> .3 LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ii I 013 704 265 4 \ *****>*«<**< II ARMY REGISTER OHIO VOLTJNTEEES \ [eNjNFI] SERVICE OF THENJNllED STATES; COMPRISING THB OiEItiL STAFF OF STATE ; STAFF OF THE VARIOUS DEPARTMENTS ; LIST OF BRIGA- DIERS ; ROLL OF FIELD, STAFF AND COMMISSIONED OFFICERS, OF EACH REGIMENT, ARRANGED IN THE NUMERICAL ORDER OF THE REGIMENT ; PRESENT PLACE OF SERVICE ; RANK OF EACH OFFICER, DATE OF COMMISSION ; AND A COMPLETE LIST OF CASUALTIES. • COMPILED FROM OFFICIAL RECORDS IN THE AWUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE, COLUMBUS, OHIO. FOR APRIL, 1862. BY CHARLES A. POLAND COLUMBUS, OHIO: PUBLISHED BY THE OHIO STATE JOURNAL PRINTING CO. 1862. CONTENTS. Page. INDORSEMENT 2 PREFACE 3 HISTORIC REVIEW OP THE REBELLION 5 OHIO STATE OFFICERS IN ACTUAL SERVICE 20 LIST OF BRIGADIERS -~ 20 INFANTRY REGIMENTS 21 CAVALRY REGIMENTS , 69 ARTILLERY ; 63 CASUALTIES 67 ARMY REGISTER OHIO VOLTWTE EBS SERVICE OF THE UNITED STATES COMPRISING THE GENERAL STAFF OF STATE J STAFF OF THE VARIOUS DEPARTMENTS; LIST OF BRIGA- DIERS; ROLL OF FIELD, STAFF AND COMMISSIONED OFFICERS, OF EACH REGIMENT, ARRANGED IN THE NUMERICAL ORDER OF THE REGIMENT ; PRESENT PLACE OF SERVICE ; RANK OF EACH OFFICER, DATE OF COMMISSION ; AND A COMPLETE LIST OF CASUALTIKS. COMPILED FROM OFFICIAL RECORDS IN THE ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFFICE, COLUMEDS, OHIO, FOB APRIL, 18C2. BY CHARLES A. POLAND. 1L COLUMBUS, OHIO: PUBLISHED BY THE OHIO STATE JOURNAL PRINTING CO. 1862. £"5" ^6" b INDORSEMENT. The Adjutant General of Ohio has indorsed the Army Register of Ohio Volun- teers in the Service of the United States, by the following request to the General Assembly for the purchase of fifteen hundred copies for the use of the State Mili- tary Departments : Adjutntant General's Office, Columbus, April 24, 1862. To the General Assembly, d-c : I have the honor respectfully to request that you make an appropriation for the purchase of one thousand copies of the " Army Register of Ohio Volunteers," for the use of this Department, and five hundred copies of the same, for the use of the Quartermaster General. The book has been accurately compiled from the records of this office, and is now in press, for publication, by Messrs. Hurtt, Allen & Co. It contains a complete list of Ohio Volunteers in the service of the United States, with a list of all casualties among the officers of which official notice has been received at this Department. The necessities of the service require the publication of such a Register ; and if it had not been undertaken by the parties named, I should have been compelled to to take the labor of it upon myself. I have the honor to be your obedient servant, C P. BUCKINGHAM, Adjutant General. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1862, by CHARLES A. POLAND, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern Distriot of Ohio. PREFACE. The compilation of this Register has required much care and record research ; and it is now as complete as a Register of Volunteers can possibly be made. It has been prepared with the utmost care, from the official records in the office of the Adjutant-General of Ohio, and its completeness and accuracy are fully and officially indorsed by the Adjutant-General, in his request to the General Assembly (which will be found on the opposite page) for the purchase of copies for the State Mili- tary Departments. In the spelling of the names in the Register some few inaccu- racies will undoubtedly be found— a matter altogether unavoidable where they have passed through so many hands. In the numbering of the regiments several numbers are blank and to which there are no regiments. This has occurred through the consolidation of parts of regi- ments. The Twenty-second, commenced at Chillicothe, under Colonel Gilmore. was consolidated with the Sixty-third, forming the Sixty-third ; the Forty-fifth and Sixty-seventh were consolidated, forming the Sixty-seventh; the Seventy- ninth and Seventy-fifth were consolidated, and formed the Seventy-fifth ; the Seventh Regiment of Cavalry, commenced at Hillsboro', under Colonel Collins, was consolidated with the Sixth, and forms the Sixth Regiment, the first bat- talion of which was ordered to St. Louis, in March, and the second and third to Wheeling Island, to join General Fremonfs Department. The only regiment of Infantry not included in this Register, is the Sixty-first, which has just been formed by the consolidation of the Fiftieth, Fifty-second and Sixty-first regiments — the officers of this new regiment not yet having been commissioned. Great credit is due to the officers of the three last named fragmental regiments, for their untiring efforts to complete their organizations. The Fiftieth was com- menced under Colonel Ryan, at Hamilton, and was partially broken up by transfers, Col. Ryan died in October, and the organization of the regiment was recommenced under Colonel J. S. McGroarty, and numbered about six hundred at the time of consolidation. The Fifty-second was commenced at Camp Dennison, under Colonel Jones, and continued under Colonel Sargeant. In February the regiment num- bered about seven hundred men, who were distributed, by order of the Secretary of War; and, at the time of consolidation, it again numbered five hundred men. The Sixty-first was commenced at Lancaster, under Colonel Schleich, (a Brigadier- General in the three months' service,) in February, and had reached the number of five hundred and fifty men, when they, in like manner, were distributed to fill in- complete regiments. The regiment formed by the consolidation of theso three fragments, will be the Sixty first, under command of Colonel Schleich. In this connection we would express our thanks to Messrs. E. P. Christie and T. B. Mosher, for the aid rendered us in the compilation of the work ; their knowledge of the business of the Adjutant-General's Department, from their long connection with it, has been invaluable to us in making the work complete- Theso gentlemen are our General Agents for the sale of this book, in the State of Ohio- Should the War for the Union be unfortunately prolonged, we shall issue Quarterly Editions of the Army Register, corrected and revised up to tho date of issue. ATTENTION, SOLDIERS! T. W. TALLMADGE & CO.'S OHIO -A-O-ESIDJOY, FOR PROCURING Bounty Money, Back Pay, and Pensions for Soldiers, their Wid- ows and Heirs. OUK OmCJES Are at COLUMBUS, OHIO, and WASHINGTON CITY, D. C. E^P See Our Advertisement on the Cover of this Boole — (Outside.) ALSO COLLECT ALL MILITARY CLAIMS. Many persons hold valid claims against the Government of the United States, or State of Ohio. Some have claims for expenses in recruiting, others for subsistence, others for damages, etc. COMMISSIONERS "Will undoubtedly be appointed to adjust and allow such claims. By sending them to us, it will insure their prompt presentation and collec- tion. READ THE FOLLOWING: Columbus, Ohio, March 24th, 1862. Capt. T. W. Talliiadge has been in the service of the United States, and of the State of Ohio, almost constantly since the commencement of the present war, having served upon the staff of Gen. Rosecrans and acted as Assistant Quartermaster of Ohio. He now proposes to retire from the ser- vice and engage in another business, in which he hopes to advance the in- terests of the soldiers. In every capacity in which Capt. Tallmadgb has acted for the Government, he has proved to be a man of good business hab- its, and his honesty and integrity of purpose have been evident in all his transactions with the Government. We cordially recommend him as a man entirely worthy of confidence, and one who will honestly carry out what- ever he proposes to do. Having been a soldier himself, he is peculiarly adapted to the business in which he is now engaged, and to which he pro- poses to devote his time and energies. W. S. ROSECRANS, Brig. Gen., U, S. A. WM. DENNISON. C. P. BUCKINGHAM, Adj. Gen. of Ohio. C. DELANO, Com. Gen. of Ohio; GEO. B. WRIGHT, Q. M. Gen. of Ohio. A BRIEF HISTORIC REVIEW OF THE KEBELLION AND OF THE LEADING EVENTS OF THE WAH. During the year that is pasged our beloved country has been the theatre of one of the most formidable rebeilions of -which human history has ever made mfintlmi. And, for the manner in which that rebellion has been met by the spontaneous uprising of tbe loyal people, so prompt and firm, so sublimely heroic, the history of earth affords no parallel. When the Traitors struck their dastard blow at the Nation's heart, a Million of Freemen sprung forth to avenge the Country's wrong and vindicate the Nation's right. From that moment to this, the whole wide continent has been resounding with the clang of arms, and rocking beneath the martial tread of the mightiest armies that Earth's bosom ever bore. Events have been thrust upon the record of that single twelvemonth, so thronged and burdened with moment- ousness, as seemed sufficient to make even centuries bend. Since the revo- lution that gave independence to our country, nothing has occurred to mark the historic page with events so sublime, so patriotic and heroic. It is the second war for American Freedom. It is a war of self-preservation, — a war for the salvation of our Constitution and our Nationality. It is a contest forced upon us by red-handed treason ; and is to be waged to its triumphant issue for the conservation of the highest interests and hopes of Humanity This great rebellion, though suddenly made manifest, was, nevertheless, long contemplated and secrectly concocted. Its ramifications run back for years. It had been avowed, in South Carolina, long before acted upon. As early as 1856, Preston Brooks, the same who perpetrated the infamous and 6 HISTORIC REVIEW cowardly assault upon Mr. Sumner in the United States Senate, and then a member of the House of Kepresentatives from South Carolina, in a speech at Charleston, said: "I tell you, fellow-citizens, from the bottom of my " heart, that the only mode which I think available for meeting the issue is "just to tear the Constitution of the United States, trample it under foot, and "form a Southern Confederacy, every State of which shall be a slaveholding «' State !" On the 6th day of November, 1860, the election for President resulted in the choice of Abraham Lincoln. On the very next day, the 7th of Novem- ber, the telegraph announced that South Carolina, North Carolina, Alabama and Georgia were even then ready to secede ; and cheers were raised for the Southern Confederacy. And on that same day the Palmetto flag was first raised at Charleston. On the 10th of November, South Carolina voted to raise and equip 10,000 soldiers : and this was but three days after the Presi- dential election. At this time the military force of the Government in the insurgent States were, at Fortress Monroe, eight companies of artillery ; .at Fayetteville Arsenal, North Carolina, one company of artillery ; at Fort Moultrie, Charleston harbor, two companies of artillery, (Anderson's) ; at Augusta, Georgia, one company of artillery; Key West, Florida, one com- pany of artillery ; at Barrancas Barracks, (Fort Pickens) Pensacola, Florida) one company of artillery ; total, eight hundred men, •with about one hundred and twenty marines, at Norfolk and Pensacola. Thus it is evident that the Government was so totally unprepared, that the whole force with which to hold all the South in check was less than a single regiment of men ! But, behold, what has she now ! An army almost innumerable, and altogether irresistible. On the 20th of December South Carolina passed her ordinance of seces- sion. On the same day Hon. Andrew Johnson made his great speech in the Senate, in which he urged upon the President, (Mr. Buchanan!) to en- force the laws at all hazards; and he, first, pronounced Secession to be "treason and nothing but treason." During all this month, and even long before, Floyd, then in the War Department, was stealing guns, ammunition, Indian Bonds, and whatever else he could lay hands upon: the guns, &c, he sent to the South, the bonds he put in his pocket, to the amount of $870,000. Close upon the heels of this monstrous theft came the still greater villainy on the part of Floyd of ordering, as Secretary of War, the removal of one hundred and twenty-four heavy pieces of artillery from the United States Arsenal, at Pitttsburgh, to the South: Seventy-eight of these guns were ordered to Galveston, Texas, and forty-six to Ship Island, (which our troops now hold,) near New Orleans. This villainous movement excited the people; and the sturdy Pennsylvanians resolved in mass that these guns should not leave Pittsburgh without a fight. And the result was that the guns did not OF THE REBELLION. 7 go! The importance of these guns may be estimated from the fact that forty-four of them were ten-inch Columbiads, sixty-nine of them eight-inch Columbiads, and the remaining eleven were 32-pounders ; and their total weight of metal was eight hundred and forty-four thousand pounds ! During the night of the 20th of December, Major Anderson adroitly re- moved his command of seventy men from Fort Moultrie to Fort Sumter, in Charleston harbor. Upon this being discovered, intense excitement pre- vailed at Charleston. The militia was ordered out, and everything wore the appearance of most passionate and frantic rage. It is a fact worthy of note that when the secession of South Carolina was announced in Congress by Mr. Garnett, of Virginia, the announcement scarcely attracted attention. The discussion on the Pacific Railway Bill was not even disturbed by it. And, throughout all the loyal States, the Freemen of the North remained calm, but firm and determined. The rage and clamor of South Carolina had no terrors for men who were not of such a nature as to be alarmed by bombast and fustian. This quiet calmness led the gasconading secessionists to suppose that the North were cowards and 'would not fight.' It is pre- sumed that they have come to a conclusion somewhat different, since that! Upon the secession of South Carolina, she appointed " Commissioners'' to proceed to Washington to negotiate with the "Government of the United States," about division of the public property, forts, territories, &c, and to ascertain how much South Carolina should draw out as her portion of ' the concern.' This, with the announcement that Mr. Buchanan had authorized Major Anderson to surrender on demand from the authorities of South Caro- lina, exasperated the public mind to an intense degree. Still, perfect quiet was observed in the North. Upon the opening of the Ne"w Year, 1861, the belief became universal throughout the East that the Secessionists intended to seize Washington City by force of arms, and prevent the inauguration of Mr. Lincoln ; and the public were informed by well informed persons that the Federal City was in danger. Gen. Scott took immediate steps to defend the city as well as the means at command would allow. But it has since been made known, that, had an attack been made, the Capital of the Nation must have fallen into the hands of the rebels. 1801. The New Ybab was ushered in mid anxiety and gloom. The peo- ple beheld, with indignant amazement, the weak and purposeless course of Mr. Buchanan. They saw him conferring with rebel ' Commissioners,' and withholding aid from the suffering and starving garrison at Fort Sumter. They had read with bitter shame and burning anger his puerile Message, in which he gently condemned secession, and at the same time strongly op- posed "coercion" as unconstitutional. They broke through his cobweb argu- ments about technicalities ; and upon the solid basis of their own common sense, demanded of the Executive self-preseevation for the Republic, which they knew could be saved only by the due enforcement of its laws. 8 HISTORIC REVIEW Still Mr. Buchanan halted and hesitated. His utter weakness and ineffi- ciency alarmed the country. Some called his conduct timidity ; others pro- nounced it treason ! His impeachment was freely discussed, while in many quarters more stringent measures were proposed; and even a Dictatorship was frequently suggested. Probably nothing prevented articles of impeach- ment against him, except tho consideration that thereby the Vice President, the now infamous traitor, John C. Breckinridge, would have become the acting Chief Executive, for the remaining two months of Buchanan's term. And the "do nothing" policy of Buchanan, bad as it was at that critical period, was deemed safer than the active secession policy that it was even then supposed that Breckinridge would inaugurate. Subsequent events have shown the wisdom of this course. The people now began to arouse. The enrollment of volunteers was com- menced, to be tendered to the Government for common defence. On the 5th of January, an immense meeting of the Workingmen of Cin- cinnati was held; at which, resolutions of the most positive and patriotic character, demanding the preservation of the Union and the enforcement of its laws at all hazards and by any means, were adopted by enthusiastic acclamation. A similar meeting was also held on the same day in Phila- delphia, at which similar sentiments were unequivocally expressed. At this time the steamer, Star of the West, was fitted out at New York to carry supplies to our garrison at Fort Sumter, and sailed on the 5th of January to Charleston. On the 9th of January she reached Charleston har- bor, and was fired upon from Fort Moultrie and a battery on Morris Island, which the Secessionists had occupied after Major Anderson's masterly movement of his command into Fort Sumter. By orders from the War De- partment Major Anderson Avas commanded not to open fire from Sumter unless he was himself first attacked ! He was, therefore, compelled to stand quietly by and see the Flag of his Country, floating upon the Star of the West, fired upon by rebels in arms against the Government. The Star of the West, being an unarmed vessel, of course, had to retire from the contest, and re- turned to New York with her mission unfulfilled. Mr. Holt, of Kentucky, was now called into the War Department, in place of Floyd ; and new energy and confidence began to be felt at once. At this time the plot to seize Washington City became well known, and was even openly advised by despatches from Savannah and Charleston, as an efficient mode of preventing the inauguration of the President elect. On the same day that the Star of the West was fired into, January 9th, Mississippi passed the ordinance of secession by a vote of sixty-two, to seven ; and the day following, Alabama passed a like ordinance by a vote of sixty- one, to thirty. On the 13th of January the Navy Yard at Pensacola was seized; but Lieut. Slemmer, stationed at Fort Pickens, prepared for action and bade them defiance. This prompt and patriotic act of Lieut. Slemmer saved Fort Pickens to the Government. On the 18th of January the Georgia State Convention, in secret session, declared for secession by a vote of one hundred and sixty-five, to one hun- OF THE REBELLION. » dred and thirty — Secession having only thirty-five majority in two hundred and ninety-five votes. On the 19th the ordinance was passed by a vote of two hundred and eight, to eighty-nine. On the 25th of January, Louisiana passed her ordinance of secession by a vote of one hundred and thirteen, to seventeen. On the 30th of January the Revenue Cutters Cass and McClelland, were betrayed by their commanders into the hands of the rebels, although Secretary Dix had ordered his agent to shoot down the first man who should attempt to lower the American flag. The traitors acted too soon. February 1. Texas passed her secession ordinance by a vote of one hun- dred and six, to seven. On the 9th of February the Seceding States formed their Provisional Constitution, at Montgomery, Alabama; and Davis and Stevens were made President and Vice President of the " Confederate States of North America." On the 11th of February, Mr. Lincoln, the President elect, set out from Springfield, Illinois, for Washington, preparatory to inauguration. His course was one continued ovation. In Cincinnati, Columbus, Cleveland, &c, immense throngs greeted him. At New York full two hundred thousand peo- ple turned out to give him welcome : so, too, at Philadelphia, where he made a memorable speech to the citizens in Independence Hall. From Philadel- phia he went, by invitation of the Legislature of Pennsylvania, to Harris- burgh. At this time, both Gen. Scott and Mr. Seward had received informa- tion at Washington, from sources that could not be discredited, of a plot for the assassination of Mr. Lincoln before he should reach Washington. This information had reached them severally, and without either knowing that the other was possessed of the knowledge of the plot. Both, therefore, took measures to apprise Mr. Lincoln of the danger. Mr. Seward sent a special messenger to Philadelphia, (his own son,) who, finding that Mr. Lincoln had gone to Harrisburgh, pressed on for the purpose of reaching him before he should leave. He found Mr. Lincoln there and made known his errand, with such proofs that left no doubt of the existence of the infernal plot. With- out making the matter known, even to his family, the President took meas- ures for an immediate departure for Washington. Baltimore was desig- nated as the point where the plot was to be consummated; and it was ex- pected that he would reach that city the next day. But instead of remain- ing over night at Harrisburgh, a special train left that evening with him on board. He reached the connection just in time, and passed through Balti- more unknown, and surprised everybody by appearing safely in Washington at 4 o'clock next morning. The proofs on this subject have accumulated since that time to such a degree that there remains no longer a doubt but that secession villains had pledged to take the life of the President for the sake of Southern gold. March. On the 18th of February, Gen. Twiggs had surrendered, or rather betrayed, the United States army, and stores to a large amount, into the rebel hands in Texas, of which Department he had command; and on the first of 10 HISTORIC REVIEW March the War Department ordered that " David E. Twiggs be dismissed from the Army for treachery to the flag of his country." On the Fourth of March, 1861, Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated as the sixteenth President of the United States ; and the imbecile rule of James Buchanan expired. There were apprehensions of some outbreak on the part of the secret band of assassins who had previously sought his life at Baltimore. But General Scott had taten such wise precautions that such purpose was foiled. Presi- dent Lincoln was introduced to the immense throng at the Eastern Portico of the Capitol, by Senator Baker, of Oregon, who afterwards fell so glo- riously fighting at the ' slaughter pen' of Ball's Bluff. On the same day Texas seceded. On the 9th of March the rebel congress passed an act for the establishment and organization of their army. The actual vote of the State of Louisiana on Secession was given on the 28th, showing, for secession, 20,448; against, 17,296 — only 3,152 majority in a total vote of 37,744, while at the Presidential election, in November, her total vote was 50,501. April. This was a month prolific of momentous events. All eyes were turned upon Major Anderson's little band at Fort Sumter. There was great activity in all the Navy Yards and Armories. The public saw that serious movements were on foot, and the anxiety was intense. On the 7th the steam transport, Atlantic, sailed from New York, laden with troops and supplies. Among the troops was Captain Barry's celebrated company of Flying Artil- lery. On the 8th, notice was given to the Charleston authorities that sup- plies would be sent to Major Anderson by an unarmed vessel; and if refused) that supplies would be sent by force. Four thousand rebel troops were sum- moned by Beauregard to Charleston. During that night United States ves- sels were reported off the harbor; signal lights were displayed at Fort Sum- ter, and the 'long roll' was heard all night in Charleston. On the 9th, Governor Curtin, of Pennsylvania, urged upon their Legislature prompt action to supply men and arms. On the 10th, the Charleston papers proclaimed that " war was begun," and that there were seven thousand troops in their fortifications. Ben. McCulloch, the notorious Texan ranger, and who has since got his quie- tus in the battle at Pea Ridge, Arkansas, was known to be in Virginia, and was contemplating a dash upon Washington with a view to seize the Federal Capital, and orders were issued to collect militia at the Washington armories. On the 11th several Pennsylvania volunteer companies tendered their aid to the Government. The Confederate Commissioners took their final leave of Washington City, in a scolding and insulting letter to the President. On the 12th of April Beauregard notified Major Anderson, at 3:30 in the morning, that fire would be opened upon him in one hour. And at half past four o'clock on the morning of the 12th, the tire of the rebel guns was opened upon the National Flag at Fort Sumter ! The Great Drama of the Rebel- OF THE REBELLION. 11 lion was then opened ! Seven thousand men, with one hundred and forty pieces of artillery, attacked Fort Sumter, held by a band of but seventy United States soldiers ! At 7 o'clock, after Major Anderson and his men had break- fasted, the guns of Sumter opened upon the rebels. Civil War was thus in- augurated. The bombardment continued all day, and during the night. On the morning of the 13th, the officers' quarters within the fort took fire from a shell, and the heat from the fire, added to the heat of the day, rendered the atmosphere almost insufferable. At noon the whole quarters were in flames, and the danger of its reaching the magazine was great. The smoke became so thick that the men could not see each other. The powder from the magazine had to be rolled into the sea. There was no ammunition but the cart- ridges in the guns. These were fired at intervals, to show that they were not silenced. At one o'clock the flag staff was shot away ; but the Stars and Stripes were then nailed to the cut piece and raised on the ramparts. The officers and men were then compelled to lie flat upon their faces in the case- mates and hold wet cloths to their mouths to escape suffocation. At this time Wigfall came with a flag of truce, and terms were made for the evacuation of the Fort. The men were allowed to remove all their company arms and property, to take with them their flag, under which they had so bravely fought, and be safely removed to any part of the United States that Major Anderson might select. They were brought to New York. Such was the assault upon our National Flag : this the opening scene of the Great Rebellion. This act demonstrated the fact that those who had leaped into rebellion had determined to break up the Government and destroy the Union. Then, one deep, determined, and devoted feeling of loyalty burst forth from the people, which swept over the land like a baptism of flame. All hearts were fired, all minds fixed, with the desperate determination to stand by the Country, to sustain its Constitution, to enforce its laws, and avenge the insult that had been offered to th e National Flag. Never before was such an uprising of a whole people known in all the foregone history of Time. A year has now passed, and all its records show with what steadi- ness of purpose and inflexibility of action that stern determination has been fulfilled. Upon this event becoming known, the Government took active measures for the protection of Washington. The President issued his proclamation, calling out seventy-five thousand men for three month's service to assist in quelling insurrection, at the same time calling a session of Congress on the 4th of July. Money was offered and men tendered from all quarters. On the 19th a rebel flag was raised on Federal Hill, Baltimore, and saluted with cannon, when some workingmen rushed out of the foundries and tore it down, and threw the cannon into the river. On the same day the President announced by Proclamation the blockade of the Southern ports. On the same day a portion of the Sixth Massachusetts and of the Seventh Pennsylvania were 12 HISTORIC REVIEW attacked in the streets of Baltimore by a Secesh mob. After being pursued, hooted, pelted, and bruised with stones and pistol shots, whereby two of the Massachusetts men were killed and eight wounded, the soldiers fired into the mob, of whom seven were killed and many wounded. The mob then, after the departure of the troops, rioted in Baltimore ; seizing arms every- where, and breathing forth slaughter. On the 20th, Gosport Navy Yard, opposite Norfolk, was abandoned, and property to the amount of fifty millions destroyed. Among these were ten vessels of war, including some of the finest of all our navy. Of these the Merrimac was one; which the rebels have since raised, and converted into an iron-clad "monster," that now has become a formidable affair. At this time the Southern papers stated that General Scott had torn up his commission from the United States, and had offered his services to the Con- federates; and cannon and bonfires all through the South gave token of their rejoicing thereat. General Scott, when informed of it, immediately telegraphed to Mr. Crittenden these words: "I have not changed: have NO THOUGHT OF CHANGING: ALWAYS A UNION MAN 1" Within six days from the President's call, Massachusetts had ready five full regiments of infantry, a battalion of rifles, and a splendid corps of flying artillery. The Secessionists made public burial of the United States Flag at Memphis, on the 25th of April. It bids fair to come to a glorious resurrection at the end of a single twelvemonth ! During this month a great change in the public mind was manifested in Maryland. Their Delegates were in session at Annapolis, where General Butler had military command. It was rumored that a Secession ordinance was contemplated. Thereupon General Butler notified them that, if such ordinance were passed, he would arrest them for treason. At the same time the people of Western Maryland sent word to their delegates that, if they passed such an ordinance, they would hang them upon their returning home. This prompt and decided demonstration both by the people and the govern- ment, roused the Unionists, sustained the wavering, and put a quietus on secession in Maryland. Up to the last of April there had been seventy-one thousand troops offered to Gov. Dennison, of Ohio, to fill the thirteen regiments required from that State by the President's call. May. During all the month of May, rebel troops were pouring into Vir- ginia. On the 6th, that State was admitted into the Confederacy. This villainous work was done by her Convention in secret session, under the gag, and at the point of the bayonet in the hands of an insolent and drunken mob. On the same day Arkansas seceded by a vote of sixty-nine, to one. It came now to be known that the rebel leaders had designed to assault the City of Washington between the 18th and 21st of April; when both General Scott and Mr. Lincoln were to be assassinated, and the city OF THE REBELLION. 13 firod at different points. And in the tumult and excitement, the rebel army was to carry the city by assault. This has been since established by a telegram in cypher from Beauregard himself. Their plans were delayed by the delay in securing the Virginia act of secession. That delay was fatal to their scheme. During this month advices were received from Europe showing that the reb- el emissaries had been over all that country endeavoring to procure loans on their Confederate bonds, for purchasing arms and munitions of war; but ■without success. On the 24th of May, the First and Second Ohio Regiments of Ohio Volunteers, numbering one thousand and eight hundred men, reached 'Washington. The First was commanded by Colonel (now General) McCook, and the Second by Colonel Wilson. These troops excited great admiration at Washington, for their good order and superior military drill. On the 27th, Jeff. Davis issued his instructions to privateers under the rebel flag. At the same time the Senate of Kentucky resolved to stand by the Old Union, and refused the offers of joining the confederate rebels. General Mans- field made a forward movement, and took position on the "sacred soil of Virginia," with thirteen thousand troops. In this advance the town of Alexandria was occupied by the Union forces. At this place a secession flag had, for some days, been flying from the top of the Hotel known as the Marshall House, and in full view of the White House at Washington. Col. Ellsworth, of the regiment of Zouaves, went alone upon the roof of the building and cut clown this flag with his knife, and was bringing it away from its position, when he was suddenly met upon the stairway by a man named Jackson, with a double-barrelled gun. He fired one charge full into Colonel Ellsworth's bosom; it went directly through his heart, and he fell instantly dead. One of his Zouaves, named Brownell, had just reached the spot when his colonel fell ; and Jackson turned the other barrel upon him and fired. But Brownell, at that moment, threw up the gun, and instantly fired his own charge full into Jackson's face, hitting him precisely between the eyes. In an instant of time both Colonel Ellsworth and his assailant were dead upon the stairway. The body of Colonel Ellsworth was taken to Washington by his mourning regiment, and was buried from the President's House. He had been a young friend of Mr. Lincoln, who shed fears of sorrow over the Young Hero's fall by assassination. On the 25th of May, some negroes who had belonged to a Colonel Mal- lory, a rebel, living near Hampton, made their way to Fortress Monroe; and were claimed (under a flag of truce) as fugitives from service, under the Fugitive Slave Law. General Butler, then in command of the Fortress, re- plied to this demand, that, " under the peculiar circumstances he considered the fugitives contraband of war." And thus, for the firs ttime, came the word " contraband " to be used as a term for an escaped slave : a term that will not soon loose its meaning in that connection. On the 28th of May, the 14 HISTORIC REVIEW blocKade of the mouths of the Mississippi went into force. Gen. McDowell took command of the Potomac army ; and the First Virginia regiment, Col. Kelly, moved upon Grafton, followed by the Sixteenth Ohio, Colonel Irvine ; and the Fourteenth Ohio, Col. Steadman, occupied Parkersburgh, Virginia. On the last of May, postal communication with the seceded States was sus- pended, by order of the Post Master General. June. On the first of June the bombardment of the rebel batteries at Acquia Creek, took place. Our gunboats shelled out the rebels and destroyed their railroad structures at that place. This was the first demonstration of serious work on the Potomac. On the 3d, our troops, consisting of four companies of Col. Steadman's Fourteenth Ohio, with his artillery, under Lieutenant-Colonel Sturgis, and four companies of Colonel Crittenden's Sixth Indiana, with the First Virginia regiment, under command of Dumont, attacked Phillippi, and put the rebels to utter rout. The rebel forces from the Cotton States had long been gathering in Virginia, and had now taken position at Manassas ; and on the 5th, Beauregard arrived from South Caro- lina, and took command of their army. On the 10th, the heavy guns of our forces at Cairo were put in position ; and then, for the first time, a thirty-two pound shot was sent booming and buzzing across the Mississippi as a warn- ing to rebels. On the 10th of June the affair at Great Bethel occurred; in which our forces met with a considerable loss, and were forced to retire. This result was attributed to some serious blunders on the part of officers in not throw- ing out any advanced guard in their night march ; in consequence of which the Third New York regiment was fired into by our own forces, under Col. Bendix, and thrown into confusion. And again, Colonel Townsend, mistak- ing some of the Vermont forces for the enemy, ordered his troops to fall back, when the Zouaves, being left without support, also retired; and thus, a big blunder, lost us the day at Big Bethel. Our killed were thirteen, and wounded thirty. On the 11th, the Western Virginia Convention met at Wheeling, and a Provisional Government for the State formed the important subject of consideration. On the 14th, the rebels evacuated Harper's Ferry, consigning all that was valuable, including cars, bridges, &c, to the flames, and leaving the place a scene of utter desolation. During all of June the army on the Potomac was being continually strengthened, and public expectation was intent upon the contest that was regarded as inevitable in that region of Virginia. The rebels were collecting at Manassas, and strongly fortifying their position. On the Foukth op July Congress convened in extra session, pursuant to the President's Proclamation. "The Glorious Fourth'' was celebrated throughout all the loyal States with a degree of enthusiasm and unanimity unknown since the days of '76. AH party issues and considerations were OF THE REBELLION. 15 disregarded, and the whole people united in renewing their vows of devoted- ness to the Union and the Constitution. On the 5th of July the Carthage battle was fought, between Colonel Sigel, and the rebels under Jackson and Rains in Missouri; in which Sigel gained a decisive advantage, and caused a loss to the rebels of some four hundred in killed and wounded. Great anxiety was being felt for General Lyon's safety. On the 11th the battle of Rich Mountain was fought, in Western Virginia, between Ohio, Indiana and Minnesota troops, under Gen. Rosen- cranz, and a rebel force two thousand strong, under Colonel Pegram. The fight was desperate for an hour and a half, when the rebels fled precipitately, leaving six cannon, munitions, &c. Our troops behaved most gallantly in this sharp engagement. After the rebels were routed, General McClellan pursued them vigorously to Beverly ; and on the 13th, Col. Pegram offered to surrender his command, thus putting about one thousand prisoners into our hands. On the 14th, the fight at Carrick's Ford took place, at which the rebel Colonel Garnett was killed, and his forces utterly routed. On the 16th of July General McDowell, in command of the army of the Potomac, commenced a forward movement towards Richmond I The force consisted of fifty-three thousand men, of all arms. On the 18th the head of our army was directed on Centreville; and a junction of the forces under Beauregard and Johnson was anticipated. On the same day our troops occu- pied Fairfax Court House. On the 19th dispatches were received at Wash- ington that our troops had taken the rebel battery at Bull Run, after a skir- mish, in which we lost thirty killed and wounded. It was also announced that General Patterson was advancing towards Winchester. On the 20th there was no fighting. On the 21st, General McDowell ordered up his whole column and opened the attack, when occurred that dreadful disaster at Bull Run ! Our troops went gallantly into the fight, took three batteries, repulsed the rebels at all points, who were beginning to fall back in retreat, when a sudden panic seized upon teamsters and civilians in the rear of our lines, which communicated its effects to the troops on the field. Thus panic stricken they turned back from their own success, and actually ran away from their own victory ! The stampede was an awful exhibition of fright and confusion and dismay. Many never halted till Washington was reached. There intelligence had been received of our success during the entire day; and the next announcement was of our most disastrous retreat. So disabled were the enemy that they did not even attempt a pursuit. Some of them even escaped to Richmond without knowing that they had retained the field, and actually announcing their own defeat as they went. Such was the Bull Run battle; — a defeat on our part without cause, and a victory on their part without merit. At the critical moment of the fight General Johnson rein- forced Beauregard by the junction of his whole command; and blame was attached to General Patterson for not engaging Johnson to prevent that im- 16 HISTORIC REVIEW portant reinforcement to the rebel column. The rebel force then was about seventy thousand. The excitement throughout the country became intense ; and the people rushed to arms by whole regiments, with the fiery determina- tion to wipe out the stain of that most fearful disaster. And most nobly have they done it! On the 29th of July Genera! Cox occupied Gauley Bridge, having driven the rebels, under Wise, out of the Kanawha Valley. August the 10th, the battle of Springfield, Missouri, was fought, in which that heroic officer, Gen- eral Lyon was killed, while bravely cheering and leading his men in one of the severest fights of the whole campaign. The rebels under Price and McCulloch were routed. But as their forces greatly outnumbered ours, Gen. Sigel, who succeeded to the command, fell back to Rolla, to await reinforce- ments. Just a month from this time, September 10, General Rosencranz defeated Floyd in Western Virginia in a hard fought battle, near Summer- ville. Floyd ran away during the night, leaving all his camp equipage, &c. On the 15th, Lexington, Missouri, was invested by the rebels, under Sterling Price. The Union forces under Colonel Mulligan made a most heroic defence, until the 21st, when, being surrounded by four times their number, and entirely cut off from water, the place was surrendered. Just one month from the surrender of Springfield, occurred the still more terrible disaster at Ball's Bluff, on the Potomac, which involved the loss of many brave soldiers, and in which the lamented Colonel Baker, United States Senator from Oregon, was killed. This event, by reason of the miserable generalship that direcied it, was received by the country with grief mingled with the sternest reprehension of General Stone's management of the affair; and he was ordered under arrest. His case is still undisposed of. On the 7th of November Port Royal, on the coast of South Carolina, was taken by our fleet, under Commodore Dupont, by one of the most brilliant engagements recorded in the annals of naval warfare. This gave our forces a fine harbor as a base of operations along the whole coast; and opened the cotton region of the coast to our occupation. On the 25th our forces occu- pied Tybee Island, in view of Fort Pulaski, that commanded the entrance to Savannah harbor. On the 18th, news reached Washington that Commodore Wilkes, of the San Jacinto, had arrested Mason and Slidell, rebel emissaries to Europe, and returned with them. They were confined at Fort Warren. During all the period from the Bull Run affair, on the 21st of July, to Christmas, our army on the Potomac had been increasing and drilling, but without any forward movement; and the quietude of the Potomac became a stereotyped phrase. 1862. The present year was inaugurated by the achievement of a very important victory at Mill Spring, Kentucky, by our forces, under General Schoepff; in which the rebel General Zollicoffer was killed, and his army utterly routed. That was on the 19th of January. And from that time for- OF THE REBELLION 17 ward it has "been a continued succession of Union victories; all of which are go fresh in mind as to scarcely need extended account. On the 6th of February Fort Henry, on the Tennessee, was taken, by bombardment from our gunboats, under Commodore Foote, with co-operation of the land forces, under General Grant. On the next, day Gen. Burnside's fleet took Roanoke Island, North Carolina, defeating the rebels utterly, 'aking many pr^oners and an immense quantity of stores. On the 13th Fort Dennelson, on the Cumberland, was assailed; and after three days of desperate fighting and a succession of heroic charges, the Fort, on the 16th, surrendered, unconditionally, to our forces under General Grant. By this we secured immense stores, all their arms, and about 13,000 prisoners. During the night before the surrender, Generals Floyd and Pil- low made an inglorious exit under cover of darkness, and escaped. Our gunboats immediately proceeded up the Cumberland, and Clarksville and Nashville fell into our hands without opposition. On the 6th of March our troops, under General Curtis, overtook the army of Price and Vandorn, at Pea Ridge, in Arkansas. The rebels had been driven out of Missouri, and had prepared themselves for battle at this place The attack was made on the 6th with desperate energy on both sides. Dur- ing the day the rebels rather gained ground upon our position, and nearly outflanked our column. During the night, by a skillfully executed move- ment, General Curtis changed his line of battle, and, on the next clay, com- pletely routed the whole rebel force, chasing them off among the Ozark hills, and dispersing their whole command. In this fight both Den McCul- loch and Mcintosh were killed. The rebels had some eight hundred or one thousand Indian warriors in their ranks ; and, in order to stimulate them tu savage ferocity, gave them whisky mixed with gunpowder to drink just before going into the tight; which so excited the savages that they killed and scalped more of the 'secesh' than of the Unionists. On the 8th of March occurred that remarkable fight between the iron clad vessels in Hampton Roads that has attracted the attention of the world. The reDel ship Merrimdc, clad in iron armor, with an iron prow, coming down from Norfolk, attacked our wooden war vessels Cumberland and Congress, and almost immediately sunk the former and burned the latter, their shot having no effect upon the armor clad monster. It was then met by the Monitor, constructed with the Ericsson Revolving Battery, and also iron clad. The firing was awful, yet neither gave way. Their guns were almost muzzle to muzzle, and yet could make no breach in those iron walls. At length a shot from the Monitor pierced the port holes of the Merrimac and did terrible execution. The rebel monster then gave way, and was taken in ,tow by consorts near by, and tugged back to Norfolk. This remarkable conflict will, doubtless, revolutionise the whole system of naval warfare and harbor defence. 9 18 historic Review On the 14th of March the batile at Newberne, North Carolina, was fought> and the rebels again routed On the 23d occurred the battle near Winches- ter, Virginia. It was one of the most brilliant affairs of the whole war. The rebel General Jackson had promised himself and his men certain suc- cess. His friends had even prepared supper for him- and his officers in the town of Winchester. But, he was met by our forces Under General Shields with such invincible firmness and unconquerable valor, that his army was speedily put to utter rout, leaving a large number of dead and wounded on the field. On the 6th and 7th of April was fought the great battle at Pittsburgh Landing, in Tennessee, near the Mississippi line. This w-as the hardest fought battle ever fought upon the American Continent. The rebels were at Corinth, some sixteen miles from our lines, under Generals A. S. Johnson- and Beauregard, and full eighty thousand strong. Our force at Pittsburgh Land- ing was not more than thirty-five thousand effectives. On Sunday morning, the 6th, our advanced lines were suddenly surprised by an overwhelming mass of rebel troops. Great confusion ensued. Our troops, falling back, soon came into line, and met the assault. The rebels fought with the fury of desperation. All of Sunday the terrible battle raged with horrible carnage upon both sides. Our troops were driven from their camp, back upon the Tennessee river, hotly pursued by the rebels. Here the gunboats got in position, and raked the rebel ranks with a most destructive slaughter. This repelled them; and night coming on, both armies slept upon their arms. But during this strife the enemy had got possession of our camp. At even- ing General Buell arrived with a heavy reinforcement; and on Monday the conflict was renewed. But by noon the rebels fell back in confusion, and soon after, retreated to Corinth, having lost some ten thousand in killed and wounded, and their commandtr-in-chief and three other generals among the killed on the field. On the same day, the 7th, the rebels surrendered their strong position at Island No. 10, on the Mississippi, to Commodore Foote, of the Flotilla, and General Pope, in command of the land forces. This was effected without the loss of a man on our side ; and was accomplished by some of the most bril- liant strategy known in the annals of modern warfare. On the 11th of April, the strong hold, known as Fort Pulaski, commanding the Savannah harbor, was bombarded by our guns, and literally blown to pieces. Its gar- rison of five hundred men surrendered unconditionally, and were all taken prisoners. Thia closes the list of Union victories for the suppression of the rebellion, as down to the present period. The rebels are now massed in two positions, — at Yorktown and at Corinth, — where they are closely invested by power- ful armies, and decisive battles are imminent and inevitable. Other than OF THE REBELLION. 19 at these two points they have no considerable force. If they fail there, as fail they must, the doom of rebellion is sealed, and that right soon. Never has there boen a rebellion so causeless and so wicked; never has a people shown such a steady determination to maintain their good and glo- rious government at all hazards and every sacrifice; never has a nation manifested such military power and resources; never have quiet citizens stepped at once from the quiet pursuits of peace into the bloody arena of war with such readiness, and sustained themselves there with such unflinch- ing valor and heroic fortitude. In the hands of such soldiers and under the guidance of wise and patriotic counsels in the Administration the country is safe; and posterity shall rise up and call those blessed whose patriotism has enabled the Government to outride this storm of rebellion. OHIO STATE OFFICERS IN ACTUAL SERVICE. Jan. 13 '62. Governor and Commander-in-Chief, DAVID TOD. Adjutant- General, CATHARINUS P. BUCKINGHAM* Brio. General Jan. 13 Quartermaster- General, GEORGE B. WRIGHT Brig. General. Commissary- General, Jan. 13 COLUMBUS DELANO - Engineer-in- Chief, Brig. General Colonel. Jan. l: Jan. 13 Judge- Advocate- General, LUTHER DAY Surgeon- General, GUSTAVE C. E. WEBER - Colonel. Colonel. Paymaster- General, Colonel. Feb. 13 Aid-de-Camp to the Governor, GARRETSON J. YOUNG - Colonel. LIST OF BRIGADIER-GENERALS. WM. T. SHERMAN, May 17 '61 0. M. MITCHELL. J. D. COX. May 17 ROBERT C. SCHENCK, May 17 ALEX. McD. McCOOK, Sept. 3 WM. W. BURNS, Sept. 28 WM. T. H. BROOKS, Sept. 28 DAVID S. STANLEY, Sept. 28 M. S. WADE, Oct. 1 * Since the above was put in type, General Buckingham resigned the position of Adjutant-General, and General Charles W. Hill, of Toledo, was appointed his successor. ROBERT L. McCOOK. JAS. A. GARFIELD, March 14 '62 GEORGE W. MORGAN. JAS. B. STEEDMAN. A. SANDERS PIATT. WM. S. SMITH. INFANTRY. 21 FIRST REGIMENT* NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM N. Colonel, Edwin A. ParrojJt, Feb. 4 '62 Lieutenant- Colonel, E. Bassett Langdon, Major, Joab A. Stafford, Surgeon, Robert Fletcher, Feb. Feb. Oct. 24 '01 Assistant Surgeon, Albert Wilson, Chaplain, George H. Fullerton, Captains, George A. Pomeroy, Louis Kuhlman, Gates P Thruston, James B. Hampson, Patriek O'Connell, Alex. T. Snodgrass, Nicholas Trapp, Thomas J. Lawton, Benj. F. Preatiss, £manuel T. Hoaker, Aug. 27 Oct. 11 Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. 31 Oct. 7 Feb. 28 '02 17 17 17 17 20 30 First Lieutenants, Silas R. Ewing, Heary Dumbush, James E. Jones, George L. Hayward, Wm. L. Patterson, John Allen Campbell, James Hill, James W. Powell, S. Barnett Paddock, Wm. A. Owesney, John Parrott, James M. Wyley, 10 '61 17 17 17 17 20 Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. 23 Aug. 24 Sept. 5 Oct. 7 Oct. 19 Feb. 28 'G2 Second Lieutenants, Frank Smith, Anton Kuhlman, Saml. W. Davies, Wm. M. Carpenter, Dennis Regan, John F. Patton, David E. Roach, Alexander Johnston, James H. Prentis, Goe. P. Leonhard, Aug. 10 '61 Aug. 17 Aug. 17 Aug. Aug. Aug. Sept. Sept. Oct. March 1 '82 SECOND REGMENT.f NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Leonard A. Harris, Aug. 6 '61 Lieutenant- Colonel, Aug. Aug. Feb. John Kell, Major, Anson G. McCook, Surgeon, B. F. Miller, Assistant Surgeon, Thos. J. Shannon, Feb. Chaplain, Maxwell P. Gaddis, Dec. Captains, William T. Beatty, July Alexander S. Berryhill, Aug. John C. Hazlett, Milton McCoy, William A. Smith, John Herrel, O. C. Maxwell, Geo. D. McKinney James F. Sarratt, David Mitchel, First Aug Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Sept, Sept. Sept, Lieutenants, 6 28 '62 28 13 '61 17 1 1 15 19 20 31 1 5 20 27 1 9 15 19 20 5 5 8 9 '62 Wm. S. B. Randall, July James Ambrose, Aug. Henry L. Anderson, Aug. A. W. Plummer, Aug. James Warnock, Aug. Jacob Fotrell, Aug. James W. Glasener, Sept, George A. Vandergrift, Oct. William Thacker, Dec. Geo. A. Hollister, Jan. John F. Gallagher, March 3 Second Lieutenants, John F. Horr, Aug. 1 Thos. McCary, Aug. 1 James E. Murdoch, Aug. 15 Geo. W. Landrum, Aug. ]'•• Jerome A. Fisher, Aug. 20 Ira H. Bird, Aug. 21 KichardS. Chambers, Sept. 1 Lafayette Van Horn, Sept. 5 Thomas Dyal, Sept. 20 James A. Suter, Dec. 8 Jacob A. Leonard, March 3 '62 61 ♦Organized at Dayton, under Colonel (now Brig. Gen.) A. McD. McCook ; now serving in Tennesssee. tOrganized at Camp Dennison, under Col. L. A. Harris; now serving in len- nessee. 22 INFANTRY. THIRD REGIMENT* FOURTH REGIMENT.t NAEE. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'n. Colonel, Colonel, John Beatty, Feb. 12, '62 John S. Mason, Oct. 3 61 Liuetenant Oolonel, Lieutenant' Colonel, J. Warren Keifer, Feb. 12 James H. Godman, Jan. 9 '62 Major, Major, 0. A. Lawson, Feb. 12 George Weaver, Jan. 9 Surgeon, Surgeon, R. R. McMeans, June 12 '61 H. H. McAbee, Assistant Surgeon, Assistant Surgeon, H. H. Seys, June 27 Albert Longwell, Aug. 21 61 Chaplain Chaplain, E. A. Strong, June 27 Lorenzo Warner, June 15 Captains, Captains, James H. Wing, June 11 L. W. Carpenter, June 4 James C. Vananda, June 11 H. B. Banning, June 4 Ephriam P. Abbott, June 11 James W. Crawford, June 4 Wm. Clement Rossman , June 11 James McMillen, June 4 Leonidas McDugal, June 11 James Wallace, June 4 Henry S. Cunard, June 11 E. B. Olmsted, June 4 Philip Fithian, June 20 A. H. Brown, June 4 John G. Mitchell, Dec. 21 Gordon A. Stewart, Jan. 9 G2 Elitha D. House, Feb. 28 '62 Peter Grubb, William Constant, Jan. Jan. 9 9 First Lieutenants, First Lieutenants, Wesley Patterson, June 11 61 F. A Coats, June 4 61 Leroy S. Bell, June 11 John Green, June 4 James St. John, June 11 John S. Jones, June 4 James M. Imbra, June 11 Jacob Shultz, June 4 A. K. Taylor, Aug. 3 G. F. Laird, June 4 Silas Pruden, Dec. 21 W. S. Straub, June 4 Stephen D. Carpenter, Jan. 11 62 Wm. H. Garrett, Aug. 9 William A. Swayze, Feb. 28 Daniel Timmons, Jan. 9 62 James S. Wilson, Feb. 28 A. W. Lippitt, Jan. 9 Frank P. Dale, March 12 James Ferguson, Israel Underwood, Jan. Jan. 9 9 Second Lieutenants, Second Lieutenants, Calvin L. Starr, June 11 61 Byron Dolbear, June 4 61 Edward M. Driscol, June 20 Henry Cutter, Jane 4. John B. Roberts, July 31 Samuel Brearly, June 4 Benj. C. G. Reed, Aug. 23 J. R. Prichard, June 4 Charles Byron, Dec. 21 Wm. M. Camp, Aug. 9 John D. Whiting, Jan. 11 62 Algernon Gilliam, Aug. 9 Joel G. Blue, Jan. 21 Lemuel Jeffries, Dec. 20 S. B. Piper, Feb. 28 Isaiah Larkins, Wm. T. Patton, George Lester, Jan. Jan. Jan. 9' 9 9 62 *Re-organized from three months' troops, at Camp Dennison ; took the field under Colonel Isaac H. Marrow; now serving in Tennessee. tRe-organized from three months' troops, at Camp Dennison ; took the field Col. Lorin Andrews ; now serving in Virginia. INFANTRY. 23 FIFTH REGIMENT* v\MR. IHNK. D VTE OP COM'N. Colonel, ianiuel H. Dunning, June 11 '61 Lieutenant- Colonel, John H. Patrick, June 11 Major, Harry G. Armstrong, Feb. 8 '62 Surgeon, Alfred Ball, June 11 '61 Assistant Surgeon, Curtis J. Bellows, Aug. 3 Chaplain, S. L. Yourtee, June 11 Captains, Theophilus Gaines, May 28 Robert M. Hayes, June 4 John Collins, June 6 Charles H. Jackson, June 7 Jacob A. Remley, June 8 John F. Fletcher, June 8 Henry E. Symmes, June 11 Robert L. Kirkpatrick, June 19 Theoph. G. Startzman, March 19 '62 First Lieutenants, C. C. Whitgon, June Lewis C. Robinson, June Thomas W. Hefferman, June George H. Whitcamp, June J. C. McDonald, June Robert Kirkup, Jan. Calvin F. McKenzie, Jan. James Kinkaid, Jan. Charles W. Smith, Feb. 8 Wm. M. Dick, March 19 Second Lieutenants, 6 '61 6 11 9 '62 9 22 Wm. M. Mely, Hugh Marshall, John M. Paver, Austin J. Shirer, Augustus C. Moonett, James Timmons, Patrick n. McCann, Alex. L. Little, Egbert Fisher, George Tharp, June 8'61 June n June 11 Sept. 7 Sept. 24 Sept, 28 Jan. 9 '62 Jan. 22 Feb. 8 March 19 SIXTH REGIMENT.! NAMK. BNK DATE OF COM'n Colonel, W. K. Bosley, June 12 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Nicholas L. Anderson, June 12 *" Major, Alex. C. Christopher, June 12 Surgeon, A. H. Stevens, Assistant Surgeon, F. W. Ames, June 18 Chaplain, Captains, Marcua. A. Westcott, June 12 Joseph A. Andrews, June 12 Jas. Willis Wilmington , June 12 Ezekiel H. Tatem, June 12 Samuel C. Erwin, June 12 Charles H. Brutton, June 12 Anthony C. Russell, June 12 Henry H. Tinker, June 12 James Bense, June 12 Charles. M Clark, June 12 First Lieutenants, Henry McAlpin, June 12 Charles P. Russell, June 12 Frank H. Ehrman, June 12 Edward M. Shoemaker, June 12 Charles Heron. June 12 Wm. S. Geltz, June 12 John W. Morgan, June 12 Richard Southgate, June 12 James M. Donovan, Aug. 3 Charles C. Peck, Dec. 12 Justin M. Thatcher, Dec. 20 George W. Morris, Feb. 14 '62 Seco?id Lieutenants, Charles Gilman, June 12 '61 Frank S. Shuffer, June 12 Benjamin F. West, June 12 Julius Montagnier, June 12 Wm. P. Anderson, Aug. 3 Wm. E. Sheridan, Dec. 12 Edward M. Gettier, Dec. 20 Henry Gee, Feb. 15 '62 Henry C. Choate, Feb. 28 *Re-organized at Camp Dcnnison, from three months' troops; took the field under Col. Dunning; now serving in Virginia. tRe-organized from three months' troops, at Camp Dennison ; took the field under Col- W. K. Bosley; now serving in Tennessee. 24 INFANTRY. SEVENTH REGIMENT* NAME. BANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, 19 '61 19 E. B. Tyler, June Lieutenant- Colonel, Wm. R. Creighton, June Major, John S. Casement, June 19 Surgeon, F. Salter, Aug. 10 Assistant- Surgeon. Charles E. Denig, Sept. • Chaplain, D. C. Wright, Captains, Joel S. Asper, Orrin J. Crane, Frederick A. Seymour, Giles W. Shurtliff, Wm. R. Sterling, James T. Sterling, George L. Wood, Albert C. Burgess, Judson N. Cross, Charles A. Weed, Jan. June June June June June June Nov. Nov. Nov. Feb. 9 11 '62 61 02 First Lieutenants, Arthur T. Wilcox, June 17 ; 61 Samuel McClelland, June 17 -Joseph B. Molyneaux, June 18 Joshua G. Willis, Oct. 31 Ralph Lockwood, Nov. 25 E. Hud«on Baker, Nov. 25 Elliott S. Quay, Nov. 30 Oscar W. Sterl, Feb. 5 '62 Henry Z. Eaton, Feb. 20 A. H. Day, April 1 Second Lieutenants. Wm. B. Shepherd, Frank Payne, Seymour S. Reed, Leicester, King, James P. Brisbine, Marcus S. Hopkin?. Mervin Clarke, Frank Johnson, Nov. 25 '61 Nov. 25 Dec. 12 Dec. 17 Dec. 20 Feb. 5 '62 Feb. 20 April 1 EIGHTH REGIMENT.f NAME. KANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, S. S. Carroll, Dec. 7 '61 IAeutenant- Colonel, Franklin Sawyer, Nov. 25 Major, Albert H. Winslow, Nov. 25 Surgeon, Lyman N. Freeman, July 9 Assistant Surgeon, Thomas McEbright, Nov. 27 Chaplain, S. Sexton, July 8 Captains, Francis W. Butterfield, June 5 Wilbur F. Pierce, June 5 James E. Gregg, June 17 William Kinney, June 18 Geo. M. Tillotson, June 18 William E. Haynes, June 18 Richard Allen, Aug. 30 Benjamin F. Ogle, Nov. 25 John Reed, Feb. 6 '62 Willis W. Miller, March 11 First Lieutenants, David Lewis, June 5 '61 Henry W. Fritzs, Juae 5 William Delany, June 18 Charles W. Fouke, June 18 Edward D. Dickinson, June 18 Philo W. Chase, June 28 James R. Swigart, July 6 Wm. M. Pearce, Aug. 30 G. Shillito Smith, Nov. 25 Charles W. Barnes, Feb. 6 '62 Alfred P. Craig, March 11 Second Lieutenants, Jacob P. Hysung, June 5 '61 Otis Shaw, Jr., June 5 John Lantry, June 18 Edward W. Cook, June 18 Creighton Thompson, June IS Herman Ruess, July 8 Azor H. Nickerson, Aug. 30 John G. Reed, Feb. 22 '62 Elijah Hayden, March 11 William D. Wetherill, March 11 *Re-organized at Camp Dennison. from three months' troops ; took the field under Col. Tyler ; now serving in Virginia. tRe-organized at Camp Dennison, from three months' troops ; took the field under Col. Dupuy ; now serving in Virginia. INFANTRY. 25 NINTH REGIMENT* KAMI. BANK. DATE OF COM'N. Oolonel, Robert L. McCook, May 28 '61 Lieutenant- Colonel, Gustavus Kemmerling, March 8 '62 Major, Surgeon, Charles E. Boyle, May 28 '61 Assistant Surgeon, Conrad Soellheim, Oct. 23 Chaplain, Joi. Anton Fuchshaber, Feb. 18 '62 Captains, Charles Joseph, May Ferdinand Mueller, May Frederick Schroeder, May Bartholomew Benz, May Gustav Richter, May Jacob Gluckowsky, May John Ganson, May B. Edliff Thanson, June Louis Hauser, Nov. Wm. Stengel, Sept. First Lieutenants, Ernst Rubener, Gustavus Neber, Herman Lutkenhaus, Morris Pohllman, William Henbig, Theodore Haffner, George H. Harries, Adam Schumacher, Theodore Lammers, Joseph Haider, Peter Greaff, Second Lieutenants Charles B. Gentsch, Frederick Bertsch, Daniel Wagner, Martin Brunei^ John Baumgaertner, Louis Trickcr. Henry Leidke, Herman Groskordt, Andrew Jenny, 28 '61 28 28 28 28 28 28 26 1 6 4 '61 9 '62 TENTH REGIMENT.t NAME- RANK. DATE OF COM'N Colonel, Wm. H. Lytle, June Lieutenant- Oolonel, Joseph W. Burke, Jan. Major, Robert M. Moore, Jan. 9 Surgeon, C. S. Muncroft, Assistant Surgeon, Homer C. Shaw, Nov. 25 '61 Chaplain, T. 0. Higgins, '"" "June 3 Captains, John O'Dowd, John E. Hudson, Christian Amies, Thomas G. Tiernon, William M. Ward, ' Chas. Fred. Nickel, Wm. H. Steele, John Bentley, Philip C. Marmiron, Charles C. Cramsey, June June June June June Dec. Dec. Dec. 21 Jan. 9 '62 Jan. 28 May 28 May 28 May 28 May 28 May 28 May 28 May 28 Nov. 1 Jan. 9 '62 Jan. 9 Feb. 18 nts, May 21 '61 May 28 May 28 May 28 May 28 May 28 Sept, 6 Sept, 29 Sept. 29 First Lieutenants, 61 John Fanning, June George Schlafemaker. June 3 James T. Hickey, June 3 James M. Fitzgerald, June 3 John Stiles, Dec. 21 John Sullivan, Jan. 9 '62 John S. Mulroy, Jan. 9 George C. Mueller, Jan. 12 Thomas Burns, Jan. 28 James A. Grover, Jan. 28 Nicholas Lacy, Feb. 28 Rudolph Seibaum, Feb. 28 Second Lieutenants, William Lambert, Dec. 21 Nicholas Knox, Dec. 21 Thomas J. Kelley, Jan. 9 Daniel 0' Conner, Jan. 9 Luke Murdock, Jan. 9 Bushrod Birch, Jan. 9 Alfred Pirtle, Jan. 28 Luke Murrin, Feb. 28 '61 62 *Ro-organized at Camp Dennison, from three months' troops- took the field under Col. R. L. McCook, (now Brig. General) ; now serving in Tennessee. tRe-organized at Camp Dennison, from three months' troops • took the field under Col. Lytle; now serving in Tennessee. 26 INFANTRY. ELEVENTH REGIMENT* NAME. KANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Charles A. de Villiers, July 6 '61 Lieutenant- Colonel, Augustus H. Coleman, Major, Lyman J. Jackson, Chaplain, Wm. W. Lyle, Surgeon, J. Frank Gabriel, Jan. 9 '62 Jan. 9 Jan. 31 July 7 '61 Assistant Surgeon, Henry Z. Gill, July 7 Captains, 0. J. Childs, June 14 John V. Curtis, June 19 Ogden Street, July 7 Philander P. Lane, July 7 Asa Higgins, July 23 Alexander Duncan, Aug. 26 Solomon Feverbaugh, Nov. 12 Wm. 8. Douglass, Dec. 19 George W. Hatfield, Jan. 9 62 First Lieutenants, H. L. Seymore, Emmor H. Price, John E. Alexander, Newton S. McAbee, John W. McAbee, Jerome B. Weller, Silas Roney, C. J. Cotiingham, Joshua H. Horton, George Johnson, June 19 '61 July 7 Aug. 26 Nov. 12 Nov. 29 Dec. 21 Dec. 19 Dec. 26 Dec. 26 Jan. 9 '62 Second Lieutenants, Andrew H. Chapman, David K. Curtis, James M. Elliott, Joseph P. Staley, William Crumbaugh, David M. Layman, Everard Jordan, Robert C. Morris, July 23 '61 Sept. 2 Dec. 19 Dec. ZQ Dec. 26 Dec. 26 Jan. Jan. 9 '62 9 TWELFTH REGIMENT.f NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Carr B. White, Sept. 10 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Johathan D. Hines, Sept. 10 Major, James D. Wallace, Sept 10 Chaplain, Russell D. Van Dusen, Aug. 10 Surg ton, William W. Holmes, Assistant Surgeon, Wm. T. Ridenour, Nov. 9 Captains, Edward M. Carey, June William B. Smith, June Rigdon Williiams, June Joseph L. Hilt, June Andrew Legg, June Ferdinand Gunckle, June Henry S. Clement, Sept. John Curtis, Nov. Ezra Stevenson, Jan. William W. Leggett, March First Lieutenants, Daniel W. Pauley, June Robert Wilson, June Jonathan C. Wallace, June Ashley Brown, June William E.Fisher, Sept. Henry F. Hawkes, Sept. John Lewis, Oct. John Wise, Nov. Aaron N. Channel, Dec. Calvin Goddard, Jan. James W.Ross, March Jacob J. Yorby, March 62 11 '61 11 22 28 10 26 3 8 6 9 31 31 62 Second Lieutenants, Alonzo M. Dimmitt, Horatio G. Tibballs, Robert H. Shoemaker, Hiram McKay, John C. Campbell, John U. Hiltz, John V. O'Connor, Fred. B. Schnebley, June 18 '61 June 28 Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. 1 9 13 9 '62 9 9 *Re -organized at Camp Dennison, from three months' troops; took the field under Col- de Villiers ; now serving in Virginia. tRe-organized at Camp Dennison, from three months' troops; took the field under Col. John W. Lowe ; now serving in Tennessee. INFANTRY. 27 THIRTEENTH REGIMENT* NAME. BANK. DATEOFCOM'N- Colonel, Wm. S. Smith, June 22 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Joseph G. Hawkins, Oct. 25 Major, Benjamin P. Runkle, Oct. 25 Surgeon, S. D. Turney, June 26 Assistant Surgeon, E. Y. Chase, Aug. 26 Chaplain, Captains, Horatio S. Cosgrove, June 6 Isaac R. Gardner, June 12 Thomas R. Roberts, June 21 Dwight Jarvis, Jr., Oct. 25 Elkanan M. Mast, Nov. 8 James D. Smith, Jan. 9 '62 James B. Dony, Feb. 5 Reason R. Henderson, Feb. 19 Joseph T. Snider, March 12 First Lieutenants, James 0. Stonage, June John Siebert, June John A. Hunter, Oct. Jeptha H. Powell, Nov. Thomas J. Loudon, Nov. Thomas L. Carnahan, Nov. John Murphy, Jan. John Conwell, Jan. Frank J. Jones, Jan. Wm. Raines, March Thos. F. Murdock, March George H. Guild, March Second Lieutenants, Thos. B. George, Oct. Samuel C. Gold, Nov. John E. Rav, Nov. S. W. McColloch, Jan. Cyrus S. Bates, Feb. Char'es Lindenberg, Feb William B. Lambert, March Joseph Ooe, March J. H. Guthrie, March Robert K. Seig, March 21 '61 22 26 9 9 '62 9 21 12 15 15 25 '61 8 27 9 '62 5 19 12 15 22 31 FOURTEENTH REGIMENT.t NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, James B. Steedman, Aug. 16 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, George P. Este, Aug. 16 Major, Paul Edwards, Aug. 16 Surgeon, Waldo C. Daniels, Aug. 16 Assistant Surgeon, George E. Sloat, Sept. 9 Chaplain, Edwin B. Raffensperger, Sept. 17 Captains, Jacob W. Brown, Aug. 15 '61 Henry D. Kingsbury, Aug. 17 John W. Wilson, Aug. 21 John A. Chase, Aug. 28 Wilbur F. Spofford, Sept. 1 John J. Clark, Feb. 28 '62 Edward S. Dodds, Feb. 28 Robert Just, Feb. 28 Albert Moore, Feb. 28 Seth D. Moe, Feb. 28 First Lieutenants, Ezra B. Kirk, Aug. 15 '61 Daniel H. Nye, Aug. 21 David A. Gleason, Aug. 21 W. H. Brownell, Sept. 4 Josiah Farrington, Sept. 5 Wm. B. Pugh, Feb. 28 '62 John Dixon, Feb. 28 Henry B. Ferguson, Feb. 28 George E. Murray, Alexander Walp, Wm. Steadman, Feb. 28 Feb. 28 Feb. 28 Second Lieutenants, John W. Hamilton, Aug. 15 '61 Wm. B. Steadman, Sept. 4 Marshall Davis, Feb. 28 '62 •Re-organized at Camp Dennison, from three months' troops; took the field under Col Smith; now serving in Tennessee. tOrganized at Tuledo, under Col. James B. Steedman; now serving in Tennes- see. 28 INFANTRY. FIFTEENTH REGIMENT* NAME- RANK. DATE OP COM'N. Colonel, Moses R. Dickey, Aug. 7 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Wm. T. Wilson, Aug. 6 Major, William Wallace, Aug. 7 Surgeon, Henry Spillman, March 18 '62 Assistant Surgeon, George Liggett, Oct. 24 '61 Chaplain, Richard L. Ganter, Sept. 20 Captains, John McClenehan, Sept. 10 Hiram Miller, Sept. 11 Andrew R. Z. Dawson, Sept. 11 Isaac Miner Kirby, Sept. 12 Abraham C. Cummins, Sept. 12 Frank Askew, Bept. 13 Amos Glover, Sept. 20 T. S. Gilliland, Sept. 21 Otho S. Holloway, Sept. 23 David J. Culbertson, Jan. 30 '62 First Lieutenants, Cyrus Reasoner, Sept. 9 '61 Joshua K. Brown, Sept. 10 Jeremiah M. Dunn, Kept. 11 Thomas E. Douglass, Sept. 11 Calvin R. Taft, Sept. 12 Andrew M. Barns, Sept. 12 Chandler W. Carroll, Sept. 13 James B. Welsh, Sept. 20 William C. Scott, Sept. 21 Robert H. Cochran, Sept. 23 Joseph McKee, Nov. 26 Joseph Goldsmidt, Jan. 30 '62 Second Lieutenants, John R. Clark, Sept. 10 '61 John G. Byrd, Sept. 11 Cyrus H. Askew, Sept. 11 Samuel Bachtell, Sept. 12 Geo. W. Cummins, Sept. 12 Lorenzo Danford, Sept. 13 Nicholas M. Fowler, Sept. 20 Vesper Dornech Sept. 23 John G. Gregg, Jan. 9 '62 Elze Stringer, Jan. 30 SIXTEENTH REGIMENT.t NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, JohnFitzroy de Courcy, Sept. 22^61 Lieutenant Colonel, Aug. 9 Aug. 9 Sept. 7 Mar. 19 '62 Sept. 13 '61 Sept. 19 Sept. 27 Oct. 15 Oct. 26 Nov. 7 Nov. 28 Dec. 1 Feb. 3 '62 Feb. 18 Geo. W. Bailey, Major, Philip Kershner, Surgeon Basil B. Breasher, Assistant Surgeon, Byron S. Chase, Not Chaplain, Joseph Matlock, Captains, Milton Mills, Eli W. Botsford, R. W. P. Muse, Hamilten Richeson, AVm. R. Monroe, Addison S. McClure, Richard W. Tannyhill, George U. Harn, Wm. P. VanDoorn, Joseph Edgar, First Lieutenants, Calvert W. Cowan, Sept. 10 '61 Samuel Enge, Sept. 13 Geo. W. Stein, Sept. 19 Lewis Moore, Sept. 27 Wm. M. Ross, Oct. 15 Absalom Fineh, Oct. 16 Hiram N. Shaffer, Nov. 7 Cushman Cunningham, Nov. 25 Manuel B. De Silva, Not. 28 George J.Jones, Dec. 1' Philip M. Smith, Feb. 3 '62 R. W . Liggett, Feb. 19 Second Lieutenants, Sept. 13 '61 Sept. 19 Sept. 27 Sept. 26 Oct. 15 Nov. 7 Nov. 28 Dec. 1 Feb. 3 '62 Feb. 19 Wm. Dorsey, Isaiah S. Beal, John Blessing, Wm. W. Boyd, Samuel Lechty, Wm. Lightcap, Rezin H. Vorhes, Wm. Buchanan, B. F. Heckert, Silas H. Coon. "Organized at Maifsfield, under Col. Dickey; now serving in Tennessee. ■("Organized at Wooster, under Col. J. F. de Courcy; now serving in Tennessee. INFANTRY. 29 SEVENTEENTH REGIMENT* EIGHTEENTH RKGIMENT.f NAME. RANK- DATE OF COM N. NAME. RANK. DATEOFCOM'N. Colonel, Colonel, John M. Connell, Aug. 16 ' U Timothy R. Stanley, Aug. 6'61 Lieutenant Colonel, Lieutenant Colonel, Marshall F. Moore, Aug. 20 Josiah Given, Aug. 17 Major, Major, Durbin Ward, Aug. 17 Charles H. Grosvenor, July 30 Surgeon, Surgeon, Washington S. Schenck Oct. 2 Wm. P. Johnson, Sept, 24 Assistant Surgeon, Assistant Surg eon, Henry J. Herrick, Feb. 4' 62 William W. Mills, Sept. 24 Chaplain, Chaplain, A. T. Fullerton, Sept, 18' til John Dillon, Sept. 16 Captains, Captains, Beuj. F. Butterffeld, Aug. 26 1 Henry R. Miller, Aug. 1 James W. Stinchconib, Sept. 11 Asbel Fenton, Aug. 10 Joel Haines, Sept. 12 John M. Welch, Aug. 26 Charles 11. Rippey, Sept. 16 John Jumper, Sept. 8 Ezra Rickets, Sept. 19 David H. Miles, Sept. 19 Abraham Ogden, Sept. 26 Philip E. Taylor, Oct, 14 Ronham H. Fox, Sept. 28 George Stivers, Oct. 21 Amos A. Whissen, Nov. 4 Charles C. Ross, Not. 1 Daniel M. Rea, Nov. 4 Julius C. Stedman, Nov. 4 Benjamin Showers, Jan. 9 62 Wm. L. Edmiston, Nov. 5 First Lieutenants, First Lieutenants, James McDonald, Aug. 16 61 Felix McNeill, Aug. 1 A. J. Davis, Aug. 22 John C. Neal, Aug. 7 Aaron P. Ashbrook, Sept. 11 Geo. W. Dunkle, Aug. 10 GilruthM. Webb, Sept, 16 Alex. W . S. Minear, Aug. 26 Leo Noles, Sept. 26 Joseph C. McElroy, Sept. 2 Perry Crosson, Sept, 28 Nelson H. VanVorhes, Sept. 13 Daniel .Sheets, Nov. 4 Charles W. McNeill, Sept. 24 Frank .Spencer, Nov. 4 Charles A. Cable, Oct, 24 Willis G. Clark, Jan. 9 62 Ebenezer Grosvenor. Nov. 5 Henry Arney, Jan. 9 Wm. B. Williams, Feb. 3 '02 Owen W. Brown, Feb. 3 Alexander Pierce, Feb. 19 Joseph H. Pool, Feb. 5 Second Lieutenants, Second Lieutenants, James H. Haynes, Aug. 1 '61 11 i'ii ry Dewar, Sept, 16 til Homer C. Jones, Aug. 10 Daniel Sullivan, Sept. 19 Amos C. Royston, Aug. 26 Theodore Michaels, Slepfe 26 Wm. W. Blacker, Oct. 14 John L. Ely, Sept. 28 Wm. B. Kirvin, Oct. 21 Theodore C. Stewart. \..V. 4 John C. Barron, Oct. 24 Seth Collins, Nov. 4 William 11. P.aird, Nov. 1 S. Austin Thayer. Jan. 9 62 CharleS G. Baldwin, Nov. 1 Win. H. Pugh, Feb. 3 Henry II. Welsh, Feb. 8*62 Oliver B. Brandt, Feb. 19 Charles B. Saunders, Charles Grubb, Feb. March 19 15 *Organized at Camp Dcnnison, under Col. Connell; now serving in Tennessee, tOrganizod at Athens, under Col- Stanley; now serving in Tennessee. 30 INFANTRY. NINETEENTH REGIMENT* TWENTIETH REGIMENT.f NAME. RANK. DATE OP com'n. NAME. KANE. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Colonel, Samuel Beatty, Aug. 10 '61 Charles Whittlesey, Aug. 19 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Lieutenant Colonel, E. W. Hollings worth, Aug. 6 Manning F. Force, Aug. 19 Major, Major, Timothy D. Edwards, Aug. 21 James N. McElrey, Sept. 11 Surgeon, Surgeon, Frederick T. Hurxthal, Oct. 1 John G. Purple, Sept. 9 Assistant Surg ion, Assistant Surgeon, Benjamin M. Failor, Oct. 3 James Knapp, Dec. 16 Chaplain, Chaplain, Edward L. Hill, Sept. 7 Captains, Captains, PaulF. Kirby, Aug. 28 John C. Fry, Aug. 18 Chas. F. Manderson, Sept. 1 George Rogers, Sept. 4 Henry G. Stratton, Sept. 7 John N. Cassell, Sept. 4 William H. Allen, Sept. 7 James M. McCoy, Sept. 8 Thomas Stackpole, Sept. 10 Charles H. McElroy, Sept. 10 Urwin Bean, Sept. 12 Wm. W. Updegraff, Sept. 16 James M. Nash, Sept. 13 Abraham Kaga, Jan. 27 '62 Franklin E. Stowe, Sept. 15 Wm. Rogers, Feb. 9 Peter A. Laubie, Jan. 1 '62 Edwin C. Downs, Feb. 19 Oscar 0. Miller, Feb. 5 First Lieutenants, First Lieutenants, Charles Brewer, Aug. 1 '61 Peter M. Hitchcock, Aug. 19 '61 Solomon J. Firestone, Aug. 26 Benj. A. F. Grier, Sept. 4 George R. Lentz, Aug. 26 George L. Melick, Sept. 7 Cyrus Trease, Sept. 7 Velorus T. Hills, Sept. 10 Samuel Lentz, Sept. 12 David R. Hume, Sept. 16 J. Ransford Percival, Sept. 13 Erastus N. Owen, Oct. 11 Correl Smith, Sept. 15 Anderson J. Edwards, Dec. 16 Wm. H. Burke, Sept. 25 David R. Rinehart, Jan. 27 '62 Edward S. Myers, Not. 1 Henry M. Davis, Feb. 19 Uriah W. Irwin, Dec. 12 Lyman N. Ayers, Feb. 22 Job D. Bell, Feb. 5 '62 Conrad Garis, Feb. 28 Thos. J. Walton, Feb. 5 Second Lieutenants, Second Lieutenants, Daniel W. Heldenbran , Aug. 26 '61 Wm. H. Jacobs, Sept. 10 '61 Joseph J. Agard, Aug. 28 Wm. D. Neal, Sept. 16 Wm.H. Knapp, Sept. 4 Nathan Bostwick, Oct. 18 Aurora C. Keel, Sept. 7 Reuben M. Colby, Dec. 16 Lewis R. Fix, Sept. 12 Seneca Hale, Nov. 26 Daniel Dunnivan, Sept. 13 Peter Wetherby, Feb. 22 '62 Ambrose C. Shaffer, Sept. 15 Robert J. Irwin, Feb. 28 Wm. A. Sutherland, Nov. 1 James Wilson, Feb. 6 '62 Homer J. Ball, Feb. 19 ♦Organized at Alliance, under Col. Samuel Beatty; now serving in Tennessee. tQrganized at Columbus, under Col- Whittlesey now in Tennessee- INFANTRY. 31 TWENTY-FIRST REGIMENT.* TWENTY-THIRD REGIMENT.! NAME. RANK. DATE OF com'n. NAME. HANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Colonel, Jesse S. Norton, Sept. 11 61 E. Parker Scammon, June 14 61 Lieutenant Colonel, Lieutenant Colonel, James M. Neibling, Sept. 19 Rutherford B. Hayes, Oct. 23 Major, Major, Samuel A. Strong, Sept. 19 James M. Comly, Oct. 28 Surgeon, Surgeon, Wm. M. Eames, Sept. 19 Joseph T. Webb, July 2 Assistant Surgeon, Assistant Surgeon, D. S. Young, Sept. 19 John McCurdy, July 2 Chaplain, Chaplain Amos Wilson, July 20 Captains, Captains, Deville M. Stoughton, Sept. 19 J. P. Mcllrath, June 1 George F. Walker, Sept. 19 John W. Skiles, June 1 Arnold McMahan, Sept. 19 H. S. Lovejoy, June 1 Silas S. Canfield, Sept. 19 Wm. H. Zimmerman, June 1 Isaac Cusac, Sept. 19 Israel Canby, June 1 Matthew Ewing, Sept. 19 J. L. Drake, June 1 Milo Caton, Sept. 19 Carlos A. Sperry, July 23 Henry H. Alban, Sept. 19 Henry Monroe Haven, Dec. 10 Charles H. Van tine, Feb. 8 62 Abraham A. Hunter, Feb. 11 62 Selleck B. Warren, March 23 First Lieutenants, First Lieutenants, William Vance, Sept. 19 61 W. S. Rice, June 1 61 James W. Knaggs, Sept. 19 Henry G. Hood, June 1 William B. Wicker, Sept. 19 Frederick H. Bacon, June 1 Porter James, Sept. 19 Chas. E. Reichenback, July 17 James L. Curry, Sept. 19 Martin P. Avery, July 23 Ltwis E. Brewster, Sept. 19 James Naughton, July 23 John C. Martin, Sept. 19 James L. Botsford, Jan. 17 012 Robt. S. Munger, Sept. 19 W. W. Sheperd, Feb. 8 Charles W. Miner, Jan. 9 62 R. P. Kennedy, Feb. 9 George Foreman, Feb. 3 George W. Stevens, Feb. 11 Joseph E. Sterns, Feb. 3 Russell Hastings, March 23 Amos E. Wood, Feb. 8 Second Lieutenants, Second Lieutenants, DeHaven K. Smith, June 1 01 Enoch B. Wiley, Sept. 19 61 A. C. Fish, June 1 John Patterson, Sept. 19 Henry Thompson, July 23 Simon B. Webber, Sept. 19 Adam Durkee, July 23 Charles W. Allen, Sept. 19 Robt. Skiles Gardner, Sept. 7 Samuel F. Cheney, Sept. 19 John S. Ellen, Sept. 7 Alex. A. Monroe, Sept. 19 Benj. F. Cooper, Jan. 17 02 Daniel Lewis, Feb. 8 62 George W. Hicks, Feb. 8 James Blakesley, Feb. 8 Andrew Y. Austin, George C. Warren, Feb. Feb, 9 11 Benjamin W. Jackson, March 23 •Organized at Findlay, under Col. Jesse Norton; now serving in Tennessee. tOrganized at Columbus, under Col. E. P. Scammon; now serving in Virginia. 32 INFANTRY. TWENTY-FOURTH REGIMENT.* TWENTY-FIFTH REGlMENT.t NAMB. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. NAME. BANK. DATE OP oom'n. Colonel, Colonel, Jacob Ammen, June 22 '61 James A. Jones, June 22 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Lieutenant Colonel, Frederick C. Jones, Dec. 18 William P. Richardson, June 22 Major, Major, Albert S. Hall, Dec. 20 George Webster, June 28 Surgeon, Surgeon, G. R. Weeks, July 26 S. G. Myer, July 26 Assista?it Surgeon, Assistant Surgeon, J. M. Cooke, July 24 Lawrence S. Andrews, Sept. 7 Chaplain, Chaplain Edward Jones, Dec. 23 Captains, Captains, David J. Higgins, June 3 James F. Charlesworth , June 4 '61 Henry Terry, June 3 James Washburn, June 4 George Arnold, June 3 Jeremiah Williams, June 4 Thomas M. McClure, Sept. 28 Aaron C. Johnson, June 4 Enoch Weller, Oct. 15 Moses H. Crowell, June 4 A. T. M. Cockerill, Nov. 15 John F. Oliver, June 4 Warrington S. Weston, Dec. 20 Asa Way, June 4 Wm. B. Sturgis, Jan. 28 '62 Lewis R. Green, June 4 Moses T. Wooster, Jan. 28 Jonathan Brown, June 4 George M. Bacon, Feb. 8 William Askew, Sept. 25 First Lieutenants, First Lieutenants, Lafayette Foster, July 23 '61 Charles B. Jones, June 4 Merit Emerson, Nov. 15 Darius Durlam, June 4 DeWitt C. AVadsworth, Dec. 20 John W. Bowles, June 4 Benjamin J. Horton, Dec. 20 John W. Ross, June 4 Henry Y. Graham, Dec. 30 Wesley Chamberlin, June 4 John Acher, Jan. 9 '62 Francis A. Davis, June 4 Uzziel Stevens, Jan. 9 Nathaniel Houghton, June 4 Robert F. Wheeler, Jan. 28 William S. Hoyt, July 1 Florence H. Harman, Jan. 28 Arthur Higgins, Oct. 16 David 0. Williams, Jan. 28 John D. Merryman, Jan. 9 '62 Paul Spohn, Feb. 8 Nathaniel J. Manning, March 12 Second Lieutenants, Second Lieutenants, Archibald McClellan, June 4 '61 John W. Brooks, Nov. 15 '61 Andrew J. Hale, June 4 Isaac N. Dry den, Nov. 15 James Templeton, June 4 James C. Williams, Dec. 20 Benjamin W. Blandy, June 4 James K. Jones, Jan. 9 '62 John T. Wood, June 4 Pernell L. Cooper, Jan. 9 James L. Ball, June 4 Willard J. Stokes, Jan. 28 Thomas J. Janney, Jan. 8 '62 Daniel Reynolds, Feb. 8 Heni-y H. Mosley, Jan. 9 Burch Foreacre, Feb. 8 Cai-rington E. Randall, March 6 Samuel';F. Reber, Feb. 8 Win. Alden Whitcraft, March 12 3/ ' Alexander Jolly, Feb. 8 Alexander Sinclair, March 12 "Organized at Columbus, under Col. J. Ammen; now serving in Tennessee. tOrganized at Columbus, under Col. J. A. Jones; now serving in Virginia. INFANTRY. 33 TWENTY-SIXTH REGIMENT* NA.MB. RANK, DATE OF COM'N. •Colonel, K. P Fyffe, June 10 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Win. 11. Young, Jan. 1 "62 Major, G. M. Dagenfeld, June 10 '61 Surgeon, M. M. Stimmel, July 2 Assistant Surgeon, Andrew Sabine, July 2 Chaplain, Emraor Kimber, Mar. 17 '62 Captains, Jesse Meredith, William H. Seaton, Samuel C. Rook, Samuel D. Henderson, William H. Squires, James Ewart, Norris T. Peatman, Samuel H Ewing, Emulous A. Hicks, John H. James, Jr., First Lieutenants, William H. Ross, Henry Hickborn, Lewis D. Adair, James R. Hume, Francis ML Leffler, John L. Watson, Andrew J. Kendall, William Clark, James E. Godiuan, David McClellan, Alexander Frazer, 0. K. Smith, June 5 '61 June 5 July 4 July 11 July 22 July 29 July 31 Nov. 8 Dec. 12 Dec. 12 July 4 July 11 July 20 July 22 July 31 Nov. 8 Dec. 12 Dec. 12 Dec. 23 March 20 '62 March 20 April 1 Second Lieutenants, Nathaniel Potter, James R. Warner, Marcus P. Bestow, Asahel R. Franklin, William M. Kste, William Baldwin, Samuel H. Hamilton, James W. Burbridge, 61 July 11 July 22 July 31 Nov. 8 Dec. 17 Dec. 23 Dec. 23 Mar. 15 '62 TWENTY-SEVENTH REGIMENT.T NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, John W. Fuller, Aug. 1 61 Lieutenant Colonel, Henry G. Kennett, July 25 Major, Z. Swift Spaulding, July 25 Surgeon, William R. Thrall, Aug. 1 Assistant Surgeon, Jacob C. Denise, Aug. 19 Chaplain, J. Eaton, Jr., Aug. 15 Captains, Nelson L. Lutz, Edwin Nichols, William W\ Culbertson Mendall Churchill, Norman Tucker, Frank Lynch, William Feeny, James H. Hedges, J. William M. Brock, First lAeutenants, William M. Vogleson, William H. Winters, Samuel Thomas, J ames Morgan, Elisha G. Hamilton, Henry A. Webb, William E. Johnson, Theodore Sawyer, James H. Boggis, Albert R. Austin, Isaac N. Gilruth, Matthew Brown, Second Lieutenants, Charles W. Green, Lucius M. Meily, Edward Uibson, James P. Simpson, John Srofe, William Wilson, Zeph. C. Bryan, Jonathan Reese, Charles F. Moore, July 18 '61 July 19 Aug. 1 Aug. 6 Aug. 10 Aug. 14 Aug 16 Deo. 7 March 26 '62 nts, July 24 '61 Aug. 1 Aug. 6 Aug. 7 Aug. 10 Aug. 14 Aug. 14 Dec. 7 Dec. 13 Feb. 6 '62 March 26 March 27 Aug. 6 '61 Aug. 10 Aug. 14 Aug. 14 Aug. 16 Nov. 25 Dec. 12 Feb. 6 '62 March 27 ♦Organized at Columbus, under Col. E. P. Fyffe; now serving in Tennessee. tOrganizod at Columbus, uuder Col, J. W. Fuller; now serving in Missouri. 34 1KFANTRY. TWENTY-EIGHTH REGIMENT.* NAME. KANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, August Moor, June 10 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Gottfreid Becker, June 10 Major, Alexander Bohlender, Oct. 9 Surgeon, Gerhard Saal, June 10 Assistant Surgeon, Adolpfa Shoenbein, June 10 Chaplain, Captains, Ernst Schachi, June 13 Matthias Keichings, June 13 Louis Frey, June 13 Artnur Forbriger, June 13 Henry Sommer, June 13 Tobias Nagel, Juiie 13 Maurice Wesolowski, June 13 William Ewald, July 27 Charles Drach, Mar. 1 '62 First Lieutenants, August Fix, Malther Louterback, Edwin Frey, Frederick VVeising, John M. Amrein, Carlo Peipho, Arnold Heer, Frank Schmidt, Martin Houser, Albert Traub, June 13 '61 June 13 June 13 Sept. 13 Oct. 10 Oct. 26 Nov. 11 Jan. 21 '62 Feb. 14 Mar. 1 Second Lieutenants, H. Konigsberger, Leopold Markbreit, Samuel Rosenthal, Louis Frintz, John Lang, Ferdinand Holzer, Gottlob Hummel, June 13 '61 Sept. 13 Oct. 11 Oct. 11 Oct. 27 Nov. 1 Nov. 11 Hermann Gutthard, Jan. 21 '62 TWENTY- NINTH REGlMENT.f NAME. RANK. DATE OP COM'N. Colonel, Lewis P. Buckley, Aug. 27 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Thomas Clark, Nov. 28 Major, John S. Clemmer, Dec. 31 Surgeon, A. K. Fifield, Aug. 23 Assistant Surgeon, Sylvester Burroughs, Oct. 3 Chaplain, R. H. Hurlburt, Sept. 10 Captains, Wm. T. Fitch, Aug. 14 '61 W. T. Stevens, Aug. 19 Edward Hayes, Aug. 26 Horatio Luce, Sept. 16 Jonas Schoonover, Oct. 15 Russell B. Smith, Nov. 12 Josiah J. Wright, Dec. 21 Myron T. Wright, March 13 : 62 First Lieutenants, Alfred Bishop. Aug. 19 '61 Benjamin F. Perry, Aug. 26 T. C.Winship, Sept. 16 Hamblin Gregory, Sept. 28 David E. Hulburt, Sept. 28 James Treen. Sept. 30 Andrew J. Fulkerson, Oct. 15 Oscar F. Gibbs. Oct. 21 Andrew Wilson, Seth E. Wilson, March 13 62 March 13 Second Lieutenants, Frank P. Stewart, James H. Grinell, Ebenezer B. Howard, Eleazor Burridge, Henry Mack, Wm. Neil, Wm. R. Williamson, Evelyn Hulburt, Aug. 26 '61 Sept. 10 Sept. 16 Sept. 28 Oct. 3 Nov. 26 Dec. 21 Feb. 28 '62 Edward B. Woodbury, March 13 ♦Organized at Camp Dennison, and took the field under command of Col August Moor; now serving in Missouri. . . . -(•Organized at Jefferson, under Col. Lewis P. Buckley; now serving in Virginia. INFANTRY. 35 THIRTIETH REGIMENT* NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Hugh Ewing, Aug. 15 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Theodore Jones, Aug. 2 Major, George H. Hildt, Jan. 28 '62 Surgeon, Joseph B. Potter, Nov. 9 Assistant Surgeon, C. B. Richards, Aug. 30 Chaplain, Henry Lange, Aug. 28 '61 Captains, D. Cunningham, Aug. 10 '61 C. Townsend, Aug. 10 John W. Fowler, Aug. 20 Elijah Warner, Aug. 21 William II. Harlan, Aug. 22 VVm. H. Ijams, Aug. 24 John II. Groce, Nov. 19 John C. Lewis, Jan. 28 '62 First Lieutenants, Thomas Hayes, Aug. John Brown, Aug. Emery H. Muenscher, Aug. James Taylor, Aug. Henry R. Briukerhofl, Aug. E. R. Patterson, Aug. G. E. O'Neal, Aug. Reese R. Finlay, Aug. Gordon Lofland, Aug. Emerson P. Brooks, Aug. Joseph Collins, Jan. Jeremiah Hall, Jan. Second Lieutenants, Ezra McConnell, Wm. Massie, Henry Hensel, P. S. Sodan, Edward 10 11 24 30 14 18 Second Lieutenants, John W. Pinkerton, Oct. Perley B. Johnson, Oct. Jackson Tharp, Oct. James Palmer, Oct. Henry Hazleton, Oct. William McLaren, Nov. Samuel B. Larimer, Nov. Coulson D. Riesler, Nov. Joel L. Maring, Dec. James Johnston, Dec. 7 18 19 3 '61 4 11 15 30 4 18 18 7 SIXTY-THIRD REGIMRNT.T NAME. RANK. DATE OF C'lM'x. Colonel, John W. Sprague, Jan. 23 '62 Lieutenant Colonel, William E. Gilmore, Oct. 17 '61 Major, Alexander L. Haskiu, Oct. 1 Surgeon, Isaac L. Crane, Oct. 7 Assistant Surgeon, Arthur B. Monohan, Nov. 7 Chaplain, Captains, Nathan Pickett, Sept. 28 Charles S. Brown, Oct. 23 J. W. Pouts, Oct. 28 Christopher E. Smith, Oct. 2K Thomas McCord, Dec. ID Rodney M. Shaw, Dec. 20 Charles J. Titus, Dec. Charles W. McGinnis, Jan. Oscar L. Jackson. Jan. James Taggart, Jan. First LAeutenants, Clark Hutchison, Sept. Thomas A. P. Champlin, Oct. 20 1'62 10 17 28 'Gl 1 Frank T. Gilmore, Oct. 1 Wusley J. Tucker, Oct. William S. Bradshaw, Oct. 28 Mahlon P. Davis, Dec. 14 Elias V. Cherry, Dec. 10 Henry J. Burt, Doc. 20 Otis W. Pollock, Dec. 20 Francis A. Gibbons, Jan. 16 '62 William Cornell, Jan. 17 Silas Thurlow, Jan. 20 Second Lieutenants, Solomon H. Johnson, Sept. 28 ! G1 Robert Booth Oct. 1 George W. Fitzimons, Oct. 15 Charles J. McGinnis, Oct. 2:*. William W. Mason, Oct. 28 Benjamin Knight, Nov. 12 William Pickett, Jan. 16*62 James A. Gilmore, Jan. 17 •Organized at Garnerville, under Col. F. B. Pond; now serving in Virginia. tOrganized at Marietta, under Captain Wm. Craig, of the regular army, was con- solidated with the Twenty-second, and took the field under Col, John W. Sprague now serving in Missouri. 50 INFANTRY. SIXTY-FOURlH REGIMENT * SIXTY-FIFTH REGIMENT.f NAME. BANK. DATE OF COM'N. NAME. BANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Colonel, John Ferguson, Jan. 21 '62 Charles G. Harker, Nov. 11' 61 Lieutenant Colonel, Lieutenant Colonel, Isaac Gass, Nov. 30 '61 Daniel French, Nov. 30 Major, Major, John J. Williams, Nov. 30 James Olds, Nov. 30 Surgeon, Surgeon, Henry 0. Mack, Oct. 3 John 0. Kyle, Nov. 14 Assistant Surgeon, Assistant Surg ion, Hugh P. Anderson, Nov. 27 John C. Gill, Oct. 3 Chaplain, Chaplain, A. R. Brown, Nov. 26 Andrew Barnes, Nov. 30 Captains, Captains, Alexander Mcllvain, Oct. 15 '61 Alexander Cassell, Oct. 24' 61 James B. Brown, Oct. 21 Horatio N. Whitbeck, Nov. 2 William W. Smith, Oct. 24 Henry Camp, Nov. 4 Samuel Neeper, Oct. 31 Edwin L. Austin, Nov. 4 Turenne 0. Meyer,- Nov. 6 Samuel C. Brown, Nov. 7 John H. Finfrock, Nov. 12 Joshua S. Preble, Nov. 17 Robert C. Brown, Nov. 27 Jacob Christofel, Nov. 22 Charles R. Lord, Nov. 30 Orlow Smith, Nov. 25 Joseph B. Sweet, Nov. 30 Richard M. Voorhis, Nov. 30 Samuel L. Coulter, Dec. 1 Albert Ellis, Feb. 26 62 First Lieutenants, First Lieutenants, Michael Reiser, Oct. 15 '61 Horace H. Justis, Nov. 1' 61 David A. Scott, Oct. 21 David G. Swain, Nov. 4 Cornelius C. White, Oct. 28 Samuel L. Bowlby, Nov. 4 A. N. Goldwood, Oct. 31 Thomas Powell, Nov. 7 Ebenezer B. Finley, Nov. 5 Francis H. Graham, Nov. 12- Simeon B. Conn, Nov. 12 Joseph M. Randall, Nov. 17 Marcus T. Meyer, Nov. 25 Lucien B. Eaton, Nov. 22 Warner Young, Nov. 27 Clark S. Gregg, Nov. 26 Aaron S. Campbell, Nov. 27 Wm. M. Farrar, Nov. 30 Tip. S. Marvin, Nov. 30 D. 11. Rowland, Nov. 30 Wilbur F. Sanders, Nov. 30 Nahum L. Williams, Nov. 30 Lorenzo D. Myer, Nov. 30 John M. Palmer, Feb. 26 62 Second Lieutenants, Second Lieutenants, William 0. Sarr, Oct. 1 '61 Johnson Armstrong, Nov. 4 01 John L. Smith, Oct. 2 Geo. N. Huckins, Nov. 15 Thomas McGill, Oct. 8 Frank B. Hurt, Nov. 18 Samuel M. Wolff, Oct. 26 Jacob Hammond, Nov. 19 Bryant Grafton, Oct. 30 C. 0. Tannehill, Nov. 26 Cyrus Y. Freeman, Nov. 27 Samuel McKinnie, Nov. 28 William McDowell, Nov. 30 Andrew Howenstein, Nov. 30 Norman K. Brown, Nov. 30 Asa A. Gardner, Feb. 8 '62 Chauncy Woodruff, Dec. 1 Henry H. Klinf, Feb. 23 '62 *Organized at Mansfield, under management of Hon. John Sherman, took the field under Col- Forsythe ; now serving in Tennessee. tWas also organized at Mansfield; took the field under Col. Harker; now serving in Tennessee. INFANTRY. 51 SIXTY-SIXTH REGIMENT* NAME. BANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Charles Candy, Nov. 25 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, James H. Dye, Sept. 28 Major, Eugene Powell, Oct. 2b' Surgeon, Thomas P. Bond, Sept, 26 Assistant Surgeon, J. W. Brock, Nov. 5 Chaplain, Wilson R. Parsons, Dec. 12 Captains, John G. Palmer, Oct. 9 Charles E. Fulton, Nov. 7 Samuel P. McMorran, Nov. 19 Alvin Clark, Nov. 22 Thos. J. Buxton, Nov. 30 John Cassill, Dec. 11 James Q. Baird, Dec. 14 Wm. McAdams, Dec. 17 Vesailus Horr, Dec. 17 J. II. Van Deman, Dec. 17 0] First Lieutenants, Wm. M. Gwynne, Sept. 5 '61 Joseph C. Brand, Sept. 28 B. P. Ganson, Nov. 15 Martin R. Wright, Nov. 19 Thos. McConnell, Nov. 20 Robert Crockett, Nov. 22 Llewellyn L. Powell, Nov. 30 Lemuel W. Smith, Dec. 11 James W. Christie, Dec. 14 Wm. Hamilton, Dec. 17 A. H. Yeazel, Dec. 17 Wilson Martin, Dec. 17 Second Lieutenants, John 0. Dye, Oct. 1 '61 Wm. A. Sampson, Oct. 1 D. A. McDonald, Oct. 14 John W. Watkins, Oct. 19 James K. Hurley, Nov. 19 Marshal L. Dempey, Nov. 20 James O. Carter, Dec. 11 A. L. Shepherd, Dec. 17 Monroe Elliott, Dec. 21 Robert Murdoch, Feb. 29 '62 SIXTY-SEVENTH REGIMENT.! NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Otto Burstenbinder, Oct. 17 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Alvin C. Voris, Oct. 2 Major, John R. Bond, Oct. 1 Surgeon, Samuel F. Forbes, Oct. 10 '61 Assistant Surgeon, James Westfall, Jan. 9 '62 Chaplain, John Crabbs, Jan. 15 '62 Captains, Henry S. Commager, Nov. 10 '61 Marcus M. Speigle, Dec. 18 Charles A. Rowsey, Dec. 18 Edwin 8. Piatt, Dec. 18 E. D. Mason, Dec. 18 Valentine Hickman, Dec. 18 John B. Spatford, Dec. 18 Lewis Butler, Dec. 18 Charles C. Lewis, Dec. 18 First Lieutenants, John Faskin, Henry L. Wood, Charles F. Handy, Josej)h Jacobs, John B. Chapman, Charles Hennessy, R. Rudolph, DeWitt C. Dewey, Alfred P. Girty, Sidney G. Brock, Charles P. Schafer, Sheldon Colton, Oct. .Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Second Lieutenants, George Worts, Oct. George L. Childs, Oct. George Emerson, Oct. Alva W. Howe, Dec. Henry J. Cram, Dec. Hugh Shields, Dec. Marquis E. Woodford, Dec. John C. Alberts, Dec. Joseph Heiter, Dec. Louis M. Miller, Dec. 4 '61 4 4 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 18 8 '61 15 25 4 18 18 18 18 18 18 •Organized at urbana, under Col, Canby; now serving in Virginia. tOrganized at Toledo, under Col. Burstenbinder; now serving in Tennessee. 52 INFANTRY. SIXTY-EIGHTH REGIMENT.* NAME. BANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Samuel H. Steedman, Nov. 29 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Robert K. Scott, Nov. 30 Major, John S. Bnook, Nov. 29 Surgeon, Eugene B. Harrison, Nov. 6 Assistant Surgeon, Benjamin F. Berkley, Oct. 21 Chaplain, Martin Perkey, Dec. 24 Captains, Lewis Y. Richards, Nov. 5 Sidney S. Sprague, Nov. 13 Arthur C. Crockett, Nov. 21 Patrick H. Mooney, Nov. 27 Edwin J. Evans, Nov. 27 Nelson A Skeels, Dec. 1 Welsey W. Bowen, Dec. 17 James J. Vorhes, Dec. 17 William C. Comstock, Dec. 18 Hiram H. Poe, Dec. 18 Mr st Lieutenants, James G Haley, Oct. 26 '61 George E. Welles, Oct. 29 John C. Harmon, Nov. 12 Abraham C. Urpuhart, Nov. 21 Leverett G. Randall, Nov. 21 Jedediah C. Banks, Nov. 25 James H. Long, Nov. 27 Thomas H. Lambert, Dec. 1 James Lannen, Dec. 17 Robert Masters, Dec. 18 Ira M. Kelsey, Dec. 18 Thos. T. Cowen, April 1 '62 Second Lieutenants, John Dwyer, Oct. 8 '61 Lewis Dubbs, Oct. 8 Andrew Jackson, Oct. 10 William F. Williams, Nov. 21 Levi Coffman, Nov. 21 George W. Kniss, Nov. 25 James Cosgro, Nov. 27 Jacob Bartlett, Dec. 1 Alexander Boyd, Dec. 18 Chaales Bates, April 1 '62 SIXTY-NINTH REGIMENT.f NAME. BANK- DATE OL COM'N. Colonel, Lewis D. Campbell, Oct. 2 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Wm. B. Cassilly, April 17 '62 Major, C. L. Gano, Nov. 5 '61 Surgeon, L. Slusser, Feb. 12 '62 Assistant Surgeon, M. H. Hayaes, Oct. 3 '61 Chaplain, Wm. G. Brownlow, April 15 '62 Captains, J. H. Brigham, Oct. 17 '61 Chas. N. Gibbs, Dec. 9 Geo. F. Elliott, Dec. 9 David Putman, Dec. 16 E.J. Hickcox, Dec. 16 Robert Clements, Dec. 16 Wm. Patton, Jan. 29 '62 James J. Hanna, March 25 Leonard C. Counsellor, March 3 John V. Heslip, March 21 First Lieutenants, F. B. Landis, Oct. 6 '61 J. W. Boynton, Oct. 5 R. H. Cunningham, Oct. 17 Marmaluke Whelpley, Dec. 9 Geo. B. Hubbard, Dec. 9 Jno. M. Boatman, Dec. 16 James Devor, Dec. 16 C. D. Smith, Dec. 16 Wm. VanDoren, Jan. 29 '62 Edward R. BlacK, March 3 James G. Elrick March 21 Wm. Cady, March 25 Second Lieutenan ts, F. Sweeny, Alex. Leemon, Ross J. Hazeltine, Geo. W. Moore, Jacob W. Shiveley, W. Lazalere, David P. Reed, Fred. Pickering, Thos. B. Hoffman, Patrick H. Suddith, Oct. 17 '61 Dec. 9 Dec. 9 Dec. 16 Dec. 16 Dec. 26 Jan. 19 '62 March 3 March 21 March 25 •Organized at Napoleon, under Col. Steedman; now serving in Tennessee. tOrganized at Camp Chase, under Col. L. D- Campbell ; now serving in Tennes- soe. INFANTRY. 53 SEVENTIETH REGIMENT* NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Oolonel, Joseph It. Cockerill, Oct. 2 '61 Lieutenant- Oolonel, D. W. C. Loudon, Oct. 2 Major, J. W. McFerren, Oct. 2 Surgeon, C. H. Swain, Oct. 24 Assistant Surgeon, T. J. Farrell, Chaplain, Joseph Blackburn, Captains, Wm. B. Brown, Reason T. Naylor, Chas. Johnson, John T. Wilson, Watson Foster, James F. Summers, Benjamin T. Wiles, Dan. B. Carter, Felix G. Stone, Dec. 11 April 14 '62 Oct. 16 '61 Nov. 18 Nov. 20 Nov. 26 Dec. 10 Dec. 22 Dec. 28 Jan. 28 '62 Feb. 11 First Lieutenants, Israel W. de Bruin, Oct. 11 '61 Louis Love, Oct. 16 H. L. Philips, Oct. 28 Valentine Zimmerman, Nov. 18 Samuel M. Woodruff, Nov. 20 John Campbell, Nov. 26 James Drennin, Nov. 26 John K. Truitt, Dec. 10 Samuel G. Richards, Dec. 23 Wm. H. Herbert, Dec. 28 Joinville Reif, Jan. 28 '62 Wm. R. Harmon, Feb. 11 Second Lieutenants, Bricc Cooper, Oct. 16 '61 Wm. R. Stewart, Nov. 18 Josiah W. Denham, Nov. 20 Joseph Spurgeon, Nov. 26 Isaac W. Adams, Nov. 26 John C. Nelson, Dec. 10 Wm. P. Spurgeon, Dec. 23 John Taylor, Dec. 28 Geo. A. Foster, Jan. 28 '62 Amos F. Ellis, Feb. 24 SEVENTY-FIRST REGIMENT.t NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Rodney Mason, Oct. 15 '61 Lieutenant- Oolonel, A. L. McKinney, Marcn 23 '62 Major, G. W. Andrews, Oct. 29 '61 Surgeon, C. N. Hoagland, Oct. 28 Assistant Surgeon, Wm. W. Crane, Jan. 6 '62 Chaplain t Captains, Henry K. McConnell, Nov. 13 61 James W. Carlin, Nov. 27 Wm. H. Callender. Nov. 29 John EL Woodward, Dec. 1 Smith H. Clark, Dec. 14 Chas. H. Kramer, Dec. 24 J. W. Moody, Jan. 10 62 Gideon LeBlond, Jan. 26 Thomas W. Bown, Jan. 28 Solomon J. Houck, Feb. i First Lieutenants, Elihu S. Williams, Oct. 5 63 James H. Hart, Oct. 7 Edward P. Ransom, Oct. 12 John M. Hill, Nov. 25 Geo. O. Toms, Nov. 29 Ira L. Morris, Dec. 11 Joseph R. Goodwin, Dec. 14 Nicholas Eeidemiller, Dec. 24 Amoor Nichols, Jan. 10 62 Joseph N. Hetzler, Jan. 25 Wm. II. McDevitt, Jan. 28 Newton J. Harter, Feb. 7 Second Lieutenants, Thomas T. More, Oct. 5 61 Amos H. Brandon, Nov. 25 J. H. Hunter, Nov. 27 Isaac Munn, Dec. 11 Horace M. Drury, Dec. 14 Stephen W. Boaman, Dec. 24 Alex. Gable, Jan. 25 62 Wm. S. Hamilton, Jan. 28 ^Organized at Ripley, under Col Cockerill ; now serving in Tennessee. tOrganized at Troy, under Lt. Col B. S. Kyle ; took the field under Col. Rodney Mason ; now serving in Tennessee. 54 INFANTRY. SEVENTY-SECOND REGIMEN T.- SEVENTY-THIRD REGIMENT.! NAME. BANK. DATE OF com'n. NAME. BANE. DATEOFCOM'n. Colonel, Colonel, Ralph P. Buckland, Oct. 30 '61 Orland Smith, Oct. 3 '61 Liuetenant Colonel, Lieutenant ■ Colonel, Herman Canfield, Oc. 30 Jacob Hyer, Oct. 3 Major, Major, Leroy Crockett, Nov. 26 Richard Long, Dec. 20' Surgeon, Surgeon, J. B. Rice, Nov. 25 Jonas P. Safford, Dee. 30 Assistant Surgeon, Astistant Surgeon, Wm. M. Kaull, Nov. 5 Isaac N. Hines, Oct. 16 Chaplain Chaplain i A. R. Poe, Jan. 11 E. E. Felton, March 13 '62 Captains, Captains, Charles G. Eaton, Nov. 30 '61 Samuel H. Hurst, Nov. 7 7 61 George Raymond, Dec. 2 Thomas Beach, Nov. 20 Samuel A. J. Snyder, Dec. 8 Thomas W. Higgins, Nov. 20 Andrew Nuhfer, Dec. 12 Thomas Lucas, Nov. 20 John H. Blinn, Dec. 28 Silas Irion, Dec. 13 Leroy Moore, Jan. 4 '62 Edward H. Allen, Dec. 30 Thomas C. Fernald, Jan. 7 J. G. McSchooler, Dec. 30 Michael Megstew, Jan. 10 Lewis H. Burkett, Dec. 30 Jacob Fickes, Jan. 10 John V. Patton, Dec. 30 Theodore M. Thompson Jan* 11 First Lieutenants, First Lieutenants, Daniel W. Harkness, Oct. 5 '61 Wm. D. Wesson, Oct. 19*61 Henry W. Gifford, Nov. 30 L. M. Buckwatter, Nov. 9 Henry W. Buckland, Dec. 2 James Q. Barnes, Nov. 20 Eugene A. Rawson, Dec. 4 George M. Doherty, Nov. 20 Jacob Snyder, Dec. 8 Frederick C. Smith, Dec. 26 Manning A. Fowler, Dec. 12 Benj. F. Stone, Dec. 30 Charles Dinius, Dec. 28 Archibald Lybrand, Dec. 30 Alfred H. Rice, Jan. 4 '62 John D. Madeira, Dec. 30 James Fernald, Jan. 7 John Kinney, Dec. 30 Anthony Young, Jan. 10 Geo. W. Lauman, Nov. 20 Albert Batas, Jan. 10 Samuel Fillers, March 3 '62 William H. Skerrett, Jan. 11 J. W. J. Stevenson, March 19 Second Lieutenants, Second Lieutenants, John H. Poyer, Oct. 19 '61 Abisha Downing, Nov. 4 '61 Spencer Russell, Nov. 30 John J. Throcmorton, Nov. 9 Wm. T. Fisher, Deo. 2 Henry Hinson, Nov. 20 James W. Hoffman, Dec. 8 John Mitchell, Nov. 20 Jesse J. Cook, Dec. 12 John F. Martin, Dec. 26 William A. Strong, Dec. 28 James S. McCommon, Dec. 30 John B. Gilmore, Jan. 4 '62 Charles W. Trimble, Dec. 30 Andrew Kline, Jan. 10 David P. Rennie, Dec. 30 James Donnel, Jan. 10 David L. Grenier, March 8 '62 Caleb F. Goshorn, Feb. 13 *Organized at Fremont, under Col. Buckland ; now serving in Tennessee. tOrganized at Chillicothe, under Col. Smith; now serving in Virginia. INFANTRY. 55 SEVENTY-FOURTH REGIM EN L* SEVENTY-FIFTH REGIMENT.T make. Hank- DATE OF COM'N. NAME. KANK. DAME OF COM 's Colonel, Colonel, Granville Moody, Dec 10 61 Nathaniel C. McLean, Sept. 18 61 Lieutenant Colonel ( Lieutenant- Colonel, Alex. Von Schraeder, Dec. 10 Robert A. Constable, Dec. 18 Major, Major, A. S. Ballard, Oct. 5 Robert Reily, Sept. 18 Surgeon, Surgeon, J. R. Brelsford, Nov. 5 Samuel Hart, Jan. 11 62 Assistant Sure, ieon Assistant Surgi 'on, E. W. Steele, Jan. 9 62 Chas. L. Wilson, Dec. 28 61 Chaplain, Chaplain Samuel Marshall, March 12 John W. Weakley, Oct. 14 Captains, Captains, Thomas C. Bell, Nov. 2 61 Chas. W. Friend, Sept. 23 61 Stephen A. Bassford, Dec. 5 Andrew L. Harris, Nov. Samuel T. Owens, Dec. 23 Horace W. Deshler, Dec. 14 Austin McDowell, Dec. 28 Benjamin Morgan, Dec. 14 Joseph Fisher, Dec. 31 James W. Swope, Dec. 14 Patrick Dwyer, Dec. 31 Wm. S. Metcalf, Dec. 16 Walter Crook, Jan. 7 62 George Fry, Dec. 22 Albion W. Bostwick, Feb. 18 James D. Foster, Dec. 25 Joseph H. Ballard, Feb. 20 Thomas M. D. Pilcher, Dec. 25 Robert P. Findley, Feb. 27 First Lieutenants, First Lieutenants, William Mills, Oct. 5 61 James A. Johnston, Oct. 10 til Henry M. Cist, Oct. 22 Wm. G. Ross, Oct. 18 Wm. McGinniss, Nov. 8 Henry B. Lacey, Oct. 20 Franklin I. Tedford, Dec. 5 Oscar Miner, Nov. 9 James H. Cochnower, Dec. 21 Oscar Deshler, Dec. 14 Wm. T. Armstrong, Dec. 23 Harvey Crampton, Dec. 14 John N. McClung, Dec. 28 Franklin F. Raikes, Dec. 14 Henry H. Hering, Dec. 31 Geo. W. Hopper, Dec. 18 Robert Cullen, Dec. 31 Judson W. Caldwell, Dec. 22 Matthew H. Peters, Jan. 7 62 Abraham W. Thomas, Dec. 25 Thomas C. Mcllravy, Feb. 18 Joseph M. Goodspeed, Dec. 25 David bnodgrass, Feb. 20 Second Lieutenants, Second IAeutenants, Robert. Stevenson, Oct. 11 61 Elias Monfort, Oct. 8 61 John W. McMillen, Oct. 24 Henry L. Morey, Oct. 18 Benj. F. Shickley, Not. 14 James W. Whaley, Oct. 23 Wm. H. Reed, Dec. 2 Geo. P. Fox, Nov. 5 Richard A. King, Dec. 5 James Mulhaner, Nov. «t John R. Hitesman, Dec. 16 Jasper N. Watkins, Dec. 14 Robert Hunter, Dec. 28 Benjamin F. Metcalf, Dec. 16 Wm. H. H. Moody, Jan. 4' 62 Wm. J. Rannells, Dec. 22 Geo. W. Bricker, Feb. 18 John C. S. Miller, Dec. 26 Bernard J. Connaughton, Dec. 31 ^Organized at Camp Dennison, under Col. Granville Moody; now serving in Ton- nesssee- tOrganized at Loveland, under Col- A C- McLean, consolidated with 79th; now serving in Virginia- 56 INFANTRY. SEVENTY-SIXTH REGIMENT* com'n. 12 '61 4 NAME. BANK. DATE OP Colonel, Charles R. Woods, Oct. Lieutenant- Colonel W. B. Woods, Nov. Major, Willard Warner, Dec. 28 Surgeon, < 'has. R. Pierce, Jan. Assistant Surgeon, 9 '02 6 '61 1 12 27 4 16 16 18 7 '62 24 Thos. B. Hood, Nov. Chaplain, John W. McCarty, Dec. 17 Captains, Thaddeus Lemert, Nov. Joseph M. Scott, Not. Edward Briggs, Nov. Levi P. Coman, Dec. Chas. H. Kibler, Dec. Joseph C. Wehrle, Dec. Strew M. Emmons, Dec. James Stewart, Jan. Jerome N. Rappleyea, Jan James M. Jay, Feb. 7 First Lieutenants, Henry D. Wright, Oct. 14 '61 Beverly W. Lemert, Nov. 1 Ira P. French, Nov. 12 James Blackburn, Nov. 27 John S. Anderson, Dec. 4 Michael R. Maher, Dec. 16 James H. H. Hunter, Dec. 18 Jehiel Wintrode, Jan. 7 '62 S. Sylvester Wells, Jan. 21 John A. Dill, Jan. 24 David R. Kelley, Feb. 7 John R. Miller, March 27 Second Lieutenants, Simeon B. Wall, Nov. 1 '61 John H. Hardgrove, Nov. 27 John W. Gray, Dec. 4 Reason C. Strong, Dec. 16 Charles Luther, Dec. 16 Freeman Morrison, Dec. 18 Richard W. Burt, Jan a 7 '62 Mark Sperry, Feb. 7 Calvin G. Wells, Feb. 26 M. S. Moore, March 27 SEVENTY-SEVENTH REGIMENTf NAME- KANK. DATE OP COM'N. Colonel, Jesse Hildebrand, Oct. 5 '61 Lieutenant- Colonel, Wills DeHass, Oct. 5 Major, Benj. D. Fearing, Nov. 20 Surgeon, James W. Warfield, Oct. 28 Assistant Surgeon, Pardon Cook, Chaplain, Wm. Pierce, Captains, Wm. E. Stevens, Wm. B. Mason, Lewis E. Sisson, Enoch W. Blasedel, Andrew Smith, James H. Lutgen, Andrew W. McCormick, Richard Fouraker, Wm. T. Robinson, Albert Chandler, Oct. 29 Jan. 4 '62 Nov. 23 Dec. 2 Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. '01 Dec. 31 Dec. Jan. 62 First Lieutenants, Wm. West, Harvey Anderson, Thomas J. Cochran, Robert H. McKitrick, Thomas Mitchell, John Henricle, Thomas Garrett, Herschel B. White, Samuel S. McNaughton, Wm. W. Scott, ▼ m. H. Fisher, Thomas Ross, Oct Nov Nov Dec Dec. 10 Dec. 12 Dec Dec Dec Dec, 15 '61 23 25 2 12 31 31 31 March 6 March 27 G2 Second Lieutenants, Joseph J. Steenrod, Nov. 23 '61 David F. Jones, Dec. 2 Marion N. Burris, Dec. 10 Oliphant S. Thomas, Dec. 10 Edward R. Moore, Dec. 12 Hanson Criswell, Dec. 12 David A. Henry, Dec. 31 Levi J. Fouraker, Dec. 31 Henry Hobletzell, Dec. 31 ^Organized at Newark, under Col. Woods ; now serving in Tennessee. {Organized at Marietta, under Col. Hildebrand; now serving in Tennessee. INFANTRY. 57 NAME. BANK. DATE OF Colonel, M. D. Leggett, Jan. Lieutenant Colonel, Feb. SEVENTY-EIGHTH REGIMENT* com'n. 21 '62 6 26 '61 21 '61 26 11 '62 Dec. Nov. Benjamin F. Hawkes, Major, David F. Camahan, Surgeon, James S. Reeves, Assistant Surgeon, Samuel 0. Mendenhall, Nov. Chaplain, Oliphant M. Todd, Jan. Captains, Horace D. Munson, Nov. Zach. M. Chandler, Dec. E. Hilles Talley, Dec. Thomas M. Stevenson, Dec. Avery L. Wallar, Dec. Peter Gebhart, Jan. John T. Rainej', Jan. Andrew Scott, Jan. John W. Cornyn, Jan. First Lieutenants, John C. Douglass, Oct. John E. .lewett, Nov. Thomas P. Wilson, Nov. Greenburg F. Wiles, Dec. Wm. C. Godfrey, Dec. Benj. A. Blandy, Dec Wm. W. McCarty, Dec. Hugh Dunne, Dec. John F. Grimes, Jan. John W. A. Gillispie, Jan. John B. Mills, Jan. John Hamilton, Jan. Second Lieutenants, John Orr, Nov. James T. Caldwell, Nov. William S. Harlan, Dec. Cyrus M. Roberts, Dec. Gilbert D. Munson, Dec. James F. Story, Deo. Joseph C. JenKins, Jan. Samuel A. DeWolf, Jan. James Carrothers, Jan. 25 '61 13 14 23 26 8 '62 8 11 11 22 '61 1 25 13 14 14 23 26 8 '62 11 11 11 13 '61 25 14 23 26 26 11 '62 11 11 EIGHTIETH REGIMENT.! NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Ephraim R. Eckley, Dec. 29 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Matthew H. Bartilson, Dec. 23 Major, Richard Lanning, Dec. 23 Surgeon, Ezekiel P. Bucll, Jan. 8 '62 Assistant Surgeon, Samuel H. Lee, Jan. 8 Chaplain, Captains, Isaac Ulman, Chas. H. Matthews, John J. Robinson, David Keels, Emerson Goodrich, Wm. Marshall, Pren Metham, Joseph M. Anderson, Geo. W. Pepper, Thomas C. Morris, Nov. 5 '61 Nov. 26 Dec. 9 Dec. 21 Dec. 23 Dec. 27 Dec. 31 Jan. 6 '62 Jan. 7 March 12 First Lieutenants, Oct. 23 '61 Nov. 5 Nov. Clark H. Robinson, Sylvester Wallace, Chas. F. Davis, Michael C. West, Dec. John Orr, Dec. Peter Hack, Dec. James Games, Dec. Wm. Wagstaff, Jan. John Kinney, Jan. Daniel Korn, Jan. Chas. E. Mitchener, Feb. James A. Philpott, March Second Lieutenants, John J. Robinson, Jr. Dec. John McLaughlin, Dec. Daniel G. Hildt, Dec. John D. Ross, Dec. Francis Farmer, Dec. Chas. F. Espy, Jan. Jacob W. Doyle, Jan. Oliver C. Pcwleson, Jan. Henry C. Robinson, Jan. 26 21 23 27 31 6 '62 7 11 21 21 9'61 21 23 27 31 6 7 11 11 62 ♦Organized at Zanesville, under Col. Leggett ; now serving in Tennessee. tOrganized at Canal Dover— took the field under Col- Ackloy; now serving in Kentucky. 58 INFANTRY. EIGHTY-EIRST REGIMENT.* NAME. B NK DATE OP COM'N. Colonel, Thomas Morton, Aug. 19 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, EIGHTY-SECOND REGIMENT.t NAME- RANK. D VTE OF COJl'N. Colonel, James Catnwell, Dec. 31 '61 Lieutenant- Colonel, Major, Major, James S. Robinson, Dec. 3 '61 Surgeon, Surgeon, R. G. McLean, April 1'62 Jacob Y. Cantwell, Jan. 1 '62 Assistant Surg eon, Assistant Surge on, J. T. Reed, April 1 Augustus W. Munson, Dec. 26 '61 Chaplain, Chaplain, Captains, Captains, Peter O'Kane, Aug. 30 '61 David Thomson, Nov. 14 Robert N. Adams, Aug. 30 Lemon S. Powell, Nov. 25 Peter A. Tyler, Aug. 30 Peter C. Boslow, Nov. 28 Ozro J. Dodds, Sept. 1 James Ewing, Dec. 11 Charles M. Hughes, Sept. 3 £ mes S. Crail, Dec. 19 R. B. Kinsell, Oct. 2 Charles Mains, Dec. 20 R. T. Lanins, Dec. 12 John S. Reig, Dec. 20 Nicholas Jerolaman, Dec. 20 Geo. H. Purdy, Dec. 21 David S. Sampsel, Dec. 31 First Lieutenants, First Lieutenants, Samuel E. Adams, Aug. 19 Wm. E. Scofield, Oct. 30 Frank Evans, Aug. 19 Alex. S. Ramsey, Nov. 4 Daniel Shuman, Aug. 30 Solomon L. Hoge, Nov. 14 James W. Titus, Aug. 30 David J. Meatzer, Nov. 25 Wm. H. Chamberlin, Aug. 30 John Campbell, Nov. 28 F. Agerter, Aug. 30 William Porterfield, Dec. 6 Wm. Clay Henry, Sept. 1 John Costin, Dec. 19 John L. Hughes, Sept. 3 Samuel B. Smith, Dec. 20 Eli H. James, Oct. 2 Samuel H. Berry, Dec. 20 Alfred E. Lee, Dec. 21 John S. Fulton, Dec. 31 Second Lieutenants, Second Lieutenants, William E. Lockwood, Aug. 19 Preston Faught, Nov. 6 '61 William F. Wilcox, Aug. 30 John P. Drennan, Nov. 9 0. P. Irion, Aug. 30 Francis S. Jacobs, Nov. 12 Anthony Bowsher, Oct. 1 James B. McConnell, Nov. 14 C. B. Ayers, Oct. 2 Wm. J. Dickson, Nov. 25 Morgan Simonson, Nov. 28 Andrew H. Nickell, Dec. 20 Charles Diebold, Dec. 20 Lloyd B. Lippitt, Dec. 20 Hervey Litzenberg, Dec. 21 "Organized at St- Louis, under Lt. Col. Morton ; now serving in Tennessee- tOrganized at Kenton, under Col- Cantwell ; now serving in Virginia. CAVALRY. 59 HOFFMAN'S BATTALION OF INFANTRY * DATE OF COM'N. NAME. BANK Major, William S. Pierson, Dec. 24 '61 Captains, Foster M. Follet, Dec. 18 '61 A Edward A. Scoville, Jan. 9 '62 B NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. First Lieutenants, Albeit G. Tuther, Dec. 18 '61 A Thos. H. Linnell, Dec. 24 B Second Lieutenants, Henry C. Benson, Dec. 18 A Benj. W.Wells, Dec. 24 B CAVALRY FIRST REGIMENT.! NAME. RANK. DATE OF Colonel, Minor Millikin, Jan. Lieutenant- Colonel, Thomat H. C. Smith, Aug. Majors, Michael W. Smith, Oct. Erasmus B. Dennison, Nov. R. S. Smith, Jan. Surgeon, Rudolph Wirth, Sept. A ssis 'ant- Surgeon. John Cannan, Oct. Chaplain, J. M. Drake, Dec. Captains, J. H. Robinson, Aug. James Laughlin, Aug. Nathan D. Menken, Aug. Andrew B. Emery, Aug. Beroth B. Eggleston, Aug. Martin Buck, Aug. Davis A. B. Moore, Aug. Valentine Cupp, Sept. Thomas J.^Pattin, Sept, Stephen C\ Writer, Sept. Thomas W. Forshee, Oct. James N. Scott, Oct. First Lieutenants, S. L. Hooker, Aug. George F. Conn, Aug. Restcome R. Kirby, Aug. S. S. L'Hommedieu, jr., Aug. Michael J. Alkire, Aug. com'n. lr 62 23 61 31 27 11 62 7 61 10 13 16 61 16 21 21 29 29 30 17 18 23 1 1 16 61 16 21 22 29 Carey A. Doggett, Aug. 29 01 John C. Frankenberger , Sept. 11 Lafayette Pickering, Sept. 17 John D. Barker, Sept. 18 James Cutler, Oct. 1 John D. Moxley, Oct. 1 John H. Piatt, Oct. 10 George P. Ladd, Oct. 25 Llewellyn Gwynne, Oct. 30 Henry Topping, Oct, 30 Mos es H. Neil, Dec. 9 Wm. McBurnie, Feb. 19 '62 John P. Rea. March 12* Second Lieutenants, Noah Jones, Aug. 16 61 Samuel W. Fordyce, Aug. 16 Samuel N. Stanford, Aug. 21 Leonard Erwin, Aug. 21 Robert R. Waddle, Aug. 29 Ira Stevens, Aug. 30 Oscar H. Underwood, Sept. 18 Abram F. McCurdy, Oct. 1 John M. Renick, Oct. 1 John C. O'Harra, Jan. 9' 62 Peter B. Cool, Feb. 9 SECOND REGIMENT.}: NAME. RANK. DATE OP COM'N. Colonel, Charles Doubleday, Sept. 5 Lieutenant- Colonel, Robert W. Ratliff, Aug. 22 Major, George G. Miner, George A. Purington Henry L. Bennett, 01 Aug. 24 Sept. 10 March 10 '62 ^Organized at Sandusky ; guarding Johnson's Island prison. tOrganized at Camp Chase, under Col- Ranson; two companies in Virginia, and the rest in Tennessee. JOrganized at Cleveland, under Col- Doubleday ; now at Fo»t Scott. Kansas- 60 CAVALRY. Surgeon, THIRD REGIMENT.* Alfred Taylor, Aug. 27 '61 NAME. RANK. DATE OF COM'N. Assistant Surg eon, Colonel, Joseph T. Smith, Sept. 6 Lewis Zahm, Aug. 6 '61 Chaplain, Lieutenant Colonel, Gaylord B. Hawkins, Oct. 10 Douglas A. Murray, Oct. 10 Captains, Majors, James Caldwell, Hiram A. Hall, William J. Keen, Sept. Sept. Sept. 4 6 9 John H. Foster, James W. Paramore, Charles B. Seidel, Sept. Sept. Jan. 23 27 16 '62 Charles C Smith, Sept. 9 Surgeon, Aaron K. Lindsley, Sept. 9 M. C. Cuykendall, Oct. 28 '61 Allen P. Steele, Dudley Seward, Sept. Sept. 9 10 Assistant Surge on, R. W. Stewart, Sept. 30 S. F. Selby, Nov. 4 Thomas W. Sanderson, Oct. 7 Chaplain, Baylis R. Fawcett, Dec. 20 E. Y. Warner, Sept. 25 A. Bayard Nettleton, March 10 '62 Captains, David E. Welch, March 14 Horace Rowland, Aug. 15 '61 First Lieutenants, Oliver G. Smith, Aug. 17 Seth A. Abbey, Aug. 11 '61 Henry B. Gaylord, Aug. 24 Edmund Ward, Sept, 4 De Witt C. Doane, Sept. 4 Timothy D. Leslie, Sept. 9 Leonard B. Chapin, Sept. 4 Henry S. Wood, Sept. 9 John W. Marvin, Sept. 8 Miles J. Collier, Sept. 10 Wm. B. Amsden, Sept. 10 Albert Watrous, Sept. 18 Leonard Adams, Sept. 13 Gurdin Woodruff, Sept. 18 Charles W. Skinner, Oct. 10 Mandred Weeks, Sept. 30 Wm. Flanagan, Nov. 9 Albert Watson, Oct. 10 Daniel Gotshall, Nov. 15 Josep B. Holmes, Oct. 30 Thos. D. McClelland, Jan. 16 '62 Henry J. Virgil, Dec. 20 First Lieutenants. John C. Hutchins, Dec. 20 ' Frederick R. Deming, Dec. 20 Jonathan B. Bliven, Aug. 24 '61 Peter L. Rush, Dec. 20 Frank S. Sowers, Aug. 30 Henry Clay Pike, Alonzo McGowan, Jan. Jan. 8 '62 8 George C. Roberts, Elisha M. Colver, Sept. Sept. 2 4 Henry Frissell, Second Lieuler Jan. 8 Clark Center, Sept. 4 ants, James B. Luckey, Robert Moore, Sept. Sept. 4 7 Abner D. Strong, Sept. 9 '61 Henry C. Miner, Sept. 8 Stanley B. Lockwood, Sept. 9 Richard B. Wood, Sept. 10 Franklin S. Case, Sep 9 Ad. M. Heflebower, Sept. 13 Wni. B. Shattuc, Sept. 9 Lewis R. Zahm, Sept. 27 Wm. B. Neiman, Sept. 30 William Maxwell, Oct. 10 Edward B. Hubbard, Oct. 17 Wood Fosdick, Oct. 25 Crawford W. Stewart, Oct. 23 Geo. C. Probert, Oct. 27 Augustus N. Bernard, Dec. 20 Victor J. Zahm, Oct. 26 David K. Carter, jr., Dec. 20 Stiles W. Burr, Oct. 26 Alexander B. Session!, Dec. 20 William R. Jackson, Nov. 4 Julius L. Hadley, Jan. 8 '62 Darius E. Livermore, Nov. 4 Wm. S. Foster, Nov. 26 Harrison Terry, Jan. 16 '62 ^Organised at Monroeville, under Col. Zahn; now serving in Tennessee. CAVALRY. 61 Second Lieutenants, Oliver M. Brown, Alonzo B. Ennes, Elihu Isbcl, Francis P. Gates, James W. Lykins, George F. Williams, Edwin R. Toll, Samuel J. Hansey, Oscar W. Truman, Ralph Devereaux, Frederick Brenerd, Henry Streicker, Aug. If, Sept. 4 Sept. Sept. 7 Sept. 8 Sept, 10 Sept. 13 Sept. l'.t Oct. •_'.". Nov. 2 Jan. 9 Jan. 16 til '62 Sept. Sept. Sept. FOURTH REGIMENT* NAME. RANK. DATE OF COiTN. Colonel, John Kennett, Aug. 30 '61 Lieutenant Colonel, Henry W. Burdsal, Aug. 30 Majors, John L. Pugh, James E. Dresbach, Surgeon, Lucian A. James, Assistant Surgeon, Thomas McMillin, Sept. 5 Chaplain, Laban C. Cheney, Oct. Captains, Hiram Shuts. Conduce G. Megrue, Peter Mathews, John W. King, George A. Gotwald, Oliver P. Rohie, Robert E. Rodgers, Henry 0. Rodgers, Franz Zimmerman, Jesse Parsons Wilson, First Lieutenants, George A. Boss. Philip il. Warner, James R. Johnson, Thomas 1). Hastings, James Ritty, John Holm, Geo. W. Dobb, Wm. Wilshear, Aug. 24 t',1 Aug. 25 Sept. 3 Sept. • ) Sept. 9 Sept. 10 Sept. 3 Oct, 5 Oct. 7 Dec. 12 ts, Aug. 24*61 Aug. 25 Sept. • i Sept. 5 Sept. 5 Sept. 9 Sept. 10 Sept. 10 Carl Adae, James Thompson, Richard P. Ret'enbeck, Wellington B. Straight, August Recherer, Henry B. Tcetor, Marcus Symonton, Adams Kuhns, Second Lieu tenants, John Shade, William W. Shoemaker, George Fritz, Henry II. Hamilton, William E. Crane, Joseph A. Harris, Milton C. Chamberlain, Andrew Kessling, George Crist, Edwin W. Mitchell, Sept. 10 Sept. 10 Oct. 4 Oct. i> Oct. 7 Nov. 11 Nov. 27 L»cc. 12 Aug. 24 Gl Sept, 5 Sept. 9 Sept. 10 Sept. 1-3 Oct. 8 Oct. b Oct, 17 Dec. 12 Jan. 11 '62 FIFTH REGIMEN T.t NAME. BANE. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, W. H. H. Taylor, Aug. 26 '61 Lieutenant Columl, Thomas T. Heath, Aug. 26 Majors, Frederick Scherer, Sept. 20 Elbridge G. River, Nov. 1 Charles S. Hays, Nov. 1 Surgeon, Charles Thornton, Aug. 27 Assistant Surgeon, George Sprague, Sept. 11 Chaplain, Captains. John C. Curtis, Philip Trounstine, John Henry Hyde, Clement Murphy, Joseph C. Smith, Phineas R. Minor, N orris R. Norton, Wm. H. Fngaly, John Henry, Isaac S. Quinlan, Samuel Warmsley. Ant'. 10 '61 Aug. 31 Sept. 1 Sept. 3 Sept 21 Sept 21 Sept. 20 Oct. :' Oct. S Not. 1 Nov. 1 ^Organized at Camp Dennison. under Col- ,1. Kennett; now serving in Tennessee. tOrganized at Camp Chase, under Col. Taylor ; now serving in Tennessee- 62 CAVALRY. First Lieutenants, Irving Halsey, Aug. John T. Taylor, Aug. Wm. W. McFarland, Aug. Caleb Marker, Sept. Charles H. Murray, Sept. Richard C. O'Bryon, Sept. Charles B. Cooper, Sept. William Owens, Sept. Elijah G. Penn, Oct. B. W. Thompson, Oct. Thomas G-. Wood, Oct. James C. Harrison, Oct. William Jessup, Nov. Joseph N. Shultz, Nov. James Lowe, Nov. Daniel Sayer, Nov. James C. Slatery, Nov. John E. Craig, Nov. Edward Crapsey, Nov. William E. Nichols, Nov. Second Lieutenants, Lawrence Shultz, Norton S. Reed, Elijah T. Van Cleve, Alex. C. Rossman, John H. Hubbell, Franklin B. Pepper, John D. Truett, James F. Porter, George H. Rader, Wm. C. Slade, Lewis C. Swerer, John Penny, Aug. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Oct. Nov. Nov. 28 '61 31 31 2 2 9 12 26 3 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 31 '61 5 7 8 9 10 10 17 27 8 4 4 SIXTH REGIMENT* NAME. BANK. DATE OF COM'N. Colonel, Wm. R. Lloyd, Dec. 19 '61 Lieutenant Oolonel, Wm. 0. Collins, Dec. 19 Majors, John O'Ferrall, Oct. 20 Wm. Steadman, Oct. 21 Richard B. Treat, Oct, 23 Surgeon, W. B. Regner, Oct. 24 Assistant Surgeon, J. C. Marr, Nov. 23 Chaplain, Captains, Amandar Bingham, Benj. C. Stanhope, Francis M. Shipley, Hamer Hayes, John H. Cryer, Thomas L. Mackay, Norman A. Barrett, John C. Richart, Charles R. Bowe, Chancey L. Bartlett, James S. Abell, Peter W. Van Winkle, First Lieutenants, Oct. 24 '61 Nov. 8 Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. 21 9 10 13 14 14 16 16 16 31 C. R. Hunt, Delos R. Northway, Richard J. Wright, W. H. Hutchins, W. H. Woodrow, James W. Chase, Henry L. Koehne, C. B. Bostwick, Wesley Love, James H. Leeman, John Van Pearce, Lewis R. Prior, John N. Roberts, John E. Wyatt, Wm. H. Bettes, Wm. J. Haight, M. H. Haskell, Chas. H. Hunter, Oliver S. Glenn, Sept. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Second Lieutenants, Thomas P. Clarke, Elias Sheppard, Peter S. Tinan, Lysander Pelton, Wm. H. Brown, Carmann Vananda, John H. Miller, Robert E. Hedden, Geo. L. Wilson, Josiah D. Freer, Henry H. Abell, Geo. W. Doggett, Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. 28 '61 14 18 21 26 9 10 13 14 14 16 16 16 20 23 31 1'61 8 14 8 21 9 10 14 14 16 16 31 *Formed by consolidating the Sixth and Seventh regiments, under Col. Lloyd ; first battalion at Fort Larimie, and second and third go into Fremont's Depart- ment. ARTILLERY. 63 M'LAUGIILIN'S SQUADRON Major, Wm. McLaughlin, Oap tains, Gaylord McFall, S. R. Buckmaster, First Lieutenants, Enoch Smith, Nov. 26 Benjamin B. Lake, Dec. 6 Second Lieutenants, Samuel H. Fisher, Nov. 26 Herman Alleman, Dec. 6 Sept. 28 '61 Nov. 26 Dec. 6 INDEPENDENT COMPANIES.! FIRST COMPANY. Captain, Wm. H. Burdsal, June 5 '61 First Lieutenant, Second Lieutenant, C. B. Hunt, June 5 THIRD COMPANY. Ciptain, First Lieutenant, Frank Smith, July 4 '61 Second Lieutenant, FOURTH COMPANY. Captain, John S. Foster, July 9 '61 First Lieutenant, Wm. II. Hannah, July 9 Second Lieutenant, Stephen D. Porter, July 9 FIFTH COMPANY. Captain, James L. Foley, Aug. 21 '61 First Lieutenant, Joseph M. Kennedy, Aug. 21 Second Lieutenant, Isaac B. McLinn, Aug. 21 SIXTH COMPANY. Captain, Jeptha Garrard, Sept. 11 '61 First Lieutenant, James K. Wilson, Sept. 11 Second Lieutenant, Geo. F. Dern, Dec. 16 ARTILLERY FIRST REGIMENT.} Colonel, James Barnett, Sept. 3 '61 Lieutenant- Colonel, W. II. Hayward, Nov. 25 Majors, Walter E. Lawrence, Seymour Race, William P. Israel, Jr., Surgeon, J. C. Swartzweldcr, Assistant Surgeon, Byron Stanton, Oct. 24 Sept. 12 Oct. 12 Nov. 'J'i Sept. 28 (hap lain, Captains, B William E Standart, Aug. 10 '61 F Daniel T. Cockerill, Aug. 15 M F. Schuliz. Sept. 5 C Dennis Kenney, it., Sept. 9 1) A. .1. Kdnkle, ' Sept. 26 E W. P. idgarton, Oct, 7 K Wm. L. DeBeck, Oct. 10 1 H. F. Hyman, Oct. 22 L Lucius \. Robinson, Oct. 31 H J. F. Huntington, Nov. 7 G Joseph Bartlett, Nov. 16 A W. F. Goodspeed, March 12 '62 -Organized at Mansfield, under Major McLaughlin; now at l'iketon, Kentucky. tOrganized in different parts of the State ; present location unknown. ^Organized at Camp Dennison, under Col- Barnett ; serving in V irginia, 1 ennes- see and Missouri, 64 ARTILLERY. First Lieutenants, John A. Bennett, Albert L. Beckley, J. H. Sypher, G. J. Cockerill, Samuel M. Espey, Lemuel R. Porter, C. Schwerer, F. Amann, Geo. VV. Howe, — John H. Miller, C Marco B. Gary, James H. Miller, Albert G. Ransom, Stephen W. Dorsey, Geo. B. Haskin, Wm. Dammert, F. Dorries, Frank C. Gibbs, G. W. Norton, Geo. Davenport, Alex. Marshall, Thos. C. Floyd, Wm. H. Fease, C F 1! D M C C B M B E F L I H II (i G D K L K A J A Chas. G. Mason, Joseph D. King, Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Aug. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Sept. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov. Nov. Nov. Dec. Jan. March March 4 '61 5 10 15 15 1 9 9 9 28 7 7 Id 22 31 31 Second Lieutenant, Geo. W. Blair, Aug. N. A. Baldwin, Aug. H. C. Loyd, Sept. Joseph Eberle, Sept. D. K. Southwick, Sept. Frank Viets, Sept. Eben P. Sturgis, Sept. Joseph Hein, Sept. W. W. Northrup, Oct. Andrew Berwick, Oct. N. Osburn, Oct. C. H. Robinson, Oct. Samuel H. Day, Nov. Thos. M. Bartlett, Nov. Martin B. Ewing, Nov. E. A. Osborn, Nov. John Crable, Dec. N. M. Newell, Jan. Henry S. Camp, Jan. Wm. Walworth, Jan. Louis Hickman, Feb. Edwin B. Belding, March Louis Doerr, March Chas. W. Scoville, March 12 25 1 '62 12 13 16 '61 18 1 5 9 9 10 10 7 7 15 31 4 7 7 20 25 1 '62 7 7 20 12 13 15 INDEPENDENT BATTTERIES* FIRST BATTERY. Oap tain, James R. McMullen, July 31 '61 First Lieutenants. George L. Croome, July 31 Second Lieutenant, George H. McClung, July 31 SECOND BATTERY. Oaptnin, Thomas J. Carlin, Aug. 6 '61 First Lieutenants, William B. Chapman, Aug. 6 Second Lieutenant, Conrad Gansvoort, Aug. 6 THIRD BATTERY. Captain, Wm. S. Williams, Jan. 20 '62 First Lieutenants, Wm. J. Mong, Jan. 20 Francis J. Myers, Jan. 20 Second IAeutenants , Wm. G. Watson, Feb. 21 Stephen Keith, Feb. 21 FOURTH BATTERY. Captain, Lewis Hoffman, Aug. 17 61 First Lieutenants, George Froehlich, Aug. 17 Lewis Pederet, Dec. 9 Second Lieutenants, Max Frank, Aug. 17 Louis Zimmerer, Dec. 9 FIFTH BATTERY. Captain, Andrew Hickenlooper, Aug. 31 '61 First LAeutenants, Anthony B. Barton, Aug. 31 Lewis C. Sawyer, March 18 '62 Secoud Lieutenants, Julius F. Blackburn, Aug. 31 '61 William L. Broadwell, March 18 '62 SIXTH BATTERY. Captain, Cullen Bradley, Nov. 11 '61 First Lieutenants, Oliver H. P. Ayres, Nov. 20 James P. McElroy, Nov. 20 army- Organized in different parts of the State ; now scattered through the whoh T1V. &.B riLLERT. .:' ' Lieutenant Cyrus Sears, Henry M. s < 7 '62 nd Lieutenant, David N. Southworth, Sept. 7 '61 Win. K. Perine, Feb. 8 '62 TWELFTH BATTERY. Not yet completed. [RT1 ENTH BATTERY. John B Myers, Jan. 2 '62 First Lieuti nant*, John R. Brown, Jan. "_' Ezra Bennett, , 1"> SeCM i Bflfo, Edmund B. Lowe, Jan. 2 Levi M. Wiilits, Feb. 1"> FOURTEENTH BATTERY. Cup | Jerome B. Burrows, Sept. 10 '61 First Lieutenants, Homer II. Stull, Sept. J * = Set and Li< uU nants, Hamilton H. Burrows, Sept. 10 FIFTEENTH BATTER! . Edward Spear, jr., Jan. 1 '62 First Lieutenants, Adrian A. Burrows, Feb. 1 James Burd Feb. 1 ieuti aunts, Win. H. Crowell, Jan. 1 Edwin F. Eli Feb. 1 SIXTEENTH BATTERY. Captain, \. Mitchell, Aug. 17 '61 Fin mis, 11 P. Twist, Aug. 17 George Murdock, Aug Second Lit utenanU, I II. Funston, 20 ■ hell, i 20 CASUALTIES. INFANTRY. 1st Regiment. — Col. B. F. Smith, leave of absence from Regular Army re- called. 2d Regiment.— Surgeon D. E. Wade, resigned Jan. 23, '62. 1st Lieuten- ants: John A. Allen, resigned March 3, '62; David Clingman, resigned De- cember 8, '61 ; J. R. D. Clendenning, Dec. 7, '61. 3d Kegiment.— Col. Isaac H. Marrow, resigned Feb. 4, '62. Captains: Joseph M. Danna, resigned Dec. 9, '61; Asa H. Battin, resigned April 9, '62. 1st Lieutenants: Carl A. Crauston, resigned ; Joel E. Thomson, re- signed March 12, '62; Jerome B. Ebert, resigned Feb. 8, '62; John Ritchie, resigned March 29, '62. 2d Lieutenants : Wilber H. Sage, resigned Sept. 6, '61; Richard R. Johnson, resigned ; Joseph D. Moore, died. 4th Regiment. — Colonel Lorin Andrews, deceased. 2d Lieutenant W. S. Surgeson, resigned Nov. 7, '61. 5th Regiment. — Major William Gaskill, resigned Jan. 27, '62. Captain: Alonzo C. Horton, resigned Aug. 21, '61 ; Geo. B. Whitcomb, killed at Win- chester. 1st Lieutenants: Robert B. Bromwell, resigned Jan. 22, '62; Rob- ert S. Logan, resigned March 11, '62; Joseph Rudolph, resigned March 11 '62; George N. C. Frazer, risigned Dec. 27, '61; Frederick W. Moore, re- signed January 2, '62. 2d Lieutenant Robert H. Barrett, resigned. 6th Regiment.— Surgeon Starling Loving, resigned Oct. 20, '61. 1st Lieu- tenants : John C. Barker, resigned Feb. 14, '62; John Francis Hoy, resigned ; Augustus Bellerback, resigned Oct. 26, '61. 2d Lieutenants: T. C. Baylan, resigned Feb. 15, '62; Solomon Bedewell, deceased; Thomas S. Royce, resigned April 14, '62. 7th Regiment. — Captains: John N. Dyer, killed at battle of Cross Lanes Aug. 26, '61 ; John F. Schutte, died from wound received Aug. 22, '61 ; Des- comb B. Clayton, resigned Aug. 18, '61. 1st Lieutenents: William H. Rob- inson, died Oct. 8, '61 ; C. F. Nitchelm, resigned April 13, '62 ; Dudley A. Kimball, resigned April 13, '62; John B. Rouse, resigned Aug. 8, '61; Louis G. De Forrest, resigned March 1, '62; John Morris, resigned Dec. 5, '61; Halbert B. Case, resigned Jan. 30, '62. 2d Lieutenants : Andrew J. Williams resigned Sept. 6, '61 ; Edward F. Fitch, resigned Nov. 28, '61 ; Ezra H. Wit- ter, resigned April 13, '62. 8th Regiment. — Colonel Herman G. Depuy, resigned Nov. 9, '61. Lieuten- ant-Colonel Charles A. Park, resigned Nov. 4, '61. Surgeon W. H. Lamme, esigned Nov. 26, '61. Captains: Oran H. Kelsea, resigned March 11, '62 68 CASUALTIES. Daniel C. Dnggatt, resigned Feb. 6, '62. 2d Lieutenants: Anthony S. Sutton, resigned Feb. 22, '62; Charles A. Wright, resigned March 11, '02. 9th Regiment. — Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Sandershoff, resigned March 8, '62. Captains: Henry Broderson, resigned Oct, 22, : 61 ; George Somers. resigned June 13, '61. 1st Lieutenants : Lharles John, resigned Oct. 31, '61 ; Jacob Moller, resigned Sept. 23, '61 ; Nicholas Willig, resigned Feb. 7, '62. 2d Lieutenant Adolphus Kuhn, resigned. 10th Regiment. — Lieutenant-Col. H. J. Korff, discharged. Captains: Emil Seip, resigned Dec. 12, '61; James P. Sedarn, resigned July — , 01; Henry Robinson, resigned Nov. 8, ! 61. 1st Lieutenants: Thomas McMullen, re- signed Dec. 24, '61 ; Conrad Frederick, resigned Dec. 12, "61 ; Henry D. Page, resigned Feb. 6, '62 ; Joseph Hoben, resigned Jan. 12, '62. 2d Lieuten- ants: John Canley, resigned Nov. 20, '61; Sebastian Eustachi, died Aug. 17, '61; Francis Darr, resigned; Joseph Connelly, resigned January 1, '62. 11th Regiment. — Lieutenant-Colonel Joseph W. Frigell, resigned Dec. 21. '61. Chaplain George W. Dubois, resigned Jan. 18 '62. Captains: Stephen Johnson, resigned Sept. 20, '61 ; John C. Drury, resigned Dec. 28, '61 ; T. L. P. Defriese, resigned Oct. 8, '61. 1st Lieutennnts: Cornelius N. Hoagland. resigned Nov. 12, '61 ; J. D. Shannon, resigned Aug. 21, '61 ; Charles B. Liudsey, resigned April 10, '61; George B. Darrow, resigned Nov. 2, '61. 2d Lieutenants: John W. La Rew, resigned Sept. 6, '61 ; W. IT. H. Gahagan. Oct. 28, '61 ; Henry M. Wilson, resigned Nov. 8, '61 ; Smith Williams, re- signed April 10, '61. 12th Regiment. — Colonel John W. Lowe, killed. Captains: James Sloan, resigned Nov. 21, '61; Azariah W. Doane, resigned Oct. 24, '61; Watts McMurchy, resigned March 30, '62. 1st Lieutenants : William P. Cowne, resigned Oct. 25, '61 ; Geo. W. Goode, died Sept. 25, '61 ; Alex. M. Ridgeway, resigned March 31, '62 ; Wm. Hivling, resigned Oct. 0, '61 ; Andrew J. Roosa, resigned Oct. 15, '61; W. H. Roberts, resigned Aug. 21, '61. 2d Lieutenants' : Moses A. Trader, cashiered by com t-martial March 20, '02; William H. Mil- ler, died from wound received atPeter's Creek, Virginia. 13th Regiment. — Lieutenant-Colonel Columbus B.Mason, resigned. Chap- lain Anthony W. Smith, resigned March 30, '62. Captains: A. F. Beach, resigned March 12, 62; Francis S. Parker, resigned Jan. 30, '62; Jeremiah Slocum, resigned Dec. 9, '61 ; William Schneider, resigned March 30, 6*2 : James McGarr, resigned Sept. 15, '61; John Castell, resigned Feb. 3, '62. 1st Liutenants: Geo. H. Guild, resigned Jan. 13, '62; Jas. D. Stover, resigned Jan. 3, '62; John Conwell, resignjed Oct. 15, '62; L. A. Laizure, died Oct. 18, 61 ; D. B. Doherty, resigned Mar. 15, '62; J. W. McConnell, resigned Mar. 15. 2d Lieutenants: Harley H. Sage, resigned Sept. 6, '61; Charles P. Cavis, re- signed Jan. 3, '62 ; John Dauhwith, resigned Sept. 24, '61 ; Sanford F. Tim- mons, resigned Sept. 24, '61 ; William D. Mitchell, resigned Nov. 4, '61 ; H H. Kendrick, resigned March 22, '62. CASUALTIES. 69 llili Regiment.— Captains : George W. Kirk, discharged Feb. I5,'62; Noah W. Ogan, discharged Feb. 16, 62; William II. Eokles,di F< b. 15, '62, s. Pomeroy, discharged Feb. 15, '62; James W. McCabe, dischargi d Feb. 15, 02. 1st Lieutenants : Robert E. Patterson, resigned March 29, '62; Craw- ford C. Adams, discharged Feb. 1",, 62. 2d Lieutenants: William N. Rogers, resigned Feb. 11. '62; Josiah Johnson, discharged Feb. 15, 62; Jam Rutledge, discharged Feb. 15, '62. 15th Regiment. — Surgeon Orrin Ferris, resigned March 15, '62. Captain James Cummins, discharged Feb. lbj '02. 2d Lieutenants: Samuel W. Storer, discharged Feb. 15, '62; Gladwin D. Chaffin, resigned Dec. 18, '61. 16th Regiment,— Captains : William Spangler, died Jan. 19, '62 ; Samuel Smith, resigned Jan. 10, '02. 17th Regiment.— Assistant Surgeon E. Sinnett, resigned Jan. 18 Captain Benjamin B. Getzendanner, resigned Jan. 1, '62; 1st Lieutenants. Jacob Humphrey, died Dec. 21, '61; Irvin Linn, resigned Jan. 25. '62J Wra. Cook, resigned Nov. 21, '61. 2d Lieutenant Wm. H. Eagle, resigned April 1. 18th Regiment. — 1st Lieutenants: Robert R. Danford, resigned Jan. 17, 02; Jacob C. Frost, resigned Feb. 8, '62; Henry B. Berkstreper, resigned 15, 62. 2d Lieutenant Samuel If. Martin, resigned Jan. I 19th Regiment.— Chaplain Thomas McCieary, resigned Feb. 18, '62. Cap- tain William Etakestraw, died. 20th Regiment.— Captains: Elisha Hyatt, resigned Feb. 22, '62; James Powers, resigned Feb. 9, '62. 1st Lieutenant Zachariah Adkins, resigned Feb. 28, 02. 2d Lieutenants ; Herman II. Sherwin, discharged March 31. '62; Benry Sherman, discharged March ">, '62. 21st Regiment. — Captains: David Gibbs, resigned Jan. 25, v >2: .lames J*. Arrants, resigned April 9 '62. 1st Lieutenants: John A. William signed Jan. : . 62; Mat hew II. Chance, resigned -Jan. 21, '62; G. <>. M'Pherson, Led Dec. 17. '61. 2d Lieutenant Job Squier, Jr., resigned March 23d Regiment. — Captains : G. R. GiddingB, resigned: W. Slocum, resigned July 17, 01; R. B. More, resigned March 23, '62; I>. Howard, resigned Feb. 11. '62; Wallis J. Woodward, died Nov. 6, '61. 1st Lieutenants: J. Ross McMuUen, resigned July 19, '61; J. P. Cunningham, resigned July 17. '61 J John F. Walls, resigned Sept. 19, 01 ; John E. Jewett, resigned. 2d Lieu- tenant John F. Ciit: ! Sept. 22, 61. 24th Regiment.— Lieutenant-Colonel Luoian Buttles, resigned Nov. 28, '61. Major Shell" : Sturgis, resigned Nov. 28, '61. Surgeon David Welsh, i ed July 26, '61. Chaplain William G. Lewis, resigned Aug. 17, 61. tains: Lyman M.Kelh 61ij Samuel B. Jackson, re« .Ian. 2:!, 62; J. B. Hi! . resigned Jan. 22, '62; Bayman N. Easton, n ; Moses J. Patterson, died Sept. 2, '61; Samuel ||. Wheeler, died Nov. 29, '61. Is' Lieutenants: J. Samuel Clark, resigned i .• Benklei resigned Sept. 14, '61 ; James R. Inskeep, resigned Oct. 14 61 70 CASUALTIES. John H. Elbert, resigned Dec. 30, '61 ; Henry S. Harding, resigned Jan. 18 '62; Robert G. Clark, resigned Jan. 17, '62. 2d Lieutenants: Jacob Diehl, resigned Sept. 20, '61 ; William C. Heddleton, resigned Oct. 22, '61 ; Gabriel B. Still, resigned ; Edgar R. Kellogg, resigned Oct. 28, 61; Farley D. Bissett, resigned Jan. 3, '62; Henry Williams, resigned. 25th Regiment. — Captain John F. Mosley, died Sept. 23, '61. 1st Lieu- tenants: William P. Reichner, resigned Oct. 31, '61; James R. Pettay, re- signed Dee. 31, '61 ; Francis D. Sinclair, resigned March 12, '62. 2d Lieu- tenants : H. Millikin, resigned Oct. 28, 61; A. C. Archbold, resigned March, 12. 26th Regiment. — Chaplain L. H. Long, resigned March 4, '62. Captains ; J. W. Smith, resigned Oct. 30, '61 ; Rayman Allston, resigned Oct. 10, 61 : Washington C. Appier, resigned Oct. 30, '61. 1st Lieutenants: Charles H. Bean, resigned Nov. 29, '61 ; Henry C. Bromback, resigned Dec. 27, '61 ; Peter Dennis, resigned March 20, '62 ; Andrew J. Fletter, resigned March 20, '62. 2d Lieutenant William Calvin, resigned March 15, '62. 27th Regiment — Captains: Milton Wells, resigned March 26, '62; William Sayers, resigned March 31, '62 ; J. Shirwood Menkin, honorably discharged Oct. 1, '61. 1st Lieutenants: George B. TJpham, resigned Feb. 6, '62; Philip B. Cloon, resigned Sept. 30, '61 ; George McDonough, resigned March 27, '62. 2d Lieutenant Daniel Blaize, resigned Oct. 15, '61. 28th Regiment — Major Randolph Hentz, resigned Oct. 9, '61. Chaplain Karl Beyschlag, resigned Jan. 10, '62. Captains: Bernhardt Eith, resigned March 1, '62; George Sommer, resigned March 17, '62. 1st Lieutenants: Charles H. Mayer, resigned Aug. 27, '61 ; Earnest Zimmerman, resigned July 15, '61; Staneslaua Gronewald, resigned Oct. 21, 61; Phillip J. Kck, resign- ed Oct. 25, '61 ; Charles A. Lucius, resigned Dec. 27, '61; Albert Ritter, resigned Feb. 14, '62; Anthony Grodzicki, resigned Nov. 10, '61. 2nd Lieutenants : Emil Wilde, resigned Oct. 29, '61 ; Charles Miller, resigned April 5 ; Lucus Schwank, resigned March 17, '62. 29th Regiment— Captains: Pulaski C. Hard, resigned March 13, '62 ; John F. Morse, resigned April 13; Alden P. Steele, resigned April 13. 1st Lieu- tenants : Leverett Grover, resigned Feb. 6, '62 A. A. Philbrick, March 13,. '62; William S. Crowell, resigned April 13; C. T. Chaffee, resigned April 13. 2nd Lieutenant W. J. Hall, resigned Feb. 6, '62. 30th Regiment — Surgeon Henry T. Greer, resigned Nov. 12, '61. Captains : William W. Reilly, resigned March 17, '62 ; C.J. Gibeaut, dismissed by Court Martial, March 18, '62. 1st Lieutenant Moses B. Gist, resigned . 2nd Lieutenant John C. Rickey, resigned Nov. 1, '61. 31st Regiment — Lieutenant-Colonel Cyrus Grant, resigned Feb. 27, '62 ; Major Samuel L. Leffingwell, discharged . Captain David C. Rose, deceased . 2nd Lieutenant Geo. W. Reed, resigned March 14, '62. 32nd Regiment— Surgeon John N. Moury, Jan. 22, '62. Chaplain Wm. H. Nickerson, resigned March 17, '62. Captains : Jackson Lucey, resigned CASUALTIES. 71 March 15, '62; Wilson M. Stanley, resigned Feb. 11, '62; J. Dyer, resigned April 10 ; Clarkson C. Nichols, resigned April 5, 1st Lieutenants : Alpheus B. Parmenter, resigned Nov. 30, '61 ; Charles C. Brandt, resigned April 5 ; Geo. F. Jack, resigned April 5 ; John W. McLaughlin, resigned March 13, '62; David N. Stambaugh, resigned NoV. 25, '61 ; Jerome B. Whelplcy, re- signed Jan. 24, '62. 2nd Lieutenants: Charles B. Church, resigned January 20, '62: Benjamin F. Guck, resigned Oct. 13, '61; James M. Leith, resigned Oct. 9, '61 j Henry H. Fickel, resigned April 5; Wm. H. H. Case, resigned April 5 ; John S. Van Marten, resigned April 5. 33d Regiment— Major J. V. Robinson, jr., died March 23, '62. 2nd Lieu- tenant Milton C. Peters, resigned Dec. 5, '61. 34th Regiment - 2nd Lieutenant Thos. Lawler, resigned Jan. 28, '62. 35th Regiment— Chaplain John Woods, resigned Nov. 19, '61; Captain Henry Mallory, Feb. 17, '62. 36th Regiment— Surgeon Robert N. Barr, resigned Feb. 26, '62. Captains : Thomas W. Moore, resigned March 5, '62 ; Levi M. Stephenson, resigned March 5, '62 ; William S. Taylor, resigned March 3, '62. 1st Lieutenant John M. Woodbridge, resigned . 2nd Lieutenant Milton Brown. discharged Feb. 5, '62. 37th Regiment — Surgeon Adolph Gerwig, deceased . Captains : Antoro Vallendar, resigned March 31 ; H. Gocke, deceased. 1st Lieutenants: Wm. Schulter, resigned Dec. » , '61 Anton Peterson, resigned Feb. 6, '62. 2nd Lieutenant Christian Pfhal, resigned Dec. 27, 61. ;i8th Regiment — Colonel Edwin D. Bradley, resigned Feb. 8, '62. Majors : Lpaphras L. Barber, resigned Jan. 12, '62 ; Moses R. Bailey, resigned Feb. 9, '62. 1st Lieutenants : Ranson P. Osborn, resigned March 9, '62 ; Converse S. Chase, resigned March 12, '62. 39th Regiment — Chaplain Benjamin W. Chikllaw, resigned April 9. Captains: Christopher A.Morgan, resigned Jan. 6, '62; John Rhodes, re- signed Feb. 3, '62 ; John C. Fell, resigned April 12; Charles W. Pomeroy. died Oct. 2, : G1 ; Adam Koogle, resigned Nov. 30, '61. 1st Lieutenants : Sam'l EL Rulon, resigned Jan. 10, '62; Charles F. Sedam, resigned Feb. 28, '62 ; Lewis Sountag, resigned Feb. 22, '62; Thomas D. Morton. Nov. 26, '62. 2nd Lieutenant Nathan R. Thompson, Oct. 7, '61. 40th Regiment.— Surgeon Alexander Mc' Bride, resigned March 26, '62; 1st Lieutenant James B. Creviston, resigned March 9, '62. 41st Regiment.— Lieutenant-Colonel John J. Wizeman, resigned March 1. Captains : Seth A. Bushnell, resigned Nov. 27, '61 ; Martin H. Humblin. re- signed Jan. 5, '62; James H. Cole, resigned March 17, '62; Frank D. Stone, resigned Jan. 22, '62; H. A. Pease, resigned Jan. 5, '62; William Goodsell. resigned Jan. 30, '62. 1st Lieutenants: Junius R. Sanford, resigned Jan. 13, '62; Zelotus C. Sisson, resigned Jan. 5 ; Wm. S. Chamberlain. Dec. 10, 61. 2nd Lieutenant Charles J. James, resigned March 17, '62. 72 CASUALTIES. 42nd Regiment. — 1st, Lieutenants: George F. Brady, resigned March 27, '62; Herman Suaebedisseu, resigaed April 3, '62; David Scott, resigned January 31, '62; Howan S. Bates, resigned Feb. 8, '62. 2nd Lieutenants: Andrew J. Stone, died- ; Sani'l H. Cole, resigned March 9, 62. 43rd Regimenl. — Captains: Moses J. Urquhait, resigned April 8, '62 : James H, Coulter, resigned Feb. 8. 44th Regiment. — Captain John M. Bell, drowned. 1st Lieutenants. Leonard Langston. resigned March 31 ; Samunl Judy, resigned M^rch 31 ; Edward E. Better, resigned March 31. 46th Regiment. — Surgeon James D. Robinson, resigned November 21, 61. Captain Harding C. Geary, killed at Pittsburg. 47th Regiment.— Chaplain Michael Bitler, resigned November 16, '61. Captains: Allen S. Bundy, resigned Nov. 19, '61 ; Andrew F. Denniston, resigned March 17, '62. 1st Lieutenants : Isidor Warms, resigned Nov. 10, '61; Horace A. Egbert, drowned Oct. 9, '61. 2nd Lieutenants: Felix Wag- ner, resigned Feb, 17, '62 , Chas. J. Cunningham, resigned Dec. 21, '61. 49th Regiment. — Captains; William Callihan, resigned Jan. 5, '62; Geo. E. Lovejoy, discharged Feb. 15, '62. 1st Lieutenant Alonzo T. Prentiss, discharged Feb. 15, '62. 2nd Lieutenants: Amos B. Cnarlton, resigned Jan. 22, '62 ; Timothy Wilcox, resigned Jan. 8, '62 ; John C. Smith, resigned March 8, '62. 51st Regiment. — Colonel William P. N Fitzgerald, resigned Oct. 14. '61. Captains: James M. Crooks, resigned March 20, '62; Charles Mueller, resigned Feb. 0, '62. 1st Lieutenants: John A. Diehl, discharged Feb 25: Charles Donnelly, discharged Feb. 25. 53rd Regiment. — Captain Lorenzo Fulton, resigned Feb. 16. 54th Regiment. — Captain Peter Bertram, killed at Pittsburg. 2nd Lieu- tenant George DeCharms, killed at Pittsburg. 55th Regiment. — 1st Lieutenant Wm. D. Sherwood, resigned March 20. 2nd Lieutenant Arthur Cranston, resigned MtirchlS. •56th Regiment, — Assistant Surgeon W. C. Payne, resigned April 8. 58ih Regiment. — Captains: Joseph N. Brown, resigned Feb. 10; Johu Bucz, resigned March 27. 1st Lieutenants : August Bierwirth, resigned March 15; Romaine Lujeane, resigned Feb. 7. 2nd Lieutenant Conrad B. Krausse, resigned March 4. 59th Regiment. — 2nd Lieutenant Wm. Hamilton, resigned March 14, 60th Regiment. — 2nd Lieutenant George W.Davis, deceased. 63rd Regiment, — 2nd Lieutenants; John M, Wisehart, resigned April 15; John B. Hegeman, resigned Jan. 1. 64th Regiment. — 2nd Lieutenant Isaac F. Biggerstaff, resigned Feb. 3, '62. 65ih Regiment. —Captain John C. Baxter, resigned Feb. 26. 2nd Lieu- tenants : Jasper P. Bradley, resigned March 30; Johu T. Hyatt, deceased. 66th Regiment,— 2nd Lieutenant Charles H, Rhodes, resigned Feb, 28. CASUALTIES. 73 67th Regiment. — Captain Hyatt G. Ford, killed at Winches'er. "2nd Lieutenants: Gustavus W. Fahrion, resigned Dec. 31, '61; Joseph Pool, resigned Dec. 18. G8th Regiment. — 1st Lieutenant Thomas Quigley, resigned April 1, : 62. 71st Begiment. — Lieutenant-Colonel Barton S. Kyle, killed at Pittsburg. 2nd Lieutenant Ezekiel Z. Hitching, resigned April 1. 72nd Regiment. — Lieutenant Colonel Herman Oanfield, killed at Pittsburg. 73rd Regiment. — C iptain John Earhirt, resigned March 27. 1st Lieuten- ants: James n. Dwyer, resigned March 8; Thomas M. Gray, resigned March 10. 75th Regiment. — 1st Lieutenant Ephraim C. Wayman, resigned March 24 • 76th Regiment. — 1st Lieutenant Newton Hemstead, resigned March 27. 2nd Lieutenant Lucian H. AVright, resigned Feb. 26. 77th Regiment. — 1st Lieutenant Horatio W. Mason, resigned March 6. 78th Regiment. — Captain Samuel W. Spencer, dropped April 16. 2nd Lieutenant Thomas E. Ross, resigned March 27. 80th Regiment. — Captain John H. Gardner, resigned . 1st Lieu- tenant George W. Ecker, resigned March 21. 81st Pegiment. — Lieutenant-Colonel John A. Turley. resigned Dec. 1, '61. Major Charles N. Lamisoo, resigned April 16, '62. Surgeon W. H. Lamme. resigned March 31, '62. Captains: Martin Armstrong, killed at Pittsburg. April 7; George A. Taylor, resigned Dec. 7, '61. 2nd Lieutenant James W. Poet, killed at Pittsburg, April 7. 82nd Regiment. — Lieutenant-Colonel Bradford R. Dufree, resigned . CAVALRY. 1st Regiment. — Colonel Owen P. Ransom, resigned . 1st Lieu- tenants: Philip Smizer, resigned Dec. 26, '61 ; Ralph M. Horton. resigned March 12, '62; James W. Allen, resigned Jan. 28, '62; Charles W. Douty, resigned April 11. '62. 2nd Lieutenants: Erastus P. McNeul. resigned Dec. 12, '61 ; Henry G. Ward, resigned Feb. 9, '62. 2nd Regiment. — Major Henry F. Wilson, resigned March 10, 62. Captains: John L. Smith, resigned Dec. 11, '61; John B. Franklin, resigned Dec. 11 ; Chauncey Eggleston, resigned March 14, '62; John H. Clapp, died Oct. 5, '61. 1st Lieutenants: Lyman C. Thayer, resigned March ■-"-'. 6a j Robert L. Hart, resigned Dec. 11, '61; Samuel F. Greil, reigned Dec. 11, 61. James D. Kennedy, resigned Jan. 8, '62; Wm. S. Dodge, resigned March 22, '62; Charles F. Ingersoll, died . 3rd Regiment.— 2ud Lieutenant Wm. Gooduow, resigned Dec. 17, '61. oth Regiment. — Chaplain Richard R. Pierce, resigned February 27, '62 Captain Chester M.Poor, resigned Feb. 27, 62 74 CASUALTIES. 6th Regiment. — 1st Lieutenant W. F. Reynolds, resigned March 20, '62. 3rd Independent Company of Cavalry. — Captain Philip Pfau, resigned March 10, '62. 2nd Lieutenant Frank A. Dossman, resigned March 12, '62. 6tb Independent Company. — 2nd Lieutenant Joseph C. Grannan, discharged, Dec. 9, '61. ARTILLERY. 1st Regiment. — Chaplain Thomas H. Oakley, resigned March 30, '62. 1st Lieutenants: Paul F. Rohrbacker, resigned Jan. 1, '62; John D. Holden, resigoed March 27, 62. 2nd Lieutenant Allen W. Pinney, resigned March 15, '62. 5th Battery. —1st Lieutenant Jno. H. Hollingshade, resigned March 18, '62. 10th Battery. — 1st Lieutenant Ambrose A. Blount, resigned April 4. 11th Battery.— Captain A. G. A. Constable, resigned Dec. 13. 2nd Lieu- teoant Wm. D. Lion, resigned Dec. 13. THE CHEAPEST AND BEST MILITARY GOODS IN THE UNITED STATES. MANUFACTURED AT THE UNION BRASS &PLATING WORKS (ESTABLISHED IN 1846.J 347 A.TVX> 349 FIFTH STREET, (Between Plum Street and Central Avenue.) CINCINNATI, OHIO. WM. POWELL & CO., MANUFACTUEEES AND WHOLESALE DEALEES IN OFFICERS' SWORD BELTS, GILT MOUNTING, OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. Swivel Snap Hooks, Studs, Buckles, Eings, &c, U. S. Belt Plates, Scabbard Ends, Oatridge Box Buttons, Brass and Silver Letters and Figures for Caps, Saddle Cloths, &c. FOR O.^V-A.IjDFLY. STIRRUPS, BRASS, SILVER AND GOLD SPURS, BITS, ROSETTES, HEARTS, PISTOL HOLSTER ENDS, VALISE ORNAMENTS, BRIDLE TIPS, BRASS MOULDINGS FORS ADDLE TREES, AND FLAG STAFF SPEAR HEADS. All kinds of Military Goods Made to Order. ARMY STATIONERY A.T WHOLESALE. VERY LOW, TO CASH BUYERS. Among our own Articles of Manufacture are U. S. ARMY PACKAGES, "UNION VARIETY' ENVELOPES," MILITARY PORTRAIT PACKETS, POCKET MAPS OF SEAT OF WAR, Soldiers' Portfolios «fc Checker Boards, RED, WHITE AND BLUE SONGSTERS, cc xjnsri03sr envelopes/' TJnion N~ote 3?aper 5 LETTER, CAP AND COMMERCIAL NOTE PAPERS, EVEEY VARIETY. ST^TIOTVEIfcY. We offer " the Trade" of the West GREAT INDUCEMENTS to purchase all kinds and qualities of LEGAL CAPS, LETTER CAPS, DEMY, BILLET, BATH, LADIES' NOTE, UNION NOTE, Three grades, 100 to 200 Styles. UNION ENVELOPES, 200 KINDS, Red, White and Blue; Billet, Octavo and Commercial Note; R., W. & B., or Border Envelopes. From $2 to $3.50 per M. BIL-F, CANARY & WHITE ENVELOPES, 1,800,000 OIV HAND. Pens, Pencils, Penholders, Inks, Union Stationery, Packages, &c One member of the firm stays East all the time and BUYS FOB CASH Call and examine. MUMFORD & CO., Wholesale Stationers, 38 and 40 West Fourth st., _ Up Stairs, Cincinnati. A GROYER & BAKER'S FAMILY AND tiHKnreNKfc MANUFBING SEWING MACHINES. Particular attention is called to the fact, that besides the Machines making our celebrated stitch, we manufacture superior Lock Stitch Machines. Purchasers have their Choice, with the Privilege of Exchange. Prices from $40 Upwards, HEMMERS, $1 TO $5 ADDITIONAL. OFFICE AND SALESROOM: 58 W. FOURTH ST., CINCINNATI. From one of the leading Merchants of Cincinnati. The following, from one of the leading merchants of Cincinnati, is a sample of similar cases daily occurring in all parts of the country : " It is now nearly six years since I purchased a Grover & Baker Ma- chine ; after using it a few months I was persuaded by some friends to sell it and get a Wheeler & Wilson's, as it made the stitch the same on both sides, and, also, there would be a great saving of thread; but a short trial soon convinced me that the work made by that machine would not wear or stand washing, without running up, and when stretched out the stitches would break, so that it, in reality, took more thread (to say nothing of the time spent in repairs) than our old machine ; then the Ladd & Webster machine loomed up, and I was told that was the perfect machine, but I soon found out there was a good deal of trouble with the tension, besides being very slow, and the sooner I got a Grover & Baker Machine the bet- ter, which I did over a year a^o, and we have had complete satisfaction ever since. THOMAS M. REDHEAD, Cincinnati, O." HEADQUARTERS FOR AGENTS' & SUTLERS' GOODS! XJixioix S-tfvtioinory, UNION VARIETY ENVELOPES, U. S. ARMY PORTFOLIOS, MAMMOTH CAMP PARAGES, UNION COTTAGE PORTFOLIOS, SOLDIERS' UNION PACKETS, SOUVENIR PACKETS, PLAIN & FANCY PORTFOLIOS, OHEAJP PUBLICATIONS, NOVELS AND SONG BOOKS, CAP, LETTEE AND NOTE PAPEES, PLAIN AND FANCY ENVELOPES, INKS, INKSTANDS, PENS, PENCILS, PENHOLDERS, MUCILAGE, UNION PLAYING CARDS, STEAMBOAT PLAYING CARDS, PORTFOLIOS, of all grades, TUCK MEMORANDUMS, PREPARED GLUE, CHECKERS, CHESSMEN, POCKET BOOKS, PORTMONAIS, &c, &c, &c. A very large stock of Staple and Fancy Stationery, Notions, &c.' at low prices. The assortment is always full and worthy the attention of close buyers. WHOLESALE STATIONER & PUBLISHER, 164 Vine St., Cincinnati, Ohio. DAILY, TRI-WEEKLY & WEEKLY OHIO STATE JOURNAL STEAM PRINTING ESTABLISHMENT, JOURNAL BUILDING, OFFICE NO. 19 STATE ST., COLUMBUS, OHIO. HUETT, ALLEjST & Co., Proprietors Subscription Department. — Daily Edition, per Mail, per annum, $6.00 ; per month, 50 cents. Tri-Weekly Edition, per mail, per annum, $3.00. Weekly Edition, per mail, per annum, $1.50 ; Twenty copies, per annum, $20.00. Advertising Department.— Daily Edition, per Square, One Insertion, f>0 cents; Three Insertions, $1.00; One Week, $1.75; Two Weeks, $3.00 ; Three Weeks, $4.00; Four Weeks, $5.00 ; Three Months, $10.00. TERMS, 0-A.SH I ZST ADVANCE. JOB DEPARTMENT. All kinds of Mercantile Job Printing Executed, with Neatness and Dis- patch. MILITARY GOODS. JOHN BONER, 36 WEST FIFTH STREET CIIVCIIVOIIVJXA-TI, O. Full assortment of SWORDS, SWORD BELTS, EPAULETTES, SASHES, EMBROIDERIES, GILT & PLATED LACE, etc. FINE PRESENTATION SWORDS, ALWAYS ON HAND. P £! E3 R. S Western Chemcal Writing Fluid k Blak'g Laboratory. "«4PH COAT 0» > TVo. 61 "Walnut Street, Ciiieiiiiisiti, Oliio. CHEMICAL WRITING FLUID, Copying, Black, Blue, Carmine, Japan, Stenciling & Shoemake. —A N D- ORIGINAL JAPANESE BLACKING. N. W. Spbbrs, Esq. — Dear Si><: — We have been uaing your Chemical Writing Fluid for sev- eral weeks, and find it fully equal, if not superior, to any Ink we have ever used. We would, therefore, respectfully recommend the same to the Board of Trustees for adoption in the schools of our city. Daniel HOUGH, Principal First District. A. S. Reynolds, " Second " W. T. Forbes, " Third " I consider it entirely superior. K. Hardy, Principal Fourth District. J. M. ROSS, " Fifth W. K. Crosby, " Sixth " B. 0. M. De Beck, Principal Seventh District. W. Rice, Eighth C. C. (iUII.FORD, ' ' Ninth A. E. Tripp, 1 Tenth W. P. Wheeler, ' Eleventh Thom L8 J. Tone, Twelfth Jons B. Trevor, Thirteenth G. L. Sands, 1 Fourteenth B. Highlands, Principal Seventeenth District. John D. Parker, First intermediate. John Hancock, Second " T. C. O'Kank, Third " Cyrus Nason, Fourth " J. L Thornton, Hughes' High School. .1. M. Edwards, " J. T. PoMIMI.LY, " |i. SHBPARD80N, Woodward High School. GEO. P. Harper, " Miss I.ivina S BARRR, Principal Writing Teach- er in Pill. lie Schools. Miss m. T. BakgB, Principal Writing Teacher in Public Schools, Rochester, N. V. Methodist BOOK Concern, Cincinnati, March 4, 1861. N. W. Speers, Esq. — Dear Sir : — We have used the specimen of Ink you had left with us, and feel satisfied that it is an excellent article. You will please send us one dozen quarts, one dozen pints, one dozen half-pints, two dozen four ounce, and three dozen two ounce. Yours, truly, POE & HITCHCOCK, Agents. (From Ohio State Journal.) Writing Fluid and Blacking.— We have called attention to the advertisement of Speers' Western Chemical Writing Fluid and Blacking Laboratory. The Writing Fluid we have in con- stant use in our counting-room, and pronounce n equal, it not superior, >" el erj respect, t" the celebrated Arnold Ink, and greatly superior to the Bottle Ink. A good article of Copying Ink in a dUKideratum, the article before us Is all that could be desired. The Carmine In, a very superior article. The Blacking an. I Oil Polish is fully equal to Mason's. Let the public try them if they would procure a good article without failure. GEO. W. POHLMAN, lOQ W. Fourth St., between Vine «& Race, CINCINNATI, O. MILITARY FURNISHER, Swords, Belts, Sashes, Shoulder Straps, Hats and Caps, Sad- dles and Horse Furniture. xjistifori^s :m:-a.:de to order. REGIMENTAL FLAGS, &C. EGGEET & BEENTANO, NO. 42 MAIN ST., CINCINNATI, O., JMCA-NTIF-ACTTJIIEIIS, IMPORTERS, AND WHOLESALE DEALERS IN TOJ3A.OOO AJXI> CiaARS, Call the particular attention of the trade to their own Manufactured Cigars, embracing some of the most popular brands, viz : HENRY CLAY, WASHINGTON, JACKSON, PINE APPLE, ELLSWORTH, ZOUAVES, VOLUNTEERS, BARON, STAR, LA CANDITA, LA UVA, UNION, PRINCIPI, • PIONEER, HOOSIER, EL SOL, &c. Also, an extensive assortment of the best brands GERMAN CIGARS, and CHEWING TO- BACCO, in plug and tin foil, and SMOKING TOBACCO, in barrels and paper. EGGERT & BRENT ANO, 47 Main Street, Cincinnati. JAMES GATES, TJINTOlNr STATIONERY DErOT, UNION ENVELOPES, UNION NOTE PAPER, UNION VARIETY PACKAGES, UNION WRITING CASES, The BEST assortment in the United States, at the VERY LOWEST PRICE. Also, a good variety o f PLAIN STATIONERY, Always on hand, at the LOWEST MARKET PRICE. No. V7 1 IS. Fourth St., bet-ween Main. &; Sycamore Streets, CINCINNATI, O. H. G-. HAMLIN, Jr. MILITAEY GOODS, MILITAEY SADDLERY, &C, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. 3STO. S3 "WEST FOURTH ST., (Two aoors East of Pike's Opera Home,) CINCINNATI, OHIO. MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN Swords, Belis, Sashes, Epaulettes, Metallic & Embroidered Shoulder Straps, Officers' Hats, Caps, Ornaments, &c., National and Regimental Flags, Either Painted or Embroidered, BELT TRIMMINGS, &.C. PRESENTATION SWORDS Always on hand, or made promptly to order. All articles in the MILITARY X.I3STE, OF EVERY QUALITY AND STYLE. S U T L, E R S Supplied in small quantities, at WHOLESALE PRICE8, and on liberal terms. HELMBOLD'S GENUINE PREPARATION. "HIGHLY CONCENTRATED" COMPOUND FLUID EXTRACT BUCHU, A positive and specific remedy for diseases of the Bladder, Kidneys, Gravel, and Dropsical Swellings. This medicine increases the power of Digestion, and excites the absorbents into healthy action, by which the watery or calcerous depositions, and all unnatural enlargements are reduced, as well as pain and inflammation, and is good for Men, Women or Children. Helmbold's Extract Buehu, for weaknesses arising from Excesses, Habits of Dissipation, Early Indiscretion or Abuse, at- tended with the following symptoms : Indisposition to Exertion, Loss of Power, Loss of Memory, Difficulty of Breathing, Weak Nerves, Trembling, Horror of Disease, Wakefulness, Dimness of Vision, Pain in the Back, Universal Lassitude of the Muscular System, Hot Hands, Flushing of the Body, Dryness of the Skin, Eruptions on the Face, Pallid Countenance. These symptoms, if allowed to go on, which this medicine invariably removes, soon follows Impotency, Fatuity, Epi- leptic Fits, in one of which the patient may expire. Who can say that they are not frequently followed by those " direful diseases" INSANITY and CONSUMPTION. Many are aware of the cause of their suffering, but none will confess. The records of the Insane Asylums, and the melancholy deaths by Consumption, bear ample witness to the truth of the assertion. The Constitution once affected with Organic Weakness, re- quires the aid of medicine to strengthen and invigorate the system, which HELMBOLD'S EX- TRACT BUCHU invariably does. A trial will convince the most skeptical. FEMALES, Old or Young, Single, Married, or contemplating Marriage. In many affections peculiar to Females, the Extract. Buchu is unequalled by any other remedy, as in Chlorosis or Retention, Irregularities, Painfullness, or Suppression of Customary Evacuations, Leuchorrhea or Whites, Sterrility, and for all complaints incident to the sex, whether arising from Indiscretion, Habits of Dissipation, or in the Decline or Change of Life. See symptoms above. No Family should be without it. Take no more B,alsam, Mercury, or unpleasant Medicine for un- pleasant and dangerous Diseases. HELMBOLD'S EXTRACT BUCHU CURES SECRET DISEASES, in all their Stages ; at little Expense ; Little or no change in Diet ; No incon- venience ; and no Exposure. It causes a frequent desire and gives strength to Urinate, thereby Removing Obstructions, Preventing and Curing Strictures of the Urethra, allaying Pain and Inflammation frequent in this class of Diseases, and expelling all poisonous, diseased and worn-out matter. Thousands upon thousands who have been the victims of quaoks, and who have paid heavy fees to be cured in a short time, have found that they were deceived, and that the "poison" has, by the use of "powerful astringents," been dried up in the system, to break out in an aggravated form, and Perhaps after Marriage. Helmbold's Extract Buchu is the great diceetic, and it is certain to have the desired effect in Diseases for which it is recommended. Evidence of the most responsible and reliable character will accompany the medicines. Certificates of cures, from 3 to 20 years' standing, with names known to science and fame. "Physicians" please "Notice." We make "no secret" of "ingredients." Hembold's Ex- tract Buchu is composed of Buchu, Cubebs and Juniper Berries, selected with great care by a competent druggist. Prepared in Vacuo, by H. T. Helmbold, Practical and Analytical Chemist, and Sole Manufacturer of Hel.mbold's Genuine Preparations. Affidavit. — Personally appeared before me, an Alderman of the city of Philadelphia, H. T. Helmbold, who being duly sworn, doth say, his preparations contain no narcotic, no mercury, or other injurious drugs, but are purely vegetable. H. T. HELMBOLD. Sworn and subscribed before me, this 23d day of November. WM. P. HIBBERD, Alderman, Ninth Street, above Race, Philadelphia. Physicians in attendance from 8 a. m., to S p. m. Price $1 per Bottle, or Six for $5. Deliver- ed to any address, securely packed from observation. Address letters for information in confi- dence to H. T. HELMBOLD, Chemist, Depot, 104 South Tenth Street, Philadelphia. Beware of Counterfeits and Unprincipled Dealers, who endeavor to dispose "of their own" and "other" articles on the reputation attained by Helmbold's Genuine Preparations; Helmbold's Genuine Extract Buchu; Helmbold's Genuine Ex- tra ct Sa rsaparilla; Helmbold's Genune Improved Rose Wash. ]^°For sale by Green & Button, Drake Brothers, H. Bosworth & Sons, Harrington & Co., F. Cassin, H. Fess. Jr., C. H. Gardiner & Co., N. Greulich, F. Kalkhoff, E. A. Lee, L. Meier, Mor- ton & Fowler, E. Meyer, C. H. Orton, J. Rice, W. C. Schmitt, H. Schweful, F. C. Spindler, J. H. Tesch, C. Warnecke, and all Druggists everywhere. Ask for HELMBOLD'S. Take no other.— Cut out the advertisement and send for it, and avoid imposition and exposure. ^SP™ Describe symptoms in all communications. CURES GUARANTEED. ADVICE GRATIS GROVER & BAKER'S FIRST HBl^f PREMIUM SEWINQ MACHINES, WITH Hemmers, Fellers, Tuckers, Corders, Binders, &c Making the " Lock" stitch, or the " Grover & Baker" atitch, at the option of the purchaser. IP R I G E :: FORTY DOLLARS AND UP *W ARDS. Recent valuable improvements, together with the greatly reduced price, combine to render them the BEST and most desirable Sewing Machine in the market. A NEW ^TYLE OF SHUTTLE aVEAOZE^Zr^IE, RUNS FAST. AND QUIET; FOR VEST MAKERS, TAILORS, SHOE BINDERS, &C, &C. WORKS WITH LIKEN THREAD, SILK OR COTTON EQUALLY WELL. PRICE, FORTY DOLLARS. Call and examine our Machines, or send tor a Circular codtaining Sam pies of sewing. GROVER & BAKER, Se\7Ving ivt^olxlxie Oo., 58 WEST FOURTH ST., CINCINNATI. AGENCY FOR OHIO VOLUNTEERS. Offices at -J COLUMBUS, OHIO, umces «i was hinGTOK CITY. T. W. TALLMADGE & CO. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Procure Soldier's Bounty, Back Pay, and Pension, WILL ALSO Collect All Military Claims against the Government of the United States and the State of Ohio. J5P~ "W lien, a Soldier or Volunteer is killed or dies in the service of the United States, his widow is entitled to all the pay due him, and $100 bounty in addition. If there ia no widow, his heirs are entitled to it. This is payable at once. TV^rite us the Facts, And we will procure all such back pay and bounty. It will be paid as soon as the claim can be audited at Washington. Those who delay until thousands of others have filed their claims ahead of them, will be obli ged to wait a long time for their money. .All Soldiers Wounded, diseased or disabled in the service, are, according to the decision of the Attorney General of the United States, entitled to [Pension. This applies to the Three-months Volunteers, as well as all soldiers in the present war. Bounty. All soldiers who serve for a period of two years, or till the end of the war, If sooner ended, are entitled to $100 bounty. Great delay will be occasioned in collecting this bounty, at the end of the war, owing to the great number which will have to be paid. Leave your claim with T. W. Tallmadge & Co. before the end of the war, and they will have everything prepared to ensure its speedy collection. A^rite to XJs And we will give you all the particulars. Our soldiers from Chio should direct all their letter* to Columbus, Ohio. ' All others may direct to'Washington City, D. C. R E F E R E N O E S : Wm.Dennison, Kx-Gov., Columbus, 0. Gen. C. Delano, Commissary Gen'l of Ohio. Gen. (!. P. Rockingham, Adjutant Gen'l of O., Gkn. Geo. B- Wright, Qr. Master Gen'l of Q,, Hon. N. H. Swayne, Judge U. S. Sup. Court. Gen. W. S. Rosbcrans, Head Quarters. Gen. W. T. Sherman, " " Kinney, Espy & Co., Bankers, Cincinnati, O. Hon. S. S. Cox, Washington City. II. B. Carrington, Col. 18th Regt. U. S. A. I. II. Marrow, Col. 3rd. Regt. 0. V. J. M. CoNNKLI., " 17th " " T. R. Stanly, " 18th " " Sami.. Beatty " 19th " " O. Whittlesey, " 20th " " K. 15. Hayes, Lt, " 28rd " " IlCGH EwiNG, Col. 30th Regt. O J. W. Sill, " 88rd " ' G. S. Mygatt, Maj. 41st. " S. A. Sheldon, Col . 42d " W. Sway»e, Lt. " 48d " S. A. Gilbert, " 44th " ' T. WoRTHIHGTON " 46th " • P. Kinney, " 56th " F. Remple, Lt. " 58th " W. H. Trimble, " 60th " N. ScnLEIGH, " 61st " ' F. B. Pond, " 62d " W. GlLMORE, Lt. " 63d " Rodney Mason, " 71st " G. Moody, " 74th " Chas. R. Woods, " 76th " \ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS I 013 704 265 4