulm, Benj. E.│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Whitten, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Solo. I. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 27,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Wilkins, John│ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Withgott, │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jesse L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Withgott, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Thom. M. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Young, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A May
- Frederick │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY F.
-
- Mustered in May 8, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ─────────────┬────────┬───┬────────┬────────┬──────────────────────────
- John Ross │Captain │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Louis C. │ 1st │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Amberg │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Howard A. │ 2d │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Haynes │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Delay J. │ 1st │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Bishop │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- George W. │Sergeant│22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Shott │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Joseph │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Gorrell │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Barzilla │ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Rosell │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James McNeal │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James Loops │Corporal│40 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henry Amen │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- William │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Chestnut │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Joseph B. │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Nelson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James Elliott│ do │41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Martin │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Lighttle │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- William R. │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Ross │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wm. G. Nelson│ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Barks, George│Private │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bell, Edgar │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——; sick; mustered
- R. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ out with company.
- Bishop, David│ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died June 15, 1864, in
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ McKims’ Hospital,
- │ │ │ │ │ Baltimore, Md.
- Bishop, Jacob│ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bishop, Jonas│ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bishop, │ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robert │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Boutz, Jacob │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Boutz, Peter │ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Boyer, │ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Aug. 31, 1864, in U.
- Richard H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ S. General Hospital at
- │ │ │ │ │ Columbus, O.
- Chadwell, │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cockerel, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Dennis │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cockerel, │Private │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cockerel, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cutright, │ do │17 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- John H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cutright, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Simeon │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Davis, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Greenberry │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dickson, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. C May
- Alexander │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Drummond, Rod│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Eberly, John │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Edgington, │ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Edwards, │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Elsass, │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Michael │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- England, │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Aaron │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- England, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent, sick——. No further
- Enoch │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Fox, William │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. C May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Ham, │ do │41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Valentine │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Haynes, Henry│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Heskett, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Stanton │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hilbrecht, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. C May
- Fred’ck │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Hinkleman, │ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Adolph │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hollis, │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William N. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kadel, Philip│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Klein, Henry │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Klutz, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kramer, Adam │Private │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. C May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Lautenclas, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Adam │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lebeau, │ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Charles │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lebeau, │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Michael │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McGinnis, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Miller, │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Discharged June 9, 1864,
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ at Baltimore, Md., on
- │ │ │ │ │ Surgeon’s certificate of
- │ │ │ │ │ disability.
- Morgan, │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Vincent │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Murphy, John │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Park, William│ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died June 26, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Jarvis Hospital,
- │ │ │ │ │ Baltimore, Md.
- Purdum, John │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ravencroft, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Aug. M. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Redman, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- August │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rief, John │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Riley, Joseph│ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rinehart, │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- David G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rinehart, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Silas │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rood, Stephen│ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ruey, Samuel │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sayre, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Preston H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Dec. 2, 1864, in
- │ │ │ │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Salisbury, N. C.
- Scholl, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Nicholas │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sproat, James│ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted to Hospital
- F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Steward May 11, 1864.
- Stadler, John│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died July 1, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ McKims’ Hospital,
- │ │ │ │ │ Baltimore, Md.
- Stall, Wilson│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Stickroth, │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Conrad │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Thoma, │ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Sebastian │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Thompson, │ do │47 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Toops, Henry │ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Toops, James │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Trochler, │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Aug. 6, 1864, at
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Sandy Hook Hospital,
- │ │ │ │ │ Maryland.
- Troub, George│Private │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Vanscoy, │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Vanscoy, Noah│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wentworth, │ do │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Ben’ng │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilt, George │ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilt, Samuel │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilson, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Martin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilson, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wyatt, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Augustus │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY G.
-
- Mustered in May 8, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ─────────────┬────────┬───┬────────┬────────┬──────────────────────────
- Joshua Hussey│Captain │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- George F. │ 1st │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Bowers │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sinclair L. │ 2d │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Pitzer │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Amos B. Beard│ 1st │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Charles S. │Sergeant│22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Drake │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John W. Cline│ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John C. Routh│ do │28 │ May 2. │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Calvin R. │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Vantress │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Samuel Mower │Corporal│30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John Newby │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.:
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 5,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Cornelius │Corporal│33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robison │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Benjamin │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Stout │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Savetus, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Swartz │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Christ, │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Underwood │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Edward │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Williams │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- John Hodson │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Austin, │Private │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Austin, James│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Barnes, │ do │13 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Barnes, John │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Belford, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Jonathan │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 5,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Bohar, David │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Brewer, Joel │ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Brown, Wm. A.│ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│No record subsequent to
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ muster-in.
- Burnes, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Robert │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Nov. 23, 1864, in
- │ │ │ │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Chamberlain, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wm. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Clabaugh, M. │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 6,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Clark, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 5,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Cline, Samuel│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Cluxton, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Carey │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Cox, David │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Davis, Thomas│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Wounded July 9, 1864, in
- L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug 30, 1864.
- Devore, Levi │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Dove, B. G. │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug 30, 1864.
- Dove, Mark │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 5,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Drake, Lewis │Private │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Eaton, James │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Flora, Isaac │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Green, Jesse │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hensel, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Francis │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hildebrandt, │ do │40 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Heze. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hildebrandt, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Jno. B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 5,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Hildebrant, │ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- P. A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hildebrant, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Sam. C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hildebrant, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Theo. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hixson, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Alonzo F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hodson, Cyrus│ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died June 8, 1864, at Fort
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Marshall, Baltimore, Md.
- Hodson, Isaac│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Jan. 23, 1865, in
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Holmes, David│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hopkins, │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Samuel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 5,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Hoskins, │ do │40 │ May 2, │100 dys.│No further record found.
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- Hussey, │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Feb. 24, 1865, in
- Elijah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ hospital at Annapolis,
- │ │ │ │ │ Md., while a paroled
- │ │ │ │ │ prisoner.
- Kohler, │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Leeker, Henry│ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McNamay, │ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Abram │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mackifee, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- John │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mendenhall, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Nathan │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Miller, │Private │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│No record subsequent to
- Zadock │ │ │ 1864 │ │ muster-in.
- Milliner, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Joseph H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mitchell, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robert R. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Moon, Alvin │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died July 13, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Fort Marshall,
- │ │ │ │ │ Baltimore, Md.
- Moore, Thomas│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mower, Peyton│ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Pitzer, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Price, John │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 31,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Quigley, John│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Sick——, at Camp Parole,
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Md. No further record
- │ │ │ │ │ found.
- Russel, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Mahlon │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ryan, James │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Nov. 20, 1864, in
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Rebel Prison, at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Severs, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Henley L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Severs, │ do │41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. H——;
- Israel T. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Severs, James│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Smith, │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Benjamin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out Nov. 23,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Trenary, │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out May 22, 1865,
- Jefferson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ at Columbus, O., by
- │ │ │ │ │ order of War Department.
- Trenary, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Samuel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Trenary, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Samuel G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- West, George │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Oct. 20, 1864, in
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Rebel Prison, at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Williams, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Williams, │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Woodruff, Wm.│ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- P. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wright, Henry│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. H——;
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ mustered out with
- │ │ │ │ │ company Aug. 30, 1864.
- Young, Milton│ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 31,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY H.
-
- Mustered in May 8, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ─────────────┬────────┬───┬────────┬────────┬──────────────────────────
- William R. │Captain │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Farlow │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James Brown │ 1st │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John F. │ 2d │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Burris │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- William F. │ 1st │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Smith │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- William H. │Sergeant│33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Smith │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Joseph │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Carmean │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- William Jones│ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Charles D. │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Parker │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Thomas M. │Corporal│26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Junk │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jno G. W. │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Donohoe │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John N. │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Timmons │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Nelson L. │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Hurtt │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- William Darby│ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Anson H. │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Mallow │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Strawder G. │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Nier │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ewing W. │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Templin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Adams, Samuel│Private │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Ayers, Elkena│ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. B May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Barton, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bowers, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Campbell, │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Michael │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Castle, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William R. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Collins, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Elias │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Collins, │Private │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jonas │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Crabb, George│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cupp, John H.│ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Deerexson, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Hen. A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dennis, │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Daniel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dennis, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dennis, Henry│ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dennis, │ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│No record subsequent to
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ muster-in.
- Donohoe, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Alfred S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Donohoe, Owen│ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Donohoe, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Downing, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Melvin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Downing, │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fix, Andrew │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Feb. 13, 1865, in
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Salisbury, N. C.
- Grove, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Handcher, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Geo. W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Handcher, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- And’w J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Harmount, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robt. S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hickman, │ do │41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. B——.
- Zach. D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- Hill, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Benjamin A.│ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hill, John C.│ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hitch, │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Clement │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Holloway, │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Joseph │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Horsey, │ do │40 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Stephen G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hughes, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Charles │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Junk, John C.│ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Junk, Robt. │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kearney, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kimmey, │ do │40 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Solomon │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kiser, Eli │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lambert, │ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Zachariah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McCammon, Wm.│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. A——, as
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ William McCommon.
- McCollister, │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McKee, Harry,│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Maddox, John │Private │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Miller, │ do │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Nier, John │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Norris, David│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Richards, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Benj. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Severs, │ do │41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. G——.
- Israel T. │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- Timmons, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jason L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Timmons, John│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Timmons, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Tomlinson, M.│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Tootle, Owen │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Waggaman, T. │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Watt, Cyrus │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Whitten, John│ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Whitten, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Ransom │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilkins, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Spencer │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilkins, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wesley R. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Willis, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Franklin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Willis, James│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wolfe, George│ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Promoted to Sergt. Major
- L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ May 8, 1864.
- Wright, Henry│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. G——.
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY I.
-
- Mustered in May 8, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ─────────────┬────────┬───┬────────┬────────┬──────────────────────────
- Philip A. │Captain │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Rodes │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henry C. Roby│ 1st │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James Q. │ 2d │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Clark │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rufus P. │ 1st │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- March │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Joseph H. │Sergeant│20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Rowland │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James T. │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Nicholds │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out Sept. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864, at Cincinnati, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Reeves R. │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- McCall │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out Oct. 3,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- John S. Steel│ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wm. H. │Corporal│21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Harrison │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Sept. 25, 1864, in
- │ │ │ │ │ hospital at Annapolis,
- │ │ │ │ │ Md.
- Marquis L. │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- March │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Albert Noble │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James H. │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Harrison │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Sept. 13, 1864, in
- │ │ │ │ │ hospital at Annapolis,
- │ │ │ │ │ Md.
- Robert Clark │ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John M. │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Wounded July 9, 1864, in
- Browning │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ discharged March 4,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at U. S. General
- │ │ │ │ │ Hospital at Frederick,
- │ │ │ │ │ Md., on Surgeon’s
- │ │ │ │ │ certificate of
- │ │ │ │ │ disability.
- Gideon S. │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Coover │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Peter │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Gharrett │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Acord, David │Private │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Acton, Andrew│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Acton, James │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Barnett, John│ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Beath, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Died Aug. 21, 1864, at U.
- Granville │ │ │ 1864 │ │ S. General Hospital at
- │ │ │ │ │ Frederick, Md.
- Berringer, │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Biggs, Isaac │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- N. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Blosser, John│ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Brake, │ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Brodess, │Private │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Thom. W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Oct. 20, 1864, at
- │ │ │ │ │ Annapolis, Md.
- Browning, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jas. F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Browning, │ do │41 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Joseph │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Browning, Wm.│ do │16 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- R. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 29,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Burner, David│ do │40 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Burner, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Chalfin, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Phile. C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cooper, Jacob│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Sick, in hospital at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Baltimore, Md., since
- │ │ │ │ │ Aug. 13, 1864. No
- │ │ │ │ │ further record found.
- Crute, James │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 4,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Curry, George│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Diviney, │ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dolohan, Edw.│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Farquhar, │ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- Amos │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Frank, Philip│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Oct. 2, 1864, in
- │ │ │ │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Fultz, Henry │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Galoway, John│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hamilton, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- James F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Harlan, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- Carter B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Harmell, │ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- Milton J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Haynes, │ do │16 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- Monroe │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Hays, George │ do │17 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hays, Josiah │Private │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hays, Samuel │ do │34 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hester, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jackson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hollis, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Thomas B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Howser, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died Jan. 27, 1865, in
- │ │ │ │ │ Rebel Prison at
- │ │ │ │ │ Danville, Va.
- Hunt, Harvey │ do │16 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Hunt, Uriah │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Jeffries, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- Jeremiah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Jump, George │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kammerar, │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Joseph │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kanish, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Conrad │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kirk, Jesse │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Lightle, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Long, Samuel │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- T. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McCrackin, W.│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out March 29,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- McDonald, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Samuel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McKenzie, Wm.│ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Discharged Sept. 2, 1864,
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ at U. S. General
- │ │ │ │ │ Hospital at Baltimore,
- │ │ │ │ │ Md., on Surgeon’s
- │ │ │ │ │ certificate of
- │ │ │ │ │ disability.
- Morris, John │ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Morter, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William I. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Null, John W.│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Orr, John L. │ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Poole, John │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Recob, George│ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Reed, Moses │ do │43 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rowe, George │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rowe, James │ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Sick, in hospital at
- F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Baltimore, Md., since
- │ │ │ │ │ July ——, 1864. No
- │ │ │ │ │ further record found.
- Sailer, Wm. │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Samson, David│ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- I. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sealock, │Private │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robert W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Shela, Alfred│ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Smart, Joshua│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- E. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sturgess, Wm.│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Tuvell, James│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Vanderburg, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. K May
- P. D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864.
- Watson, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Marion │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Westbrook, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wm. A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilcox, Isaac│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- N. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilcox, │ do │46 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robert │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wood, William│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
- COMPANY K.
-
- Mustered in May 8, 1864, at Camp Dennison, O., by Robert S. Smith,
- Captain 2d Cavalry, U. S. A. Mustered out Aug. 30, 1864, at Camp
- Dennison, O., by William Stanley, 2d Lieutenant 10th Infantry, U. S. A.
-
- ─────────────┬────────┬───┬────────┬────────┬──────────────────────────
- William C. │Captain │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Wilson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James V. │ 1st │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Rannels │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Newton │ 2d │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Shoemaker │ Lieut. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Edwin │ 1st │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Shockley │ Sergt. │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John M. │Sergeant│30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Johnson │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- James J. │ do │44 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Gregory │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Edward P. │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Bond │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- George │Corporal│26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Lawhead │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Henry │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Lieuellen │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- John Eachus │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out to date Aug.
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 30, 1864, by order of
- │ │ │ │ │ War Department.
- John Boring │Corporal│21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Jos. │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Woodmansee │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Daniel Fenner│ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mahlon, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Russell │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Robert B. │ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Mitchell │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Aithy, Henry │Private │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Discharged——. No further
- C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Baker, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Griffin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bloom, Alfred│ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Bloom, George│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Boring, Henry│ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Boring, │ do │.. │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Joseph │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Brewer, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Campbell, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jas. W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Canny, George│ do │38 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Clement, John│ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Clevenger, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Martin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cook, Nathan │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Cottrell, │ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Joseph │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Craig, │ do │32 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Killed July 9, 1864, in
- Franklin │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.
- Curtis, James│ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│No further record found.
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- Dabe, James │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Darby, Thomas│ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dennis, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Seneca │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out April 6,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Devers, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Thomas │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Dillon, James│ do │39 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Eachus, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Squire │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died July 14, 1865, at
- │ │ │ │ │ Wilmington, O.
- Ellis, James │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- V. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Faquhar, Amos│ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Fenner, James│ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fenner, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fisher, │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fisher, James│Private │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Fisher, │ do │42 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Freed, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Maybury │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Gregory, │ do │45 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robt. W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Haynes, │ do │16 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- Monroe │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Hallam, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hamilton, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- Jas. F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Hamilton, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- John W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hamilton, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Tobias │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hansell, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Howard │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Harlan, │ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- Carter B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Harmell, │ do │35 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- Milton J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Hendee, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hooton, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- Thomas │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Hoover, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Oliver F. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hubbell, │ do │29 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Edward │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ died March 10, 1865, in
- │ │ │ │ │ hospital at Annapolis,
- │ │ │ │ │ Md.
- Hull, George │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Hunt, Harvey │ do │16 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; died June 4,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864, at Easton, Md.
- Hunt, Uriah │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Jeffries, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- Jeremiah │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Johnson, │Private │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Henry C. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Kirk, Jesse │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Lafetra, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Milton │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lawhead, John│ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Lieurance, │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- David │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lieurance, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- George │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Lieurance, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│On muster-in roll. No
- John │ │ │ 1864 │ │ further record found.
- Lyon, David │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McDonald, │ do │36 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Elphonz │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McKenzie, │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- Harvey │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- McKenzie, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- James │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McMillen │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Judiah H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- McVeyh, James│ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Mann, William│ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Matthews, Eli│ do │33 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Middleton, │ do │28 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jehu │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Miller, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Lemuel S. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Mitchell, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Arthur L. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Moore, Thomas│ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- A. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Morton, │ do │46 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Richard │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30. 1864.
- Noftsgher, │ do │37 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Naaman │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Pierson, Levi│ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Pond, Jesse │ do │26 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Discharged——. No further
- W. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Pond, William│ do │31 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- J. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Rannels, │ do │23 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Captured July 9, 1864, at
- Thom. G. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ battle of Monocacy, Md.;
- │ │ │ │ │ mustered out May 3,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1865, at Columbus, O.,
- │ │ │ │ │ by order of War
- │ │ │ │ │ Department.
- Rees, James │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Roberts, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Thad. H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Rockhill, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. B——.
- Jonathan │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- Sabin, Curtis│ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Sherbick, │ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Samuel │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Slate, Daniel│ do │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- P. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Smith, Isaac │ do │27 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred to Co. B——.
- N. │ │ │ 1864 │ │
- Spencer, │Private │22 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- Alfred │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Spencer, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Harvey │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Stackhouse, │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Albert │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Stackhouse, │ do │21 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Jesse │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Stackhouse, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Joshua │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Thorn, Elbert│ do │30 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Tupes, │ do │40 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Absent——. No further
- William │ │ │ 1864 │ │ record found.
- Vanderburg, │ do │24 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Transferred from Co. I May
- P. D. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ 11, 1864; mustered out
- │ │ │ │ │ with company Aug. 30,
- │ │ │ │ │ 1864.
- Walker, Asa │ do │18 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Walker, │ do │20 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Elijah T. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Walker, │ do │25 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- Robert B. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- Wilson, Henry│ do │19 │ May 2, │100 dys.│Mustered out with company
- H. │ │ │ 1864 │ │ Aug. 30, 1864.
- ═════════════╧════════╧═══╧════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- 1. P. 13, added missing “Organization of the Hundred Days Service”
- heading.
-
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