A portrait and biographical record of Portage and Summit counties, Ohio, Part 48

Author: A.W. Bowen & Co., pub
Publication date: 1898
Publisher: Logansport, Ind. : A.W. Bowen & co.
Number of Pages: 938


USA > Ohio > Portage County > A portrait and biographical record of Portage and Summit counties, Ohio > Part 48
USA > Ohio > Summit County > A portrait and biographical record of Portage and Summit counties, Ohio > Part 48


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).


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Fra P. Sperry is a member of the Congre- gational church, a man of great energy and integrity of character and a practical and suc- ! born February 10, 1867; Mary Amelia. 1 :


£


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OF PORTAGE AND SUMMIT COUNTIES.


July 27, 1871, all three in Tallmadge, the last named dying May 27, 1882. Mrs. Willis Sperry died April 18, 1896, and he next mar- ried, November 3, of the same year, Mrs. H. A. Sackett, nee Mabel Fenn, daughter of Willis Fenn. Dr Sperry bas one of the most attractive homes in Tallmadge. He is a gen- tleman of wide culture and is most favorably known throughout the county both as a scholar and a physician.


...


J AMES B. STAUFFER, the enterpris- ing dairyman of Richfield township, Summit county, Ohio, was born in Salem, Columbiana county, October 9, 1847, a son of Abraham and Mary (Estry) Stauffer. The former wasalso a native of Co- lombiana county. porn September 12, 1815, of German descent, married June 7, 1838, and died April 30, 1878. Mrs. Mary (Estiy) Stauffer, also of German extraction, was born in Huntingdon county, Pa., October 16, 1820, and died in Columbiana county, Ohio, Decem- ber 27, 1894. The children of these parents were all born in Columbiana county, in the order here given: William II., March 9, 1840; Elizabeth M., June 22, 1844; James B., the subject; Celestia A., July 7, 1851 ; Sophia, De- cember 23, 1853-died in California June 29, 1891; Cary II., October 8, 1856; Laura F., April 25, 1859; and Mary A., December 7, 1861.


James B. Stauffer remained with his par- ents until eighteen years of age, and then be- gan business for himself by renting a coal bank, from which he mined and sold the min- eral, making a success of his undertaking. January 1, 1867, he married Miss Sarah A. Buzby, who was born January 27, 1848. a daughter of Eleazer and Nancy (Grimes) Buz- by, natives, respectfully, of New Jersey and Ohio. Mr. Buzby was a Quaker and school-


teacher, and to his marriage with Miss Grimes were born three children, viz: Daniel (de- ceased), William E. and Sarah A. (Mrs. Stauf- fer). Mr. Buzby died, and his widow married, for her second husband, J. B. English, a school-teacher of Mount Union, Stark county, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. English are Methodists, and fraternally Mr. English is a Freemason.


Mr. Stauffer continued his coal operations for two years and then bought a saw-mill, which, in conjunction with the lumber trade, he operated until 1884, when he went to Campbellsville, Ky., and was there engaged in the lumber business until 1892, when he re- turned to Ohio and bought a farm of 168 acres in Richfield township, Summit county, on which he erected new buildings; he next bought seventy-two additional acres, and, later, 266 acres in the same township, and engaged in farming until April 1, 1897, when he rented out his land and engaged in the creamery busi- ness at Peninsula and West Richfield, Summit county. The Peninsula plant will be the larg- est of its kind in the state, with a daily capac- ity of 20,000 pounds of inilk, and will be equipped with the latest improved machinery. Mr. Stauffer is a capable business man, has been very suscessful in his undertakings, and it is plain that his creameries are destined to take rank among the leading industries of Sum- mit county. He is generous of disposition and public spirited, being always ready to pro- mote all worthy public enterprises. He is prominent as a Mason, and is an active mein- ber of Pitman lodge, No. 224, in that order. To his happy marriage there have been bort six children, viz: Delorma, Effie, Abraham, Josephine, Mary and Luster, each of whom has received an excellent education. The family stand high socially, and the people of Richfield may be congratulated upon the fact that Mr. Stauffer has made his permanent home in the township.


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PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD


0 MAR C. STOCKING, of Hiram, Port- age county, Ohio, was born October 14, 1828, in Waterbury, Conn., and is a son of Anson and Flora (Coe) Stocking. When five years old his parents settled on a farm in Litchfield county, Conn., and he here remind until he was about seventeen years of age. He early learned the trade of a painter, and when he was twenty he became a worker in brass, and in the manu- facture of locks, in the works of the Russell & Irwin manufacturing company, of New Britain, Conn. He married, in Torrington, Litchfield county, Conn., Louisa M. Pierce, returned to New Britain and then to Torrington, about 1855, and worked on trunk locks, and after- ward worked in a inelodeon manufactory for some years. He then went to Ansonia, Conn., and worked at brass work on kerosene lamps. To Mr. and Mrs. Stocking were born Edwin C. and Albert P.


Mr. Stocking enlisted at Ansonia, Conn., August 4, 1862, in Capt. Sanford H. Chaffe's company B, Twentieth regiment, Connecticut volunteer infantry, to serve three years, or during the war, and was honorably discharged near Washington, D. C., at the end of his service, June 13, 1865, and was mustered out at New Haven, Conn. He was promoted, for ineritorious conduct, to be corporal, from May 5, 1864, having previously acted as corporal for nearly one year. He was in the battles of Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Lookout Mount- ain, Tracy City, Tenn., and Boyd's Trail, and was on the famous Atlanta campaign. He was in the battles of Resaca, Buzzard's Roost, Tunnel Hill, Rocky Faced Ridge, Snake Creek Gap, Peach Tree Creek, Turner Ferry, siege and general assault on Atlanta, and was one of the first men to enter that city after its fall, he being on a reconnoitering ex- pedition, and fired at one of Wheeler's cavalry- . inen, engaged, with others, in the destruction


of a drug store, and slightly injured him, as he rode off. The Confederate cavalrymen broke and destroyed everything they could find. but fled mostly on the entrance of the Union troops. He was then on Sherman's cele- brated march to the sea, and was in the battles of Savannah, Charleston, Silver Run, Averysborough and Bentonville, and was in many skirmishes, too numerous to mention. especially in the Kenesaw mountains. Mi. Stocking also was present and took part in the grand review at Washington, D. C. He thinks that he saw the hardest service in the Gettysburg campaign, when he marched with his company from Dumfries, Va., thirty-five miles south of Fairfax Court House, making this march during a hot dry day in June, from 3 A. M. to 9 P. M., and thence to the battle field-twenty-four days on this forced march, and suffering greatly from rain, mud and hot weather. At night the tired soldier slept on his arms, with no shelter except a rubber blanket. He was in the battle of Gettysburg forty-eight hours, and kept his knapsack on his back all the time. He had nothing to eat except a little raw pork and hard tack. Mr. Stocking was not wounded but was struck with several spent balls, and at Chancellorsville one ball struck his knapsack and passed through the folds of his blanket, which saved his life. He was a good soldier and served his country faithfully. He is now much disabled from the exposure of sleeping on the ground, and is a sufferer from rheumatism. Mr. Stocking re- turned to Ansonia, Conn., and to his family. He had left his wife with two small boys, and during his long service he had received no furlough home.


In August, 1865, Mr. Stocking came to Hiram, Ohio, where his wife's father, Ralnes Pierce. Sr., was then living. Here Mr. Store". ing engaged in the small fruit business for twelve years and prospered, having now ..


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OF PORTAGE AND SUMMIT COUNTIES.


pleasant home and a few acres of land. He then started a hack and express line from Hiram to Garrettsville, which he ran for four- teen years, and two years ago retired from active business.


In politics Mr. Stocking was first a whig and theu a republican, casting his first presi- dential vote for Gen. Scott and then for John C. Fremont, and was one of the original re- publicans. Mr. Stocking has held the office of township trustee, and is a respected citizen. He is an honored member of the G. A. R., Mark Horton post, Garrettsville, and is an unaffiliating Odd Fellow. Mrs. Stocking is a member of the Congregational church.


Edwin Stocking, son of Omar C., married Bell Crawford, and is a machinist in Chicago. They have two children, viz: Edwin B. and Leroy. Albert P. Stocking, the younger son, married Mary Jones. He is a railroad man and lives in Cleveland, Ohio.


The Stocking family is of old English Pu- ritan stock, the founders of the family in Amer- ica settling in Connecticut on the foundation of the colony, and was a soldier in the Revo- Intionary war. Anson Stocking, the father of Omar C. Stocking, was a cabinetmaker and painter, and also a farmer of Torrington, Conn. He was a respected citizen and one of the board of selectmen of his town and a justice of the peace. His children by his marriage to Miss Coe were Flora, Omar C., Fannie, Phila and Eber. To his first marriage, to Phila Miles, were born John, Samuel, Marcia and Anson. All of these children by the first wife are now deceased, and Mr. Stocking died at the age of seventy-four years. He had two sons in the Civil war. Eber served in the first call of 186t and was discharged on account of disability


Rodney Pierce. the father of Mrs. Stock- ing, was a son of Thomas and Sarah (Green) Pierce, was from an old colonial Connecticut


family, of the same original stock as President Pierce. Mr. Pierce was three times married; the first time to Harrict Kelsey, and their chil- dren were Louise, Elizabeth, Charles, George and Henry; the second wife was Jane Dutton, and their children were Ilenry, John, Harriet, Jane and Rodney. There were no children by his third wife. Elizabeth Mulholland. Two of the sons were in the Civil war -- Henry and George, both in the Nineteenth regiment Con- necticut volunteer infantry three years' service. Henry served out his time and was in several battles, his regiment having been formed into a battery of heavy artillery. George was killed at the battle of Cold Harbor. Mr. Pierce was a carpenter and joiner, and owned a farm of 200 acres in Torrington township, Conn. He came, in 1864, to Hiram, Ohio, and bought a farm and here passed his remaining days. He was a member of the Congregational church, in which he was a deacon many years, and was an honored and industrious man of ster- ling worth.


RANK HALL SPIRES, druggist and storekeeper, in' Atwater township, Portage county, Ohio, was born here January 1, 1866, a son of Thomas and Josephine (Hiddleson) Spires, both natives of the Buckeye state. He was educated in the common schools of his native town, and later for many years was his father's assistant in the lumber business and in stock raising, and also for some years clerked for him in a dry- goods and notion store. In February, 1890, he purchased from Walter McConnery the drug store which he now owns, in which he carries a full and well-selected line of drugs and chem- icals, as well as an assortment of groceries, tobacco, etc., and, beingpolite and affable, is doing an excellent trade.


Mr. Spires was united in marriage Novem-


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PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD


ber 19, 1891, with Miss Addie Benjamin, who was born in Atwater township, January 12, 1868, a daughter of Platt and Ellen Benjamin, the former of whom is a native of New York state and the latter of Rootstown, Ohio. Mrs. Spires was educated in the schools of Atwater aud Ravenna, and after fi ishing her education, at the age of fifteen years, taught school her- self for several years at varions places through- out the county. Mr. Spires is a member of Atwater lodge, No. 649, Knights of Pythias, and also of the Portage county Gun club, in which he has several times won the champion- ship medal, and has made a record, at trap- shooting, of forty-seven out of fifty birds. He is likewise an enthusiastic sportsman, owning two of the best bird-dogs in the county, and never misses a season to indulge in the hunt. He is very attentive to business, however; it is only on an occasion of a shoot going on that he takes a vacation. He and wife are great favorites in the social circles of the township and both are held in high estimation by all their neighbors and friends.


LBERT C. STOW is one of the most venerable and respected citizens of Summit county, Ohio, and the oldest native-born person living in Stowe township. He is from sterling English ances- try. The founders of the family came to New England in old colonial times and were among the founders of Connecticut. The grandfather of subject was a sea captain in the West India trade in early times, and it is believed that his name was William. Lord Thomas Stow, who recently died, leaving a large estate but no will, was of the same family. Rev. Dr. Stowe, hus- band of Harriet Beecher Stowe, the famous author, was of the same stock.


William Stow was the father of Albert C., .was born January 26, 1776, at Middleton, i


Conn., and of his brothers and sisters were Annie, Russell, Zebulon, Thomas are remem- bered. William Stow was a sea captain, fol lowing the same vocation as his father. 1Ic married in Middletown, Conn., Peggie Gay- lord, who was born February 8, 1774. a daugh- ter of Jonathan. They were married at Mid- dletown, Conn., April 10, 1795, by Rev. Gushom Buckley, and their children were William, born November 15, 1795; Thomas, October 31, 1797; Joseph, December 12, 1799; Zebulon, April 8, 1802; Maria, April 18, 1804: Abiah, May 3, 1808-all born in Middletown, Conn. Albert C., born July 5, 1810; James, June 22, 1812; Margaret, February 22, 1814: Russell M., March 13, 1816-all born in Stowe township, Portage (now Summit county) Olio. William Stow, the father, came to Ohio in June, ISog, making the journey with a yoke of oxen and one horse, and was over forty-one days on the journey. Jonathan and Thomas Gaylord also came with their families- - all rela- tions. They cut their way through the wil- derness of western New York state and Penn- sylvania to Portage county, the families sleep- ing in their wagons at night.


William Stow settled on 300 acres of land at Monroe Falls, Stowe township, in the woods -the land was covered with heavy timber. IIr bought his land of Judge Joshua Stowe --- one of the original members of the Connecticut company, who owned the land on the Western Reserve. William Stow traded a vessel and house and lot in Middletown and other prop- erty, with Judge Stowe for his 300 acres. William Stow was a well-to-do man for his time, and left a well-settled country to be- come a pioneer in the Ohio wilderness. He built a log house on his land and cleared up a good farm. He sold 100 acres for *3 pier acre to Squire Sammuel Cheney, and ret: mel 200 acres. Being a sailor, he was employed! to rig the first vessel built at Cleveland ;


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OF PORTAGE AND SUMMIT COUNTIES.


1812, sailed this schooner a year and carried provisions to Sackett's Harbor. He was not accustomed to the hard work of a pioneer, but he learned fast and did a large amount of clearing. He finally sold his land, or what remained after he had given much to his sons, and moved to Brimfield, Portage county, and bought several small farms. He sold out and returned to Stowe township three years later, in 1839, and here passed his remaining days on his farm. He was early a member of the Congregational church and in later life a member of the Christian church, and in poli- tics a whig. He died September 20, 1853, aged seventy-seven years and eight months. Mr. Stow was a man of sterling worth and the head of one of the most respected fam- ilies. He was a constable several years and a man of strong and determined character.


Albert C. Stow was born July 5, 1810, near Monroe Falls in the log house near the present site of the paper-mill on the original Stow farm, and is the only living member of his father's family. He received the limited com- mon-school education of the district, was brought up a farmer, and at sixteen years went to work in a woolen-mnill for one year, and then resumed farming on his father's farm. Ile married, at the age of twenty-four years, in Michigan, November 22, 1835, Almira Bar- ret, who was born January 23, 1818, at Wood- stock, Conn., a daughter of Simon and Lydia (Masscraft) Barret. The founder of the fam- ily in America came from England in old Puritan times. The family was mentioned in "Doomsday Book " and located in 1086. An- other mention is made in London "Knights," 1381, and after this many knights and county families are named, down to the present, as scattered all over England and the colonies. Perhaps the "Baret." as it is spelled in "Doomsday Book," was Saxon, and probably the first Barretts were Normans and kin to


the Barretts or Barrets of France and Italy, and came to England with the conqueror. Several Barretts located in Virginia and Mas- sachusetts from 1620 to 1640-one or inore in Boston, and one on the Concord. One. Thomas Barrett, aged sixteen years, sailed from London in the ship Increase in 1635: a Thomas B. Barrett, with his wife, Frances. in 1635. A Thomas Barrett with his wife, Frances, were settled in Chelmsford in 1630. It has been, so far, impossible to trace them to any other family or locality in either old or New England.


Thomas and Frances Barrett of Chelms- ford had three children- - Margaret, Moses B., and Mehitable. Moses Barrett married a Miss Smith of Dorchester, September 10, 168.1 and had a son, Moses. Moses Barrett, Jr., mar- ried and had born in Chelmsford the follow- ing children: Daniel, Hannah, Oliver. Smith. Moses and Benjamin (twins). Moses Barrett moved to Woodstock, Conn., about 1722. Smith Barrett married Mary Spalding. His children, born in Woodstock, were Samuel, Hannah, Daniel, Priscilla, Thomas, Ephraim. Martha, Priscilla (second), Ephraim isecond) and Mary. Daniel Barrett married, the first time, Huida Elothrop, March 14, 1765, and for his second wife, Mary Manly, in 1774 or 1775, and for third wife a widow, Mrs. Mary Miles Dodge in 1778, and his fourth wife, Jemima (Inman) Benson, November 16, 1780. His children, born on the Woodstock home- stead, were, Smith, Anna, Daniel, Thomas Manly. Aldrich, Wiley, Edward Inman, Mary (Mrs. Nathan Barret), Simon and Andrew. Mrs. Jemima Benson, was a daughter of Ed- ward Inman, born December 14, 1748: she had four children, by her former marriage: Isaac, Joseph, John and Inman. She died February 7, 1827, Daniel Barret died July 22, 1887.


Simon Barret, father of Mrs. Stow, was


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PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD


born February 21, 1784, in Woodstock, Conn., received his education at the academy at Woodstock, and taugh! school twenty-one seasons in Connecticut, Canada and New York state. He married, in Woodstock, Conn., October 12, 1809, Lydia, Masscraft, daughter of Jacob and Hannah (Austin) Masscraft, both of New England ancestry. Lydia was born in Woodstock, Conn., November 11, 1787. Jacob Masscraft, her father, was a farmer of Connecticut stock and was a soldier in the Revolutionary war. He died in Woodstock from consumption contracted by exposure in that war. The Austins were a Massachusetts family and seafaring people, and the great- grandfather of Mrs. Stow was captured by Algerine pirates and never returned. Mr. and Mrs. Simon Barret had the following children: Newton, Milton, Almira, Martha E., Simon G., William P., Sarah and Frances L. Simon Barret came to Stowe township, Summit county, Ohio, May 20, 1835, and remained three months, and September 20 went to Michigan and settled at Spring Port, where he died in 1837. He was a man of high char- acter, much respected by all. Mr. Stow's father was a second cousin to Judge Stowe, the owner of this township.


Albert C. Stow, when he was a boy, lived in almost a wilderness, and after marriage, Mr. Stow, with his wife, lived in Brimfield about three years and worked on his father's land, and in 1839 settled on fifty acres which his father gave him in Stowe township; in 1856 he sold this land, which he had improved, and came to his present farm. Mr. Stow has al- ways been a hardworking and industrious man and prospered by his sterling thrift. When young he cleared a great deal of land and worked hard to make his home, assisted by his faithful wife. Both Mr. and Mrs. Stow have been members of the Christian church since 1846, and aided in founding and build- .


ing the Christian church at Stowe Corners. Mr Stow has been a deacon many years. In politics he was first a whig and then a repub- lican. He has always been a man of undem. able integrity of character and had the respect of all who knew him. To Mr. and Mrs. Stow two daughters have been born --- Ellen F ar ! Emma A., the latter having died at the age of forty years. Ellen E. married Rev. Frunt. M. Green, a minister of the Christian church in active ministry, and also a member of the state legislature two years. They have fiv children, viz: Lura A., who married Edwi! Wetmore; Fannie M., who married William Cox; Mary T., who died, aged fourteen; Frank A. and Daisy.


ENRY P. STRAIGHT, a veteran of the Civil war, and a greatly re- spected citizen of Hudson township. Summit county, Ohio, was born in Erie county, N. Y., March 8, 1828, a son of Royal A. and Nancy (Dolph) Straight, and was brought to Ohio in 1835, by his parents. who settled in Rome, Ashtabula county.


Henry Straight, paternal grandfather ol Henry P., was born in Rhode Island, of En- glish descent, ran off from home when sixteen years old, enlisted, served all through the Revolutionary war, and also through the war of 1812, in which he was quartermaster of hr- regiment. He married Anna Powell, in Ma sachusetts, and located at Charlotte, Chi :- tenden county, Vt., and there were born t him three children, viz: Henry P., Royal . L. ,ar Anna Elizabeth. He caine to Ohio, with I: son, Royal A., and here died at the advan.o! age of ninety-eight years.


Royal A. Straight, son of Henry, was bot . in Charlotte. Vt., and when young, weat ' Newstead, Erie county, N. Y., where } bought a farm, and married Miss Nancy D: 1 ;.


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OF PORTAGE AND SUMMIT COUNTIES.


who was born in Kinderhook, N. Y., a daugh- ter of Aaron and Catherine (Delong) Dolph, and to this union were born six children- Henry l'., Allen M., George H., Elizabeth, Ruth. and Anna. In the spring of 1835. Mr. Straight came from Erie county, N. Y., to Ashtubula county, Ohio, and purchased 125 acies of partially cleared land, on which was a log house; this land he thoroughly cleared up, and converted into a comfortable home, and profitable farm, In 1857 he removed to White county, Tenn., and purchased an old plantation of 1,700 acres, but in 1861, being persecuted for not taking the oath of allegiance to the Confederate government, he was glad to sell it for $1,000 -- not a tithe of its value. He then went to Marion county, Ill., bought, and lived on eighty acres for a few years, and then moved to Kent county, Mich., where he passed the remainder of his life, dying March 2, 1876, at about seventy-six years of age, a member of the Baptist church. He was first a whig in politics, but became one of the orig- inal republicans, voted for John C. Fremont, its first candidate for the presidency, and was an ardent Union man, but too old, although he volunteered, to be accepted as a soldier; but he sent three sons-Henry P., Allen M. and George II .-- to the defense of the Union, and also sent two sons-in-law-Edmond R. Allen and Charles Newman. Of these, Allen M. was in the One Hundred and Eleventh Illi- nois infantry, in the three-year service, was in the Atlanta campaign, and many battles be- side, was captured at Peach Tree Creek, and was fifteen months in the Andersonville and Florence prison pens, but finally reached home alive: Charles Newman, who served in the same regiment, died in prison at Florence, where he had been transferred from Anderson- ville. Edmond R. Allen was in the same regiment for three years; George H. Straight was in the three-year service, in the Fortieth


Illinois volunteer infantry, was severely wounded, and died at his home in Illinois a few months later.


Henry P. Straight received a good common- school education and has always been a farmer. He married, September 25. 1849, at Hart's Grove, Ashtabula county, Ohio, Miss Mary J. Stevens, who was born April 20, 1831, at De- troit, Mich., a daughter of Weston and Eliza- beth (Snedekor) Stevens, the former of whom was born in Rochester, N. Y., a son of Ebe- nezer and Hannah (Whaley) Stevens-the Stevenses being of English and the Whaleys of Scotch descent. The mother of Hannah Whaley was a daughter of Samuel Whaley, a Scotch peer, but she ran away from home, when young, to accompany a married sister io Rochester, N. Y., and thus her property be- caine alienated. Weston Stevens was a brick- mason by trade and died in Cleveland, Ohio, the father of the following children -- Samuel W., Mary J., Caroline and Harriet.


After marriage, Mr. Straight settled in Rome, Ashtabula county, Ohio, bought fifty acres of land, partly cleared, and the re- mainder he cleared himself. In 1857, he re- moved to White county, Tenn., with his fa- ther, settled about eighty miles east of Nash- ville, remained there about a year, but owing to troublous times returned to Ohio, and eu- listed at Chardon, Geauga county, December 4, 1861, in battery G, First Ohio light artillery, for three years, veteranized for three years longer and served until honorably discharged at Camp Chase, Ohio, August 31, 1863. Mr. Straight took an active part in the following battles: Pittsburg Landing, April 6-7, 1862; Corinth, May 1 to 30, 1862; Franklin Pike, September 7, 1862; Stone River, December 31, 1862. to January 2, 1863; Tullahoma cam- paign. June 23 to 30, 1863: Dag Gop, Sep- tember 11, 1863; Chickamauga, September 19 and 20, 1863, Missionary Ridge, November




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