USA > Ohio > History of the Ohio falls cities and their counties : with illustrations and bibliographical sketches, Vol. I > Part 19
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Shortly after the formation of the United States Sanitary Commission, in 1861, the Ken- tucky Branch of the Commission was organized, with Dr. Theodore S. Bell, of Louisville, as pres- ident, and the Rev. J. H. Heywood, vice-presi- dent. Says Mr. Heywood, in his History of the Branch :
Dr. Bell was chosen president by the unanimous and hearty vote of the members. From beginning to end he labored unweariediy, bringing to the great work not only fervent patriotism and broad humanity, but a mind alike capacious and active, extensive medical experience, a thorough mastery of sanitary law, and an intense, unrelaxing energy that was as vitalizing as it was inherently vital. And while rendering this invaluable service to the general cause-service to which Dr. Newberry, the accomplished Western Secretary of the United States Sanitary Commission, repeatedly paid the tribute of highest admiration-Dr. Bell had personal charge of a large hospital, which he so conducted as to command the esteem of and win the love and gratitude of hundreds and thousands of sick and wounded soldiers and their re- lations and friends. Never in any country or any age has there been more untiring consecration of rare powers and extraordinary attainments to noblest ends than was made by our honored fellow-citizen during those eventful years of des- tiny.
The brief but excellent memoir of Dr. Bell, contained in Louisville Past and Present, adds the following concerning his services:
The part Dr. Bell enacted for the relief of the sick and wounded of both armies during the war for the maintenance of the Union is especially worthy of mention here. In the sanitary report mentioned above [that of Dr. Newberry, secretary of the Western department of the commission] it is stated that on the night of the 9th of October, 1862, a meet- ing in Louisville was called to provide for the sufferers of the battle of Perryville, fought on the previous day. Dr. Bell, whose energies had been so severely taxed that a severe spell of sickness ensued and he was supposed to be near death's door, was informed by his faithful and sympathetic friend, Captain Z. M. Sherley, of the intended meeting, and Dr. Bell announced his intention of attending it. Captain Sher- lev protested against this course in a man who could not stand alone; but finding the doctor inexorable, called and aided him in getting to the meeting. Dr. Beil's knowledge
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HISTORY OF THE OHIO FALLS COUNTIES.
of sanitary measures guided the meeting, and the matter was committed to his keeping. A friend called and informed him that he and another gentleman were going to Perryville in a spring wagon and a team of two mules. The gentleman agreed to carry for Dr. Bell seventy pounds of stores for the wounded. This package, consisting of a bale of oakum, a number of pounds of pure chloroform, bandages, and beef extract, was put up under his supervision, and reached Perry- ville far in advance of any of the numerous other transporta- tion wagons and ambulances. The medical director, Dr. Murray, said as soon as he saw the package opened he knew that a doctor had presided over that merciful package.
A great number of Confederate sick and wounded were left at Perryville and Harrodsburg, and their friends in this city contributed funds for their relief. Under an order ol General Boyle these articles had to pass through the hands of Dr. Bell as president of the Kentucky branch of the San- itary Commission. He was so faithful to the dictates of mercy in forwarding everything of this kind that when Cap- tain Harry Spotts, who, as one of the active friends of the Confederates, still had a fund of about $300 in his hands, was abont leaving Kentucky to take charge of the St. Nich- olas hotel, he called upon Dr. Bell to take charge of this fund and purchase needed articles for the Confederate sufferers at Perryville and Harrodsburg. While Dr. Bell was willing to undergo the labor, he felt the delicacy of his position; but he made the purchases of Wilson & Peter, who filled the bill in the most liberal manner, and he presented their bill of items to Captain Spotts, who expressed his entire satisfaction with his expenditure of what he very properly deemed a sacred treasure. The articles were forwarded to the hospitals to the care of those who were ministering to those Con- federate sufferers. General Boyle gave full permission to him, as president of the Kentucky branch of the United States Sanitary Commission, to forward to the sick and wounded Confederate soldiers at Harrodsburg the liberal contributions of their friends in this city, and Dr. Bell per- sonally superintended the forwarding of these articles by the means of transportation placed at the disposal of the Sanitary Commission,
Dr. Woods, of the Indiana branch of the sanitary commission, wrote thus at one time of its operations here:
We render assistance to all that we can. We give prece- dence to the most distressing. A poor soldier is about to die at Park barracks. We obtain for him a discharge fur- lough, give him transportation, and send him home to die in his family. I spent a whole day with his case alone. A poor widow came here, with but one child in the world, and he is a soldier sick in the hospital. She has no dependence but him. She is robbed at the depot of every cent she has. No possible means to go home except to get her son dis- charged, draw his pay, and go home on that. She obtains from the surgeon a certificate of disability. His case is re- jected by the board of examining surgeons. For her we work. 1 met a soldier who had lost the power of speech by sickness. He had been sent here without a pass. He knew no more what to do or where to go than a sheep. I took him to the medical director and the hospital.
STATE MILITARY OFFICERS.
The citizens of Louisville, as may easily he supposed, were fully represented among the State
military authorities during the war-period, as well as among the soldiers in the field. Hamilton Pope, Esq., a prominent lawyer of the city, and son of Worden Pope, the famous old pioneer, was placed in charge of the State guard at the outset of the war, with the rank of brigadier- general, and remained in command until the troops were received and mustered into the Fed- eral service. Samuel Gill, of that city, was a commissioner on the military board under the legislative act of May 24, 1861, and also under that of September 25th, of the same year. Gen- eral John Boyle was Adjutant-General of the State from September 1, 1863, to August 1, 1864, when he resigned. Messrs. James W. Gault, W. DeB. Morrill, and James F. Flint, were State military agents until February 15, 1866. Dr. Isaac W. Scott was surgeon-general from September 3, 1863, with the grade of col- onel. The Hon. James Speed, afterwards At- torney-general of the United States, was long mustering officer for the Northern armies at this point.
GENERAL AND STAFF OFFICERS.
It is a fact well very worth noting that, although Louisville is very far from comprising one-fifth of the entire population of the State, and did not furnish near twenty per cent. of the total number of Federal soldiers who enlisted in Kentucky during the war, yet one fifth (22) of the whole (115) list of general and staff officers in the Union army, appointed and commissioned by the Pres- ident, were selected from her loyal ranks. The following is believed to be a full or nearly full list :
Lovell H. Rousseau, brigadier-general, October 1, 1861 ; major-general, October 8, 1862; resigned November 30, 1865. William T. Ward, brigadier-general, September 18, 1861; breveted major-general February 24, 1865 ; honorably mustered out August 24, 1865.
Walter C. Whitaker, brigadier-general, June 25, 1863; breveted major-general, March 13, 1865; honorably muster- ed ont August 24, 1865.
Jeremiah T. Boyle, brigadier-general, November 9, 1861 ; resigned January 26, 1864.
Thomas E. Bramlette, brigadier-general, April 24, 1863; declined accepting.
Eli H. Murray, Colonel Third Kentucky Veteran Caval- ry; brevet brigadier-general, March 25, 1865.
Alexander M. Stout, colonel Seventeenth Kentucky In- fantry; brevet brigadier-general, March 13, 1865.
J. Rowan Boone, lientenant-colonel Twenty-eighth Ken- tucky Veteran Infantry; brevet colonel March 13, 1865.
Philip Speed, major and paymaster September II, 1861 ; resigned December 23, 1862.
13
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HISTORY OF THE OHIO FALLS COUNTIES.
L. T. Thustin,[major and paymaster, September 11, 1861 ; breveted lieutenant-colonel ; honorably mustered out April 30, 1866.
John Speed, captain and assistant adjutant-general, March II, 1863; major and paymaster, March 22, 1865; resigned March 19, 1865.
Alexander C. Semple, captain and assistant adjutant- general, September 29, 1862; resigned March 18, 1864.
J. Speed Peay, captain and assistant adjutant-general, July 15, 1862; resigned May 2, 1863.
H. C. McDowell, captain and assistant adjutant-general, November 19, 1861; resigned August 27, 1862.
William P. McDowell, major and adjutant-general March II, 1863; resigned December 9, 1863.
Stephen E. Jones, captain and aid-de-camp July 9, 1862; resigned March 13, 1865.
William L. Neal, captain and assistant", quartermaster, May 18, 1864; honorably mustered out July 28, 1865.
George P. Webster, captain and assistant quartermaster, May 12, 1862.
R. C. Welster, captain and assistant quartermaster, Sep- tember 30, 1861.
Joshua Tevis, captain and assistant commisary of subsis- tence, November 26, 1862; canceled.
John Fry, captain and assistant commissary of subsistence, October 31, 1861; breveted major March 13, 1865; honorably mustered out February 2, 1866.
J. F. Huber, captain and assistant commissary of subsistence October 25, 1861; breveted major; honorably mustered out October 12, 1865.
THE FEDERAL CONTINGENT.
It is probably impossible to make up from any sources accessible to the local historian an exact roster of the soldiers contributed to the Federal armies by Louisville or Jefferson county. Had the massive volumes in which the enterprise and liberality of the State have embodied her rolls of Union soldiers, the Adjutant General's Report, for 1861-66, contained, as does the Adjutant Gen- eral's Report of Indiana for the same period, the places of residence as well as the names of the soldiers, the work would be comparatively easy. Fortunately, the alphabetical list of officers, near the close of the great work, does supply the places of residence of the commanders; and with these as a partial guide, it has been possible to compile with reasonable certainty the lists of Federal commands from this city and county. Still many soldiers must have been recruited here for regiments and batteries which con- tained, perhaps, not a single officer from this region, and so, particularly if the recruit was mus- tered into service elsewhere, there is absolutely no clue to his residence here. On the other hand, it would not answer to accredit Louisville with every soldier mustered iuto service here; since large numbers of men who had no residence
in this region came or were brought here for the purpose of muster-in. Notwithstanding these difficulties, however, it is believed that an approx- imately correct list has been prepared. If any mistakes in spelling are found, they must be charged over to the office of the Adjutant-Gen- eral of the State; since the printed words of the Report have been in our compositors' hands, and the whole has been carefully read by copy.
SECOND KENTUCKY INFANTRY.
FIELD AND STAFF.
Colonel William E. Woodruff.
Colonel Thomas D. Sedgewick.
Adjutant Henry Weindell. Surgeon David J. Griffiths.
Assistant Surgeon Frederick Rectanus.
COMPANY B.
COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
First Lieutenant Archibald Mclellan.
First Lieutenant George R. McFadden.
Second Lieutenant Sidmund Huber.
THIRD KENTUCKY INFANTRY.
FIELD AND STAFF.
Colonel Thomas E. Bramlette.
Regimental Quartermaster Thomas M. Selby, Jr. Surgeon Joseph Foreman.
Assistant Surgeon James R. Scott.
FOURTH KENTUCKY INFANTRY.
COMPANY H.
COMMISSIONED OFFICER.
First Lieutenant Henry Teney.
FIFTH KENTUCKY INFANTRY .*
The Fifth was organized in the summer of 1861, under Lovell H. Rousseau as colonel, and was mustered into the United States service on the 9th day of September, 1861, at Camp Joe Holt, Indiana, by W. H. Sidell, major Fifteenth United States infantry, and mustering officer. Colonel Rousseau was promoted to brigadier- general October 5, 1861, and Harvey M. Buck- ley was then commissioned colonel. He re- signed January 26, 1863. William W. Berry was, on the 9th of February, 1863, mustered as colonel, and commanded the regiment until its muster-out of service at Louisville September 14, 1864. A portion of the regiment veteranized, and at the muster-out of the regiment the re- cruits and veterans were transferred to the Second Kentucky Veteran cavalry.
It is with regret that a report of this regiment
*The regimental histories are used, almost verbatim, as they are found in the Adjutant-General's Reports.
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HISTORY OF THE OHIO FALLS COUNTIES.
is published without a full history of its career, it having been one of the very first Kentucky regi- ments which "rallied around the flag," and formed part of Rousseau's gallant command, who, by their timely occupation of Muldrough's Hill, kept at bay the rebel forces, and saved Kentucky from being drawn entirely within the enemy's lines. The difficulties under which the regiment was raised, having been organized at the time that Kentucky was resting upon her neutrality, assure to its officers the greatest credit for their success.
At the alarm of an invasion of Kentucky by Buckner, this gallant command was thrown out in defense of Louisville by General (then Colonel) Rousseau, held them in check until reinforce- ments arrived from Ohio and Indiana, and for- ever refuted the idea of a State standing in a neutral position when the integrity or unity of the nation was assailed. From the time the Fifth crossed the Ohio river from Camp Joe Holt, re- cruiting progressed rapidly throughout Kentucky. Having been thoroughly disciplined during the time it was encamped at Joe Holt, it took the lead of and was the nucleus around which the Grand Army of the Cumberland was formed. It served with distinction, and gained repeatedly praise from the department commanders. Be- sides numerous others, it participated in the fol- lowing-named battles in which loss was sus- tained, viz: Bowling Green, Shiloh, Stone River, Chickamauga, Mission Ridge, Rocky Face Ridge, Resaca, Dallas, Kenesaw, Atlanta, Dallas, Orchard Knob, Liberty Gap, and Blain's Cross Roads.
FIELD AND STAFF.
Colonel Lovell H. Rousseau. Colonel William W. Berry. Lieutenant-Colonel John L. Treanor. Major Charles L. Thomasson. Adjutant Edward W. Johnstone.
Regimental Quartermaster Thomas C. Pomroy.
Regimental Quartermaster John M. Moore. Surgeon John Matthews. Chaplain James H. Bristow. Sergeant-Major James T. O. Day. Sergeant-Major A. Sidney Smith. Sergeant-Major Hervey R. Willett. Quartermaster-Sergeant Frederick N. Fishe. Quarter master-Sergeant William H. Hayars. Commissary-Sergeant Henry A. Day. Hospital Steward John Wyatt.
COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
Principal Musician Simon Boesser.
Principal Musician James Matthews.
Musician Major C. Barkwell.
Musician Joseph Einseidler.
Musician Christian Gunter.
Musician Bernhard Klein.
Musician Charles Oswald.
Musician Samuel Ross. Musician John Ruef.
Musician Richard Schwenzer.
Musician Philip Selbert.
Musician John Spillman.
Musician Edward S. Sargeant.
Musician Philip Schenkle.
Musician John Schottlin.
Musician Joseph Von Berg.
Musician Sebastian Walter.
Musician Amos Lippincott.
COMPANY A.
COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
Captain William Mangen.
Captain Thomas Foreman.
First Lieutenant John M. Smith.
NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
First Sergeant James Maloney.
Sergeant Paul Clinton,
Sergeant Andrew C. O'Neil.
Corporal Robert Cosgrave.
Corporal Benjamin D. Edsell.
Corporal Francis M. Gray.
Corporal Michael Hammond.
Corporal James Joyce.
Corporal Bartholomew Buckley.
Teamster Charles Bowers.
PRIVATES.
Thomas Corbitt, James Crow, Thomas Dunn, John F. Dietz, John Dutch, Joseph Elsner, James Fisher, Patrick Gorman, Robert Johnson, Daniel Keefe, William Keiley, Lewis Keele, John Manning, Alenanzer Monroe, Edward Murphy, John Mara, Bernard McElroy, Jeremiah McCor- mick, Timothy McCormick, Patrick McCormick, John Mc- Keown, Michael O'Malia, Theodore Pohlmeyer, John Pil- kington, Jeremiah Rager, John Rimo, Bernard Smith, Jacob Suftell, John L. Swabb, Peter S. Kennedy, Thomas Lewis, Thomas Loftie, Oliver Newell, Henry Runch, James Ryan, John Toomey, Henry Toby, John Thornton, James Tevlin, Larkin Adams, John Kilroy, Moses M. Pounds, William Bediker, Daniel Curran, Willlam W. Cassedy, John W. David, Alexander Gilbert, George Grimshaw, William H. Harrison, Owen Kelley, Benjamin Lowery, Philip F. Moore, John Myer, Michael McCook, John Turnboe, Patrick Vale, Thomas Dwyer, William Herren, Hugh McElroy.
COMPANY B. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
Captain Lafayette P. Lovett. First Lieutenant John P. Hurley, Second Lieutenant Thomas J. McManen.
Second Lieutenant David Jones.
NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
First Sergeant George Sambrall. Sergeant James D. McCorkhill. Sergeant Lewis P. Cox. Sergeant John M. Sutton. Sergeant John Ott. Sergeant William Batman.
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HISTORY OF THE OHIO FALLS COUNTIES.
Sergeant John Vickrey. Corporal Frank Pope. Corporal Joseph Conen. Corporal William P. Dueley. Corporal James Noonan. Corporal John Keohler. Corporal William Gibson. Corporal Edward O'Brien. Corporal Sanford T. Thurman. Corporal Thomas Selvage. Corporal Richard Sweeney. Wagoner Nicholas Larence. Musician Joseph Hazlewood. PRIVATES.
Joseph W. Bennett, Benjamin F. Bennett, Robert Beatt, Patrick Cleary, John Carter, James Connell, George Cancel- man, Thomas Frothingham, Michael Frank, John Gunn, George W. House, Frederick Herns, Louis Hodes, John Jordan, John Kenney, Henry Kendall, John F. Koch, Jere- miah Knapp, Henry Manore, Joseph Miller, Edward Mitch- ell, Thomas Murray, James Mulcha, Charles Ott, Joseph Smitb, William Snider, John T. Steele, William T. Thur- man, Elijah Thurman, Thomas Hardin, Thomas Barrett, John Branan, Henry Conner, John Dunn, Augustus Hess, William B. Jones, William Movyers, Enos Sutton, Alexander Tinock, Louis Base, Joseph Dey, Frederick N. Frishe, Pat- rick Woods, John Metz, Johnson Todd, Beauford Thurman, Levin W. Collins, Simon Echart, Thomas Gunn, Conrad Granco, Charles Shupp, Christopher Beeker, Melville F. Howard, Richard Henan, Alexander Mullen, John Norris, John W. Sutton, Petre Sutton, William Stewart, James H. Sirles, Richard Toole, Thomas Voss.
COMPANY C.
COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
Captain Asaph H. Speed. Captain Christopher Leonard. First Lieutenant Richard Jones.
NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
First Sergeant Albert Webb. Sergeant Lewis Hagerman. Sergeant William Foster. Sergeant William Shaw. Sergeant John Rhodes. Sergeant Mason L. Speed. Sergeant Frank Lightner. Sergeant Le Grand Dunn. Sergeant Stephen Jewell. Corporal George W. Byers. Corporal Henry B. Mckinney.
Corporal Charles Stiglitz. Corporal Peter Holback. Corporal John Ernwine. Corporal Richard Goodman. Corporal Charles Osterman. Corporal John Peevler. Corporal Henry Hoos. Musician George Puff.
PRIVATES.
Jacob Barber, John Backhoff, Martin Butler, Sidney Broadas, James Carroll, Benjamin F. Davis, Robert Dotson, Anthony Dunbar, James Hagerman, Jesse Hill, Henry Hess, Thomas Kelly, James Kennedy, Thonias Kennedy, Joseph McGuire, Thomas Molumby, James Medlock, Thomas Maher, Michael O'Brien, Zachariah Owens, Peter O'Connell,
John J. Oakley, Willaby Richardson, John Riley, Christo- pher Schiffman, Joseph Wright, Henry Wright, Alonzo Bu- chanan, William Burns, John Donahoo, Michael Dublin, Henry Hopsmeyer, William H. McCoy, John Myrick, Frank Partridge, Thomas J. Peters, Charles Rumsey, Jesse D. Sea- ton, Martin Seibert, Conrad Wenzel, Henry Wilkins, Dennis Burk, George Weimhoff, John Brown, Dennis Conroy, Pat- rick Flinn, George Hughes, George Letzinger, John McCor- mick, William S. Riley, Thomas Sly, Bernard Arthur, John Casper, John Cronan, William Dotson, William D. Laffy, Michael Collins, Michael Conley, Elijah Davis, John Mc- Laughlin, Henry Miller, Joseph N. Parrish, Richard Kuhl- man, Gothart Schnell, Henry Valentine, George Ward.
COMPANY D.
COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
Captain William W. Rowland. First Lieutenant Theodore F. Cummings.
NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
First Sergeant Adam Kraher.
Sergeant Conrad Shire.
Sergeant John P. Richardson.
Sergeant Daniel R. Grady.
Sergeant Edwin R. Waldon.
Sergeant Elijah Tansill.
Corporal James Kennedy. Corporal Alexander McKeon. Corporal John Apel.
Corporal Alfred W. Harris.
Corporal James C. Gill.
Corporal Louis Glass.
Corporal David Ward.
Corporal Patrick Burks.
Corporal Bryan Drew.
Musician William Edwards.
Teamster John S. Kounts.
PRIVATES.
James K. Cooper, James Dannelsy, Josiah Edwards, Pat- rick Gilligan, John P. Gunnels, Martin Harback, Charles Haas, Robert Hodgkins, Ferdinand Kerchendoffer, John Maloy, Sebastian Mill, Louis Neas, Francis Powell, James Ryan, John Stab, Deaderick W. E. Stark, John C. William- son, Edward Parks, Benjamin Patrick, Louis M. Ronime, Austin D. Sweeney, Martin Weitz, Keran Egan, John Fox, Willlam Hacket, John McCormick, Hugh MeMannus, Rob- ert Smith, Theodore Steinbronk, Clemance Schroeder, John Higgins, Thomas Larue, Alexander Moore, John M. Young, Daniel Canning, Patrick Dannelly, Henry Geotz, Dents Henderson, James Hartigan, John Mann, Michael McMan- nus, James H. Richardson, George W. Vandergraff, Conrad Brawner, Riley A. DeVenney, Edward Fleming, Arthur Graham, Stephen B. Hornback, George Pfiffer, Jacob Sauer, Louis C. Smith, Francis M. Tucker.
COMPANY E. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
Captain August Schweitzer. Captain Stephen Lindenfelser. Second Lieutenant Frank Dessell.
NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
Sergeant Frederick Knoener. Sergeant Joseph Schmitt. Sergeant Mathias Schontess. Sergeant John B. Schiebel.
IOI
HISTORY OF THE OHIO FALLS COUNTIES.
Sergeant John Schmidt. Corporal Rudolph Egg. Corporal Berhard Sceiner. Corporal William Koch. Musician George Schweitzer. Teamster Andrew Meissner.
PRIVATES.
Joseph Dumpel, Charles Fritz, Philip Falter, John B. Fel- ber, Frank Gehring, George Gerlach, John Huber, Valentine Harper, Christian Jutzi, Jacob Karcher, Philip R. Klein, Bernhard Keihl, August Koehler. Jacob Lanx, Louis Lorey. Charles Murb, Peter Mueller, Robert Nere, Thomas Rastet- ter, William Reif, Joseph Stoltz, Philip Schneider, Julius Winstel, Jacob Arenat, Christian Baker, Michael Boheim, Henry Boheim, Frederick Bernds, Charles Evers, John Eisele, John Fust, John Hufnagel, Theodore Jagar. Anton Kuntz, William Martin, Henry Menze, Joseph Meyer, George Ruckert, Anter Scherer, John Stokinger, Louis Schernbachler, Christian Welker, Joseph Weingartner, Benedick Walzer, Casper Weiner, Peter Klotz, George Bam- miester, Frederick Blair, Philip Goebel, John Mohr, Francis Brohm, Christian Erisman, Ernst Hofsap, Andrew Kolb, Simon Rehm, William Stranch, Philip Amann, Ludwig Bin- ger, Bartholomew Drebler, Joseph Faust, Joseph Overmoble, Frederick Rodeloff, John Traber, John Urban, William Vopel, John Gottschalk, Gothard Kling, Adam Newkirk, Henry Niehaus, Henry Saner, Benedict Wempe, Jacob Scherzinger.
COMPANY F.
COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
Captain John E. Vansant. First Lieutenant William H. Powell. Second Lieutenant John Martz.
NON-COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
First Sergeant John O'Herrin. First Sergeant Jacob Peterson. Sergeant David Doup. Sergeant William Knox.
Sergeant Franklin Bratcher. Sergeant William Burgess. Sergeant John Keer. Sergeant Charles Kahlert. Sergeant James T. O'Day. Sergeant William Snapp. Sergeant Felix Wolf. Corporal John F. Beal, Corporal Robert Bryant. Corporal Albert Laycock. Corporal Henry Agee. Corporal Thomas Martz. Corporal John Brodock. Corporal Nathaniel E. Osborn. Corporal Jobn Wilkins. Musician William D. Mewheny.
PRIVATES.
James Atwood, Samuel C. Kline, John Cusick, John Dew- berry, Patrick Darmady, John Eagan, Joseph Foster, James Fineran, William Fletcher, John Garrick, William Hamilton, John Hoffman, Patrick Kerwin, Frederick Kick, James P. Lawler, John Lemmer, William Mewheney, John Peterson, Charles Ratsfeldt, Andrew J. Smith, John Stratton, James Savage, Harrison Stage, Edward S. Sexon, David Wood- fall, John Erb, William R. Greathouse, William W. Hill,
Lee Hand, Henry Henston, Martin Surmons, George Wright, Mathew Higgins, Jeremiah Locherv, John Scott, Henry R. Willett, Joseph Kraig, Jacob Mungee, Jonas Smith, John W. Thorp, Michael Brady, Andrew Connery, Edward Dowling, Irwin Deweese, Charles Dolan, James Knox, Nicholas Miller, John Pierce, Henry C. Smith, John Schmidt, Jacob Stencil, David Whittaker, Edward Brown, James H. Hughes, Oliver H. Johnson, Mathew Murtchier, William Pulsfort.
COMPANY G.
COMMISSIONED OFFICERS.
Captain John M. Huston.
Captain Willian H. Powell. First Lieutenant David Q. Rousseau.
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