History of Hamilton County, Ohio, with illustrations and biographical sketches, Part 42

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 42


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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Sergeant Charles Clifford.


Sergeant Charles Kennedy.


Sergeant Isaae West.


Sergeant J. C. Barnet.


Sergeant H. G. McCormick.


Corporal Ira Athearn.


Corporal William Bray.


Corporal G. W. Snider.


Corporal R. H. Wood.


Corporal W. M. Seal.


PRIVATES.


Robert Aleorn, S. F. Blakemore, Robert H. Brown, Osear Bigler, Young Busser, James E. Bosley, Samuel Coffman, John Cox, W. S. Cones, John Carran, B. C. Converse, G. A. Eagan, J. P. Evans, Ben- jamin Fowler, Joseph Fagin, F. W. Glenn, C. M. Gregg, W. F. Gim- dly, James Graham, Robert Grace, James Guard, John Hodson, G. J. Hegginson, Charles Hines, W. H. Hover, Daniel Hammitt, John Hal- ler, Edward Humphrey, J. H. Hitt, John Higby, Paul Israel, J. W. Jones, E. P. Jennings, Benjamin D. Jones, James Kasey, Frank Knapp, William Kelley, J. Kegan, James Kelley, J. F. Kennedy, J. E. Lukins. Cornelius Leary, James E. Lynne, John H. Love, William H. MeGlas- son, R. McMillan, D. H. MeKenzie, Peter Minzes, A. Mehan, M. H.' Morgan, A. M. Moore, E. Norris, J. Netzs, C. E. Nowrse, Thomas Noran, L. F. Noble, J. W. Oliver, J. M. Powell, W. H. Pearee, L. A. Rowell, G. W. Rittenhouse, John Reese, Richard Reese, Franeis Sotters, Nieh- olas Stevens, Charles Soden, J. F. Skinner, James Sullivan, E. H. Smith, William Tomlinson, Henry Van Matre, G. H. Williamson, W. H. Webber, Cyrus E. Watkins, W. W. Weatherby, A. Witts.


CAPTAIN BARD'S COMPANY (Infantry).


Another thirty-day organization, raised in Cincinnati during the excitement and alarm of 1862. It was called into service by Major General Lewis Wallace, mustered in September 2d, and out October 3d.


COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain Sylvester W. Bard. First Lieutenant Peter C. Bonte.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant Samnel B. Newell. Sergeant James Byrne.


Sergeant Robert Keith. Sergeant Horton Ensign. Sergeant James Stewart.


Sergeant William P. Biddle.


167


HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OIHO.


Corporal Thomas Marshall. Corporal Henry Burns. Corporal William Crosset. Corporal Joseph Dixon. Corporal William Stack. Corporal Robert Saunders.


PRIVATES.


Andrew Acker, Hamilton Allen, Edwin Alden, John Brisban, John W. Bradley, William Barton, George Buckeye, William Ballance, James H. Brooking, Thomas W. Butts, George Cordman, Henry Cordman, Hampton A. Clark, James Conroy, Henry Destlerath, George De Lyon, William Danford, John Doran, James C. Franklin, John Farley, Burtis Gale, Henry Ganblesping, Robert Gilmore, Walter Godfrie, Frank Hener, George Huges, Charles Hyatt, John Hann, Augustus Hand, Clarkson Keller, Herman Landweher, John Legner, Thomas Lockwood, Augustus Lake, Richard Miller, John Mortimer, Patrick McCabe, John McLaughlin, Jesse O'Neal, John Ronaldson, Christopher Ritchie, John Riddle, Lewis Rutgler, Patrick Lexton, John Sanford, Otto Stemmer, Nicholas Sticksell, Irwin Taylor, Edwin Van Anning, George Valland- ingham, Lewis Winland, Pierson F. West, Joseph Watterhouse, John Walker, John Willis.


FIRST OHIO CAVALRY.


This was organized in the late summer of 1861, under the first call for three years' men. It was mustered in at Camp Chase, October 5, 1861, and was a choice regi- ment, as there was a great pressure to join the first cav- alry command formed in the State, and the men were · carefully picked. About the middle of September, before the whole regiment was mustered, companies A and C were ordered to western Virginia, and saw much hard service in the Shenandoah valley and about Washington. and did not rejoin the regiment till January, 1865. In December the rest of the regiment, the first cavalry regi- ment in that department, reached Louisville. During the next four years (for the organization became "vet- eran") it saw abundant service in Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, at the battles of Perryville, Mur- freesborough (in which Colonel Milliken was killed), and Chickamauga (where Lieutenant Colonel Cupp fell), those of the Atlanta campaign, and many minor actions. The latter part of its service was in raiding and garrison duty in Georgia, Alabama, and South Carolina. It was mus- tered out at Columbus, September 13, 1865.


COMPANY C.


COMMISSIONED OFFICER.


Captain Nathan D. Menken.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Sergeant Henry Bertram.


Corporal Henry Krumbick.


PRIVATES.


John Bohl, Christopher Kattick, John Singclair, Joseph Tirolf, Mar- cns Hummel.


COMPANY C.


(In the Veteran Organization.) FIELD AND STAFF.


Quartermaster Sergeant John Camm.


Quartermaster Sergeant John J. Johnson.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Corporal Francis H. Gellser. Corporal Marcus Hummel. Corporal Albert Hirst.


PRIVATES.


Henry Gruttendick, William Hampton, William I. Malden, William Ormston, John Siford, James M. White.


Discharged .- Corporal David P. Fouts; Privates Stevens Bangs, Henry Herz, John H. Shieds, Henry Stevens, Albert Webb.


Transferred .-- James L. Price.


COMPANY D. PRIVATES. Ezekiel Branek, Thomas O'Grady, Thomas I. Wheeler.


COMPANY G. NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICER.


Corporal William L. Ready. .


PRIVATES.


Noah S. Alexander, John W. Divine, Jerome Dolan, George Feeny, John Hogan, Thomas Karns, James Kingsley, John Lyons, James Morton, Edward Mclaughlin, William McLaughlin, Christopher Mo- ser, William W. D. Patterson, Sylvester Quigley, Daniel Ready, Syl- vester Roosa, Philip S. Stovall, John Hemphill, Charles Fisher.


COMPANY H.


Private John W. Malone.


COMPANY 1. PRIVATES.


Daniel Donoghue, Patrick Crowley, Francis Clement.


COMPANY K.


Private James Jones.


COMPANY M. PRIVATES.


John Matthews, Samuel L. Leffingweil.


SECOND OHIO CAVALRY.


This was raised in the summer and fall of 1861, the last company being mustered in at Camp Wade, Cleve- land, October 10, 1861. It was raised mostly from the Western Reserve, and was a superb regiment. It served, under its original veteran organizations, until September II, 1865, when it was paid and disbanded. It had a very extended and arduous service. Mr. Whitelaw Reid, in his Ohio in the War, says:


The Second fought under the following general officers: Bnell, Wright, Hunter, Denver, Sturgis, Blunt, Salomon, Curtis, Schofield, Burnside, Carter, Gillmore, Shackelford, Foster, Kantz, Sedgwick, Wilson, McIntosh, Torbert, Custer, Sheridan, Meade, and Grant. Its horses have drunk from, and its troopers have battled in, the waters of the Arkansas, Kaw, Osage, Cygnes, Missouri, Mississippi, Ohio, Scioto, Miami, Cumberland, Tennessee, Holston, Potomac, Shenan- doah, Rappahanock, Rapidan, Bull Run, Mattapony, Pamunkey, Chickahominy, James, Appamatox, Blackwater, Nottoway, and Ches- peake. It has campaigned through thirteen States and a territory: Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Ten- nessee, Georgia, Alabama, West Virginia, Maryland, Virginia, and In- dian territory. It has travelled, as a regiment, on foot, horseback, by railroad and steamboat, on land, river, bay, and ocean. It has marched an aggregate distance of twenty-seven thousand miles; has fought in ninety-seven battles and engagements. It has served in five different armies: The army of the Frontier, of the Missouri, of the Po- tomac, of the Ohio, and of the Shenandoah-forming a continuous line of armies from the headwaters of the Arkansas to the month of the James; and its dead, sleeping where they fell, form a vidette-line half across the continent, a chain of prostrate sentinels two thousand miles long.


The following named accredited to Cincinnati and elsewhere in Hamilton county, as found in the veteran Second :


STAFF OFFICER.


Quartermaster Sergeant Edwin J. Lukens.


COMPANY B.


Private Henry Neales.


COMPANY C. PRIVATES. John Alexander, Henry Davis, Charles Ellis, William H. Graham, George Mcclellan, Lawrence C. Miller, Henry Patterson.


COMPANY G. PRIVATES.


Dutton Baker, William Christy, William Covington, William E. Chance, Benjamin S. Collins, Walter G. Finch, James Galligher, John T. Hayes, Matthew DeCapez.


.


168


HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


COMPANY H.


Private Charles Rice.


COMPANY I.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant Joseph H. Graff. Sergeant John G. King. Sergeant John Wolford. Sergeant Baxter Davis. Sergeant Herman Evers.


Sergeant James Liddy. Corporal Benjamin Earl. Corporal Frederick B. Puthoff. Corporal Charles Winkelman. Corporal Alonzo Noble.


Farrier John W. King.


Wagoner George L. Bowers.


PRIVATES.


Edward Beall, Charles Beall, Henry Douglass, William Doherty, Henry Fachman, Jacob Fritz, Rudolph Gessler, John Harrington, Ed- ward Humphreys, Ehard Heitz, Lewis Helpman, Frank Hurn, John H. Imvalle, George W. C. Jennifer, Hugh Mulligan, John Murphy, Henry Nelson, Alfred G. Nerney, Charles Ryan, James Ryan, Thomas Riley, Nicholas Shuh, Peter Smucker, Philip Schindeldecker, Frederick Schindeldecker, Albert Smith, John Vogt, William Winkelman, Wil- son Wright, John Weckerly, William Williams.


Discharged .- First Sergeant Edwin C. Joyce; Sergeants James Cas- tillo, John Willis, John Weaver; Corporal Richard A. Verney; Privates Albert V. Clark, Abraham Craig, William Hicks, Henry Hume, Otto Kemper, Edward Myers, S. A. Shiplar, Charles Strieker, Leon E. Sherwood, Edward Van Pelt.


Transferred .- Sergeant E. A. Dumount; Privates N. F. Lugenbahl, John Netz, Isaac Newton.


Died .- Private Emil C. Graff.


COMPANY K. PRIVATES.


Charles MeClellan, Henry Miller, Albert Mussey, Joseph McClair, William Ogler, Erhardt Rottle, William Sweeney, Henty Staver, Henry Utery.


Discharged .- Privates Silas Corzalt, Joseph Rider.


COMPANY M.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICER.


Corporal William Ailes.


PRIVATES.


Thomas Harris, David Hamlin.


THIRD OHIO CAVALRY. (Veteran).


Organized September, 1861; discharged August 14, 1865.


COMPANY A.


Private James D. Lasley.


COMPANY B.


Private Henry Maek.


COMPANY H. PRIVATES.


Charles Carr, Robert Francis, James Gillan, Philip Heiser, James Kenney, George Ruger, William Smith, Robert B. Smith, William H. Hambright.


COMPANY I.


Private John H. Benson.


COMPANY K.


Sergeant James H. Gidley.


FOURTH OHIO CAVALRY.


This regiment, in both the original and veteran organi- zations, seems to have been recruited almost bodily in Cincinnati and elsewhere in Hamilton county. It was raised under special authority from General Fremont, by Colonel John Kennett, between August 15, and No- vember 23, 1861, when it moved from Camp Gurley to Camp Dennison with one thousand and seventy men. It embarked for Jeffersonville December 6th, and on the


twenty-seventh crossed into Kentucky and moved to Bacon creek, with an assignment to General O. M. Mitchell's third division. It captured a valuable supply train at Bowling Green, and led the advance to Nash- ville, near which place, at Edgefield, the city was for- mally surrendered to Colonel Kennett. March 9, 1862, while in camp eight miles from the city, Morgan's men captured its forage train with thirty men and eighty horses. The regiment moved soon after to Murfrees- borough, and an expedition from it destroyed a powder mill and magazine near McMinnville, repulsing a force of rebels thrice its number, without loss. At Huntsville it captured a railway train with eight hundred rebel sol- diers, also seventeen locomotives and many cars. Its operations thereafter were very active and successful in northern Alabama, and when the country was abandoned upon the retreat of Buell in September, it covered the rear of the column to Murfreesborough, and then joined in the pursuit of Bragg, and afterwards in guarding Buell's wagon trains. On a March to Danville soon after, a detachment of the Fourth, numbering about two hundred and fifty, was surrounded, captured, and pa- roled. The rest of the regiment, marching sixty-nine consecutive days, in due time reached Nashville again, ' took part in the battle of Murfreesborough, undertook a raid in Bragg's rear and cut the railroad, capturing a lo- comotive and train of cars, and made several successful attacks. It moved southward with the army of the Cumberland, June 24th; September 9th, fought and routed Wheeler's cavalry near Alpine, Georgia, and on the twenty-ninth was engaged on the extreme right at Chicka- manga, with a loss of thirty-two killed, wounded and missing. After the battle it pursued Wheeler into east Tennessee, and fought him near Farmington. Till the last of December it was on duty in northern Alabama, then re-enlisted and took its veteran furlough. Shortly before that, the Second battalion made an inroad into east Tennessee, and at Cleveland captured many pris- oners and burned a shot, shell and cap factory. It then went to the relief of Knoxville, and soon after re-en- listed also. On March 13, 1864, the reorganized and now veteran regiment started again from Camp Denni- son for Nashville, where it was equipped, and marched on foot to Columbia, where it was remounted. On May 22d it joined the Seventeenth corps at Decatur, Ala- bama. On the twenty-ninth its brigade was attacked by General Roddy with a large force, when he was repulsed in disorder, after a hard fight of two hours. In the At- lanta campaign it was engaged in frequent skirmishes, and on the sixth of July it destroyed some large fac- tories at Roswell engaged in making cloth for the rebel armies. On the nineteenth it helped to destroy the Au- gusta railroad east of and near Atlanta. It aided in a successful raid to Covington, during which two railway bridges, two trains and locomotives, and over two mil- lion dollars worth of cotton were destroyed and five hundred rebels captured. The Fourth was also in Stone- man's raid, was engaged at Flat Rock bridge, accompa- nied General Kilpatrick on his raid around Atlanta, had a severe engagement at Lovejoy's Station, August 19th,


169


HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


while in the advance, and, after the command was sur- rounded, participated in a charge by which the rebel lines were cut through and all the wagons and artillery safely brought out. The regiment reached Buckhead on the twenty-second, and on the twenty-fifth took part in Sherman's flank movement to Jonesborough, and thence marched to . Cross Keys, where it stayed till September 26th, thence went to Landtown, to Atlanta, and to Nash- ville for a remount. This was finally formed at Louis- ville, and it started Dixieward again, newly equipped and remounted, on the first of December, reaching Nashville ten days afterwards. It picketed the Cumberland while the battle of Nashville was proceeding, and when it was over, guarded a wagon train to Columbia. At Gravelly Springs, in January, it was equipped for a long cam- paign, and spent the time there in drilling and building quarters and stables.


On March 22d the regiment, now a part of General Wilson's command, advanced by Frankfort, Rupellville, Jasper, Elyria, and Monteville to Selma. On April Ist, at Ebenezer Church, fifteen miles from Selma, the enemy was routed in a sharp skirmish, losing three pieces of ar- tillery and several hundred prisoners. The next day, in front of the rebel works at the latter place, the troops dismounted for a charge, the Fourth being the left regi- ment of Wilder's brigade, which held the right of the line. One-fourth the command were holding the horses, and there were only one thousand five hundred in the charging column. The attack was made, over five hun- dred yards of open ground, and through a hail of grape, canister and musket shot. The line swept undauntedly across the works, capturing two lunettes, with seven guns and other war equipment. Fifty men of the Fourth were killed and wounded in this charge. The arsenal and navy yard at Selma were destroyed, and on April 6th the column resumed its march, capturing Mont- gomery and Columbus, and reaching Macon on the twentieth, where it remained on guard and patrol duty until May 23d, when it started homeward, arriving at Nashville June 15th, and being mustered out the latter part of the next month.


ORIGINAL ORGANIZATION. FIELD AND STAFF.


Colonel John Kennett.


Lieutenant Colonel Henry W. Bendsall.


Major John L. Pugh.


Major James E. Dresbach. Surgeon Lucian A. James.


Assistant Surgeon Thomas McMillin.


Chaplain ----- Cheney.


Quartermaster Thomas D. Hastings. Adjutant Philip H. Warner.


Sergeant Major Silas N. Basom.


Quartermaster George Cirst.


Commissary Sergeant Edward Wood.


Hospital Steward John A. Sowers. Bugler James H. Rea.


REGIMENTAL BAND.


Chief Musician, Charles Seidensticker; First-class Musicians, Charles Baeminger, August Schwevel, Peter Bohl, Frederick Witte, Louis Reinhart, Charles T. Brental; Second-class, William Plate, Charles Ernst, Conrad Havering; Third-class, Thomas J. Scott, John Goebel, Jacob Goebel, Charles Kress.


COMPANY A.


COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain Oliver P. Robie.


First Lieutenant George H. Dobb.


Second Lieutenant Henry H. Hamilton.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Quartermaster Sergeant Cyrus H. Pierce.


First Sergeant Charles D. Henry.


Sergeant Frederick H. Bonker.


Sergeant Frank Robie.


Sergeant George W. Rollins.


Sergeant George W. Gaskins.


Corporal William D. Convin.


Corporal Charles Tailer.


Corporal Frederick H. Boniker.


Corporal James Short.


Corporal Oscar Mour.


Corporal James Pike.


Corporal Asaeph Butler.


Corporal Isaac Butler.


Bugler Albert N. Young.


Saddler John H. Moor.


PRIVATES.


John Aberdeen, Thomas J. Armstrong, Benjamin Aydlotte, Thomas Anthony, Isaac W. Brown, Josiah A. Brown, Michael Bunker, John H. Booth, Albert Brant, Thomas C. Bundy, Edward Brady, Adam Bell, Samuel Barnett, Samuel Binney, John Buckhart, Edward G. Bartlett, Thomas Cestello Robert W .- Canton, Charles H. Canton' Charles Crain, George Cust, Orin Crist, George Crow, James C. Cun- ningham, Philip Decker, Henry E. Davis, James A. Farnish, Benton Furgeson, John Goodbarne, Louis Garachini, Michael Gorman, Thomas Groover, Timothy W. Green, Martin Gons, James Graziani, Joseph C. Glardon, Albert G. Hopping, William Harris, John W. Hatfield, Ebenezer Hatfield, John Humphrey, Abijah W. Hayden, Eli F. Hamilton, William Hesse, Ambrose Hallam, John B. Hall, Andrew Jeffries, Amansel D. Jackson, Owen Kilcom, William Kopp, Harmann Kolkmeier, Michael Kenney, Oscar Kirby, Llewellyn Lodge, Philip Leonard, Michael Martin, William Meader, Sanford Mullisberg, Franklin Miller, Thomas McCabe, William McDonnell, Charles P. Miller, Albert Maxwell, Theodore Mortman, Louis Nardoni, Joseph H. Nicholson, Charles E. O'Hara, Thomas Omelia, Hamilton Porter, William Pierce, Joseph C. Prescott, Henry A. Porter, Thomas Quig- ley, George Rork, George Raster, Thomas C. Roiliston, Julius Rein- nick, Davis Sutton, Abraham Skinner, Charles Storey, Thomas J. Scott, Charles D. Smith, Henry Ewing, John G. Stettor, John L. Sowers, William Shires, Charles Steine, William A. Thomas, Lester L. Taylor, William M. Teterick, William A. Wellshear, James Wade, Verner Wycoff, Robert Wise, Edgar B. Wichcraft, James G. Williams.


COMPANY B. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain Conduce G. Meguire.


First Lieutenant Philip H. Warner.


Second Lieutenant Henry B. Teeter.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Quartermaster Sergeant Ambrose R. Megrue.


First Sergeant Andrew J. Keeney.


Sergeant Hamilton R. Williams.


Sergeant Gideon Landaker.


Sergeant William A. Clough.


Sergeant Samuel C. Marshall.


Corporal John M. Hedrick.


Corporal Greenlief Calley.


Corporal Alvin M. Miller. Corporal Charles M. Wainright.


Corporal Drury M. Porter.


Corporal Alpheus H. Underwood.


Corporal Thomas W. Cook.


Corporal Jonas Smith. Bugler George Stork.


Bugler Henry Smith. Farrier James M. Thomas.


Farrier Charles S. Sprague.


PRIVATES.


Jaines Blackburn, Joseph P. Berry, Perry Badgley, Thomas Brennen, Matthew Barris, James S. Booth, Thurston Bates, Charles F. Bates,


22


170


HISTORY OF HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO.


Edward Barfoot, Henry R. Brock, Samuel Cop, William Cop, Samuel Carey, Hannibal Clough, Solon Cook, John A. Corbin, John Carr, Francis J. Cane, George M. Day, Hartson Dunfy, Marion Eckles, John Fitzgerald, Benjamin Fay, William H. Fairfield, John A. Gage, James C. Gage, Asa T. Henderson, George enderson, HAustin S. Hut- · son, John Harper, William A. Hartwell, Samnel T. Harvey, David A. Harvey, George W. Harper, Philip L. Hedrick, George W. Huhgy, John Hays, William H. Hammond, Nicholas L. Jones, Charles L. Kidd, Charles Leatherberry, William Linville, Isaac Lanedaker, Jo- seph Mahoy, James Nolan, Ephraim Nigh, Archibald Osborn, Frits Peters, William F. Porter, Jacob Pierce, George Porter, Anson D. Robinson, Isaac Seaman, John H. Searam, Christopher Sulsor, Philip Shearer, Charles Schram, Albert C. Stickney, Booth F. Stead, John Stout, Paul Stone, James W. Shafer, John G. Shermer, John E. Smith, William H. Smucker, Samnel Tooley, James W. Vance, Joseph Voltz, Lewis Warner, Jesse W. Williams, William Wainright, Homer Wing, Samuel Wells, John Wener, Amos Young, Nathan M. Lawrence, John R. Godall, Samuel Lawrence, Joseph Garrison.


COMPANY C.


COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain Peter Matheus. First Lieutenant James R. Johnson. Second Lieutenant William E. Crane.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Quartermaster Sergeant John C. Bonnell.


First Sergeant Anthony Bernard. Sergeant George G. Fennell. Sergeant James Hammond. . Sergeant Edward S. Calph.


Sergeant James N. Woods.


Corporal Charles E. Allen. Corporal Reuben E. Balch.


Corporal Lewis W. Schiess.


Corporal John T. Boggess.


Corporal Samuel Bowser. Corporal Hugh C. Matthew. Corporal James F. Gossett. Corporal Smith Ackley.


PRIVATES.


Henry Atkinson, George H. Ashcraft, Henry Arand, Christopher Beuker, Jennings Bekwith, John R. Bailey, Abraham Bailey, Squire Brant, Jacob Bowser, John H. Baldwin, Philip H. Brooks, Fielding K. Bowers, Thomas J. Bailey, James Barnhart, Silas H. Bascom, George A. Brown, George Cooper, Zaddock Cann, Samuel H. Cherry, Benja- min F. Cable, William Cann, George H. Corzatt, George Derlein, George Deatz, Michael J. Dowling, Elias Evans, Richard Foster, Jo- seph A. Garrick, George J. Grimm, George Geiger, John Gross, Adam Henke, John Hollingsworth, Phillip Holzer, Charles Hamilton, Patrick Haley, Augustus Hartsmam, James Haly, Michael Hempfner, Philip B. Helplin, Nathan Hollingsworth, Thomas Irwin, Edward Johnson, John H. Kringer, George King, John B. Kirman, Jacob Knawl, Dan- iel Lane, James S. Ludlington, Allen A. Lawrence, Adam Lechling- felt. Samnel H. Mercer, George A. Murdock, William Malcom, Samuel B. Malcom, William G. Miller, William Mountjoy, Andrew Mish, Johh McLaughlin, Peter Maringer, Patrick Murphy, Adam Neiding, Daniel Ochs, William Owens, Norman O'Donnell, William Prestley, Thomas Powers, Isaac V. Paulson, James Pacey, James E. Phelps, William Peiff, James H. Rea, James Rodden, James Roberts, Harman Strader, Thomas Smith, Alexander J. Strickland, Henry Strassner, William A. Sanders, John G. A. Steffin, William Shive, Matthew F. Steward, Henry Sauers, Andrew J. Spurgeon, David Shankan, jr., George R. Thompson, Henry Soler, John Trilling, George W. Whittaker, Dennis West, Allen D. Weaver, William Wilkinson, Nathaniel L. Welch, Pe- ter Weber, John C. Ward, Sylvanus T. W. Wolf, George W. Yazel, Nelson J. Young.


COMPANY D.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Quartermaster Sergeant Charles Guilde. Sergeant Fielding Alcorn. Sergeant Charles Fox. Sergeant Justus D. Durrell. Corporal John Bishweiler. Corporal Warren Bonnell. Corporal Benjamin Stoker. Blacksmith Augustus Miller. Farrier Henry P. Bowen.


PRIVATES.


Samuel Archibald, J. Beckwith, James Bernhardt, Wilson Beatty, James Curtis, John Cotty, Joseph Campbell, Philip Decker, Henry C. Ferris, Frederick Furst, John Frazer, Henry Garland, Joseph Gilson, Charles Hamilton, Philip Holtzer, Angust Holtzman, Isaac V. Paul- son, Nicholas Pell, Henry Reumebaun, Anson D. Robinson, Paul Stone, William D. Smucker, William Stapleton, Acquilla Sanford, Allen D. Weaver, George W. Whittiker, Simeon Ward, Otto Young, Nelson I. Young, Michael Scholl.


Missing .- Privates James Scott, Christopher Schrel, John W. Whet- stone.


Transferred .- Edward Crorndley, Edward Puffer, Elisha McGuire, Henry Schondell, Heairer Harberger, John Raupp, John Retbbl, George M. Stoup, Lonis Seman, John Steek, John B. Jennings, Amos 1. Jennings, Joseph L. Jennings.


COMPANY E.


COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


Captain George A. Gotwald.


First Lieutenant John Hohn.


Second Lieutenant George Fritz.


NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.


First Sergeant James Thomson.


Sergeant William S. White.


Sergeant Henry Harmse.


Sergeant Charles Weidner.


Sergeant George Deibel.


Sergeant Carl A. G. Adae.


Corporal John Meidert.


Corporal William H. Witt.


Corporal Jacob Binsach.


Corporal Christopher Troasher.


Corporal George D. Bendel.


Corporal John Beyer.


Corporal Joseph Feldkamp.


Corporal Aerhart Blum.


Bugler Washington S. Stoop.


Blacksmith Frederick Reich.


Blacksmith Gotleib Kernan.


PRIVATES.


George Aman, Adolph Auhl, Herman Avabicker, Adam Alexander, Frederick G. Bull, Frank H. Basker, Xavier Buchs, Bernard Baasch, John Barwanger, Herman Brinker, James Brunnenkaut, Christopher Behender, Samuel Caldwell, Peter Day, Jacob Doll, Matthias Demuth, Andrew Durr, William Dryer, Joseph Eichenlaub, Frank Engler, Jo- seph Ehrhart, Joseph Flick, Ferdinand Esslear, Michael Gabriel, Jonas Geiser, Frederick Gnuterberg, John B. Grussel, George Grime, John Groble, Jacob Groble, Thomas Hart, Philip Hartman, Peter Heckman, Christie Hertsberger, Frederick Heck, Frederick Herold, John Hagger- dorn, Philip Hotten, Charles Hernich, Henry Heiesterkamp, Louis Heiman, Frederick Humbleman, Philip B. Hebling, Charles Herfel, John Home, Joseph Hove, John Johnson, Daniel Jeansen, Andrew Kepfer, Christian Kress, Charles King, Adam Litchenfelt, Meyer Lowenstein, George Lampe, Frederick Messing, John F. Myers, Ste- phen Metzger, August Miller, William Miller, Jacob Miller, Ernst Muller, Herman Meil, Fremont Mattross, William Meyer, Philip Nehrposs, Adam Neiding, Henry Neimeis, Frederick Otterling, John Ohrn, Frank Phuff, Thomas Powel, Michael Kaisch, George Rudolph, Adrian Keihle, John Ruper, Christian Rackeman, Matthias Rall, John Roser, Jacob Kief, Anson D. Robinson, Clements Saner, Edward Schmidt, Peter Schreiner, Frederick Shultz; George Sturm, John Stef- fen, Frederick William Sorge, Tony Semalty, Christian Schlenklous, Philip Seibert, William Schneider, Bernard Shatt, Fredrick Shoor, Cas- per Strom, James H. Senior, Charles F. Senior, Andrew Schram, Den- nis Shoot, Frank Smith, Gotlieb Troascher, Alexander L. Thomson, Nicholas Velten, John Vogt, sr., Henry Vogt, John Vogt, jr., Deid- rich Volgein, George Walter Ist, George Walter 2d, Jacob Wenzel, William Wilkin, Andrew Wagner, Lawrence Weiss, John Gottfried.




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