History of Hamilton County, Ohio, with illustrations and biographical sketches, Part 33

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 33


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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13I


HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


FIELD AND STAFF.


Colonel Granville Moody. Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Von Schroeder. Major Alexander M. Ballard. Adjutant Henry M. Cist.


COMPANY C.


COMMISSIONED OFFICER.


First Lieutenant William F. Armstrong.


PRIVATES. Joel Perkins, James N. Rodgers, James A. Sheffield.


COMPANY D.


PRIVATES. George King, Philip Minhart, James S. Tropp.


COMPANY H.


Private Samuel Rodgers.


COMPANY I.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Corporal James Walley. Corporal Evan Morgan.


PRIVATES.


Edward Ambros, Michael Brannon, James Carrigan, Timothy Cro- nin, John Creedon, James Farrell, Andrew Harrigan, Daniel Lane, John Morarity, Therance Mclaughlin, Patrick Naughton, James Smith.


COMPANY K.


COMMISSIONED OFFICER.


First Lieutenant James H. Cochnower.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Sergeant Charles Rambono.


Corporal William J. Holmes. Corporal John W. Carson.


PRIVATES.


Armstrong G. Warwick, Michacl Brown, John Burke, James Beng, Joseph Decotell, Joseph Faber, John Garthaffner, John Horten, George King, William Lambert, Philip J. Munich, Alphonso C. Porter, An- drew Pheterson, Isaac C. Robert, Samuel Rodgers, Charles Sander, Walter Scull, Lonis Sheil, Thomas Terry.


SEVENTY-FIFTH OHIO INFANTRY.


The Seventy-fifth was organized near Cincinnati Dec- ember 18, 1861. On the first day of March it joined General Milroy's brigade at Huttonsville, West Virginia, having made a long march over most wretched roads in most unpleasant weather. While halting at Monterey, Court House, the enemy made a spirited attack, which was gallantly met by this regiment leading the advance. May 8, 1862, in an engagement with Stonewall Jackson, additional laurels were gained under the immediate eye of General Milroy -- "The Old War Eagle"-but nearly a hundred were killed add wounded. The next affair in which the Seventy-fifth faced the enemy was at Cedar Mountain in August, 1862. The loss here, however, was slight. For a week following engagements were frequent, and this regiment at Freeman's Ford again lost heavily. The last of August, in the second battle of Bull Run, so bloody was the fighting that in killed and wounded the Seventy-fifth alone lost one hundred and fifteen. During this fight not less than ninety shots took effect on the colors of this regiment. From this time to the second of May, 1863, nothing of importance occurred. The history of the battle of Chancellorsville need not here be told. Although receiving the enemy gallantly, the odds were too great, and, with the brigade, the Seventy-fifth fell back, losing in half an hour one hundred and fifty men. After this battle it returned to its old camp near


Brook's Station, where it remained until the battle of Gettysburgh. The regiment was under fire every day of the battle, losing in all two hundred and seventeen officers and men. In August the Ohio brigade was sent to Charleston, South Carolina, and remained on Morris Island till after the fall of Forts Wagner and Gregg. In February, 1864, the regiment was mounted, and from that time was designated as the Seventy-fifth mounted infantry, performing all the duties of a regular cavalry regiment. From this date to the twenty-sixth of September, 1864, the regiment was in the district of Florida, breaking up blockade-running, destroying rebel stores, conducting de- tachments of cattle, and performing other duties. It was then sent on a secret expedition to the headwaters of the St. John's river. In October and November six com- panies were mustered out of service, their term of enlist- ment having expired. After the fall of Savannah the Seventy-fifth was reorganized into a veteran detachment, and was afterward known as the veteran battalion. This command performed valuable and difficult service till August, 1865, when its members received an honorable discharge.


FIELD AND STAFF.


Colonel Nathan C. McLean. Major Robert Reilly.


Assistant Surgeon Charles L. Wilson.


Chaplain John W. Weadly.


Sergeant Major William S. Stewart.


Quartermaster Sergeant Thomas F. Davenport.


Commissary Sergeant Lyman Y. Stewart.


Hospital Steward Martin V. Shader.


COMPANY A.


COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain Charles W. Friend.


First Lieutenant George B. Fox.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant Thomas Wheeler.


.


Sergeant Joseph B. Alters.


Sergeant Christian Schmetzer.


Sergeant Rezin F. Hall.


Sergeant H. H. Dumont.


Corporal Elmore W. Dunn.


Corporal Jacob Gaus.


Corporal Ezra M. Ellsworth.


Corporal Caleb Parrent.


Corporal Richard Fishwick.


Corporal Caleb O. Decamp.


Corporal Josiah C. Hall.


Corporal John P. Allen.


Musician Thomas K. Sayer.


Musician Hosea R. Felter.


Wagoner John Schmetzer, sr.


PRIVATES.


Robert Agnew, Frederick Aherns, Wilson Becount, James Becount, William Brooke, Michael Butler, Henry B. Burnett, Henry Breithoff, C. Brown, Michael Brady. John Cummings, William Critchfield, John Critchfield, George Cain, Peter Collins, James H. Coleman, Mat- thias Dwyre, James H. Erwin, Frederick Engle, James Fishwick, John H. Heer, Charles Francis, Simon P. Ferry, William H. Ginn, Andrew Gambriel, Anthony Graves, George Goetze, Gottlieb Harkell, Charles Howell, John G. Hallam, Peter Herklesmiller, Adam Habinstritt, James Jackson, Peter Jacobs, Patrick Kelly, Michael Liady, James McCor- mick, Gothold Markart, John Mills, Luke McClune, Michael Mahar, lohn A. Mentel, William McGill, Joseph Meyers, James F. Miller, An- drew Martin, James Martin, Sylvester Nesbitt, James Naylor, Abram S. Pendery, William Parrent, William H. Palmer, George Pray; Andrew Pepprus, Alfred Patmore, Leopold Reame, James Riddle, Clinton W. Seward, William W. Stewart, John Stewart, William G. Sturgis, John Schmetzer, jr., Frederick Schmetzer, Ernst Schmetzer, Albert Stevens,


132


HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


James V. Stevens, Samuel Shuttleworth, Charles Smith, Henry Sheep, Isaac H. Spillman, Sampson Sutton, Stephen Skillman, James A. Skill- man, James F. Thurman, Hosea Tullis, Oliver Thayer, Philip Weiss, Robert Long, Leonard M. Kimmel, John Batzt.


COMPANY F.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICER.


Corporal Henry Lour. PRIVATES.


Richard Cook, Louis Eckerly, Ernst Galees, Thomas Hermanson, John Mason, John Roth, Conrad Wilmer.


COMPANY K.


COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain James A. Johnston. First Lieutenant Theodore K. Keckler,


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant Phineas B. Haskell.


Sergeant James A. Crozet.


Sergeant Mark A. Knowlden.


Sergeant Richard Faulkner.


Sergeant Moses Kennedy. Corporal John C. Delvitt. Corporal Thomas Moran. Corporal Oliver H. Hibben. Musician Edward F. Brown. Wagoner John Davis.


PRIVATES.


John S. Allison, Felty Brightenbach, David G. Brookman, John J. Brown, Thomas W. Brown, John Carrigan, Thomas Coleman, Edward E. Denniss, William Dickinson, Bennett Dixon, Joseph Donohue, Peter Eiden, Samuel Green, Samuel H. Gump, James E. Hipple, James Jackson, Andres Monser, Thomas Mulligan, John M. Kenzie, Samuel Reeves, Andrew Rodgers, Patrick H. Riley, Charles H. Smith, William W. Smith, Robert Wallace, Conrad Waag, James Williams, Simon Davis, Edmund C. Hill, John Stanard, Martin V. Strader, Henry Neely, Thomas Riley, John Brannan, Melchor Myers.


SEVENTY-SEVENTH OHIO INFANTRY.


Surgeon James W. Warfield.


SEVENTY-NINTH OHIO INFANTRY.


Only one company was raised in Hamilton county. The entire command was rapidly recruited in the summer of 1862, though one company of sharpshooters, raised for it in Clermont county, did not join it till the next June. It received marching orders September 3d, and moved into Kentucky through Cincinnati, then menaced by the rebels. After a severe march against them, it went to Louisville and operated against Morgan and other rebel cavalry forces. December I to February 24, 1864, it was mainly on guard duty in Tennessee. In March it reached Lookout valley and was assigned to the Eleventh corps, afterwards part of the Twentieth, in which the Seventy-ninth was in the First brigade, Third division. With its brigade it shared in the furious and bloody attack on the enemy's works near Resaca and a number of the severest actions of the Atlanta campaign. At Peach Tree Creek, July 20th, it wason the first line and was the second Union regiment that became engaged. It here lost one-half its members in action. It began the campaign with six hundred men, and had but one hun- dred and eighty-two at the close. It was in the march through eastern Georgia, the siege of Savannah, the af- fairs at Laytonville and Columbia, and of Averysborough and Bentonville, in the grand advance of Sherman north ward. It was mustered out at Washington June 9, 1865, paid and discharged at Camp Dennison June 17th. It had lost, from all causes, more than its original number, or about one thousand men, all told.


.


COMPANY A.


Private Charles G. Hallam.


COMPANY B.


Musician Algernon S. Cropsey.


COMPANY F. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.'


Captain John W. Kilbreth. First Lieutenant Benton Halstcad.


Second Lieutenant Henry C. Carlin.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant George F. Reed.


Sergeant Henry M. Reading.


Sergeant Charles Woodworth.


Sergeant Charles P. Wilson.


Sergeant Charles C. Shannon.


Corporal William Chapman.


Corporal Daniel Sweatman. Corporal John Makinson.


Corporal Dwight J. Tillinghast.


Corporal Edmunds S. Hopkins.


Corporal Samuel V. Wright.


Corporal James Caffrey.


Corporal James W. Power.


Musician Thomas G. Crapsey.


Musician Ebon A. Turpin.


Wagoner John C. Bickham.


PRIVATES.


Amos A. Allen, James M. Ayres, Daniel Adams, John E. Burton, Charles F. Bassett, Frederick Bremer, Phillip Behrman, Andrew Brohm, Charles Cook, John Conley, Hiram Crampton, Samuel G. Creswell, George E. Dyer, Edward Day, William J. Dodson, William Drope, Robert Duer, William Detzle, David Everly, Louis Etler, James Eng- lish, James Ferris, Joshua Francis, Joseph Fries, Thomas S. Ford, John H. Franklin, William Hobbs, Samuel Huen, John Hudson, Frederick Hunkmeier, Adam Heintz, Charles Huber, George F. Hawekatte, Albert Jeans; John W. King, Thomas Kelly, William Killoughy, Israel Kearney, Daniel Kelehan, John M. Glashan, Walter Miller, George M. Newy, Oliver Outcalt, Thomas Price, George Quigley, Noah Reed, George Smith, John H. Simons, Greenlief Smith, Benjamin Steinkamp, Benjamin Smead, Xavier Strausberger, William R. Snell, Jacob Schotzman, William Segirst, Michacl Sheridan, William Sunderman, Nathaniel B. Thompson, George W. Totten, James Whitney, Alfred White, Jediah A. Whinney, John E. Wheeler, Samuel Wright.


EIGHTIETH OHIO INFANTRY .- COMPANY I. -Private Leopold Goldsmith.


EIGHTY-FIRST OHIO INFANTRY .- COMPANY F.


COMMISSIONED OFFICER.


Captain Ozro J. Dodds.


PRIVATES.


Orien Clark, Walter Scott.


EIGHTY-THIRD OHIO INFANTRY.


Several companies of this regiment were from Hamilton county; the remainder from Butler. Before the regiment was fully organized, the exigencies of the situation in Kentucky, during the invasion of Kirby Smith, became so great that the Hamilton county companies, then at Camp Dennison, were ordered into the field. On the night of the third of September, 1862, the day of leaving camp, they bivouacked in the streets of Covington. After various movements they marched across the Lick- ing river to support the Beechwood battery, on the Alex- andria turnpike, did heavy picket duty for several days, and were then withdrawn to Camp Orchard. Here the rest of the regiment joined them, and gave the Eighty- third in all one thousand and ten men. The regimental organization, however, dated from the twenty-second of August, when all the companies were full. September


I33


HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


18th the command marched to Cynthiana with an expc- dition under General Q. A. Gilmore, but found no ene- my in force. October 15th it reached Paris, Kentucky, and joined the First brigade, Tenth division, army of the Tennessee. A fortnight thereafter it was on its way to Louisville, stopping two weeks at Nicholasville, where it was presented with an elegant banner, by the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton railroad company. The division (General A. J. Smith's) sailed for Memphis November 23d and thence further down the Mississippi December 20th. The Eighty-third engaged in some laborious and success- ful operations about Milliken's Bend, and had its first battles at Chickasaw Bayou and Arkansas Post. In the latter action it lost one-fifth of its number, but was the first to plant its flag upon the enemy's works, was honora- bly mentioned in the official reports, and specially thanked by unanimous vote of the Ohio legislature. In camp afterwards at Young's Point, the regiment lost heavily by disease. May 20th, after heavy skirmishing and some severe fighting, it reached the front at Vicksburgh, was in the assault on the twenty-second, where it lost eight per cent. of its men engaged, and took part in the subse- quent operations of the siege. After the surrender it moved with its division against Johnston, assisted in the affairs about Jackson and in the pursuit of the rebels to Brandon, returning thence to Vicksburgh, after an unusu- ally arduous campaign. ` August 24th it changed camp to Carrollton, Louisiana, and remained there, save for an expedition to Donaldsonville, till the third of October, when it formed a part of the force starting on the Teche campaign. November 3d, when in charge of a forage train, it had a sharp encounter, and lost fifty-six men, mostly captured. A few weeks afterwards it moved to Fort Jackson to quell a mutiny among colored troops; was then ordered to New Orleans, and thence to Madi- sonville, where it went into the Second brigade, Third di- vision, Thirteenth army corps. The fore part of March, 1864, at Franklin, it was transferred to the First brigade of the Fourth division, same corps, and marched with it on the ill-fated Red River expedition. It was hotly en- gaged in the battle of Pleasant Hills, and gallantly main- tained its reputation. At the beginning of its share in the action, after marching ten miles in two hours, it occu- pied the extreme right of the Federal line, and came near being enveloped and destroyed by the rebel left, which extended far beyond it, but was extricated under a terri- ble cross fire, in perfect order. May 2d it was engaged in a sharp skirmish while on a foraging expedition, and at Alexandria furnished large details for work upon the dam which finally saved the army. On the twenty-eighth the regiment reached Baton Rouge, and remained there in camp till July 21st, when it left for Algiers, opposite New Orleans, moving thence to Morganza to repel an attack, and going into camp there for the remainder of the sum- mer. October Ist it formed part of an expedition to sieze and hold Morgan's Ferry, on the Atchafalaya, and on the eighteenth, of another to the Atchafalaya at Simms- port. November rst it embarked for the mouth of White river, and in December was ordered to Nachez for consolidation with the Forty-eighth Ohio. The new


regiment comprised six companies of the former and four from the latter, retaining the name Eighty-third. All the field officers were from the former command. It was as- signed to the Third brigade, Second division, Thirteenth corps, and, March 20th, started in the Mobile campaign. It made the assault on Fort Blakely April 9th, and captured two posts, eight cannon, two mortars, eight hun- dred prisoners, two flags, etc., etc., losing thirty-six killed and wounded. It did provost duty in Selma till May 12th; was in Mobile a month, and in Galveston on guard duty till July 26th, when it started for home, arriving at Cincinnati the fifth of August, and getting final payment and discharge at Camp Dennison on the tenth.


FIELD AND STAFF.


Colonel Frederick W. Moore.


Lieutenant Colonel William H. Baldwin.


Major S. S. L'Hommedieu.


Surgeon John S. McGrew.


Assistant Surgeon Marion Wilkinson.


Assistant Surgeon George Cassiday.


Adjutant Lawrence Waldo.


Sergeant Major Joseph W. Rudolph.


Quartermaster Sergeant Stacey Daniels.


Commissary Sergeant Ceorge W. Carey.


COMPANY A.


COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain Dewitt C. Shockley.


First Lieutenant William R. McComas.


Second Lieutenant Albert Fehrman.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant C. A. Burns.


Sergeant Jacob Meyer.


Sergeant George F. Hibben.


Sergeant Edward C. Collins.


Sergeant Charles H. Amos.


Corporal Samuel Battsell.


Corporal Charles Bodine.


Corporal Thomas J. Thompson.


Corporal John Snyder.


Corporal Jacob Mosier.


Corporal Homer Kendall.


Corporal Bernard Jacobs.


Corporal John Haller.


Wagoner Sylvester Kriefer.


PRIVATES.


James Anderson, Anthony Augerer, Elmore Bridges, Davis Bock, William Bird, Peter Brobest, Nathan Baltzell, Louis Benjamin, Michael Bohlinger, Robert Close, Conrad Castal, Isaac E. Crosly, William Canoll, Robert Cox, Thomas Cox, Thomas Davis, Raphael Ceiphy, James Dodd, Samuel De France, Jacob Godow, Conrad Gurther, Henry Gedes, Michael Hughes, Peter Hoffman, Joseph S. Hewris, William Hogan, Simon Honreleman, Harry Hull, Frank Hildreth, Joseph H. Halton, David Hilton, John Jones, William Jones, Alfred P. James, Gustave Lippart, Alexander G. Leme, William A. Lernka, Nathan Lehman, Richard Milligan, David Milligan, John McAllister, George Mosier, William Murphy, Russel McKitrick, Isaac Mueters, Andrew Moore, Elijah McLaughlin, Henry Mclaughlin, Albert Martin, Charles H. Nichols, Thomas Owen, Adrian Pierson, John R. Pepper, Robert Porter, David Pierson, Annas Roseboom, Elijah Roll, William Reynolds, James Reynolds, John Rhodes, Joseph T. Rossa, Daniel Riker, William Sweaniger, Charles A. Short, James Stapleton, Arthur W. Salter, Aaron T. Sutton, Michael V. Smith, Ernest Schowe, Andrew Speath, Benjamin Shutts, William Turner, Christian Tonges, Joseph Twelins, Adam Volkert, Jacob Voegli, Thomas White, William Worstle, Emil Weggert, Thomas Wallace, Jacob R. Williams, James Dowis, Frederick Meyer, William Sloan, John Worstle, Ennis Riker.


COMPANY B. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain James W. Craven. First Lieutenant Philip Bescher. Second Lieutenant John T. Talbott.


I34


HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant James T. DeMarr.


Sergeant Charles H. E. Cole. Sergeant Joseph R. Shannon. Sergeant Peter Shatsman. Sergeant James D. Campbell. Corporal Samuel Nash. Corporal Lemuel Vanzandt. Corporal James J. Shannon.


Corporal Gustave Leifer.


Corporal Thomas Beette.


Corporal Lewis Williams.


Corporal William Fisher.


Corporal William Strohman.


Musician Samuel C. Price.


Musician William L. Primby. Wagoner Harry E. Breeding.


PRIVATES.


H. Ausdenmoore, John S. Boake, George M. Brenling, Henry K. Bascom, John Behner, Ludwig Berdel, Franz Bury, George J. Buckel, John W. Brudsall, Albert B. Carl, Dennis Coffey, Thomas Corcoran, William Codling, Samuel Corer, Taylor Conner, Andrew Conley, Charles W. Dean, James Dowd, Columbus Dale, Isaac F. DeMarr, Albert Findley, Anton Ferenter, Alexander Glaze, Solomon Gness, Bar- ney Goldschmidt, William Hazard, John G. Harrington, David Hall, George Holden, James W. Hudson, George H. Howe, Bernhardt Helda, George E. Harvey, Charles Henry, William R. Irwin, Joseph K. Irwin, John W. Jackson, jr., George W. Johns, Samuel S. Junkins, Christian Koerter, Joseph Kindle, George Leist, jr., George M. Labarre, Van Buren Littleton, Granville McDonnell, Casper Monig, William Meyere, James M. Matthews, Frank Noble, Felix O'Neil, Levi Pettil, John R. Payne, Henry Romes, Lawrence Shaffer, David Swaney, Jacob Seifert, Charles Smith, Benjamin M. Wright, Charles W. White, Edwin D. Wosencraft, Francis M. Watt, Robert Work, John W. Wallace, William P. Work, James G. Work, Joseph Worsted, William Wilson, Andrew Wertheimer.


COMPANY C. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain Edward Manser. First Lieutenant William H. Mindeler.


Second Lieutenant Henry M. Gastrall.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant William A. Beasley.


Sergeant George Kerr.


Sergeant John Pritchard.


Sergeant George W. Milam.


Sergeant John Donnehen.


Corporal George Snyder.


Corporal Benjamin Cook.


Corporal James Patton. Corporal William H. McLeaven.


Corporal Herbert Winston.


Corporal Richard E. Thompson.


Corporal Colin R. Palmer.


Corporal Lewis R. Washburne.


Musician William Deford.


Musician Charles Harrington. Wagoner Jonah Cook.


PRIVATES.


Jerome B. Bainbridge, William Bell, Byron Bailey, Frank Balkiman, Alexander Berger, Richard Conkling, jr., James Close, Phaley Cun- ningham, George W. Carey, John Daniel, George W. De Lyon, Thomas Drumb, Stephen Demoss, David Danworth, Thomas Doherty, William R. Dederick, Andrew J. Deford, William Eaton, Daniel Flowers, William F. Fordyce, Charles H. Gould, Douglass Guy, Ben- jamin K. Helter, John A. Hoffman, Joseph Hoffman, John S. Hensler, Griffin Hemphill, Henry Hacker, Louis Henix, James Hefferman, Charles W. Horweg, John Holley, William Hemmernan, Henry Jones, Stephen D. Kite, James Kenley, Patrick Lavery, Joseph Laren, John Lenhoff, Mathias Lenhoff, James Lamb, Andrew H. McKee, Thomas H. Mack, Henry Miller, Robert Middleton, Patrick B. McCabe, Pat- rick Murray, Frank Martin, Albinus J. Masters, Daniel Nciman, Henry Oeschlager, John Pheeney, Martin I .. Peabody, James Pharis, James Quinn, Andrew B. Rey, John Rhover, Oscar P. Richey, Edwin R. Ross, Thomas G. Robinson, Michael Riley, John Scabold, Stephen


M. J. Smith, Henry H. Streuve, Frank Shields, William Stronberg, John R. Telfers, Samuel Tearne, Jefferson Terry, Thomas Van Wise, John A. Wetmore, William Widdlefield, John C. Wilson, Josiah Wil- liams, Henry Woods.


COMPANY D. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain Albert W. Boser.


First Lieutenant James Carlin.


Second Lieutenant Gershom Tomlinson.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant Samuel A. Keen.


Sergeant Charles P. Saxton.


Sergeant Archie Young.


Sergeant Martin L. Best.


Sergeant Francis Crebs.


Corporal William M. James.


Corporal William Jager.


Corporal William Buck.


Corporal Henry Weston.


Corporal William C. Carter.


Corporal Joseph Festo.


Corporal Joseph Loor.


Corporal Eli H. Conway.


Wagoner William F. Magee.


Musician Washington A. Bozer,


Musician William Palmer.


PRIVATES.


Joshua Ashley, Ira Atkins, William T. Alexander, Francis Bain, Wesley Brennan, David Barnes, Nimrod Bannister, John Burk, John N. Bates, William A. Benson, Richard H. Balb, Jeremiah Conger, George Cullum, John Campbell, Michael Connel, William A. Comic, James Creighton, James G. Clark, William Drake, John Danagh, King Dearmond, Lewis A. Davidson, James Dorn, Silas Fragee, Lawrence Felenas, Jacob R. Flannagan, John Gunning, John M. Gibbs, Reuben Gardner, Oliver P. Glancy, John Haller, Samuel Hamilton, Turner Homer, William Hedges, Joseph Hopping, Milton Helmick, John Hevey, George C. Hartfence, Jacob Hinkelman, John Hooper, Isaac Jackson, William P. John, Henry B. John, John Kind, James T. Kelso, Henry Kilgour, James R. Lacey, Henry Luster, Edward Ma- har, Abraham Malson, Frank Malson, Jacob Myers, Jacob Moser, George W. Moriarity, Michael Martin, Hiram McMurry, William H. Morgan, William J. McMurry, John Magee, Datus E. Myers, Patrick McCabe, Allen W. Neese, John Newcomb, Michael C. Nugent, David I. Osborn, John Peterson, Peter Pulse, George Rudicil, Noble Ross, Anderson Rudicil, Joseph Reeder, John Roney, Samuel F. Reed, James C. Ross, John Sapp, George W. Stewart, William E. Lears, DeLancey Lackel, Arthur Smith, Alfred Skidmore, Robert R. Thomas, John Teller, Edmund Talkington, John Vanasdale, Ephraim Williamson, Potter White, John White, Matthew Trever, James P. McMurry, Alex- ander H. Miller.


COMPANY E. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain Pardon D. Connell.


First Lieutenant Adam E. Billingsby.


Second Lieutenant John R. Phillips.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant Lutellus Hussey.


Sergeant Charles B. Palmer.


Sergeant George McCormick.


Sergeant John Dunn.


Sergeant Clinton W. Gerrard.


Corporal Alonzo Dunn.


Corporal Robert G Rusk.


Corporal John W. Bell.


Corporal Eli Earhart.


Corporal Francis McGregor.


Corporal Isaiah Thompson.


Corporal Truman Mosteller


Corporal Parshall Cornelius.


Musician Jacob Harper.


Wagoner William H. Steward.


PRIVATES.


James Agadine, Robert Burns, Jonah Buchanan, Jonas Baushman, Samuel Beeler, Joseph Burgoyne, Peter Beeler. George Bailey, John Becler, Joseph Bowen, Peter V. Bumhart, John H. Carter,


I35


HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OIHO.


John S. Cox, Lewis Cunan, Pollock Cobb, Daniel Doty, Isaac Doug- lass, Henry Drashell, James Faust, Peter Forney, Oliver H. Gerrard, Thomas Gorman, James Gray, Alexander Grooms, William Harrison, Jacob Harper, John Hegrich, Thomas Hatter, James Huff, Adrian Hageman, Charles Kilgour, John M. Keeler, Jacob Klick, Charles W. Kratzer, Gustav Krauss, William C. A. Krauss, Edward M. Krauss, Thomas Love, Joseph Landenburgh, Martin McGinnis, James Miller, Gideon McGill, William Martin, Stephen Myers, Charles Metz, Hum- phrey Magnihan, William C. Newell, William Pryer, Francis R. Palmer, William Pitcher, Stephen M. Price, John Ritter, George Ritter, William C. Ritter, James D. Ross, Francis C. Ritter, Pengree Riker, Arthur C. Ritter, Edward Smith, Charles F. Smith, Noah Smith, John W. Short, Jonah Shuff, John W. Stewart, James Stevens, Joel Swihart, George Swihart, Eli Swihart, David Taylor, Michael Tragnor, Samuel Thompson, William Trewitt, Martin Williams, Peter C. Williamson, Ezra Wilvarren, Hammett Workman, Jacob Whaler, Elias Zickeforse, Henry Zickeforse.




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