USA > Michigan > St Joseph County > History of St. Joseph county, Michigan, with illustrations descriptive of its scenery, palatial residences, public buildings, fine blocks, and important manufactories > Part 76
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J. B. Anderson and Lewis & Van Ness are grain-buyers. In 1876 they bought one hundred and forty thousand three hundred and fifty bushels.
The shipments of 1876 exceed those of 1875 by about fifty thousand bushels.
THE FIRST HOTEL
was opened by Lewis B. Lyman in the eastern part of the village, near the bridge. The first building built expressly for hotel purposes was erected by Lyman near his first tavern, and called the Eastern. Taft kept a little house formerly on the same site. George Van Buren built one afterwards on the present site of the Wakeman House, and called it the Western. Both of , these hotels were burned, and in 1873 the present commodious brick edifice was built by Adams Wakeman, he burning the brick for the same himself. Mr. Van Buren leased the new house and operated it until June, 1876, when his lease expired, and Mr. Wakeman entered upon the duties of host with W. M. Marantette as manager, and keeps a fine hostelry. Mr. Van Buren in the meantime opened the Commercial Hotel, which he is at present con- ducting successfully.
THE POST-OFFICE
was not established in the village until 1859, the mail for the people thereof coming to Nottawa post-office, two miles to the south, and brought from thence by private hands. Joseph Bacon was the first mail-carrier from Mendon to White Pigeon. In 1858, December 17, William Pellett was commissioned as postmaster, and on May 23 following, the Nottawa post-
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224
HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, MICHIGAN.
office was discontinued. Mrs. Harriet E. Smith was appointed assistant post-mistress February 28, 1859, and managed the office for several years, having been previously employed in the same position at the Corners by Dr. Hyatt, the postmaster of the Nottawa office. The mail was to be supplied to the Mendon office, when it was first established, from Three Forks, mean- ing doubtless Three Rivers, but, in February, 1859, the supply was changed to Nottawa. Mr. Pellett was succeeded by William Harrington in 1860, and he by Hosea Barnabee in 1861, who held it until 1870, when A. Cran- dall, the present incumbent, was appointed. The business of the office in 1876 was as follows : Stamps sold, one thousand two hundred and three dollars and ten cents; registered letters sent, nine hundred and thirty-five; money-orders issued, twelve thousand and thirty-one dollars and eighty-one cents ; money-orders paid, two thousand five hundred and fifty dollars and sixty-nine cents.
THE RAILROAD
which passes through the village was secured by the liberality of the citizens of the same, and of the township. Adams Wakeman, Mr. Marantette, Estes, Harrington, and Mr. Taft were prominent in securing the requisite aid, giving largely of their own means to effect the passage of the road-the Grand Rapids and Indiana-through the village. In 1864 the townspeople voted twenty thousand dollars in aid of the road, and in June, 1866, in- creased the loan or donation twenty-five thousand dollars. In December of the same year the people also voted fifty thousand dollars in aid of the Grand Trunk railroad, on condition that it passed through the township near the village, but it did not accept the conditions, and the loan was never made.
The business transacted by the railroad at the Mendon station in 1876 will be seen by the following exhibit, kindly furnished by Mr. E. Baker, the station-agent in the village: Freight forwarded, eight millions four hundred and forty thousand eight hundred and sixty-one pounds, two-thirds of which was grain. The ticket-sales for the year amounted to five thousand one hundred and thirty-five dollars and eighty-five cents.
THE UNITED STATES EXPRESS COMPANY
have an office in the village, and the agent, Mr. J. B. Anderson, has cour- teously furnished the following statement of the company's business for 1876: The value of the receipts, which are principally composed of money- packages, amounted to one hundred and eighteen thousand nine hundred dollars, and that of the forwarding to eighty-three thousand six hundred dollars,-making a total value of goods and money transferred of two hun- dred and two thousand five hundred dollars.
THE PROFESSIONS.
The first physician who ministered to the "ills that flesh is heir to," was Dr. Rose, who prescribed for his patients after the method of the botanic school. Dr. Bennett, on the prairie, was also of that school. In 1844 Dr. Richard- son administered his lotions and pills, and diagnosed his patients according to the allopathic or regular school of medicine. Dr. Israel Purchell, who fol- lowed him, was of the same practice, and died in Mendon after 1851.
Dr. Edwin Stewart came in 1852, and is there yet, being a most worthy citizen. In 1852 Dr. Harra was in the village for a few months. Dr. Loftus Hyatt, who had been in company with Dr. Mottram in Nottawa pre- viously for some years, came to Mendon in 1859, and is still a resident there. Dr. H. C. Clapp located in the village in 1860, and is still in practice therein. Dr. Hamlin (eclectic) was also a dweller in the village in 1860, for a short time only. Dr. Corbin came in 1870, and Dr. Samuel H. Ben- nett (homeopathic), who is still a resident of the village, came before Corbin. Dr. Charles W. Shepherd, a partner of Dr. Stewart, came in 1874.
THE FIRST LAWYER
who put out his "shingle" in Mendon was G. P. Doan, and he is still blooming in the village. Orla J. Fast came next, and is now the prose- cuting attorney of the county, and is a very successful lawyer. A. J. Reeves was also a resident attorney of the village for a brief period.
Dr. J. E. Fuller was a dentist in the earlier history of the village, but Dr. A. J. Benedict is the only surgeon-dentist here at present, and he came in 1859.
THE PRESS.
The Mendon Eagle spread his wings and screamed defiance to slow-going villages elsewhere, in 1857-8, under the management of N. D. Glidden and A. C. Miles. The bird subsided after a year's exhibit of his high-flying qualities, and Burlingame & Rockwell brought out the fowl again under the name of the Mendon Independent, which held the even tenor of its way
for about two years, when it ceased to illumine the horizon with its rays. Burlingame publishes a paper at present in Lenawee county.
The office was sold and finally passed into the hands of Mr. Marantette, and the material and presses were used by several different parties, spas- modically, as they found means sufficient to pay the rental therefor.
In 1871 Charles P. Sweet published the Mendonian for about three years. It professed independence in politics, and supported Mr. Greeley in 1872 for the presidency. Mr. Sweet went to Vicksburg, Kalamazoo county, where he still continues the publication of the paper under another name. In the fall of 1874 Mr. Alfred Rindge began the publication of
THE MENDON WEEKLY TIMES,
the first number appearing October 2 of that year. The Times is a seven- column folio, gotten up in good style, and presents a neat appearance. Its record of local happenings is its best feature, though it by no means confines its columns to those alone. Its office is a well-stocked one, with new type and material, three good and new presses,-one the Centennial Nonpareil, the latest style out,-and does job-work with neatness and dispatch. The Times has a healthy patronage, and in politics is independent.
THE UNION SCHOOL
of Mendon was first organized as such September 3, 1866. The first board of trustees were Dr. Edwin Stewart, Dr. H. C. Clapp, A. H. Voorhees, D. K. Van Ness, O. M. Beal, and Enoch Healey.
The present site of the school-house, known as "The Park," was, after much negotiation and discussion, bought, and the present fine and airy structure erected in 1873. The plan of the White Pigeon union school- house was adopted after a full examination of several others. The building committee were H. H. Bourn, Benjamin Will and George Van Buren. Adams Wakeman supplied the brick from his own kilns.
The school-house and lots are valued at twelve thousand dollars, and the house furnishes three hundred and twenty sittings. The bonded indebted- ness of the district is nine thousand seven hundred dollars. The first frame school-house erected in district number six was built in 1841, and the second about 1857.
The school was in session for the year ending September, 1876, ten months, two hundred and eighty-one pupils being in attendance. One male teacher was paid one thousand dollars, and three females one thousand three hun- dred and forty-four dollars. The total income of the district was four thou- sand eight hundred and fifty-two dollars and eighty-two cents, including one hundred and forty-four dollars and forty-five cents tuition fees from non- resident scholars. The present board of trustees is as follows : Dr. Edwin Stewart, Dr. H. C. Clapp, D. R. Beckley, R. E. Fletcher, G. W. Van Bu- ren and W. P. Custard.
The present corps of teachers comprises J. W. Bentley, principal ; Annie H. Warner, assistant; Nettie Hazen, grammar department ; Imogene Cross, intermediate; Hattie E. Blakely, primary. The principals of the school have been : David W. Herman, 1866-7; J. W. Bentley, 1868-73; Ira L. Forbes, 1874-5; C. B. Van Slyke, 1875-6.
THE CHURCHES
in Mendon village'are the Catholic, Episcopal, Methodist and Baptist denom- inations.
THE CATHOLIC CHURCH SOCIETY
was organized in 1837-38 by Father Charles Boss. The Moutan family, Mr. Marantette and family, Mr. Metta and family, the Neddeaux family and the French residents generally forming the nucleus of the society, after- wards known in 1858, as at present, as St. Martin's church. Mr. Marantette furnished a chapel until 1866 for several years, either at his house or in his store-building. The present church-building was erected in 1866, has about three hundred sittings and is valued at four thousand dollars. There are some forty-five or fifty families at present connected with the church. In 1840 Father Barnie visited the church here, and Father E. Soren, of Notre Dame, in 1842. The other priests who ministered to the charge, none of whom have remained more than one year, have been Fathers Quentin, Bor- reau, Schilling, Grenger, Murriveaux, Labelle, Richards and Kurst.
THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH SOCIETY
of Mendon was organized in 1856-58, the class being formed somewhere be- tween those dates. The church-building was erected by a layman, Ezra Bourn, in 1860. The early members were: Ezra Bourn and wife, A. J. Troy and wife, George .Maring and wife, L. Blyman and wife, Ziba White and wife, Mrs. Adaline Pellett, Gilbert Bennett and wife, Lentulus Huntley and wife,-Ezra Bourn being the class-leader and steward. The church contains
RES. OF HIRAM WAKEMAN, MENDON, S! JOSEPH
COUNTY, MICHIGAN.
RESIDENCE OF A. WESLEY MARING, MENDON, ST JOSEPH CO., MICH.
KEMAN
USE
WAKEMAN HOUSE, MENDON, MICHIGAN.
225
HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, MICHIGAN.
about three hundred sittings, and is valued at five thousand dollars, and its parsonage at one thousand eight hundred dollars.
It is a brick building, and situated on the main street of that village. It was built on a broad catholic principle, for everybody to use who chose to occupy it. The Sunday-school connected with the church was organized in 1860, a union school being in operation earlier. Its superintendent is Mr. Anderson, and it has one thousand volumes in its library, the largest in the county, and which has been provided for by a most zealous and worthy sis- ter of the church, Paulina (Harmon) McMillan, who endowed the library with eight hundred dollars, the interest of which is to be expended annually for books perpetually. Miss McMillan inherited a snug fortune from Mr. Harmon, who adopted her as his child and made her his heir, and she has been a most liberal donor to the Methodist Episcopal society, giving them a parsonage, valued at two thousand dollars, besides numerous other benefac- tions. A. J. Troy was the superintendent of this Sunday-school for six years, previous to J. C. Abbott, present incumbent.
The Mendon society was formerly the appointment of the Centreville charge, and afterwards in the circuit of Colon, Leonidas, and Park. Mr. J. C. Abbott, an old veteran in the cause, established preaching in Colon, in 1843, in a cooper-shop. At Watervliet, in Berrien county, Mr. Abbott preached a temperance sermon and pledged the ladies of the village to re- fuse to board the only liquor-seller in the village, a bachelor, and per conse- quence he was obliged to leave. Mr. Abbott immediately called a meeting in the quondam saloon, and turning the bar into a desk, he preached there- from, dispensing truths where drink had been dispensed before. The min- isters who have had charge of this society are Reverends Patterson, 1860- 61; E. Kellogg, 1862; Beach, 1863-65 ; Joseph Jones, 1866-68 ; James L. Childs, 1868-69; William Mathias, 1869-70; William Rice, 1870-71; R. C. Welch, 1872; W. I. Cogshall, 1873; J. C. Abbott, 1874-75, and J. E. White, present incumbent. The church numbers eighty-four members.
ST. PAUL'S (EPISCOPAL) CHURCH,
of Mendon, was organized September 8, 1866, with the following members : O. M. Beall, A. M. Townsend, William Harrington, Samuel C. Hodgman, Charles H. Lewis, James E. Fuller, George E. Sanford, Hazzard L. Stowell, Peter R. Hall, Edwin Stewart and Levi Cole. Vestryman, William Har- rington ; senior warden, Edwin Stewart ; junior warden, Charles H. Lewis; S. C. Hodgman, secretary, and Levi Cole, treasurer. The present church was built in 1868. It contains two hundred and twenty-five sittings, and is furnished with a fine portable pipe-organ. It is valued at six thousand dollars.
The female members at the time of the organization were: Mrs. John Holden, Mrs. William Harrington (who subseqently donated to the church the organ, valued at six hundred dollars), Mrs. Edwin Stewart, Mrs. D. K. Van Ness, Mrs. Levi Cole, Mrs. I. J. Mclellan, Miss Mary Stowell, Mrs. H. L. Stowell, Mrs. C. H. Lewis, Mrs. L. B. Lyman and Mrs. George San- ford.
A Sunday-school was organized when the parish was instituted, J. B. Anderson being the present superintendent. There are now forty scholars enrolled, and papers take the place of books.
At the bishop's first visit,-January 6, 1867,-he (McCrosky) confirmed a class of twenty-four, and the January following, six ; May 29, 1869, three ; in 1870, four, and in 1872, four. Dr. Gillespie, bishop of western Michigan, in May 23, 1875, confirmed a class of ten.
The ladies aid-society has been very efficient in aiding the building of the church, and is supporting a rector. Mrs. Van Ness is the president. The rectors of the society have been : Rev. William Charles, 1866-7 ; Rev. Augustus Bush, 1869-72; Abraham Reeves, 1873 ; L. D. Ferguson, 1875. The present rector, Rev. A. E. Bishop, began his labors over the church January 1, 1877.
The present vestry is as follows : D. K. Van Ness, S. W. ; J. B. Anderson, J. W .; C. H. Lewis, secretary ; I. J. Mclellan, treasurer ; Levi Cole, Edwin Stewart, Loftus Hyatt, John Holden, O. S. Morton and Homer Randall.
THE BAPTIST CHURCH.
The early members of this organization include J. B. Taber and wife, Elisha Foote, Elisha Foote, Jr., Miss J. P. Tomlinson, P. Crandall, Mrs. L. Crandall, Osborn and others. . SOCIETIES-MASONIC.
Mendon Lodge, No. 137, F. A. M., was instituted under dispensation in 1861-2, and chartered in 1863, with N. S. Johnson, W. M., who has been succeeded in the "East" by Horace C. Clapp in 1864-7 and 1870-5; by
Charles Palmer, 1868-9. The present officers are Charles A. Palmer, W. M .; A. H. Voorhees, S. W .; S. H. Bennett, J. W .; D. K. Van Ness, treas- urer; N. N. McAllister, secretary. The craft number eighty-five.
I. O. O. F.
Morrison Lodge, No. 136, was organized January 7, 1870, its charter- members being William Harrington, N. G .; Rev. William Mathias, V. G .; G. Engle, treasurer; T. H. Toby, secretary, and I. N. Caldwell. Its present membership is sixty-two. The hall where the lodge meets is the property of Morrison Lodge stock company, and was built in 1875, and is valued at one thousand dollars. The present officers are John Wolford, N. G .; Wallace Langdon, V. G .; Charles Wellesley, secretary ; S. P. Baird, treasurer.
Morrison Encampment of Patriarchs, No. 57, was instituted February 14, 1873, with J. Foreman, C. P .; Lewis H. Fort, H. P .; John Wolford, J. W .; William Osgood; J. C. Blue, treasurer ; Julius B. Anderson, scribe, and C. B. Kenyon, S. W. It numbers at present thirty-five members, and its present officers are George Van Buren, C. P .; J. N. Caldwell, H. P .; Wallace Langdon, S. W .; S. Coon, J. W .; Charles Wellesley, scribe; John Wolford, treasurer.
Both lodge and encampment were named in honor of R. H. Morrison, of Sturgis, an eminent member of the order.
PATRONS OF HUSBANDRY.
Mendon Grange, No. 111, P. of H., was organized October 25, 1873, with A. H. Voorhees, master ; L. B. Osgood, overseer ; A. P. Emery, secretary, and twenty-seven charter-members, which were increased to fifty-three at the close of the first meeting. The membership at one time was as high as one hundred and five, but numbers at present only fifty-five,-the loss being the usual result by death, removal, and dismission. The grange is in good working order at present, and owns a warehouse on the railroad-grounds or near by, in which the members handle their own grain, plaster, etc. Three hundred tons of plaster passed through the building the first year. The present officers are J. W. Bentley, master ; Frank Butler, overseer; A. H. Voorhees, secretary; Mrs. Margaret Lehr, Ceres; Mrs. Maria Manning, Pomona ; Mrs. Maria L. Fletcher, Flora ; Miss Ellen S. Voorhees, stew- ardess.
GOOD TEMPLARS.
A lodge of Good Templars was organized August 14, 1867, and flourished finely, gaining a membership of one hundred and fifty and over, but it began to decline in 1869. The last meeting was held May 3, 1870. It was re- organized a few months after, but led a sickly existence for a short time, finally sinking past recovery. Among its members were A. Crandall, Dr. H. C. Clapp, Prof. B. F. Fast, O. J. Fast, E. D. White, A. Gaines, J. E. Embly and wife, Mrs. Crandall, Rev. B. F. Hills, and A. H. Vose.
THE MUNICIPALITY.
Mendon village was first incorporated in 1858, the first president being William Miner ; G. P. Doan, clerk, and O. S. Norton, marshal. G. P. Doan was president in 1863 and in 1867. The corporation lapsed and the village was re-incorporated in 1870. The meeting of the city-board December 14, 1870, showed George B. Reed, S. Barnabee, George Van Buren, R. E. Fletcher, Levi Cole and Frederick Glafke to be the trustees, and B. S. Howe, the clerk. In 1871, O. J. Fast was the president, and again in 1875. Dr. H. C. Clapp filled the office in 1872, and J. W. Hyatt was the clerk. In 1875, A. N. McAllister was clerk. In 1875 the village re-incorporated by special act. The present board of village officers is as follows : Nathan S. Johnson, president ; Samuel Cross, recorder ; Homer Randall, treasurer ; Homer G. Fuller, Lentulus Huntley and O. M. Beall, trustees ; E. Whiting, marshal. The corporation own ladders and trucks to put fires out, and a calaboose to put rogues in.
THE BUSINESS OF THE PRESENT
is conducted as follows :
Trade.
General Merchandise-Lewis Van Ness & Co., O. A. House, O. M. Lyman, Hasbrouck & Dukitte, Miner & Lester.
Groceries and Crockery-Levi Cole, C. L. Hasbrouck, Philip Ernst, Nel- son Howard, T. S. Riley, O. M. Beall.
Drugs-C. L. Hasbrouck, O. M. Beall, Nelson Howard.
Hardware-J. A. Wallace & Co., Stephen Barnabee.
Books and Stationery -Alfred Crandall.
Clothing and Gents' Furnishing Goods-O. G. & J. Bond.
Millinery and Ladies' Furnishing Goods-Mrs. T. S. Riley and Miss Hattie Dean.
226
HISTORY OF ST. JOSEPH COUNTY, MICHIGAN.
Not ons and Fancy Goods-George H. Hart. Bakery and Restaurant-I. J. McLelland. Dress-making-Mrs. Mary Knox. Markets-Whiting & Doan, and Cool & Tase. Hotels-Adams Wakeman, George Van Buren. Lumber-E. L. Yaple.
Grain and Produce-Lewis Van Ness & Co., J. B. Anderson, William Leidy.
Livery-J. M. Laird & Co., John Tompkins.
Seeds, Farming Implements and Plaster-Custer Brothers.
Manufacturers.
Flour-Mill-Nelson Farquhar.
Staves and Headings -- Wakeman & Lewis.
Planing and Saw-Mill-Peek, Brown & Co., H. H. Brown, etc. Furniture-G. Ernst & Kuhn.
Wagons-F. Glafke, William Dutton.
Blacksmithing-Ziba White, Howard & Gifford, W. W. Whiting, Joel Rose, Axtell & Cleveland.
Cooperage-Schuyler Greene and Greene & Stimpson. Harnesses-George S. Root, John C. Ziegler. Shoes and Boots-George Ernst, Wolford & Slayton.
A fair estimate, made by competent business men in the village, places the capital invested in business in the village at one hundred and fifty thousand dollars.
MENDON IN THE REBELLION
has as proud a record as any of her sister towns in the county. She sent her sons to the front as promptly and as numerously, according to her popu- lation, as any, and they bore upon their shields as bravely, gallantly, and steadfastly as any of Michigan's soldiers the honor of the State. Men- don's citizen-soldiery in the war for the Union against treason and secession, as gathered from the official records, were as follows :
FOURTH MICHIGAN INFANTRY.
Private George Cook, Company C; discharged at expiration of service. Private Addison J. Carpenter, Company C; discharged at expiration of service.
Private Eugene Garvin, Company C; discharged at expiration of service.
Private James K. Rockwell, Company C; discharged for disability.
Private William Stevens, Company C; discharged for disability.
Private John Sergeant, Company C; discharged at expiration of service. SIXTH INFANTRY.
Private Vintroy Greene, Company B; discharged.
Private John E. Hall, Company B; discharged.
Private Eaton D. Slayton, Company B; mustered-out.
Private Silvanus S. Chapman, Company C; discharged for disability. SEVENTH INFANTRY.
Private Winslow Brown, Company I; discharged for disability.
Private James H. Phillips. Company I; discharged June 2, 1862.
Private Holly Corwin, Company K; mustered-out.
TENTH INFANTRY.
Private Anson Sweet, Company K; mustered-out. ELEVENTH INFANTRY.
Sergeant Cuthbert Dixon, Company A ; discharged at expiration of service. Corporal Aaron B. White, Company A; discharged at expiration of service. Corporal Edwin D. White, Company A; discharged at expiration of ser- vice.
Private Leonard F. Carknard, Company A ; died at Stevenson, Alabama, October 15, 1863.
Private Nicholas C. Carknard, Company A; discharged.
Private Thelismar A. Church, Company A; discharged at expiration of service.
Private Ephraim Gibson, Company A ; died at Elizabethtown, Kentucky. Private John R. Hamlin, Company A ; discharged at expiration of service. Private William F. Patterson, Company A; discharged at expiration of service.
Private David Rockwell, Company A ; discharged at expiration of service. Private Daniel D. V. Rose, Company A; discharged at expiration of service.
Private Thomas A. White, Company A; discharged for disability.
Private James K. Woodward, Company A; mustered-out.
Private Henry A. Key, Company A; mustered-out.
Private Martin H. Glover, Company A ; mustered-out.
Private Richard H. Welch, Company A; mustered-out.
Private Harrison Auten, Company C; died May 2, 1862.
Private Nelon Bacon, Company C; discharged at expiration of service. Private William F. Y. Bournes, Company C; discharged at expiration of service.
Private Anthony Worthington, Company E; discharged at expiration of service.
Private Thomas Crow, Company G; discharged November 30, 1861.
Private Harvey Bates, Company G; mustered-out.
Private General V. Bland, Company I; mustered-out.
Private William H. Auten, Company C; veteran reserve corps.
TWELFTH INFANTRY.
Private Martin Nehran, Company K; discharged for disability. THIRTEENTH INFANTRY.
Private John S. Vandebogart, Company A ; mustered-out.
FIFTEENTH INFANTRY.
Private John Jones, Company A; re-enlisted and mustered-out.
Private George H. Butler, Company D; mustered-out.
SIXTEENTH INFANTRY.
Private Benjamin Horton, Company I; mustered-out.
NINETEENTH INFANTRY.
Private James McIntyre, Company C; died at Smithville, North Carolina. Private A. D. Mason, Company D ; veteran reserve corps ; mustered-out. Corporal James E. Embly, Company D; mustered-out.
Private John Boyer, Company D; mustered-out.
Private John W. Barrett, Company D; died at Nicholasville, Kentucky.
Private John M. Culver, Company D; mustered-out.
Private George B. Crandall, Company D ; mustered-out.
Private Theodore Neddo, Company D; mustered-out.
Private Robert Huff, Company C; died at Nashville.
Private Levi Hendrickson, Company C; killed at Thompson's Station, Tennessee, March 5, 1863.
Private Darius S. Cook, Company E; mustered-out.
Private Ira E. Dexter, Company E; mustered-out.
Corporal W. T. Huff, Company K; first lieutenant and mustered-out.
Private Sylvester E. Barrett, Company K ; died of wounds at McMinnville.
Private Elijah Bowerman, Company K; mustered-out.
Private James Bradford, Company K; died at Murfreesboro, August 23, 1863.
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