The History of Wyandot County, Ohio, containing a history of the county, its townships, towns general and local statistics, military record, portraits of early settlers and prominent men etc, Part 53

Author:
Publication date: 1884
Publisher: Chicago, Leggett, Conaway
Number of Pages: 1072


USA > Ohio > Wyandot County > The History of Wyandot County, Ohio, containing a history of the county, its townships, towns general and local statistics, military record, portraits of early settlers and prominent men etc > Part 53


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Adjt. Jonathan Ayers.


Chaplain, J. G. Baughman.


Company A-Capt. Henry H. Ragon.


First Lieuts. William McFee, James S. Leith.


Second Lieut. E. B. Ragon.


Sergts. Levi Shults, J. S. Bowers, H. J. Pool.


Corps. E. Pool, Benjamin Morris.


Privates, Fred Kinley, William Kurtz, Isaac Blackburn, John Black- burn, Hugh Mason, Isaac Ayres, John Gatchell, Jesse Smalley, H. J. Hunt, Leonard Cole, Charles Copler, A. R. Hunt, D. J. Hale, J. M. Pool, Henry Brown, H. C. Bowen, V. L. Obenchain, George Hayman, William Parker, E. Stansbery, John Walton.


Company C-First Sergt. H. M. Cunningham.


Company D-Capt. Asa Brayton.


First Lieut. F. R. Baumgardner.


Second Lieut. Amos Stetler.


Sergts. D S. Nye, A. E. Gibbs, Byron Kear, W. H. Grindle, John W. Lime.


Corps. Oliver Brayton, Amos Bixby, Amos Nye, David Lindsay.


Privates, W. Plott, William Berry, John Battenfield, J. Barnhiser, J. S. Foster, J. J. Brunning, E. Goodman, W. Lowery, James McGarvey, Henry Kimmerly, Harrison Kimball, James Clark, M. A. Clark, A. A. Carothers, A. Carothers, A. S. Gear, S. J. Keeler. Lewis Bacher, J. A. J. Lang, W. Hurd, W. B. Hurd, J. W. Conn, Thomas Bliss, Gibson Busch, W. H. Davis, J. Duddleson, John Deardoff, Alonzo Ellison, James Myers, C. Humphrey, H. H. Hoysington, A. H. Hoysington, M. D. Grossell, W. H. Karr, L. D. Karr, J. H. Karr, J. C. Ish, J. E. Jones, C. L. Parker, J. W. Crum, C. R. Mckenzie, E. H. Sage, James, Ritchie, O. P. Robinson, D. Sipes, Land. line Smith, W. K. Nye, L. E. Nye, George A. Nye, A. Harshberger, J. D. Shireman, Elkanah Sherman, E. Sherman, E. H. Shellhouse, D. Shell, Joseph Shane, Wellington Nesbaum, S. C. Williams, S. Y. Williams, H. Straham, Luther Stone, S. Harpster, O Whipple, J. W. Harpster, B. F. Swartz, W. H. Straw, W H. H. Williams, G. F. Wonder, D. Wonder. A. J. Wonder, S. R. Wohlgamuth, S. Wohlgamuth, S. A. Wisner, Asa Wisner. Company E-Private, E. Young.


Company F-Privates, Jacob Baldwin, Robert Lindsay, Miles Bowsher, William Bowsher, Andrew Baldwin.


Company G -- Capt. William Frank.


First Lieut. Howard Kennedy.


Second Lieut. S. H. White.


Corps. G. W. Clark, John Shrank, Allen Parker, R. L. Willard, bugler.


Privates, Thomas Emptage, James Emptage, S. B. Cook, Irvine Straw, J. W. Atkinson, J. W. Bowers, Theodore Kellogg, - McGha, Jerry ~Neal, John J. Inglehart, Orrin Long, John Runels, T. B. Mount, Mar- shall Cozier, S. D. Holland, R. Parks, E. L. Parker, Joseph Worthington,


469


HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


Jacob Williams, Theodore Uncapher, D. H. Walker, W. A. Butler, John Campbell, D. D. Hildreth, William Hildreth, Robert Mitchell.


Company H-Capt. James A. Gibson.


Sergts. Samuel Phillips, T. B. Armstrong.


Privates, Clay Miller, John Milligan, J. W. Little, A. C. Hunt, J. W. Stinchcomb, W. H. Case, Alfred McCauley, Noble Emerson, G. W. Horrick, George H. Heistand, J. W. Shaffer, James Hibbins, Alva Bunn, T. A. Van- Gundy, G. W. Baldwin, Lewis Lupton, George Wilson, Benjamin Pontius, W. L. Clingman, J. O. Welty, H. C. Welty, T. C. Wood, C. C. Pancoast.


Company K-Corp. W. D. Cook, private Joseph Seager.


Company not reported-Jeremiah Kitchen, Captain; Aaron Kennedy, Sergeant; John Woessner, P. B. Oliver, Henry Karr, J. F. Myers, Ashford Nail, N. K. Eyestone, Vincent J. Flack. Warner Osborne, W. O. Phillips, W. J. Wilcox, P. P. Wilcox, C. Henry, William Hoffinan, T. J. Frazer, L. Bloom, Aaron Price, J. R. Willson, Lovi Willson, D. Shafer, John Mid- lam, J. Puffenberger.


ELEVENTH OHIO INDEPENDENT BATTERY.


The men who composed this battery were enlisted at Cincinnati, and from Athens, Butler, Hamilton, Vinton and Wyandot Counties, in August and September, 1861, and rendezvoused at St. Louis Arsenal, Mo., where they were mustered into service on the 27th day of October, 1861, with one hundred and fifty-one men, rank and file.


The battery consisted of two six-pounder riffed guns; two six-pounder smooth-boro guns, and two twelve-pounder field-howitzers, with gun car- riages and caissons complete, and battery-wagon and blacksmith shop. The uniforms for the men were made to order, from actual measurement, of the best material, and each man was furnished with a pair of superior buck gauntlets in addition to the regular uniform. The non-commissioned offi- cers. in addition to their regulation saber, were armed with Baal's patent revolvers, and the privates with saber-bayonets.


On the 26th of October, the battery marched to department headquar- ters, and was reviewed by Maj. Gen. Fremont, then commanding the Western Department, and was there presented by Mrs. Fremont with an elegant silk guidon. A few days later, the battery proceeded to Tipton, Mo. Sub- sequently it marched to Otterville, where a few weeks were passed; thence to Boonville and St. Charles. From there it was taken on transports to Commerce, Mo., where it joined a portion of Gen. Pope's Army of the Mississippi, then or- ganizing for operations against New Madrid and Island No. 10. It partici- pated in the Union victories at those points, and then moved with Gen. Pope's command to the re-enforcement of Grant's and Halleck's forces in front of Corinth, Miss. During the siege, and in the battles and skir- mishes resulting in the occupation of Corinth the battery bore its full share.


With other troops, it remained in the vicinity of Corinth throughout the spring and summer of 1862, participating in the Ripley expedition under Gen. Rosecrans meanwhile. It was during this summer that the following incident occurred as narrated in a letter written by Lieut. Cyrus Sears at " Camp three miles beyond Corinth, Miss., July 2, 1862," to his brother, John D. Sears, Esq., of Upper Sandusky. * * Early Saturday morning last, Charles Rhodes and Robert Swegle, privates of our battery, were walking through the abandoned rebel camp, when having strayed in- cautiously too far, they suddenly came upon a couple of 'Secesh' sentinels armed with loaded double-barreled shot guns. Our men being unarmed


470


HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


were very unceremoniously taken prisoners and marched off toward the enemy's camp. Their captors proving very incautious, or mistaking the character of their prisoners, soon allowed them to get close along side. No sooner did they do this, than little Charley called out to Swegle to 'go in,' and suiting his actions to the words he grappled the gun of his man with one hand and, giving him a right-hander with the other, floored him. Meanwhile, Swegle, who is a big fellow, served his man in the same style, and disarmed him in short meter, and came to the rescue of Charley, who was having it rough and tumble, with his customer, among the bushes. The tables were now turned, and the 'Butturnuts' were marched into camp and turned over to Gons. Buford and Hamilton, who declared that it was the best and bravest incident that had come under their notice, and that it should be properly mentioned. * * "


About the 1st of August, the battery with Gen. Hamilton's division moved to Jacinto, Miss., where it remained until 3 o'clock A. M., of the 16th of September, when it moved forward with the forces of Gen. Rose- crans, for the purpose of co-operating with Gen. Grant against the rebel Gen. Price at Iuka. Gen. Grant, with Ord's division, did not arrive in time. As a result, Gen. Rosecrans' command of about eight thousand men, after a march of nineteen miles, met Price, who had 12,000 men posted on a densely-wooded hill just southwest of the town of Iuka, at 4 o'clock P. M., of the 19th of September, and fought him single-handed. This battle, for the numbers engaged, was one of the most hotly contested and sanguinary fought during the war. The steady blaze and roar of mus- ketry, as the opposing forces struggled to obtain and hold the crest of the hill, continued unceasingly until 9 o'clock P. M. During the remainder of the night, Rosecrans was engaged making his dispositions to seize some adjacent heights at daybreak for his artillery, and replenishing his ammu- nition. He had the men called to arms at 3 o'clock, and at daylight was moving. But meantime, Price had learned of the proximity of Ord's column of 6,000 men, and had hastily retreated, leaving his dead un- buried, and his wounded either on the field or in hotel buildings, churches and dwellings in the town. The enemy's loss in this engagement was 1,078 prisoners, dead and wounded, left on the field, with 350 more wounded estimated to have been carried away. The Union loss was 782 killed, wounded and missing.


The Eleventh Ohio Battery went into this action 102 strong (three com- missioned officers and ninety-nine enlisted men), under the command of First Lieut. Cyrus Sears. During the engagement, it was charged on three different times, suffering a loss of two officers and fifty-five men killed or wounded, eighteen being killed on the field and others dying afterward. Not a man flinched, and numbers were killed or wounded after the rebels, in their advance, had passed the muzzles of the guns, some of them nobly dying in the attempt to spike their pieces. More than sixty of the horses belonging to the battery were killed or disabled during the action, with the entire loss of harness and equipments. The assaulting rebel column suffered terribly, having received over a hundred rounds of canister and other shot, while moving forward less than a hundred yards. They (the rebels) made several attempts to drag off the guns by hand, but were thwarted each time by the hot fire of musketry poured in upon them by the Union regiments.


Although the battery suffered severely in the battle at Iuka, in the loss of men and equipments, it was, in a very short time again ready for the


471


HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


field, and took a prominent part in the battle of Corinth on the third and fourth days of October following (a battle in which eighteen thousand Union troops, under Rosecrans, signally defeated more than twice their number of rebels) nobly maintaining its reputation for efficiency and gal- lanty. On the 4th, after the first line in the center had given way, and when the rebels flushed with temporary success were pressing the second line with exultant shouts, the battery poured a destructive and continuous fire upon the advancing rebels, who, although coming within fifty yards, could no longer withstand the murderous discharge of canister from scores of Union guns, but broke and fled.


Subsequently the battery participated in various movements in Northern Mississippi and West Tennessee. In January, 1863, it was moved to Mem- phis, where its corps-the Seventeenth, under Maj. Gen. James B. McPher- son- was preparing for the Vicksburg campaign. After a futile effort to reach the immediate vicinity of Vicksburg via the Yazoo Pass, the com mand to which the battery was attached steamed down the Mississippi to Milliken's Bend, Louisiana, where it remained a short time, and then started with the army, under Gen. Grant for the rear of Vicksburg. In the battles of Raymond, Clinton, Jackson, and Champion Hills, the battery bore a prominent part. Also throughout the siege of Vicksburg.


In the many changes consequent upon the re-organization of the army after the capture of Vicksburg, the battery was transferred from its old command-Seventh Division, Seventeenth Army Corps-to a provisional division, and soon after moved with its new command to Helena, Ark. Marching with Maj. Gen. Steele's command -- the Army of Arkansas-from Helena, about the middle of August, for Little Rock, the battery passed through all the vicissitudes of a long and tedious campaign. In a short but decisive engagement fought near the capital of Arkansas on the 9th of September, 1863, the battery expended about one hundred rounds of am- munition, and both officers and men received the commendations of the General commanding for the ability with which the guns were handled, and for accurate firing at both Jong and short range. With this battle the active campaigning of the battery may be said to have ceased. It remained at Little Rock until the spring of 1864. About the 1st of April, with other troops, it proceeded to Pine Bluff, Ark., intending to co-operate with Banks in the Red River expedition, but Banks was defeated, and a portion of Steele's forces were halted at Pine Bluff, where the battery remained until its departure for Ohio, to be mustered out. It arrived at Columbus about the 1st of November, 1864, and on the 5th of that month its members were mustered out of service.


Lieut. Sears, already mentioned in the foregoing sketch, was, several months before the battery's term expired, appointed Colonel of a colored regiment. The men whom he enlisted at Upper Sandusky, and with whom he proceeded to St. Louis in September, 1861, joining "Constable's," soon afterward known as the Eleventh Ohio Independent Battery, were named as follows :


M. D. Butler, H. C. Worley, J. W. Bibby, C. Miller, Ira C. Swazze, M. N. Worly, John Crocheron, James Dewine, James B. Mitchell, M. V. B. Hall, Milo Allen, J. S. Barger, John Ettle, Jerome Woolsey, Lewis Ridling, Henry Mclaughlin, Oscar Carpenter, Sherlock Stofer, John F. Hefflehower, John Holland, F. Welch, J. F. Hoover, J. B. Brooks, James W. Towers, J. B. Mowry, S. D. Welch, H. M. Welch, John R. Jury, J. W. Brewer, Stephen Trimble, W. H. Woodcock, W. H. Swazze, Louis B.


472


HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


Henry, Elias Bringman, John Bringman, Amos B. Alger, D. Baugbman, Theodore Allen, Matthew Free, Jacob Everhart, Zachariah Welch.


MISCELLANEOUS.


Besides the companies and regiments of which mention has already been made, there were many others containing Wyandot County men whose record is equally as brilliant. But from the fact that these men served in organizations in each of which the county had but very few representatives, it is an impracticable task to do otherwise than to arrange their names in classified lists as follows :


OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY REGIMENTS.


Second-Company F, John Pausch.


Third-Company I, J. K. Waltermire ; Company -, E. Cowgill


Fourth-Company D, N. G. Case, Charles Case, Philip Wickiser; Com- pany H, Joel Straub, Charles Warner, William Burns ; Company G, John F. Myers, A. W. Napers.


Sixth-Company I, John C. Lynch.


Eighth-Company A, Sergt. L. Snover, D. G. Watson, John Beatty, J. H. Nichols, Hiram B. Brown.


Ninth-Company A, Jonas Wohlgamuth ; Company F, Buell D. Chap- man, Corporal ; Charles Moessner, private Company H, J. H. Warner.


Eleventh-Company A, William Reiber.


Fourteenth-Company -, Joseph Snider.


Sixteenth-Company G, Thomas Hanna.


Eighteenth-Company H, J. M. Huff, Fifer.


Twentieth-Company K, D. B. Rinehart, First Lieutenant ; Company A, R. B. Conant, Sergeant ; Company B, C. O. Oldfield ; Company -, Henry Inman.


Twenty -first-Company C, O. L. Cleveland ; Company H, J. W. Daish, Corporal.


Twenty-third-Company G, J. A. Brown ; Company F, Robert Ewart. Twenty-fourth-Company K, Joseph Lehman.


Twenty-fifth-Company D, Sergt. T. A. Van Gundy ; Privates, Jonas Kamble, G. W. Long, W. H. Mann, Joel Milum, George W. Bogart ; Com- pany G, Sergt. G. W. Kriling, Private J. K. Hawk.


Twenty-sixth-Company B, Francis Dawson, Barton Dawson.


Twenty-seventh-Company A, R. I. Murphy.


Thirty-second-Company I, Daniel Stam; Company H, J. S. Van Mar- ter, Second Lieut.


Thirty-third-Company A, Jacob Reuter ; Company C, Jacob Stam ; Company D, Milton Tong ; Company K, D. W. McConnell.


Thirty fourth-Company E, Edward Quaintance, Corporal; George W. Rex, G. W. Eckert, John Lumberson.


Thirty-sixth-Company D, J. E. Goodrich, Sergeant; A. G. Barger. Thirty-seventh-Asst. Surg. A. Billhardt.


Company F-First Lieut. M. W. Blucher.


Sergt. Jacob Schneider.


Privates, Henry Wuscher, Sebastian Glamser, Fred Fahrni, Peter Fahrni, John Michelfetter, J. Altenberger, Jacob Bastel, William Buehrle, Fredrick Waechter.


Other companies: ·


A-E. G. Bates.


473


HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


K-Henry Gerster, John Keller, Oswald Voegel, Nicholas Volker.


Thirty-eighth-Company C, C. Stury.


Thirty-ninth-Company K, Joel Cole.


Forty fifth-Company B, W. R. Ramsdell; Company I, William Earp, George Morrison, George H. Morrison, J. W. Wickiser, William Wick- iser; Company K, Adam Lambert, Jesse Lambert, Isaac N. Lane, A. G. Straw.


Company D -- Nathan Rovert, Oliver Robinson.


Fifty-first-Company A, John Bart.


Fifty-third-Company H, H. W. Gillingham.


Fifty-fourth-Company G, Privates David Dysinger, David Kauble, Samuel Stalter, Oregon Kerr.


Company K-Capt. William H. Hunt; Private William Brown.


Fifty-seventh-Company F, Privates, Lewis Morehart, Leander Tong, Isaac Wohlgamuth, Lewis Switzer, Jerome Propes, James Switzer, Isaac Switzer, Joseph Glick, Joseph Newel, Andrew Amrine, Marion Esterly.


Other Companies in Fifty-seventh:


B-Sergt. J. F. Kemmel; Private Jacob Rumple.


C-Private George A. Gibbs.


D-Capt. David Ayres, Jr.


G-Capt. E. A. Gordon.


I-Private Samuel Gordon.


Fifty-eight-Company D, Christ. Woessner.


Sixty-first-Company K, Sergts. A. Bope, J. W. Brewer; Corp. Matthew Walton; Privates J. C. Spencer, Isaac Lott, H. Keller, Samuel Longabaugh, Jacob Greek, Nicholas Mott, P. H. Brewer.


Company G-Sergt. Israel Walterhouse.


Jac. Ludwig, Jacob Eckleberry.


Sixty-second-Company K, John Kriechbaum; Company A, Jacob Ken- nedy; Company D, Emmanuel Bowlby.


Sixty-fourth-Company A, Joseph Haupt; Company B, Joseph Rich- mond, E. B. Messenger; Company -, O. E. Fox.


Sixty-fifth-Company D, Privates, George W. Finnell, S. Perry, Theo- dore Stubbs, F. F. DeTray; Company C, Privates, J. C. Miller, George Zabriska.


Sixty-sixth-Company B, M. A. Parlet; Company E, Isaac Wood; Company H, S. H. Stricker; Company K, John Burk.


Sixty-seventh-Company C, J. C. Duffield.


Sixty-eighth-Company K, H. C. Kime.


Seventy-first-Company C, Jacob McPike; Company not known, John DeBolt, S. Barnhiser.


Seventy-second-Company C, A. P. Kelley; Company D, Orsin Bower, Corporal.


Seventy-third-Company A, Thomas Dawson.


Seventh-sixth-Company K, John McMullen.


Seventh-eighth-Company C, Rush Holloway; Company G, I. Hart, N. Willoughby, L. W. Scott.


Eightieth-Company A, Peter D. Newell.


Eighty-seventh-Company G, Theodore Dame.


Ninety-sixth-Company C, C. O. Oldfield, First Lieutenant; Company


E, Thomas H. Carter; Company F, J. E. Breese.


One Hundredth-Company G, Patrick Farley.


One Hundred and Second-Company C, Samuel Miller; Company G, Chester Bowsell; Company D, Samuel Lutz.


474


HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


One Hundred and Sixth-Company I, F. Shrank.


One Hundred and Seventh-Company D, John Russell; Company F, Frederick Bush.


One Hundred and Ninth-Company G; William Van Marter.


One Hundred and Thirteenth-George W. Kemp, Assistant Surgeon.


One Hundred and Twentieth-Company B, W. W. Chew.


One Hundred and Twenty-first-Company E, E. G. Bartram; Company G, Job Hoffmire.


៛. One Hundred and Twenty-second-Company F, McDonald Savage.


One Hundred and Twenty-sixth- Company A, Titus Lowmiller, John Whittaker.


One Hundred and Twenty-eighth-Company C, M. M. Starr, Sergeant; George W. Starr; Company D, F. M. Brown.


One Hundred and Thirty-second-Company A, William Plott.


One Hundred and Seventy-fourth-Company H, W. E. Webber, First Lieutenant.


One Hundred and Seventy-fifth-Company I, Sergt. J. H. Plott; Corp. William Baker; Privates, Elias Wentling, J. D. Wickiser, David Spoon, Daniel Spoon, G. H. Carey, A. J. Shellhouse, W. H. Kimmell, Jesse Edg- ington, Henry Cram, L. A. Cole.


One Hundred and Seventy-sixth-Company B, G. Spitzer.


One Hundred and Seventy-seventh-Company B, S. B. Bechtel.


One Hundred and Seventy-eighth-Company G, W. Lundy; Company F, James Williams.


One Hundred and Seventy-ninth-Peter Grubb, Lieutenant Colonel; Company B, Privates, B. F. Smith, T. C. De Jean, John Keller, G. W. Gregg, G. S. Barber, Joseph Ralston, William Washburn, William Lim- berson, L. Wilson; Company G, Corp. E. Mutchelknaus; Company H, Ja- cob Hawdenshield; Company I, Privates, Uriah Bechtel, F. Caldwell, F. H. Chatlain.


One Hundred and Eightieth-Company C, Privates, E. Reynolds, Reu- ben Inman, J. E. Healey, Martin Inman; Company E, Private Samuel Bare; Company G, Corp. Frederick Scheufler; Company K, Privates, Jacob Opp, drummer, S. D. Blue, Simon Kachly, P. J. Liles, W. H. Moore, William Robey, Thomas M. White.


One Hundred and Eighty-second-Company K, E. R. Earp; Company I, S. G. Liles, Second Lieutenant; Company -, A. P. Inman.


One Hundred and Eighty-seventh-Company G, C. Wilt.


One Hundred and Eighty-eighth-Company G, Alfred Epley.


One Hundred and Ninety-second-Privates, Company E, John J. Mayer, John Tirey, J. L. Barick, John Weaver; Company H, Private G. W. Halsay; Company I, Privates, Isaiah McCleary, John Loubert, Theodore Henry, J. P. Berleen.


One Hundred and Ninety-fifth-Company B, Park Ludwig, John Wise, A. Hemrick; Company -, C. S. Sherwood.


One Hundred and Ninety-seventh -Company B, W. H. Spore; Com- pany E, Hosea Tong.


One Hundred and Ninty-eighth-Company A, Robert Gerster, J. J. Gerster.


OHIO NATIONAL GUARDS, ONE HUNDRED DAYS' SERVICE.


One Hundred and Thirty-fifth-Company -, Charles Wooley; Compa- ny I, L. E. Landon.


475


HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


One Hundred and Thirty-sixth-Company C, Wilbur Brown; Company E, Robert Seaton.


One Hundred and Fifty-fifth-Company F, Henry W. Peters.


One Hundred and Sixtieth-Company G, L. Chilcote.


One Hundred and Sixty third-Company C, Wesley Cashel, First Lieu- tenant.


One Hundred and Sixty-fourth-Company C, C. W. Longwell, Corporal; Company G, H. Dwire.


Regiment not known-Company E, John Freet.


OHIO VOLUNTEER CAVALRY REGIMENTS.


Second-Napoleon B. Brisbine, Surgeon; Company D, F. A. Singer.


Third-Company E, T. P. Miller; Company G, A. J. Caldwell, J. F. Gregg; Company L, Perry Roswell, Sergeant; G. M. Wisner, Corporal; Ashley Bixby, William Hewing, E. A. Nye, John L. Martin, Andrew Nye, S. A. Shepherd; Company M, J. S Chapin, First Sergeant; L. C. Chapin, John Lindsey, Sergeants; Daniel Clinger, C. H. Bradley, John Warner, Reese Hunter, Jacob Payne, W. H. Smith, Sergeant; William Young, Sims Irwin, G. B. Harness, William Hollanshead.


Company not known-Nelson Wilkins, Albert Harvey, Henry Lear. Fourth-Company A, Henry Dodge.


Fifth-R. J. Brennen.


Eighth-Company L, J. M. Henry, First Lieutenant.


A. Fitzgerald, James Fitzgerald, J. Fitzgerald.


Ninth-Company F', L. C. Moody, Sergeant; H. W. Karr, John Karr, H. K. Inman, J. W. Holloway, J. C. Graham, Enos Gatchell, Jacob Gat- chell, William J. Gatchell, William H. Branyen; Company -, Joseph McCutchen, Captain; George Sherman.


Tenth-Company B, John Venter; Company H, Daniel Dubbs, Ser- geant; Company L, S. T. Jaqueth, Corporal.


Eleventh-Company H, Henry A. Hoffman.


Twelfth-Company A, Abraham Conger, F. M. Wert.


Thirteenth-Company -, S. A. Worley.


Thirtieth -- Company L, Frank Kurtz. -,-Company A, J. W. Lilley.


OHIO ARTILLERY COMMANDS, VOLUNTEERS.


First Ohio Heavy Artillery-David Gatchell, William Moore. Second Ohio Heavy Artillery-Henry Larick.


Sixth Battery, Light Artillery-Second Lieutenant, Lemuel Krisher.


OTHER STATES.


INDIANA.


Fifth Infantry -- Battery, John Kennedy, H. C. Worley. Eighth Infantry-Company H, John Reiger.


ILLINOIS.


Seventy-seventh Infantry-Company B, J. A. Poyers.


One Hundred and Seventh Infantry -Company C, E. B. Norris.


One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Infantry-Company H, Joseph Coon, Daniel Williams.


Ninth Cavalry-William Walters.


476


HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


PENNSYLVANIA.


Eleventh Cavalry-Company M, Irvin Bacon, Captain. Seventeenth Cavalry-Company A, J. M. Walterhouse. Fifth Artillery-Company B, John Andrews.


NEW YORK.


First Infantry-Company G, W. M. C. Durbarow.


Fifth Infantry-Company C, W. H. Spore.


Ninth Infantry-Company I, A. J. Shuler. Thirty-second Infantry-Company H, George W. Cypher. Thirty-fifth Infantry-Thomas Shuler.


Forty-second Infantry-Company H, J. M. Crawford, Sergeant.


Fifty-eighth Infantry-Company E, G. W. Nibloe, First Lieutenant.


One Hundred and Thirty-seventh Infantry-Company I, P. J. Van Marter.


Third Artillery-Company H, George W. Cypher.


Thirteenth Artillery-Company E, Christian Birk, Sergeant.


First Light Artillery-Company C, Edgar Ingerson.


Twenty-fourth Cavalry-Company A, James Morrison.


IOWA.


Fourth Infantry-Company D, John Swinehart.


Thirty- fourth Infantry -- Company H, David Sheldon.


Thirty-first Infantry-Company D, Edward Brown.


MASSACHUSETTS.


Twenty-first Infantry-Company H, W. T. Durlow.


Fifty-fifth Infantry- Company E, I. W. Brickney, Color Sergeant.


MICHIGAN.


First Infantry-William High.


Third Infantry-Rolando Freet.


Eighth Infantry-Company D, Theodore Freet.


Second Cavalry-Company A, Alfred Foy.


Eleventh Cavalry-Company B, Willis Baker, First Sergeant.


MISSOURI.


Twelfth Infantry-Company E, Christian Birk.


Second Cavalry-Company C, J. B. Pool, Second Lieutenant.


KANSAS,


First Infantry-Company H, T. B. Armstrong. Seventh Cavalry-Company A, George W. Kenan.


CALIFORNIA. First Infantry -- Company A, A. F. Smith, Captain. Third Infantry-Company I, C. S. Swank, Sergeant.


NEW JERSEY. Second Cavalry-Company M, George W. Karr.


MARYLAND. Second Infantry-Company F, E. Thomas.


*


479


HISTORY OF WYANDOT COUNTY.


Infantry-Samuel Hart. VIRGINIA.




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