First Maine bugle, 1893 (history of 1st Maine Cavalry), Part 37

Author: Tobie, Edward P. (Edward Parsons), 1838-; United States. Army. Maine Cavalry Regiment, 1st (1861-1865). Reunion; Cavalry Society of the Armies of the United States; First Maine Cavalry Association
Publication date: 1890
Publisher: Rockland, Me. : First Maine Cavalry Association
Number of Pages: 822


USA > Maine > First Maine bugle, 1893 (history of 1st Maine Cavalry) > Part 37


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).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37


Hist. p. 536.


GARLAND, Me., Oct. 5001, 16.3 COMPAL! CH.L.E.,


I have always wished to meet with the regiment at the reuniones but have fer been able to on account of my hes. b being too poor. I remember all to cofrades as I was a member of Company. A, First Maine, for four long years, smel would like to see them all.


Respectfully yours, C. D. F KFTIST.


BROOKSVILLE, Me., Oct. 5th, 18)3. GEN. J. P. CILLEX,


Dear Comrade- The First Mait - lin - GIE Extra just inceived. The theory. five cents that I owe on the BUGLE plers find inclosed. I am not prepared to sen j in the dollar for it just now, but for each copy as I receive them I will reant try twenty-five cents.


Yours in F., C. and L., A. P. FRIEND .. Ilist. p. 612.


If the other comrades who find it c. ficult to send one dollar would a lopt the above plan and send twenty-hve con's #s they receive each Call, they would! fit no financial difficulty in paying for ie BUGLE .- J. P. C.


NEWPORT, Me, O.t. 68, 1993 DEAR GENERAL AND COMRADE,


Your circular came to hand peste and I hasten to answer it lest I speak let it slip my mind. I send you p - 1 note for fifty cents which will carry we up to the next year. Then I will Ska the Beats and will pay one yerrires vance just the same as I da all nighther papers. I do not wenler in the best that you do sometimes get decoura ;. knowing as we by the de that it is nes'- gence on the part of the umbrales. We do not consider that these balls for ' BUGIE have to be paid just the sale in others. I hope in the future you will not have any occasion to prompt nie to e


92


FIRST MAINE PUCLL.


known duty. I want the BUGLE sent right along and will try to do my duty. Hoping this will find you well,


I remain your comrade, O. M. HARRINGTON. Hist. p. 431.


M. S. Lake, captain Fourteenth Wis- consin, Trinidad, Colo, writes : " On our march to the sea with Sherman seven of us were sent to Millen Prison. We found, abandoned in one of the mud huts built by the prisoners to protect them from sun and rain, the body of A. Å. Russell, First Maine Cavalry, so de- composed that we could not move hun. We got his letters out of his pocket, and on our return to the army we handed them to the adjutant general, who said he would return them to the writer with the above statement. I would like to hear from some of Russell's friends." There was an Alvarado Russell ( Hist., p. 626), but the above must refer to George A. Russell of Company E, ( Hist., P. 530) who is reported as prisoner June 24th, 1864, at St. Mary's Church, and died in prison at Andersonville September 12th, 1864-grave number 8557 .--- En.


A SUGGESTION EN IOWA DE. MENITE


History record store they everyoneto like that of iso1, no matter with 120 succeeded, within thirty years there affe, the opposite party came into pipect, ha been followed by a second war nur. fierce and bloody than the best. Wien this fact in mind the ex-soldier, lame and old, ahead of his time, with his pensey cut off, will watch with interest the pory ent rapid moving of events. Att p:p victors have slept quietly at Gettys Mm thirty years, they are forcel to move t make room for a r.ilroad! Abraham Lincoln sealed his devotion with ? . blood, Grover Cleveland I secured a pas per out of the poor horase an I sent him as a substitute. Each aet was a ni asape of the man. Life has it- compensations. as we grow old present memory and eyesight become dult but the events of long ago loom up clear and disting; as age comes, we may be indillenent about today, may forget the house w. live in, but the BUGLE Cali will nije Antietam, Spottsylvania and Appomattox real while mind lasts.


93


GENEALOGICAL ..


GENEALOGICAL.


" There is no honor in rank or title or official station. no pridle of family : of wealth, like the honor and pride which belong to the survivors of the great ste pele which preserved constitutional liberty on the face of the earth."


ABBREVIATIONS .- b., born; d., died ; dau., daughter ; disch., discharged; en., chif." l; His' history ; m. married; p., page; res .. resided.


GEORGE W. BRYANT,


Born in the town of Greenwood near the shore of Bryant's Pond, Me. on Aug. 17, 1840. Son of Samuel and Rebecca (Stevens) Bryant. My father died in ISSi, aged eighty-one years. My mother is still living. At the age of sixteen I be- came a laborer on the engineer depart- ment of the A. && St. I. Railroad. In the spring of 1863, I became foremen of work in the same department of said road, the name having been changed to the G. T. R. I continued at this work until Feb. 1864, at which time I enlisted as commissary sergeant of Co. G First Dis- triet Columbia Cavalry. In August of this year, (this regiment having been nearly destroyed). I was transferred with others to the grand old First Maine Cavalry and placed in Co. I .. , as a surplus non-com- missioned officer and was one, among others of this character to apply for a muster out. From some cause never made plain to me we were held and I tried as best I could to do the duties as- signed me, in fact, was. I believe in every move the regiment inade from that time until mu-tered out on Aug. 1. 1865, I desire to say here that I was used with all the respect and courtesy necessary to make membership in that company pleasant by all its surhordinate officers and men whose promotion would have been sure had it not been for myself and


others. On returning Home, 5 15 42 " offered work by the G. I. P. Ch. . rial- though broken in health wa, contrived. in its service as long as I ves stato care for and arrange the worl. for no men vie Oct. 1884. Was mar 1 April 29. 1866, to Mary IMer, Fortier . f Moses and Lucy (Swift) ITnow'ton. cho only child, Nina B. was bain on Feb. r., 1872. I was raised to the S. D. OF M. M. in Jefferson Lodge, No. 100 al Min- Pond, Me. in March, 1962, and ;0 0 1 under the Living Arch in Oxford Royal Arch Chapter No. 29, at Best. 1, Me. in Aug. IS09. Receive ! the S alet pogres in O. F. in Mount Mica Lodge No. 17 at South Paris, Me. in 1877. 052 bradio was in the Terth Maine Infuite, cindy the Twelfth Maine. I believe in the Christian religion and am a Methodist Was appointe I postmaster in this will- in Apal, ISSO, with my daughter as a. sistant, and was superceded in Apel 1893.


ALBERT P. FRIEND.


Albert P. Frien 1. (Hist. p. 56;1: 40 Aug. 5, 1840. at B'uehill, Me. m. Jul: 4. 1803, Hannah L. R Derts, via Ward. July 4, 1844, at Brooksville, Me.


CHILDREN.


Abbie E .. b July 4, IS 4: d. Oct. 10. 1864.


94


FIRST MAINE BUGLE.


Addie I .. , b. Oct. 28, 1876; d. May 10, ISS5.


Nellie M., b. Sept. 10, 1869.


Erna H., b. June 7, 1870; d. Aug. 10, 1872.


Gertie B., b. Oct. 31, 1886; d. Mar. 29, 1887.


Oc. farming; Republican; res. Brooks- ville, Me .; en. Feb. 16, 1864, in Co. G, First Maine Cavalry ; was taken prisoner at Boydton Road, Va., Oct. 27, 1864, and was confined in Libby Prison four months, contracted a disease while pris- oner of war for which he is now receiv- ing a pension. He is now a member of the James A. Garfield Post, No. 46, Blue Hill, Me. His grandfather, John Friend, was b. Dec. 5, 1773; d. 1847; his wife, Abigail, b. Aug. 30, 177S.


CHILDREN.


Elisha, C., b. June 9, 1799. John, b. Sept. 20, 1Soo.


Lurena, b. Sept. 17, 1802.


Robert, b. Sept. 13, ISO.4. Moses, b. May 15, 1805. Abigail, b. Oct. 13, 1807.


Phoebe, b. Feb. 13, 1811. Hannah, b. April 12, 1813. Eunice, b. Oct. 15, 1815.


William, b. Sept. 12, 1818. James, b. Feb. 1, 1821.


Of this family four are now living. His father, Elisha C. Friend, b. June 9, 1799; d. Mar. 1868. He m. Rebekalı Eaton of Tremont, Me. She was b. ISoo; d. Sept., 1883. Their family num- bered thirteen children; four are now


living : Albert P. and Wille t.P. (tabng, Louisa A., Andje I. Wabert servet three years and eight months in the lan war as a member of the Fourth Mamme Battery. Two children were drov ped at sea, one died in California ant one in Arkansas.


DANIEL JACKSON.


Daniel Jackson, b. Mar. 11, 1511. 30. Lucy E. Poole, S. Nov. 11, 1514; M. Nov., 1865.


CHILDREN.


Albert F. Jackson, (Ilist. p. 692), b. June 23, 1837.


Laura A., b. Nov. 25, 1840; d. Sepr, I865


Geo. F., b. Aug. 20, 1843; en. D.c., 1863. Co. E, Ist Me. IT. . 1.


Albert F. m. Ann M. Eliot, De -. 13, 1857.


Res. Monson; oc. merchant; Repub- lican; Freewill Baptist.


CHILDREN.


Walter C., b. Sept. 3, 1858.


Lelia E, b. Oct. 22, 1Sso, d. May is, 1879.


Carrie L., b. Aug. 22, 1862 : d. Oct. 6, 1865.


Amy F., b. Mar. 19, 1864. Carroll L., b. Apr. 13, 1867.


Walter C. Jackson m. Grace C. Har- low June 5, 1952.


CHILDREN.


Earl H. Jackson, b. Nov. 5, 1884. Cecil F., b. Jan. 16, ISSS.


5.


95


TAPS.


TAPS


" On Fame's eternal camping ground Their silent tents are spread, And glory guards, with solemn round, The bivouac of the dead."


Alonzo J. Bagley


Died in Islesboro, May 4th, 1893. He formerly belonged in Belfast; was a member of Company B and among those transferred to the navy in the spring of 1864; prior to his enlistment in the cav. alry he had served in the infantry.


Lieut. Henry S. MeIntire


Died in Peru, February 7, 1893, of heart failure. He had been a sufferer from kidney trouble for many years, although able to go about and care for the sick, in which capacity he will be much missed. The funeral services were under the charge of the Grand Army. Rev. A. C. Abbott preached the sermon from John III., 14. Mi. McIntire was quartermas- ter sergeant of Company G. Ile enlisted October 4, 1861; was acting first ser- geant summer of '62; commissioned Sup. second lieutenant September 1, 1862, and mustered out February 1, 1863, by the order rescinding the recognition of that gra.le. He was for several years one of the selectmen of Peru, and at one time represented his district in the Legislature. He leaves a wife, five sons and one daughter to mourn his loss.


James Alvin Rice.


By his remarkable coolness and intre- pidity while in the cavalry service, this soldier won from his comrade, the title of " the bravest boy in the company."


Indeed at times he was so unesen tous of danger that his conduct seemed to h. less. He was of stender form; Gove feet, four inches tall; of dark completion, with black hair and eyes. His both cc- curred at Natick, December 20th, 1991. His first enlistment was in the Eleventh Regiment of Massachusetts V hinter Infantry in Company K. May 9th. IST Weakened by sickness soon after los : g- iment began its helt-servi e al Wa-hove- ton, he found himself uralde to tued !! his duties as a private with pomistor satisfaction; and when ordered forward to meet the enemy at Manasmy Fe he- came entirely prostrated, and was last behind. Medical care old n : 300m to recruit his energies and he oppl ed for a discharge. In this he was seconded by his brother in the same company an ! by his captain, but without avad. 11.s brother writes, "James is not stort enough to bear the hand service of a -of- dier, and I think his only charge for A is a discharge." Under repeat" i meg- pointments and continued ill healer. he took the ansoldierlike course of helping himself by abruptly leaving the s.my in August, 150I. In this he was successful. This act, however, so far as all the hets go to show, was not lone under the in- fluence of any unworthy native On arriving home, he toll his friends that hs must join the army again as soon as he was able, and this promise he fulfilled in


96


FIRST MAINE. BUGLE.


October following by enlisting in the first cavalry regiment of Maine. Even while unfit for service he loved to sing out in clear tones the soldier's well-worn ditty :


" A soldier, a soldier, I'm longing to be ;


The name and the life of a soldier for me ! "


And several of his letters came home bearing the couplet as his chosen motto. The cavalry service, with its dashing en- counters, its thrilling incidents of scout- ing and hairbreadth escap's was well adapted to his enthusiastic temperament. He was ever ready and even eager to go on a scout, and was always found among the very foremost when intrepidity was required. It is to be regretted that, while he wrote often to His friends at home, he never describes events in their details, and so his narrative must be meagre and dry where it should be filled with intense interest. Yet his jaunty expressions seem to delineate forcibly his own heroic spirit, while they mark with graphic brevity the scenes in which he bore a part. To say, for instance, of the sec- ond Bull Run battle that " We had a good smart fight, and I am all right," conveys a most emphatic idea of this youthful cavalier. So also of the engage- ment at Cedar Mountain, August 9th, 1862, (the first at which he was present) " It was a good fight and I bad my horse shot under me." He was at the battles of South Mountain and Antietam; also at Brandy Station, Va., June 9th, 1863; at Fredericksburg under Burnside; and at Gettysburg-concerning which none of his letters are now found to speak. On the second of May, 1863, while ou a scouting party near Louisa Court House, he, with fourteen others, was taken pris- oner, and held at Richmond for several werks, when he was paroled and came to Alexandria. He tersely sums up his treatment while in rebel hands by writing, "They stripped me of everything, and tried to starve me." White on parol he


obtained a furlough and came honig During this visit he was anes el as a deserter froin the Eleventh Infantry Loop iment. After a few days of confinement in the county jail and at Fort In lepend ence, he was carried South in hou 140s. having twice attempted escape. Hader perately resolved and declared that the would never be returned to the' regimen- and when in the vicinity of Wood 1200 he gave a sturning blow to los pean) and made good his escape, and fen ! ors way to his cavalry comrades, who give him protection until his exchange prisoner, which occurred soon aller. HE was exchanged. October 11th, 1505. 10 .- tober thirty-first he writes, " We bent a hard fight at Freeman's Ford all Caos near losing our whole regiment D .- cember 7-We fought two hour- an gave them the worst of it. I believe I am the luckiest man that ever !Vel May 15, '64, near Hurriton's Lan Di -- We have been on the move ever spire the second, and a number of high's navr been the consequence, but I have h. my old luck. Five of my comporti were killed at my side. I almost f leve that a bullet can't hit me. Yesterday. about three miles from Richmond se ha a good fight that lasted six hours. W got the advantage and took two fleres of artillery and two hundred pro tes. June 3-We go scouting every dis. My company with two others, went to. 50 Culpepper yesterday, andI saw abents : rebels, and then we turned an ! run for camp, disgracing the wb de army. A gast 20-A tight is coming soon. I trust in the One that has safely carried! me through all the battles. Augus: 22 -- 3V- have had two gond fights north of the James. Fam the luckiest man listy ! go where others don't care to g, vet i have never been hit; but I have had another horse shot un jer mie. Avr the Wellon Railroad night, where he wa greatly exposed and several of is


..


سيدوز كيده


--


97


TAPS.


near comrades fell, be again speaks of his fortunate escape from personal harm. On a raid to Richmond at an earlier date, March ist, 1864, he writes of one of his hardest-fought battles, " The cavalry went in dismounted to charge a rebel battery, whose well-directed fire of grape and canister compelled a retreat, which the rebels followed up, capturing many of the men and horses." At a skirmish near Rappahannock Station' the rebels were driven, and in following them up our cavalry boy gave chase to two of them and having the better horse soon came within a short distance, when he ordered them to halt and surrender, at the same time giving them a threatening flourish with Lis revolver, which was innocent of powder or ball, he having previously dis- charged all its contents in the fray. See- ing his resolute attitude they concluded to yield to him a conqueror; and under fear of his harmless pistol, backed by his daring determination, he brought them triumphantly to camp. By a letter dated August 29th, 1864, (but with no mention of localiy, as was the case with many of his letters,) it appears that, his regiment having come up with a body of rebel infantry, and his colonel wishing to ascer- tain their number and position, he volun- teered his services as a spy. He writes, " After I had taken off my boots and stockings and all my military gear except my revolver, 1 contrived, by creeping on my hands and knees for about one hun- dred rods, to pass their pickets unper- ceived, and having secured the needful information, I came back the same way. I knew that the chances were I should be shot, but I would not have it said that Rice was less fearless than any of his comrades. I mean when I leave the army to leave a good name behind me, or not leave it alive." But the fates were not always to protect hin from harm. In the engagement which ensued he was wounded twice; a pistol-shot making a


hole through his thigh, and a misket-hall passing through ur calf of his leg, om! killing his third borse. He was carri 1 to the hospital, but he could not beart . be away from his company. The woundis that others would call severe and gid y make the reasons for a! sence from st .. ice he regarded as too slight to de tuin him in a hospital. He writes, " My c_p .- tain came to see me and I told him I could ride very well and I wantel to g back with him; and after he hal seer the doctors he took me back with him to the regiment." The next severe engage .. ment at which he was present was at the Boydton Plank Road, October 27th, 1, 4, and this was his last. He received a wound from a minie ball that passed com- pletely through the lower part of his chest from side to side, which prov It, be fatal. His last communication to his friends at home was dated at Empos; Hospital, Washington, D. C., and was written by the hand of an amanuensis. It says, " I am wounded as you know hy a minie-ball that came very near tollug my life, and it is not impossible that it inay be the means of my death yet, but I hope to live to see you again. Give my love to mother and tell her I shall write as soon as I am able." He I. .. gered in much pain until Novem'er twenty-third when death came to his relief. In closing this sketch it is proper to say that though in some respect- bis impetuous temperament made hinto per: externally uninviting to refined charac- ters, yet there is reason for believing that at heart there was more real gowijtress than was possessed by some others of smoother accomplishments. He epir- tained no malice-not even towapis his enemies. " If I am ever killed in bat- tle," says he in a letter, " don't lay it to the rebel soldiers, but to those who caused the war." It cannot be reason- ably believed that anyone, after cons i. ering the service he rendered with sach


98


FIRST. MAINE BUCLE ..


ardent enthusiasm while a cavalryman, will be willing to speak, except in the mildest terms, of his indiscretion in de- serting his post in the Eleventh Regi -- ment of Infantry, Massachusetts Volun- teers.


Rev. Preston B. Wing


Died in Hopkinton, Mass., April twenty- third, aged fifty-six years, from angina pectoris. He was born in Mt. Vernon, Me., June 16th, 1837, the son of Green- leaf and Roxana R. (Gibson) Wing. Ile received bis education in Levant High School, Hampden Academy, East Maine Conference Seminary, and Maine Wesleyan Seminary. He enlisted in Company A, First Maine Cavalry, in IS61, but on account of ill health was


discharged in 1862. In Bender to m Kevenus Department and Prom t 40 shal's office; at Willdingtor, . 0, ! 1866 to 1569, deputy colle GEB ant assessor in the Intedel Tevere service. In 18;o he va, in boonei Auburn, Me., giving s con 200. om 1 reporting on an editorial sof Hervar led to rappare for the runitry ani en - uated from the bang . Ser mo sir : i He supplied at Winterhart and More Centre; Went to Freypoor Mag zed, 1879, was ordained p.stor Jnine all. ISSo; dismissed Ocrober 1 -: , I've. 001 installed as pastor at Ilapeitos, Na December Ist, ISSO. He nome Nov Aurilla B. Hun of Anturn, Menwho survives him .- Belfast Journal, Mr. It. 1893.


CONTENTS OF CAMPAIGN III.


CONTENTS OF CAMPAIGN III


AFTER APPOMATTOX, No. VI .-- THE YANKEE REBEL, Call i.


MAJOR HENRY C. HALL.


APPOMATTOX, INCIDENTS OF


GEN. CHARLES H. SMITHI.


II.


41-45


APPOMATTOX, RECOLLECTIONS OF III. 192;


ASSEMBLY, THE


J. L. PRAY. I.


Notes, The Roll Call, Capt. John H. Harmony, Sons of the First of Maine, Subscriptions, Genealogical, Maps.


ASSEMBLY, THE II.


Notes, Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, Androscoggin Association, Skowhegan Branch Association, The Massachusetts Branch, Teaching History with the Stars and Stripes, Comrades Fill- ing Positions of Honor and Trust, Tribute to a Comrade. ASSEMBLY, THE


III. SO-E;


Notes, Bunkey, Somerset Branch, Comrades Holding Posi- tions of Trust, Union Veterans' Union, Marriage Bells.


ASSEMBLY, THE


IV. 72-60


Notes, Outside the Fort, Boston Branch, Massachusetts, Asleep, How to be Alive, Branch Associations, Reunion of Co. I, The Nebraska Reunion, Marriage Bells, Caleb N. Lang, Kilpatrick's Cavalry Association, Confederate Veterans.


BATTLE SCENE REMAINS, THE-Poem,


GEORGE S. BERRY.


BICYCLE RIDE, A TWENTY-EIGHT HUNDRED MILE


II. 33-41


JONATHAN P. CILLEY, JR.


BUGLE ECHOES,


Daniel J. Mecds, Mrs. Florence M. Chadbourne, H. S. Cole, Mrs. Harriet Munson, Perley Lowe, Wm. G. Hills, Nelson S. Forsyth, A. B. Lawrence, Francis Haviland, A. L. Knauff, John Hannan, Artemus Coombs, Thomas B. Pulsifer, Win. Trimble, F. C. Needham, Edwin C. Burleigh, Geo. F. Bliss, A. P. Friend, Lieut. Howard Aston, Jos. Grasille, Thos. H. Flint, Mrs. P. P. Spratt, Orren M. Harrington, James Hayes, C. H. Smith. BUGLE ECHOES,


William P. Coleman. William Trimble, Reuel W. Porter. F. M. Tuton, Elisha DeW. Harris, James B. Peakes, W. E. Bailey, C. A. Wentworth, James 1 .. Bowen, John H. Kem- per, Frank W. Hess, Mary A. Coffin, Cyrus Case, Llewellyn Green, Charles F. Davis, Monroe Daggett, Henry G. Bartlett, W. Murray Weidman, M. O. White, I. A. Albee, D. W. Davis, C. A. Stevens, Charles Triechel, George F. Jewett, E. G. Ingalls, James IL. Merritt, Alfred Pierce, I. Newton Rit- ner, F. S. Dickinson, A. P. Friend, C. E. Thurston, John C. Lineham, S. A. Feller. George F. McDonald, Christiara Hutchinson, Batiste LeSault, W. A. Vinal, Alvin Hunter, J. K. Lowden, Alonzo Annis.


III. 51


I. 97-101


Il.


100


FIRST MAINE BUGLE.


BUGLE ECHOES,


J. E. Crawford, Elisha Vose, Francis Haviland, Thomas J. Sanford, Wm. M. Davis, John S. Sewall, A. W. Stiles, A. W. Fenton, George F. Emery, R. R. Bangs, F. J. Savage, I. E. Saunders, W. F. Bickford, Frederick S. Dawes, Mrs. George WV. Eaton, A. K. Snell, E. W. Whitaker, E. W. Whicher, (Edward,) Charles W. Skillings, J. W. Harriman, W. F. Bickford, J. F. Duncan, E. W. Schulte, M. T. V. Bowman, Albert F. Jackson, Charles B. Kenney, D. D. Stewart. BUGLE ECHOES,


HI. 88-95


William A. Rucker, Georgia C. Nickerson, W. A. Collins- wood, Frank S. Douty, H. T. Burns, James L. Randolph, II. B. Sleeper, Frank W. Hess, Mrs. George W. Eaton, Julius D. Rhodes, G. W. Bryant, Arthur S. Palmer, Julius D. Rhodes, C. H. Smith, C. H. Smith, Horatio S. Libby, Geo. S. Bar- nard, C. B. Talor, Orrin F. Lewis, R. W. Edward, Redmond O'Connell, Milton F. Ricker, C. D. Furbush, A. P. Friend, James H. Merrill, O. M. Harrington, Edward P. Merrill. CAVALRY SOCIETY, ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES,


IV.


III. 63- 70


Constitution, Ry-Laws, Officers for 1893-4, Proceedings of Annual Meeting, Boston, Jane 27 and 28, 1893, Banner and Bugle, Captured, Petite Banquet, Carriage Drive, Boston Hospitality, Three Generations, New Victory to Win, Next Meeting, Badge List of Members, Deceased Members. CAVALRY SERVICE, INCIDENTS OF C. W. WILES. II. 45-50


CONFEDERATES, PEN PICTURES OF PROMINENT ALBERT E. SHOLES.


I.


COUNTRY FOR WHICH YOU FOUGHT, THE (Illustrated) I. 14-64


LIEUT. EDWARD P. TOBIE.


COUNTRY FOR WHICH YOU FOUGHT, THE II. 20 32


LIEUT. EDWARD P. TOBIE.


COUNTRY FOR WHICH YOU FOUGHT, THE -


III.


32-45


LIEUT. EDWARD F. TOBIE.


COUNTRY FOR WHICH YOU FOUGHT, THE (Illustrated) IV. 24-45


LIEUT. EDWARD P. TOBIE. III.


DISMOUNTED CAMP, DETAILED FROM LIEUT. SAMUEL C. SMITH.


III. 3-10


FIRST CAVALRY BATTLE AT KELLY'S FORD, VA., THE MAJOR FRANK W. HESS. FIRST CAVALRY BATTLE AT KELLY'S FORD, VA., THE IV. MAJOR FRANK W. HIESS. IV. 40-500


FIRST MAINE, WITH THE RILEY L. JONES.


GENEALOGICAL,


Job C. Adams, Artemus Coombs, George F. Closson, John Henry Dolben, William H. Daniels, Howard M. Doyen, Charles F. Davis, William H. Farnum, Albert R. Fogg, George D. Frost, Samuel A. Fuller, Simon Garvin, Elijah Gay, Abner Grant, Alvin Hunter, Charles L. Marston, Ben- jamin F. McKusick, Daniel J. Meeds, Nathaniel L. Owen, Henry L. Patch, Edward E. Proctor, Albert A. Robinson, Gardiner A. Savage, Gardiner Stewart, Wnitam A. Vinal, Edmund W. Whitney.


II.


24-20


----


---


101


CONTENTS OF CAMPAIGN III.


GENEALOGICAL,


IV. Geo. W. Bryant, Albert P. Friend, Daniel Jackson. GETTING THE WEATHER GAGE OF THE MARINES, HENRY P. BARTLETT.


III. 55


GOING DOWN THE HILL, Poem, CHARLES C. HASSLER.


I. 65.00


JOHN P. KELLY, Poem, REV. FREDERIC DENISON. IV.


21 .7


KILLED BY THE COMMITTEE, - II. 50 51


KNOX COUNTY BRANCH ASSOCIATION, 11.


51 50


Banquet, Speeches and Stories, Address by Gen. Cilley, Sto- res by Sergt. Melville B. Cook, Official Order of Gen. Meade, Poem by Miss Anna E. Coughlin.


LEROY H. TOBIE'S MILITARY CAREER, IV.


LITTLE WASHINGTON RECONNOISSANCE,


III.


ROSCOE R. BANGS.


MY MULE, CHAPLAIN SAMUEL A FULLER.


III.


12 19


OLD CAMP GROUND, THE, Poem,


III. 37-31


C. C. HASSI ER.


PRESIDENT LINCOLN'S LAST SPEECH,


CHARLES D. JONES. II. 51 .01


PRESTON'S HISTORY, A TRIBUTE TO


II.


GEN. JONATHAN P. CILLEY.


PRISON LIFE AND ESCAPE, II.


CAPT. ANDREW M. BENSON.


PRISONER OF WAR, MY EXPERIENCE AS


III.


25-30


MARCELLUS M. PARKER.


PRISONER OF WAR, MY EXPERIENCE AS


IV. 3 7


MARCELLUS M. PARKER,


II.


IV.


62- - 1


SUNSHINE AND SHADES OF ARMY LIFE,


III. 47-53


CHARLES. W. SKILLINGS.


TAPS, - Gen. John W. Freese, Capt. Warren Mansur, Edmund W. Whitney.


II.


94-09


TAPS,


IV.


Alonzo J. Bagley, Lieut. Henry S. McIntire, James Alvin Rice, Rev. Preston B. Wing.


TWENTY-FIRST OF MAY, Song,


II. 11-13


CAPT. T. D. BLACK.


UP SHENANDOAH VALLEY AND ON TO APPOMATTOX, GEN. J. P. CILLEY. II.


I. 7 :- 02


WHEN HE WAS A SOLDIER BOY, Poem,


MARY STEWART.


3-11


REMINISCENCE, A CAVALRY LIEUT. HORATIO C. LIBBY. REUNION, TWENTY-SECOND, AT PORTLAND, ROLL CALL, -


I. 3-43


REVERE HOUSE,


BOWDOIN SQUARE, BOSTON. European Plan,


Central. Convenient, Atin WER J. J. Merrow & Go., Proprietora.


Do You


FEEL SICK?


Disease commonly comes on with slight symptoms, which when neglected increase in extent and gradually grow dangerous.


un


If you SUFFER FROM HEADACHE, DYS- TAKE RIPANS TABULES PEPSIA or INDIGESTION,


If you are BILIOUS, CONSTIPATED, or have TAKE RIPANS TABULES LIVER COMPLAINT,


If your COMPLEXION IS SALLOW, or you TAKE RIPANS TABULES


SUFFER DISTRESS AFTER EATING,


For OFFENSIVE BREATH and ALL DISOR- DERS OF THE STOMACH, TAKE RIPANS TABULES hipans Tabules Regulate the System and Preserve the Health.


RIPANS TABULES take the place of A COMPLETE MEDICINE CHEST and should be kept for use in every family. . .


EASY TO TAKE, QUICK TO ACT. SAVE MANY A DOCTOR'S BILL. Sold by Bruceiste or sent by mail en recep of the Bus (viale, Facente. Family [ DES THE RIPANS CHEMICAL CO. 10 SPRUCE STREET, NEW YORK


----


8426


5676





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