History of the twenty third Pennsylvania volunteer infantry, Birney's zouaves 1861-1865; comp. by the secretary, Part 31

Author: Pennsylvania Infantry. 23d Regt; Wray, W. J
Publication date: 1904
Publisher: Philadelphia
Number of Pages: 884


USA > Pennsylvania > History of the twenty third Pennsylvania volunteer infantry, Birney's zouaves 1861-1865; comp. by the secretary > Part 31


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).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32


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order a cessation and prepare for the onset of the rebels which they well know will soon follow. When the Union fire ceases the rebels vainly imagine that their fire has compelled this silence and they regard it as a partial victory. They hasten their preparations. And yet on the part of General Long- street who doubts the success of the attack there is hesitancy and delay. But General Lee has ordered it and his order must be carried out. General Pickett who commands the column of assault is eager for it. His men are confident of victory. When all is ready General Pickett looks to General Longstreet to issue the order and he yet hesitates. General Pickett proudly says "I shall go forward, sir." . And now as the soldiers rise from the ground to form ranks many cannot rise. The ground is strewed with the dead, the wounded and with those who have been overcome with the intense heat. But all the able bodied men rise and take their places in line. Full of ardor they move forward with measured pace, so as not to break their allignment. Pickett's division moves with Garnett's brigade in the centre, Kemper's on the right and Armistead's on the left. A swarm of skirmishers covers their front. The smoke which enveloped them and shut off their view has cleared away and they can now see the Union line towards which they are marching and upon which they are to make their assault. This assaulting column of Pickett's di- vision numbers 4500 effective men. By the addition of troops of Pettigrew, Trimble and Wilcox, on the right and the left which are to support Pettigrew, the whole number of troops assaulting is raised to 14,000. The issue of this hard fought battle of Gettysburg upon which so much, both to the rebel in- vading troop, and to the Union cause is depending is now at hand. The success to the rebels means the continued inva- sion of the northern loyal States with disaster heaped upon disaster to the Union cause-and discomfiture to the rebels betokens the lifting of the dark cloud of war and discomfiture ; means the turning of the tide and incoming of success. On, on ! come the rebels marching solidly and quietly in magnifi- cent order. Friends and foes alike watch their movement, as they pass over the space intervening, and accord them the ad- miration which their courage and soldierly bearing merit. Their friends anticipate nothing but victory. On the Union side there is solicitude, courage and firm determination. As


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soon as the rebels emerge from their sheltering woods and thickest smoke, McGilvery concentrates the fire of his forty cannon upon them. Perhaps some of them think of Freder- icksburg under Burnside. These death-dealing missiles do their deadly work. Though suffering from this artillery fire the rebels close up their ranks and move on. The distance over which they must pass is about a mile and a half. Haz- zard having expended all his ammunition of long range is obliged to reserve his fire until they come nearer. As they approach, encouraged by the silence of Hazzard's guns Gen- eral Pickett crosses several enclosed fields until, at length, he reaches the base of the elevation of attack. Then he changes his direction by a half wheel to the right and makes a halt to rectify his lines. This is disastrous to the rebel plan. By this


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THOS. W. SNOWDEN. ALEX P. WILKINS, Co. B.


LEWIS STRENNER, DANIEL GRAEBER,


movement the distance between General Pickett's division and the supporting troops of General Heth is much increased. These by their imposing appearance, at the distance of 250 yards, draw the Union fire and stop to reply. The troops of Wilcox, too, on the right of General Pickett did not move out with the same promptness as the centre column and he has moved straight forward. As Pickett's division in its forward movement descends into a hollow and becomes involved in the smoke, Wilcox following along his direction to the right becomes separated from Pickett and does not, as General Lee intended, cover the flank of Pickett's division. This is a most


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important and providential result, and is highly favorable to the Union side. The central and chief assaulting column is not properly protected and is not adequately supported. It is not as fully prepared to deal the stunning blow designed upon the Union centre. The objective point of the Union line is Ziegler's wood. This part of the ridge, besides the wood is protected on the west by rocks which project like a wall. Stone walls and fences, too, serve for shelter and protection. Here Hayes' troops are posted and the division of General Gib- bon. The two Union lines are so arranged that the batteries of the second line can deliver their fire over the first line. In the salient angle of Ziegler's woods, General Doubleday has placed Stannard's Vermont Brigade. It is against this position so strong and defended by troops so well posted, the rebels are advancing for attack. They will meet with an obstinate resistance. Pickett is beginning to realize the peril of his situation. He is separated from his supporting columns and must attack alone. On his left Pettigrew is not up, and, on his right, Wilcox strays away. And yet he comes. boldly on. He does not waver. The gaps made by the shot and shell of the Union artillery only caused them to close up their ranks. The Union battery on Little Round Top which enfiladed their lines, from which they suffered considerably, led to the like closing up of their lines. At the fence occupied by the skirm- ishers of the Second (Union) Corps, near the Emmettsburg Road, Pickett's column met the first Union forces ; these they quickly drove back. General Gibbon commanding the Union front opposed to Pickett's advancing column had directed his men to reserve their firing until the enemy was near enough to make their fire effective. That fire, thus delivered, was with deadly effect. The rebel forces under Pettigrew, on the left of Pickett's column, began to waver on their left and fall behind, the nature of the ground there was more exposed than it was on the rest of their line. The artillery fire had shaken them much and this deadly Union infantry fire of Hayes' Division sent them back in masses. Through all this Pickett's sol- diers advance at the double quick. This fearful fire of General Gibbon's division thins their ranks. The rebel Gen- eral Garnett, whose brigade is somewhat in the advance, falls mortally wounded not a hundred yards from the Union line. This for a moment causes his troops to halt. The brigades of


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Pickett, at sixty yards, open fire upon the Union line, but their bullets flatten themselves upon the rocks against which they strike. Halting a little to allow Armistead's men to get more completely in line, they move forward under the leadership of their chiefs and scale the acclivity which is before them. The yells of the rebels mingle with the fire of their muskets. But this well directed fire from the Union from the oblique and energetic fire of Stannard's forces and those of Gates upon his right flank caused many of his men to surrender, others to retreat outright, and others to crowd together. Nevertheless, the brigade of Armistead, united with that of Garnett's, pressed on. Pickett is determined to break Gibbon's line and capture the guns. Webb's front which had been the focus of the enemy's concentrated artillery fire 'which had lost already some fifty men and officers, still remained firm and unshaken. The disabled guns-Cushing's battery A, (Fourth U. S. Ar- tillery, and Brown's Rhode Island battery,) had been re-placed by two fresh batteries and also by Cowan's First Indepen- dent of New York, of the Sixth Corps, which had come up and taken the place of Brown's battery on the left. Armistead, urging his men forward, has reached the rebel front between Kemper and Garnett, and these, a compact mass of men, bespattered with blood, driven by an irresistible force superior to the individual will of the men composing it, throws itself like a solid body upon the Union line before it. The shock is terrible. It falls, at first upon the brigades of Hall and Harrow, then concentrates itself upon Webb's brigade. Webb, in the midst of his soldiers encouraging them, is quickly wounded. The struggle is waged at close quarters. The rebels pierce the line of the Union forces. But the Union men, dislodged from their first position at "the wall," fell back to their second line, formed of small earth-works, erected on the ridge in front of their guns. These guns fire grape shot upon the advancing foes. Hancock and Gibbon bring forward all their reserves. Hall to the left of Webb, by means of a line rectified by a half wheel to the rear, places his men on the flank of the advancing rebels. General Harrow, not being directly engaged, advances with his left, and almost takes Pickett's advancing line, on the reverse.


"This first line of Hayes' Division which received this charge was composed of the Twelfth New Jersey, Fourteenth Connecticut and First Delaware. The Second line, One Hundred and Eleventh, One Hundred and Twenty-fifth, and Thirty-ninth New York Regiments.


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The troops, posted on the right and left, hasten towards the point threatened. Humphreys sends Carr's brigade to the assistance of the Second Corps. The Union regiments become mixed, but they are all pressing each other in a mass, forming a living bulwark of defence more than four lines deep. A clump of trees, near which Cushing, when living, had posted his guns, is the point the rebels aim to reach. Armistead on foot, his hat perched on the point of his sword, rushes forward to attack the battery. To his men he cries, " Give them the cold steel, boys," but he falls pierced with balls by the side of the gallant young Cushing. Hereafter this clump of trees, the farthest point reached by the rebels, be- comes historical. Thus far and no farther is the fiat of Almighty God in their vain efforts to conquer the North and extend the limits of Southern slavery. As Pickett's centre failed so the column on his left, intended for support, failed. Also the column of his right which by continuing on its direct couse instead of declining to the left about 45 de- grees, thus leaving Pickett's column uncovered and liable to attack on its right and thus to greater loss and confusion ; also to fail in its unaided uttack on the Union front ; it also failed through the splendid and rear attack of Stannard's force who, besides inflicting great loss and confusion upon Pickett's ad- vancing right, took several hundred prisoners. This attack was followed closely by Gates' command which continued to fire on them at close range. This caused many to surrender, others to retreat, and others to crowd together. The Eighth Ohio, which was on picket, overlapping the rebel left, closed in on the rebel left with great effect. Still, the next rebel brigade, Armistead's-united to Garnett's brigade, pressed on, as Pickett was determined to break the Union line under General Gibbon, and, in so doing, take the Union guns. The Union forces under Webb, having suffered much by being made the special objects of the rebel artillery fire, still remained firm against the coming attack. Cushing's battery A, Fourth U. S. Artillery, posted on the Union crest with Brown's Rhode Island battery, had been disabled by the Rebel artillery fire, and had been replaced by Cowan's First New York, of the Sixth Corps' battery, and another, Wheeler's bat- tery, came up just before Pickett's attack and took the place of Cushing's. The rebel Armistead pressed forward, leaped the


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stone wall waving his sword with his hat on it, followed with about a hundred of his men, several of whom carried rebel battleflags. He shouted "Give them the cold steel, boys " and laid his hand upon a gun and this, for a few minutes, was in his possession, and the rebel flag was in the front waving over the Union line. But Webb, animating and encouraging his men, was very near Armistead. He led the Seventy-second Pennsylvania against the rebel front and placed a line of wounded men in the rear of these to hold them to their duty. A portion of the Seventy-first Pennsylvania were posted so as to throw in a flanking fire, while a great part of the Sixty-ninth Pennsylvania and the remainder of the Seventy-first, made stern resistance from a copse of trees on the left near where the rebels had broken the Union line and were Union men were shot with the rebel muskets touching their breasts. A splendid charge of two regiments was led by Colonel Hall, which passed completely through Webb's line and engaged the enemy in a hand-to-hand fight. General Armistead was shot down by the side of the gun he had taken. It is said his last words were "Tell Hancock, I have wronged him, and wronged my country." Gibbon and Webb were wounded and the loss in Union officers and men was very heavy. Two rebel brigadiers were killed and more rebel prisoners were taken than twice Webb's brigade; also six rebel battleflags and 1463 muskets were gathered in. General Doubleday sent stretcher-carriers and ambulances to care for the Confederate wounded. When Pickett, the rebel leader, looked at the top of the ridge he had temporarily gained, he clearly saw that it was impossible to hold this position, Union troops were rushing in upon him from all sides, The Union Second Corps was en- gaged in a furious assault upon his front. His men were fighting with clubbed muskets and even banner-staves were entertwined in a fierce and hopless struggle. The Confederate Pettigrew, on his left, had given way and a heavy Union skirmish line began to accumulate on that flank. He saw his men surrendering in masses, and with a heart full of anguish he ordered a retreat. Death had been busy on all sides, and comparatively few of his advancing column now remained and these in disorder fell back behind the Confeder- ate Wright's brigade sent forward to cover their retreat.


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A small rebel force rallied in a slashing that had been cut down by our men to accommodate the Union artillery fire, but when two regiments of Rowley's brigade, the One Hundred and fifty-first Pennsylvania and the Twentieth New York State Militia under Colonel Theodore B. Gates, made a gallant charge they drove them out.


While this contest of the rebel centre and left in front of the Union forces under Webb was carried on, the rebels on the right of the advancing column had advanced in their own direct route and thus separated themselves more and more from Pickett's column and, at a delayed period of time, had been deployed by its leader and had opened a feeble fire against Caldwell's division on the left of the troops under General Doubleday. This furnished Stannard an opportunity to repeat his successful flank fire against these also. De- taching the Fourteeth and Sixteenth Vermont regiments, he, with them, opened a disastrous flank fire upon the left of the advancing column. The rebel Wilcox, thus struck on his left, while a long line of batteries on his front tore his front to pieces with cannister-shot, found it impossible for his troops to gain a foothold. He found his column exposed to a de- structive cross fire and was obliged to retreat. A large body of his men were brought in as prisoners.


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A portion of Longstreet's corps,-Robertson's and Law's brigades advanced against the two Round Tops with the view of preventing the sending of troops from that position to strengthen the force resisting Pickett's charge. Kilpatrick interfered with this. About 2 P. M. he made his appearance on the Union left with Farnsworth's brigade, and Merritt's Brigade of Regulars with Graham's and Elder's Regular bat- teries. His design was to attack the rebel right and reach the rebel ammunition train in that vicinity. Rebel report is that his men came on yelling like demons. Driving back the rebel skirmishers on that flank Merritt's men, deployed on the left, soon became engaged with Anderson's Georgia Brigade supported by two batteries. Farnsworth on the right, with his First Vermont regiment, leaped a fence and advanced until he came to a second stone fence, where he was checked by Law's Fourth Alabama Regiment, on its return from a demonstration against Round Top. Farnsworth, turning and leaping another fence, amidst shot and shell made an attempt


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to capture Bachman's rebel battery. In this effort Farnsworth was killed, and the First Vermont, finding itself enclosed in a field with high fences on all sides, behind which rebel infantry were continually rising and firing, was broken up and forced to retire in detachments. This attack of Farnsworth hindered the sending of any rebel troops to Pickett's force.


The repulse of Pickett's force with such slaughter and loss, destroyed the rebel dream of conquest and led to the retreat of Lee's army across the Potomac, with the Sixth Corps in their rear as far as South Mountain, where, amid a downpour of rain and the thick darkness, our Brigade spent the night. On that mountain top three or four Twenty-third Pennsylvania Volunteer officers sheltered themselves in the garret of a house, glad of a protecting roof over them. There one of the Chaplains lost a flask of brandy which he had been carrying in his saddle bag for the wounded soldiers. Thankful for the shelter enjoyed, he said nothing, made no inquiries. Some on the outside in the pelting rain warmed themselves and kept out the cold. Although the risen Potomac delayed Lee's crossing, he succeeded in getting across with forces and trains. This ended the Gettysburg campaign.


CALIFORNIA JOE OF BERDAN'S SHARPSHOOTERS.


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Names and Addresses of all Known Survi- vors of the Twenty-third Pennsyl- vania Infantry


Those marked with * were of 3 months' service.


Field and Staff


Colonel John F. Glenn, 2535 Brown Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Lieutenant-Colonel Wm. J. Wallace, 1432 South 49th Street, Phila- delphia, Pa.


Adjutant Thos. K. Boggs, Flushing, New York.


Quartermaster Sergeant Wm. H. Albertson, 24 South 7th Street, - Philadelphia, Pa.


Regimental Band


Cobbin, Thomas, Philadelphia, Pa.


Roth, John, 1716 South 6th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Wiley, Benj., Wilmington, Del.


Company A


Bateman, J. J., 4254 North Franklin Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Branson, Ed. R., 533 Dickinson Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Barry, Albert B., 2308 Cedar Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Brabender, Ed. A., 216 West Wildey Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Colwell, James, 1712 North 26th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Davenport, Henry H., 244 Line Street, Camden, N. J. Fritsch, Henry G., 7031 Wright Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Garson, Lewis F., 804 Champe Street, Denver, Col. Huber, Charles F., 212 Washington Square, Philadelphia, Pa. Hilton, Wm. F., Box 685, Hartford, Conn.


Havens, Joseph, 2525 East Norris Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Murray, Charles, Soldiers' Home, Dayton, O.


*Martin, Sylvester H., Adj., Soldiers' Home, Erie, Pa. Martin, James, Soldiers' Home, Va. McCormick, Michael, 1630 South Rosewood Street. Philadelphia, Pa. *North, George W., 4513 Haverford Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Patton, John, 41. N. Paxson Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Patterson, James, Post I G. A. R., Philadelphia, Pa. Powell, Geo. II., 308 South State Street, Chicago, Ill. Quigley. Wm. J., Oakland, Cal.


Sexton, John E., 655 North 39th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Shutruter, Wm., Table Rock, Adams County, Pa.


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Speckman, Louis J., Berwyn, Chester County, Pa. Stengel, Philip, Fox Chase, Philadelphia, Pa.


Tustin, Isaac, Moorestown, N. J.


Company B .


Blanck, Geo. W., 351 Pine Street, Camden, N. J.


Bohn, John, Box 173, Lehighton, Pa. Barbour, Jas. H., 1444 North 27th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Connelly, Frank A., 1807 N. Judson Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Carty, Henry A., Callao, Peru, South America.


*Costello, John, 606 Spring Garden Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Dorn, Theo. H., 1329 South 29th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Drew, Henry G., 420 South 17th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. *Fitzinger, George W., Matawan, N. J.


Graeber, Daniel, 3411 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Gardiner, David, Soldiers' Home, Va.


Gillespie, James, Penn Street, Manayunk, Philadelphia, Pa. Granello, Geo. WV., Lebanon, Pa.


Hillebrand, Louis, 108 South Sth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Hahn, Frank D., Brockport, New York. "


Holworth, Henry, 3633 North 16th Street, Philadelphia, Pa Jenkins, B. F., 2041 South 10th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Lampter, Lewis, 3829 Nice Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Mooney, John, 148 Market Street, Chicago, Ill. McKim, Henry, Burlington, N. J.


*Newberg, Robert, 2318 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Peddle, Wm. R., Pension Bureau, Washington, D. C. Peifer, F. Geo., 2040 Cherry Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Peacock, Henry C., 2207 Townsend Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Snowden, Thomas W., 1901 Fairmount Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Sewell, James, 3742 Evans Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. Thomas, R. B., 1246 North ISth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Tuder, John F., Hammonton, N. J. Thalheimer, Albert, 141 Cedar Street, Reading, Pa. Wilkins, Alex., Soldiers' Home, Dayton, O.


Company C


Bauer, John, 2125 North 9th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Brown, John, Bull Head Hotel, Wilmington, Del. Collins, James P., Beartown, Lancaster County, Pa. Chadwick, Thomas I., 2042 Fitzwater Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Callahan, John, Rahway, N. J.


*Campbell, Peter F., 1913 Pemberton Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Cassaday, Nicholas, Vienna, Fairfax Co., Va. Donnell, Ezekiel, Soldiers' Home, Va.


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Eberhart, Wm. F., 615 W. Venango Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Ellenger, Chas. S., Adams Express Company, 17th and Market Streets, Philadelphia, Pa.


Fell. Thomas, 2505 Fox Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Ford, Wm., Braddock, Pa.


Gardiner, John, 2723 Philip Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Gilbert, Thomas, 118 Mehl Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Galloway, Geo. W., 167 Fountain Street, Manayunk, Philadelphia, Pa. Henry, Daniel, Branch P. O., Westmoreland County, Pa.


*Landon, John K., 822 Dudley Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Lasage, James, 2233 North 18th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


. Little, Wm., Tacony, Philadelphia, Pa.


Miller, Wm. H., Henry Clay, New Castle County, Del. Marache, Chas. C., 1124 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. McFadden, Neill, West Vincent, Chester County, Pa. Nutt, James, 2008 W. Huntingdon Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Staiger, Gotleib, 2016 Berks Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Sigmond, Houston, 725 Watkins Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Spence, Mathew, 211 Pulaski Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Thomas, Wm., 1949 Judson Place, Philadelphia, Pa. Tipton, Charles E., 827 Federal Street, Philadelphia, Pa .. Thompson, James, Henry Clay, Del.


White, Joseph H., Easton, Md.


Warner, Martin, Columbus, O.


Company D


Albany, A. J., 103 Cotton Street, Manayunk, Philadelphia, Pa. Brown, Charles, Adams Express Company, 17th and. Market Streets, Philadelphia, Pa.


Barr, Samuel, ISI Levering Street, Manayunk, Philadelphia, Pa.


Boyd, John, Soldiers' Home, Dayton, O.


Barnes, George W., Soldiers' Home, Va.


Buchanan James, Steubenville, O.


Crawford, Geo., Soldiers' Home, Va.


*Clement, W'm. K., 3926 Aspen Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Campbell, Alex., 806 Preston, Houston Street, Tex.


Campbell, James, Soldiers' Home, Va.


Edwards, W'm .. 2502 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Fisher, James, U. S. Soldiers' Home, Cal.


Galbraith, John, rear 1934 Cuthbert Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Gibson, Thomas, 153 Hermitage Street, Manayunk, Philadelphia, Pa. Hogg. Charles T., 2855 North 6th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Harvey, Jas. D., Morris Run. Tioga County, Pa. *Huebly, Joe. E., 516 South 12th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Hattersley, Joseph, 2 Clark Street, Newark, N. J.


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Kirkpatrick, John, 23 Winchester Street, Manayunk, Philadelphia, Pa. Kennedy, John H., 1637 Christian Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Lindsay, John, 1251 South Mole Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Mitchell, Geo. P., 213 Mulberry Street, Manayunk, Philadelphia, Pa. Marache, Charles C., 1124 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. McCoy, Henry, 2425 North Bancroft Street, Philadelphia, Pa. . McClung, John, 3248 Lancaster Street, Philadelphia, Pa. McGee, Thomas, Frankford Arsenal, Philadelphia, Pa. Rumney, John, 4655 Smick Street, Manayunk, Philadelphia, Pa. Rivel, Jeremiah, 809 West 7th Street, Wilmington, Del. Thwaites, Alfred, Monastery Avenue, Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pa. Tippen, George, 219 Mifflin Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Wright, Isaac, Prospect Street, Roxborough, Philadelphia, Pa. Wiley, Samuel, 5718 Ludlow Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


*Watts, David, 2042 North Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa.


Company E


Baker, Wm. J., 2250 North 15th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Brown, James, 5645 Appletree Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Boyd, John, 1311 North 23rd Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Boyd, Hugh, 52012 South 23rd Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Brown, James, Catharine above 21st Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Brown, Jas. C., 326 Belgrade Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Blessington, Jas., Vallejo, Cal.




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