USA > Iowa > The Thirty-fourth Iowa Regiment > Part 2
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The regiment about this time was ordered to join the army of the Potomac, and went to Algiers, op- posite New Orleans, for the purpose of embarking at that point. Some little delay occured and Maj. - Gen. Granger, who was about starting on a cam- paign against the forts at the mouth of Mobile Bay, procured orders to take the Thirty-Fourth regiment with him, which was done.
The regiment disembarked on the 28th of July, on the west end of Dauphin Island, marched that night to within two miles of Fort Gaines, and commenced the siege of that fort. On the 5th of August, Admiral Farragut made his celebrated run by the forts, lashed to the masts of the flag ship.
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THIRTY-FOURTH IOWA.
We were immediately moved across the Bay to Mobile Point, and commenced operations against Fort Morgan.
The siege of this fort was commenced in earnest at daylight on the morning of the 23d of August, 1 864. Fort Morgan was a powerful and formid- able one, and made desperate resistance.
All who were there will remember that the can- nonading was most terrific, excelling anything ever witnessed by the regiment. The stream of shot and shell was incessant from daylight of the 23d until daylight of the 24th.
The enemy exhibited wonderful pluck and held out until the fort was in ruins over his head. The rebel commander was Brig .- Gen. Page. On the 24th the ceremonies of receiving the prisoners were conducted, and the Thirty-Fourth, assigned to that duty, marched up in front of the fort to receive the prisoners, the band playing " Hail Columbia." The rebels marched out through the sally-ports. and formed in a line parallel with the Thirty-Fourth. The rebel officers were ordered to the front and center, the men ordered to stack arms, and the of- ficers to surrender their swords into the hands of a staff officer detailed for that purpose. The national salute was being fired during the ceremonies, and the band was playing patriotic airs. The scene was very impressive.
The compliment of designating the Thirty-Fourth for this ceremony was in recognition of its leading
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HISTORY OF THE
services in connection with the siege. Capt. Rock- well's company was the first to enter the fort, hav- ing been detailed to occupy it as guards.
One night during the siege of Fort Morgan, the lights were all out in our camp except in a certain wall tent; this was occupied by some persons en- gaged in a game of draw. The enemy noticing this light commenced firing at it with a Whitworth rifle cannon. Several times he fired and the men of the regiment, who were lying near trying to sleep cried, "put out that light," no attention was paid to their cries; finally a shot cut one of the corner ropes of the tent dropping it on the players and ending the game.
On the 25th of August the Thirty-Fourth, with four other regiments, was sent on tin clads to Cedar Point to capture Fort Powell but found it had been evacuated. Here we spent two never to be forgotten days. Our movements stirred up the mosquitoes. At midday, under a broiling sun, they gathered in clusters on our clothing, and regardless of heavy woolen shirts and blouses drew forth our life's blood. At night we put up our little mosquito bars, built a smudge at both head and feet, lit our pipes and tryed to sleep.
These long-billed galli-nippers bit as if they never before had tasted Yankee blood. They provoked the most horrid oaths ever listened to, but heeded neither man's cries, prayers nor execrations.
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THIRTY-FOURTH IOWA.
After a short stay in this locality, during which time we engaged in destroying the rebel fortifica- tions. We returned to New Orleans about the middle of September, and immediately proceeded, without disembarking, to Morganzia, La., where the regi- ment spent about four weeks, doing outpost duty along the Atchafalaya River, where we had several skirmishes with the enemy.
On the 21st of September, Col. Clark, Capts. Boyle, Clark, Waters, Herring and Lieut. Clauson started north for recruiting service. On the 12th day of September, 1864, by order of Maj. Gen. E. R. S. Canby, commanding the mil- itary division of the west Mississippi, the Thirty- Fourth and Thirty-Eighth Iowa were consolidated, making a full regiment of about a thousand men, one of the finest regimental organizations that ever marched to martial music.
From the organization of the Thirty-Fourth up to this time. 214 officers and men had been killed or died of disease. With sorrowful and regretful feel- ings we bade good bye to those who, by the consoli- dation, were super-numerary and mustered out. Among them, Adjutant Bryant, Capt. Hatton and Lieuts. Boyd, Comins and Dilley, all brave, noble and true men, who had been tried in the fire and not found wanting.
Together we had stood shoulder to shoulder in battle and enjoyed victory; together endured hun- ger, thirst, storms, heat, cold, fatigue and disaster.
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HISTORY OF THE
There will be found in a supplement to this sketch a roster of the officers of the Regiment, as first or- ganized, and of the Regiment after the consolida- tion.
The regiment remained in the vicinity of Morgan- za until the 25th of January, 1865, when we went by water to Barrancas, Fla., this movement being part of the general campaign, under the direction of Gen. Canby, against Mobile.
We arrived at Barrancas on the 28th day of jan- uary, 1865. At this time the regiment went into a delighful encampment in a grove of evergreens, on the main land, just across the bay from Fort Pick- ens, Gen. C. C. Andrew in command of the brigade. It is a pleasant spot in the history of the regiment. and one to be ever remembered as a sort of com- pensation for the distress and discomfort experi- enced in many localitities.
On the rith of March the regiment broke camp at Barrancas and marched to Pensacola, a distance of about sixteen miles by land, and half that dis- tance by water.
Ten thousand men, under Gen. Steele, left the old historic town of Pensacola, Florida, on the 20th of March, 1865. Gen. C. C. Andrews commanded the second divisions of these troops; Col. G. W. Clark, the Thirty-Fourth Jowa Infantry, one of the best regiments in the division. The Thirty-Fourth was often called the Star regiment, because its number was the same as the stars which filled the
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THIRTY-FOURTH IOW .1.
field of our flag, and represented the number of States in our Union at that time. For eleven days we marched through Florida swamps, corduroying many miles of road, were rained upon hours each day, slept in damp clothes at night, were on half rations the last five days: our men gathered and ate the corn which had been left on the ground by the enemy's pickets and had been slobbered over by their horses. During this time we had numer- ous skirmishes with the rebel cavalry. The first day of April found us opposite Blakely, Ala., at one time a town of three thousand people, now one of the main defenses of Mobile. The fortifications around Blakely were circular in form, three miles
long. and included nine well built redoubts. They were armed with forty pieces of artillery, and sur- rounded by ditches four to five feet deep. All the trees six to eight hundred yards in their front had been felled. Fifty yards out from the works was a line of abatis, and opposite some of the redoubts a second line, then three hundred yards out to the front, parallel with their works, was another line of abatis and behind the latter detached rifle pits. These works were manned by three thousand and five hundred of the enemy. The second of April was occupied in investing these works, during which operation we lost sixty or seventy killed and wounded.
Hawkins' Division, which was composed of col- ored troops, was on the right, Andrews' Division
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HISTORY OF THE
in the center, and Garrard's on the left. 6 It is sup- posed that ten men, well protected by earth works, can successfully resist three or four times their number. So, instead of throwing our troops against the enemy's fortifications, with great loss of life and possible repulse, Gen. Steele determined to work up as near his lines as possible, with pick and shovel, with which we were well supplied. In fact, when the campaign of Mobile was com- menced, Gen. Canby, in general orders, provided that one pick, one axe, and one spade be carried by every twelve men. Our first entrenchments were dug a thousand yards from the enemy's works.
For the benefit of our posterity, a few words as to temporary intrenchments may be inserted here. They are usually called "rifle pits", and are two or three feet deep, the dirt being thrown on the side toward the enemy; occasionally on top of this dirt will be placed the trunk of a tree six or seven inches in diameter. By scraping away a little earth from under this trunk, the enemy could be . observed without exposing the heads of our men. These trenches were always dug at night, no talk- ing above a whisper being permitted, and no sound but that which came from digging with picks and shovels. Owing to the scarcity of these, it took three nights' work to complete our first line. The fourth night, the supply of intrenching tools having been increased, more rapid progress was made, so
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THIRTY-FOURTHI IOWA.
that by the eighth night we had finished a second and a third line of intrenchments, the last being six feet wide and capable of holding troops in three ranks, and was 600 yards from the rebel works.
The skirmishers in front of our division entrench- ed themselves within eighty yards of the enemy's outer line of pickets. In the mean time small forts for our artillery had been constructed along our first and second lines, and the guns of our light bat- teries placed in them.
The enemy was not quiet while this was going on as any exposure of our men drew his fire, both of musketry and artillery, killing and wounding each day twenty to forty of ours. Spanish Fort, eight miles south, which had been invested March 27th, by the Sixteenth Army Corps, surrendered to Gen. A. J. Smith on the 8th, and some of the guns used in its siege were immediately sent to Gen. Steele, who had them placed in position during the night of the 8th and the morning of the 9th.
Five o'clock, the evening of the 9th day of April was fixed as the hour for a general assault of the enemy's works. At that hour the simultaneous firing of all the cannons on the line of the second division was to be the signal for the charge.
Owing to an unforseen delay, this signal was not given until 5:30 p. m. At that hour our troops had all been formed in line of battle, in the lines of en- trenchments nearest the enemy with bayonets fixed. One regiment of each brigade was deployed as skit -
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HISTORY OF THE
mishers along the front of its brigade, in the en- trenchments. Breathlessly they waited the signal to move forward. The silence was interrupted only by an occasional shot from a rebel picket.
The waiting and suspense was a severe test of courage. Some tried to conceal their anxiety by an effort to appear reckless, careless and brave, and whispered jokes and puns, pretending they en- joyed it immensely.
Others, more serious, gave their comrades mess- ages to be delivered to loved ones at home, in case they fell. The countenances of none indicated that they shrank from the approaching contest; while all dreaded it, they were impatient for the battle.
With the crashing of the signal guns our first line of skirmishers leaped from the trenches and with yells rushed forward 150 yards, while the sec- ond line, with loud cheering soon joined them and all rushed forward together. Now every cannon the enemy had on his lines, and every rifle, poured forth their deadly missiles on our men, and tem- pests of bullets, pieces of bursting shell, canister and grape whistled about their ears.
They were met by deadly and unseen and un- known dangers in sunken torpedoes, which, when trod upon, exploded, stripping the flesh from their legs, and wounding terribly. Fallen trees, abatis and wire stretched along near the ground impeded their way and exposed them longer to the enemy's fire. No reply was made except by our artillery.
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THIRTY-FOURTH IOWA.
which pounded away over our heads at their forts.
In fifteen minutes we had surmounted all the ob- structions, climbed their works and given them the bayonet. They staggered backward and dropping their guns, threw up their hands in token of surren- der, and our work was done.
We were victorious but 654 of our men, who an hour before were joking and laughing with each other, had been laid low. In these fifteen minutes our losses were greater than those on our side in the four revolutionary battles of Lexington, Bunk- er Hill, Trenton and Bennington.
We captured 3,423 prisoners, 40 pieces or artil- lery besides small arms. The enemy's loss in kill- ed was probably a third as much as ours. Gen. Steele reached the works soon after the capture. and in his squeaky voice exclaimed: "I knew you'd do it, I knew you'd do it."
Those were glorious moments. There are few such in a life time. Victory had crowned our ef- forts. The end for which days of toil and nights of waking had been passed, was quickly and glor- iously accomplished. At half past three this same afternoon, Lee, at Appomattox, had surrendered to Grant and the war was virtually over two hours be- fore our charge.
On the 14th of April our regiment entered trium- phantly into the city of Mobile. One hundred guns were fired in honor of this event, and glorious vic- tories reported from all quarters.
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HISTORY OF THE
Mobile, a city of 25,000 before the war, was re- duced at this time to about 12,000.
While the regiment was still rejoicing over the great victories, and as we were steaming up the Alabama River we received a signal announcing the assassination on the 14th of President Lincoln and Secretary Seward, causing great revulsion of feeling, from highest exultation to deep- est sorrow.
On the 24th we landed at Selma, Ala., where we remained in camp a few days only. We returned to Mobile, where we remained, performing light guard duty, awaiting developments until June, when the division under command of Gen C. C. An- drews, sailed for Galveston, Tex. Feeling that the war was closed, and our contract filled, this move- inent was very distasteful, and gave rise to many complaints from the boys.
We arrived at Galveston and soon after proceed- ed to Houston, Tex. Our regiment marched through the streets of this old historic town, the first army of free " Yankee " soldiers who had ever trod the soil of that region. The dwellings were closed, shutters were drawn, the women of that city having sworn never to look upon a Yankee, hence they closed and barred their doors and windows.
But it is historically true, and should be so re- corded, that before the Thirty-Fourth left Houston, inany of these rebel ladies smiled sweetly upon the " Boys in Blue," and the leading spirit of them all
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THIRTY-FOURTH IOWA.
married a Yankee soldier, and now lives happily with him in Chicago.
Others became wives of Union soldiers.
Our stay in Houston was in many respects com- fortable and pleasant, but all were eager and anx- ious to return to their homes. We did not leave Houston, however, until the 17th of August, when the regiment was mustered out of service, and re- turned to Iowa, to peace, rest and home.
Before closing I would like to speak of the cour- age, excellencies of character, and efficiency of Gen. Clark, of Col. Dungan, of Majors Kellogg and Kern-poor Kern, who tried so hard to see us at our last re-union, and who is now awaiting us beyond, for the last and final re-union above-of Bryant, Davis, Coffman and the captains and others-but what shall I say more ? For the time would fail me to tell of Gideon, and of Barak, and of Sampson, and of Jeptha and all the rest. Other historians must follow and carry forward and finish the work.
Respectfully submitted, J. S. CLARK, Historian. Late Captain of Company C. Company B, after Consolidation, Thirty-Fourth Iowa Regiment.
APPENDIX.
Roster of Field and Staff Officers of the Thirty- Fourth Before Consolidation.
RANK. NAME. RESIDENCE.
Colonel. . . . G. W. Clark. Indianola.
Lieut .- Colonel. . Warren S. Dungan
.Chariton.
Major.
. Racine D. Kellogg.
Garden Grove.
Major.
John Kern.
Norwalk.
Adjutant
Wm. M. Bryant
Indianola.
Qr. Master
John D. Sarver.
.Chariton.
Surgeon.
Chas. W. Davis.
Indianola.
Ass't Surgeon. . Henry W. Jay.
.Chariton.
Ass't Surgeon . . Vic. H. Coffman. Indianola.
Chaplain Uri. P. Golliday .. Garden Grove.
Ser. Major.
Bertrand Rockwell.
. Chariton.
Qr. Mas. Ser .. , Joseph T. Meek
Indianola.
Com. Ser.,
John Throckmorton.
.Chariton.
Hos. Stew.
.John S. Davis.
Des Moines.
Roster After Consolidation.
RANK. NAME. RESIDENCE.
Colonel ..
.. . ..
.. G. W. Clark
Indianola.
Lieut .. Colonel .. Warren S. Dungan
Chariton.
. Major.
Hinkley F. Beebe.
Waverly.
Surgeon.
. Vic. H. Coffman
Indianola.
Adjutant Chas F. Losche Iowa.
Qr. Mas. .
H. A. Maydole.
Hesper.
Hos. Stew.
John M. Folger
Indianola.
Ser. Major.
.. N. B. Douglass.
Chariton
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THIRTY-FOURTH IOWA.
Or. Mas. Ser .. . Ephraim G. Sandy. Sandyville. P. Musician .... Orson M. Ingalls Indianola.
P. Musician Jerome B. Davis. Hartford.
Roster of Company A. - Decatur County.
CAPTAINS.
Eli H. Alexander, Jonathan R. Waters.
LIEUTENANTS. Jonathan R. Waters, Rowland T. Sloan.
SERGEANTS. 1755333
Albert S. Ellis, Ist; Peter Scott, 2d; Henry Wal- ton, 3d: Perry Wolverton, 4th; Henry L. Lillard, 5th.
CORPORALS.
Joseph Winters, Ist; James Williams, 2d; Jack- son M. Worden, 3d; Hiram Williams, 4th; Zeno Tharp, 5th: Italus Curry, 6th; Charles Edgington, 7th; John C. McVay, 8th.
MUSICIANS.
Asahel C. Lockwood, Asahel Edgington.
WAGONER.
WVm. H. Vance. PRIVATES.
Hiram B. Arnold, Henry L. Arnold, Mar- tin Bridges, Royal B. Bullard, Reuben Bullard. Wm. J. Beaver, Stephen H. Briley, John Mar- tin Brown, Win. A. Bennett, Joseph Culver,
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HISTORY OF THE
Wm. H. Carr, Charles M. Carter, Henry T. Chan- dler, John Connely, David P. Commons, Daniel Et- telman, Miller Field, James S. Farris, John H. Gra- ham, Lycurgus Gillham, James Gallagher, Joel Herschberger, Jonas F. Harman, Christian Hard- man, Moses Hardman, Eli Heaston, Hiram Hard- ing, Samuel Harding, Isaac Helmick, John M. Huffnard, Jonathan B. Huffman, Allen D. Hall. WVm. H. Hitchcock, Alexander Hankins, Con- rad B. Hite, James I. Hite, George Helt, G. W. Helt, Hiranı Hine, Jacob Henning, John Ham, Alvin G. Hawkins, Abraham Johnson, John W. Ken- nett, Peter Kinnaman, Jessie Monk, Phillip W. Mourrer, Amos A. Manning, James C. Mellen, Dav- is Macy, Andrew J. Mckinney, Milton B. Norris, Wm. Nutter, Elisha L. Pace, Eli W. Phelps, Merit S. C. Rogers, John Rogers, Daniel M. Stiles, Silas H. Sparling, Stephen Scott, Andrew J. Stanford, J. Smith, Clinton D. Sloan, George H. Stults, James M. Silvers, Stephen H. Silvers, Wm. B. Silvers, Samuel Shank, Wm. Thornberry, Nath. B. War- rington.
Additional Enlistments .- Chas. Alden, Chas. Per- say, Isaac E. Mccullough.
Commissioned officers 3, Sergeants 5, Corporals 8, Musicians 2, Wagoner I, Privates 70. Total rank and file, So men.
Roster of Company B .--- Warren County.
CAPTAINS.
Win. P Guthrie, Jas. A. Dunagan.
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THIRTY-FOURTH IOW'A.
LIEUTENANTS.
John C. S. Wasson, Ist; Jas. A. Dunagan, 2d. SERGEANTS.
John H. McMahan, Ist; Wesley Dunnigan, 2d; Geo. W. Spray, 3d; James M. Ray, 4th; Silas W. McMahan, 5th.
CORPORALS.
James H. Duncan, Ist; Samuel F. Dunegan, 2d; Moses P. Steel, 3d; David F. Taylor, 4th; Jacob C. Randolph, 5th; Morris M. Barge, 6th; Daniel Fox, 7th; Samuel R. Cain, Sth.
MUSICIANS.
Jerome B. Davis, Alexander W. Pyle.
WAGONER.
Clay W. Smith.
PRIVATES.
Leonard V. Anderson, Wm. M. Allen, James Blanchard, Melville W. Barkhurst, Chas. B. Bourn, James H. Cain, Lewis C. Clevenger, Daniel I. Cain, Chas. W. Corzatt, Wm. H. Clevenger, George W. Clevenger, Samuel Dalbey, John F. Evans, Robert M. Frist, Joseph Frazer, Daniel M. Goble, Hiram W. Goble, Samuel M. Gwinn, Thos. Ginder, Jacob Hefmer, Joseph B. Halterman, Win. Hall, Gowen W. Hurst, Win. H. Hartman. Francis M. Hicklin, Stephen James, George W. King, Robert G. Lucas, Hamiliton D. Lucas, Wm. A. Lundy, Oscar Lundy. Wm. W. Lane, James R. Lamb, Alva Myrick, John W. McDole, Nathan C. McDole, Wm. Morgan, Ja-
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HISTORY OF THE
cob McCoy, Samuel McNees, Win. H. Moorman John H. Neer, Monroe B. Pyle, James A. Pendry, Robert T. Pendery, Wilson Phillips, Robert Park, John Phillips, George N. Proctor, Pleasant H. Proc- tor, Wm. J. Park. G. H. Reynolds, James S. Reed, Win. C. Rogers, Wm. V. Roberts, Wm. R. Rick- er, Martin S. Stierwalt, Henry A. Stierwalt, Solomon Shepard, Wm. S. Shetterly, Abraham' Shetterly Benjamin F. Shetterly, Fredrick W. Sexton, Dan- iel P. Sherman, Wm. H. Shetterly, Wallace Sea- man, Silas P. Stubbs, B. L. Salisbury, Benjamin F. Spy, Wm. D. Taylor, Wm. A. Taylor, Jas. M. Tay- lor, Joseph Trout, Benjamin F. Thomas, Wm. S. Woodward, Israel Winpigler, Wm. M. Winning, Daniel H. Wellens, Silas Williams, Geo. Winpiger. Manuel Winpigler.
Additional enlistment. - Volney H. Scott.
Commissioned officers 3, Sergeants 5, Musicians 2, Wagoners 1, Corporals S, Privates So. Total rank and fiile 99 men.
Roster of Company C, Warren County.
CAPTAINS.
Dan. H. Lyons, James S. Clark. LIEUTENANTS.
Hub'd C. Henderson, ist; James S. Clark, 2d; Robert E. Martin, 2d.
SERGEANTS.
Robert E. Martin, ist; Thomas E. Gifford, 2d; Moses F. Clark, 3d; Levi Reeves, 4th; Jas. M. Mc- Kee, 5th.
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THIRTY-FOURTH IOWA.
CORPORALS.
Jas. Randolph, Ist; David M. Clark, 2d; Win. G. Silcott, 3d; Samuel A. Nichols, 4th; Jos. T. Meck, 5th; Benj. Heath, 6th; George L. Whitney, 7th; Mathew H. Harbison, Sth.
MUSICIANS.
John W. Monteith, Ichabod S. Phillips.
WAGONER.
William F. Wells.
PRIVATES.
Thos. J. Allen, Jas. M. Barnes, Jno. W. Barnes, Syl- vester Barns, Wm. A. Brown, Geo. W. Barngrover Jas. D. Briant, Hiram Burtch, Thos. Cross, Win. M. Cleveland, Wm. A. Clark, Chas. B. Duncon, David Douglas, John A. Donovan, Jonathan Duncon, John M. Fallis, George W. Foreman, Henry A. Flea- ger, James G. Foreman, James C. Graham, Sam. uel L. Graham, James P. Graham, Stephen Grimes, James Glines, John B. Gray, Hiram G. Hiatt, Samuel W. Hiatt, Benj. K. Hart, Oliver S. Horr, Isaac Henderson, Jasper Hockersmith. Wm. P. Harlison, Thos. J. Henderson, Joseph Hewitt, Geo. A. Henderson. Vincent A. Kenedy, James A. Laverty, Maxwell J. Lattimer. Carlos W. Larkin, Wm. S. Mardock, Hiram B. Moon, Dan'l D. Miller, John Monroe, Lucius B. Monroe, Jacob B. Moon, Jas. Moon, John W. Moore, Oliver H. Maxwell, Geo. McGinnis, John Merrell, Jas. M. Nicholls. Samuel Parker, Asa B. Park, John W. Randolph, Wm. H. Rhine, John W. Ruggles, Thos. V. Reed,
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HISTORY OF THE
Richard Reeves, Chas. W. Scanland, Wm. Sillcott, James A. Sillcott, Robert Shawver, Geo. Stites. Othaniel Shawver, Solomon Shepherd, Mahlon H. Stanton, John W. Tharp, Sidney Viers, John C. Way, Jas. H. Waters, Ethan O. Whitaker, Jas. Woodward.
Additional Enlistment-Eli Vance.
Commissioned Officers 3, Sergeants 5, Corporals S, Musicians 2, Wagoner I, Privates 72. Total rank and file, 91 men.
Roster of Company D, Warren County.
CAPTAINS.
James H. Knox, John M. Lee.
LIEUTENANTS.
Elias W. Perry, Ist; John M. Lee, Ist; John M. Lee, 2d; Thomas L. Dilley, 2d.
SERGEANTS.
Thomas L. Dilley, Ist; Augustus B. Swift, 2d; Woodferd P. Evans, 3d; Martin V. Tannehill, 4th; Ephraim G. Sandy, 5th.
CORPORALS.
James L. Smith, ist; Lewis Harlan, 2d; James H. Pring, 3d; Thomas E. Kinzey, 4th; Samuel Y. Cannon, 5th: Absalom Scott, 6th; Jas. Pollitte, 7th; Perry T. Lake, 8th.
MUSICIANS.
Geo. F. Fordham, Peter F. Cherry.
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THIRTY-FOURTH IOWA.
WAGONER.
John M. Draper.
PRIVATES.
Jas. W. Anderson, Thos. J. Anthony, Caleb N. Bennett, W. H. Brown, Archibald Burgess, Lindley M. Bowles, Jos. Bromily, John H. Best, John W. Cook, David W. Cook, Wm. B. Coles, Isaac Cook, Jas. C. Conrad, David Coles, Nelson Cunningham, Willis Cleavinger, Jacob Coles, John S. Davis, Chas. W. Dunn, John P. Davis, Wilson Dart, Tilman P. Edgerton, Jos. V. Edgerton, Henry E. Fogle, Chas. F. Foulke, John M. Folger, Martin T. Flesher, Bennett Gunsaulus, Robert M. Goudy, Wheeler N. Geer, Benj. F. Gregory, Jacob B. Garbison, Sam'] A. Griffin, Leonard Grover, Win. F. Hoskins, Wm. Harter, Geo. H. Hutt, Geo. Hamilton, Geo W. Harlan, Isaac N. Hosford, Geo. M. Hall, Jas. Kirn- zey, Jas. W. Lyon, Sam'l M. Littler, Wm. H. Lake, John C. Lawrence, Thos. H. McConnell, Jesse Moore, Rob't Morris, Isaac Myers, Reason L. P. Massey, Win. Moose, McKens. B. Oldaker, Jno. W. Oxenrider, Jacob H. Pilzer, Thos. M. Rodgers, Moses J. Reed, Calvin R. Ramsey, Eugene Richard, John P. Sutton, Wm. R. Smith, Jeremiah H. San- dy, Wm. W. Scott, Jacob Smith, Jas. M. Smith, Wm. H. Smith, Dempsey J. Scott, John W. S. Tay- loy, John H. Tippie. Morris Thompson, Samuel Washburn, Joseph L. Wilson, Samuel Walker, Valentine Warner, Jonathan Wallace, Chas. W. Welton, John Wilson.
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HISTORY OF THE
Additional Enlistments-Jas. W. Duncan, Stewart Fetters.
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