The Union regiments of Kentucky, Vol. I, Part 38

Author: Union Soldiers and Sailors Monument Association, Louisville, Ky; Speed, Thos. (Thomas), 1841-1906; Pirtle, Alfred, 1837-; Kelly, R. M. (Robert Morrow), b. 1836
Publication date: 1897
Publisher: Louisville, Courier-journal job printing co.
Number of Pages: 768


USA > Kentucky > The Union regiments of Kentucky, Vol. I > Part 38


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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The regiment left Snodgrass Till, where the rebel forces were finally checked on the 20th, after dark, with the division, and fell back to Rossville, and the night afterward to Chattanooga, the 4th bringing up the rear. The regiment went into action with nineteen officers and three hundred and sixty men for duty, and lost thirteen officers wounded, and one hundred and sixty enlisted men killed and wounded. Took part in the action of Missionary Ridge, ascending the hill on the extreme left of the Army of the Cumberland, losing only twelve in killed and wounded. Col. Croxton had been wounded at Chicka- mauga, and Col. Phelps, 38th Ohio, a regiment recently added to the brigade, commanded the brigade at Mission- ary Ridge. Col. Phelps was killed just after reaching the top of the hill. Col. Croxton, just returned from the hos- pital, accompanied the brigade, but would not assume com- mand and was again wounded at foot of the hill, and had to return to hospital, and Col. Hays, 10th Ky., assumed command of the brigade. Gen. A. Baird was in command of the division, Gen. Brannan having been made chief of artillery. Capt. Geo. M. Jackson, Company E, who had resigned by reason of ill health the year before, visited the regiment just before the battle, and when it was ordered into action took a musket and fell in with his old com- pany and fought gallantly throughout the engagement.


Early in January the regiment re-enlisted, and, on the 19th, returned to Kentucky on veteran furlough.


A pleasing incident during the siege of Chattanooga was the presentation to Gen. Thomas, then commanding the Army of the Cumberland, of a sword ordered by the enlisted men while at Triune, at a cost of $1,500. No officer was allowed to contribute. When the sword was


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received at Chattanooga, many of the contributors were dead. Gen. Thomas rode down to the regiment, which was in close column by division, the sword was presented by Q. M. Sergt. W. R. Williams in a neat speech, to which Gen. Thomas briefly replied and the ceremony was over. In Gen. Price's portrait of Gen. Thomas the belt shown is the one belonging to the sword then presented.


At the end of the thirty-day-veteran furlough, the regiment rendezvoused at Camp Nelson, within ten miles of where it originally enlisted. It got orders to recruit and be mounted, moved to the suburbs of Lexington, where a large command of one year regiments, whose terms were about to expire, was encamped. Authority was obtained to recruit among them; they were very ready to re-enlist for a longer time, particularly in a mounted regi- ment, and a large number of recruits of excellent charac- ter were speedily obtained; a full company had been ob- tained at Camp Nelson, which absorbed Company II, then much reduced. Horses were bought at Lexington, by inspectors chosen by Col. Croxton, and a fine mount ob- tained.


While the regiment was at Lexington, Lieut. Col. Hunt, whose Chickamauga wound had permanently dis- abled him, resigned. Maj. Kelly was made lieutenant- colonel, and Capt. Tompkins, Company E, promoted to major. May 16th the regiment marched to the front, with twenty-five officers and about five hundred and fifty well mounted men for duty, and armed, except Companies A and K, which had Spencer carbines, with the Ballard breech loading rifle, which proved a failure in the first engagement. Maj. Tompkins, with a recruiting detail, was left in Lexington. The regiment marched by way of Nashville to Chattanooga arriving early in June. Leaving Chattanooga, it camped about ten miles from Lafayette, Ga. At reveille, two cavalry soldiers were brought in by the pickets, and reported that Col. Wat- kins, with a detachment of four hundred men of his bri- gade, consisting of the 4th, 6th and 7th Ky. Cavalry regiments had been attacked, before day, by Gen. Pillow with a large force and was holding the courthouse and jail. Col. Croxton immediately ordered the regiment to mount and leaving a company to guard the train started on a gallop for Lafayette. Watkins' gallant men had apparently spoiled Pillow's appetite for fighting, for his command immediately began to give way before the at- tack of Croxton, and were soon in disorderly flight, leav- ing a large number of killed and wounded. Watkin's command had made a gallant defense, but were without


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water and nearly out of. ammunition and would have been compelled to surrender but for the fortunate ap- pearance of the 4th Ky. Infantry. The regiment lost only a few men wounded. Pillow was pursued some miles to- ward Sommerville, and then the march to the front was resumed. The regiment was detained, in Villanow Valley and at Snake Creek Gap, for some weeks under orders to protect the railroad, and had several slight skirmishes with raiding parties. Then joined the army advancing on Atlanta, and had a sharp skirmish, with slight loss, at Mason's church; was attached to 1st Brigade, 1st Divi- sion, Cavalry Corps, and Col. Croxton was assigned to command the brigade consisting of the 1st E. Tenn., Sth Iowa and 4th Ky. Mounted Infantry, Gen. Ed. McCook commanding the division. Late in July, marched with the division on a raid against the railroads south of At- lanta, McCook's division starting from the right of the army and Stoneman's from the left. Crossing the Chatta- hoochee, the railroad was destroyed near Newnan, a large wagon pack train captured and destroyed and several hundred prisoners taken, and then the Macon road de- stroved, near Lovejoy's Station. Delay there for Stone- man brought Wheeler's rebel cavalry and a brigade of infantry from Atlanta, and the return commenced. Crox- ton's brigade brought up the rear of the division, and the 4th Ky. the rear of the brigade, and suffered severely near Lovejoys. Marched all night and at daylight next morning, while holding the rear, was attacked by over- whelming forces and Lieut. Col. Kelly and nearly half the regiment captured. The balance broke through and caught up with the rest of the brigade, near Newnan, where another sharp action was had and the command driven. After reaching camp, after the raid, Croxton with his brigade was ordered to Tennessee, where the 4th participated in the campaign against Forrest, having a sharp skirmish with loss, at Pulaski; regiment then com- manded by Maj. Tompkins. Lieut. Col. Kelly rejoined the regiment at Pulaski. In the meantime Col. Croxton had been made brigadier-general; Kelly, colonel, and Tompkins, lieutenant-colonel. Capt. J. I. Hudnall was commissioned major, but declined to accept and was mustered out for expiration of service and Capt. J. W. Jacob, Company A, was made major.


The brigade, the 4th Ky. accompanying it, was ordered to the vicinity of Florence, to observe Hood's advance. When Hood crossed the Tennessee, there was a sharp fight at Shoal Creek, in which the 4th Ky. held a position en- abling the command and artillery to fall back safely. In


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this action Adjt. Schable and Lieut. Hoch were badly wounded. The trains were sent back and seen no more till Nashville was reached. Croxton's brigade, in which the 2d Mich. had taken its place, fell back before Hood's advance, having frequent skirmishes and took part in the cavalry fight on the left at Franklin sustaining a slight loss. The regiment moved with the cavalry in the battle before Nashville, and took part in the pursuit of Hood and went into winter quarters at Waterloo, Alabama.


During that winter, recruits and detached men and prisoners rejoined, and veterans from the 6th, 8th and 10th regiments were assigned to the 4th and the 2d Iowa Cavalry, which was about to be mustered out, turned over their Spencer carbines to the 4th and completely armed it. About March 22d the regiment started with Gen. Wilson on the greatest cavalry campaign of the war. The 6th Ky. Cavalry had been added to the brigade in place of the 1st Tenn. On reaching Elyton, near Birmingham, Ala., Croxton was ordered to proceed to Tuscaloosa, to break up some Confederate supply factories there. The 4th Ky. was guarding the wagon trains that day, and had to leave one company, K, with the train and was a day behind in following the brigade. Near Tuscaloosa the brigade encountered Chalmer's division of Forrest's command, marching to head off Wilson. Croxton re- treated north toward the Black Warrior, and the 4th Ky., duly warned, cut across and intercepted him. The Tuscaloosa garrison had been advised that Croxton had been scattered through the mountains, but the brigade swam the Black Warrior, marched down its north side, capturing the bridge at Tuscaloosa in a night attack.


Croxton had been given discretion to get out as he could, and, after finding that the state of the rivers would prevent him from reaching Mobile, concluded to start for Vicksburg. After getting a short distance across the Mississippi line he met an equal or superior force, and after a sharp fight returned to the vicinity of Tuscaloosa, and after a day or two of rest concluded he could catch up with Wilson by taking a straight line for Augusta, Ga. The country was rough and well watered, streams were high and many were crossed by swimming. The 4th Ky. captured the ferry over the Coosa, after a skirmish, and had a skirmish in approaching Tallapoosa, Ala., and helped in the capture of the conscript camp at Blue Mt., possibly the last fight of the war.


The command proceeded, via Newnan to Griffin, 'Ga., on the Atlanta & Macon road, where Croxton found an engine and went to Macon and surprised Gen. Wilson,


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who had supposed him back in Tennessee, by reporting to him. The regiment removed to Macon, and after some marching in pursuit of the fugitive President of the Con- federacy, remained in camp at Macon, till August 17th, when it was mustered out and ordered to Louisville for final discharge.


The 4th Ky. Infantry served something over four years. Proud of its record, it never changed its organization to the 4th Ky. Veteran Infantry. It was never on post duty and never on detached duty, but always actively in the field. When the different army corps began to take emblems, the 14th Corps took the acorn. That was a rem- iniscence of Camp Dick Robinson, where the Bluegrass boys of the 4th began in the fall to joke the mountain boys of the 3d and 7th about the ripeness and abundance of the oak mast, and those regiments began to call them- selves acorn regiments. The 4th Ky. Infantry, first and last, had more men in it than any other Kentucky regi- ment-it never failed to receive the commendation of its commanders. Every officer holding a commission at date of'muster out, except the colonel and lieutenant-colonel, had risen from the ranks.


Field and Staff.


COLONELS-Speed S. Fry, John T. Croxton, Robert M. Kelly. LT. COLS .- P. Burgess Hunt, Josephus H. Tompkins. MAJOR-Joshua W. Jacobs. ADJTS .- William Goodloe, Charles V. Ray, Charles T. Schable. Q. MASTERS-Michael B. Hope, Minor C. Humston, James R. White. SURGS .- Stephen L. Burdett, Matthew H. Young. ASST. SURG .- Har- rison Phillips. CHAPLAINS-John W. Jacobs, John R. Eades .- SER- GEANT-MAJORS-George H. Patten, Samuel G. Hillis. HOSPITAL STEWARD-Jno. W. McKellup. Q. M. SERGT .- Charles MeLaughlin. PRINCIPAL MUSICIAN-Jas. H. Rollins. 2d PRINCIPAL MUSICIAN -Lewis P. Barbee.


Company "A."


CAPTAINS-Wellington Harlan, William W. Sanders, Joshua W. Ja- cobs. 1st LIEUTS .- James H. Linney, Chas. T. Schable. 2d LIEUTS .- Sidney M. Wiehl, Thomas P. Young. SERGTS .- Joseph J. Landrum. Andrew J. Sinkhorn, Washington Hollen. Joshua H. Tye, Lewis C. Hal- ligan, Geo. S. Covey, Jeremiah O. More, Wilber S. Sinkhorn. William C. Crozier, Emory R. Harrington. Boyle O. Rodes, Alfred S. Stewart. Henry Teney, Louis Gratzmiller. Theofilus F. Sebastian. Humphrey Hyde. CORPLS .- Wm. C. Lutes. James W. Embs, Wm. Townsend, Jno. A. Hollen, Wm. H. Crum, James N. Arthur. Arrington L. Reed, Squire B. Johnson, Lewis P. Barbee. Wm. F. Hoch, Henry B. Stan- wood. William W. Tompkins, James Kenney, Charles Murphy. MUSI- CIAN-Samuel B. Tate.


PRIVATES-James G. Begley. Richard J. Barnes, Calloway Bow- man, Greenberry Bowman, James H. Baker, Peter Bennett. Joel Brad- ley, May Bradley. Benjamin T. Bruner, James F. Baker. Mastin Bond. Jno. G. Burns, Michael Buttar. Milton Brown, Aaron H. Cooley, James T. Clarck, Geo. W. Colter, Wm. Cornelius. Wm. J. Childers. Marshall Crawford, Braxton D. Cox, Geo. E. Clymer. Amos Davis, Elihu Derbin. John Doke, James Doyle, Jno. H. Evens. Thomas Furguson. Thomas W. Grubbs. Peter Grubbs, Seymour H. Gould, Jno. B. Holmes. Curtis S.


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Holland, Benjamin F. Hudson, Thomas W. Hope, Michael Hazen, Ben- jamin Houpt, James W. Ingrum, William Johnson, George W. Johnson, David Jameson, Wm. Kays, Drury Kays, James Magee, Henry C. Ma- han, James L. Moss, Geo. W. Montgomery, Oscar Oldham, Franklin ()'Neal, Blueford Pucket, Hiram Patrick, Samuel Phillips, James R. Russell, Daniel B. Royalty, Wm. Richards, Geo. W. Ratcliff, Samuel S. Shears, Francis M. Sanders, Thomas Stevens, Elijah Smallwood, Thos. Spurlock, Squire R. Street, Jno. M. Southard, Thos. G. Spears, Lewis Smith, Joseph Smith, William B. Townsend, Letcher Wayes, Hezekiah Young. Benj. T. Zimmerman, William Abbott, Michael Burns, William T. Beddow, John Brew, Demarcus Berger, Thos. C. Ball, James Bustell, John Cassidy, David Cravins, James Dimpsey, Joseph Dunn, Joseph Eckly, Russell B. Figg, Henry Firman, James George, Jno. V. Herran, Thos. B. Hart, Isaac Johnson, Peter Kewin, Chas. T. Linney, Charles Myer, Jesse Marity, James Marmion, Wm. A. Mink, John Nihill, Geo. Pope, Jno. D. Reynolds, Frederick G. Shaw, Michael Sanders, Thos. J. Shindlebower, Nathaniel Southards, John Shaw, Jno. M. Sweeney, Eu- gene Sullivan, Clinton Sparks, Riander Thomas, Henry Tutt, Edward N. Vaughan, Geo. W. Wells, Chas. E. Kinsey, Godfried Lux, Patrick Christerfer, John Doolan, John Farril, James Haligan, Silas Hawkins, Daniel S. Jones, William Jones, James M. Leathers, Martin Madon, Michael G. Russell, Oliver J. Shettle, Geo. Stealey, Ezekiel Stewart, Levi Tespin, Robert H. Taylor, Alexander H. Yates, Joseph C. Cooper, Jno. T. Craig, Jas. M. Courtney, Edward Curbey, Wm. Davidson, Geo. W. Felgar, Geo. W. Gray, Franklin Geagler, Simon Gilders, Thos. W. S. Holland, Wm. H. Haynes, David A. Haynes. Peter Lawless, Chas. M. Lock, Ulrick F. Mckinney, Wm. F. Barker, Chas. H. Smith, Jesse Smith, Francis Townsend, Geo. J. Wilson, John W. West, Chas S. Vaughan.


Company " B."


CAPTAINS-Peter J. Hiatt, Jas. A. Vaughan, Emory R. Harring- ton, Lewis B. Lancaster. 1st LIEUTS .- Mason C. Miller, G. D. Hunt, Michael B. Hope. 2d LIEUTS .- James M. Hall, Henry B. Stanwood, James M. Duke. SERGTS .- Wm. K. Thomas, David H. Butts, James Burk, John W. Eager, Win. M. Adams, John P. Richardson, Calvin Houk, Colby Hase, Timothy Ham, William B. Jones, Jas. Cox. COR- PORALS-Jno. French, Joshua Golden, Robert G. Ramsey, Ambrose Logsdon, Martin B. DeBaun, Lewis C. Gabbard, Wm. E. Whitinghill, Godfrey Isaacs, James Renfrow, John M. Thompson, Frederick Walden, Richard P. L. Noke.


PRIVATES-Chas. B. Adkins, John Allen, Wm. H. Bustell, Howard N. Burgess, Geo. W. Bradley, Joseph J. Byers, Charles H. Brown, Geo. C. Boggs, Lewis S. Cutsinger, John R. Cravens, David Cloyed, Garland Carlan, Samuel Dalton, James Davis, Robert B. Daugherty, William K. Denton, John T. Fulk, Samuel J. Faulkner, Peter B. Gabbard, Able Gab- bard, Jasper Gray, John W. Gilbert, Stephen A. Good, H. Greenwood, Sidney B. Hamilton, Theophilus Hibbard, Wilda Highly, William Hall, George W. Hughes, Samuel A. Ham. James Huffman, Wm. W. Hendren, Calvin Harpe, Robert B. Harris, Wm. S. Ingram, Samuel Judd, Frank- lin Johnston, James P. Kennedy, Wilkins Kelly, George Key, William L. Long, Thomas J. McQueen, Newton Moor, Hugh Morton, James Mc- Cormack, Jerry P. Onstott, Charles H. Oggsdon, John Pursell, William Pirce, Isaac Pirce, Joel Pitman, James Rise. Wm. L. Rise, Thomas Rob- Inson, Andy Roberts, George Roberts, John Sigman, Isaac S. Suttles, George B. Seymour, Mathew Simmons, John M. Sanford, Josiah L. Smith, Elisha Taylor, John Waldredg, Thos. D. Walker, John W. Wise, Prim Williams, Thos. J. Whitinghill, Alfred Whitt, Calvin Whitt, Wm. Young, Dawson Bowles, Richard L. Bradshaw, Edmund A. Brown, Sam- uel B. Combs, James T. Cutsinger. Benj. F. Christman, Joseph Gipson, William H. Jones, Benjamin Lunts, Abraham Miller, Benagy McClea- ron. Jonas Pitman, Robert Riddle, Isaac Roberts, Walter B. Smith, Wm. B. Smith, Davis Smith, Leonard Scarbrough, William T. Woods, Wm. Green, Daniel Albright, James Bustell, Joseph Hunter, John Halard, William A. Mink, John W. F. Miller, John M. Suthard, Nathaniel Suth- ard, Nathaniel Bustell, William R. Baird, Bird Dowell, Reuben' Hase,


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John Miller, Irah Miller, George Montgomery, Rufus N. Morgan, Mil- ton Parsons, Joseph Price, George W. Parsons, Jas. H. Renfrow. John Suthard, William Smith, James Thomas, Wm. Whitiker, Joshua Brock. James Bunch, James Brown, Samuel M. Brown, George Brown, Alphus Copland, William T. Cambell, Anderson Daws, Andrew B. Dobson, Thomas H. Dunivan, William Foster, Jeremiah Hurburt, Jas. M. Hos, Eli Montgomery, Jacob Myers, Hamilton Mears, George Phillips, Jas. Ross, James M. Renfrow, Lewis L. Stewart, Melvin Sims, John W. Stafford, Ephraim Simpson, George Weaver, Thomas Wilson, Alexan- der Ward.


Company "C."


CAPTAINS-John L. Williams, Luther Jenkins. 1st LIEUTS .-- Robert T. Williams, Granville C. West, George F. Rowland. 2d LIEUTS. -John W. Lewis, Edward M. Anderson. SERGTS .- James T. Watkins. John B. Vaughter, John Carey, Allen Spencer, George W. Rasner, Al-x- ander Spencer, Edward M. Anderson, John Birt, Edward Carey, Joseph Dunn, Isaac Myres, John McGrath. CORPLS .- George W. Rasor, Thos. Bowlin, James R. Gregory, George W. Jewell, William H. Mays, Will- iam E. Grayson, Thomas J. Potts, Hiram Bowlin, Granville C. Clark .. James B. Dooley, John B. Kimbrel, James F. Lee, William F. Mavity. Jesse Mavity, Jeremiah Halpin. MUSICIANS-Patrick Brodrick, Jas. H. Rollins.


PRIVATES-Benjamin F. Atchison, Elijah Abner, Henry Anderson. Wiley F. Agnew, Henry Brewer, Martin Bailey, Thomas Baird, John Burnett, William N. Blythe, Daniel Cain, John Click, John Centers, Jos. Clark, John Deaton, William E. Dycus, William M. Eastes, Daniel Ed- wards, Henry Gillen, James Hopkins, Charles Higden, Fielding Hanks. Benjamin M. Hornback, John Harsman, Louis Hoch, Christopher Hisel. Andrew Jackson, William H. Jarvis, James Johnson, 1st. James John- son, 2d, Benjamin F. Jones. John D. Jamerson, Richard M. King, Will- iam H. Keith, George W. Knox, Henry Knox, George W. Kimbrel, Pat- rick Laler, Elisha C. Lucas, William C. Lamb, Isaac T. Lamb, John R. McCollom, Robert McCartney, William McGlossin, Westley, H. Murphy, John Murry. James H. Morrison, Alexander Messer, Sidney Muncy, Jas. McGlaughlin, Allen Nealis, Middleton Neal, William H. Neal, Ferdi- nand Priester, Henry Reffit, John A. Stilwell, John See, Wiley Stice, James Strange, James F. Stewart, James A. Stewart, Henry T. Shouse, James Smith, William O. Sells, Henry C. Turner, William Thompson, Robert Willoughby, Jackson Wireman, Uriah Wietle, Mason Anglen, Absalom Bowling, Richard Beaty, Travis, Brown, James M. Cross, John Chasteen, Philip D. Clark. Jas. Cahill, Henry W. Cuisacc, John W. Fisher, Joshua Grayson, Wm. R. Hedges, Wm. Hensley, Jonathan L. King, Joshua Perkins, John H. Rasor, James W. Ingraham, James F. Muncy, Thomas J. McEntire, Wade Willoughby, John A. Adams, Mich- ael Aegon, John W. Bailey, Elijah Couchright, Miness Cox. Solomon Cox, John Dipple, Albert H. Dyer, Isaac S. Downs, Patrick Dorsey, Jno. W. Fisher, James Graham, Patrick Galigher, Abraham Ingraham, John Ingraham, James Ingraham, Hugh Johnson, Milton Kring, Joshua Kring, Benjamin F. Kinney, James Kidwell, Jno. W. King. Jno. Mc- Glothen, Joseph McGlossen. Harrison Otis, Jno. W. Powell, James Rol- lins, David J. Reynolds. Enoch Rice, Jno. B. Smith, Thomas Shults, Nixon Willoughby, James S. Willoughby, Benjamin Willoughby, John R. Whaley, Harden Asbill, Robert Anderson, Daniel Bell, Alexander Bradshaw, Wm. Dailey, William Freeman, James H. Harris, Thomas Hicks, Wm. H. Hatton, Geo. F. Isleman, Geo. Johnson, Reuben Kirby, John Keller, Benj. F. Kirtley. George W. Lee, Thomas Leonard, Peter Lee, 'Albert Mosier, John Martin, John Mahan, Patrick McGuire, Frank Smith, Wm. Spalding, James M. Stancil, Levi Vials, Jno. L. M. Wil- cox, Geo. W. Yocum.


Company "D."


CAPTAINS-James J. Hudnall, Jno. A. Roberts. 1st LIEUTS .- Nicholas M. Kelly. Charles V. Ray, Geo. H. Patten. 2d LIEUTS .- Chas. T. Swope. SERGTS .- Alonzo Lokey, James T. J. Hazelrigg, Charles T. Daniel, Geo. F. Edwards, Thomas T. Patten, Wm. M. Goshorn, Wm. S. Simpson. Samuel A. Carr. John M. Mclaughlin, Wm. R. Williams, Jas.


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S. Gillepie. CORPLS .- Daniel Maher, Asbery Dance, Michael Ken- ney, James T. Lowrey, Francis E. Coats, Jno. W. Harrison, Wm. S. Thacker, Sidney M. Goshorn, Wm. H. H. Wilson, James L. Bohannon, George E. Gault, James A. Troutman, Thomas W. West. WAGONER .- James Chipley. MUSICIAN-Daniel B. Murray.


PRIVATES-Robt. Abercrombie, Jas. Abercrombie, Wm. H. Adams, Harrison Bell, James M. Bruke, James Bowling, Michael Casher, Jas. J. Coppage, Richard B. Davis, Elijah Denny, Evin Daley, Henry C. Davis, James Dugan, John Eatmer, Marion Edwards, Justin Evallde, Chas. Fisher, Francis Flerka, Benjamin Fisher, Geo. Gray, Alvis Gray, Jesse V. Gray, James Gollher, Robert Gullett, Chas. T. Hawkins, Alex- ander F. Hays, Ira D. Hall, William Hunt, John Hays, Litttleton Horn, John Keller, Paris E. Morgan, Hiram Moore, Wiley Murrell, Wm. R. Marshall, Wm. Miles, Arthur H. Mosely, O. Mullins, Timothy McCar- thy, Nathan Marcum, Abner McQueen, Lee Nelson, Napoleon B. Nix, Hiram Neal, Jefferson T. O'Daniel, James Philloon, Crittenden Rhodes, Brenster L. Remby, Wm. H. Reed, Wm. D. Summers, Martin B. Sim- mons, Richard Spindler, Abraham Stratten, Jonathan Stokly, Zacha- riah Tomlin, Samuel Tucker, George E. Turner, Eli Vance, William Wagner, Benjamin F. Walker, Perry Wells, Green G. Wells, Hiram Whitting, Coleman A. Wilson, Nathan Williams, Elias Wooten, Peter Webster, Robert Bradford, Henry C. Brothess, Elisha Bailey, Wm. J. Baker, Rice W. Denny, Wm. O. Dunaway, William Gannon, Daniel J. Haley. Edward Hughes, Thomas W. Hart. Marcu T. Kimes, Nicholas Neith, David Konshaky, Jas. M. Madden, Hiram Marcum, G. W. Printy, Geo. W. Rea, Amos A. Race, Henry C. Shouse, Geo. M. Stevenson, John Wilson, John James, Allen K. Storm, Joseph Stich, George W. Wolling- ford, Isaac Brooking, Colledge Collins Bellew, Benjamin F. Bishop, Wm. H. Culbertson, Daniel Cockran, Thomas J. Crump, Robert P. Conrad, Norman Downard, Joseph J. Fowler, Milo M. Goshorn, Wm. C. Howell, John W. Herndon, Eli T. Ingram, Harry Lawrence, John M. McLain, Jonathan S. Myers, Lafayette Morgan, Randall M. Olinger, Henry D. Potts, W'm. K. Spraggens, Thomas Stark, Benjamin F. Stark, Harvey Tomlin, Michael Thorp, William Wicks, George W. Whaley, Thomas D. Blake, John W. Bennett, John Connell, Charles P. Dednily, Hamton E. Doherty, Thomas J. Fry, Henry K. Fleming, Henry W. Inse, Wm. C. Imptoe, James Kelley, John Lair, James T. Lindsay, John T. Overly, Benj. H. Pruitt, Andrew J. Poff, Richard Polley, Dennis Reynolds, Warren B. Shields, Dewit C. Stevens. Josiah Strickly, Jno. M. Snow. John Tomlin, Jno. W. West, Jno. L. Wilson, Cyrus White.


Company " E."


CAPTAINS-Geo. M. Jackson, Nathaniel L. Turner, Jas. A. Moores. Ist LIEUTS .- Isaac N. Jacobs, Archibald Moores. 2d LIEUT .- James A. Moores. SERGTS .- Geo. W. Kimbreil, David D. Potts, Wm. S. Hil- ton, James A. Sewell, John T. Henderson, William R. Williams, James Beryman, William M. Stewart, John W. Scrivener. CORPLS .- James McAdams, Jno. P. Wages, John P. Brinegar, Wilson Carpenter, Wm. Pettit, Miner C. Humpston, Joseph Ecley, William M. Scrivener, Laex- ander Dunahoo, Montgomery Wisemon, Dawson Petticord.


PRIVATES-James Akeman, James P. Anderson, Marcus Burgher, Moses M. Brewer, James Brewer, Anthony Blemer, Herman Hushman, Henry Clarke, Wm. R. Coyle, Robt. H. Cooper, Jas. S. Cooper, Andrew J Fowler, Marcus Gray, Joseph Graham, Patrick Griffin, Henry Guill, Henry Gipson, Green B. Garrett, Benjamin Hunt, Jno. W. Hall, Harri- son Hernendon, Jas. Ham, Wm. H. Jones, Henry Kimbrill, Wiley Kim- brill, James S. Lynch, Edward Lynch, Wm. H. Logsden, Joseph Lake, Henry A. Leonard, Chas. Long, John Land, William Millian, William McIntosh, Richard Moberly, Harden Moore. Richard T. McKiney, Ben- Jamin F. McIntosh, George Moberly, Benjamin F. Owsley, Solomon Os- burn. John H. Potts, James Pope, Abraham Powell, James P. Rawlins. Green R. Reynolds, William N. Richardson, Eli Sparks, Perry Skinner, Jonathan Scarbrough, Adam Shepard, John Selby, Wm Shearer, Robert Stewart, James Scanelin, James Spencer, George W. Slinker, Joseph Awarled, Benjamin F. Taylor, William Willis, William Wierman, Jas. Wierman, John White, Oliver H. Wormouth, Dedrick Waruke, Pleas- ant Whitely, Nathan. B. Adams, George W. Anderson, Liberty




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