Duluth and St. Louis County, Minnesota; their story and people; an authentic narrative of the past, with particular attention to the modern era in the commercial, industrial, educational, civic and social development, Volume II, Part 13

Author: Van Brunt, Walter, 1846-
Publication date: 1921
Publisher: Chicago, New York, American historical society
Number of Pages: 532


USA > Minnesota > St Louis County > Duluth > Duluth and St. Louis County, Minnesota; their story and people; an authentic narrative of the past, with particular attention to the modern era in the commercial, industrial, educational, civic and social development, Volume II > Part 13


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 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57


Considering the Civil war record of St. Louis County as it now is, i.e., including in the record those of the residents of St. Louis County who served in the Civil war and afterwards took up abode within the county, as well as those who enlisted from St. Louis County, the roster is a large one, and connects the county with many distinguished regiments. As will be seen by referring to the list, men who then or later were of St. Louis County, were found upon the rosters of many regiments of many states. It would not be possible to here review the records of all the regiments in which men of the county served, but brief reference might be appropriately made to the distinguished records of Minnesota regiments. In every one of the famous Minne- sota regiments from the First to the Eleventh were men who are registered as of St. Louis County. The lists before the writer of this review give the names of 581 soldiers of Civil war service claimed to be of St. Louis County ; and among them are fifty-eight who served in Minnesota military units.


Regimental Records .- The State of Minnesota was not four years old when, on April 13, 1861, Fort Sumter, Charleston, South Carolina, surrendered to the forces of secession. Washington officials and President Lincoln knew of it that night, but the country in general knew nothing of it, and not many of the people of Washington sensed its real significance. There was one man in the Federal capital, however, who immediately grasped the dire portent of the message from Sumter; he was a sturdy pioneer of the Territory of Minne- sota. Alexander Ramsey, then governor of the state. He was in Washington on state business at that time, and with the characteris- tic quickness of action and thought had resolved that Minnesota should be one of the first states to prove its loyalty to the principles for which Lincoln and the Republic stood. Impatiently he waited for night to pass. With daylight he took action. It is said that "early on the morning of the 14th, Alexander Ramsey, governor of Minnesota, *


* presented in person to President Lincoln his written offer of 1,000 men for the suppression of the rebellion. It was then stated by the president, and the fact has never been con- troverted, that this tender was the first response to the President's call for 75,000 men." Thirty years later, ex-Governor Ramsey, in a public address, stated :


In the month of April, 1860, upon official business as governor of Minne- sota, I was called to the City of Washington. *


* On Saturday night,


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April 13, Washington was deeply moved by the intelligence that *


Fort Sumter * had been attacked and * * * * had sur- * rendered. Early Sunday morning, accompanied by two citizens of Minnesota, I visited the War Department and found the secretary (Cameron) with his hat on and papers in his hand, about to leave his office. I said: "My business is simply, as governor of Minnesota, to tender a thousand men to defend the Government." "Sit down immediately," he replied, "and write the tender you have made, as I am now on my way to the President's mansion." This was quickly done, and thus Minnesota became the first to cheer the President by offers of assistance in the crisis which had arrived.


Surely a proud distinction for a region then in its first decade of statehood. The offer was accepted, and enlistments began next day, April 15th, at St. Paul and other places.


Probably Governor Ramsey had reckoned that one thousand men would more than meet the quota expected of the young state, which when created in 1857 had a population of only 150,000, many thousands of whom were of the red race. Yet, before the four years of war were over Minnesota had "furnished 25,052 Union soldiers," or "72 per cent of her presidential vote in 1860, and 14 per cent of her entire population in that year." Ten per cent, or twenty-five hundred men gave their lives to the nation, "and probably as many more died after their discharge as the direct result of wounds received or disease contracted" during military service.


Major Battles .- The mortality among men of Minnesota was deplorable, yet the fame of Minnesota regiments of the Civil war is immortal. "Official reports show that Minnesota regiments were engaged in all the sixteen leading battles of the war. * * * Gettysburg, Spottsylvania, Wilderness, Antietam, Chancellorsville, Cold Harbor, Fredericksburg, Manassas, Shiloh, Stone River, Chickamauga,


Petersburg, Vicksburg, Chattanooga, Nashville, and Atlanta.


* * The First Minnesota at Gettysburg, the Second Minnesota at Chicka- mauga, the Third Minnesota at Fitzhugh's Wood, the Fourth Minne- sota at Vicksburg, the Fifth Minnesota at Corinth and Nashville left much conclusive evidence of their prowess that no story of either battle is complete which does not make acknowledgment of their effective participation."


And through the greater part of the national strife, when Minne- sota was stripped almost bare of its man-power to keep the Union flag in the van, the few that remained in the home sector had to be almost constantly on guard lest the restless and cruel Indian at their very frontier, in fact within their borders, might get beyond control and manifest their traditional hatred of white people by bloody massacres in outlying settlements. Once they did get beyond control, as has been elsewhere narrated. It was a trying time, yet those who lived through the Civil war period look back in reminiscence to that period as "glad grand days," as they really were, for in that period, as during the periods of other serious wars, the Revolution, the Span- ish and World wars, men and women, young and old, were enthused by a spirit of unselfishness, of loyalty to and consideration for others, of patriotism to the nation; they were filled with that exaltation of service in a righteous cause which makes sacrifice glorious, and hard- ship a privilege. The soldiers that went to war left the capital of Minnesota thrilled by the enthusiasm and courage displayed by every- one. The First Regiment left St. Paul (Fort Snelling) on June 22, 1861, at 5 o'clock in the morning; yet the "town was out." a vast crowd to "see them off" at the lower levce, and at 8:30 A. M., the line of boats cast off, "the band playing a lively air, the crowd on the


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shore and the soldiers cheering lustily," all proud to enter upon per- sonal sacrifices for the nation, and thinking it "a glorious day" even though tears came to the eyes of some at the same time.


Now to review briefly the records of the regiments in which men of St. Louis County served. The review begins with :


First Minnesota Infantry .- The First Regiment of Minnesota volunteers, which became an infantry unit, was organized in April, 1861, and originally commanded by Col. Willis A. Gorman, former territorial governor of Minnesota. Ordered to Washington, District of Columbia, June 14, 1861; embarked, June 21. Participated in the following marches, battles, sieges and skirmishes: Bull Run and Edward's Ferry, 1861; Yorktown, Fair Oaks, Peach Orchard, Savage Station, Glendale and Nelson's Farm, Malvern Hill, Vienna, Antietam, Charleston, first Fredericksburg, 1862 ; second Fredericksburg, Gettys- burg, and Bristow Station, 1863. Discharged at Fort Snelling, Minne- sota, May 5, 1864. At Gettysburg, out of 252 men engaged, the First lost 205, "the greatest relative casualty list suffered by any command during the war."


The following named men of St. Louis County were upon the rosters of the First Regiment: E. A. Austin, W. H. Bassett, G. H. Durphin, J. J. Egan, E. H. Foster, W. H. Johnson, E. R. Jefferson, R. E. Jefferson, J. O. Milne, Thos. H. Pressnell, Franklin Paine, and John Young.


Second Minnesota Infantry .- The organization of the Second Regiment of Minnesota volunteers was entered upon even before the First had left St. Paul. Officially, the Second Regiment was recorded as having been organized in July, 1861. It was originally commanded by H. P. Van Cleve, a West point graduate, a veteran of the Black Hawk war. He became a brigadier-general in 1862. The Second Regiment was ordered to Louisville, Kentucky, in October, 1861, and became part of the Army of the Ohio. Engaged in the following campaigns, battles, and sieges: Mill Spring, siege of Corinth, Braggs Raid, Perryville, 1862 ; skirmishes of the Tullahoma campaign, Chicka- mauga, and Mission Ridge, 1863. The regiment was veteranized in January, 1864, and joined Sherman's forces for the Atlanta campaign, taking part in the following engagements: Resaca, Kenesaw Moun- tain, 1864; Jonesboro; Sherman's march through Georgia and the Carolinas: Bentonville, 1865. Discharged at Fort Snelling, July 11, 1865. The regiment "covered itself with laurels" in the battle of Chickamauga, and "few Minnesota regiments, if any, performed more long and laborious marches."


St. Louis County men of the Second Regiment were: J. N. Barn- card, A. C. Bentley, Thomas Bowen, J. W. Burbank, M. C. Russell, and R. W. Sanburn.


Third Minnesota Infantry .- The Third Regiment was organized in October, 1861, and originally commanded by Col. Henry C. Lester, of Winona. Ordered to Nashville, Tennessee, in March, 1862; thence to St. Louis, Missouri, and to Minnesota. Engaged in Indian expedi- tion of 1862. Participated in battle of Little Rock, Arkansas, Novem- ber, 1863. Veteranized in January, 1864. Engaged at Fitzhugh's Woods, March 30, 1864; ordered to Pine Bluff, Arkansas, April, 1864; mustered out Devall's Bluff, September 2, 1865; discharged Fort Snelling. Regiment was conspicuous at Fitzhugh's Woods.


St. Louis County men in Third Regiment : Andrew Brink, H. J. Eaton, Hans Eustrom, E. L. Woodward, and E. S. Woodsworth.


Fourth Minnesota Infantry .- Organized December, 1861, Col.


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John B. Sanborn. Ordered to Benton Barracks, Missouri, April 19, 1862. Participated in: Siege of Corinth, April 1, 1862; Iuka, Sep- tember, 1862; Battle of Corinth, October, 1862; Siege of Vicksburg, Raymond, Jackson, Champion Hills, assault on Vicksburg and cap- ture of Vicksburg, July 4, 1863; Mission Ridge, November, 1863. Veteranized January, 1864. Allatoona, October, 1864; Sherman's march through Georgia and Carolinas; Bentonville, March 20, 1865; Raleigh, 1865. Mustered out at Louisville, Kentucky, July 19, 1865. Discharged at Fort Snelling.


St. Louis County men on rosters of Fourth Regiment: U. S. Ayers, Brady Johnson, W. B. Patton, Charles Stewart, Fred Stauff, E. A. Tyler, and W. H. Van Valkenberg.


Fifth Minnesota Infantry .- Organized May, 1862, Col. Rudolph Borgesrode of Shakopee. Col. Lucius F. Hubbard of Red Wing later in command. Ordered to Pittsburg Landing, May 9, 1862. Left three companies in Minnesota for garrison duty. Regiment in many battles in 1862, including Siege of Corinth, April-May; Battle of Iuka, September, 1862; Corinth, October, 1862. Minnesota detachment engaged with Indians at Redwood, Minnesota, August 18, 1862 ; Siege of Fort Ridgely, August 20-22, 1862; Fort Abercrombie, D. T., August, 1862. Regiment with Sixteenth Army Corps saw heavy fighting in 1863, including: Jackson, Siege of Vicksburg, Assault of Vicksburg, Mechanicsburg, Richmond, 1863. The regiment was at Fort DeRussey, Louisiana, in March, 1864; then followed the Red River fighting, March-May; Lake Chicot, June, and Tupelo. July, 1864. In that month the regiment was veteranized. In August it engaged in the Battle of Abbeyville. Ordered to Nashville, Tennes- see, in November, 1864, it took part in battle of Nashville, Decem- ber 15-16. In April, 1865, it was at Spanish Fort and Fort Blakely, and finally, on September 6, 1865, was mustered out in Demopolis, Alabama.


M. Bruletti, James Farrell, N. Hettinger, W. G. Huston, and J. McGraw were the St. Louis County men of the Fifth Regiment.


Sixth Minnesota Infantry .- Organized August, 1862. Ordered to participate in Indian expedition forthwith. In battle with Indians at Birch Coulee, September 2, and Wood Lake, September 22, 1862. Garrison duty, frontier posts, next eight months, then actively in field against Indians. Three engagements. Similar garrison duty September, 1863 to June, 1864, then leaving for Helena, Arkansas. Ordered to St. Louis, Missouri, November, 1864, thence to New Orleans, January, 1865. With Sixteenth Army Corps engaged at Spanish Fort and Fort Blakely, April, 1865. Col. A. D. Nelson, original commander, was ordered to frontier before the organization was completed but he soon resigned and Col. Wm. Crooks appointed. James H. La Fans seems to have been the only St. Louis County man in that regiment.


Seventh Minnesota Infantry .- Organized in August, 1862, Col. Stephen Miller, of St. Cloud, commanding. Participated Indian expe- dition, 1862; battle Wood Lake, Minnesota, September 22. Garrison duty frontier until May, 1863. Actively in field against Indians that summer ; engagements July 24, 26 and 28. Ordered St. Louis, Mis- souri, October 27, 1863; thence to Paducah, Kentucky, April, 1864; thence to Memphis, Tennessee, Assigned to Sixteenth Army Corps, June, participating in : Battle of Tupelo, July ; Tallahatchic, August ; pursuit of Price from Arkansas to Missouri ; Battle of Nashville, Ten- nessee, December, 1864. Last engagements Spanish Fort and Fort


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Blakely, Alabama, April, 1865. Discharged at Fort Snelling, Minne- sota, August 16, 1865.


Lt .- Col. Wm. R. Marshall, later governor of state, may be claimed as St. Louis County man, being one of pioneer townsite owners on the North Shore in the '50s; but the men of the Seventh Regiment shown on St. Louis County rosters are Frank Burke, John Hagadon, -McNeil, and Thos. Stokes.


Eighth Minnesota Infantry .- Organized August, 1862, Col. Minor T. Thomas, of Stillwater, commanding. At frontier posts until May, 1864, when regiment took field against Indians. Distinguished itself at Tah-cha-o-ku-tu, July 28, 1864, Little Missouri River, that engage- ment being only one against Indians commemorated in oils, the famous picture now hanging in the Minnesota State Capitol.


Other engagements of Eighth Infantry include battles against Con- federate troops, the record including Battle of the Cedars, Wilkin- son's Pike, Tenn., December, 1864, and near Murfreesboro same month. Regiment took part in battles of Kingston, March, 1865, and was mustered out at Charlotte, North Carolina, July 11, 1865.


H. C. Helm and J. F. Russell, of St. Louis County, were of the Eighth Regiment.


Ninth Minnesota Infantry .- Organized August, 1862, Col. Alex. Wilkins, of St. Paul, commanding. At frontier posts until Septem- ber, 1863, then ordered to St. Louis, Mo .; Garrison duty, Missouri, until May, 1864, then going to Memphis. Later engagements: Gun- town expedition, June, 1864; Oxford expedition, August, 1864; Talla- hatchie, August, 1864; pursuit of Price, Arkansas to Missouri ; battles of Nashville, Tennessee, December, 1864; Spanish Fort and Fort Blakely, April, 1865. Discharged at Fort Snelling, August 24, 1865.


G. K. Barncard was the only known man of St. Louis County who served with the Ninth Regiment.


Tenth Minnesota Infantry .- Organized August, 1862, Col. James H. Baker, of Mankato, commanding. Frontier duty until June, 1863. In field against Indians during summer ; engaged July 24, 26 and 28th. At St. Louis, Missouri, October, 1863; Columbus, Kentucky, April, 1864; Memphis, Tennessee, June, 1864. With Sixteenth Army Corps at Battle of Tupelo, July ; Oxford expedition in August ; Price pursuit ; battles in Nashville, December, and in April of next year, 1865, at Spanish Fort and Fort Blakely, Alabama. Discharged Fort Snelling, August 19, 1865.


There were at least four St. Louis County men in the Tenth Regiment ; they were : James J. Barns, Hugh A. Cox, Amos Franken- field and Henry Wellgarde.


Eleventh Minnesota Infantry .- The Eleventh Regiment was not organized until August, 1864, under command of Col. James Gilfillan. It left for field of bitterest warfare, Tennessee, but was not destined to take part in actual fighting, being detailed to guard railroad between Nashville and St. Louis. It was mustered out in June, 1865. H. F. Johnson, of St. Louis County, was in that unit.


First Regiment Heavy Artillery .- It was not until April, 1865, that the first Minnesota regiment of heavy artillery was organized. The first battery of light artillery had been organized in October, 1861, and the second and third batteries in December, 1861, and February, 1863, respectively, but there seemed to be no call for heavy artillery until 1865, when Col. Wm. Colville, of Red Wing, organized the First Regiment. It was ordered to Chattanooga, Tennessee, and there remained until September, 1865, when it was mustered out.


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On the rolls of the regiment were John Saxton, Conrad Schoffer, and Albert Woolson, of St. Louis County.


Second Company, Sharpshooters was mustered until the Federal service for three years, in March, 1862, under command of Capt. Wm. F. Russell. It was part of a corps of picked men, known as "Berdan's Sharpshooters," recruited for special service. Its record is practically the record of the First Minnesota Infantry, for it was assigned to duty with that regiment in June, 1862, and remained attached until mustered out.


WV. H. Smith, of St. Louis County, was of the Sharpshooters.


First Mounted Rangers was organized in March, 1863, by Col. Samuel McPhail, of Houston. It took part in the Indian expedition of that vear, and was mustered out before the end of that year.


The St. Louis County men among the Mounted Rangers were Geo. R. Page, Nelson Hooper, Geo. N. La Vaque and John H. La Vaque.


Brackett's Battalion Cavalry .- Major Alfred B. Brackett, of St. Paul, organized the battalion of cavalry known by his name in October and November, 1861. The three companies soon left for Benton Barracks, Missouri, and in December, 1861, the battalion was assigned to "'Curtis' Horse," and in February, 1862. left for Fort Henry, Tennessee. In the following April the regiment became the "Fifth Iowa Cavalry," and as such took part in siege of Corinth, April, 1862. Ordered to Fort Heiman, Tennessee, August, 1862; veteranized February, 1864; ordered to Department of Northwest in 1864, Indian warfare, engagements July and August. Mustered out by companies May and June, 1866.


Charles Cotter and Leonidas Merritt were of Brackett's Cavalry, and another St. Louis County man, H. H. Hawkins, who is listed as of Second Minnesota Cavalry, may have belonged to the second com- pany of Brackett's battalion.


Hatch's Battalion, Cavalry .- Hatch's Battalion, otherwise known as the Independent Battalion of Minnesota Cavalry, was organized in July, 1863, by Major E. A. C. Hatch. It was formed for service against the Indians, and although a Federal unit, it was permitted to operate independently of General Pope, then in command of the department, reporting direct to the War Department, Washington. The battalion was order to Pembina, D. T., October, 1863, and to Fort Abercrombie, D. T., May 1864, and there remained until mustered out by companies April to June, 1866.


S. L. Bohanan seems to have been the only St. Louis County man in Hatch's Battalion.


The Late Asa Dailey .- The foregoing review covers the records of Minnesota regiments in which St. Louis County men served, but as will be seen by the following list, men of the North Shore were in very many other regiments, many of them of very distin- guished record. But obviously this review must confine itself to Minnesota regiments. However, so that a complete roster might be preserved in an authentic county history, the compiler of this work approached Mr. Asa Dailey, of Duluth, in November, 1920, knowing him to be the man best fitted for the preparation of such a roster. Mr. Dailey, a worthy loyal comrade, readily entered upon the work, having during the latter part of his life devoted himself exclusively to Grand Army affairs. It is thought that he was loyally engaged in such work of compilation when stricken in the spring of this year. He never recovered, death coming on June 19, 1921. Among his papers were later found the pencilled lists containing


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the Civil war information that follows this chapter. Whether the list is complete, or not, the compiler of this county work is unable to state, but the information is given so that the worthy patriots who are of record in St. Louis County, e.g., who were of local residence either before or since the Civil war, and gave the nation personal service during that long and terrible struggle, might feel that the editors of this work desire to honor them, or their memory, in acknowledging their war service.


The lists prepared by the late Asa Dailey, and here given, include only men of St. Louis County, it is presumed. The branch of service is given where possible. The list begins: Anderson, Charles U. S. N .; Austin, E. A., 1st Minn .; A. O. Ayers, 86th Ohio; S. C. Aldrich, 65th Ohio; Charles Arnold, 142nd N. Y .; Samuel Anderson, 11th Pa .; Henry Alger, 1st Conn., Charles N. Ashford, 10th N. Y .; U. S. Ayres, 4th Minn, Martin Anderson, 33rd Wis .; John Abair, 153 N. Y .; R. W. Abbott, 9th Maine; J. J. Ash, 2nd N. J. Charles Archer, 14th N. Y .; Martin Anderson, 53rd Wis .; J. N. Albertson, 11th N. Y. S. F. Boyer, 104th Ohio; C. N. Bonnell, 5th Wis .; W. H. Black, 23rd Ill .; John Butler, 6th N. Y .; John O. Benson, 4th Ill .; T. B. Bedell, 1st Cal. ; William Ball, 45th Wis. ; Thomas S. Brown, 5th N. H .; J. H. Baker, 31st Iowa; B. H. Brown, 5th N. H .; John Burns, 15th U. S .; Frank E. Birdsell, 7th Mich .; C. B. Bjmark, 7th Mich .; James J. Barns, 10th Minn. ; Lucien J. Barnes, 1st Mo .; Myron C. Bunnell, 10th Mich .; Wm. G. Benson, 12th Mich. Inf .; A. E. Briggs, 110th Pa .; G. Bywater, 3rd Mo .; Fred D. Barnett, 84th Pa .; Geo. C. Blackwood, 177th Ohio; U. A. Burnham, 76th N. Y .; Milton Buell, 48th Wis .; E. L. Barber, 10th N. Y .; M. Bruletti, 5th Minn .; W. H. Bassett, 1st Minn .; John Bucha, 12th Wis .; Frank Burke, 7th Minn .; Daniel L. Bishop, 13th Me .; Chas. E. Budden, 1st Mich .; Hiram E. Barker, 2nd Wis .; Samuel Barge, 13th Wis .; Andrew Brink, 3rd Minn .; S. H. Brinn, 7th N. J .; John R. Balsh, 141st N. Y .; H. G. Blackmor, 56th Ill. ; A. C. Blackman, 28th Ind. ; Alfred Baker, 65th N. Y .; C. P. Bragg, N. S. N. ; G. H. Barncard, 9th Minn. ; Daniel Bigber, 1st Wis .; M. W. Bates, 21st Mich .; J. W. Butt, 46th Iowa; A. H. Burke, 75th Ind .; F. H. Barnard, 44th Mass. ; R. S. Barker, 31st Me. ; Henry Brown, 26th Mass. ; W. F. Bailey, 12th Iowa ; S. E. Burnham, 1st Me. ; L. J. Butter- field, 6th Wis .; D. J. Budd, Wis .; Thomas Brooke, 76th Ohio; S. L. Bohanan ; John T. Bright, 13th Pa .; Lewis Barrett, 28th Ohio; Ardin H. Bowen, 54th Ill .; J. M. Burbank, 5th Wis .; J. M. Barr, 9th Iowa ; W. J. Baker, 3rd Wis .; Jas. S. Bush, U. S. N .; Thomas Burns, 29th Mich .; John Barton, 43rd Wis .; Henry Brown, 26th Mass .; Edwin Barnham, 1st U. S. Engrs .; M. R. Baldwin, 2nd Wis .; Thomas Bart- lett ; S. S. Barnett ; G. H. Brown, 5th N. H .; A. C. Bentley ; Thomas Bowen; J. N. Barncard, 2nd Minn .; Chas E. Bostwick, 128th N. Y .; J. Brierly, 3rd Mass .; T. O. Brown, 18th Ill .; J. W. Burbank, 2nd Minn .; F. H. Brassett, 12th Wis .; Wm. F. Butters, 1st Me .; W. T. Bailey.


C. J. Crassett, 10th Wis .; P. O. Carr, U. S. N .; Miles Colson, U. S. N .; Thomas Cantwell, 143rd N. Y .; D. G. Cash, 27th Mich. ; J. H. Cole, 12th Mich .; Cunningham, 73rd Pa .; E. M. Crassett, 18th Wis .; J. H. Cramer, 13th N. Y. ; Chamberlain, 4th Wis. ; A. Caisse, 3rd Mich .; Hugh A. Cox, 10th Minn .; R. S. Cowden, 7th Ohio; R. Cavanaugh, U. S. N .; Henry Champlin, 30th Wis .; M. J. Crothers, 6th Mich .; H. H. Covert, 148th N. Y .; Orson Coon, 49th Wis .; Chas. W. Cate, 8th Mich .; Ira Coburn, 950th Pa .; M. M. Clark, 5th Iowa; Henry Cleveland, 5th N. Y .; Chas. Cotter, Minn .; Dd. Crowley, 30th Wis .;


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Chas. Caya, 45th Wis .; A. M. Cox, 2nd Ill .; E. G. Chapman, 8th Iowa ; S. W. Clark, 4th Mass .; Chas. F. Clement, 10th Ind .; Elkin Corbett, 1st N. Y .; James G. Clark, 30th Ohio; Osgood Churchill, 12th Me .; J. B. Culver, 13th Mich .; H. W. Coppernall; C. D. Campbell, 27th Mich .; Anthony Cloud, 44th Ind .; R. B. Campbell, U. S. N .; W. L. Carey, 29th Ohio; J. C. Cook, Sth Mich .; L. G. Colman, 30th Mich .; R. J. Clemon, 8th N. Y .; Arthur B. Chapin, 1st Ohio; N. B. Church; Michael Casey, L. U. Case, 1st Mich .; W. C. Corey, 18th Wis. ; C. Car- gall, 2nd N. Y .; D. S. Cole, 3rd Mich .; E. B. Christie, 8th Ill .; A. W. Clark, 5th Mich .; Walter M. Clark, 27th Wis .; Louis B. Coffey, 2nd Wis .; Wm. Carnethan.


Marion Daniel, 3rd Wis .; A. S. Daniel, 11th Conn .; J. S. Daniels, 2nd Wis .; Asa Dailey, 30th Wis .; W. F. Davey, 97th N. Y .; John Donovan, 145th N. Y. ; E. S. Dodd, 14th Ohio ; Job P. Dodge, 11th Ill .; Richard Dodge, 27th Wis .; Wm. Doudanow, 27th Mich .; Nelson Drake, 5th N. Y .; Cornelius Donohue, 4th Mich. ; Geo. W. Donaldson, 27th Mich .; John Dimond, 1st N. Y .; Don A. Dodge, 101st N. Y .; James L. Dow, 49th Wis .; H. A. Douglas, 2nd Wis .; T. F. Dean, 9th Ind .; Darius Dexter, 7th Ill .; Sylvanus Doris, 2nd N. Y .; G. H. Durphin, 1st Minn.




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