USA > Kentucky > The Union regiments of Kentucky, Vol. 2 > Part 8
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Union Regiments of Kentucky.
Richardson, Isaac F. Coffee, Jonas Burton. CORPLS .- Thos. H. Wil- liams, Nelson T. Rice, Harrison Kelley, David Derefield, Thos. J. Sher- mon, John W. Hamon, Abide Colvin, Henry Perry. MUSICIAN-Wm. Thomas.
PRIVATES-Preston Adams, Greenville Adams, Hugh Boggs, Mar- shall Bellamy, Jilson Blanton, Milton Cooper, Isaac N. Coffee, Robert A. Chatin, John Combs, Robert Craft, Wiley Craft, Jihisa Colvin, Wm. A. Collinsworth, James Davis, John T. Dean, Henry C. Evans, Elias Fu- gett, James Faris, Alexander Frazier, Apperson Fletcher, Perry Graham, Hardin Graham, David Griffith, Merideth Griffith, Henry H. Gambill. Nathan O. Gambill, Jesse Gambill, Dial Gullett, Matthew Gullett, Wm. S. Gullett, James H. Hodge, Claborn Hicks, Martin W. Honaker, Jas. J. Hamilton, Robert Jordon, Fleming Jordon, James Kitchen, Arthur Kitchen. Nehemiah Kitchen, Henry Mckinsey, Joseph Mckinsey, Dan- iel Michaels, Milton Perkins, William Phillips, John F. Patrick, Francis M. Patrick, Elijah Patrick, Samuel Patrick, Isaac Pack, Benjamin Puck- ett, William M. Rice, Jr., David Ross. Samuel Rice, Richard Robin- son, William Robinson, George W. Row, Geo. Risner, Nathan Sparks, Granberry Sexton, John W. Stidon, Levi Tackett, William Tackett, Wil- liam Tackett, Jr., Thomas Vanhoose, James L. Wright, Asberry Waller. John M. Brown, Charles P. Bailey, Jeremiah Biggs, Isaac Dixon, George W. Green, George W. Griffith, Isaac H. Hannah, Francis Jones, Martin Myers, George Marshall, Reuben Marshall, Francis M. Risner, Wilson Risner, Levi J. Sparks, John D. Culver, Morgan Marshall.
Company "C."
CAPTAIN-Thomas D. Marcum. 1st LIEUT .- Russel T. Thompson. 2d LIEUT .- James W. Shannon. SERGTS .- Thomas J. Roberson, An- drew J. Spradlin, James Collier, Stanley Copley, Milus Dobbins. COR- PORALS-Samuel Bates, Leonard Nolen, David I. Smith, Wm. F. Rob- erson, Volentine Lahman, Joseph Mead, James Akers, James K. Nolen, Elias Boyed, Thomas Whitten.
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PRIVATES-John Adkins, Jonah Adkins, Charles Adkins, Francis M. Artrip, Greenville Arthur, Thomas Bundy, William Blevins, Nathan- iel Bates, William Black, Jehew Collins, Bennett Cox, Enoch Carter, John W. Copley, William Chafins. Charles Carr, Samuel Clark, Fred- erick Conner, Thomason B. Curnutt, George W. Davis, Andrew Demp- sey, William Endicott, Joshua Endicott, Morgan Francis, William Fran- cis, John M. George, Elihu Hicks, Jonathan Hardy, George W. Hicks, Louis Hensley, Albert Holbrook, Jacob Howard, Elisha Howard, Elijah Howard, Shadrick Hatfield, Nelson Hale. Wm. C. Harris, Ira Hamilton. Thomas Justice, Joseph Johnson, Wm. J. Johnson, James Kissinger. Joseph Kimbler, James Lamaster. Samuel Large, William Lyteral, Jno. H. Lee, Frank Lewis, Alphus Miller, Moses Pasley, John Phillips, Geo. Prater, Henry Roberson, Andrew J. Rule, Jeremiah Sammons, Flurry Sammons, William Sammons, James Sheppard, Daniel Spradlin, Jas. Spradlin, James Selvage, Samuel Smith, Geo. W. Taylor, Louis Tackett, Riley J. Underwood, William Wadkins, William Wiley, D. B. Wellman. Calvin Wellman, Ambrose Wadkins, Robert Young, Jr., Robert Young, Sr., John T. Butler, Jefferson Blevins, Greenville Ball, Effort Freeman. James Howard. James Muncy, Daniel Muncy, Milton Pennington, John W. Smith, Henry Sparks, Mason Canard, Hiram Jude, Frank Phillips. Francis Gullett, John Hicks.
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Company "D."
CAPTAIN-George F. Johnson. SERGTS .- James W. Carter, Thos. L. Prater, Lewis P. Bailey, Thomas W. Prater, Joseph Dixon. CORPLS -John P. Simer, Kels Risner, Milton Litteral, William Minix, Thomas P. Whitaker, Thomas R. Sperry, Abner C. Candle, Franklin F. Rule.
PRIVATES-Moses Adams, James F. Bailey, Alexander L. Bailey, Henderson Belvens, Levi Conly. Edward Collingsworth, Sandford R. Cooper. Alfred Cannedy, Alemanza Caldwell, William Carrell, Elisha Curnutte, Elbert Dixon, Edward Davis, James Evans, Merideth Fletcher, Moses Hoskins, Jesse Hackworth, Jackson Hensley, John Jordan, Jonas Jordan, Charles Kerbey, Fleming Litteral, Hiram F. Lambert, Chart.
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427
Fifteenth Kentucky Infantry.
i ... wis. George W. Lawson, Benjamin McWharter, Jackson Marshall, Wm. C. Marshall, Wm. Marshall, Lewis Minix, John Montgomery, Isaac Montgomery, David Morris, Martin Noe, Meredith Poe, Hugh Poe, Jas. Prater, James P. Simer, Peter Sparkes, John Travis, Robert Whitaker, Johnson Whitaker, William Whitaker, David Whitaker, Morgan C. Whitaker, James Williams, Harmon Workman, Washington Ward, Abraham Young, John D. Fannin, Abraham Gibbs, Andrew Marshall, W'm. T. Rous, John Stafford, Allen L. Howard, James Minix, Martin Thompson
Fifteenth Kentucky Infantry.
September 10, 1861, Curran Pope, George P. Jouett and W. P. Campbell, announced that they would raise a regiment. They rapidly received the requisite number of volunteers, and the regiment became the 15th Ky. In- fantry. Curran Pope was a brother of Hamilton Pope, a native of Louisville, and was a West Point graduate. He became the colonel of the regiment. One year later, he was mortally wounded at the head of his command, in the battle of Perryville, and a few days after died of his wounds at Danville. He was an accomplished officer and full of promise and distinction as a military man. George P. Jouett was a citizen of Louisville, son of the celebrated Kentucky artist, Matt Jouett. He became lieutenant- colonel, and William P. Campbell, of Louisville, was major. These two officers were also killed at Perryville. They were both nien of the highest type, and their un- timely death was greatly mourned as a severe loss to the regiment and to the service. The material of the 15th Ky. all came from Louisville and its vicinity.
Several who had been active in recruiting for this regiment were left out in the organization of fragments of companies. Among them was Alfred Pirtle, who had served in the Home Guard and afterward in other con- nections.
The regiment was organized in its camp at the fair grounds, near the city, and as soon as this was done it was ordered to duty on the Nashville railroad. For a short time it encamped at New Haven, and from thence went to Bacon Creek, where, on December 14th, it was formally mustered into the service. In February, 1862, it was in Bowling Green, immediately after the evacua- tion of that place by the Confederates. From there it proceeded to Nashville, Franklin, Mitchellville, Tenn., and to Huntsville, Ala. For about six months it was en- gaged in scouts, reconnoissances and guard duty, being in Mitchell's division, of Buell's army.
In August, 1862, it entered upon the memorable march
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Union Regiments of Kentucky.
of Buell's army from Tennessee to Louisville. Reaching Elizabethtown, Ky., it marched from that place to Louis- ville-forty-three miles-in twenty-four hours. From Louisville it marched out to Perryville. It was then in · Lytle's brigade, of Rousseau's division.
The terrible experience of the 15th Ky. at Perryville was a great shock to the people of Louisville. It was en- gaged in the severest part of the battle. The three field officers were killed, as stated, also Lieutenants McClure and McGrath, and sixty-three men. Two hundred were wounded. The steadiness of the regiment under the most trying circumstances was a subject of comment, and re- ceived mention in several reports. Gen. Rousseau's bri- gade maintained its position against repeated attacks until, in the afternoon, "an immense force of fresh troops of the enemy moving around to his right, concealed by the undulation of the ground, turned his right flank, and fell upon the right and rear of his brigade, and forced it to retire, which it did under the orders of Col. Lytle, who was at that moment wounded, as he thought fatally, and, refusing to be taken from the field, was taken prisoner by the enemy." Gen. Rousseau says: "Hearing of this condition of things, I galloped over toward the right, and found the brigade formed in line of battle, the right (the 15th Ky. Volunteers, Col. Pope) resting on the hill at Clark's house, with Loomis' battery immediately in the rear of an eminence, the 10th Ohio and the 3d Ohio, Co !. Beatty, on the left of the road. These regiments had, without support, struggled hard to hold their line of bat- tle for several hours, and were only forced to retire after immense loss and the movements of the enemy above re- ferred to." He also says: "While near the 15th Ky. I saw a heavy force of the enemy advancing upon our right, the same that had turned Lytle's right flank. It was moving steadily up in full view of where Gen. Gilbert's corps had been during the day, the left flank of which was not more than four hundred yards from it. On approaching the 15th Ky. (though broken and shattered), it rose to its feet and cheered, and as one man moved to the top of the hill, where it could see the enemy, and I ordered it to lie down." Gen. Rousseau specially compliments Maj. William P. McDowell of the 15th, who served on his staff.
Col. John Beatty of the 3d Ohio, in his report, says: "I desire to bear testimony to the gallant conduct of the 15th Ky., which fought side by side with ourselves."
For a time during the battle, the 15th encountered a terrific fire from the enemy, who had shelter behind a stone fence. The 15th at the same time had the less sub- .
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Fifteenth Kentucky Infantry.
stantial shelter of a rail fence and a barn, both of which were riddled by shells.
Maj. MeDowell, in his account of this regiment, says: "In the midst of the battle Capt. James B. Forman seized the colors and mounted the remains of the rail fence, waving them and cheering the men to continue re- sistance."
After the battle of Perryville, the regiment marched through Crab Orchard, Stanford and Lebanon to Bowling Green. There Capt. James B. Forman was made colonel in place of Col. Curran Pope. It then proceeded to Nash- ville, where it was assigned to Beatty's brigade, of Rous- seau's division, in the Army of the Cumberland, com- manded by Gen. George H. Thomas.
On the 31st of December it was engaged in the great battle of Murfreesboro, or Stone's River. Maj. McDowell says: "About 9 o'clock a. m. we came up close to the front and could see orderlies riding hurriedly hither and thither. A group of officers composed of Gen. Rousseau, with his brigade and regimental commanders, was formed immediately in front of the 15th, when all returning to their commands, we were faced to the right and moved hurriedly to the cedar forest, to stem the current of an almost irresistible storm in the cedar glades, where Gen. McCook's corps had been violently attacked, and sorely passed. Passing in rear of Gen. Sill's division, our bri- dage got into the same kind of a position as that held at Perryville, that is on the extreme right wing of the army, with the 15th on the right of the brigade. Here, with instructions to hold the enemy in check until the artillery could be gotten out of the thicket, we met the enemy and stopped for a while his triumphant charges. We held the road until the last gun and caisson had passed safely, but at a terrible cost to the 15th, for in a short half hour we lost our gallant young colonel-(James B. Foreman) shot from his horse-in the flower of his youth, being only a little past his twenty-first birthday. Eighty others were killed and wounded on that fatal day at Stone's river. Holding our position a little too long, we had to fight front, flank and rear to get back to the 14th Corps' position in the center, for the enemy had passed around our right and were enveloping us before we knew it. Long will the members of the 15th remember the appear- ance of the 'massed artillery' on the right of the turn- pike as they emerged from the woods, and never can they forget the outburst, when they got back to those guns, for the earth trembled and thousands went down in the desperate charges made against them."
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Union Regiments of Kentucky.
From the battlefield at Stone's river the regiment went to Tullahoma; there Marion C. Taylor was made colonel; Noah Cartwright, lieutenant-colonel; W. G. Helpin, major, and D. N. Sharp was made adjutant.
June, July and August, 1863, the 15th proceeded with Rosecrans' army, doing its full share of duty, and in Sep- tember was at Chickamauga. In the movements im- mediately preceding the battle of Chickamauga and in that battle the 15th was in Beatty's brigade (1st), Negley's division (2d), 14th Army Corps, Gen. Thomas. The regi- ment was commanded by Col. Marion C. Taylor. .
August 30th, the brigade left Cove Spring near Stev- enson, Ala., marched across Sand mountain by Moore's Spring, and Brown's Spring, and September 6th en- camped at MeKaig's Spring, on the north side of Look- out mountain. September 7th, the 15th marched to the summit of Lookout mountain, the enemy's cavalry re- tiring before it. September 8th, moved to Cooper's Gap; 9th, to Steven's Gap; 10th, guarded train from Steven's Gap to Chickamauga; 17th, marched to Owens' Ford ou Chickamauga creek; 18th, to Crawfish Spring.
September 19th, the battle of Chickamauga opened. It raged that day and the next. It is impossible in the present limits to describe the fighting of those two days. The 15th is mentioned many times in the reports, fighting obstinately. Gen. Beatty says: "Col. Taylor, 15th Ky., to whom an order had been given to haul off by hand two pieces of artillery, which had been abandoned, enlarged upon his instructions, and gathered five and attaching them to limbers succeeded in saving them all." In all the reports the conduct of the 15th is mentioned in the most complimentary manner. The 15th lost five killed, and forty-three wounded. On the 21st, Beatty's brigade was in line of battle on the east side of the Chattanooga road, from whence it moved to a ridge east of and near Rossville. There it was fiercely attacked, and Gen. Negley says, after a brisk engagement with artillery and musketry the enemy was checked in the Gap by Stanley's brigade and driven from the mountain crest by a gallant charge of the 15th Ky., of Gen. Beatty's brigade.
Gen. Negley bestows the highest compliments upon the officers and men of his entire division for their en- durance, fortitude, cheerful obedience and heroic conduct during the campaign.
The 15th remained at Chattanooga and was assigned to post duty. While not participating directly in the battle of Mission Ridge, November 25th, it was under orders and its colonel, Marion Taylor, went personally
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Fifteenth Kentucky Infantry.
into the battle with the division and was highly compli- mented for his service by the division commander, with whom he acted. During this battle the regiment was under command of Lieut. Col. Halpin. The 15th remained at Chattanooga during the winter, and in the spring of 1864, participated in the first movements of the Atlanta campaign. On the 2d day of May it was at Ringgold; the Sth, in front of Buzzard's Roost; the 9th, at Rocky Face; 12th, passed Snake Creek Gap; the 14th, fought at Resaca, where the regiment suffered great loss by the death of Capt. Irwin McDowell, who was killed on the enemy's works while cheering his men forward.
Capt. McDowell was a young officer of the finest capacity and promise. He was a brother of Maj. Henry C. MeDowell and Maj. Wm. P. McDowell. The sister of these noble young officers was the wife of Hon. Bland Ballard, U. S. District Judge in Kentucky. No nobler spirit was sacrificed in the war than that of Capt. Irwin McDowell.
The 15th having started with the opening of the cam- paign continued through to the end, being under com- mand of Lieut. Col. Halpin. Fighting its way with Sher- man's army through May, June, July and August, it was in all the battles until Atlanta was captured, the 15th being at that time with Gen. Sherman, at Jonesboro. The loss of the regiment in this campaign was sixty-one.
After the capture of Atlanta the 15th was with Sher- man's army until the march to the sea began in Novem- ber, 1864, when it was assigned to the command of Gen. Thomas, in Tennessee. It was stationed at Chattanooga, and October Sth was sent to Bridgeport, Ala. It re- mained there on garrison duty until December, when it was ordered to Louisville. On the 14th of January, 1865, it was mustered out of service, having served faithfully three years, three months, three weeks and three days. Of the eight hundred and eighty-eight men mustered into service in 1861, over four hundred were killed and wounded. Few regiments made such a record as the 15th; its service was hard, its losses great, its heroism complete.
Col. Taylor located in Shelbyville, Ky., after the war and practiced law. He won distinction and was greatly beloved. He died about 1871.
Adjt. D. N. Sharp located in same place, where he is & leading citizen.
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Union Regiments of Kentucky.
Field and Staff.
COLONELS-Curran Pope, James B. Forman, Marion C. Taylor. LIEUT. COLS .- Geo. P. Jouett, Joseph R. Snider, Noah Cartwright, William G. Halpin. MAJORS-William P. Campbell, Henry F. Kalfus, James S. Allen, Ahimaaz H. Chambers. ADJTS .- William P. McDowell. David N. Sharp. Q. MASTERS-Jno. W. Clarke, Woodford Hall. SUR- GEONS-Luther P. Weatherby, Richard F. Logan, Edward H. Dunn. ASST. SURGS .- Eli D. Whitaker, Ezra Woodruff. CHAPLAINS-Jere- miah J. Talbott, Wm. C. Atmore, Samuel T. Poinier. SERGT. MAJS .- George Petry, Daniel G. Spalding. Q. M. SERGT .- William M. Tilden. COM. SERGTS .- Robert O. Phelps, Henry McNeal, David N. Wilson. HOSPITAL STEWARD-Samuel E. Ratliff.
Company "A."
CAPTAINS-Marion C. Taylor, John S. Churchill. 1st LIEUTS .- Jas. A. T. McGrath, Coleman S. Daniel, Henry M. Lyle, Joseph W. Lyle. 2d LIEUTS .- Francis A. Winlock, Joseph L. Atherton. SERGTS .- Wm. H. Beatty, David N. Sharp, William E. Truman, Wm. J. Ballard, Thos. E. Wilson, John M. McGrath, James S. McConnell, William A. McCam- mon, Wm. Kelly, Robt. M. Robb. CORPLS .- Michael Maloney, Henry T. Shindler, Thomas M. Fisher, Frederick Elbert, Jas. L. Hardin, Rich- ard T. Whitaker, Barney M. Harwood, William T. Middleton, William H. Hall, John B. Carrico,, Charles Saylor, William Orchard, Henry C Sparks. WAGONER-Vincent Harris.
PRIVATES-Jas. Robert Albin, Milton Edwards, Henry V. Leffler, William T. Milton, Isaac McArten, William Saunders, John B. Shindler, Orille Branham, James Gill, Michael Leary, William Carlyle, Henry C. Daniel, John Driskel, Calvin S. Duvall, George Hickman, Samuel Al- bert, Alfred M. Baskett, Stephen Cosgrove, William C. Coulter, James Douglass, George Deering, Cyrus Finley, Thomas W. Gardner, Joel H. Hardin, Woodford Hall, Lanius Humphries, Stephen Kinkead, Chris- tian Keifer, John Marche, John H. Masonheimer, Thomas W. Miles, James C. Mills, Christopher C. Newman, Addison A. Parker, William H. Pemberton, Samuel Rule, John Sayles, Lewis E. Stout, Geo. W. Sparks, Austin Seay, John A. Warford, William A. Wood, George W. Field, Michael Moore, George Petry, Charles A. Sale, David N. Wilson, Sam- uel Welch, Henry Bremer, Lewis Bennett, Shadrack Casey, Joseph M. Donahoe, Robert Edrington, Joseph Edrington, Noah Elbert, Henry C. Field, Massina Fontaine, John Green, Edward Green, Thos. T. Good- man, Patrick Hogan, Thomas Hazelett, James Love, Augustus R. Mul- len, John H. McBride, Anselm McAhan, William O'Mullane, Wm. O'Shaughnessy, Coonrod Ritter, Henry B. Ross, John Sullivan, John A. Tucker, John S. Walton, John Jaks, Dennis McCrystal, William Mor- gan, James D. Myers.
Company "B."
CAPTAINS-Joseph R. Snider, William H. Harrison, Abraham Roth- child. 1st LIEUTS .- Benjamin H. Howser, Jas. W. Gray. 2d LIEUT .- Richard Foster. SERGTS .- Thomas Baker, John W. Meeks, James T. Mitchell, Warren Cook, James J. Hardesty, James A. Heady, Chas. D. Brown, George W. Reed, William Cook, W. H. Millen, James H. Har- rison. CORPLS .- Andrew J. Cook, James W. Harp, William T. Snider, John W. Sullivan, Caleb Hardesty, William A. Richardson, Harris Al- len. WAGONER-John S. Greer.
PRIVATES-Robert H. Baker, John D. Baker, Alexander Brown, Horatio Brown, John Cogwell, Richard M. Coombs, George W. Carpen- ter, Carroll K. Easly, John Fishback, James A. Fishback, E. D. Gra- ham, Archis Heady, Thomas Heady, Sanford Jewell, William W. Jessee, John Lanford, Isaac Lanford, James Pullum, Thomas Smithy, Benja- min F. Sheborn, James T. Searcy, James W. Steward, Joseph Tinsly, George P. Vaughn, John Whortonburg, Hector L. Busby, Jas. T. Gow- ens, Lazarus Hoffman, Wm. J. Houser, Barnett Jewell, Thomas N. Morris, 'James A. Morton, George R. Pugh, Hudson Reynolds, James L Simmit, John H. Snider, Joseph Taylor, James L. Taylor, Esquire Wi !!- iams, Cornelius F. Whitehouse, John J. Fauks, George M. Jones, John
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Fifteenth Kentucky Infantry.
I.yman. Joshua Morrow, Phillip O'Connell, Harrison J. Whitehouse, Ezra Woodrough, James F. Atkins, John Howser, Joseph Haws, Still Hrady, Richard A. Randol, Henry Ritter, Charles L. Ritter, Baley Futherland, Holland H. Skelton, Henry M. Snider, Benjamin F. Toombs, Alexander S. Toombs, Wm. H. Easly, Hamilton Easly, William W. Ramsey, William F. Stephens, John M. Ware.
Company "C."
CAPTAINS-William T. McClure, James B. Forman, Ahimaaz H. Chambers, Henry Wilson. 1st LIEUTS .- L. Frank Todd, Ezekiel S. Forman. 2d LIEUTS .- Joseph L. McClure, Robert H. Roberts. SER- GEANTS-Isaac T. Chambers, Irvin McDowell, Edward S. Duncan, John Duncan, Moses Hagan, Isaac Kaston, John R. Burch, John T. Willian, Ludwell D. Luckett. CORPLS .- Jno. Kelly, Wm. H. West, Co- lumbus Crady, Felix Crady. MUSICIAN-Sylvester Cheatham. WAG- ONER-Matthew Greenivell.
PRIVATES-James Avis, William Brown, William B. Battman, Charles M. Carden, James T. Clark, Joseph B. Cook, Joseph A. Davis, James Dever, N. M. Elliott, Uriah R. Ewing, James Eagland, John Fo- Kle, Thomas Knott, John Lafollet, John Lavey, Joseph Metcalf, George A. Prather, Richard T. Right, John B. Simms, Resin L. Smith, Harri- son Stratton, Henry H. Williams, Wm. Woods, Thomas Wright, James S. Allen, Felix Ash, Gains M. Bowlin, George W. Clark, T. Frank Crady, John Dennis, Thomas Dever, Joseph Duplain, George Ford, John W. Green, Daniel Hailey, Alfred B. Hewett, John W. Kerrick, Hiram Lin- ville, James E. Miller, Robert H. McKinney, Samuel J. Tradwell, James Elmore, Charles T. Jackson, Stephen H. Miller, John W. Noble, David Arnold, John H. Cox, Starrett Coy, Robert Campbell, Miles Castor, Co- lumbus Dever, James H. Drury, Seth Duncan, James R. Heaton, John W. Shackleford, Richard E. Ward, William D. Willian, J. Miles Bradley, William Crady, John H. Clarkston, William Eagland, Patrick Kegan, John McMahon, Joseph Wood, Samuel C. Able, Charles H. Corne, Mar- tin Faha, Henry C. Gilky, John Johnson, Morgan H. Jones, Henry A. Ptinget, George W. Smith, Clark Stackhouse, James H. Spalding, Rob- ert Thompson.
Company "D."
CAPTAINS-Henry F. Kalfus, John B. McDowell, John L. Foster. Ist LIEUTS .- John V. Thompson, Wm. H. Brooks. SERGTS .- Frank- lin HI. Foster, William Hill, Charles M. Maydwell, George W. Brooks, William Jacobs, Benjamin F. Tolston, Robert O. Phelps, Edward C. Caldwell. CORPLS .- James L. Ludwick, John E. Johnson, Thomas S. Sims, Hardin Moore, Benjamin F. Foster, George W. Jacobs, Joseph Ros- tetter, Reuben Ratcliff, Francis Younger, Wm. Ballew. WAGONER- Joseph Collier. MUSICIAN-Alfred Hewey.
PRIVATES-Charles Albording, Wesley R. Brooks, Alexander Crist, John R. Chaddic, Henry Dereme, John W. Felker, Benjamin Garrett, William Glassgow, Anthony C. Hornback, John J. Jackson, Nathaniel Johnson, Wm. W. McDowell, William McMurry, Walter Middleton, Mich- av! O'Donnell, Paul Richards, William P. Routt, William Roby, William Smith, William H. Shepherd, Henry Styer, John Stel, George W. Turn- bow, Jno. Welch, David J. Williams, Fred Walter, David Bradford, Geo. W. Colwell, John H. Foster, Samuel W. Foster, Thomas A. Hill, Rob- ort Howard, Samuel Howard, William H. Mayfield, Alphonzo A. Mar- Lin, Benjamin Newton, Richard E. Quick, John Ratcliff, Washington Simpson, Samuel Shepherd, John H. Howard, John H. Hornback, Sam- uel Sutterfield, Bartholomew Powell, Perry Ash, James L. Connell, Wm. Eckert, Patrick Garvey, John Gorey, John R. Jett, Lorenzo G. Murphy, Patrick Mahar, John S. Newton, Philip J. Phelps, Jacob Ratcliff, Wm. Schoptaw, Lewis C. Brooks, William L. Bolton, Jos: L. Barnett, Charles Dewberry, Martin Flynn, Wm. J. Mayfield, John Schopstain, William T. Simpson, William Farrell, Thomas H. Levette.
Company "E."
CAPTAINS-Noah Cartwright, Charles L. Easum. 1st LIEUTS .- John B. Wood, Richard F. Shafar. 2d LIEUT .- Harrison Hikes. SER-
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Union Regiments of Kentucky
GEANTS-Andrew Kidd, Lawrence Kelly, Cyrus P. Beatty, Alfred Davis, John Kiser, George H. Fishback, Jos. Rush, William J. Shake. CORPLS .- James Mathews, William H. Miller, Edward Earl, James Wise, Leslie Burr. Lee M. Alvis, James H. Fields, Thomas J. Omer, Benjamin Pennington. MUSICIANS-William French, George Wilker- son. WAGONER-William L. Cunningham.
PRIVATES-John George Beck, Conrad Bullock, John Burke, Wmn. Burke, Christopher Billing, James Black. John W. Cummins, Constan- tine Crugler, John Cunningham, Jolin Caufman, Jacob Denton, Charles Engle, Reuben Furguson, John Furguson, George I. Fields, Alexander Grigsby, Robert Hicks, James King, James Lawson, Walton McNally, John O'Brien, Fred Plumb, William Ray, John E. Stockton, John Snite- miller, Matt. Snyder, John Stanton, Joseph Vaughn, Jerry Williams. Matthew J. Cockerel, Samuel M. Dorsey, Joseph Fogle, John Lawsman, James McGarvey, Charles L. Maddox, William D. Malott, George Me- tern, Mike O'Dey, Hiram Potts, Allen J. Parson, Louis Roth, Frank Rouke, John Roush, Thomas Rooney, Edwin Sweeney, William Wing. Philip Zubrod, William Allen, Rufus Aimons, Thomas J. Chilton, Rob- ert Bishop, Robert Kyle, Philomon Olds, William S. Powell, John Pat- terson, Joseph Snyder, Robert W. Taylor, Charles Barnett, Reuben Frederick, Thomas Lyden, Thomas J. Metts. James W. Engle, Jacob F. Winstead, Frederick Kobeg, James Rady, Thomas Abrams, William Ca- hill, John Delaney, Hugh McEwen, James Swencher.
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