History of Hamilton County, Ohio, with illustrations and biographical sketches, Part 21

Author: Ford, Henry A., comp; Ford, Kate B., joint comp; Williams, L.A. & co., Cleveland, O., pub
Publication date: 1881
Publisher: Cleveland, Ohio, L. A. Williams
Number of Pages: 590


USA > Ohio > Hamilton County > History of Hamilton County, Ohio, with illustrations and biographical sketches > Part 21


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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It is unnecessary for me to speak of the military services of my long tried and valned friend immediately on my right [General Findlay]. It is well known that at the head of a gallant regiment of volunteers, dis- ciplined by himself, he served on the first northwestern campaign of the late war. It is equally well known that, if his advice and that of his gallant compeers (the other colonels of the army) had been adopted, the campaign would have had a different result, and the honor of our arms would not have been tarnished by an inglorious surrender.


THE MEXICAN WAR.


Upon the requisition of the President under an act of Congress approved May 13, 1846, Ohio was called upon to furnish three regiments of infantry to the army being prepared for the invasion of Mcxico. They were promptly raised and forwarded, notwithstanding many citizens of the State were opposed to the war, and one of them had said, upon the floor of Congress, that, were he a Mexi- can, he would welcome the Americans "with bloody hands to hospitable graves." Colonel Curtis, George W. Morgan, and A. M. Mitchell commanded the first regi- ments despatched. The next year a fourth regiment was called out, and sent to the field in command of Colonel Charles H. Brough, who died some years after in Cin- cinnati.


Of the entire Ohio contingent, however, the roll of but one company is on file in the adjutant-general's office at Columbus. It is that of Captain Otto Zirckel's com- mand, in the Fourth regiment of Ohio volunteers, com- manded by Colonel Brough. The regiment was mustered into service at Cincinnati, May 27, 1847, by Colonel Ewing, United States army, and mustered out at the same place July 18, 1848. The following names are re- corded upon the roll of Captain Zirckel's company as . those of Hamilton county men :


Musician Henry Snyder.


PRIVATES.


Christopher Kastner, Charles Hantzsche, Benedict Diesterweig, John Gobler, George Schatzman.


The rendezvous at Cincinnati was at Camp "Washing- ton," established for the purpose of this war in a conve- nient locality near Mill creek, upon ground now covered, in part, by the city workhouse and the house of refuge. The headquarters of the camp are still shown, in a long, low building, now used for residence and saloon keeping, not far south of the workhouse. The district yet bears the old name, though not in a corporate capacity, it now and for many years past being a part of the city.


THE WAR OF THE REBELLION.


It would require a huge volume to write, in full detail, the honarable record made by this county during the great civil war. Special chapters will be given in this work to "Cincinnati in the War," "The Siege of Cincin-


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HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


nati," and "The Morgan Raid Through Ohio;" and due notices of patriotism and patriotic efforts will be made in the histories of the townships. These will allow us to be very brief in this introduction to what is, after all, the best exhibit of good deeds during the fearful struggle-a roster of the immense contingent furnished by Hamilton county to the Federal armies.


The number of camps of rendezvous and equipment established in the county would, of itself, furnish evidence of the activity of her people in the maintenance of the war. The following minor encampments may be enu- merated :


Camp Harrison, north of Cincinnati; established by order of Governor Dennison, and named from ex-Presi- dent Harrison.


Camp Clay, at Pendleton, in the then eastern suburbs of Cincinnati.


Camp John McLean, near Cincinnati; named from Justice McLean, of the United States Supreme court. The Twenty-fifth Ohio infantry, commanded by Colonel N. E. McLean, a son of the judge, was quartered here.


.Camp Gurley ; named from the Hon. John A. Gurley, one of the members of Congress from Cincinnati.


Camp Dick Corwine, also near the city; named from Major Richard M. Corwine.


Camp Colerain, near the place of that name, ten miles north of Cincinnati.


Mention is also made of a Camp Wheeler, near Union Ridge, in this county, where "Tod's Independent Scouts" made their headquarters in July, 1863.


In September, 1861, the Thirty-first Ohio infantry ren- dezvoused at the orphan asylum in Cincinnati; and many other public buildings in and about the city were tempo- rarily used for quarters at various times during the war.


The great camp, however, one of the most famous cantonments in the county at the time, was Camp Denni- son, near Madisonville, in the eastern part of the county, on the Little Miami railroad, seventeen miles from the then limits of Cincinnati. It was named from Hon. Wil- liam Dennison, governor of the State at the outbreak of the war, at whose request a site for such camp was se- lected in the latter part of April, 1861, by General Rose- crans, then a retired army officer in business in Cincinnati. One of the prime objects in establishing a large encamp- ment in this region was to give a feeling of security to the people of the city, in view of the doubtful position of Kentucky at this early stage of the war. Captain George B. McClellan, president of the Ohio & Mississippi rail- road, also a young officer of the regular army, who had resigned to engage in civil pursuits, had been appointed by Governor Dennison major-general of the Ohio mili- tia; and by his invitation Rosecrans accepted the post of topographical engineer upon his staff, and proceeded to select the camp. The site chosen was a stretch of level land, not very broad or long, but sufficient for most pur- poses of the camp. The ground was necessarily leased at the high rates put upon it by the owners ; and the gov- ernor was much blamed for what was deemed an extrav- agant outlay. It was named from him by General Mc- Clellan, who was put in command of the camp, but soon


left it to assume his new duties as a major-general in the regular army. At first it was in charge of the State, and gave the governnor and other Ohio officers infinite trouble through complaints of bad treatment, insufficient food, clothing, tents, arms, etc., and other ills. It was early turned over to the General Government, however; and was one of the two great camps (the other being Camp Chase) maintained by the United States in Ohio during and for some time after the Rebellion. Scores of regiments were recruited or rendezvoused, equipped, and drilled here. Countless thousands of "boys in blue', passed its gates going into or out of the service, or re- turning from rebel prison pens to refit for the field. Little of it now remains, save a glorious memory, the cemetery where rest its hero dead, and the old sign at the entrance. The very name of the post office maintained there, sad to say, has been changed. The old camp, however, with all its bustle, in the pomp and circumstance of war, will long live in the recollections of the myriad citizen-soldiers who from time to time inhabited it.


The military committee of Hamilton county should not pass without a notice. Its intelligent activity and patriotic zeal, in aiding the recruitment of troops and otherwise for- warding the Federal cause, were eminently serviceable to our armies, and were gratefully acknowledged by the au- thorities of the State and the Union. It was originally ap- pointed by Governor Dennison, and was mantained, with some changes in its personnel, until the close of the war. At the end of 1863 it was composed as follows: General Joshua H. Bates, chairman ; W. H. Davis, secretary; Hon. N. W. Thomas, Colonel A. E. Jones, W. W. Lodwick, John W. Ellis, Francis Weisnewski, Thomas Sherlock, Eli Mushmore, Amzi Magill. Its headquarters were of course in Cincinnati.


It may here also be observed that, besides the long list of general officers in the service, who reflected honor upon Cincinnati, and who will be enumerated hereafter, the county elsewhere furnished to the Northren armies dis- tinguished soldiers in the persons of Brigadier-General Jacob Ammen, of Lockland, and brevet Brigadiers Thom- as Kirby Smith, of Colerain, E. Barrett Langdon, of Lin- wood, and Benjamin C. Ludlow, of Cumminsville, a native of the old Ludlow's Station, at the same place; be- sides many of lesser rank.


We now come to


THE IMMENSE ROSTER


of the Hamilton county contingent in the late war. It has been compiled from the rolls in the bureau of the Adjutant-General of the State, where every courtesy and convenience have been kindly afforded for the work. Happily, few Rebellion rolls are missing from this great collection, except in some cases of three-months regi- ments or companies; and fortunately, too, for twenty-nine regiments of infantry, eight regiments of cavalry, and seven batteries, at the time this compilation was made, the records had been reduced to such system and shape that it was possible to present a full roster of each of these commands. For the others, the muster-in rolls must in general suffice, as is usual in histories of this


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HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


kind. The writer has been embarrassed, not only by the magnitude of the list, but by the difficulty, in many cases, of identifying officers or men as belonging to Hamilton county. No means exist in the adjutant- general's office, apart from the rolls, for such identifica- tion; and these are not always reliable. Entire com- panies, raised in other parts of the State, were re-enrolled at Cincinnati or Camp Dennison, and appear accordingly upon the rolls, and large numbers of men from other parts of the State and country went to these places for their original enlistment; while many Hamilton county citizens were enrolled at points outside of the county or "in the field," particularly for veteran services, and can- not now be recognized, except by those who personally know the facts, as Hamilton county volunteers. Not- withstanding the faithful use of Mr. Reid's invaluable book, Ohio in the War, and other available sources of in- formation as to the locale of companies, regiments, and individual enlistments, it is probable that some hundreds, at least, are herein accredited to this county that belong to other counties, and that quite as many whose names should appear upon this roster, have been omitted, be- cause the rolls do not furnish the data by which they can be recognized as of the Hamilton "Grand Army." But every effort has been made to secure as full and nearly accurate a roster as possible under the circumstances.


In general, it has been thought safest to include in this roll of honor all who were recruited in Cincinnati or the townships of Hamilton county, so far as shown by the records; and to omit those enrolled at Camp Dennison, unless some other evidence has been found that they be- long to the county. Many names, it will be observed, are duplicated, and some, perhaps, triplicated, by re-en- listments, transfers, or promotions. In all cases, if the period of service is not specified in the history or roll of the regiment, it will be understood that the muster-in was "for three years, or during the war." The orthography of the rolls has been followed; but discrepancies of spell- ing to be found in them make it reasonably certain that many whose names appear herein will experience that peculiar sort of fame of which Byron speaks-having their names spelt wrongly in print.


HAMILTON MEN IN KENTUCKY REGIMENTS.


A number of companies recruited in this county, which could not be received for the three-months' service, ren- dezvoused spontaneously at the Methodist camp-meeting ground, on the Colerain pike, eleven miles from the city (Camp Colerain). Among these were the Valley guards,- recruited in and about Clifton, Cumminsville, and Carth- age, of which the following named were officers:


COMMISSIONED OFFICERS. Captain Flamen Ball, jr. First Lieutenant W. H. Hickock. Second Lieutenant Frederick Cook.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant John Joyce. Sergeant Henry Hayward. Sergeant William Scanlan. Sergeant S. J. Lawrence. Corporal John Shaw. Corporal C. Drier. Corporal Henry Jessan.


Colonel P. J. Sullivan was recruiting a regiment in Cin- cinnati, and finding it could not be received at Camp Harrison, marched a number of his companies, about eight hundred men in all, to the camp-meeting ground. They included the Rough and Ready guards, Captain Spellmyer; the Miami guards, Captain Boyer ; the Zouave cadets, Captain Joseph A. Stacy; the Beck guards, Captain Beck; the Fulton Continentals, Captain David Johns; and the Union artillery, Captain Joseph Whittlesey. The several companies subsequently went to Camp Clay, where they were joined by a company from Louisville, for which no provision was made in Kentucky, the governor of that State having declined to furnish the men asked from that State. Patriotic Ohio, however, supplied the deficiency in great part; and President Lincoln, upon the solicitations of Judge Chase and other Ohioans, consented to receive as the First and Second Kentucky regiments the organizations effected at Camp Clay. They were equipped and prepared for the field at the expense of this State, but were in time recog -. nized by the authorities of Kentucky, who issued com- missions to their officers. They were as follows:


ยท


FIRST KENTUCKY INFANTRY.


FIELD AND STAFF.


Colonel James N. Guthrie. Lieutenant Colonel D. H. Enyart. Major Bartholomew Loper. Quartermaster Captain Gilbert Clemmens.


SECOND KENTUCKY INFANTRY.


FIELD AND STAFF.


Colonel William E. Woodruff.


Lieutenant Colonel George W. Neff. Major Thomas G. Sedgwick.


Quartermaster Captain Joseph Blundell.


By far the larger part of these, like the men of the regi- ments, were Hamilton county citizens-Cincinnatians. The commands saw their first service in the brigade of General Jacob D. Cox, in the army of West Virginia. They served a longer term than the period of original enlistment, and made very creditable records in the field.


THE HISTORIES AND ROSTERS.


For the material of the following introductionary his- tories, recourse has been had almost exclusively to that unrivalled repository of information concerning Ohio in the war-Mr. Whitelaw Reid's great work bearing that name.


FIRST OHIO INFANTRY. (Three months' service.) COMPANY B.


PRIVATES.


John Bischansen, Nicholas Kirchhimer, Charles Kneip, John Link, Robert Visel, Martin Ritter, Henry Speier, Nicholas Schmid, William Schubert, Albert Voelkle.


(Three years' service.) COMMISSIONED OFFICER.


Sergeant Major Charles H. Winner.


COMPANY C. PRIVATE.


Charles A. Stine.


COMPANY D.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Corporal Alfred Smift. Teamster Daniel Groves.


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HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


PRIVATES.


Matthew Asken, Jacob Effinger, Abraham Busch, Samuel S. Dean, Richard Gregory, Hugh Gray, William A. Huddard, George Jamison, Chester C. Logan, Cornelius Lowe, Franklin Moon, John Phillips, William A. Withrop, Benjamin Young, Lewis Young.


SECOND OHIO INFANTRY.


This was enlisted at first for three months, under the call of President Lincoln for seventy-five thousand men. It was mustered into service at Columbus, April 17, 1861, only three days after Fort Sumter was evacuated. It was at the first battle of Bull Run, and bore honorable part in the service around Washington until July, when it was mustered out at the expiration of its term, and re- organized at Camp Denison as a three-years' regiment in August and September. A majority of the field, line, and staff officers had already seen service with the three- months' men. The regiment moved into eastern Ken- tucky in September, 1861, and by its good behavior did much to ingratiate itself and the Union cause in that region. Its subsequent service was with General Buell's army, Generals Rosecrans, Thomas and Sherman. It was in the battle of Stone River and Chickamauga, in those of the Atlanta campaign, and in several minor actions. The nucleus of the regiment, like that of the Sixth and others raised in Cincinnati, was formed in one of the peace organizations of the city. It was commanded during part of its career by Colonel Leonard A. Harris, ex-mayor of Cincinnati, and a native of that city. Most of the field, staff and band, two companies, and some recruits scattered through other companies, were from Hamilton county.


FIELD AND STAFF.


Colonel Anson G. McCook.


Colonel Leonard A. Harris. Lieutenant Colonel John Kell.


Lieutenant Colonel Obediah C. Maxwell. . Major William T. Beatty. Surgeon Daniel E. Wade. Surgeon Benjamin F. Miller.


Assistant Surgeon Thomas J. Shannon.


Assistant Surgeon William A. Carmichael.


Quartermaster Ira H. Bird.


Adjutant George Vandegriff.


Adjutant John W. Thomas.


Chaplain Maxwell P. Gaddis.


NON-COMMISSIONED STAFF.


Sergeant-Major Horace R. Abbott.


Quartermaster Sergeant Albert F. Fisher.


Commissary Sergeant Jacob Hogue.


Principal Musician Charles Seibold.


Prisoner of War .- Joseph C. Ault, Hospital Steward.


Died .- Marion A. Ross, Jacob Thompson, Sergeant-Majors; Samuel Price, of the band.


Transferred .- George Cochran, Quartermaster Sergeant; William Dodge, Principal Musician.


Discharged .- George H. Hollister, Julius F. Williams, Aaron W. McCune, Sergeant Majors ; Enoch P. Hoover, Hospital Steward ; George Thayer, Ordnance Sergeant.


REGIMENTAL BAND.


Burton C. McCoy, Leader; First class musicians, John W. Bates, Charles Bates, John Clinton, Cyprian H. Winget; Second class, Hiram Cook, Franklin Steven, David Shafter, Ransford R. Whitehead, Thomas Witmore ; Third class, John Busby, George Brant, John H. Brown, Jason M. Case, George W. Owens, Rosoloo Smith, Benjamin F. Tufts.


COMPANY D. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain William A. Smith. Captain James Warnock.


First Lieutenant George W. Landrum. Second Lieutenan, John F. Davis.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant Anthony W. Henry.


Sergeant Henry E. Ross.


Sergeant Ezekiel A. Howard.


Sergeant James Purden. Sergeant George W. Briggs.


Corporal John H. Quigley.


Corporal Isaac W. Craig.


Corporal Albert Jenkins.


Corporal John C. Wones.


Corporal George Rust.


Wagoner James Cowan.


PRIVATES.


William Allen, George Anslaugh, Joseph Binkley, Joseph N. Cutler, Thomas Clark, Francis M. Cox, John H. Dressing, Henry Gilson, Michael Gallivan, John B. Hunston, Theodore Hughes, John Huddle- ston, Alfred Jones, Alexander Johnson, Michael Lynch, John Ludrick, Lewis Mangum, George Mollitor, William Menke, George W. Mitch- ell, Joseph McAfee, Thomas O'Connor, Marcus O'Connor, Philip Reilly, David W. Slusser, William Simpson, Michael Tovey, Amos Westfall, William A. Williams, James Welsh, Richard Benson, Walter B. Bell, John Clifford, Samuel Graham, John Kennedy, David S. Long, Michael McIneray, John McCune, Bernard O'Meally, William Porter, Charles A. Proctor, Hugh Redmon, Julius Shelley.


Prisoners of War .- Albert E. Thatcher, James Peese, John Darragh, Walter S. McHugh, James McNally, William Patton, Peter Reenan, Jonathan Simpson.


Killed in Battle .- Corporal William H. Jones. Privates Michael Bausch, Henry Demeling, James Doyle, Harry Harle, James Henry, John Meade, Thomas Tracey.


Missing .- Corporal William Cunningham.


Died .- Sergeant Thomas J. Moore, Corporal John C. Elliott, Pri- vates Daniel Bannon, Charles H. Beal, Frederick Ropp, Thomas Stack, John E. Weaver.


Discharged. - First Sergeants George N. Gates and John F. Davis, Privates Michael Costegan, Murty Gallevan, Augustus Wood, William Harvey, Marion Julian, James Matthews, William McCarter, Archibald McAfee, Michael Newman, William Pitman, George W. Ross, Henry Straddling, William J. Weist, Hannibal Wilson.


Transferred,-Sergeant Julius F. Williams, Musician William Dodge, Privates Marcus L. Brown, Lawrence Coen, Jacob A. Hogue, George Moore, Abraham Smith.


COMPANY F.


PRIVATES.


Frank Nolte harles McGurn, William M. Tatman (both discharged).


COMPANY H. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain John Henell. Captain Jacob Totrell. First Lieutenant Jerome A. Fisher.


Second Lieutenant Henry Purlier.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Sergeant Alfred Lafore.


Sergeant Augustus Crawford.


Corporal James McLaughlin.


Corporal Charles E. Brown.


Corporal Isaac Wilson,


Corporal James C. Norton.


Corporal John Keifer.


PRIVATES.


Charles H. Abbott, Jonas Boggs, James Duncan, Michael Doherty, George Epke, William Gold, John R. Hallam, Jeremiah Hogan, Rob- ert L. Lind, Theodore Spinner, John Striker, John Whistler, Thomas Wiggins, Ernest Beerbaum, John Battles, George Cook, William T. Gray, Halford H. Heick, John Norvasky, James Rice.


Prisoners of War .- Sergeants George M. Hall and Benjamin John- son: Corporal Philip Lipps; Privates Robert Baggott, Charles W. Chard, John Dumas, William Egan, John Hillstrip, Bernard Hester, Henry Lanfersiek, John Miner.


Killed in Battle .- Corporal Samuel Hall; Privates George Capp and Patrick O'Donnell.


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HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OIHO.


Died .- Privates George W. Hackwalder and James L. Shell.


Discharged .- Sergeant Henry Purlier; Privates William Camer, Lawrence Fagan, John Gold, Ezra Mock, Patrick McCarty, Joseph Nealy, Thomas H. Orr, Frederick Qnamby, George Thayer, William H. Walker.


Transferred .- First Sergeant Aaron W. McCune; Sergeant James A. Suter; Privates Timothy Brannon, James Crouch, Joshua Dunkley, Charles F. English, James Kirby, John Mageer, Richard N. Ross, Jo- seph Wellington, Jesse C. Young.


On muster-in but not on muster-ont roll .- Musician Kendall Edson.


COMPANY I.


Private John Kramer, transferred


THIRD OHIO INFANTRY.


This regiment was raised for the three months' service, and was re-enlisted for three years. It was first mustered into service April 27, 1861. Its earliest duty was in the preparation of Camp Dennison, a few miles from Cincin- nati, and it did not take the field until after its re-organ- ization in June. Its most notable service was as mounted infantry in Colonel Streight's expedition into northern Georgia, in early April, 1863, when almost the entire command was captured. One company of the three years' regiment was from Cincinnati, and the other com- panies from the city were in the three months' service.


(For three months). FIELD AND STAFF.


Colonel Lewis Wilson. Fife Major Jerome F. Dandelet.


COMPANY B.


COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain George M. Finch. First Lieutenant Edwin D. Saunders. Second Lieutenant Frederick S. Wallace. Lieutenant Stephen M. Athearn.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant Charles Swift. Sergeant Roswell G. Feltus. Sergeant William Buchman. Sergeant William Suckles. Corporal William Young. Corporal James M. Walker. Corporal Joseph L. Flenner. Corporal Milton H. Lydick. Musician E. Vanpelt. Musician George T. Suter.


PRIVATES.


W. H. H. Taylor, jr., Charles L. Feltus, Henry Hofkamp, William Kiefer, Edwin C. Saunders, J. Martin, M. B. Chamberlain, C. D. Griggs, A. B. Benton, Charles Hulvershorn, James Vanpelt, J. J. Beahr, Frank A. Armstrong, E. S. Cooke, George W. Johnson, J. Frank Mil- Ier, William W. Miller, William C. Mudge, Thomas L. Wentworth George L. Pendery, John Davis, George F. Walters, J. B. Holman, John C. Martin, Enoch C. Jacobs, D. S. Pearce, J. L. Hann, Charles B. Schondt, A. J. Noble, William Scott, Charles M. Stout, R. C. Steen, O. Taxis, Edmond H. Davis, A. King, John L. McElhaney, Joseph A. Clark, W. H. Speed, S. A. Harrison, William Weye, D. W. Sny- der, Joseph Foss, Robert Cameron, F. McGrew, Thomas Colgan, A. Alexander, Charles Gniss, Charles L. Shannon, A. Stevens, Samuel Warwick, T. P. Cavanaugh, W. H. McDevitt, P. Bohl, Urath B Jones, N. B. Holman, John Holtzwiger, John M. Hubbell, William A. Koon, William Torrey, Joseph Ryan, John Nealy, Henry L. Williams, George C. Kithchen, Andrew Reuss, Henry De Bus, William Sterritt, William Stewart, J. N. Kuntz, W. K. Perrine, Lewis Roderige, James R. Smith, Frank Thieman.


COMPANY C. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain J. E. Baldwin. First Lieutenant J. E. Riggs. Second Lieutenant G. H. Aiken. Lieutenant George Vandergriff.


Lientenant C. A. Newman.


Lieutenant Engene C. Wilson.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant W. E. Oakley.


Sergeant C. S. Burns.


Sergeant Charles Mendenhall.


Sergeant W. G. Ross.


Corporal B. T. Wright.


Corporal D. W. Pierson.


Corporal P. R. Mitchell.


Corporal L. V. Horton. Bugler J. F. Dandelet.


PRIVATES.


E. R. Davidson, J. Calhoun Wright, M. Strohmeier, C. W. Miner, David S. French, Jacob S. Burnett, A. E. Doisey, C. F. Mckenzie, W. H. Childs, George H. Hull, W. P. Egan, Charles Faulman, Thomas Jones, O. T. Gunn, E. J. Lukens, George McCammon, J. T. Piggott, jr., Ira Athearn, E. E. C. Swift, W. W. Wilmot, Charles B. Ellis, Thomas T. Wheeler, B. H. Parsons, S. H. Bascom, Thomas Coen J. W. Johnston, George H. Palmer, J. W. Craven, P. Bucher, George W. Ward, T. Brickham, J. Small, C. H. Phelps, Isaac West, B. H. Snyder, R. W. McComas, Thomis Webb, J. H. Simpson, Nathan Guilford, Alfred Koste, L. H. Hill, E. H. Hussey, M. B. Bailey, A. H. Russell, William Mitchell, G. Rudolph, H. P. Radcliff, T. Deming, E. E. Isabel, B. B. Fearing, T. Wilton, R. R. Martin, H. Tilden, Benjamin Harbison, John Snosey, jr., F. S. Taylor, jr., Henry Schultz, W. C. Williams, Ogden Mender, John A. Wright, J. A. Arthur, Frank Sterns.


COMPANY I. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.




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