USA > New York > History of the Tenth regiment of cavalry New York state volunteers, August, 1861, to August, 1865, pt 1 > Part 5
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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
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1802
HISTORY OF THE TENTH REGIMENT OF CAVALRY.
the remainder hiding below. There were four skiffs moored to the side of the river near us. Lieutenant Weed divided us up into four squads, and instructed us to pick our boats and make a run for them. We obeyed orders; jumped into the boats, and pulled for the schooner. But the skiff's being so shallow, and this being our first experience as marines, we would hit our knees with the oars, and turn the boats completely around at times. However, we "got there," after a while. The rebs had rushed up on deck, and Lieutenant Weed ordered them to surrender. They started to give three cheers for Jeff Davis and the Southern Confederacy, but the eleven old muskets came up and they never finished the cheers. They tied their knives, revolvers, and letters in a large Confederate flag, and threw all overboard. They were ordered below, and the captain and mate of the schooner released. While we were rowing toward the schooner three of their number escaped in a boat to the opposite shore. After capturing the schooner, Lieutenant Weed and four men started in pursuit, and on approaching the shore two boats, each inanned by eight marines (one boat having a small howitzer in the bow), was rowed rapidly toward them. The marines ordered our boys to "heave-to," but they didn't heave. So the marines fired a shot across their bow. The boys heaved! After an explanation, some of the marines joined in the search. I have forgotten whether the three rebs were captured, but I think they were.
It seems the Baltimore officers had also notified the commandant of Fort McHenry, and that officer had sent the revenue cutter Reliance up to the mouth of Back River to capture them as they came out. Two boats' crews were sent up the river to make the capture; but we, being "horse-marines," and experts in the "dough-boy " business, got there first. Upon examination of our prize, we found we had twenty-two men, one of them a Confederate lieutenant, wearing a new gray uniform under his dress of citizen's clothing. He had been recruiting in Baltimore. About two hours after the capture we saw a horse and carriage come down to the river's edge, and, fastening the horse to a tree, the driver made signs to us. We answered the signs by sending three or four men to meet him. When they neared the shore, he discovered that they were Yanks, and he lit out through the woods. Well, that carria yo contained a bountiful supply of sweet, boiled hams, soda-crackers, etc., intended for the rebs. We confiscated the catables, and the secret-service men took the horse and carriage to Baltimore. We stood around the hatchway eating the good things, to the discomfort of the picnic party they were intended for. But, there being an abundance, we gave them a portion after enjoying their chagrin for a while. A calm prevailing, the crew could not sail under canvas, so the officer in command of the marines manned the boat again and had them tow the schooner. It was now about midnight ; near morn- ing there sprang up a good, stiff breeze, and we set sail, and made the bay about daylight. The officer in command of the Reliance came on board, and we started for Fort McHenry. The revenue cutter could not keep in sight of us. Arriving at the fort we turned over the prisoners, and had breakfast there, after which we marched to General Wool's Headquarters and were complimented by the old veteran. Now, if we twelve men didn't think the rebellion would end right there, it wasn't because we hadn't done our daty toward crushing it ! We took train for Back River, and on our arrival found Company A formed in open ranks, facing in, to receive us, and Eh Turner and James Cook (Joe Cook, the Irish
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بال كويه بكيم .
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29
LIEUTENANT WEED'S ACCOUNTS.
1862
bugler) played and sung "See the conquering heroes come!" The name of the captured schooner was Resolution.
Lieutenant (afterward Major) Weed writing of the capture, says :
After we got to the schooner, and while we were boarding her, the rebels all rushed down the hatchway, and all we had to do was to clap the cover over to pen them. I then took four men and followed three, who were going for an island. Two boats, containing eight men each, put out from the revenue cutter Reliance, which had been sent up from Baltimore, and intercepted us, and made us heave-to. One boat's crew landed, and I got into the other boat with Lieu- tenant Thompson, of the revenue cutter, and went to the opposite side of the island (Lieutenant Thompson was well acquainted with the country around there). We caught the three chaps, one of whom proved to be a captain and another a lieutenant, as we found the next morning, when we searched them, each wearing a fine uniform of gray beneath their citizen's dress.
I went on board the revenue cutter on the morning of the 5th, and took break- fast with Lieutenant Thompson and the Captain, whose name I have forgotten. I was royally entertained. I shall never forget the passage from the schooner to the cutter. The waves ran from twenty to thirty feet high, and I in a gig, which seemed so small ! Well, I made up my mind I had done my last soldier- ing, but I finally reached the cutter without mishap.
Major Avery and Captain Pratt finally left camp and proceeded to the scene of operations, but arrived after the capture had taken place.
Fishing and flirting occupied much of the time of the boys at Havre de Grace. The shad were plenty and the girls pretty ; but even these considerations failed to produce contentment. The men appeared to prefer raiding to guarding, fighting to fishing, field- service to the ennui of camp-life on the Chesapeake, and so it was welcome news that came, about the middle of June, that the Regi- ment would soon be relieved and transferred to Virginia. In appar- ent confirmation of this, pistols and carbines were received and issued on the 19th of June.
A pass from the " Colonel commanding" was sufficient to insure free transit on the railroad between Havre de Grace and Baltimore, and the privilege was taken advantage of by the boys, to their great enjoyment. The capacity of the road was taxed to its utmost in transporting troops and material southward during the time the Regiment was guarding it. As the long trains laden with troops passed the camps, cheers and salutations of good-will were given the soldiers by our boys, who would gather on the banks as the cars passed by, and the response would roll along from front to rear of the long trains, ending with the never-forgotten tiger. The express-
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1862
HISTORY OF THE TENTH REGIMENT OF CAVALRY.
trains usually contained some people who thought of the soldier when making arrangements for the trip, as there would issue from the open windows of the flying cars packages containing such trinkets as were calculated to supply the imaginary wants of the soldier, together with fruit, newspapers, etc. As the trains would whirl past, followed by a cloud of dust, the boys would scamper for the testimonials of loyalty and regard.
On the 25th of June orders were received for that portion of the Regiment stationed at Havre de Grace to proceed to Baltimore. Everything was put in readiness and the detachment left about noon. On arriving in Baltimore the companies were reviewed by General Wool, commanding the Eighth Army Corps, after which they were assigned to Patterson Park, at the eastern end of the city, where they went into camp. Companies A, C, and G remained on duty, guard- ing the bridges of the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore Rail- road, between Baltimore and Bush River.
Immediately following the riot in Baltimore, April 19, 1861, a party, headed by I. R. Trimble, one of the officers of the railroad, and at the time Assistant Marshal of Baltimore, proceeded over the road with car-loads of combustible material, for the purpose of destroying these bridges. They were successful in causing a partial destruction of them, thus preventing the passage of trains bearing Union troops to the defense of the national capital .* The bridges were soon after rebuilt, but their destruction was " a consummation devoutly to be wished " by the secessionists, and it required "eternal vigilance " to prevent their being burned again. Even as late as July 11, 1864, two years after the Tenth was relieved from guarding them, Colonel Harry Gilmor, with the First and Second Battalions of Maryland (Confederate) Cavalry, made a dash and attempted the de- struction of Gunpowder Bridge, but was driven off by the guard stationed there, aided by a gunboat.
Company G was occupying the position of greatest trust, protect- ing the long bridge just named. The next most important bridge, for whose safety the Regiment was held responsible, was one over Bush River, guarded by Company C. The Back River Bridge, while not of so great length as either of the others named, by reason of its near proximity to Baltimore-six miles-rendered a keen vigil neces- sary to prevent its destruction by secessionists, who might make a
* Trimble afterward entered the Confederate service, was made a major-gen- eral, and lost a leg at Gettysburg.
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31
1862
NEW QUARTERS AT PATTERSON PARK.
sudden raid from the city. This was guarded by Company A. The duties were not so onerous or important, however, as to prevent the boys making the acquaintance of the surrounding inhabitants and partaking of their hospitality.
The new quarters of the Regiment, Patterson Park, was a beauti- ful place. Before its occupation by the Tenth it had been used for a like purpose by a small infantry command. The park was located on high ground at the eastern end of Baltimore and Lombard Streets. It commanded a fine view of the bay, and Fort Marshall to the east and Forts McHenry and Federal Hill to the south. Through the park was a line of earthworks, grass-covered, but perfect as the day on which they were thrown up. They were erected by the Ameri- cans, at the time of the landing of the British under General Ross, at Long Point, and used in the defense of the city when the advance of the British army was made in support of their fleet during the bom- bardment of Fort McHenry, September 15, 1814.
Adjoining the park, on the north, was the extensive Patterson Park Hospital, organized by Surgeon R. W. Pease, who was detached from the Tenth for that purpose, and was promoted to surgeon-in- charge on its completion. It had a capacity for twelve hundred patients, and ranked with the best hospitals in the country.
Dress-parades, police and camp-guard duties were the only exer- cises the Regiment was called upon to perform to stimulate digestion while stationed here. Large numbers of ladies were always attracted by the dress-parades, which were held in the street in front of the park.
The Third New York Volunteers were stationed at Fort McHenry, the Fifth New York (Duryea's Zouaves) at Fort Federal Hill, and Reynolds's Independent New York Battery at Stuart Place, at the opposite end of Baltimore Street. The camps of these organizations were daily visited by some of the members of the Tenth. The drill of the Light Battery and the bayonet-exercise of the Fifth New York Volunteers were especially attractive. The latter regiment was a large one, and made a very showy appearance in their bright Zouave uniforms. They were commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Gouverneur K. Warren, afterward major-general of volunteers and commander of the Fifth Army Corps. There were other officers of this regiment that attained high positions in the army, and some of them lent luster to the mounted arm of the service. The Major of the Regiment was J. Mansfield Davies, afterward Colonel of the Harris Light Cavalry. Judson Kilpatrick and Henry E. Davies, Jr., the former our first and
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32
HISTORY OF THE TENTH REGIMENT OF CAVALRY. 1862
the latter our last brigade commander, who both rose to major-gen- erals of volunteers, were captains in this regiment.
On a requisition bearing date July 17, 1862, a portion of the Regiment received horses at Patterson Park in August, and on the 15th of the latter month marched for Washington in the afternoon, mounted, where they arrived at midnight and went into camp near Bladensburg Toll-gate, just east of the Capitol.
Companies A, C, and G, on being relieved from guarding the P., W. & B. Railroad by the Nineteenth New York Militia, went direct to Washington, arriving at one o'clock in the morning, Saturday, the 16th of August. They were quartered in the Soldiers' Retreat, where they had breakfast, and then marched to the camp. Here the Regi- ment became reunited on ground made historic as the battle-field be- tween the British forces under Admiral Cockburn and General Ross and the Americans under Generals Winder and Brown and Commo- dore Barney, in which the Americans were defeated and the capital was sacked and burned on the 24th of August, 1814, just forty-eight years before. In this unfortunate affair Colonel Stansbury, of Balti- more, commanded the Baltimore Brigade, including the Fifth Regi- ment, made up of the best blood of the city. The barracks occupied by Company A, when located at Back River, were on a plantation owned by a Colonel Stansbury, a man whose sympathies with the South in the impending struggle were pronounced. He may have been a descendant of the first named-perhaps an unworthy son of a worthy sire.
The ground occupied by the Regiment was rendered famous also as the place where many noted duels had been fought. The Bladens- burg dueling-grounds are described as " not far west of Bladensburg, just beyond the line which separates the Federal city from the State of Maryland, a short distance off the road from Washington." Not far from here the famous meeting between Henry Clay and John Randolph occurred on the 8th of April, 1826; and here, not long prior to the battle between the British and Americans, already re- ferred to, a United States Secretary of the Treasury shot his antag- onist through the body in "an affair of honor ; " and here, too, Com- modore Stephen Decatur, Jr., was killed on the 22d of March, 1820, by Commodore James Barron, who was severely wounded in the same encounter, and many others of lesser note had yielded up their lives or had been disabled on this spot, victims of the barbarous code.
The place at the time the Tenth encamped there was well suited for the purposes of a cavalry station. A broad field extended toward
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CAPTAIN GEORGE VANDERBILT. Co L
33
BREAKING HORSES AND BONES.
1862
the south, and a spring of water on the hillside above furnished an abundance of water for both man and beast.
The breaking of the green horses to the saddle furnished great amusement to the men, and the boastings of some of them as to their superior horsemanship was put to the crucial test. In some cases the determination to make good their vauntings resulted in bruised limbs and aching heads, for there were many high-spirited and some vicious steeds among the seven hundred and thirty-two that had been issued to the Regiment during August and September. Com- fortable and commodious stables were provided for the animals on the grounds, and rapid progress was made by the men in the mounted drill. The location was too isolated and inaccessible to draw the crowds of sight-seers from the city; but there were occa- sional visits from notables, who usually rode out in their carriages on the old Bladensburg road and frequently stopped to witness the dress-parades. Among the number who thus paid the Regiment a visit was the President and Secretary Seward, who witnessed the pa- rade from their open carriage with evident interest and satisfaction.
The boys, who now appeared to realize that they were on the eve of that "active field service " for which they had been longing and petitioning, endeavored to make the best of the time allowed them for inspecting the beauty and grandeur of the nation's capital, prior to being transferred to hostile territory. The Capitol and other public buildings, the navy-yard, and in fact every place that tempted the curiosity, were visited.
Since leaving the Elmira rendezvous the Regiment had by each successive move approached nearer to the seat of war, and now, that it was fully equipped and mounted, the men were in daily expecta- tion of marching orders that would take them into the presence of the enemy. But just at this time it was decided to add another battalion to the Regiment, and a detail for recruiting it was made, as follows :
HEADQUARTERS PROVISIONAL BRIGADE, WASHINGTON, August 23, 1862.
SPECIAL ORDERS No. 50.
The following-named officers, non-commissioned officers, and men, are detailed to recruit for the Tenth New York Volunteer Cavalry, in accordance with Gen- eral Orders from the War Department, No. 88, of 1862 :
1st Lieutenant Alvah D. Waters, Company G, Tenth New York Cavalry.
2d Lieutenant George Vanderbilt, Company H, Tenth New York Cavalry. Sergeant Walter R. Perry, Company A, Tenth New York Cavalry.
Sergeant Marshall R. Woodruff, Company B, Tenth New York Cavalry. 3
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HISTORY OF THE TENTH REGIMENT OF CAVALRY.
1862
Sergeant Edgar Hinckley, Company C, Tenth New York Cavalry. Corporal James Matthews, Company D, Tenth New York Cavalry. Sergeant T. W. Johnson, Company E, Tenth New York Cavalry. Sergeant D. H. Binkley, Company F, Tenth New York Cavalry. Sergeant B. B. Porter, Company G, Tenth New York Cavalry. Sergeant C. E. Pratt, Company II, Tenth New York Cavalry.
By order of Brigadier-General CASEY :
E. WALTER WEST, Lieutenant and Aide-de-Camp. To Colonel JOHN C. LEMMON, Tenth New York Cavalry.
To this order the name of Sergeant-Major N. D. Preston was afterward added.
This detachment, under the command of Lieutenant Alvah D. Waters, proceeded to the State of New York and at once entered upon the duties of recruiting four full companies, offices being opened for the purpose in different parts of the State, with Elmira as the general rendezvous. Company I-one hundred strong-under Cap- tain David Getman, Jr., was organized at the rendezvous on the 21st of September, and was mustered into service on the 30th of October. The men comprising this company were recruited in Broadalbin, Mayfield, Perth, Johnstown, Northampton, Brooklyn, and Galway, in Fulton County.
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Company K, Captain Wheaton Loomis, followed on the 30th of the same month, with one hundred men, and was mustered in on the 29th of October. It was raised in Oxford, Greene, Coventry, Sher- burne, McDonough, Unadilla, Preston, Guilford, and Pharsalia, in Chenango County.
Captain Alvah D. Waters's company, L, was organized on the 24th of October, and mustered into service on the 29th of the same month. Its members came from Cortland, Taylor, Solon, Virgil, Freetown, Homer, and Marathon, in Cortland County; Lewiston and Wheat- field, in Niagara County; Buffalo, Collins, and Aurora, in Erie County; Otto and Persia, in Cattaraugus County; Watkins, in Schuyler County; Lyons, in Wayne County ; Pitcher, in Chenango County ; Big Flats, in Sullivan County; and Elmira, in Chemung County.
Company M was organized in November, and mustered into serv- ice in the field in November and December, 1862, and January, 1863. Its membership was drawn from Cortland, Freetown, Virgil, Cuyler, Lapeer, and German, in Cortland County; Buffalo, in Erie County; Niagara Falls, in Niagara County; West Sparta, in Living- ston County; Otto, in Cattaraugus County ; and Oxford and Pitcher, in Chenango County.
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35
THE ROSTER OF THIRD BATTALION.
1602
The following is a complete roster of the four companies com- prising the Third Battalion, as mustered :
COMPANY I. 1764832
Captain, David Getman, Jr.
1&! Lieutenant, Stephen Dennie, od Lieutenant, Charles H. Hill.
Sergeants.
Horatio HI. Boyd (1st).
John W. Abernethy.
Dorwin J. Close.
Asa Capron (Q. M.).
Nicholas D. Casc.
Jacob C. Case.
John W. Inness (Com.).
David N. Haines.
Corporals.
Chester L. Berry.
Hosea Davis, Jr.
Abram H. Van Dyke.
Henry Betts.
Darius S. Orton.
Harvey Becker.
Augustus M. Brown. Peter Phillips.
Henry A. Piper, Teamster. Daniel Satterlee, Teamster.
Charles Thayer, Farrier.
Harvey A. Lane, Farrier. George Riddle, Saddler. James L. Mercer, Wagoner.
Privates.
Barlet, Charles S.
Fice, Ansel.
McClary, Hiram.
Benson, Charles.
Forbes, Daniel C.
McCormick, John.
Blowers, Abram H.
Forbes, Francis.
Murdock, Peter R.
Blowers, Elias.
Foster, William.
O'Bryan, William. Patterson, Edward.
Blowers, William H.
Fox, Miner.
Peck, George.
Bohannon, John T.
Fox, Norman R.
Briggs, William R.
Freeman, Alva.
Brower, Christopher.
Goodermost, William A.
Brower, William.
Hager, William D.
Reynolds, John. Rhodes, William P. Richardson, Daniel.
Brown, James H.
Hall, Albert.
Brown, Nathaniel W.
Hall, James.
Richardson, John H. Richardson, Marcus A.
Close, George W. Clute, John W.
Hammond, John.
Sandford, George E. Sandford, James H.
Crouch, Thomas T.
Handy, John.
Cuming, Philip.
Honeywell, Joseph W.
Sanborn, Joseph A. J. F.
C'uming. Thomas.
Jones, William II. Laird, James A.
Satterlee, Abram. Satterlee, Zadock. Schermerhorn, Daniel W.
Davis. George. Day, Julius B. Dye, Asa.
Lee, Thomas. Lepper, Jacob.
Schermerhorn, George W. Shaw, John.
Earle, James.
Marlet, John.
Mosher, Ephraim.
Smith, George H.
Ferguson, Seneca.
MeCabe, Barney.
Stoddard, Rawson.
Ferguson, George D.
Hall, John.
Phillips, Lorenzo, Reynolds, Jesse ..
Blowers, John.
Fox, Hollis.
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HISTORY OF THE TENTH REGIMENT OF CAVALRY.
1862
Stuart, George. Tatlock, Thomas B.
Terrell, Andrew J.
Waite, James II.
Wands, William. Warner, Martiton.
Wells, James W. Wescot, Alexander. Whitney, Francis R.
COMPANY K.
Captain, Wheaton Loomis. 1st Lieutenant, Benj. F. Lownsbery. 2d Lieutenant, Lewis D. Burdick.
Sergeants.
Bronson Beardslee (1st). Norman W. Torry.
Win. D. Cheever (Q. M.). Isaac J. Stratton.
Thos. E. Chapman (Com.). Thomas C. Pettis.
Corporals.
Henry B. Griswold.
Shelden Bolles.
William H. Loomis.
Frederick A. Hill.
Patrick Griffin.
Samuel P. Morse.
Jotham Woods.
William D. Seaman.
Lucius A. Hall, Teamster.
Isaac Cole, Teamster.
William L. Daniels, Farrier.
Henry O. Daniels, Farrier. Antia Erna, Saddler. William F. Allen, Wagoner.
Privates.
Adams, John T.
Finch, Charles D.
Padgett, Charles.
Arnold, Amons.
Fisk, George L.
Padgett, John.
Barnes, Nehemiah.
Gale, Alpheus L.
Padgett, Rufus.
Beardsley, Addison.
Haxton, Benjamin.
Padgett, William F.
Benedict, Abijah D.
Holdrege, Charles II.
Palmer, Nehemiah D.
Booth, George C.
Huntley, Charles F.
Palmer, Marcus A.
Brooks, Samuel A.
Ingersoll, Theodore G.
Palmer, James.
Bunnel, James M.
Ingraham, Andrew.
Ray, Charles A.
Butler, Emory A.
Ingraham, Austin.
Raynor, John.
Button, Sylvester. Cady, William.
Kuhn. Jacob.
Robinson, Charles J.
Carhart, George N.
Lamphen, George.
Rosa, Adna.
Condran, John.
Lamphen, William.
Rosa, James.
Crosby, Orris.
Marlin, Thomas W.
Rosa, Levi.
Crumb, Orson.
Martin, Addison W.
Sargent, Alvin D.
Crumb, William P.
Miles, William .1.
Sargent. Traey A.
Cummings, John D.
Moak, Harris P.
Sharp, Nicholas.
Dillinbeek. Oscar S.
Moak, Julius.
Stanley, Monroe.
Dobson, Frederick H. Dolan, James.
Nichols, Ambrose S.
Tracy, Roswell W. Tyler, Uri F.
Dow, Elmony G.
Tubbs, Orris P.
Farley, Patrick.
Feeley, James.
Nickerson, Edward W. Nightingale, John W. O'Leary, Timothy.
Van Ostrand, William.
Vantassall, Lawson.
Ireland, Henry.
Rekins, Robert.
Morse, Edgar D.
Adam C. Tallman. A. Gray Raymond.
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THE ROSTER OF THIRD BATTALION.
1562
Vantassall, Uri. Vantassall, William. Wellman, Joseph.
Wells, Charles II. Wells, George W. Wells, Willard.
Willoughby, Edgar R.
Woods, William. Winchester, George A.
COMPANY L.
Captain, Alvah D. Waters.
ist Lieutenant, George Vanderbilt. 2d Lieutenant, Burton B. Porter.
Sergeants.
Frederick A. Gee (1st).
Joshua W. Davis.
Jason L. Reed (Q. M.).
David H. Rines.
Andrew J. Lyman. Royal Miller.
Franklin L. King (Com.). Llewellyn P. Norton.
Corporals.
Orrin C. Dann.
Ballard Kinney.
Charles E. Blauvelt.
John R. Maybury.
John W. Mathews.
Walter H. Angel.
Thomas H. Doolittle.
Thomas K. Ashton.
Abram G. Van Hozen, Teamster. Walter Green, Teamster.
William Law, Farrier. Kirtland Herrick. Saddler.
Levi D. Ruddock, Farmer.
John Traver, Wagoner.
Privates.
Avery. Samuel R.
Craft, Jackson.
Morse, William P.
Albro, David J.
Dexter, Clark L.
Newcomb, Franklin T.
Albro, Ezra J.
Dexter, Bela A.
Ostrander, Silas.
Albro, George W.
Edwards, David, Jr.
Overacker, James S.
Albro, Philan R.
Egbertson, Orange.
Parker, Edward M.
Arnold, John.
Ellsworth, Edman.
Parslow, Uriah.
Babcock, Myron.
Bacon, James M.
Bacon, Lester.
Faritor, John. Fougerty, John.
Patchin, Edward A. Pearsons, Kimble .. Phelps, Cicero C. Phillips, Romanzo M.
Beaumont, George P.
Frye, Joel E.
Beaumont, William.
Gard, Samuel D.
Reynolds, Andrew E.
Richardson, Jonathan. Robertson, Charles W.
Robertson, Solomon. Rockwell. Garrett P.
Brown, Daniel.
Rourke, Peter.
Brown, James B.
Brown, Milford M. Chileott, Lewis. Clark, George W. Cobb, William. Colburn, Eugene A. Cowlan, Edward.
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