USA > Ohio > Champaign County > History of Champaign County, Ohio, Its People, Industries and Institutions, Volume I > Part 67
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All of the regiments enumerated above were composed of infantry troops. But the county contributed a respectable quota to the volunteer cavalry regi- ments of the state. The Third Ohio Cavalry enlisted thirty-one men in the county in fall of 1861. The Twelfth Cavalry was organized in the fall of 1863 from the state at large and drew at least as many volunteers from the county as the Third Cavalry. An organization known as "Burden's Sharpshooters" was organized in the fall of 1862 and enrolled at least seven men in Champaign county. Their names are recorded in the local records as receiving a bounty for enlistment in this particular organization .
It is not generally known that a number of colored men from Cham- paign county enlisted during the war. The state recruited five thousand colored troops during the war and Champaign county furnished a few of this number. Unfortunately there is no way of telling who they were, the local records making no distinction between bounties paid white and colored troops. No company of colored men was raised in the county, the local colored men either joining volunteer companies raised in Columbus or else joined the United States Regular Army. A few colored men who lost their lives in the service have been traced and their names are herewith presented: Jerry
(44)
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CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, OHIO.
Brown, Anderson Smith and John Barrett, of Company A, Twenty-seventh United States Colored Troops, were killed in an assault on Petersburg, Vir- ginia, July 30, 1864. Isaiah Gales, of Urbana, a member of the same com- pany and regiment of colored troops, died in Philadelphia, September 26, 1864. Charles Holmes, another colored boy of Urbana, was a member of Company C, Thirty-third United States Colored Troops, and was killed in South Carolina on September 23, 1863. Among other colored soldiers from the county, most of them from Urbana, were the following, all of whom are deceased: William Spain, Isaiah Buckner, Nathaniel Stevens, Henry Clark, David Barret, David Boyd, Harry Washington, Samuel Hunter, Frank Boyd (enlisted under name of Frank Adams) and Samuel Hill (enlisted under name of Samuel Wright). The following colored veterans of the Civil War are now living in the county: James Taylor, Dorsey Fletcher, Louis Dickerson, Jerry Wornel, Calvin Gales and William Roberts.
THE THREE-MONTHS REGIMENT OF 1861.
Ohio furnished twenty-three infantry regiments for the three-months service in 1861, and Champaign county furnished a number of men for the First, Second and Third Regiments. These men volunteered without any bounty and most of them later re-enlisted in other regiments. a large number of them joining the Sixty-sixth Regiment which was organized at Urbana in the fall and winter of 1861-62.
Capt. B. Frank Ganson has the honor of having been the first volunteer from Champaign county for service in the Civil War. At a rousing meet- ing held in the court house on April 16, a call was made for volunteers and Ganson at once leaped to his feet and rushed to the front of the room to offer his services. The example set by this patriotic youth was quickly followed by a number of others and before the meeting was over there was a sufficient number of volunteers to organize a company. The com- pany was ordered to Camp Dennison, assigned to the Second Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and was mustered into the United States service on April 17, 1861. There are no local records to indicate who the volun- teers for the three-months service were, the military authorities being offered so many men that no effort was made to proportion them to the various counties of the state.
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CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, OHIO.
FIRST REGIMENT ( THREE MONTHS).
Champaign county furnished a few men for the First and Second Ohio Volunteer Infantry Regiments for the three months service. These regi- ments were organized at Columbus, April 18, 1861, left Columbus on the morning of April 19, and were mustered into the service at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, April 29. They arrived in Washington the following week and were assigned to General Schenck's Brigade, of General Tyler's Divi- sion. The First Regiment was in the battle of Vienna, Virginia, June 17, with a loss of nine killed and two wounded. Both regiments were at the battle of Bull Run July 21, 1861, and the First had three killed, two wounded and two missing, and the Second lost two killed, eight captured and one missing. The First Regiment was mustered out between August 1 and August 16, 1861, and the Second on July 31, 1861.
SECOND REGIMENT ( THREE-MONTHS SERVICE).
The Second Regiment contained more volunteers from the county than the First. It is probable that Company K had more than any other com- pany, its captain, William Baldwin, and first lieutenant, Thomas F. Brand, both being Urbana men. The little village of Woodstock furnished no fewer than eight men for this company, namely: George W. Stoddard (corporal), Charles Cushman, John J. Hoisington, Melvin Kenfield, Alvaro Smith, Willard C. Smith and Henry Harrison Hess. Hess was the only one of the number who was not mustered out with the company. He was captured at Bull Run on July 21, 1861, and was a prisoner at Richmond, Virginia; Salisbury, North Carolina, and New Orleans, Louisiana. He was paroled at Richmond, Virginia, in 1862, and was sent to his home at Wood- stock where he died on June 19, 1862. Other volunteers in Company K were Thomas F. Brand ( first lieutenant ), J. P. Dolbow, Michael Durkin, Monroe Elliott, W. A. McComsey, Thomas M. Owen, Samuel B. Price, and Cyrus F. Ward.
SECOND REGIMENT (THREE-YEARS SERVICE).
The Second Regiment, Volunteer Infantry, for the three-years service was organized at Camp Dennison from July 17, to September 20, 1861. The original members of the Regiment, excepting the veterans, were mus- tered out on October 10, 1864, the limit of the term for which they were
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CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, OHIO.
enlisted. The veterans and recruits were then transferred to the Eighteenth Veteran Infantry Regiment, October 31, 1864.
Among a long list of battles in which this regiment was engaged the following may be enumerated: West Liberty, Kentucky, October 23, 1861 ; Pike Town, Kentucky, November 9, 1861 ; Bridgeport, Alabama, April 29, 1862; Perryville, Kentucky, October 8, 1862; Stone's River, Tennessee, December 31, 1862; Rosecrans' Campaign, June 23 (from Murfreesboro to Tullahoma, Tennessee) ; 'Chickamauga, Georgia, September 19-20, 1863; Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, September 24, 1863; Missionary Ridge, November 25, 1863, Ringgold, Georgia, November 27, 1863; Buzzard Roost, Tunnel Hill and Rocky-Face Ridge, Georgia, February 25-27, 1864; Resaca, Georgia, May 13-16, 1864: Peach Tree Creek, July 20, 1864.
This regiment is one of the number which has left no local records concerning its members from Champaign county. Among the field and staff officers it is known that Cyprian H. Winget and Rosaloo Smith were musi- cians, both from Rush township. In Company A were a number of Cham- paign county volunteers, the company being captained by Alexander S. Berryhill, of this county. Rush township alone furnished the following : George W. Stoddard (first lieutenant), Calvin Winget, Dexter P. Smith and John Hoisington (corporals), Christopher Cranston, Julius Cushman, Melvin Kenfield, David Moore, Minard Sessions, Miles Standish, Eliphas Meacham, William Willis and Wilson Young-a total of fifteen from the Woodstock community. Other volunteers in Company A were E. Harrison Hovey, Isaiah Cline, John W. Green, Norville W. Anderson, Samuel T. McMorran, James H. Gowdy, Stephen Cundiff, James Allman, Jasper Car- ter, Michael Fritz. Moses Cline. W. P. Long, H. W. Long, Levi Borem, E. B. Cundiff, M. P. Downey, J. M. Fitzpatrick, D. D. Moore, Theodore Sutphen, William West. Daniel C. Hitt, George B. Hunter, T. C. Runyan and John Roberts. Company D included George W. Briggs, Michael Costi- gan. John McCune. Joseph Meade, J. S. Mcafee, James McNally, Michael Touey. James Peese, John E. Weaver. Company H enrolled Daniel Bannen, John W. Kennedy, Levi Jennings, James L. Shell and Henry Summer- ling.
THIRTEENTH REGIMENT ( THREE MONTHS).
The Thirteenth Volunteer Infantry was enrolled from the 20th to the 27th of April, 1861, and mustered into the United States service from April 24 to May 4, 1861, at Camp Jackson, Columbus, Ohio. The regiment
693
CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, OHIO.
was reorganized for three years, between May 29 and June 20, 1861, the. enrolling taking place between these two dates. Those who did not re-enlist were mustered out with their companies from August 14 to 25, 1861, at Columbus, Ohio.
Champaign county had a number of men in this regiment, but the local records do not indicate who they were. Company D, captained by Benjamin P. Runkle, contained a number of recruits from the county, among them being Burdette Shyrigh, Solomon Brecount, John M. Cundiff. Jacob Idle, Charles McDargh and Frank Chance (corporal). It was mus- tered out on August 22, 1861.
Company K, John A. Corwin, captain, also had a number of Cham- paign county volunteers, among them being Moses B. Wright, John F. Hefflebower, John Conrad, Ichabod Corwin, David Downey, John R. Frankberger, John Hewitt, William B. Johnson, Samuel Lafferty, Harri- son Landsdown, Thomas Mcclellan, Samuel Moore, Abraham Reams, Jona- than Reams, John Stoafstall, John Thackery, David Toomire, Joseph Toomire and Joseph Wren.
TWENTY-SIXTH REGIMENT ( THREE YEARS).
The Twenty-sixth Volunteer Infantry was organized at Camp Chase, Columbus, from June 8 to July 24, 1861, to serve three years. On the expiration of its three-year service, all its original members except the veterans were mustered out. The members of the Ninety-seventh Regiment of Ohio Infantry, whose term of service had not expired at the date of muster-out of that regiment were transferred to this regiment on June 10, 1865. Then the organization, composed of veterans and recruits, was retained in the service until October 21, 1865, when it was mustered out in accordance with orders from the war department.
The Twenty-sixth Regiment was engaged in several of the hardest- fought battles of the Civil War, the most important of these being the fol- lowing : Shiloh, Tennessee, April 6-7, 1862; Corinth, Mississippi, May 30, 1862; Perryville, Kentucky, October 8, 1862; Stone's River, Tennessee, December 31. 1862-January 1-2, 1863; Chickamauga, September 19-20, 1863; Missionary Ridge, November 25, 1863: Rocky-Face Ridge. Georgia, May 5-9, 1864; Resaca, Georgia, May 13-16, 1864; Adairsville, Georgia, May 17-18, 1864; Dallas, Georgia, May 25-June 4, 1864: Kenesaw Mountain, Georgia, June 9-30, 1864: Peach Tree Creek, Georgia, July 20, 1864 : Atlanta, Georgia, July 22, 1864: Jonesboro, Georgia, August 31-September 1, 1864;
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Spring Hill, Tennessee, November 29, 1864; Franklin, Tennessee, Novem- ber 30, 1864: Nashville, Tennessee, December 15-16, 1864.
The regiment enrolled a number of volunteers in Champaign county, most of them being found in Company H. Edward P. Fyffe, then fifty-one years of age, was appointed colonel of the regiment on June 10, 1861, and was discharged on December 18, 1863. John H. James, then twenty-seven years of age, was appointed adjutant on June 29, 1861, and was promoted to the captaincy of Company A on December 12, 1861, resigned from the latter position on February 12, 1863. Another Urbana officer of the regi- ment was Leander H. Long, then thirty-seven years of age, who was ap- pointed chaplain of the regiment on July 5, 1861, resigned from the service on March 4, 1862. Long was mayor of Urbana at one time and a promi- nent minister of one of the local churches.
Among the members of Company H were the following from Cham- paign county : S. H. Hamilton, John D. Shoafstall, Thomas J. McArthur, William G. McClintock, William B. Johnson, David Blue, Thomas Coleman, Patrick Connell, William Corwin, Mathew Castle, Shepherd Grove, William S. Gowey, George Huffman, John W. Henry, William Cameron, James Miller, William H. Miller, Thomas K. Mouser, Mathew Newland, Ralph Osborn, Leonard Roberts, Samuel Richeson, Frederick Singer, Daniel D. Smith, Adolphus Stump. John M. Williams, George Brewster, Charles Bartholomew and Miles C. Baker.
THIRTY-SECOND REGIMENT ( THREE YEARS).
The Thirty-second Regiment was organized near Mansfield, Ohio, between August 20 and September 7, 1861, to serve three years. Company F was detached on December 22, 1863, and was organized as the Twenty- sixth Independent Battery, Ohio Light Artillery, and a new Company, F, was organized in February and March, 1864. On the expiration of the term of the Thirty-second Regiment the original members with the excep- tion of the veterans, were mustered out and the organization, composed of veterans and recruits, was retained in the service until July 20, 1865, when it was mustered out.
The Thirty-second regiment had a long and honorable career at the front and bore as conspicuous a part in the war as any regiment from this county. In 1861 the regiment was at Greenbrier and Camp Alleghany. West Virginia, where they fought engagements on October 3 and on Decem- ber 13. In 1862 they were in Virginia and, beginning in May with a battle
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CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, OHIO.
at McDowell, they fought at Cross Keys, Port Republic and Harpers Ferry, the last engagement extending from September 12 to September 15. In 1863 the regiment was in Mississippi and participated in the siege of Vicks- burg, being present at the battle of Champion's Hill on May 16, a battle that history concedes to be the bloodiest fought during the whole war. In 1864 the regiment opened the year in February at Bakers Creek, Mississippi, and later started in with Sherman in the northeastern part of Georgia and followed him through to the sea, participating in all the battles of the famous Atlanta campaign. From Savannah the regiment was with Sherman north- ward through the Carolinas and Virginia to Washington, D. C., where they participated in the Grand Review.
Champaign county furnished practically all the volunteers for Company B, most of them being from the eastern part of the county, Mechanicsburg and Goshen township contributing more than a score. Horatio G. Johnson, of Mechanicsburg, was a first lieutenant of the company. A few volunteers from the county joined Company H, among them being William M. Whitaker, a resident of Urbana in 1917. Whitaker was mustered in on August 29, 1862; appointed corporal, November 1, 1862; appointed sergeant March 27, 1865; mustered out with his company, July 20, 1865.
A summary of the Thirty-second Regiment is given in a volume entitled "Ohio at Vicksburg" ( 1906), pp. 60-71. This summary states that "Com- . pany B was recruited chiefly from Union and Champaign counties, and was mustered into the service August 20, 1861, at Camp Dennison, Ohio, from where it was sent to Camp Bartley." Recruiting for the veteran service began on December 7, 1863, and by January 18, 1864, about seventy-five per cent. had re-enlisted and the Thirty-second was mustered in as a veteran regiment. That the regiment was in some of the hardest-fought battles of the war may be seen when it is stated that it went "to the front September 15, 1861, 950 strong, recruited 1,650 men, making a total mustered during its service of 2,610. Of that large number, three fairly good-sized regiments, but 565 remained at muster out." If further proof of the valiant service of this regi- ment is demanded the reader is directed to a statement in Reid's "Ohio in the War," p. 216: "It is believed that the regiment (Thirty-second Ohio) lost and recruited more men than any other from Ohio," A handsome monu- ment is dedicated to the Thirty-second Regiment on the battlefield at Vicks- burg. It bears the inscription "THIRTY SECOND INFANTRY, COLONEL BENJA- MIN F. POTTS, 3d BRIG., 3d DIv., 17th CORPS, OHIO." A picture of the monument may be seen in the volume "Ohio at Vicksburg," p. 70.
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CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, OHIO.
FORTY-SECOND REGIMENT ( THREE YEARS).
The Forty-second Regiment was organized at Camp Chase between September and November, 1861, for the three-years service. With the excep- tion of the veterans the original members were mustered out at different dates from September 30 to December 30, 1864. The veterans and recruits were then transferred to the Ninety-sixth Battalion, Ohio Volunteer Infantry. Most of the fighting of this regiment, which will always be known as Colonel Garfield's regiment, was in the Southwest, in Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. The first engagement of the regiment occurred on January 10, 1862, at Middle Creek, Kentucky. The next engagement did not take place until December 28-29, 1862, and was at Chickasaw Bayou, Mississippi. The succeeding engagements of the regiment were as follows: Arkansas Post, Arkansas (Ft. Hindman), January 11, 1863; Thompson's Hill, Mississippi (Ft. Gibson), May 1, 1863; Raymond, Mississippi, May 12, 1863; Cham- pion's Hill, Mississippi, May 16, 1863; Big Black River, Mississippi, May 17, 1863; Siege of Vicksburg, May 18-July 4, 1863; Siege of Jackson, Mississippi, July 9-16, 1863; Opelousas, Louisiana, October 21, 1863.
Most of this regiment was enrolled in the eastern part of the state, only Companies I and K being from the western part of the state, the former being recruited at St. Paris and the latter at Bellefontaine. About one- third of Company I came from Champaign county and the remainder of the company from Miami and Shelby counties. Company I was captained by Roland B. Lynch, not a Champaign county man. The following Champaign county volunteers were commissioned and non-commissioned officers of Com- pany I: David N. Prince, appointed captain January 1, 1864, having been mustered in as first sergeant; David Scott, first lieutenant ; William L. Stew- art, second lieutenant; Sylvester F. Count' and Ira B. Grandy, sergeants ; Joseph H. Loudenback, John Shanley, William Gray, John W. Anderson, William H. Byers, Robert R. Earsom and Robert McIntosh, corporals; Wil- liam H. Dodson and William H. Moore, musicians.
Among the privates of Company I from Champaign county-the list is impossible to complete-were the following: David J. Comer, Darius Comer, Jacob Couchman, George R. Crawford, John B. Deweese, William G. Gray, Ephriam Heath, William Jones, Jason P. Kite, Oliver P. Longfellow, George H. Lippincott, Chauncey N. McIntosh. Joseph Kitchen, Eli Lemen, James W. Lyon and John H. Tritt.
Of the volunteers in Company I from Champaign county, Jason P.
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Kite is one of the very few left-and the only one from Johnson township- most of the members having answered the last roll call. Mr. Kite has attended every reunion of the Forty-second since 1876 and for thirty-eight years was the secretary of the regiment, relinquishing this post on account of failing eyesight. Mr. Kite entered the service on November 16, 1861, at the age of eighteen and was mustered out with his company on December 2, 1864.
A brief sketch of the Forty-second Ohio is given in the volume "Ohio at Vicksburg," pp. 82-88. The regiment is traced from its organization in September, 1861, through the siege of Vicksburg, until it was mustered out in November and December, 1864. The regiment lost one Officer and twenty men killed, and eighteen officers and three hundred and twenty-five men wounded. The monument to the Forty-second in Vicksburg Military Park contains the following inscription : "FORTY SECOND INFANTRY, LIEUT. COL. DON A. PARDEE, MAJ. WILLIAM H. WILLIAMS, COL. LIONEL A. SHELDON, 2D BRIG., 9TH DIV .. 13TH CORPS." A picture of the monument may be seen on page 88 of "Ohio at Vicksburg."
FORTY-FIFTHI REGIMENT (THREE YEARS).
The Forty-fifth Regiment was organized at Camp Chase, August 19, 1862, to serve for three years and was mustered out of the service on June 12, 1865. Its actual service in the field included the following battles: Dut- ton's Hill, Kentucky, (Somerset), March 30, 1863; Monticello, Kentucky, May 1, 1863; Monticello and Rocky Gap, Kentucky, June 9, 1862; Colum- bia, Kentucky, July 3, 1863; Morgan's raid through Indiana and Ohio, July 3-20, 1863; Buffington Island, Ohio, July 19, 1863; Philadelphia, Ten- nessee, October 20-22, 1863; Rockford, Tennessee, November 14, 1863; Holston River, Tennessee, November 15, 1863; Siege of Knoxville, November 17-December 4. 1863 ; Bean's Station, Tennessee, December 14, 1862. Begin- ning in the spring of 1864, the regiment was with Sherman until after the Siege of Atlanta in September, and then returned to Tennessee, where it fought the battles of Columbia, Franklin and Nashville, the latter on December 15 and 16, 1864.
It is possible to determine with accuracy the number of recruits Cham- paign county furnished for the Forty-fifth Regiment. A complete list of the eighty-five recruits for this regiment, together with the township to which they were credited, as well as the amount of their bounty and the person receiving it, is preserved in an old record which may be seen in the auditor's office. By comparing this record with the official record of the
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state adjutant-general it is possible to determine the company of each recruit, this not being indicated in the local record. Practically all of the recruits were in Company H although a few were in Companies E, C and I. The complete roster of the county in this regiment follows :
Company H
Township
Enrolled
Age
John Alexander
Wayne
Aug. 10, 1862
18
David Apple
Johnson
Aug. 4, 1862
18
George Allen
I'rbana
Aug. 11. 1502
William R. Arrowsmith
Concord
Aug. 12. 1862
Charles Ammon
I'nion
Aug. 1, 1862
21
S. G. Brecount
Johnson
Aug. 10. 1802
28
Valentine Bridgeman
Jackson
Aug. 11, 1862
Ianne Bridgeman
Jackson
Aug. 23, 1862
Joseph Bollinger
Jackson
Aug. 23. 1862
1.9
Zachariah Cox
Johnson
Aug. 11, 1862
1.9
A. D. Coon
I'nion
-Aug. 4. 1882
George B. Conrad
I'nion
Aug.
9. 1882
1.8
George Duffy
l'rbann
Aug. 12. 1862
19
James Duffy
I'rbana
Aug.
4. 1862
19
George Dunlap
Johnson
Aug.
6, 1862
21
Moses Everett
Johnson
-Aug.
1, 1862
30
David Emel
Jackson
Aug. 11. 1862
Willlam Flowers
Johnson
Ang.
1, 1862
45
Frances M. Field
Johnson
.Aug.
7. 1862
19
Samuel W. Groves
Salem
July 24. 1562
19
Benjamin Grimes
Johnson
Aug.
4. 1802
.20
Samuel Garver
Jackson
Ang. 11. 1862
21
H. C. Gibbs
Concord
Ang. 14. 1862
18
I. B. Harmon
Johnson
Aug.
1862
10
John H. Harmon
Wayne
-Aug. 11. 1862
George W. Huffman
Johnson
Aug. 11, 1862
Benjamin F. Harrison
Union
Aug. 2, 1862
David F. Johnson
Concord
July 39, 1862
William Jordan
Johnson
Aug.
1, 1962
18
Simon B. Kenton
Concord.
Ang.
8, 1802
23
Samuel Kennedy
Mad River.
Ang. 8, 1862
18
Alexander Lewis
Johnson
Aug. 8, 1862
18
George Lewis
Johnson
Aug. 8, 1862
28
John Lafferty
I'nion
.Aug. 11, 1882
25
Benjamin K. Miller
l'rbana
.Aug. 11. 1862
Samuel Miller
Jackson
-Ang. 8, 1862
1ยบ
William MeCarty
Jackson
Aug. 12. 1862
24
Janac Morris
Wayne
Ang. 8. 1802
28
Thomas MeDermott
Urbana
July 30, 1862
19
James O. Neer
Concord
July 30, 1862
21
John P. Neer
Concord
July 30. 1862
George W. Purcell
Urbana
Ang. 4, 1862
19
Orlando T. Lemon
I'rbana
Aug. 11. 1862
23
18
28
A. H. Dernette
U'rbana
Aug.
9, 1862
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CHAMPAIGN COUNTY, OHIO.
Company H
Township
Enrolled
Age
John D. Pence
U'rbana
Aug.
8. 1862
24
Eli Pence
Johnson
Aux.
4. 1862
21
Charles H. Rhoads
Urbana
Ang.
4, 1862
.22
Clavin Roberts
Union
Aug.
1, 1802
21
Henry I .. Stallman
Johnson
Aug.
1, 1862
28
Charles H. Smith
Urbana
Aug.
4. 1862
21
George Shrofe
Johnson
Aug.
4, 1862
10
Jacob Snuffer
Urbana
Ang.
6. 1$62
20
John Thackery
Mad River
Ang.
6. 1862
23
Basil West
Jackson
Ing. 11. 1862
20
Newton Westfall
I'nion
Ang. 0, 1862
.19
Michael B. Westfall
Union
Aug. 9. 1862
24
Joseph Wilshire
l'rhona
Aug. 11, 1862
18
Robert Young
l'rbana
Ang. 11. 1862
20
William Walker
I'nion
Aug. 5, 1862
.29
Thos, J. Johnson
Concord.
Aug. 12, 1862
22
John B. Lung
Johnson
Aug. 4. 1862
.18
William Nitchman
Concord.
Aug. 30, 1862
21
Wm. F. Spencer
Union
Aug. 11, 1862
10
W'm. Spillman
T'nlon
Aug. 5. 1862
18
William Whisler
Union
Ang. 12. 1862
18
A. J. Jordan
Johnson
Aug. 19, 1862
28
Peter Dillon
July 23, 1862
29
John W. Hall
Adams
Ang. 12, 1862
18
William H. Jett
July 23. 1862
23
Robert M. Lowman
Mad River.
Aug. 7. 1862
27
Jacob Walrath
Joseph K. Ramsey
Aug. 12, 1862
. 31
Isaac Wilson
Wayne
Aug.
9, 1862
18
Myron Bowen
Wayne.
Ang.
1, 1862
10
Company E
Jacob Kress
Adams
Aug.
6. 1862
82
Andrew J. Miller
Harrison
July 12. 1862
18
Christian Norman
Johnson
Aug. 7. 1862
.90
Davie Prince
Johnson
July 11. 1862
20
Elijah Pence
Adams
July 28, 1862
25
William A. Yutaler
Adams
Ang.
8. 1862
20
David M. Hall
Concord
Aug.
9. 1862
18
Clinton M. Sharp
Johnson
Aug.
8, 1862
23
Company (
Ellis P. Linville
Wayne
Ang. 4. 1862
27
Stephen Stowe
Rush
July 18. 1862
24
Company 1
James Young
Salem
Aug. 15. 1862
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