USA > Pennsylvania > Beaver County > History of Beaver County, Pennsylvania, and its centennial celebration, Volume I > Part 57
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Detachments of the rebel forces had been thrown out to Carlisle and York, and seemed to be threatening the State Capital when Lee, discovering that the Army of the Potomac was approaching, hastily recalled them all to the point towards which his main body was tending-the town of Gettsyburg. There, on the first three days of July, was fought the battle that sent the pride of the Confederacy to the dust. The movements of the armies were so rapid, and the grand drama was so quickly enacted, that the newly organized militia had no opportunity to participate in its scenes. But the work which was done by the militia in connection with this great event was by no means unimportant. When General Lee's army was advancing by the Cumberland valley, they constructed a system of earth works for the defense of the State Capital; after Gettysburg was fought they were usefully employed in bringing in the wounded and stragglers from both armies and collecting the débris of the field, and the major portion of those at Harrisburg were pushed forward up the valley, a part of them joining the Army of the Potomac in Maryland, in readiness to take part in the battle which it was thought would be fought at Williamsport, but which was prevented by the escape of the enemy on the 13th and 14th. They were employed also in different portions of the State in repressing demonstrations from the disaffected elements of the people; and those regiments which were in the Depart- ment of the Monongahela rendered very important service in effecting the capture of Morgan, whose raid was extended almost to the territory of our own county. Says Bates:
With the close of this raid, ended the rebel invasion of the north, of 1863. Further service, for which the militia had been called, was no longer required, and during the months of August and September, the
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majority of the men were mustered out. With few exceptions they were not brought to mortal conflict. But they, nevertheless, rendered most important service. They came forward at a moment when there was pressing need. Their presence gave great moral support to the Union army, and had that army been defeated at Gettysburg, they would have taken the places of the fallen, and would have fought with a valor and desperation worthy of veterans. Called suddenly to the field from the walks of private life, without a moment's opportunity for drill or dis- cipline, they grasped their muskets, and by their prompt obedience to every order, showed their willingness-all unprepared as they were-to face an enemy, before whom veterans had often quailed. The bloodless campaigns of the militia may be a subject for playful satire; but in the strong arms, and sturdy hearts of the yeomanry of the land, who spring to arms at the moment of danger, and when that danger has past, cheer- fully lay them down again, rests a sure guarantee for the peace and se- curity of the country.
The Beaver County companies of the militia of 1863 were in the 56th Regiment. They were Co. C, Capt. George S. Barker; Co. E, Capt. Samuel R. Patterson; Co. H, Capt. Samuel Law- rence; and Co. I, Capt. Robert Gilmore. This regiment served at New Creek, a tributary of the Potomac in West Virginia.
BEAVER COUNTY MEN IN THE NAVAL SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES
Naturally the number of men entering the naval service from a county so far inland as Beaver would be small, but there have been several of Beaver County's sons in each of the last two wars, and of these it seems fitting that some notice should be given in the chapter which records her military history. We shall here give brief sketches of those of whom we have heard and have been able to obtain information. There may be others equally worthy of mention, but we have knowledge of only the following:
Lieutenant-Commander James P. Robertson, U. S. Navy, son of Hon. Archibald Robertson of Beaver Falls, was born December 18, 1840. He entered the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md., September 25, 1857
In May, 1861, the acting midshipmen of the first and second classes of the Academy were detached and ordered into active service, Midshipman Robertson being assigned to Admiral Du Pont's flag-ship Wabash. The young midshipman received his first baptism of fire aboard that vessel at the battle of Port
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Royal, and a few weeks later he was promoted to the grade of acting master, a rank corresponding with ensign to-day.
July 16, 1862, Robertson was promoted to lieutenant, and in 1862-63 was attached to the North Atlantic blockading squadron. During 1863-64 he was executive officer of the U. S. S. Keystone State, which vessel was very successful in overhaul- ing privateers and blockade-runners, capturing many large cargoes of cotton. He was promoted lieutenant-commander, August 16, 1866, and served on Admiral Goldsborough's flag- ship Colorado on the European station, 1866-67, and was retained by Admiral Farragut when that officer relieved Golds- borough, and placed in command of the Admiral's yacht Frolic during Farragut's famous cruise of 1867-68. During the fol- lowing years Lieutenant-Commander Robertson's service was rendered on ordnance duty at Philadelphia Navy Yard, 1869- 70; torpedo duty at Newport, R. I., 1870-71, and at Mare Island Navy Yard, California, 1872-74. He died in Philadel- phia, July 21, 1875.
Joseph Hoopes, son of John R. and Lydia Hoopes, was born at New Brighton, Pa., September 19, 1841. Early in the Civil War he entered the navy as Third Assistant Engineer, being attached to the second of the Monitors, the Passaic. He sailed in her for Charleston, S. C., in company with the original Monitor, which sank south of Cape Hatteras, the Passaic barely escaping by getting into Beaufort (N. C.) harbor. Mr. Hoopes served on the Passaic until the spring of 1865. He was then assigned to the Kearsarge, and left Boston, Mass., in her the night of Presi- dent Lincoln's assassination, the present Admiral Dewey being the executive officer of the ship. He died of yellow fever off the coast of Liberia, Africa, in the spring of 1866, and was buried at sea. A monument to his memory is in Grove Ceme- tery at New Brighton, Pa.
Oliver Blackburn Shallenberger was born at Rochester, Penn., May 7, 1860. His father, Dr. A. T. Shallenberger, was one of the leading physicians of the county, and upon his mother's side he descended from the Bonbright family of Youngstown, Pennsylvania.
Mr. Shallenberger received his early education in the public
Oliver Blackburn Shallenberger.
-
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schools of his native place, and at Beaver College in the neigh- boring town of Beaver. In 1877 he entered the Naval Academy at Annapolis as cadet engineer, and at the head of the twenty- five candidates then admitted, which position he held through- out the year. At the end of the three years' course, despite serious physical disabilities which had interfered with his appli- cation to study, he held third position in his class. After his graduation he took the customary two years' cruise upon a Gov- ernment vessel, being assigned to the U. S. flag-ship Lancaster. The greater portion of this time was spent in the Mediterra- nean, during which Mr. Shallenberger witnessed the bombard- ment of Alexandria by the British fleet under Admiral Seymour, July 11 and 12, 1882. In 1883 he returned to the United States, and resigned from the naval service in the following year.
While Mr. Shallenberger was at Annapolis particular atten- tion was being given to the development of electrical science, for which he exhibited a special aptitude. After his resignation from the navy he devoted his entire attention to studies con- nected with this science, and soon began to make important contributions both to the knowledge of the subject and to the solution of the problems with which it deals in the modern systems of electrical distribution. His genius was at once recog- nized by students and by the men interested in the commercial development of electricity, as shown in the fact that he was made chief electrician of the several great Westinghouse plants. Our space and the scope of our work do not permit us to even name the many inventions due to his engineering skill, of which the principal one is, perhaps, the current meter which bears his name. But beyond even the most valuable of these were the character and life of the man who made them. We think it can be truly said of him :
None knew him but to love him None named him but to praise.
November 27, 1889, Mr. Shallenberger was married to Miss Mary Woolslair of Beaver, by whom he had two children, a son and a daughter. For several years preceding his death he had been in failing health. He died in Colorado, January 23, 1898.
Capt. Joseph Henry Pendleton, son of Joseph R. and Martha (Cross) Pendleton, was born at Rochester, Pa., June 2, 1860.
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History of Beaver County
He was educated in the public schools of his native town and in the Beaver Seminary, Beaver, Pa., and also took a course preparatory for Annapolis at the Agricultural College near Washington, D. C. In a competitive examination for admission to the Naval Academy he was No. 3 in the entering class of 1878, which was a very large one. Graduating in June, 1882, he made the Southern Pacific cruise in the Hartford. This cruise lasted about two years, and at its close he returned to Annapolis for his final examination and commission.
Choosing the Marine Corps, he was made second lieutenant in that corps, in which he has remained ever since, holding now the rank of captain, and being within two or three numbers of his promotion to major.
Captain Pendleton was married, August 20, 1884, to Mary Helen, daughter of Prof. William Wirt Fay of the Naval Acad- emy. He was ordered to the Brooklyn Navy Yard; thence to Portsmouth, N. H., Navy Yard; and thence to the Mediter- ranean on a three years' cruise on the Pensacola, commanded by the present Admiral Dewey. Since then he has been on duty at Brooklyn Navy Yard; Mare Island; Sitka, Alaska; Washington, D. C .; and Annapolis.
At the breaking out of the Spanish-American War he was assigned to duty on the converted cruiser Yankee, which was at first part of the effective patrol established along the Atlantic coast, when the descent of the Spanish fleet upon that coast was apprehended. Afterwards the Yankee was ordered south and took part in the bombardment of Santiago, one of the ear- lier naval engagements of the war. Through a misunderstand- ing of signals the Yankee continued throwing shells after the signal, "cease firing," had been displayed on the flag-ship. One of the guns in the command of Captain Pendleton fired the last shot of the engagement. Soon after this engagement the Yankee was ordered north, and was among the vessels selected to form Commodore Watson's flying squadron, which was to cross the Atlantic and strike the Spanish coast. She did not return in time to see or participate in the destruction of Cer- vera's fleet.
The retina of Captain Pendleton's right eye having be- come detached by the concussion of the rapid-fire and heavier guns during target practice and in the bombardment at San-
Signaling at Sea.
Snap-shot taken on board the auxiliary cruiser St. Paul during the Spanish-American war by a reporter for a New York daily newspaper. Reproduced from a copy in the possession of Walter Lincoln Fry of Rochester, Pa. Mr. Fry is shown in the picture with a flag in his hands, "wig-wagging."
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History of Beaver County
tiago, he was compelled to undergo several months' treatment at the Presbyterian Eye and Ear Hospital, Baltimore. The retina became reattached, but in a damaged condition, and when he was able to resume his duties he asked for an assignment to Sitka, Alaska, where he is now stationed, being in command of the Marine Barracks.
Like most naval officers, Captain Pendleton is not much of a politician, but he is an advocate of the single tax on land values. He is a communicant of the Protestant Episcopal Church.
The interesting picture on the opposite page "Signaling at Sea," was taken on board the auxiliary cruiser St. Paul during the Spanish-American War. In this picture the young man who is seen standing upon the rail with the flag in his hands, "wig-wagging," is Mr. Walter Lincoln Fry of Rochester, Pa. Mr. Fry was born in Rochester, March 16, 1881, and was edu- cated in the public schools of that place. On the 4th of Janu- ary, 1897, he entered the school-ship Saratoga at Philadelphia, where, on the 2d of May, 1898, at the beginning of the war with Spain, he enlisted in the United States Navy and was assigned to duty on the St. Paul.
It will be remembered that this vessel was one of four be- longing to the American Line- the three others being the St. Louis, the New York, and the Paris-which, by an Act of Con- gress, had been placed at the disposal of the United States Government for its use as auxiliary cruisers in case of war. She and her sister ship, the St. Louis, both of 11,600 tons, were built by the William Cramp & Sons Ship and Engine Building Company of Philadelphia. The St. Paul was the first of the American liners to go into commission as an auxiliary cruiser of the United States Navy. Captain Sigsbee, of the ill-fated Maine, was commissioned as her commander, and on May 15th she sailed out of Hampton Roads to join Commodore Schley's squadron at Key West, the graceful ocean liner of a few weeks before having been transformed into a formidable fighting craft.
The St. Paul was immediately ordered on scouting duty, and a few days later began the blockade at Santiago, capturing there Cervera's collier, the Restormel, and definitely ascertaining the presence of his fleet in that harbor. Relieved from blockade duty here by the arrival of Schley's squadron, she rendered VOL. I .- 34.
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further effective service in assisting to re-establish cable com- munications and in carrying supplies of ammunition and rations to the American marines and Cuban insurgents fighting at Guan- tanamo, where she joined the Texas, Marblehead, and Suwanee in the second bombardment of Fort Caimanera. She then pro- ceeded to Porto Rico to take part in the blockade of that island. At San Juan, on the 22d of June, she engaged the Spanish cruiser Isabella II. and the torpedo-boat destroyer Terror, de- stroying the latter and driving the cruiser and a gunboat which had joined her to cover in the harbor. From this time to the close of the war, the St. Paul served as a troop-ship. Mr. Fry was with his vessel in all her engagements and various duties until she went out of commission and he was honorably discharged, August 31, 1898. Later, he spent about three years as quarter- master in the merchant marine, and as quartermaster's clerk on the United States transports Rawlins and Sedgwick. He is at present residing in Rochester and doing business in Pittsburg.
Richard Gray McConnel, son of William P. and Lydia (Stewart) McConnel, was born in Bridgewater, Pa., May 4, 1872. He was educated in the common schools and in the high school of Beaver, Pa., and in the spring of 1892 entered the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. Here he spent three years, when, on account of failing health, he was compelled to leave. After a year's rest he entered the course of mechanical engineering in the Western University of Pennsylvania. At the opening of the Spanish-American War he enlisted for duty in the naval service and went through the war as ensign on board the U. S. S. Leonidas. Until his last illness he was a first lieutenant in the U. S. Marine Corps, stationed at the Norfolk, Va., Navy Yards. He died at Albuquerque, New Mexico, June 17, 1904, and was buried in the cemetery at Beaver, Pa.
Other Beaver County boys who have served the United States for a longer or shorter period in the navy are Leslie Pat- terson, son of Mead Patterson, of Rochester, Pa .; George H. Schlagle, son of John H. Schlagle of the same place, now a marine guard at League Island; and Harry O. Clark of Free- dom, son of the well-known riverman, Capt. Bentley Clark.
NOTE .- James H. Gillis, a retired Admiral of the U. S. Navy, lived for some time in Beaver, in the house on Third Street in which Dr. Milton Lawrence afterwards lived-the second house on the left hand side of Raccoon Street.
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ROSTERS OF BEAVER COUNTY TROOPS IN THE WAR OF THE REBELLION I
Company H, 9th Regiment, Pennsylvania Reserve Corps, 38th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, recruited at New Brighton for a term of three years, mustered into service, May 24, 1861 :
CAPTAINS
John Cuthbertson,
with rank from April 19th, 1861; wounded at Glendale (Charles City Cross Roads) June 30, 1862 ; captured July 1, 1862 and con- fined in Libby prison; paroled Aug. - , 1862; resigned Dec. 8, I862.
Jacob S. Winans,
Feb. 28, 1863. Brevet Major,
March 13, 1865.
FIRST LIEUTENANTS
John F. Price,
resigned Nov. 8, 1861.
Charles K. Chamberlain,
Dec. 8, 1862; wounded at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862; Brevet Captain, March 13, 1865.
D. Riley Hawkins, 2d Lieutenant, May 2, 1863, vice Charles K. Chamberlain, promoted; Brevet Ist Lt., March 13, 1865.
Thomas J. Marshall, First Sergeant. SERGEANTS
Joseph M. Devinney. Henry Lloyd.
Henry W. Blanchard, wounded at Antietam, Sept. 17, 1862.
John Mitchell. Jesse M. Corbus. William Ashton,.
wounded at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862.
CORPORALS
William R. King. Matthew H. Fulton,
wounded at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862. James B. Andrews, wounded in action at Antietam, Sept. 17, 1862.
George E. Smith, wounded at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862. Irvin (K.) Campbell.
William C. Fleming, died Oct. 18, 1861.
Dennis Vanlear, killed at Antietam, Sept. 17, I862. Samuel Forns. [Toms ?] Marcus C. Rose. Edward Dorian. Joseph Cuthbertson. William C. Thompson, wounded at Glendale, June 30, 1862.
William Broad.
1 The names in these rosters, except those of men mustered in at headquarters of the Provost Marshal at New Brighton, are mainly copied from Bates's History of Pennsylvania Volunteers. The editor has, however, carefully revised the rosters in every case where it was possible to do so, and has added many interesting details. It is too much to hope that every error in the original has been detected, or that his own additions are perfect, but at least no pains have been spared to obtain accuracy. He gratefully acknowledges the assistance of William B. Cuthbertson, Esq., of New Brighton, in the preparation of these rosters, and especially for the transcription of the names on the rolls of the Provost Marshal, the latter having never before been published.
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History of Beaver County
PRIVATES
Ackleson, Mitchell,
wounded at Bull Run, Aug. 30, 1862. Allison, James.
Butler, Joseph. Bennett, William.
Blatner, Christian, wounded at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862.
Burke, William.
Butler, John B.,
killed at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862.
Broad, Moses,
killed at Bristoe Station, Va.,
Dec. 23, 1863, by railroad acci- dent.
Beatty, Walter L., killed at Antietam, Sept, 17, 1862.
Crawford, James C.
Conkle, George. Craig, Walter G. Conkle, Thomas.
Davis, Edward K.,
wounded at Dranesville, Dec. 20, 1861. Dimond, Thomas. Dunn, Lester. Dinwiddie, James L.
Eberhart, Andrew, E. Early, Henry C.,
wounded at Glendale, June 30, 1862.
Funkhouser, Madison. Fowler, William. Fleming, Robert. Fridiger, John. Fairman, Robert.
Gardner, Jeremiah. Glass, John F.
Gallaher, James W.,
killed at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862.
Hays, Henry A. Humell, David. Hobaugh, Joseph V., wounded at Glendale, June 30, 1862. Hawk, John B.
Houk, Lewis T.
King, Jonathan M. Kirker, Lorenzo C. Kirker, William,
wounded at Antietam, Sept. 17, 1862. Kelso, George,
wounded at Glendale, June 30, 1862.
Lloyd, Joseph, Law, James R. Leslie, William,
wounded at Antietam, Sept. 17, 1862. Lardin, William M.
Laing, John,
wounded and captured at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862 ; died in prison at Richmond, date unknown.
Lemmon, Robert W.,
killed at Antietam, Sept. 17,1862. Laporte, Leonidas,
died of wounds received at Bull Run, Aug. 30, 1862. Lytle, Robert S.
McFerren, Milton L. McCamish, Prussia.
Musser, Jacob J.
Martin, George F.
Marquis, Albert S., wounded at Mechanicsville, Va. M'Clain, Samuel. Murphy, John,
captured at Glendale, June 30, 1862; died in prison at Rich- mond, Va. M'Clain, Andrew,
killed at Antietam, Sept. 17, 1862. Martin, William M.
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History of Beaver County
Matheny, Edward,
died, Jan. 2, 1863, of wounds re- ceived at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862.
Nye, Tobias,
wounded at Glendale, June 30, I862.
Newell, Silas B.,
died, Dec. 23, 1861, of wounds re- ceived at Dranesville, Dec. 20, 1861. Ness, Robert, died of wounds received at South Mountain, Sept. 14, 1862.
Osburn, Edward, wounded at South Mountain, Sept. 14, 1862. O'Neill, John.
Palmer, Henry, wounded at Gaines's Mill and Mine Run. Parris, William. Price, George A., killed at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, I862.
Rheinhard, Charles. Robeson, James C.
Reddy, Lewis. Ramsey, Robert.
Richards, Samuel D.
Reed, William L.
Reed, James C.
Showalter, Stanley,
captured at Bristoe Station, Oct. 15, 1863. Sweeny, William. Smith, John W. D. Stanyard, John J.
Todd, Cornelius J. Townsend, Alfred, wounded at Bull Run, Aug. 30, 1862; discharged to accept com- mission U. S. Army. Thamer, Daniel F.
Vanlear, Joseph. Vaneman, Scott. Veon, Samuel, wounded in action at Glendale, June 30, 1862.
Vangorder, Alex.
White, Isaiah. Wimer, Josiah.
Welch, Archibald, wounded at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862.
Wright, James. Walters, Alexander, died at Alexandria, Va., Dec. 10, 1862. Webb, Francis, died at Windmill Point, Va., Feb. 7, 1863.
Wragg, Francis, killed at Gaines's Mill, June 27, I862. Zeigler, Isaac.
The following members of Company A, 9th Regiment of Penn- sylvania Reserve Corps, 38th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volun- teer Infantry, were enlisted in Beaver County :
Lloyd, David. Reisinger, Smith. Corbus, Daniel R. Campbell, Thomas. Chamberlain, Ham. H.,
killed at South Mountain, Sept. 14, 1862. Henry, Thomas.
Larimer, James M. Scott, Hugh F. Townsend, Charles C. Hoopes, Edward J., killed at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, I862. Bradshaw, Joseph F.
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History of Beaver County
Company F, Ioth Regiment, Pennsylvania Reserve Corps, 39th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, recruited at Rochester for a term of three years, mustered into service, June 29, 1861 :
CAPTAINS
Milo R. Adams,
discharged Dec. 25, 1862, for wounds received at Glendale (Charles City Cross Roads), Va., June 30, 1862.
Abner Lacock.
FIRST LIEUTENANTS
Matthew S. Quay.
John L. Moore.
Eph. P. Stewart.
Joseph M. Reed.
George E. Lehmar.
SECOND LIEUTENANTS
Alfred P. Cairns.
Thomas L. Darragh.
SERGEANTS
Rufus D. Cole, First Sergeant.
James M. Moorberger. James McKee. William Olcott. Harrison J. Chandler.
CORPORALS
Thomas S. Wray, wounded at Wilderness, died.
James Atkinson.
George McCaskey.
Alexander Dawson.
William D. Reno. Thomas G. Evans, wounded at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862. George Bean, wounded at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862. Robert H. Brown.
PRIVATES
Ambrose, John.
Anderson, Francis M.
Anderson, John W.
Anderson, James E.,
killed at Glendale, June 30, 1862.
Beuchler, Frederick.
Blaine, David R.
Brown, James.
Brown, Eli E.
Beighley, James K. P.
Beaner, James W.
Baker, George.
Batto, Daniel.
Bentz, Lewis.
Bevington, Mason.
Bryan, George P., killed at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862.
Cross, John W.
Campbell, Robert.
Carr, William C.
Casselton, Guy.
Carey, George W., wounded at Antietam, Sept. 17, 1862.
Dawson, Benoni C. Douds, Edward H.
Donavan, John, wounded at Gaines's Mill, June 27, 1862.
Edgar, Lemuel G.
Edgar, Joseph F. Evans, Martin S.
Elliott, Sylvester, killed at Bull Run, Aug. 30, 1862. Edgar, John, killed at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13 1862. Fish, Wallace W.
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History of Beaver County
Gull, Casper. Graham, Williamson. Gull, Henry, killed at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862. Gray, Robert. Hamilton, William L.
Hays, Joseph G. Hendrickson, H.
Hutchison, Charles. Hamilton, Samuel,
wounded at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862. Henry, James H. Hawley, Thomas,
killed at Glendale, June 30, 1862. Holland, Christopher B.,
killed at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862. Handy, Chauncey, died, Sept. 26, 1862. Holder, Ralph R., killed at Bull Run, Aug. 29, 1862.
Izenour, Arthur. Jordan, James D. Jack, Robert. Jones, John J.
Kettlewood, William.
Merkle, Wash. Moorhead, James H.,
wounded at Wilderness, May 8, I862. Might, David, killed at Bull Run, Aug. 30, 1862. M'Connell, Clark. McGahey, James P., wounded at Wilderness, May 8, 1864. M'Afee, John. M'Williams, James. M'Laren, John P. M'Millen, Hugh, killed at Bull Run, Aug. 30, 1862.
Neville, Jason. Neville, Edward. Neville, Ira.
Purvis, John. Phillis, James M. Pfeifer, William H., wounded at Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862. Page, John.
Ramsey, Cochran.
Reehl, John.
Reehl, Robert.
Roy, Andrew, wounded at Gaines's Mill.
Reno, Hiram S.
Robinson, John W.
Ramsey, William, killed at Glendale, June 30, 1862. Rowe, James J., killed at Gaines's Mill, June 27, I862.
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