History of Washington County, Iowa from the first white settlements to 1908. Also biographical sketches of some prominent citizens of the county, Vol. I, Part 31

Author: Burrell, Howard A
Publication date: 1909
Publisher: Chicago : S. J. Clarke Pub. Co.
Number of Pages: 558


USA > Iowa > Washington County > History of Washington County, Iowa from the first white settlements to 1908. Also biographical sketches of some prominent citizens of the county, Vol. I > Part 31


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


TWENTY-FIFTH IOWA INFANTRY- COMPANY E.


Jas. M. Neal.


TWENTY-FIFTH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY F.


Jonathan Supplee, T. E. D. Selders.


471


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


Regiment organized in August, '62, mustered out at Washington, D. C., June 6, '65.


TWENTY-FIFTH 10WA INFANTRY-COMPANY 1.


S. A. Russell, Capt .; J. W. Harper, Capt. ; T. Y. Williams, 1 Lt. ; R. F. Strain, S .; Geo. Harter, S .; Andrew Ferguson, S .; J. A. Harper, S .; L. B. Carll, S. ; J. H. Taylor, S. ; T. M. Neal, C .; A. H. Mintier, C. ; David Twinam, C .; Isaac Gross, C .; J. S. Colville, C .; E. N. Cochran, C .; Henry Spears, C .; G. W. Gates, C .; A. Morehouse, C .; WV. I. Neal, Mus .; E. F. Daine, Mus .; A. Seber, Wag. ; Hiram Alexander, W. V. Alexander, D. L. Allen, J. W. M. Allen, Chris. Arthaud, Jos. Adams, A. H. Benson, R. E. Bennett, Henry Black, T. M. Brown, W. P. Carlin, John Cherryholmes, F. M. Crawford, J. R. Craw- ford, Jos. Chiquet, S. P. Coe, A. J. Davidson, W. D. Davidson, Mark Dill, H. M. Edwards, J. W. Fullerton, Henry Fisher, G. W. Hunt, A. C. Holmes, Jos. Huston, E. H. Hipwell, Andrew Jackson, W. F. Johnson, J. M. Johnson, Wm. Johnson, D. K. Kell. Wm. McCall, Robert McCall, J. C. McConnell, J. J. McClelland, Jas. McCutchen, J. R. McElroy, T. H. Maxwell, Vincent Max- well, Pulaski Maxwell, Thos. Matthews, W. C. Mayhew, J. A. McKee, E. C. McMillan, A. I. Mitchell, S. J. Moore, W. H. Moorehead, J. P. Mize, S. W. Neal, J. H. Neal, Thompson Palmer. W. I. Neal, B. A. Porter, James Porter, George Porter, J. W. Rankin, G. W. Riley, T. S. Rowan. J. G. Rowan, W. H. Ray, W. C. Schwaebe, S. C. Scott, J. G. Smith, S. B. Slaughter, James Strain, Samuel Strain, D. P. Strain, Samuel Thompson, W. D. Twinam, W. J. Walker, Eleazer Wolford.


THIRTIETH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY E.


W. T. Burgess, Capt .; Jos. Smith, Capt .; D. S. McCannahey, Q. M .; M. W. Parker, I Lt .; I. S. Drummond. 2 Lt. ; J. W. Middleton, 1 Lt. : Robert Blair, S .; Robert Beaty. S .; J. N. Coffield, C.B. Smith, S .: T.W. Hyde, Chap .; H. B. Jordan, C .; A. M. Bosworth, C .; L. W. Pringle. C .; E. C. Hobson, C .; David Horton, C .; Jas. Pollock, Mus. ; W. B. Shephard, Mus .; B. F. Wight, Wag .; J. L. Bales, Henry Blick, Wm. Bridges, L. Bramer, D. C. Boers, W. I. Brayhill, Benj. Bowman, Sr., Benj. Bowman, Jr., O. P. Cauffman, Jas. Cregan, H. G. Connor, David Clapper. Wm. Donovan, W. C. Easter, C. S. Eddy, Wil- ford Ewen. Samuel Fox, Geo. Fowler, Henry Gilmore, W. W. Gayton, P. F. Hemmenway, W. H. Heaton, J. W. Harvey, G. M. Jacobs, Otto Kraken, D. E. Kendle, Jos. Lyon, O. M. Miller, Jas. McIntire, Ephraim McIntire, J. A. McIntire, Session Melville, G. D. McCarty, Jas. McCoy. J. J. McCarty, Samuel McCulley, T. D. Pollock. Thos. Parshall. W. M. Painter, Daniel


472


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


Pickens, Mount Peaseley, D. M. Robison, G. W. Reed, John Ralston, H. C. Sales, Albert Spencer, J. D. Shorer, Perry Stoker. L. G. Stanley, C. L. Smith, J. R. Snyder, J. P. Smith, James Smith, A. M. Smith, Josiah Smith, W. M. Snyder, I. Schreffler, B. B. Swisher, W. E. Townsend, B. F. Thorn, Allen Tupper. Jefferson Wilks, B. F. White, H. B. Wissenger, J. M. White, Newton Williams, P. C. Wilson, W. G. Watson, A. J. Wentworth, J. W. Wilson, Enos Whitacre, James Wiles.


THIRTIETHI JOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY K.


S. D. Cook, Capt .; J. D. Gallagher, Capt .; N. A. J. Young, I Lt. ; Frank Critz, I Lt .; Virgil Chipman, Mus .; W. M. Stover, Mus .; Jas. McCanna, Wag .; Leonard Benn, S .; W. H. Fulton, S .; A. B. Young, S .: Jas. Bailey, S .; J. W. Haigler, S .; H. N. Lane, C .; J. M. Criswell, C .; D. E. Bush, C .: Jacob Bishop, C .; Isaac Novinger, C .; J. R. Blackwell, C .; R. S. Merchant, C .; W. W. Looney, C. ; S. C. Benn. J. C. Bunker, Elijah Bailey, Thos. Brown, John Bear. Jas. Brawner, Thiewbaut Bouquat, Wm. Brown. J. J. Bottger, L. M. Coover, John Carpenter, W. T. Coffman, C. H. Davis, S. R. Darnell. J. L. Davis, C. S. Edmondson, I. S. Edmondson, Lorenz Escher, Jr., D. C. Fritz. John Farley, T. J. Foster, Jas. Figgins, D. J. Gregory, Jas. Gilbert. T. C. Hand, Jas. Hole, Wm. Hollenback, Miles Hasty, Josiah Harter, J. M. Haigler. J. C. Haigler, S. C. Loomis, Jolin Lohberger. Levi Lane, J. M. Louder, J. G. Louder, T. C. Mapel, C. B. Mapel, S. G. Mapel, S. S. Mapel. J. G. McCree, N. T. McIlree, Jas. McIlree, A. C. Marsh, Elias McMullen, Wm. Merchant, A. C. Minor, S. E. Parker, J. L. Patrick, A. B. Purrington, H. L. Rehkoff. F. C. Robinson. Murat Rickey. Thos. Rickey. Jos. Reiner, Wm. Strabley, J. J. Streber, J. N. Stratler, Barthold Tatman, Daniel Thurman, S. B. Ween E. C. Williamson, Gilbert Yoeman.


The regiment was organized in August. '62, mustered in at Keokuk Sep- tember 23, and mustered out at Washington City June 5. '65.


THIRTY-THIRD IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY H.


Jas. A. Coffman, R. M. Hall, Jas. M. Wilson.


THIRTY-SEVENTH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY G.


Cyrus Cox, Capt. ; Josiah Allen, D. P. Cole, J. D. Haley, Alfred Keeney, Thos. Little, D. T. Lee, J. R. Mitchell, Andrew Mckay, Nathan Riley, Phillip


-


.


.


.


IOWA NATIONAL GUARD ENCAMPMENT AT WASHINGTON, 1897


-


3


COMPANY D, FIFTIETH IOWA INFANTRY. APRIL 26, 1898 En route to Des Moines, Iowa


HE NEW YORK ILUBLIC LIBRARY


ASTOR, LENOX TILDEN FOUNDATION


475


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


Smith, David Zuck.


THIRTY-SEVENTH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY H.


Daniel Crugan, W. Frame, Alfred Keaney, A. M. Lyon, P. A. Tenney, Phillip Smith.


THIRTY-SEVENTH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY K.


Ed. S. Brinton, John Kerr, T. P. Shaw, John Van Vlist.


This was the Graybeard regiment, ages ranging from thirty-nine to sixty- four. Organized in October, '62, mustered in December 15, and mustered out at Davenport May 24, '65.


FORTIETH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY I.


D. W. Cox, Wm. Hornish, S. W. Reynolds, A. W. Reynolds.


FORTY-FIRST IOWA INFANTRY -. COMPANY B.


Josiah Duer, Merton McIlvane, A. L. McLoud, C. L. Wakelee, David Wells.


FORTY-FOURTH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY D.


Jasper Cox, Leander Darling, Hugh R. McClelland.


FORTY-SEVENTHI IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY G.


James McClough, A. J. Mitchell, E. D. Whitacre, J. F. Williamson.


FORTY-SEVENTH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY H. Geo. A. Black, Mus. ; W. W. Abraham.


FORTY-FIFTH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY B.


J. B. Hope, Maj. ; J. P. Dawson, Quar. Mas. ; W. H. Allen, Capt. ; S. E. Hawthorn, I Lt .; E. R. Eldridge, 2 Lt. ; Samuel Stutson, Asst. Sur. ; M. M. Runyon, S. ; David Mitchell, S. ; J. B. Nelson, T. M. Mckenry, J. H. Fleming. S .; J. D. Robinson, C .; A. J. Duke, C .; C. C. Rodman, C .; J. V. Anderson, C .; W. C. Smiley, C .; Zach. T. Lindsey, C .; A. L. Williams, C .; Martin Whit- comb, C .; E. W. Allen, Luther Allen, H. C. Atwood, R. H. Armstrong. R. A. Boyd, A. R. Barnes, G. D. Brinton, W. B. Bishop, Abe Beanblossom, F. M.


476


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


Collins, A. M. Collins, Alex. Curran, B. F. Cherry, J. R. Compton, A. G. Cun- ningham. Ilurlbut Darbyshire, Pat. H. Dayton, Hiram T. Dayton, Jeff. P. Dayton, John .A. Donaldson, John C. Donaldson, Geo. Dusenberry, Jas. Flem- ing, T. A. Ferguson, L. O. Gallop, J. M. Gibson, E. W. Gowey, T. H. Hawkins, Henry Harris, B. F. Hillis, John Johnston, R. O. Johnston, A. N. Keister, D. M. Lydick, W. J. Maxwell, W. T. McCune, W. L. McClelland, T. E. McMil- lan, J. M. McNay, E. T. McGregor, C. B. Morehouse, J. M. Miller, W. H. McGeier, Wm. T. Neal, C. W. Neill, Asher F. Pay, R. H. Pattison, Milo W. Patterson, Thos. Pyle, G. R. Reas, W. N. Ritchey, W. G. Richardson, J. A. Robertson, G. W. Sison, Bigelow Story, Wm. Vincent, J. C. Wilson. Z. T. Winder, E. W. Wright, W. K. Wallace, S. P. Young.


FORTY-FIFTH IOWA INFANTRY-COMPANY F.


T. H. McFall, J. F. Meek.


Regiment organized for one hundred days, mustered in May 25, '64, mus- tered out at Keokuk, September 16, 64.


FIRST IOWA CAVALRY-COMPANY F.


N. H. Browner, C. ; Wm. Hunter. C. : H. W. Shaver, C .; T. J. Browner, C .: S. M. Ilines, C .: J. S. Baker, C. : E. H. Wilson, C. : Wm. McClure, C. ; Robert Allen, J. S. Allen. L. W. Austin, Allison Bunker, Jesse Bunker, W. R. Bolding, Balt. Bollinger, James Boston, J. W. Baxter, D. B. Boyd, John H. Boyd, J. W. Crawford. Chas. Casteele, J. B. Doran, Alex. Doran, F. A. Druff, Ellery N. Foster, Elisha Gray, John C. Gerrard, Henry Grayson, John Hamil- ton, O. P. Hull, C. A. Honsell, C. H. Housh, J. W. Horn, Charles McCoy, G. N. McCowan, Wm. McAllister, George Maier. Charles Mayer, John Noringer, C. L. Nurse, Albert Powers, Benj. Parsons, Amos Prindle, Hildebert Perry, Wm. Powers, G. W. Reilley, Samuel Sewall, Cleophas Smelscer, M. J. Simms, W. E. Snodgrass, O. A. Stillings, M. G. Troup, Wm. Tatman, Alpheus Titus, Samuel Van Norman, Ira Williams, Chalmers Woodruff. J. D. Wilson, Josiah Wilson, R. A. Williams.


FIRST IOWA CAVALRY-COMPANY K.


Melvin E. Mann, Farrier.


SECOND IOWA CAVALRY-COMPANY A.


D. J. Ferree, I Lt. ; Samuel Havens, P. E. Leach, Otis Legg, Isaiah Miller,


477


IHISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


Milton Sweet, B. F. Snider, L. I. Washburn. A. W. Woodford. Benj. Wag- oner.


SECOND IOWA CAVALRY-COMPANY IL.


Jonathan Duer, G. P. Philips. Jos. McCord. W. N. Rogers.


SECOND IOWA CAVALRY-UNASSIGNED.


Addison Brown, Samuel Furter, J. H. Givens. Henry Hildebrand


TILIRD IOWA CAVALRY.


T. J. Maxwell, Assist. Surgeon.


FOURTII IOWA CAVALRY-COMPANY C.


Wm. Coppock, Henry Fishburn, MI. J. Rhodes.


SIXTH IOWA CAVALRY-COMPANY A.


Nicholas Geye, Horace King.


SIXTH IOWA CAVALRY-COMPANY E.


J. W. McCormick, J. H. Perkins.


SEVENTH IOWA CAVALRY.


Sanford Anderson, Dan. W. Cox. A. F. McLoud, T. F. Powers, David Wells. C. F. Wakelee.


EIGHTH IOWA CAVALRY-COMPANY F.


Wm. D. Harris.


NINTIE IOWA CAVALRY.


J. F. McCutchan, Capt. : Marcus Allen, G. W. Braden, G. W. Benson, A. W. Bailey. John F. Blanden. G. C. Barnes, T. B. Brown, F. G. Chesler, Jas. Carmichael, Josiah Campbell, Hugh Craig, J. W. Clinkenbeard. D. B. Clouse, W. J. Durfey, J. S. Davidson, S. S. Ellsworth, C. H. Ellsworth, A. M. Easton,


478


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


T. I. Ferree, S. W. Goble, J. M. Gormley, Robt. Grover, W. O. Hessletine, John Hardy. F. E. Johnston, John Jones, Wm. Kenan, Thompson Laine, J. S. Leeper, Jesse Longwell, C. W. Lyon, A. A. Marling, D. A. McAnulty, Albert Phillips, Win. Pierce, F. T. Russell. Jacob Stotts, F. N. Seeber, Archi- bold Stewart, Edward Sims, M. Tompkins, W. S. Tilton, J. M. Tripp, J. D. Tansey, E. B. Tripp, S. D. B. Welch, J. D. Welch, J. Whitlock, James Young.


SIXTIETH UNITED STATES, COLORED COMPANY H.


G. W. Black, Jos. Dancy, Jerry Franklin, John Johnson, Henry Johnson, Josiah Leeper, Jas. Weeks, Caleb White.


The boys enlisted for two years, but stayed twenty-eight months.


ELEVENTH UNITED STATES, COLORED.


Oliphant Carter.


WASHINGTON COUNTY BOYS IN OTHIER REGIMENTS.


B. F. Parker, First Battery Iowa Light Artillery ; John A. Swan, Twelfth Illinois Cavalry, Company E. ; Parker Hoover, Thirtieth Illinois Infantry, Company F. ; also Martin Melvin, Company K. ; Frank Ford, Thirty-third Illi- nois Infantry, Company K .; Jos. Shockley, Thirty-ninth Illinois Infantry, Company H. ; T. I. Gibson, Eighty-sixth Illinois Infantry ; Frank Cramer and Herman Behr, Forty-third Illinois Infantry, Company E .; Arnold Twiggs, Sixteenth Iowa Infantry.


The local camp for the city recruits was at the old fair grounds, covering the present home of Mrs. John Wagner, on the Mt. Pleasant road.


By way of "friendship garland," be it recorded that all through the wonder- ful political campaign of 1860, and for all the recruiting and war meetings, and the leaving of companies for the front, and for martial and political visits to other towns, E. T. Hebener, a Douglas democrat, played the fife for the escorts. He charged nothing for local night meetings, but was paid for services that took him from his daily work. He was a superb player, a mild- mannered, merry, broad-gauged man, in every way a comrade and desirable citizen. Let a republican scribe, but not a Pharisee, lay a simple nosegay on that man's grave.


Of course, our people ran the gamut of emotions in those five stirring years. There were many heart-breaks, many sobs and tears, many tragedies. Many a poor fellow did not come back, or came, darkling, in a rude box. When


Gen. T. H. Stanton


The "Fighting Paymaster" U. S. Army


Gen. Hiram Scofield Taken when A. A. G. on Gen. Lauman's staff


OFFICERS OF THE REBELLION


THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY


ASTOR, LENOX TILDEN FOUNDATION


4


1


481


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


the companies left us-well, no one has painted the scene like Col. Ingersoll in his immortal piece of rhetorie and pathos, the Indianapolis Memorial Day speech-


"The past rises before me like a dream. Again we are in the great struggle for national life. We hear the sounds of preparation ; the music of boisterous drums : the silver voice of heroic bugles. We see thousands of assemblages, and hear the appeals of orators. We see the pale cheeks of women, and the flushed faces of men ; and in those assemblages we see all the dead whose dust we have covered with flowers. We lose sight of them no more. We are with them when they enlist in the great army of freedom. We see them with those they love. Some are walking for the last time in quiet, woody places with the maidens they adore. We hear the whisperings and the sweet vows of eternal love as they lingeringly part forever. Others are bending over cradles, kissing babes that are asleep. Some are parting with mothers who hold them and press them to their hearts again and again and say nothing. Kisses and tears, tears and kisses-divine mingling of agony and love! And some are talking with wives, and endeavoring with brave words, spoken in the old tones, to drive from their hearts the awful fear. We see them part. We see the wife standing in the door with the babe in her arms-standing in the sunlight, sobbing. At the turn in the road a hand waves-she answers by holding high in her loving arms the child. He is gone, and forever.


"We see them all as they march proudly away under the flaunting flags, keeping time to the grand, wild music of war- marching down the streets of the great cities, through the towns and across the prairies, down to the fields of glory, to do and die for the eternal right.


"We go with them, one and all. We are by their side on the gory fields, in all the hospitals of pain, on all the weary marches. We stand guard with them in the wild storm and under the quiet stars. We are with them in ravines run- ning with blood, in the furrows of old fields. We are with them between con- tending hosts, unable to move, wild with thirst, the life ebbing slowly away among the withered leaves. We see them pierced by balls and torn with shells in the trenches, by the forts and in the whirlwind of the charge, where men become iron, with nerves of steel.


"We are with them in the prisons of hatred and famine ; but human speech ean never tell what they endured.


"We are at home when the news comes that they are dead. We see the maiden in the shadow of her first sorrow. We see the silvered head of the old man bowed with the last grief.


"These heroes are dead. They died for liberty, they died for us. They are at rest. They sleep in the land they made free, under the flag they rendered stain- 31


482


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


less, under the solemn pines, the sad hemlock, the tearful willows, and the em- bracing vines. They sleep beneath the shadows of the clouds, careless alike of sunshine and storm, each in the windowless palace of rest. Earth may run red with other wars : they are at peace. In the midst of battle, in the roar of con- flict, they found the serenity of death. I have one sentiment for soldiers, living and dead: Cheers for the living, tears for the dead."


But who would have missed it? We do not live in level, prosaic years- we merely exist. We really live, as the torch fiercely burns, only in stress of revolution and weather.


The war was the heroic ballad of our boys' lives, their one great, signal romance. Forty and more years after, they vividly recall the battle days and speak of them as mothers mind the birth-days of their children. Both mothers and soldiers were there and have a right to remember the agony, yea, and the aftermath of joy. if they survived. By that wonderful gravitation and puri- fication, that we see but do not understand. all the ugly things that at the time annoyed and pained, sink out of haunting memory, and the boys remem- ber the glad things, the funny things ; even the ugly things are transmuted into raw material for jest and fun. At re-unions yet, they josh and laugh and tell stories, the gayest of humorists, the most pardonable of "cheerful liars." The little brown button long since became a fetish, like a church token-it has good right to stand as a semi-sacred thing. It is the symbol of the heroic, romantic period of their lives.


It would have been billions in our pockets and hundreds of thousands of lives saved, had we bought the slaves at the owners' appraisement. Elihu Burritt demonstrated that mathematically in addresses all over the North. Sambo and Dinah and the pickaninnies caused the war. The planters would not sell them ; they were mnad, and we were mad, and it had to be an inevitable fight to a finish-with Dinah and Sambo and the ebonies freed. From che southerners' stand-point, it was a war of utter and supreme folly. But there was no help for it. When anger comes in, sense and reason take a vacation.


How much did this county suffer in the civil war? Scan this table of casualties in the several companies :


Co.


Reg. Men killed, wounded, died.


Officers.


H


2d


817


70


H


7th


880


73


C


8th


731


57


E


10th


728


58


F


11th


601


47


I & K


1 3th


819


65


I


18th


445


33


483


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


Co.


Reg.


Vien Killed, wounded, died


Officers


C


19th


549


36


A & I


25th


556


49


E & K


30th


644


58


B


45th


19


mn


Ist Cav.


543


4th Cav.


583


This list of deaths was prepared by Lieut. Smith W. Brookhart of Com. pany D, Fiftieth Iowa, in the Spanish war, and read on Memorial day, 1902:


COMPANY HI-SECOND INFANTRY.


Geo. W. Neal, 2 Lt., killed at Corinth ; Sergt. Wm. Wright, September 25, 1861 ; Corp. Samuel A. Mealley, killed at Donelson, February 15, 1862 ; Corp. Henry Weaver, February 17, '62, of wounds ; Corp. Geo. W. Johnson, Septem- ber 10, '64, of wounds ; Drummer Samuel M. Eicher, wounded at Donelson, died April 1, 1862; Hugh Amarine, November 8, 1863; Jno. W. Andrews, October 28, 1861; Jos. H. C. Dawson, September 28, 1861 ; Robt. Easton, March 24, 1864; Marvin French, killed at Corinth; Wm. Hudson, January 10, 1862; John R. Fullerton, March 30, 1862; Finley Paxton, January 16, 1862; James M. Porter, wounded six times October 3, 1862, at Corinth but would not leave field ; Benjamin Edwards, at Altoona, Ga .; John Bowen ; Robert McCuhen ; David F. Eckerman, wounded, August 5, 1864, died ; I. G. White, first man from Washington county to lose his life, August 31, 1861.


COMPANY H-SEVENTH IOWA INFANTRY.


Robt. S. Glasgow, died November 8, 1861, of wounds received in battle ; Samuel Rickey, October 12, 1862, from wounds at Corinth ; Wm. L. Woods, from wounds at Belmont ; Jos. A. Abbey, from wounds at Belmont; Wade C. Arnold, from wounds at Belmont; Charles Bloom, killed No- vember 7, 1861, at Belmont; Darius Bush, killed at Belmont; Hugh C. Andrews, killed at Corinth; Lewis Austin, killed at Belmont; Samuel C. Crowner, January 20, 1865 ; Wm. W. Edmondson, killed at Corinth ; Phil- lip Gladwin, killed November 7, 1861, Belmont ; Joseph Gerthoffer, December 9, 1864 ; Geo. W. Hogue, April 20, '62, wounds, at Savannah, Tenn. : Alexan- der M. Holmes, August 26, 1864 ; George A. Logan, killed at Belmont ; W. H. Lamb, at Paducah, Ky., January 13, '62; John F. McConnell, at Paducah, April 16, 1862; John L. McDowell, killed at Belmont ; John W. Matthew, prisoner at Corinth, died December 14, 1863, at Jefferson Barracks, Mo .;


484


IHISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


William Moore, at Newark, N. J., May 14, 1865; John Perkins, killed at Bel- mont ; Jeremiah Phillips, at Corinth, March 7, 1863 ; Anderson Ralston, Sep- tember 26, 1864, at Rome, Ga. ; Wm. S. Smith, November 5, 1861, St. Louis, Mo. ; Ambrose Shaw, killed at Belmont : George Tenant severely wounded at Belmont, mortally at Corinth, died October 19, '62: John C. Temple, killed battle Belmont ; Thomas P. Vincent, of wounds at Belmont, at Mound City, Ill., November 19, '61 ; Geo. W. Wells, killed in Shiloh, April 6, 1862 ; Reuben Worthen, killed at Belmont ; Jesse P. Warren, died November 25, 1861.


COMPANY C-EIGIITHI INFANTRY.


Caldwell Bailey, died December 20. 1801, Sedalia, Mo .: Sergt. James G. Hight, wounded at Shiloh, taken prisoner and died of wound October 22, 1862, Annapolis, Md .; John A. Duke, died at Macon, Georgia, of starvation and ill treatment while prisoner. October 5, 1862, captured April 6, 1862 ; Robert S. Young, captured at Shiloh. April 6, '62, died October 21, '62, of star -. vation and ill treatment ; Edward Carris, February 28, 1862, Sedalia, Mo .; Martin Gentzler, killed on Tennessee river by Guerillas from ambush ; James D. Glasgow. December 11, 1803. at Pocohontas, Tenn. ; David A. Knowles, August 6, '62, Jeff. Bks., Mo. ; Joseph F. Kelley, February 9, 1865, R. 1., Ill. ; James Marshall, April 20, 1862, of wounds at Shiloh, at Keokuk ; John Mc- Murray, May 18, 1862, at Mobile, while prisoner, wounded and captured Shiloh, April 6, 1862 ; David Parrish, wounded April 6, 1862, died of wounds Apri! 20, at Indianapolis ; James Robertson, July 31, 1862, Mound City, Ill .; John D. Roberts, September 11, 1865, Tuskegee, Ala. ; Wmn. Smiley, July 8, 1863, Memphis ; Wm. H. Tripp, wounded August 24, 1864, Memphis, died September 24, 1864, was also captured April 6, 1862 ; Robert C. Thompson, September 8, 1863, wounded and prisoner at Shiloh ; Robert O. Watson, May 23, 1864, Davenport ; James H. Young, killed April 6, 1862, Shiloh.


COMPANY E-TENTH INFANTRY.


N. J. H. Terry, killed at Champion IIills, Miss., May 16, '63 ; Hiram Tat- man. died at Birds Point, Mo., Feb. 19. '62 ; Joseph Glosser, killed November 25, '63. Chattanooga ; Abraham Dawson, died at Birds Point, Mo., February II, '62, from wound received in ambush near Charleston, Mo. ; Henry Barger, of wounds, at Champion Hills, Miss., May 20, '63; Lewis C. Stark, killed November 25, '63, Chattanooga, in battle ; Charles Page, of wounds in battle of Corinth ; John Sanchi, June 6, '63, of wounds at Champion Hills ; John G. Albin, May 28, '63, of wounds in battle of Champion Hills ; Ephraim N. Bell,


485


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


May 20, '63, at Robes' Plantation, Miss., of wounds : Win. Bear, July 1, '63, at Memphis, of wounds ; Samuel Curry, February 6, '62, at Birds Point, Mo., of wounds, near Charleston, Mo. ; John Enfield, January 1, '62, at Birds Point ; August Hemmenn, of wounds in battle of Corinth, on October 6. 62; John Hurt, August 29, '63, St. Louis, of wounds at Champion Hills : Thomas J. Parsons, killed near Charleston, Mo., January 8, '62; Abraham Phillips, killed January 8, '62, near Charleston, Mo .; Thomas B. Roberts, April 14, 62, at New Madrid, Mo. ; Dennis A. Rice, December 11, '61, Mound City, Ill. ; Win. E. Rogers, October 6, '63, Richmond, Iowa; V. W. Stone, January 5. '64. St. Louis ; Wm. W. Williamson, July 17, '62, Birds Point.


COMPANY F-ELEVENTII IOWA INFANTRY.


N. L. Mckinney. November 28. '62, at Lagrange, Tenn. ; Geo. J. Barnes, killed at Shiloh ; Martin A. McClain, killed at Shiloh ; T. M. Souter. July 8, '64, of wound at Nickajack Creek, Ga .; Theodore Campbell, May 8. 62, at St. Louis, of wounds at Shiloh; David Andrews, May 29, '62, at Corinth ; Edward Doran, February 21. '62, Fulton, Mo. : Job Hawk, March 6, '62, Ful- ton ; Thomas Jorden, January 20, '62, St. Louis ; James Kenedy. November 12, '63, Vicksburg ; John S. Martin, September 28, '64, Keokuk ; James Mc- Gowan, August 20, '62, Bolivar, Tenn. ; Joseph C. McNay, June 19, '62, Corinth : John D. North, January 4, '62, Jeff. City, Mo. : Elliott Parrish, Sep- tember 24, '63, Memphis; Henry Purrington, killed on route home October 31, '64, after muster out ; Henry H. Riley, killed at Shiloh ; Moses Ross, Sep- tember 16. '63, Washington, Ind. : John Rickey, December 5, '63, Jeff. Bks., Mo. ; Sam L. Snooks, February 17, 65, Bufort. S. C. : Isaac N. Smith. Decem- ber 11, '61, St. Louis ; Geo. W. Shafer, July 5. `62, of wounds, at Kenesaw Mountain, Georgia ; Robt. A. Tedford, August 1, '64, Atlanta.


COMPANY I-THIRTEENTHI INFANTRY.


James A. Brown, near Corinth. June 29, '62 : Stephen R. Moore, September 24, '62, Jackson, Miss. : Stephen Werts, killed July 28, '64, near Atlanta ; Charles F. Shaw, December 23, '61, Jeff. City. Mo. ; Marcus Humphrey, June 12, '62, Monterey, Tenn. : L. P. Aylworth, killed at Shiloh ; Henry H. Burham, May 24, '62, Monterey, Tenn. ; Wm. L. Beason, August 28, '63, Montezuma ; Jas. E. Delong, July 22, '64, near Atlanta, wounded at Shiloh ; John M. Dusen- berry, killed July 22, '64, near Atlanta ; Michael Faulkner, September 29. '62, Corinth ; Edmund Hill, Jan. 12. '65, Chattanooga : Tobias Hites, March 16,


486


HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY


'65, Savannah, Ga .; John A. Lanning, captured July 22, '64, near Atlanta, died Spetember 9, '64, Andersonville ; John McCall, wounded Shiloh, died July 18, '62, at Cincinnati, O. ; Sam'l C. Marvel, missed in battle near Atlanta ; David Park, December 18, '61, St. Louis ; B. Pierson, January 16, '62, St. Louis : Simeon Polen, wounded at Shiloh, died April 26, '62, at St. Louis, of wounds ; Joseph Park, killed at Shiloh ; Henry Rickey, June 12, '62, near New Albany, Ind .; Selkirk Sanders, January 6, '62, St. Louis; Horace Shelley, missing in battle near Atlanta ; Wm. H. Thompson, killed July 22, '64, near Atlanta ; N. H. Tannahill, February 10, '63, Providence, La. ; Henry Walker, killed February 10, '64, Hillsborough, Miss. ; Lewis White, killed July 24. '64, Atlanta ; Frederick Wilkins. November 2, '64, Chattanooga.




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.