History of Harrison County, Iowa, including a condensed history of the state, the early settlement of the county together with sketches of its pioneers, Part 28

Author: Smith, Joseph H., 1834?-
Publication date: 1888
Publisher: Des Moines : Iowa Printing Company
Number of Pages: 506


USA > Iowa > Harrison County > History of Harrison County, Iowa, including a condensed history of the state, the early settlement of the county together with sketches of its pioneers > Part 28


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38


Boyer Township-Wm. H. Burkholder, and Charles J. Mira- cle. This man last named was a substitute for some one, at this time not known.


Cincinnati Township-John H. Boyd and Hiram Blackburn.


Calhoun Township-James Shaw. This subject never reached the regiment to which he was assigned.


Clay Township-F. M. Caywood, Aaron Davis, Julius Miller


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


and William H. Good. Mr. Good was a substitute for James Callion, the latter giving Good $1,000 to take his place.


Jefferson Township-Jacob Holton, O. P. Reel and W. F. Nelson. The last named person was a substitute for Ad. Adams, who gave Nelson $500 to stop rebel bullets for him.


Jackson Township-Lewis E. Toll and Lorenzo D. Driggs.


La Grange Township-Frank Ervin, Samuel Jack and John LaPray. Mr. LaPray was a substitute for Mr. William Orr, who, being drafted, gave to the said LaPray $1,100 to be shot in his place.


Little Sioux Township-Joshua Lane and Gilbert Gamet. This last named person gave Dan Murphy $700 to act as his sub- stitute.


Raglan Township-Eli. J. Hagerman, Samuel Morgareidge, Henry Shaw and Alex. Johnson.


Taylor Township-Jesse Arbaugh, Thomas F. Stewart, Charles Wilson and B. F. Martin. This man Wilson was a substitute for Mr. James W. McIntosh, now of Kansas.


St. John Township-Thomas J. Faith, Thomas J. Frazier, William N. Fouts, James Seaton and Oliver Wolcott. Mr. Wol- cott procured Mr. Cyrus Cole to take his place as a substitute, they being brothers-in-law.


Union Township-William Reeder was drafted from this township and secured the services of Nelson Rider as a substi- tute at the cost of $900, and William H. Butler was substitute for some one in this township, principal not known.


There were many curious as well as peculiar actions at and about the time of this draft, and immediately following the same.


One Joshua Lane was drafted from Little Sioux, who, upon learning that he had been chosen to wield a musket or kock a cannon, immediately repaired to the office of a physician, who gave certain doses of emetics and purgatives by which sick- ness could be produced at will, when as soon as he was notified


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


by the Deputy Provost Marshal, he swallowed these decoctions and suddenly became nigh unto death; this then caused his substitute to be called upon to fill his place, which did not fit the fancy of Dan Shearer, who held this unenviable position. As soon as Shearer learned this he had business relations in Nebraska and fled immediately to transact the same, and the Deputy Provost, not catching onto the fraud being perpetrated on him and Shearer by Lane, followed Shearer to Nebraska and brought him back to Harrison county, and when about to ship him to W. J. Brownell, to whom all drafted men were assigned, at Des Moines, Shearer then told that Lane was playing "'pos- sum," which brought about the arrest of Lane; however Shearer did not become relieved until he made a trip to Des Moines and Lane was forwarded and accepted.


Mr. B. C. Adams, who was at this time Deputy Provost Mar- shal, dealt honorably with all these men, but woe to the man who attempted to skulk and hide in the Willows or Nebraska, for they might succeed for a little time, but they were soon fer- reted out and brought up standing. Those who had deserted and dropped down in this county supposing that they were so far from their commands that they would never be recognized or apprehended, were always surprised by the presence of this omniscient Deputy Provost, when being tapped on the shoulder and informed that their services were needed at such a place and in such and such regiments. Our people had never experienced much of the war spirit prior to this, but there was in the man- ner, anxiety and gait of every deserter, such a tell-tale appear- ance, that with a reasonable description, recognition was readily made.


At the time of this drafting much uneasiness was felt by many of those who had no desire to be shot, or at least to forego the comforts of a good warm fire and feather bed, and to that end, at the time the drawing was to be done at Council Bluffs, were either at hand or had some one present so that they could have


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


an "early " report, among whom was Mr. Wm. S. Meech, an old timer in the county.


Some of the ripest Democrats were fearful that the drawing would not be done with fairness, and that the Republicans would escape, and the quota be filled with the honest Democracy, the portable expounders of the Federal Constitution; and to alle- viate this fear Mr. Wm. S. Meech was called into the room where the drafting was done, and blindfolded, and then by his own Democratic hand drew out of the box the fatal names of those who should doff the blue and shoulder the musket. This was a master piece of policy, for when completed, there was no room for the howl of political persecution and violation of the con- stitutional right of the oppressed Democratic citizen.


Mr. Meech had a son (Harrison Meech) then just arrived at arms-bearing age, whom he was fearful would be selected, and it is said that old Uncle William, while the names were being read after having been handed by him to the party who could read, was so exercised that the traditional sweat in the far off garden in the east was but little superior to that experienced by our friend on this occasion. However this fear was not wholly confined to the Democracy, from the fact that there were Repub- licans who held the exterior of their persons in as much adora- tion as the others.


Many of those who were for the Union in the early days of the '60s were so because of the fact that the attack on the Gov- ernment by the Confederates was an attack on their party, and while the sequence of the decision was correct, yet the reasons by which the opinion was reached were scarcely tenable. This kind of War Republicans were of the "Artemus Ward school," willing to sacrifice all their relations rather than see the Confed- erate cause win the day, and when called upon to fill the gap made in the ranks in the front, either by bullet or disease, would rather find an Isaac than be the Isaac sacrificed.


About the 1st of August, 1864, Dr. J. H. Rice, of Magnolia,


351


HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


was appointed as the Special Examining Surgeon for this county, and in the discharge of his duties called to his assistance Dr. George H. McGavren, and part of the time two other well posted physicians-Dr. Robert McGavren and Dr. Cole, who in the discharge of their duties as such examining board, had occasion to hear the most exaggerated stories of personal deformity and inability that ever came to the ears of men of their profession. These men now all reside in the 'county except Dr. Cole, who has passed to that place from which no traveler returns,


One person who resided at Cincinnati who wanted to be ex- cused for the reason that he was unable to march, walked all the way from that little town to Magnolia, a distance of 18 miles, before breakfast, to convince the examining board that he was unable to endure the fatigue of the march. Another, who still lives on the same farm on which he then resided, suddenly became so deaf that he could not hear it thunder, and could not hear words uttered in the very loudest tones, but when caught in the act of turning his own and his neighbors' cows into the corn field of the Hon. Phineas Cadwell, at midnight, and when realizing that Mr. Cadwell would prosecute him for his dastardly, cowardly act, he was immediately anxious to make settlement therefor, and could hear the most commonplace whisper-as to terms of settlement. This man may have been all right, but the fact is stated that he got away from his maker before he was fin- ished. Another presented himself and claimed exemption on ac- count of hernia, and was excused. After examination he holdly boasted that he could whip any man in the county. Another man, now a resident of Magnolia, claimed exemption for the same cause, but when he was examined there was not the least appearance of the disability claimed, and the examining board, either to tor- ment him, or give him all the chance possible to show his ills, kept him standing naked all day, in order that the deformity might blossom into something other than the appearance then present, but to the disgust of the applicant, and the infinite


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


amusement of the doctors, nature would not assist the coward in the perpetration of such apparent fraud. There is also an- other who does not now reside a thousand miles from Woodbine, who put in the excuse that he was wholly unable to do military duty, from the fact that he was unable to work, though for ten years prior to that time and for twenty years since he has labored on his farm each day, from before the rising of the sun until far into the night.


Never was mankind so sorely afflicted with all the ills that flesh is heir to, as at this special time. Broken limbs came to the surface then which never prior to that time or since have been heard from; chronic cases of alleged long standing were dwelt upon with an eloquence bordering upon despair, but the most general disease at that time was weakness of the lungs, and they who were so afflicted acted as their own physicians, and prescribed for themselves the freshness and purity of the west- ern mountain air. This general disease was not confined to any one class, either political or religious. Many went to the moun- tains at or about this time, but the most singular features of this wide spread "lung complaint " was that the women were wholly free from the ravages thereof, and as soon as the declar- ation of peace was made, there was a wave of such speedy recov- ery as far surpassed the miracles at the time of the troubling of the waters by the angel of eighteen centuries past.


At this time nearly four hundred men, the bone and sinew of the county, had enlisted, many of whom were then resting in unknown graves in the "sunny south," or maimed and crippled for life, or broken in health; and that which at first had seemed only a sunny day's picnic, had fastened itself upon us as an egre- gious reality. War, with all its consequent results, was upon us, and the day of the outbursts of patriotism had become a thing of the past, made so by former unprecedented enlistments.


Then again, the opportunity to accumulate fortunes, made so by war prices and the great abundance of money, could scarcely


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


be yielded to the unadulterated demands of pure patriotism, in which the life of the person and the poorness of the pay, were the considerations for ease, comfort and security of life and prop- erty. Some stated that they could not enlist from the fact that their families required them at home to provide for their wants,. when the real status of the case was that the wives had for a long time in the past as well as from that date to the present, supported them. The causes for not going were as diversified as the human countenance, but when the time came that the requisite quota must be furnished, then the greater proportion of those drawn, without the least hesitation, obeyed the " on ward to the front" with as much alacrity and with the same patriot- ism as in the early days of enlistments. However, the end came, and with this the universal rejoicings of all. The soldier return- ing all covered over with glory, and the stay-at-home man happy in the thought that the ordeal was past, the Government was saved, and he was alive.


LIST OF SOLDIERS NOW LIVING IN THE COUNTY,


With their Postoffice Address, and the Company and Regiment to which they formerly belonged.


J. A. Boies, First Colorado Cavalry, Woodbine, Iowa.


P. C. Du Val, Co. A, Magnolia.


J. P. Hutton, Third Col., Co. F, Missouri Valley.


W. L. Reeves, Third Col. Cavalry, Co. E, Little Sioux.


Hugh P. Morrow, Twelfth Col. Cavalry, Co. M, Magnolia.


Maj.Dwight Saterlee, Eleventh Conn. Infantry, Dunlap, Iowa.


Capt. J. D. Brown, Co. D, Eighteenth Conn. Infantry, Missouri Valley, Iowa.


Peter Campbell, Co. D, Eighteenth Conn. Infantry, Woodbine, Iowa.


John S. Hall, Co. B, First Dak. Cavalry, Woodbine, Iowa. Miles Cowan, Co. B, First Dak. Cavalry, Woodbine, Iowa.


Lewis R. Yates, Co. B, First Dak. Cavalry, Woodbine, Iowa.


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


Edward Marshall, (drummer) Second Regiment, Dist. Colum - bia, Woodbine.


ILLINOIS.


Samuel Baird, Co. B, Eighth Ill. Infantry, Dunlap, Iowa.


Geo. Weed (Sergeant) Co. B, Eighth Ill. Infantry, Dunlap, . Iowa.


First Surgeon, George B. Christy, Dunlap, Iowa.


A. I. Cuttler, Co. M. Sixteenth Ill. Cavalry, Logan, Iowa.


W. H. Squires, (Corporal) Co. K, Seventeenth Ill. Cavalry, Dunlap, Iowa.


J. L. Leach, Co. H, Seventh Ill. Infantry, Little Sioux, Iowa.


L. H. Pratt, (Corporal) Co. C, Eighth III. Infantry, Dunlap, Iowa.


Lieut. W. H. Campbell, Co. H. Eleventh Ill. Infantry, Mis- souri Valley, Iowa.


J. B. Baker, Co. I, Thirteenth Ill. Infantry, Logan, Iowa.


Aaron C. Perry, Co. D, Fifteenth Ill. Infantry, Missouri Val- ley, Iowa.


J. W. Shultz, Co. G, Eighteenth Ill. Infantry, Missouri Valley, Iowa.


Capt. Robert B. Hillas, Co. A, Nineteenth Ill. Infantry, Dun- lap, Iowa.


A. N. Ovaitt, Co. F, Twentieth Ill. Infantry, Magnolia, Iowa.


W. C. Harrah, Co. H, Twenty-second Ill. Infantry, Missouri Valley, Iowa.


J. N. Young, (Brigham) Co. G, Twenty-seventh Ill. Infantry, Logan, Iowa.


John B. Conyers, Co. B, Twenty-ninth Ill. Infantry, Little Sioux, Iowa.


Wm. Newfind, Co. K, Thirty-second Ill. Infantry, Missouri Valley, Iowa.


Joshua E. Lahman, Co. C, Thirty-fourth Ill. Infantry, Mis- souri Valley.


D. C. Clark, Co. H, Thirty-sixth Ill. Infantry, Magnolia, Iowa.


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


Anderson Adams, Co. H, Forty-sixth Ill. Infantry, Dunlap, Iowa.


James Beecham, (Corporal) Co. A, Fifty-second Ill. Infantry, Little Sioux.


J. T. Headley, Co. D, Fifty-second Ill. Infantry, Persia. F. A. Jennings, Co. A, Fifty-third Ill. Infantry, Dunlap. Henry Jennings, Co. I, Fifty-third Ill. Infantry, Dunlap. John C. Wood, Co. A, Fifty-third Ill. Infantry, Dunlap.


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Wm. G. Baldwin, Co. G, Fifty-fourth Ill. Infantry, Missouri Valley.


John F. Davis, Co. E, Fifty-fourth Ill. Infantry, Missouri Valley.


J. G. Redenbaugh (Corporal) Co. K, Fifty-eighth Ill. Infantry, Reeder's Mills.


W. A. Phillips, Co. A, Sixty-second Ill. Infantry, Persia. Lewis G. Neff, Co. I, Sixty-fourth Ill. Infantry, Persia. Joseph Cue, Co. C, Sixty-fifth Ill. Infantry, Dunlap. H. D. Lovelace, Co. A, Sixty-fifth Ill. infantry, Woodbine. E. G. Henry, Co. H, Sixty-sixth Ill. infantry, Missouri Valley.


Charles Manchester, Co. H, Seventy-fourth Ill. infantry, Dunlap.


Willard Seaton, Co. D, Seventy-fourth Ill. infantry, Missouri Valley. This soldier is the present mayor of Missouri Valley.


S. C. Patrick, Co. G, Seventy-fourth Ill. infantry, Dunlap.


G. W. Chamberlain, Co. G, Seventy-fourth Ill. infantry, Dunlap.


O. L. French, Adjutant, Co. G, Seventy-fifth Ill. infantry, Logan.


Joseph Williams, Captain Co. G, Seventy-fifth Ill. infantry, Dunlap.


Geo. W. Spry, Co. H, Eighty-fourth Ill. infantry, River Sioux.


Alfred J. Norman, Co. A, Eighty-sixth Ill. infantry, Logan. H. B. Kinnie, Co. A. Eighty-eighth Ill. infantry, Logan.


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356


HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


John Hope, Go. A, Ninetieth Ill. infantry, Little Sioux.


Edward Gilpin, Co. A, Ninety-third Ill. infantry, Persia.


W. M. Morris, Captain Co. A, Ninety-third Ill. infantry, Woodbine.


Dr. Josiah Giddings, Assistant Surgeon, Ninety-fifth Ill. in- fantry, Woodbine. 1


John Laird, Co. D, One-hundred-and-Twelfth Ill. infantry, Magnolia.


B. L. Jones, Co. A, One-hundred-and-Eighteenth Ill. infantry, Little Sioux.


Frank Goodenough, Corporal Co. A, One-hundred-and-Twen- ty-fourth Ill. infantry, Missouri Valley.


G. F. Brayton, Co. B, One-hundred-and-Twenty-sixth Ill. in- fantry, Persia.


Wm. Brayton, Co. B, One-hundred-and-Twenty-sixth Ill. infantry, Logan.


John Williams, Co. D, One-hundred-and-Fortieth Ill. infantry, Missouri Valley.


John W. Widdows, Co. K, One-hundred-and-Forty-fifth Ill. infantry, Magnolia.


Fred. D. Palmer, Co. A, One-hundred-and-Forty-sixth Ill. in- fantry, Magnolia.


Luther D. Brown, Co. I, One-hundred-and-Fifty-third Ill. in- fantry, Magnolia.


Richard Marshbury, Co. F., Sixth Ind. cavalry, Missouri Valley.


T. C. Young, Co. G, Sixth Ind. cavalry, Missouri Valley.


L. F. Mills, Co. E, Ninth Ind. cavalry, Logan.


Cal. Beaman, Co. D, First Ind. heavy artillery, Missouri Valley.


J. R. McCullaugh, Co. I, First Ind. heavy artillery, Missouri Valley.


C. D. Johnson, Fifth Ind. battery, Woodbine.


John V. Walker, Co. E. Twelfth Ind. battery, Little Sioux.


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


James H. Crowder, Musician, Eighteenth Ind. infantry, Mis- souri Valley.


John Huntly, Co. G, Twenty-ninth Ind. infantry, Logan.


Amos Kellogg, Co. H, Thirty-third Ind. infantry, Logan.


W. B. Keith, Sergeant, Co. B, Thirty-fifth Ind. infantry, Mon- damin.


Henry Wasson, Co. B, Thirty-fifth Ind. infantry, River Sioux.


Elijah Ashcraft, Corporal, Co. C, Forty-second Ind. infantry, Modale.


H. A. Shacklett, Sergeant, Co. C, Forty-second infantry, Modale.


Wm. Comstock, Co. K, Forty-eighth Ind. infantry, Dunlap.


John Bridgeman, Co. B, Fifty-first Ind. infantry, Missouri Valley.


John Hodson, Co. F, Fifty-third Ind. infantry, Modale.


Joseph Alexander, Co. E, Fifty-seventh Ind. infantry, Dunlap.


Harvey M. Babb, Corporal, Co. C, Sixty-third Ind. infantry, Logan.


John Hooks, Co. D, Sixty-third Ind. infantry, Dunlap.


Albert Nicely, Corporal, Co. A, Sixty-third Ind. infantry, Woodbine.


Albert Harrold, Co. E, Seventy-fifth Ind. infantry, Reeder's Mills.


Samuel C. Bartholomew, Musician, Eighty-third Ind. infantry, Little Sioux.


Willliam E. Ross, Co. G, Ninety-seventh Ind. infantry, Modale.


John M. Suthers, Co. D, One-hundred-and-Fifteenth Ind. in- fantry, Magnolia.


Nathan Myers, Corporal, Co. B, One-hundred-and-Thirty-third Ind. infantry, Logan.


Joseph Montgomery, Co. G, One-hundred-and-Forty-seventh Ind. infantry, Woodbine.


John G. Williams, Co. B, One-hundred-and-Forty-eighth Ind. nfantry, Missouri Valley.


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


John P. Creager, Corporal, Company I, One-hundred-and Fifty-second Iowa Infantry, Logan.


John Bell, Missouri Valley.


C. H. Hushaw, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Dunlap. William Barkoph, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Logan.


Anson Smith, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Logan.


Norman L. Cole, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Woodbine. James J. Chew, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Logan. Charles H. Hushaw, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry.


Wm. H. Moore, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry.


Charles J. Perin, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, More- head.


Thomas J. Perin, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Morehead.


Joseph H. Rilley, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Little Sioux.


Frank J. Porter, First Lieutenant, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Woodbine.


L. H. Pepper, Private, Company B, Second Iowa Cavalry, Dunlap.


James Scales, Private, Company C, Second Iowa Cavalry, Magnolia.


J. L. Donelson, Private Company I, Third Iowa Cavalry, Magnolia.


Wm. Davis, Private, Company M, Fourth Iowa Cavalry, Dunlap.


W. B. George, Private, Company L, Fourth Iowa Cavalry, Little Sioux.


J. W. Rickman, Private, Company K, Fourth Iowa Cavalry.


W. H. Rickman, Private, Company L, Fourth Iowa Cavalry, . Missouri Valley.


Hugo Holdoegel, Private, Company A, Fifth Iowa Cavalry, Woodbine.


Alma Ratterson, Private, Company B, Fifth Iowa Cavalry, Modale.


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359


HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


Charles G. Scofield, Sergeant, Company A, Fifth Iowa Cavalry, Logan.


Charles Wheelock, Sergeant, Company B, Fifth Iowa Cavalry, Logan.


James J. Chew, Private, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Logan.


Norman Cole, Private, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Woodbine.


Wm. M. Mathis, Private, Company C, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, died 1886, at Woodbine.


W. H. Moore, Private, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Woodbine.


G. W. Ralph, Private, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, River Sioux.


Joseph W. Rilley, Private, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Little Sioux.


J. M. Smith, Sergeant, Company F, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Missouri Valley.


Anson Smith, Company E, Sixth Iowa Cavalry, Logan.


D. D. Jacobs, Private, Co. F, Seventh Iowa Cavalry, Magnolia.


James Ratigan, Private, Co. M, Seventh Iowa Cavalry, Reed- er's Mills.


T. J. Kopson, Private, Co. K, Eighth Iowa Cavalry, Missouri Valley.


John D. Dewell, Sergeant, Co. M, Ninth Iowa Cavalry, Magnolia.


B. J. Peasley, Private, Co. M, Ninth Iowa Cavalry, Little Sioux.


Albert Stuart, Private, Co. I, Ninth Iowa Cavalry, Persia.


360


HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


SECOND IOWA BATTERY.


Benj. B. Loss, Second Iowa Battery, Logan.


Jasper Reeder, Second Iowa Battery, Knox Co., Neb.


Martin Little, Second Iowa Battery, Logan. F. M. Irvin, Third Iowa Battery, Reeder's Mills. Isaac Mason, Fourth Iowa Battery, Modale.


Wm. Dapee, Fourth Iowa Battery, Persia.


IOWA INFANTRY.


Michael South, Co. K, Second Iowa Infantry, Little Sioux. Levi Crouch (Farrier) Co. A, Fourth Iowa Infantry, Modale. N. M. Purcy, Co. D, Fourth Iowa Infantry, Persia.


First-Lieut. Jas. W. Bonney, Co. B, Fourth Iowa Infantry, Little Sioux. 1


William Barkoff, Co. E, Fifth Iowa Infantry, Logan.


G. W. Johnson, Co. F, Fifth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Valley.


C. R. Anderson, Co. E, Eighth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Val- ley.


U. Bitterlie, Co. B, Eighth Iowa Infantry, Magnolia.


Sylvester Mackenzie, Co. E, Eighth Iowa Infantry, Dunlap. Major Charles Mackenzie, Ninth Iowa Infantry, Dunlap.


Thomas J. Powell, (Corporal) Co. I, Ninth Iowa Infantry, Modale.


Capt. J. E. Ainsworth, Co. F, Twelfth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Valley.


A. L. Manning, Co. F, Twelfth Iowa Infantry, Dunlap.


W. H. Burkholder, Co. E, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Wood- bine.


Joseph Duer, Co. B, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Val- ley.


Wm. N. Fouts, (D) Co. C, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Valley.


Thos. J. Frasier, (D) Co. C, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Mis- souri Valley.


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


E. J. Hagerman, (D) Co. F, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Mon- damin.


2


Major Jacob S. Holeten, (D) Co. F, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Woodbine.


Watson Humphrey, Co. A, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Logan.


S. H. Morgan, Co. C, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Val- ley.


Henry Shaw, Co. B, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Mondamin.


James Shaw, (D) (never reached Regiment) Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, Logan.


Capt. Logan Crawford, Co. H, Fifteenth Iowa Infantry, Mis- souri Valley.


Pete E. Cromer, Co. H, Fifteenth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Valley.


Andrew M. Ellis, Co. H, Fifteenth Iowa Infantry, Little Sioux.


Wm. Evans, Co. H, Fifteenth Iowa Infantry, Woodbine.


David Kanauss, Co. H, Fifteenth Iowa Infantry, Logan.


Aaron McCoid, Co. H, Fifteenth Iowa Infantry, Logau.


Thos. Marshall, Co. H, Fifteenth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Valley.


Wm. F. Wills, Co. H, Seventeenth Iowa Infantry, Mondamin.


Ethan Cole, Co. H, Seventeenth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Val- ley.


John S. Goss, Co. H, Seventeenth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Valley.


James C. Lytle, Co. H, Seventeenth Iowa Infantry, Little Sioux,


Samuel Marksbury, Co. A, Seventeenth Iowa Infantry, Mis- souri Valley.


H. N. Welch, Co. I, Seventeenth Iowa Infantry, Logan.


Amsley Clinkenhard, Co. E, Eighteenth Iowa Infantry, Mon- damin.


R. G. Boyd, Co. H, Eighteenth Iowa Infantry, Modale.


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


Emerson Parmenter, Co. H, Eighteenth Iowa Infantry, Dun- lap.


D. W. Bechtel, Co. F, Twenty-third Iowa Infantry, Dunlap. Henry Bishop, (Corporal) Co. I, Twenty-third Iowa Infantry, Little Sioux.


David Henderson, (Sergt.) Co. E, Twenty-third Iowa Infantry, Missouri Valley.


J. D. Hull, (Corporal) Co. E, Twenty-fourth Iowa Infantry, Dunlap.


Thomas Hughes, Co. A, Twenty-fifth Iowa Infantry, Missouri Valley.


William Raineer, Co. C, Twenty-sixth Iowa Infantry, Reeder's Mills.


Capt. Wm. M. Magden, Co. D, Twenty-sixth Iowa Infantry, Woodbine.


Henry Weed, (Corporal) Co. K, Twenty-sixth Iowa Infantry, Magnolia.


A. C. Mc Yonagil, Co. H, Twenty-seventh Iowa Infantry, Mis- souri Valley.


Alex. Lewis, Co E, Twenty-eighth Iowa Infantry, Reeder's Mills.


COMPANY C, TWENTY-NINTH INFANTRY.


Wm. Agens, Ute.


Jas. L. Armstrong, Reeder's Mills.


Capt. Geo. S. Bacon, Des Moines.


Alex. Barr, Earling.


Amsey Beadle, Logan.


I. F. Bedsaul, Magnolia.


John A. Benjamin, Dunlap.


James Bird, Modale.


Wm. Bourn, (Sergeant) Modale.


J. H. Brace, (blind at this date) Dunlap.


E. P. Brown, Dunlap.


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HISTORY OF HARRISON COUNTY.


John H. Darting, Missouri Valley.


B. H. Dennice, (blind at this date) Missouri Valley. John G. Downs, Pender, Neb. John H. Ellis, Little Sioux.


Clark Ellis, Little Sioux. A. B. M. Ellis, Missouri Valley. M. H. Greenfield, Logan.


Alex. M. Huff, Hancock.


T. P. Kellogg, Woodbine.


J. S. Lightell, Modale. Wm. Lyman, Oakland.


Geo. Main, Magnolia.


L. H. Mc Williams, Little Sioux.


R. Morgareidge, Buffalo Gap, Dakota.


John H. Noyes, Mondamin.


Chas. W. Oden, First Lieutenant and Quartermaster, Little Sioux.


James Owens, Missouri Valley. F


W. H. Rinehart, Macedonia. J. H. Rice, Assistant Surgeon, Magnolia. Walter Ritchison, Modale.




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