USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Weymouth > Historical sketch of the town of Weymouth, Massachusetts, from 1622-1884 > Part 17
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On the 9th and 10th of August it came under fire for the first time in any important engagement, and its losses in the battle of Cedar Mountain were one killed, eight wounded, and two missing, and from this time forward it bore not even suspicion of reproach. Its record was unsurpassed. Its next fight occurred on the 23d at Thoroughfare Gap; and on the 30th, at Groveton, a severe battle was fought, in which the regi- ment lost fifteen killed, sixty wounded, and sixty-three missing, and among the killed was its lamented colonel.
From here the regiment took up its line of march for Washington, which it reached very soon after the disas- trous defeat of General Pope in the second battle of Bull Run, and immediately started under McClellan in search of Lee, who was encountered on the 14th to the 17th at South Mountain and Antietam. In these bloody and obstinate engagements the regiment went into
218
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTHI.
action with three hundred and forty men, and came out with only thirty-two, having lost in killed seventy, wounded one hundred and eighty-three, and thirty missing.
On the 21st of September, Captain Bates, having been promoted first as major in the Thirty-third Regiment, then as colonel, took command of his old regiment, where he was gladly welcomed. They crossed the Potomac on the 30th of October, and passed down into Virginia, where, on the 13th of December, they fought their next hard fight in the battle of Fredericks- burg; going into action with two hundred and fifty- eight men, they sustained a loss of fourteen killed, eighty-eight wounded, and three missing. Taking up their winter quarters at Belle Plain, they remained in camp until the latter part of April, 1863.
The regiment was in the battle of Chancellorsville under Hooker, but met with inconsiderable loss. Under Meade, the regiment followed Lee into Pennsylvania and was in the hard fight at Gettysburg, from 1st to 3d of July, where it fully sustained its reputation for bravery and endurance, and came out of the battle with a loss of nine killed, forty-one wounded, and sixty-one missing, and returned back to Virginia on the 18th of July.
On the 15th of August, Colonel Bates, who had been to Massachusetts to recruit for the regiment, returned with one hundred and seventy-six men, mostly drafted, who proved of not much service. During the remain- der of the fall the time was spent in marches over Eastern Virginia, and the regiment took up its winter quarters at Culpepper, where it remained until May, 1864 In March, Grant took command of the army, and the regiment was with him in the fights at the Wilderness, Todd's Tavern, and Spottsylvania, 5th, 7th, and 8th of May, where its losses were nineteen killed,
219
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
sixty-three wounded; and on the 10th and 11th, at Laurel Hill, its losses were fifteen killed and thirty-two wounded. May 23 and 30, on the North Anna and Pamunky, its losses were five killed and twenty wounded. In the fifty days, from May 5 to June 25, the regiment had reported forty-six killed, one hundred and twenty-three wounded, three missing, and thirteen prisoners.
Upon the latter date, June 25, the service of the regiment came virtually to an end. The re-enlisted men and conscripts were turned over to the Thirty- ninth Massachusetts, and the regiment, consisting of eighty-five men, turned their faces homeward, marching for City Point, thence to New York, arriving in Boston, July 1, 1864, with one hundred and seventy men, half of whom had been absent on detached duty or in hos- pital, where a glorious welcome awaited them, and they were mustered out on the 8th.
The service of the regiment tells its own story. There is no need of panegyric; its work is its sufficient eulogist. No braver went into battle, none more trusty, and none came home with a better reputation.
Company H from Weymouth was in all its service, and its losses were its sufficient witness that it bore its full share of the labor, hardship and fighting.
Original number of men and officers
1040
Volunteers
100
Conscripts
395
In all
1535
Killed
162
Wounded
505
Missing
183
In all
850
Company H lost, killed, wounded, missing, and died, fifty-three.
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SKETCH OF WEYMOUTHI.
THIRTY-FIFTH MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS.
The disastrous issue of the Peninsular campaign in the summer of 1862 furnished ample evidence that the Rebellion was not only not crushed, but that before such a result could be accomplished the Union must put forth its best endeavor. Accordingly President Lin- coln issued a further call, July 1, for an additional threc hundred thousand men for three years' service, and on the following day, Governor Andrew proclaimed it to the State.
It was under this call that the Thirty-fifth Regiment was organized, commencing at once in Boston, where several companies were started; the towns of New- buryport, Chelsea, Haverhill, Weymouth, and Roxbury furnishing cach a company, while the remainder of the companies were made up from other towns in the vicinity.
The camp was formed at Lynnfield, Essex County, and named " Camp Stanton," in honor of the Secretary of War, and men in companies and squads begun to flock in and the work of organization commenced in earnest. Company H, recruited in Weymouth, and commanded by Captain Benjamin F. Pratt, with Geo. P. Lyon and Oliver Burrell as lieutenants, was soon upon the ground, and, in a sense, ready for work.
The regiment was mustered into the United States service in detachments in August and September, and started for Washington on Friday, Aug. 22, under the following officers: Edward A. Wild, coloncl; Sum- ner Carruth, major; and Nathaniel Wales, adjutant. They reached their destination in two days, and were at once assigned to the command of Brigadier-General Casey, and on the 25th transferred to General Whip- ple, and by him placed in Van Volkenburg's brigade,
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SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
where they immediately began camp life beyond Arling- ton Heights, in Virginia.
After the defeat of General Pope, and the consequent demoralization of his army, General McClellan was placed in command, and upon him devolved its re- organization, which he accomplished in an incredibly short time, and was ready to take the field in search of Lee within a very few days. The Thirty-fifth Regi- ment having been transferred to the command of General Burnside, constituting a part of Reno's bri- gade (the Second) in Sturgis's division (the Second) of the Ninth Army Corps, commenced its march on the evening of 6th of September.
It was not, however, until Sunday, the 14th, that the regiment took part in its first battle, -that of South Mountain,-in which its part was an important and honorable one. This was followed immediately by the world-renowned Antietam fight, in which it was indeed baptized in blood, losing, in the two engage- ments, seventy-eight killed, and about one hundred and seventy-five wounded, so that its roll call upon the 18th showed less than three hundred men fit for duty; but it established its reputation as a fighting regiment, as the result of the Maryland campaign, - an honorable record which it ever after maintained.
On the 27th of October the regiment crossed the Potomac into Virginia and began its second campaign upon the sacred soil of that unfortunate State, and its second battle of importance was that of Fredericksburg, in which it lost ten killed in battle. This was the last engagement during the year, and the time was taken up for many weeks in marches and counter- marches, with severe camp duty in the horrible weather of that season.
After several months passed in inaction, if this most disagreeable part of the whole service can be called
222
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
snch, in the latter part of March, 1863, the regiment left the Atlantic coast, having been ordered to the West, and began its third, or Kentucky campaign. After a few weeks here of active service without much fighting, the regiment crossed over to Cincinnati, and passing through the States of Indiana and Illinois, it was soon at Cairo, and in June steamed down the Mississippi. Disembarking at Young's Point, near Vicksburg, the army made a short and useless campaign in Louisiana and Mississippi, in which Jackson, the capital of the latter State, was taken possession of, with a good deal of skirmishing, but not much hard fighting.
In August the regiment returned to the Mississippi, and started for Cairo, which it reached on the 12th. It immediately took cars for Covington, where it went into camp, but soon started through Kentucky for a campaign in East Tennessee, which occupied several months, spent mainly in marches and camp duty in a very uncertain country, with few fights of consequence, the most important being that at Campbell's station, in November. The record of the regiment, until April when it took up its line of march for Harrisburg, is not exciting. Passing through Harrisburg, it arrived at Annapolis on the 7th, and went into camp.
In the latter part of April the regiment broke camp, passed through Washington and took up its march into Virginia for a third campaign in that State. During the weeks that followed there was no want of excite- ment or active service, for the Wilderness campaign was one ever to be remembered by all that participated in it.
On the 2d of June, the Second Corps, to which the Thirty-fifth was attached, commenced its advance towards Petersburg, and took up its position in the siege of that city, in which arduous duty it fully sus- tained its well-earned reputation, and also its full share
223
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
of loss, which was, during that service, twelve killed and thirty-four wounded, out of one hundred and sixty fit for duty.
The autumn campaign of the regiment was made towards the South on the line of the Weldon railroad and in the neighborhood of Poplar Spring church, but it took up its winter quarters upon the Appomattox. In the spring of 1865 came the closing scene in the war, the surrender of Lee, and the fighting in connection with that event, in which the regiment had its share. It was mustered out of the service on the 9th of June, 1865, having been in active service about two years and three quarters, but was not paid off or discharged until the 27th, at Readville.
The following statistics will show, in brief, the char- acter and work of the regiment: -
Whole number enlisted and recruits
1526; Co. H, 145
Killed in battle or died of wounds
143 ;
12
Died in service .
93 ;
13
Discharged on account of wounds or disease
344;
¥
26
Deserted
38;
6
Unaccounted for
5;
Expiration of service
.
356;
32
FORTY-SECOND REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOL- UNTEERS.
This regiment was organized in the autumn of 1862, in consequence of the call for volunteers for one year, and was the outgrowth of the old Second Regiment of First Brigade, First Division of Massachusetts Volun- teers, recruited at Camp Meigs, Readville. Company A was wholly from Weymouth but the remainder of the regiment came from all parts of the State.
It was mustered into the United States service in Sep- tember and October, 1862, but was not fully organized
224
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
until Nov. 6, when the following officers were placed in command: colonel, Isaae S. Burrell; lieutenant-colonel, Joseph Stedman; major, Frederick G. Stiles; adjutant, Charles A. Davis.
The regiment left Camp Meigs, Nov. 21, for New Orleans, via New York. Remained at Camp N. P. Banks at East New York, Union Raee-Course, until Dec. 2, when it went to Brooklyn, whence it sailed in four transports for its point of destination ; Col. Burrell with Companies D, G and I on the "Saxon " on the 3d; arrived at Ship Island on the 14th, and New Orleans on the 16th.
This detachment was ordered immediately to Galves- ton, leaving New Orleans on the 19th and reaching Galveston on the 24th, where they were attacked by the rebels 5000 strong, under Gen. Magruder, and after sustaining the " siege" for several days and seeing no prospeet of help, they surrendered July 1, about two hundred and fifty or sixty in all, the losses of the rebels being, by their own acknowledgment, some three hundred or four hundred.
Companies A, B and F, under Lieutenant-Col. Sted- man, sailed from Brooklyn on Dee. 4, on the "Quiney," put into Hilton Head, disabled, on the 11th, and reached Carrollton, above New Orleans, the 29th, going into eamp Jan. 3. The remainder of the regiment left Brooklyn on Dee. 5, Companies E and K, Capt. Davis, on the "Charles Osgood," which reached Carrollton, Jan. 1; and Companies C and H, Major Stiles, on the " Shetueket," which arrived there on the 14th.
These miserable old transports brought them into port too late to share the fate of their gallant colonel, and prevented them from achieving under him a glorious vietory. The prisoners were afterwards parolled, and saw no more serviee other than that as prisoners in the hands of the rebels.
225
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
The remaining companies were attached, by the order of Gen. Banks, to the Second Brigade, Col. Farr, Second Division of the Nincteenth Army Corps, under Gen. W. T. Sherman. Their duty was mainly in garrison and guard about New Orleans, towards Lake Ponchartrain and up the Mississippi to Baton Rouge and Port Hudson, arduous and irksome but with very little fighting.
At Galveston, the only occasion in which any of the regiment had an opportunity to show their mettle, they approved themselves of the same material as their comrades of other regiments who had won well-earned reputations as fighting regiments, and only surrendered when the defence became perfectly hopeless.
In these various duties the time was spent until July 31, when they were embarked on the government trans- port " Continental," reaching New York on the 8th of August and Boston on the 10th, having been run on the rocks off Point Judith during the passage from New York. They were furloughed until the 20th, when they were mustered out at Readville.
" The services of the regiment, although varied, were well performed, and this report should not close without some praise for the enlisted men in its ranks.
" Whatever duty they were called upon to perform was faithfully executed. Thoroughly imbued with the prin- ciple of the noble general [N. P. Banks] in whose corps they were placed, that 'success is a duty,' they always on all occasions cheerfully labored for success that duty might be done." [Adjutant-General's report, 1863.]
The casualties of the regiment were, four killed, twenty wounded, thirty-two died of disease, and two hundred and fifty-six taken prisoners.
Company A of Weymouth performed faithfully all the duties required of it, and if it did not have its full share of fighting, it was its misfortune and not its fault.
15
226
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
FOURTH REGIMENT OF HEAVY ARTILLERY MASSACHU- SETTS VOLUNTEERS.
The Twenty-third Company of Heavy Artillery (Company G, Fourth Regiment) Massachusetts Vol- unteers was largely composed of men from Weymouth, many of whom had seen service in other organizations. It was organized and mustercd into the United States service on Aug. 27, 1864, for one year. It left the State on the 16th of September, and arrived at Washington on the 23d, where it was assigned to duty upon the defences of that city. With eleven other companies, it was consolidated and formed the Fourth Regiment of Massachusetts Heavy Artillery on the 12th of Novem- ber following.
The company consisted largely of new recruits; of the one hundred and forty-five who were its members, only thirty-four were re-enlistments. Seventeen of com- missioned and non-commissioned officers had been in the service before. Of the veterans, sixteen were for- merly members of the Forty-second Regiment Massa- chusetts Infantry, five of the Twelfth, and one each from the following organizations of Massachusetts Volunteers: First, Fourth, Fifth, Twenty-ninth, Thirty- fifth, Thirty-seventh, Forty-fifth, Fifty-second; also from Second New Hampshire Infantry, Second United States Artillery, Fifth Massachusetts Battery, and Eighth Mas- sachusetts Battery. The regiment was mustered out of service on the 17th of June, 1865, in consequence of the "close of the war."
During the term of its service it was connected with the Twenty-second Army Corps, and, by the reports of the United States army inspectors to headquarters of the army, was not excelled in disciplinc, instruction or military appearance by any company in the corps. [Furnished by Captain Andrew J. Garey.]
227
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
SOLDIERS' RECORD.
Abbott, Luther C., 8th Regt., Maine. Adams, George M., sergt., 35th Regt., Co. H. Adlington, Stephen L., private, 35th Regt., Co. H. Adlington, Walter S., private, 11th Regt., Co. F; died. Allen, Charles H., private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Allison, Walter, private at Watertown Arsenal. Ames, William F., 1st Conn. Cav. Andrews, Edward G., private, 12th Regt., Co. H. Atkinson, James, private, 12th Regt., Co. H. Bailey, Christopher T., corp., 12th Regt., Co. H. Bailey, Orestes L., private, 4th Cav.
Baker, Andrew J., private, 3d Heavy Art. Baker, Calvin R., private, 33d Regt., Co. K. Baker, Charles H., musician, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G.
Baker, Howard, private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Baker, William H., private, 13th Regt., Co. H; killed. Baldwin, Everett, private, 12th Regt. Barnes, Ferdinand J., corp., 35th Regt., Co. H. Barnes, Robert B., private, 16th Light Bat. Bartlett, George, private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Bates, Albert, private, 12th Regt., Co. H. Bates, Alfred L., private, 12th Regt., Co. H. Bates, Charles W., private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Bates, Elijah R., navy.
Bates, James L., brig .- gen., 12th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Bates, John F., private, 13th Regt., Co. K. Bates, John W., lieut., 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Bates, Leavett, sergt., 42d Regt., Co. A. Bates, Levi L., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Bates, Lewis D.
Bates, Samuel A., private, 12th Regt., Co. H. Bates, Stephen, private, 12th Regt., Co. H. Bates, William L., private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Beals, Elias F., corp., 12 Regt., Co. H; wounded. Bearce, Simeon, private, 35th Regt., Co. H. Beard, Austin P., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Beaulieu, Moses, private, 11th Regt. Belcher, Alfred C., private, 1st Cav.
Bicknell, Anson F., corp., 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Bicknell, Charles E., corp., 35th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Bicknell, Francis A., major, 35th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Bicknell, Frederick T., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; prisoner; died. Bicknell, George W., private, 14th Regt., Co. F; wounded; died.
Bicknell, John Q., 43d Regt., Co. B. Bienville, Lewis, private, 11th Regt.
228
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTHI.
Bingham, Clarence V.
Binney, Isaae H., private, 12th Regt., Co. H.
Binney, John, sergt., 42d Regt., Co. A.
Birmingham, Matthew, private, 12th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Birmingham, Richard.
Blaekman, John II., private, 12th Regt., Co. II; killed. Blanchard, Alonzo, private, 12th Regt., Co. H.
Blanchard, Alonzo W., private, 42d Regt., Co. A.
Blanchard, Charles B., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; prisoner; died. Blanchard, Frank, private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G.
Blanchard, George W., private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Blanchard, James B., private, 42d Regt., Co. A.
Blanchard, John, private, 32d Regt., Co. G.
Blanchard, John, Jr., sergt., 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Blanchard, Mark M., private.
Blanchard, Otis S., private, 35th Regt., Co. H.
Blanchard, O. S., private, 58th Regt., Co. G; killed.
Blanchard, Thomas S., private, 32d Regt., Co. A.
Boodrue, John. 43d Regt., Co. B. Bourne, Ezekiel P., private, 12th Regt., Co. H.
Bourne, L. V., private, 2d Art., Co. H; died.
Bowditeli, Frederick H., musician, 42d Regt., Co. A. Bowker, James B., private, 12th Regt., Co. H; prisoner. Brady, Thomas, private, 29th Regt., Co. B. Bragg, Ira W., surgeon, navy; died. Bresnahan, Michael, private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Briggs, Charles E., private, 14th Light Bat.
Briggs, Henry H., private, 8th Vt. Regt., Co. G. Briggs, John H., private, 12th Regt., Co. H. Brooks, Spencer L., sergt., 12th Regt., Co. H. Brown, Dennis, private, 9th Regt., Co. D; accidentally killed. Brown, George, navy.
Brown, James, navy.
Bryant, James A., corp., 4th Heavy Art., Co. G; prisoner. Buekmaster, Michael, private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Buker, Leonard E., sergt., 32d Regt., Co. F. Burns, Franeis D., private, 12th Regt., Co. H. Burns, John W., private, 12th Regt., Co. H; prisoner. Burrell, Charles H., private, 3d Cav., Co. I; wounded. Burrell, David B., lieut., 12th Regt., Co. H; killed. Burrell, John G., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Burrell, John P., lieut., 42d Regt., Co. A.
Burrell, Joseph H., Jr., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Burrell, W. L., private, 1st Heavy Art., Co. M; killed. Burrell, Martin D., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; prisoner. Burrell, Martin J., lieut., 42d Regt., Co. A. Burrell, Oliver, lieut., 35th Regt., Co. H. Burrell, Richmond.
229
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
1
Burrell, Richmond P., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Burrell, Samuel E., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Burrell, William L., private, 14th Heavy Art .; killed. Cady, Benjamin L., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Cady, Lorenzo, private, 1st Heavy Art. Cahill, Thomas, private, 4th Cav .; killed. Cain, Leonard W., musician, 56th Regt., Co. C. Cain, Stephen, musician, 56th Regt., Co. C. Calnan, John.
Canterbury, William, musician, 12th Regt. Carey, Timothy, private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Carney, Thomas, private, 30th Regt .; died. Carney, William, private, 35th Regt., Co. H. Carroll, John, private, 3d Bat., R. I. Carroll, John, navy.
Carroll, Michael, private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Carter, Galen A., private, 16th Regt .; wounded and died. Chandler, Bradford, private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Chapman, Daniel L., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Chase, Abial H., corp., 42d Regt., Co. A. Chessman, E. B., private, 32d Regt., Co. H; died. Childs, John, private, 3d Heavy Art.
Churchill, Joshua F., private, 12th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Churchill, Julius R., private, 32d Regt., Co. G. Clapp, Loring O., private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Clapp, William H., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Clark, Albert, private, 12th Regt., Co. H. Coburn, Hiram S., capt., 42d Regt., Co. A. Cokeley, Dennis, private, 9tlı Regt., Co. D. Cokeley, Humphrey, private, 35th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Coleman, Thomas, private, 24th Regt. Collet, Frederick, sergt., 4th Heavy Art., Co. G.
Colson, Frederick B., private, 1st Cav., Co. K.
Conner, Daniel, private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Conners, Patrick, private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Cook, Thomas W., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; deserted. Coolidge, Amos R., private, 16th Light Bat.
Coolidge, Francis E., private, 12th Regt., Co. C; killed. Coolidge, Frederick, private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Coolidge, George H., private, 11th Regt., Co. K; died.
Coolidge, Richard S., private, 11th Regt., Co. G; deserted.
Coolidge, William F., private, 11th Regt., Co. K. Corban, Frank, private, 4th Regt., Co. C. Corban, Roswell L., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Corr, Owen, navy.
Cotter, Patrick, private, 4th Cav .; died. Coughlan, Thomas, 42d Regt., Co. A.
230
SKETCH OF WEYMOUTH.
Cowing, Charles G., private, 42d Regt., Co. A.
Cowing, Henry V., private, 11th Regt., Co. F; prisoner. Crocker, Charles A., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; killed.
Crocker, Elery C., sergt., 42d Regt., Co. A.
Crocker, Enoch, private, 11th Regt., Co. F; killed. Cronin, Patrick.
Cudworth, Benjamin, private, 42d Regt., Co. D.
Cully, Andrew, private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Cummings, William L., private, 4th Cav., Co. D; prisoner.
Cunningham, John, private, 12th Regt., Co. H; wounded.
Curtis, Charles H., private, 12th Regt., Co. H.
Cushing, Alanson B., navy.
Cushing, Alfred T., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Cushing, Charles E., corp., 12th Regt., Co. H; prisoner and died.
Cushing, David W., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; killed.
Cushing, Edward, private, 12th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Cushing, Elbridge G., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G.
Cushing, Francis H., private, 42d Regt., Co. A. Cushing, Frederick O., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G. Cushing, George A., private, 42d Regt., Co. A.
Cushing, George C., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G.
Cushing, George F., private, 16th Light Bat.
Cushing, Henry F., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; wounded. Cushing, John F., corp., 42d Regt., Co. A.
Cushing, Thomas B., private, 12th Regt., Co. B; killed.
Cushing, William E., private, 11th Regt., Co. F.
Cushing, William N., private, 42d Regt., Co. A.
Cushing, William N. (2d), private, 14th Regt., Co. K.
Cushing, William Newton, private, 2d Cav.
Daffy, Thomas, private, 42d Regt., Co. D.
Daggett, Henry T., private, 1st Cav.
Dailey, Israel A., private, 4th Heavy Art., Co. G.
Dallof, Albert W., private, 35th Regt., Co. H; wounded.
Dalton, John W., private, 35th Regt., Co. H.
Daly, Dennis, private, 1st Regt. Dame, Joseph T., private, 32d Regt., Co. F; killed. Damon, Albert, Co. H; wounded.
Damon, Isaac B., private, 2d Regt.
Damon, Joshua F., private, 12th Regt., Co. H.
Damon, Proctor A., private, 1st U. Heavy Art.
Damon, Zachariah, private, 35th Regt., Co. H; died. Davidson, Albert, private, 13th Regt., Co. C.
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