The military annals of Tennessee. Confederate. First series: embracing a review of military operations, with regimental histories and memorial rolls, V.1, Part 47

Author: Lindsley, John Berrien, 1822-1897. ed. cn
Publication date: 1886
Publisher: Nashville, J. M. Lindsley & co.
Number of Pages: 942


USA > Tennessee > The military annals of Tennessee. Confederate. First series: embracing a review of military operations, with regimental histories and memorial rolls, V.1 > Part 47


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On the morning of the 19th of September, 1861, at daylight, firing commenced, but it turned out to be only a few bush-whackers, or probably some of the young men of the village, who fired on us. The skirmish is mentioned only to record what I believe to be the fall of the first Confederate soldier outside of Virginia. Lieut. Robt. Powell (Co. K) was killed here. He was a quiet man, but of true courage. Shortly after this the regiment moved with Zollicoffer's command back into Tennessee, and then into Kentucky again, passing through Jamestown, Over- ton county. At the fierce little engagement of Wild Cat, near London, Ky., Octo- ber 21, 1861, it was held in reserve while Col. Newman's and other regiments attempted unsuccessfully to dislodge the enemy from a strong position in a mount- ain-pass. We marched thence to Mill Springs, Ky., and crossing the Cumber- land River, established camps on its north bank, thus having the river between


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MILITARY ANNALS OF TENNESSEE.


us and Tennessee. Here we went into winter-quarters, having thrown up what was then supposed to be extensive earth-works for our protection. But Gen. Thomas was approaching us, and it seemed wise to go out and attack him; so on the night of the 18th of January, 1862, Gen. Zollicoffer marched with his whole force-some thirty-five hundred infantry-from his fortified camp twelve miles t> Fishing Creek, which part of Thomas's force was reported to have crossed, leaving a part on the other side. It was therefore proposed to destroy these forces in detail. But it so happened that the force which had crossed was larger than Zollivofer -, and the fight proved disastrous. Here the brave Zollicoffer was slain. He fell in the line of the Nineteenth Tennessee Regiment. In this fight Co. B lost Lieut. Con- ley; Co. K, Carrol Carmack, a much-loved and gallant boy, and others of the reg- iment killed, and many wounded. It was a fierce fight of two hours, and the re- treat was made in great disorder. Reaching the fortified camp at night-fall, a: midnight the retreat toward Murfreesboro, Tenn., commenced. By sunrise Jan- uary 20th, the Nineteenth Regiment had crossed the Cumberland, and marche? thence to Murfreesboro to join Gen. A. S. Johnston's force retreating from Bowl- ing Green, Ky. On this march the suffering of the men from hunger was ex- treme. From the fight on January 19 to the following Wednesday night they had nothing to eat except meat one night, without any bread or salt or any thing to cook it in. When we got flour it was without salt, and it was cooked by mak- ing it into dough and rolling this out into strings the size of your finger, turning it around a ramrod, and sticking this in the ground near the fire. The suffering- from cold was also very great. Few blankets were brought from our winter-quar- ters, and the snow fell and the weather was very severe. Consequently, when the regiment reached Murfreesboro it was greatly reduced by sickness, and in a very bad condition. A few days rest, however, greatly improved its condition, and when Gen. Johnston resumed the march toward Shiloh it had recovered much of . its strength and spirit .*


In that battle of April 6th and 7th, 1862, the Nineteenth lost heavily in kille : and wounded. I deeply regret my inability to place on your roll of honor t ..-


* The regiment was first in Zollicoffer's brigade. After his death Col. Tatham. of the Fi .. teenth Mississippi, commanded the brigade, till after the battle of Shiloh. While under Ta :- ham the brigade was in Breekinridge's division. Bragg's (?) corps. Col. Tatham died at Vicks- burg during the first siege, and Gen. Lusk, of Arkansas, commanded the brigade for a shor: time. When the division left Mississippi the brigade was under command of Col. F. M. Waik. er, of cur regiment. Rejoining Bragg's army at Murfreesboro, the Nineteenth was placed in Stewart's brigade, Cheatham's division, Polk's corps. After the battle at that place, Stewart being promoted and transferred, the brigade-composed of the Fourth, Fifth, Nineteenth. Twenty- fourth, Thirty-first, and Thirty-third Tennessee regiments-was commanded by Gen. Strah !. After Chickamauga our brigade was transferred, and fought with Stewart's division as Mission- ary Ridge. When Gen. Johnston took command of the army we were returned to Cheatham's division, Hardee's corps. Early in June Col. Walker was put in command of Maney's brigadie, taking his regiment with him, and was in that relation when he fell at Atlanta, July 22. Soon after this event the regiment resumed its position in Strahl's brigade. Gen. Hardee left us. and Gen. Cheathani took command of Hardee's corps at Lovejoy, Ga., and Gen. John C. Brown command of Cheathams division. The campaign into Middle Tennessee was made under these officers. Gen. Strahl fell at Franklin. Col. A. J. Kellar took command of the brigade after the battle of Franklin. After the retreat of Hood's army from Nashville the command wen: v.a Corinth, Miss., to North Carolina, where after reorganization the surrender took place, the regiment being then in Palmer's brigade.


This note, and other matter incorporated in Col. Heiskell's sketch, was furnished by the Rev. J. A. Lyons (Co. E), now living in Nashville. J. B. L.


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names of the gallant dead. Capt. Z. T. Willet (Co. B) and Thomas H. Walker (Co. I) were killed; Maj. Fulkerson was severely wounded and Col. Cummings slightly. The killed and wounded, as I recollect it, was over twenty-five per cent. out of the four hundred engaged. The Nineteenth was present at and aided in the capture of Gen. Prentiss and four thousand prisoners in the first day's fight. On the following day it was hotly engaged several times in holding the eneuly in check until the wounded and guns captured in the first day's fight could be removed from the field. While resting from this fight-in the meantime, however, marching and countermarching in line of battle-its first year of service expired. The reor- ganization took place near Corinth, Mississippi, May 10, 1862, with the following result :


Colonel, F. M. Walker; Lieutenant-colonel, B. F. Moore; Major, R. A. Jarna- gin; Surgeon, J. E. Dulaney; Assistant Surgeon, J. E. Pyatt; Chaplain, R. W. Norton; Quartermaster, A. D. Taylor; Assistant Quartermaster, Win. Bowles; Commissary, J. II. Kennedy.


Co. A: Captain, D. A. Kennedy; First Lieutenant, F. M. Foust; Second Lieu- tenant, Thos. Carney; Third Lientenant, N. P. Nail.


Co. B: Captain, J. G. Deaderick; First Lieutenant, J. C. Hammer; Second Lieu- tenant, R. J. Tipton; Third Lieutenant, T. M. Brabson.


Co. C: Captain, W. C. Harvy; First Lieutenant, M. J. Miles; Second Lieuten- ant, A. W. Smith; Third Lieutenant, Wm. Miles.


Co. D: Captain, J. G. Frazier; First Lieutenant, S. J. A. Frazier; Second Lieu- tenant, A. B. Hoge; Third Lientenant, Thos. N. L. Cunningham.


Co. E: Captain, W. W. Lackey; First Lieutenant, S. G. Abernathy; Second Lieu- tenant, H. A. Waller; Third Lientenant, J. H. Waller.


Co. F: Captain, J. II. Hannah; First Lieutenant, J. M. Sims; Second Lieuten- ant, J. F. Sharp; Third Lieutenant, Robt. Rhea.


Co. G: Captain, A. S. Gammon; First Lieutenant, J. A. Rhea; Second Lieu- tenant, J. K. P. Gammon; Third Lieutenant, H. D. Hawk.


Co. H: Captain. W. P. H. McDermott; First Lieutenant, J. H. Kimbrough; Second Lieutenant, F. S. Hale; Third Lieutenant. B. F. Hoyl.


Co. I: Captain, J. D. Lively; First Lieutenant, J. E. Wooding; Second Lieu- tenant, W. Il. Lovejoy; Third Lieutenant, Wm. Hall.


Co. K: Captain, C. W. Heiskell; First Lieutenant, J. H. Huffmaster; Second Lieutenant, W. W. Etter; Third Lieutenant, W. B. Miller.


Soon after this the regiment was with others sent to Vicksburg, Mississippi, Gen. Breckenridge being in supreme command. We arrived at Vicksburg June 28, 1862, and on the fourth of July went on what was thought to be a perilous expedition. It was reported that the enemy had landed a force from his gun-boats some four miles below the city (in the swamps), and the Nineteenth Tennessee, the Twentieth Mississippi, and other regiments, were sent to dislodge it. The heat was intense, and the march was, for the last mile, through mud sometimes knee-deep, and so difficult to march through that some of the men were Jest in the swamp. The Nineteenth Regiment was given the honorable position of marching in front. When we reached the bank of the Mississippi River a gun- boat not over one hundred yards below us let loose on us. Our only safety was to march down toward the gun-boat, and so near it that the guns could not be de- pressed enough to strike us. This was done, and for an hour we lay within twenty


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MILITARY ANNALS OF TENNESSEE.


· yards of a Federal gun-boat, which constantly threw over us numerous shells, but no one was hurt. After this, chills and fever reduced our number to such an ex- tent that at the battle of Baton Rouge, in which the regiment was engaged, there were scarcely one hundred men able to bear arms. Of this small number some were chilling while the fight was going on. Lieut. W. W. Etter, than whom a braver man never lived, actually fought through this battle, and did his duty nobly though chilling all the while. Lieut. Nail, of Co. A, now living in Chat- tanooga, was desperately wounded in this fight. The killed and wounded I can- not recall. Soon after this battle, in token of its uniform gallantry, Gen. Breck- enridge ordered that Fishing Creek, Shiloh, Vicksburg, and Baton Rouge be inscribed upon its battle-flag, which by this time was riddled with bullets.


Leaving Mississippi, shattered and broken by disease and service, the regiment did not accompany Bragg into Kentucky, but reached Loudon, Tennessee, as the army was returning from the Kentucky campaign, remained on guard-duty a: that point a short time and rejoined the army at Murfreesboro in time to partici- pate in the battle fought there, where it lost very heavily in killed and woundel. Among the killed were Maj. Jarnagin, a gallant and noble spirit, and Lieut. Sterling Abernathy, of Co. E. Lient. W. B. Miller, of Co. K, was severely wounded. After this battle the regiment spent the winter eight miles in front of the army on the Shelbyville pike, on picket duty. Capt. C. W. Heiskell was promoted to the Majority of the regiment, and J. C. Hodges was made Captain of Co. K.


In the fall of 1863 Gen. Bragg retired to Chattanooga, Tenn., and on the 19th of Sept., 1863, the bloody battle of Chickamauga was fought. In this battle the Nineteenth lost very heavily. Capt. Lackey, of Co. E, and many other officers and men were killed and wounded. Maj. C. W. Heiskell received a severe wound in the foot, by which he was disabled twelve months. Capt. S. J. A. Frazier, of Co. D, was wounded, and imprisoned until the close of the war. The following extract from Gen. Strahl's report shows how his brigade, and the Nineteenth Regiment especially, suffered: "Most of the field officers on my right were dis- mounted by having their horses shot from under them, and Mai. C. W. Heiskell. of the Nineteenth Tennessee Regiment, a very gallant officer, was severely wounded in the foot. During this short encounter [of the morning of the 19th of September] with the enemy, the Nineteenth Regiment was on my right, and was therefore much more exposed, and consequently met with heavier loss."


After this the regiment was in the battle of Missionary Ridge, where was killed Lieut .- col. B. F. Moore, a soldier of matchless bravery and chivalrie bearing on every field. He fell in sight of his father's house, and his family could almost have heard his dying-groans but for the awful storm of musketry in which he gave up his great spirit. On the retreat from Missionary Ridge the Nine- teenth formed part of the rear-guard, and repelled the enemy more than once during that memorable night. Gen. Maney, who with his and Strahl's brigades was covering the retreat, was severely wounded in one of these encounters.


And now commenced that great retreat of Gen. Jo. Johnston from Dalton to Atlanta. In the almost constant fighting of the Dalton-Atlanta campaign the Nineteenth was conspicuously present. To give a list of engagements during this period would be a tedious task. It is but just to the memories of the heroic men who fell, as well as to the few who survived, to say that from the beginning to the end of this campaign the Nineteenth was never once driven from any position to which


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it was assigned. It is worthy of remembrance that in the defense of "Dead Angle" -- or Hickory Ridge-on the Kennesaw Mountain line, Col. F. M. Walker, of the Nineteenth, commanded Maney's brigade, and by his skill and valor forced a long-delayed recognition of his right to rank as General of brigade.


The deeds of daring and indomitable plock illustrated on that campaign can never be told. Meeting the enemy July 20, in the desperate encounter on Peach- tree Creek-Hood's first effort after taking command -- and again on the ever- memorable 22d of July, the Nineteenth found itself, after its daring and success- ful charges of that day, so exposed in the advanced position won, that but for the friendly cover of night-fall it must have been captured, or annihilated by the deadly fire from the enemy's breastworks by which it was completely surrounded. Here in the forefront of the battle, of necessity in the midst of his men afoot, while his good sword swept in glittering circles over his head, and his voice rang out in words of encouragement and command above the peal of rifles almost muzzle to muzzle, the beloved and chivalrous Walker, pierced by a fatal ball, sunk upon one knee with his head resting upon the other as if in prayer. Thus died a Christian gentleman, of whom it were impossible to speak too highly. His men loved him as a brother, and he was worthy of all the love they gave. Many eyes unused to weeping will be wet as these lines recall the man .* His commission as Brigadier-general reached the army the day after he fell. This left Maj. C. W. Heiskell Colonel of the regiment.


At or just before a short engagement near Atlanta, in which Hardee's corps was hotly engaged, an incident occurred which I shall never forget. The pickets were placed, and the Confederates, who had no picks or shovels, seeing the Fed- erals digging their pits from which to fire, hailed them and asked for their pieks and shovels to dig their picket-holes. And the Confederates went to the Federal pickets, borrowed their picks and shovels, dug their picket-holes, returned the picks and shovels, and then returned and took their positions, when both began their work of death.


Assisting in holding the enemy in check at Jonesboro and Lovejoy until At- lanta was evacuated, the regiment followed Hood on his ill-fated Tennessee cam- paign in the winter of 1864. In the battle of Franklin none occupied a more exposed position than the Nineteenth, and none more fully accomplished all that could be asked of flesh and blood. Its right rested on the west side of the Co- lumbia turnpike. Charging across the plain, the enemy were driven from their breastworks. Several men of the regiment clambered over them in the face of the enemy concentrated behind the buildings a few yards distant. Finding them- selves between two fires, they sought such protection as was afforded. Sergeant Lum. Waller, of Co. E, than whom no truer man lives, was wounded at the end of Carter's brick smoke-house by the fire of our own men-the enemy firing from the opposite end-and lay there all night. This building still stands, bearing the marks of over one hundred bullets. Here fell our beloved brigade command- er, Gen. Strahl. He died upon the enemy's works about midway of the Nine- teenth Regiment. During the engagement he took gun after gun from the men below and fired at the enemy. A private of Co. A, Zack Smith by name, whom Gen. Strahl had punished for some act of insubordination, seeing the General on


* When asked to take command of Maney's brigade, he consented upon condition that his regiment be transferred with him.


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MILITARY ANNALS OF TENNESSEE.


the works and firing at the Federals, scrambled up to his side, and as the General fired he fired. The General, struck with admiration, patted Zack on the shoul- der and said: "Go it, Zack; I will never forget you for this." W. W. Etter, of Co. K, leaped over the breastworks, and as he did so the Federals took off their hats in admiration of the gallant deed. He remained there uncaptured until the enemy fled, when he rejoined his command unhurt. He now lives in Shelby county. Sergt .- maj. Arthur Fulkerson, of Co. K, a beardless boy, fell, pierced with sixteen bullets. William Hipshire and William Phipps, of the same com- pany, who had been in every fight in which the regiment had engaged, and in all had acted with conspicuous gallantry, were for the first time wounded here.


After the fight at Nashville, the few men who escaped capture and death were a part of the infantry force under Gen. Walthall, of Mississippi, that covered the retreat of Hood's army from Tennessee. As the regiment moved out of Colum- bia on the morning of the 22d of December, 1864, Gen. Hood rode up to the head of the brigade and asked who was commanding. Lieut .- col. L. W. Finley replied, "Col. Heiskell." He then said: "I wish to leave some infantry with Gen. Forrest to help him until I get across the Tennessee. River, and I am sure I can rely on you Tennesseans to see the work well done." Pausing a moment, lie remarked: "The cards were fairly dealt at Nashville, boys, but they beat the game." Jim Stevenson ("Old Tige"), of Co. E, promptly responded: "Yes, General, the cards were fairly dealt, but they were mighty badly shuffled." *


On this retreat the Nineteenth was in two engagements-one near Pulaski, where Forrest captured two cannon with horses and caissons and brought them off; and the other engagement after crossing Sugar Creek. There it lost one man killed. The fight near Pulaski occurred on Christmas-day, 1864. The regiment was barefooted and ragged, and that day had marched twenty-four miles. As it neared camp, about eleven o'clock at night, marching in the darkness and driz- zling rain and sleet, Col. Heiskell, whom some of his men had often asked to have the regiment mounted, said to them, " Well, boys, how do you like the cav- alry?" One said, " O this is not regular cavalry." Another replied, "I think it has been pretty regular for the last forty-eight hours."


The Federal cavalry gave us no more trouble after Sugar Creek. We crossed the Tennessee, marched through North Alabama and Mississippi, went from Me- ridian, Miss., to Selma, Ala., thence to Montgomery, and on to the last battle of the war, or rather its last engagement-the battle of Bentonville, N. C. As it passed by Gen. Johnston's tent, who had resumed command, a shout arose in honor of this beloved chief, and then on to the fight. The Nineteenth missed only one pitched battle (Perryville) in which the Army of the Cumberland and the Army of Tennessee engaged. It surrendered at High Point, N. C., in April, 1865, with sixty-four men in line, after just four years service. It illustrated its courage, I had almost said, on a thousand battle-fields, and never faltered amid the burning, pestilential sands of Louisiana or the winter's snow of Kentucky; amid hurtling shot and bursting shell it moved onward and forward. The bones of its dead lie bleaching on every battle-field from Fishing Creek to Benton- ville, and its few survivors remember with tearful pride their fallen comrades, and will forever cherish its valor and its glory.


*Stevenson is yet living near Knoxville-poor fellowi totally biind.


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REGIMENTAL HISTORIES AND MEMORIAL ROLLS.


The following shows the changes in officers, and as many of the killed as are remembered, and where killed, not elsewhere mentioned:


Capt. J. G. Deaderick, son of the present Chief-justice of Tennessee, a gallant and meritorious officer, was promoted to the Majority of the regiment November 25, 1863, and to the Lieutenant-colonelcy after the death of Col. Walker, July 22, 1533.


Lieut. N. P. Nail, of Co. A, being disabled from wounds, resigned July 4, 1563, and R. P. James (now living in Memphis), who never shirked his duty on the field or in camp, was elected Lieutenant July 28, 1863.


Upon the promotion of Capt. Deaderick, Lieut. T. M. Brabson, a quiet but gal- lant soldier, was made Captain of Co. B, November 25, 1863.


Lieut. Hammer, of Co. B, having resigned, R. J. Tipton was promoted to his place July 10, 1863. He was killed August 1, 1863. He died with his face to the foe. A. C. Smith was promoted May 4, 1863, and W. N. Aiken elected Jan- uary 4, 1864, to Lieutenancies in the same company.


Capt. Harvy, of Co. C, resigned, and A. W. Smith, brother of Chancellor Smith, East Tennessee, a good soldier, was made Captain of this company March 4, 1803. W. D. Gammon, a meritorious soldier, and now a successful lawyer at Morris- town, East Tennessee, was elected Lieutenant of Co. C July 28, 1863.


Capt. J. G. Frazier was killed December 31, 1863, at Murfreesboro, and Lieut. S. J. A. Frazier was promoted to the Captaincy of Co. D January 1, 1863. He was faithful and brave, and now occupies a prominent place at the bar. He lives at Chattanooga, Hamilton county.


R. W. Colville, a mere boy, but worthy of the honor, was promoted to a Lied- tenancy in Co. D, August 22, 1863, upon the resignation of Lieut. Cunningham, of that company.


Capt. W. W. Lackey was killed September 19, 1863; and no braver man fell in the fierce battle of Chickamauga. H. A. Waller was promoted to succeed him as Captain of Co. E, on the same date.


Lieut. S. G. Abernathy was killed December 31, 1863, at Murfreesboro. J. L. Waller succeeded him, and Oscar Ingledow was elected to succeed him July 2S, 1863.


Lieut. R. G. Rhea was killed June 17, 1863, and J. F. Tatham was elected July 23, 1863, to succeed him as Lieutenant in Co. F.


Capt. A. L. Gammon resigned on account of ill health, and Lient. R. L. Blair succeeded him as Captain of Co. G. He did his duty faithfully and well. He was very severely wounded at Chickamauga; is now practicing law in Virginia.


J. H. Rhea was elected Lieutenant of Co. G July 28, 1863. He was wounded at Chickamauga, from the effects of which he died a few years later.


C. C. Spears, now a prominent citizen of Hawkins county, was elected Lieuten- ant of Co. K in May, 1863. He served through the war, and was always at his post.


It is impossible to give a list of the killed and wounded among the privates. In the battle of Murfreesboro one company (K) lost thirty-six in killed and wound- ed, and the other companies in proportion. In the battles of Shiloh and Chicka- mauga the losses were about in the same proportion, and the names of this legion of dead heroes have faded from memory. I recollect Marshall, Looney, Woolfin- barger, Columbus Etter, E. Webster, Fudge, Edgar Potts, Welch -- all gallant men.


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MILITARY ANNALS OF TENNESSEE.


Official. ] FIELD AND STAFF, NINETEENTH TENNESSEE INFANTRY.


Colonels, David H. Cummings and F. M. Walker; Lieutenant-colonels, F. M. Walker and. B. F. Moore; Majors, A. A. Fulkerson and R. A. Jarnagin ; Surgeon, J. E. Dulaney; Assistant Surgeons, Samuel Carson and E. A. Pyatt; Chaplains, D. Sulhins and R. W. Norton; Assist- ant Commissary Subsistence, R. A. Jarnagin and John II. Kennedy; Assistant Quartermaster, A. D. Taylor; Adjutants, V. Q. Johnson and William Bowles.


Walker, Col. F. M., k. in battle, July 22, 1864. Moore, Lieut .- col. B. F., k. in battle, Nov. 25, 1863. Jarnagin, Major R. A., k. in the battle of Murfreesboro. Carson, Assistant Surgeon Samuel, d. Nov., 1861.


COMPANY A. Captain, John D. Powell.


Godby, G. P., k. in the battle of Shiloh. Dunlap, William, k. at Fishing Creek, Jan. 19,


Rowe, Lewis, k. accidentally.


Burkhart, William, k. in the battle of Murfrees- boro. Bruder, J. M., d. in prison. Childress, D. M .. k. in the battle of Murfrees- boro. Cuon, C., k. at Murfreesboro.


Foust, A. T., d. at Vicksburg, Miss.


Hefdin, J. M., d. MoGee, J. M., k. at Murfreesboro. McKenny, William, d. at Corinth. Powers, James, k. Riddle, A. M. C., d. Wideman, John P., d. at Chattanooga. Watts, Samuel, d. at Knoxville.


COMPANY B.


Captain, James G. Deaderick.


Willet, Zadock T., k. at the battle of Shiloh. 1 Depew, Cyrus, d. June 27, 1862.


Conley, Joseph D., k. at Fishing Creek, Jan. 19, 1862.


Deakins, Chesley, d. at Chattanooga. Epperson, John N., d. at Atlanta.


Fulkerson, George W., d. 1, 1862.


Deaderick, Joseph W., d. Aug. 6, 1861.


Bains, John McD., k. at Shiloh.


Aiken, S. Brown, k. at Murfreesboro.


Foster, Samuel, k. at Murfreesboro.


Hodges, John J., d. at Atlanta.


Sherman, John, k. accidentally.


Humphreys, Oliver M., d. March 28, 1863.


Bagley, William S., d. July 2, 1861.


Burson, Thomas D., d. July 24, 1861.


Cornwell, Martin E., d. April 20, 1863.


Jordan, John, d. Dec. 1861.




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