History of Macoupin County, Illinois : biographical and pictorial, Volume I, Part 22

Author: Walker, Charles A., 1826-1918; Clarke, S. J., publishing company, Chicago
Publication date: 1911
Publisher: Chicago : S.J. Clarke Pub. Co.
Number of Pages: 550


USA > Illinois > Macoupin County > History of Macoupin County, Illinois : biographical and pictorial, Volume I > Part 22


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).


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HISTORY OF MACOUPIN COUNTY


sas, to join Steele's expedition against Little Rock; November 10, participated in the capture of that place; January 15, 1864, three fourths of the regiment reenlisted and were mustered as veteran volunteers; January 27, moved to Vicksburg and accompanied Sherman in the Meridian campaign and returned to Vicksburg; March 10 was assigned to the Red River expedition; on the 14th participated in the capture of Fort De Russet, Louisiana; April 9 engaged in the battle of Pleasant Hill. After returning to Memphis, it was ordered to Illinois on a furlough, June 24. The detachment of non-veterans remained, being commanded by Captain John A. Logan, participating in the battle of Tupelo, July 14 and 15, 1864. After the expiration of the furlough they rendezvoused at Centralia, Illinois, and proceeded by way of Cairo and Memphis to Holly Springs; August 12 participated in the Oxford expedition, returning to Memphis, August 30; September 30, arrived at Jefferson Barracks, St. Louis; moved to Franklin and drove the enemy from that place; moved with the army in pursuit of Price and returned November 18, 1864; arrived at Nashville, Tennessee, December 1 ; took part in the battle of Nashville, December 15 and 16; December 24 was ordered to Paducah, Kentucky, to muster out non-veterans. It performed gar- rison duty until mustered out, September 9, 1865, at Paducah and arrived at Camp Butler, September 15, 1865, for final payment and discharge. This was a gallant regiment and won high reputation.


Company E.


Captain, Henry W. Kerr ; corporals, William G. Davis, V. A. Davis.


Privates, Francis Aicardy, John Bolivans, John Easly, John Fireman, Joseph Goodenough, John Glover, William R. Glover, Ellis Herrin, Isaac Lamb, George Melbourn, Robert G. Mouseg, George Pollard, Charles Rosenthal, J. F. Schultz, George W. Thomas, John Blevins.


Recruits, A. W. Crowder, William T. Gooch, Marshall McWaine, John W. Rice, Hardin Stromatt, Alexander Welch.


Company F.


Private, Harrison Hawkins.


Company G.


Sergeant, Alexander Elkins.


Privates, H. A. Crouk, Samuel Elkins, William M. Elkins, James McFurlow, William Nossett, James H. Robertson.


Recruits, George M. Clayborn, Jesse Davis, John Davis, Hiram M. Fisher.


FIFTIETH INFANTRY.


Recruit, William C. Boyd.


Company G. Company H.


Private, George W. Walls.


Company K.


Private, Alfred B. Hogan.


.


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HISTORY OF MACOUPIN COUNTY


FIFTY-NINTH REGIMENT.


Company I was recruited by Captain Alfred W. Ellett, of Bunker Hill, who was made brigadier general, November 1, 1862. This regiment of Illinois men was first accredited to Missouri, Illinois' quota being full, and was known as the Ninth Missouri Infantry. It did good service in the latter state. On the 12th of February, 1862, the name was changed to the Fifty-ninth Illinois In- fantry. It participated in the battle of Pea Ridge and after marching and skirm- ishing arrived at West Plains, April 28. Captain Ellett, three lieutenants and fifty men were ordered to report for duty to Colonel Charles Ellett's ram fleet. After service in Mississippi, Tennessee and Missouri, under General Jefferson C. Davis, and later, General Robert B. Mitchell, on the 3d of September it left Murfreesboro and began the westward march with Buell, arriving at Louisville, September 26. On the Ist of October it moved in pursuit of Bragg; October 7 engaged the enemy at Chaplin Hills; on the 8th it lost heavily, out of three hun- dred and sixty-one men going into action there being one hundred and thirteen killed and wounded. On the 10th it pursued the enemy and on the 14th had a skirmish at Lancaster; was in the Stone River campaign with the Army of the Cumberland and in the Tullahoma campaign during the siege of Chattanooga, and was constantly under fire of the enemy's batteries; November 23, 1863, it started on the Lookout Mountain campaign. The Third Brigade, of which the Fifty-ninth was a part, was led in the assault on the Mission Ridge by this reg- iment. January 12, 1864, it was mustered out as a veteran organizaiton. May 3d the Atlanta campaign was begun, and on the 7th it supported the attack' upon Tunnel Hill, while on the 8th the attack on Rocky Face Ridge began, which lasted until the 13th. The regiment was in action at Resaca, Adairsville, Kings- ton, Dallas, Acworth, Pine Top, Kenesaw Mountain and Smyrna Campmeeting grounds. From July 12 until August 25 it was under fire night and day before Atlanta; it fought at Lovejoy Station, and after skirmishing and doing arduous service, reached Nashville, December I. On the 15th the battle of Nashville took place. The Fifty-ninth was in the first line of the assaulting column and planted the first colors on the captured works. It lost one-third of its men in killed and wounded, this being. the last notable battle in which the regiment participated. After being on duty in various parts of the south until December 8, 1865. at New Braunfels, Texas, it was mustered out and ordered to Spring- field. Illinois, for final payment and discharge.


Company I.


Captains, Alfred W. Ellett, Charles F. Adams, James A. Beach ; first sergeant, Alfred B. Blake; sergeants, William Cleaver, John Duffee, Gilbert C. Hamilton, Richard R. Ferdon ; corporals, John T. Hanlon, John Hallam, Samuel Fisherman, James P. Donna, Reuben W. Smith, George W. Bailey. Adolph Hulsenbech ; musician, Henry C. Ferdon.


Privates, Charles C. Isaacs, Jonathan Miller, Elijah B. Mitchell, Elias Rob- erts, William Robertson, James L. Smith, Thomas M. Stockwell, James H. Sikes, William Fieman, George D. Walton.


SOLDIERS' MONUMENT, GIRARD


LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS


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HISTORY OF MACOUPIN COUNTY


Recruits, Edward W. Bartlett, William H. Cline, John V. Holland, Albert G. Huddleston, Lorenzo M. Hill, James F. Lock, James A. Mitchell, Alexander M. Marshall, William McCoy, John P. Sawyer, Tobias N. Taft, John Varble, Rich- ard Welch, William F. Warren, Daniel W. Young, Robert B. Beach, Edward C. Ellett.


SIXTY-FIRST INFANTRY. Company B.


Recruit, William Wood.


Company E.


Charles B. Atkins, William D. Albion, Joseph P. Caruth.


Company K.


Recruits, Peter C. Barlow, Price M. Jones, George F. Rutherford.


SIXTY-SECOND INFANTRY. Company B.


Recruit, Richard K. Ragan.


SIXTY-THIRD INFANTRY.


Company H.


Recruit, Nathan M. Young.


SEVENTY-NINTH INFANTRY. Company D.


First lieutenant, Isaac P. Hartsock.


NINETY-FIRST INFANTRY.


Company I.


Recruit, John F. Pearce.


Company K.


Sergeant, James W. Oats.


Privates, George Deal, John W. Maxfield.


Recruits, William Deal, William H. Robinson.


NINETY-SEVENTH INFANTRY.


This regiment was recruited principally in the counties of Madison, Cumber- land, Fayette, Jasper, Jersey, Calhoun and Macoupin. It was organized at Camp Butler, September 8, 1862, by Colonel Rutherford and was mustered out Septem- ber 16. Company A was from Macoupin county and was raised by L. D. Martin, W. H. Willard and P. H. Pentzer, at Gillespie, Bunker Hill, Staunton and vicinity. L. D. Martin was made lieutenant colonel, William H. Willard was


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HISTORY OF MACOUPIN COUNTY


made captain of Company A and P. H. Pentzer was made sergeant major of the regiment. Richard Wood was made first lieutenant and Alexander Atchison second lieutenant. The latter was killed at Vicksburg, May 22, 1863. In the spring of that year Captain Willard resigned and Lieutenant Wood became cap- tain. W. E. Best, who was sergeant major was promoted to the captaincy of Company C. Company A made an enviable record for bravery and heroism. Captain Pentzer of Company C had the color company during three years. To this company belongs the honor of having surprised and captured General F. M. Cockrell, later United States senator from Missouri.


October 3, 1862, the regiment was moved from Camp Butler to Cincinnati and assigned to A. J. Smith's Division at Louisville. On the 17th it left Louis- ville for Memphis and went into camp; left Memphis, December 20 and landed near Walnut Hill, on the Yazoo, being on the extreme right during the opera- tions on Vicksburg. When the attack was abandoned January 1, 1863, it moved to Arkansas Post and took part in the battle at that place; May Ist was engaged at Port Gibson and on the 10th fought at Champion Hills; May 19 arrived in the rear of Vicksburg, taking part in the hardships and dangers of that memorable siege until July 4, when the stronghold fell. It took part in Sherman's expe- dition to Jackson and returned to Vicksburg, where it remained until August ; it embarked on the 25th for New Orleans and went into camp at Carrollton, Louisiana. It was mustered out of service July 29, 1865, at Galveston, Texas, arriving at Camp Butler, August 13, 1865, where it received final payment and discharge.


First assistant surgeon, Constantine M. Smith; non-commissioned staff-ser- geant majors, Patrick H. Pentzer, William E. Best, William Mathie, Hugh R. Johnston ; commissary sergeant, R, R. M. McLeary.


Company A.


Captains, William H. Willard, Richard H. Wood, William E. Best; first lieu- tenants, Alexander C. Atchison, William H. Hamilton; second lieutenant, Will- iam R. Eddington; first sergeant, George W. Trask; sergeants, William H. Ham- ilton, Leander S. Bird, William R. Eddington ; corporals, Robert Kelly, William L. DeWitt, Samuel P. Bird, Hugh R. Johnson, Joseph N. Brown, Thomas M. Pentzer, Benjamin R. McLeary, George Brebner; wagoner, Robert Ewing.


Privates, George A. Apple, A. H. Barnes, Almond H. Barnes, Joseph H. Barnes, Weird Baur, George W. Barringer, William H. Brown, William E. Best, John W. Brown, Robert Brown, Charles T. Barster, Merritt L. Cox, George W. Collison, Jeremiah Dwyer, David Dickey, Elliott Giffin, John Gilles, Henry Golicke, Andrew J. Gray, Jesse Hoffman, Charles W. Johnson, Alonzo James, George W. Lee, Augustus Lisbelt, Orlena Lukin, John Lilly, John B. McPherson, Johnson McGillroy, Willis McGillwen, William H. Medlin, William Melcher, William W. McKee, Robert Miller, Jeremiah Naughton, Martin V. B. Opdyke, John Oltman, John W. Paul, Thomas Pope, James Pope, James Pore, S. M. Partridge, William Patterson, Newton Porter, Robert E. Patrick, James Robin- son, William J. Stark, Stephen Smith, James T. Squires, Ernest Shrive, Henry Spette, Robert E. Smith, Benjamin F. Smith, Thomas Swain, Perry Shouts, J.


.


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HISTORY OF MACOUPIN COUNTY


R. Stennett, William F. Savage, Joel Wheeler, Peter 'Wegand, Lewis D. T. Wood, Henry Wise, Robert H. Wallace, Samuel Watson, Mathias Wendlin.


Recruits, John Bridges, Reuben S. Bates, Elias L. Ball, John A. Chambers, William W. Clayton, Charles A. Carroll, James M. Dunn, H. J. Duncan, Jacob P. David, Andrew P. Dyer, Sebastian Elter, Boyless Forrest, William J. Holland, Martin Hollingsworth, Callard P. Hawkins, Robert H. Jones, John Jeff, James H. Jones, William Ketchum, David Morris, William Mathie, David Powers, George Powers, George D. Plumhaff, Charles A. Palmiter, William H. Powers, B. F. Sawyer, John Shrier, Asa Swain, William D. Wood, Jesse Webb.


Company C. /


Captain, Patrick H. Pentzer.


Company E.


Recruit, George W. Leach.


ONE HUNDRED AND FOURTEENTH INFANTRY.


Company B.


Private, William Griffith.


Company E.


Private, Granderson Henderson.


ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-SECOND INFANTRY.


This infantry was commanded by General Jolin I. Rinaker. All of this regiment with the exception of Company C was organized at Camp Palmer, Carlinville, August, 1862, where it was drilled for a month and mustered in September 4. About the 6th of October, 1862, the regiment was ordered to report to General Dodge at Columbus, Kentucky. It went on duty at Tren- ton, Tennessee, where Colonel Rinaker was placed in command of the post. November 12, the right wing of the regiment-Companies A, D and F-was ordered to Humboldt, Tennessee, where, with a part of the Fifty-fourth Illi- nois and Seventh Wisconsin Battery, it constituted the force on duty at that place under command of Colonel Rinaker. December 16, 1862, a large force of mounted infantry under command of the enterprising and daring rebel, General Forrest, had crossed the Tennessee river near Clifton for the purpose of tearing up the railroad and destroying the bridges between Jackson, Ten- nessee, and Columbus, Kentucky, while a cavalry force under the rebel general, Van Dorn, was moving from Murfreesboro, Tennessee, to attack and destroy the Mississippi Central Railroad from near Jackson, Tennessee, to Holly Springs, Mississippi. The design of these operations was to frustrate and prevent the movement of the Army of the Tennessee under General Grant, then moving by the inland route to capture Vicksburg. General Grant's army depended for its supplies upon the line of railroad between Columbus, Kentucky, via Jackson, Tennessee, and Holly Springs, Mississippi, and thence south as he advanced. There were at all the stations along the line of road small bodies of troops,


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HISTORY OF MACOUPIN COUNTY


most of them infantry. These detachments at any of the points were not of sufficient strength to repel an attack. General Sullivan commanded the dis- trict of Jackson, Tennessee, including the troops from the Kentucky line to- ward Columbus to Bolivar, Tennessee, and as Jackson was at the junction of the Memphis, Charleston and Mississippi Central Railroad Company's said line, on which supplies must move, and as there was a large accumulation of military stores at Jackson and as Forrest had defeated and captured the cav- alry force belonging to that district at Lexington, on the 16th of December, General Sullivan ordered all the effective troops on the line to move at once to Jackson. On the 17th Colonel Rinaker, therefore moved his command, con- sisting of the right wing of the One Hundred and Twenty-second Illinois, four companies of Fifty-fourth Illinois, and half of the Seventh Wisconsin Battery, from Humboldt to Jackson, Tennessee, where the rest of the One Hundred and Twenty-second arrived the same day. On the night of Decem- ber 27, with a part of the Thirty-ninth Iowa, Fiftieth Indiana and one-half of the Seventh Wisconsin Battery, all under Colonel Dunham, were ordered to move out from Trenton to intercept Forrest's command on its return from the vicinity of Columbus, Kentucky, to the Tennessee river. After a forced march they reached Huntingdon, Tennessee, on the night of December 29. The next day additional troops arrived and General Sullivan assumed command. Nine companies of the One Hundred and Twenty-second, with the rest of Colonel Dunham's command took the advance to intercept Forrest's command, which was moving around to the south and east of Huntingdon, seeking to avoid fighting and to recross the Tennessee river. Two days later, December 31, the battle of Parker's Cross Roads took place. The loss to the One Hundred and Twenty-second was one officer and twenty-two men killed, two officers and fifty-four men wounded. At this battle Colonel Rinaker was severely wounded. Here they captured seven pieces of artillery and five hundred prisoners. Major James F. Chapman, Captain Balfour Cowen and Lieutenant W. W. Freeman, quartermaster of the regiment, and sixty enlisted men sick in the hospital at Trenton, were captured by the enemy under General Forrest. It moved on the 17th of February, 1863, to Corinth; on the 25th was engaged at Town Creek, thence to Saulsbury in June; thence to Iuka in October, Colonel Rin- aker commanding the post at each place; thence it moved to Eastport, thence to Paducah and on the 19th of January, 1864, to Cairo. Companies E, H, and K were engaged in defending Paducah against Forrest's attack, on the 24th of March repelling three attacks on Fort Anderson. The regiment moved to Memphis and La Grange and was assigned to the First Brigade, Third Divi- sion, Sixteenth Corps, commanded by A. J. Smith. In the battle of Tupelo, on the 14th of July, the regiment lost Captain Josiah Burroughs and nine men killed and thirty-three wounded. It was engaged in the campaign in Missouri after Price; left St. Louis for Nashville and engaged in the battle of Nash- ville, December 15 and 16, capturing four pieces of artillery and a battle flag by the skirmish line, commanded by Major Chapman; February 18, 1865, em- barked for New Orleans; thence to Dauphin Island, Alabama; on the 23d moved with the fleet up Fish river to Dorley's Landing, and thence to Span- ish Fort. Colonel Rinaker was in command of the First Brigade; was en-


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HISTORY OF MACOUPIN COUNTY


gaged in the charge of the 9th on Fort Blakely, losing twenty killed and wounded. The regiment was mustered out of service. July 15 and received final payment and discharge at Camp Butler, Illinois, August 4, 1865. This was one of the best of the Illinois regiments and its colonel was breveted brigadier for meritorious service.


Colonel, John I. Rinaker, promoted brevet brigadier general, March 13, 1865; lieutenant colonel, James F. Drish; major, James E. Chapman; quar- termaster, William W. Freeman; surgeons marines, W. Seaman, William A. Knox; first assistant surgeon, John P. Mathews; chaplain, John H. Austin; non-commissioned staff, sergeant majors, John N. McMillan, James W. Gard- ner ; quartermaster sergeants, Hugh Colton, John H. Cherry, John Craggs; commissary sergeant, John C. Miller ; hospital steward, Daniel Wise; principal musicians, George Lee, James P. Lair, Martin Woods, David Coon.


Company A.


Captain, William B. Dugger; first lieutenants, Thomas G. Lofton, James M. Valentine, Arthur Comer; second lieutenants, David B. Haldennau, Bailey O. Bowden; sergeants, Milford E. Davenport, Mark Crowder, Luther Crowder, Arthur Comer ; corporals, Benwin Wedell, Henry Binds, Richard T. Phillips, George T. Jones, Charles S. Patchin, Wilson Boring, Job O. Wickersham, Jesse B. Ash; musicians, Jesse Undercofler, E. P. Penn; wagoner, George W. Morris.


Privates, Henry C. Ashbaugh, Charles D. Ashbaugh, John Q. Adams, Will- iam M. Anderson, Francis M. Byrum, Charles F. Barrack, James M. Bottom, Robert L. Berry, George N. Burington, Samuel L. Berry, John C. Baugh, Bailey O. Bowden, Harman Burdorff, Gideon B. Brown, Aaron Challicombe, Frederick Challicombe, Joseph S. Crossgrove, Adolphus Campbell, Dennis Camp- bell, August Chapino, John M. Chapman, Samuel H. Chapman, Steven B. Cole, Henry Deisel, Alexander M. Davis, John W. Davis, George Davidson, Anthony Dallas, Francis M. Etter, John S. Enos, Patrick Fitzgerald, Eli R. Friend, Chris Fricke, Frank Fricke, William H. Gephart, John R. Gowins, James H. Gulick, August Hake, Joseph B. Hill, Virgil L. Herin, Newton Har- lor, Joseph G. Henry, Joseph G. Hitchings, Andrew Jackson, William Johnson, James M. Joy, August Klannberg, Lewis Kasseskie, Daniel W. H. Killion, Al- chaner Lowry, Truston P. H. Loveless, George Lee, Jr., Dennis H. Murphy, Francis M. Manuel, James D. McReynolds, John C. Miller, Phillip Moss, John M. McMillan, Hiram Navity, William H. Otwell, E. L. Owen, Amos Pickem, John W. Piper, John Rohr, William Robinson.


Recruits, Anderson Bounds, George W. Brown, Oscar A. De Leun, Oliver W. McGinnis, Henry Opperman.


Company B.


Captain, Manoah Bostick; first lieutenant, John Harding; second lieutenant, Eli H. Davis, John I. Fletcher; first sergeant, Thomas F. Stevens; sergeants, Levi B. Smith, John White, John Fletcher, John F. Woodmansee; corporals,


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HISTORY OF MACOUPIN COUNTY


James H. Stone, Andrew J. Calahan, William Hettick, William T. Richmond, John Mize; musician, Charles Erhart ; wagoner, James W. Duncan.


Privates, Lewis W. Atteberry, Charles E. Atteberry, Hapson Arnold, John W. Butler, John Baker, Owen Butler, Perry A. Baty, John Bacon, Benjamin F. Bivin, John Croford, John Charleston, S. B. Croford, John H. Calahan, Joseph L. Crum, William Clark, William H. Dugger, James W. Drake, John Decker, George W. Edwards, George Ebert, Henry L. Evans, Newton Farris, Arthur C. Foster, James W. Greer, Henry C. Greer, James W. Gardiner, John F. Gregory, Lewis R. Holly, Benjamin F. Hedges, John Hawks, Lysander L. Hungerford, Major Jones, James T. Johnson, Robert Lynch, John Lynch, William H. Madison, James B. Morris, Calvin Neighbours, William M. Owens, Saunders P. Perry, John D. Pulliam, David W. Pinkerton, William Ridgway, William G. Roberts, Evan F. Richmond, F. W. Richardson, Stephen Rice, John W. Scott, John Schermer, James Scott, Franklin Siebert, Ezekiel Sharp, Nim- rod Sharp, Robert S. Shipley, Charles Shumway, John W. Schaning, Willis H. Thompson, Noah M. Weaver.


Recruits, Ira E. Butler, Thomas C. Butler, Thomas J. Bristow. John W. Evans, Josiah Fishback, John C. Miller, Russell J. Stoddard, A. W. Smith, William A. Smith, Erastus Thompson, Leonard J. Thompson, Maton B. Thomp- son, Robert J. Wells, George W. Wright.


Company C.


Private, Jesse Cockrell.


Company D.


Captain, Lewis P. Peebles; first lieutenants, James N. Halt, Henry C. Gooding ; second lieutenant, John F. Roach; first sergeant, John F. Roach; sergeants, John C. Peebles, Thomas P. Oliver, Edward G. Duckels, Samuel Creamer; corporals, Joseph C. Hall, William S. Harlan, William H. H. Ib- betson, John Leech, James L. Murphy, Theodore L. Leadbrook, Lucius B. Corbin, John T. Johnson ; musician, Oscar Beck.


Privates, Hobert M. Andrews, Robert F. Andrews, John Ashton. David Atteberry, John H. Barker, M. Spencer Brown, J. McKendree Brown, Joseph B. Bell, David Blackwell, Joseph M: Cloud, Fitzgerald Coleman, John Craggs, Franklin Chapman, Edmund Chapman, John F. Coonrod, Coren A. J. Cummings, John R. Cundall, John W. Crayse, Thornton Cummings, Joseph F. Cantrell, Albert Dowden, Eugene W. Delaplain, Jerome W. Delaplain, William M. De- laney, F. W. Eastwood, James M. Graham, John F. Hagler, Alfred Holmes, Isaac W. Harlan, Isaac N. Johnson, Alexander Jemison, Robert Kell, Archi- bald D. Kincaid, Timothy Loveland, George W. Lee, Jesse Litton, Aaron Lan- ning, William R. McGahey, George W. McGahey, Henry F. McNeil, A. Mof- fatt, Sebastian C. Moore, Martin V. Nivans, William H. Peters, George W. Peebles, Winfield S. Peebles, Francis F. Patterson, Henry L. Paddock, John Pugh, Ambrose Robings, William Stratton, George Sheperson, William Saw- tell, James B. Smith, Jacob Sell, William Sawyer, John W. Thomas, Austin S. Thomas, Isaac Vanaman, James H. Williams, William Winson, William A. Young.


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HISTORY OF MACOUPIN COUNTY


Recruits, James Ashton, Francis Dubreal, James A. Huston, William B. Hood, John A. Oliver, Perly A. Peebles, James Sprowel.


Company E.


Captains, Baxter Haynes, Abraham C. Hulse; first lieutenants, Benjamin V. Carey, Thornton G. Capps; second lieutenant, Dennis Springer; first ser- geant, Thornton G. Capps; sergeants, James Burlison, John M. Taylor, John A. Lee, Jacob C. Wood; corporals, Enoch S. Richards, John B. Clevenger, William B. Moore, John Swift, Daniel Chapman, John W. Young, Jonathan L. Jennings ; Musicians, James P. Lair, John W. Williams.


Privates, William J. Ashlock, Caleb Adcock, Laban C. Arnold, David M. Angelo, Joshua M. Baldwin, James W. Baldwin, Jeremiah L. Baldwin, Le Roy Brigendine, Samuel Bridges, Joseph M. Brigendine, Joseph Crawford, Jesse H. Crawford, John D. Crawford, Isaac N. Clevenger, Joshua B. Clevenger, M. B. Clevenger, Samuel Covey, William C. Carr, Lytle B. Chowning, Jesse M. Cheney, James T. Courtney, John W. Crum, Thomas H. L. Evans, A. C. England, John England, Robert Edwards, William Edwards, J. C. Grimmett, Andrew J. Hogan, John T. Horton, Layborn Hunt, Robert T. Hunt, Jefferson G. Hunt, George W. Harford, James M. Hayes, William H. Hewitt, Emanuel M. Kimball, Ezekiel Knight, James M. Laird, Samuel Laird, William B. Lloyd, John W. Laycock, James Murray, Andrew J. Myers, William M. Mclaughlin, James B. McGinnis, Samuel M. Piper, Francis Phillips, William Price, Lewis Redman, George W. Rice, Edmond Richards, Elijah G. Steeley, Dennis Springer, James W. Steeley, William T. Swift, Jesse Stennitt, William J. Stennitt, William W. Tosh, William H. Thompson, William J. Vance, Isaac N. Vance.


Recruits, James J. Adcock, J. C. Clevenger, Robert Orr, John R. Ray, John W. Richards, Stacey Thomas, Robert B. Walker.


Company F.


Captain, James S. Chiles ; second lieutenants, Duncan C. McIver, Peter Mur- phy ; first sergeant, James Sharp; sergeants, John D. Murphy, David Whittico, William H. Terry; corporals, Reuben R. Fletcher, George W. Deeds, John Ables, William T. Philpot, John Coulter, William F. Raymond, Charles T. Holman, James Anderson; musician, Lafayette T. Hall; wagoner, William C. Taylor.


Privates, Jacob B. Ashlock, William J. Bridge, Hiram O. Bridges, Charles B. Blake, Isaac Brown, Richard S. Burton, John L. Borrow, William Chad- wick, Henry Draper, Joseph Edwards, Richard Fentress, Ruffin D. Fletcher, Wiley Fanley, William Hornbuckle, Gabriel Jones, Pendleton J. Miller, Will- iam Murphy, Duncan C. McIver, Francis M. Neal, Martin Melin, Evan Odle, Lewis Rhoads, Charles Rogers, Richard B. Reamer, William A. Sherman, Francis M. Sheperd, John H. Sherman, Benjamin H. Tolbert, Luther B. Tun- nel, August Wickerman, Hiram J. Withrow, Samuel Young.


Company G.


Captain, Balfour Cowen; first lieutenants, William H. Cox, John A. Shaw; second lieutenants, Rufus W. Loud, Augustus C. Brown; first sergeants, George




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