U I Parti '^- 1 P of :opy 1 . jrsonal Records Grand Army of the Republic Its History and Its Heroes / PERSONAL RECORDS / mk JOHN C. ROBINSON THE GRAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC (DEPARTMKNT OF NEW YORK) PERSONAL RECORDS BY / COMRADE HENRY P. PHELPS MAY B© IflMJ .- ~r •' W»SV' «v. NEW YORK l8c)t) Coi'VKii;iiT, 1895 Bv Hi;nry p. Phhi.ps PREFACE T can not be too distinctl\- understood that the preservation in this form, of individual records of comrades of the Grand Army of the Repul)lic, stands for something more than merelv the gratification of personal pride, no matter how justifiable, and natural, and honorable that personal pride may be. Just as the Grand Army itself seeks not merely to conserve the interests of its members, but through them to maintain, and encourage and illustrate for all the world, the highest arifl noblest standard of American Citizenship, these records, while they can not otherwise than honor the soldiers of the republic, have a still grander mission in that they are a precious legacy, teaching to future generations, through the examples of those thus commemorated, the great principles of loyalty and patriotism which should fire the heart and inspire the soul of every man worthv to live under the Hag made sacred by the blood of countless thousands who have died in its defense. Better than anything yet published do they represent the material of which the Union armies were composed, not only by what these men accomplished as wearers of the blue, but by what they have since become as citizens. In many an instance the lad of 19, who without influence or experience, faithfully carried a musket through all his term of service, has since shown liy the place he has won for himself as a civilian, the stuff that was in him all the while, but which, in the repression of armv life, was never demonstrated, or perhaps, suspected. It is for this reason, and also, once and forever to refute the vile aspersions of calumniators of our glorious organization, that some- thing more than the army records enters into most of these sketches, affording as they do, with the accompanying portraits, the most irrefragible demonstration of the high standing and exalted character of manv of its most prominent members. And while it is too much to hope, perhaps, that in the delicate matter of encomium and prominence, exact proportionate justice has been done, it should be said in fairness to all concerned, that while in nearly every instance, the manuscript has been submitted to the one best qualified to verify the statement of fact contained therein, the editor alone is responsible for the form which the statement is made to take. On the other hand, however, where less space has been devoted to a record than seems adequate, the rea- son is usually to be found in the modesty of the individual comrade, himself, — certainly PkF.F.\( E not in any desire of the compiler to lessen the [)r<>])er proportions of the sketch in question. The rule has been observed that anv man who is a member of the Grand Armv is eligible tu representation in these |)am's, no matter what his rank, or term, or what the nature of his service. Some of the best nun in tlie organization at first objected that their war records were not of sulfKiml importance to justifv an a])pearance here. The answer was simple; ICverv volunteer who enlisted, no matter whether it was for thiriv (lavs, or three years, placed bis life at the disjiosal of his countrv. TluMeafter it was sim|)lv witii him a matter of obevinjj; orders. These mijiht lead liim to "The iminincnt deadly breach," uv Id the shclli-r of the \]:v^ that lloats above a hospital — to the bloody field oi Gettys- burgh, or to do provost dLit\ in the city of New \'ork. Every soldier could not be always at tiu' front. 1 he actual lighting force of an army is rarelv half its numerical strength, lint like Milton's angels, " They also serve who wait." it is assumed that a member of the Grand .Armv of the Republic did such dutv as lie wa-^ called upon to do, and what that dutv was, whether ])erilous or otherwise, his sketch makes manifest. If it was such as brought him lionorable scars, or promotion on the held oi iialtle, no one will wish to deprive him of his glory ; but nun ju'^t as brave as lie. went through the war unscathed, and willioLit siioulder-strap or clu-vron — men just as loval, just as true, languished with disease in hos|)ital, laitl down their lives, and died without a glimpse of gray, or smell of powder. There is no rank in the Grand Armw aiul no rule of precedence has been observed in the arrangement of these sketches. With a few exceptions, thev have been |)rinted practicallv in the order in which the data was received. Aside from their personal bearing they include many interesting incidents of armv life coming under the obser- vation of the narrators, and which ha\'e been hiliieito un])ulilishe(l. 11. P. P. \ <^ • \ c PERSONAL RECORDS JOHN C. ROBINSON. Among the 40,000 members of the Grand Army of the Republic who constitute the Department of New York, there is none who more fully has the respect, the esteem and the sympathy of his comrades than has the hero of three wars and thirty years of army service, now sitting under the shadow of a great affliction, in his home and birthplace, the beautiful city of Binghamton. Nearly fourscore years have passed since John Cleveland Robinson first saw the light of day which comes no longer to his sightless eyes. He was born April 10, 1S17, of New England parentage. His father was the first judge of Broome countv, and was also postmaster of Binghamton under Andrew Jackson. After studying in the schools of his native town, and in the near-by academy at O.xford, young Robinson received an appointment as cadet at West Point in 1835, and although leav- ing a year before graduation to study law, in October, 1839, was commissioned second lieuten- ant in the 5th U. S. Infantry, and was stationed at Sackett's Harbor and Green Bay, Wis. He joined the Army of Occupation in Texas, at Corpus Christi, as regimental and brigade quartermaster; was at Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma, served with distinction at Monterey, and participated in the concluding operations of the Mexican war, being promoted meantime to first lieutenant. In August, 1850, he was further promoted to captain, and in 1853-4 was engaged against the Indians in Texas, and in 1856 he led expeditions against the Seminoles in the Eveiglades and Big Cypress swamp of Florida. In 1857-8 he took part in the Utah expediti(_)n which the action of the Mormons made necessary. At the beginning of the civil war Captain Robinson happened to be in command at Fort McHenry, having under him only 100 men at the momentous time when the Massachusetts Sixth were attacked on their way through Balti- more, and It was part of the same rebel plan to capture the fort. The arrival of a transport gave rise to tiie rumor, assiduously cultivated by the commander, that a full regiment had been sent on to strengthen the garrison, and the ruse prevented an attack that under the circum- stances might have been successful. Captain Robinson was subsequently sent on recruiting and mustering service to Ohio and Michigan, and in September was appointed colonel of the First Michigan Volunteers. In February, 1862, he was promoted to major in the United States army; was commissioned brigadier-general of volunteers the following April, and commanded a brigade at Newport News; was transferred to the Army of the Poto- mac, and placed in command of the First brig- ade of General Phil Kearney's division; took part in the seven tlays' battle before Richmond, and commanded a division at Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville and Gettysburg, where he earned the brevet of lieutenant-colonel, U. S. A., and at Mine Run and in the battle of the Wilder- ness performed services for which he received the brevet of colonel. At Spottsylvania Court House, while leading a charge on the enemy's breastworks, he was wounded by a bullet in the left knee which led to amputation of the leg at the thigh a week later. This, of course, unfitted him for field service. He was brevetted major-general of volunteers in 1S64, and brigadier and major- general U. S A. in March, 1865, and was awarded a congressional medal of honor. He served as military commander and commissioner of the Freedman's bureau in North Carolina in 1866; was mustered out of volunteer service September i, of that year; commanded the lO Till'. Grand Akmv oi riii l\i rn-.i k department of the South in 1867; and tlie de- partment of tlie lakes in 1867-8. On May 6, 1869, was retired witli full rank of major-gen- eral. U. S. A. Still his honors were not quite complete. In 1S72 he was elected lieutenant-governor of the state of New York, on the republican ticket headed by General Di.x for governor. He was the third department commander of the depart- ment of New York, and in 1877-8 was the com- mander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic. In 1S87 lie was chosen president of the Society of the Army of the Potomac. and later on in the Red River campaign. Tlu-y were then sent to the Shenandoah V'alley (July. 1864), and were with Sheridan at Opequan and Cedar Creek. They remained in the valley till the close of the war, and were then sent to Georgia. Sergeant Saxton took part in all these campaigns, but was never wounded. He joined the Grand Army soon after it was organized; was commander of Post 56 and of Post 173. In 1892 was a member of the Depart- ment Council of Administration, and in 1894 was elected delegate-at-large to the National Itncampment. Is a lawyer, living at Clyde, ^ C^ CHARLES T. SAXTON CHARLES T. SAXTON, enlisted as a private November 19, 1861, in an organization that afterwar|iographical Alias of the city. a well known scientific work of great value, especially to the medical profession. He is the originator of the Board of Health, the elevated and cable railway system and of the under- ground system recently adopted. For more than a quarter of a century he has been professionally active in promoting the improvement of the Harlem river, recenth' opened to navigation, the celebration of which was under his auspices. He has planned and is now superintending the improvements of the east harbor, an important addition to the commercial facilities of the metropolis. ABRAHAM GILBERT MILLS was born in New York city, March 12, 1844. When but four years old, his father died. He then lived for several years in Jamaica, Long Island, where he attended L'nion Hall Academy until the age of fifteen, when he began his commercial career by entering the service of E. H. Kellogg & Co., a business house of high standing, and which still exists in the city of New York. On the organization of the famous Duryee Zouaves (5th N. Y. Vols.) at the outbreak of the war, he sought to enlist in that regiment, but his widowed mother could not then be persuaded to give her consent. This he finally obtained in the following year, and enlisted (at the age of eighteen) in the regiment of his choice. Mean- time the Duryee Zouaves had gained a high reputation for military discipline and bravery in battle, many of our most promising young men sought to enlist in the now famous regiment and several of Mills's schoolmates and friends enlisted with him. An attempt was made to form a Zouave brigade, and Mills began his active military career in the field as a member of Company E, Second Duryee Zouaves (165th N. Y. Vols.), a regiment ofticered mainly from the "Old Fifth." This regiment was in active service three years in Louisiana, Texas, Virginia (under Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley), and in South Carolina, . nd well sustained the high reputation of the original Duryee Zouaves, whose term of service had expired in 1863, but whose name and uniform the "Second Duryee Zouaves" made conspicuous until the close of the war. Concerning Mills's career at the beginning and in the most notable part of the service of his regiment, Brevet Lieut. -Col. Henry C. Inwood Its IIistokv and Its Heroes 15 (one of the "old Fifth"), who was the captain of the company in vvhicli he served, writes as follows: "He very r.ipidly acquired a thorough knowledge of and practical acquaintance with the duties of a soldier. He became prominently an ornament and example to the company. I promoted hira corporal and very shortly afterward sergeant, in which capacity he greatly assisted me in preparing my company for field service. As a sergeant he passed through the Port Hudson campaign in 1S63, and distinguished himself nobly as a brave American volunteer. Mills had commanded his company in the fruit- less nigiit attacks on the "Citaciel," the strong- est point in the defenses of Port Hudson (June 29 and 30, 1863), and was on duty with his com- pany throughout the entire campaign. After the surrender of Port Hudson and the consequent opening of the Mississippi, Mills was detached from his regiment on special duty, concerning which Col. Inwood says: "I recommended A. G. Mills for this service because he was my best soldier." Doubtless absence from his regiment •'^,JJ r ABRAHAM G. MILLS " He was side by side with me at the charge on Port Hudson May 27, 1863, and after I was disabled by a rebel bullet and the regiment very much decimated and demoralized by defeat, he conspicuously rallied them to the colors, took command of my company and, with the regiment, led them to the charge again, and, by his intrepidity, earned and received thp thanks of the brigade commander (General Nicker.son). I was to this an eye witness. "On rejoining the regiment from hospital I learned from the regimental commander that Mills had conducted himself handsomely during my absence, that he had commanded the company and had rendered efficient service. I took the earliest opportunity to recommend him for a lieutenancy and requested his assignment to ray company." on detached service prevented his further pro- motion, but his services to the close of the war were meritorious and he was honorably mustered out with his regiment September i, 1865. Shortly afterward he was offered and accepted a position in the civil service of the government in Washington, D. C, and entered the Columbian College Law School in that city in 1867, whence he graduated in 1869 and was admitted to prac- tice in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. Meantime he had been promoted to an important position in the U. S. treasury department and in 187 1 was sent to London i6 Tin; Gkami Akmv ov riii-; l-JKruiiLic with a delegation of treasury officials in connec- tion with rc-fiiiKlintj the government bonds. In 1874 he resigned his government office to enter commercial life, in which he has had a successful career, and is now vice-president and secretary of Otis Brothers & Co., the well known elevator builders, and is also a director in several other important business enterprises. He entered Lafayette Post No. 140, G. A. K., in 1890, and in the following year was elected commander of that famous post. On the expira- tion of his term he was unanimously re-elected commander, and is still a recognized leader in that select, progressive and influential organiza- tion of veterans of the war. He is also a member of the Loyal Legion, of the United Service Club, a life member of the Society of the Army of the Potomac, a vice-presi- dent of the Nineteenth Army Corps Society, an associate member of the Uuryee Zouaves (Old Fifth) Veteran Association, and vice-president of the Veteran Association of the Second Duryee Zouaves (165th N. Y. V'ols). In social and club life he is eciually conspicu- ous as a leader. He is president of three clubs and associations in the Adirondacks, a vice-presi- dent of the Colonial Chil), a member of the governing boards of the lingineers' and Patria Clubs, e.\-president of the New York Athletic Club and of the National League B. B. C, and is also a member of a large number of patriotic, scientific, charitable, commercial and social clubs and organizations. RASTUS S. RANSOM was born in Mount Hawley, 111., March 31, 1839. He enlisted May 31, 1861, and was conspicuously identified with the recruiting and organizing of the 50th N. V. Volunteer Engineers, which was mustered into service September 15, 1S6 i, and was commissioned first lieutenant, Co. H, to rank from September 16. The regiment encamped at Hall's Hill, Va., and was assigned to Butterfield's brigade, Fitz- john Porter's division. After some time spent in drill the regiment was sent to Washington navy yard, and there equipped to join the peninsula cam|)aign. It was sent forward via City Point, to Yorktown,and was in the trenches from April 3, 1862, to May 4, when the enemy evacuated, and our troops occupied the city. After a few days the 50th was moved to White House Landing as a part of Gen. Woodbury's brigade of volunteer engineers, and Lieutenant Ransom participated in the operations of the Army of the Potomac in its advance on Richmond, up to and including the battle of Fair Oaks. During the peninsular campaign Lieutenant Ransom was in command of his company, the captain being on iletached duty. His health failed, however, t(j such degree that remaining any longer in the Virginia swamps meant speedy death. Unwilling to resign, he obtained thirty days' leave of absence, thinking he might in that Ram lb S. Ransom time regain his heallh and return to his comnuuui. He was moved from camp on a hand-car drawn by a mule, but at White House Landing, the surgeon in charge, finding some supposed irreg- ularity in his papers, ordered him back to camp in the swamps. His condition being critical, the surgeon of the brigade so certified, and Lieutenant Ransom was discharged May 31, 1862, on the ground of disabilities contracted in the service in the line of duty. Lieutenant Ransom returned to his home in Flmira a physical wreck. Later on, in the hope of being of some further service to his country, he made application for admission to the invalid Its History and Its Heroes 17 corps (July 16, 1863), but was found unfit for even that branch of the service. The following letter shows the esteem and respect in which he was held by the colonel of the 50th : Headijuarteks 50TH Regt., N. y. Vol., ~| "Camp Advance" near New Bridge, Va., |- J/ny 31, 1862. J R. S. Ransom, f/rsi Lieutcnanl : Dear Sir — I can not permit you to leave this regi- ment — compelled by long continued ill health— without expressing my sincere sympathy for the cause and evi- dent propriety of the act — at this particular crisis — which I know- pains you much. Allow me to add my testimony of your ability, zeal and industry in discharging the duties of first lieutenant of Company H, of 50th Regiment, N. Y. Vol., since the organization of the regiment last August, and for nearly half that period, those of lieutenant commanding, during the absence of Captain Beers on detached service. I desire also to testify my high appreciation of the ability and courage displayed by you, during the ardu- ous and dangerous service the officers and soldiers of this regiment (as part of the " Engineer Brigade " of the Army of the Potomac) were called upon to perform for several weeks before Yorktown, constructing batteries, pontoon and other bridges, entrenchments and parallels, under the almost constant fire from the cannon and mortars of the enemy. With the hope that the care and comforts of home, and suitable rest will restore your health, and m\' wishes for your happiness and prosperity hereafter, I am, dear sir. Very truly your friend, CHARLES B. STUART, Colonel sot h Regi., N. Y. V. Comrade Ransom is now a prominent mem- ber of the New York bar, and he was surrogate of the county of New York for six years. He is a member of Lafayette Post and the Loyal Legion, in which he is deservedly popular, as he is in all other organizations with which he is connected. JAMES ARMSTRONG BLANCHARD was born in Jefferson county, N. Y., August i6th, 1845, of Huguenot, English and Scotch descent. When nine years old his family moved to Wis- consin, and in that state he enlisted in the Second Wisconsin Cavalry, joining the regiment in the summer of 1864, when it was near Vicks- burg, where they were principally engaged. When asked for his military record. Comrade Blanchard said ; " In view of many records, it is hardly worth mentioning. When the war broke out my father was dead. I was the baby of the family, and my brothers and sisters had gone their several ways. Mother and I lived on the farm and took care of each other, and the farm took care of us. In 1864 I enlisted as a private soldier in the Second Wisconsin Cavalry and was assigned to Company I. I was a mere atom of the lowest known quantity in the regiment, filling the niches assigned me, and if you would know my military record you must look for it in the history of the regiment." Turning to the history we find that on Dec. ist several companies of the regiment, number- ing 280 men, were sent out to learn the position and strength of the enemy. About eleven miles from Yazoo City they met the enemy's pickets, drove them in, and soon became engaged with a force four or five times their number. Com- panies E, F, H and I were ordered to dismount and dislodge the enemy. A sharp battle ensued. The major in command was severely wounded, and the companies engaged lost about forty in killed, wounded and missing The enemy's loss was seventy-five. The major commanding, in his report, says: " I cannot refrain from speak- ing of Lieutenant R. R. Hamilton, of Company F, and Lieutenant Tinkham, of Company I, and their companies, who displayed the greatest bravery and fought gallantly, and deserve the highest praise." Soon after this engagement, the regiment proceeded to Memphis, from where it took part in one of the Grierson raids, which covered some 450 miles and resulted in the cap- ture of 500 prisoners, who were turned over to the Second Wisconsin to guard. General Grier- son says in his report; " The Second Wisconsin was detached to take charge of the prisoners, and the officers and men of this regiment deserve much praise for the cheerfulness with which they performed this arduous duty during the balance of the march." On this raid immense amounts of the enemy's property were captured and de- stroyed, and General Grierson, in closing his report of it, says: "This, one of the most successful expeditions of the war, undertaken, as it was, at a period when roads and streams were considered almost impassible, could not have met with such extraordinary success without the patient endurance and hearty co-operation which were evinced by my entire command, and all those who participated richly deserve the lasting gratitude of the government and remem- i8 TiiK Grand Army ok tiik Rki'uhmc brance of their countrymen." The command reached Vicksburg Jan. 5th, 1865, were trans- ferred back to Memphis, whence the)' went on wiiat was called the " mud " raid into Arkansas and Louisiana, destroying property, breaking up and capturing bands of the enemy, consum- ing something more than a month, and notable for the unprecedented rainfall which made the whole country one vast and almost impassible swamp. Returning to Memphis February 20th, the regiment was engaged in guarding Memphis and hunting guerillas and fragments of armies James A. Hi.anchaku in Northern Mississippi and Western Tennessee until May 9th, when they were sent to Grenada, Miss., to garrison that place. Once more return- ing to Memphis, they were ordered to Alexan- dria, Louisiana, and from there overland to the Rio Grande, presumably to look after the opera- tions of Maximilian in that quarter. This long march was begun on the 8th day of August. There was considerable suffering from the heat, scarcity of water and food. Stops were made (m the way for rest and recuperation. The march ended at Austin, Texas, on the 6th day of November. It was here they were mustered out, months after the war was over, and received their linal discharges at Madison, Wis., Dec. 15th, 1865. The latter part of the service was performed under the command of General Custer. Comrade Blanchard relates an interesting inci- dent that occurred during this campaign. The lieutenant-colonel temporarily in command of the regiment, was very unpopular, and at Alex- andria, some 150 of the men having been drink- ing freely, made a demonstration by marching to his tent, and having chosen the orderly- sergeant of Company C as spokesman, informed their commanding officer that if he did not leave the regiment in twenty-four hours they would dump him, head and heels, into the Red river. Of course the officer did not leave, but the orderly-sergeant was court-martialed, and with another officer who had committed a far more heinous offense, sentenced to be shot. All the preparations were made for the execution ; the troops were ordered out to witness the spectacle; the men were placed on their coffins, beside their open graves; the first word of command was given, and then in the midst of the most breathless silence, an orderly rushed forward and snatched the sergeant out of range. The (illier man was shot. The sergeant's sentence had been commuted to three years' imprison- ment, the result of a petition signed generally by the officers, who knew his soldierly record. Curiously enough, however, while the petition was granted, it was so worded in its reflections upon the same unpopular lieutenant-colonel, that General Custer ordered the seventeen com- missioned officers who signed it to be placed under arrest, and all the non-commissioned officers reduced to the ranks. While the regi- ment was on the march from Alexandria to the Rio Grande, General Sheridan met it at Hemp- stead, Texas, and after investigating the matter revoked the order of General Custer and restored the commissioned officers to their commands, and the non-commissioned officers to their former rank. Somewhat broken in health, Comrade Blanch- ard, instead of returning to the farm, resolved to acquire an education, and entering Ripon Col- lege, prepared for college, pursued the classical course, graduated in i87i,came east, and after a course at Columbia College Law School, began the practice of law in the city of New York, and is now at the head of the tirni of EDWARD J. ATKINSON . I Its History and Its Heroes 21 Blanchard, Gay & Phelps, with offices in the Tribune Building. Mr. Blanchard has confined his attention entirel)' to the civil department of the law, in which he has built up a large and lucrative business. Without being, in any sense of the word, a seeker for political preferment, he has long stood high in the councils of the republican party. He was one of the organ- izers, in 1887, of the National League of Re- publican Clubs, and has ever since been active in its official management. He is a member of the Bar Association, of the Republican and Union League Clubs, of the Geographical Society, and of Lafayette Post, No. 140. EDWARD J. ATKINSON, the department commander of the Department of New York in 1895, was born in the city of New York, March 10, 18^3. On leaving the public schools he found employment in the wholesale drygoods house of Robertson, Hudson & Pulliam, and re- mained with them till the)' went down in the panic of 1857. He was next bookkeeper for W. E. Brockvvay, a New York brewer, till April 15, 1861, and then enlisted in Co. A, 9th N. Y. S. M. Days and weeks passed on, men and officers were all eager to take part in the stirring events which were thrilling the country, but no word came from the governor ordering them to the front, so when May 27 came around, and still no order to go forward had been received, they started on their own account, passed unarmed through Baltimore on their way to Washington, and on June 6 were mustered into the United States service as the 83d New York volunteers — and they were volunteers, indeed. Without his knowledge Atkinson's name was placed on the muster roll by the adjutant, as principal musician, and thus he became a member of the non-commissioned staff of the regiment, but while at the head of the regimental drum corps, he was also a private soldier in Co. A, and thus did double duty. While with the regiment he participated in the engagements of Sandy Hook, Md., Second Bull Run, South Mountain, Antietam, Chantilly, Cedar Mountain, Thor- oughfare Gap and Fredericksburgh, besides a number of skirmishes. In March 1S63, the war department having decided to dispense with the services of principal musicians, he was mustered out, and came home. Since then he has been deputy warden of the New York penitentiary eight years; cashier of the Weed sewing machine company seven years, leaving that position to accept one of searcher in the county clerk's office. In 1888 he was promoted to his present position of chief of that department of the office. In 1880 he joined Kilpatrick Post, of which he was commander for two terms. In 1887 he or- ganized Horace B. Clafflin Post, 578, and was its second commander for one term. The esteem in which he is held by his comrades is shown by the fact that, by the unanimous vote of the New York posts, he has been chosen secretary and executive officer of the memorial committee for fourteen consecutive terms. In 1893 he was elected senior vice department commander; in 1894 he was a candidate for department com- mander, but was defeated by John C. Shotts. His success the ensuing year demonstrates the truth of the frequent declaration that tlie G. A. R. is not a political organization, for while a majority of department commanders in this state have happened to be republicans. Commander Atkinson has always been a democrat. Honor- able in all his dealings, loyal to the order, and helpful to its members, no distinction it confers by ballot can be higher than the one bestowed upon him long ago by popular acclaim — " a good comrade! " FRANK ABBOTT.— Dr. Frank Abbott was born September 5, 1836, in Shaphleigh, York county, Maine, and is a lineal descendant of George Abbott who settled in Andover, Mass., in 1640. It is to the honorable record of this family that it includes from sixty to one hundred members who, ranking from private to general, participated in all the colonial wars up to the Declaration of Peace in 1781. After attending schools in his native town, and clerking for a while in a Boston dry-goods store, Frank Abbott, in 1857, turned his attention to dentistry which eventually became his life-work. After practicing for seven years he took up the study of medicine, graduating in 187 1 — mean- time settling in New York where he has attained the highest rank as specialist in the practice of dental and oral surgery. While living in Johnstown, N. Y., in 1862, he became largely instrumental in raising the One 22 The Grand Army ok the Repuhlic Hiinflied and Fifteenth New York Regiment, which was recruited in tlie counties of Fulton, Montgomery and Saratoga, and was commis- sioned first lieutenant of Company E. The reg- iment was at once ordered to the Shenandoah valley, and for about a week guarded the Potomac and Winchester railroad from Charles- ton to Winchester. They were then ordered to Harper's Ferry, and camped on Bolivar Heights overlooking the scene made forever historical by the John Brown insurrection. On September 13th three companies with similar details from other regiments were sent over the river into started west for the alleged purpose of lighting Indians. They were, however, stopped and quartered at Camp Douglas, Chicago, until they were exchanged, and while there Lieutenant Abbott resigned, having acted during the greater part of his term as adjutant of the regiment. Returning to Johnstown in November he re- sumed his practice. In the summer of 1863 was drafted, but on examination was declared exempt, being physically unfit for service. Dr. Abbott is past master of Astor Lodge, 603, I', and A. M. ; Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine; member of the New York '^ FRANK ABBOTT Maryland on picket duty. The following morn- ing a skirmish began on Maryland Heights, and lasted from 10 a. m. till 3 p. M., when the Union men were ordered back to their quarters on Bolivar Heights, the enemy planting cannon where they had held our line in the morning. The troops on Bolivar Heights, 10,000 strong, were kept under the fire of five batteries posted at different points commanding the camp, our men replying with seventy-one guns. The Union forces held the position from Saturday at 3 p. m. till Monday at 8 a. m., being constantly under fire, when a white flag was run up, and the Union command surrendered to Stonewall Jack- son. They were immediately paroled (Septem- ber 16) and sent to Annajiolis, and from there County Medical Society; American Dental Asso- ciation ; New York Odontological Society, and of the New York State and First District Dental Societies; Fellow of the American Geographical Society; member of the New York Academy of Sciences; Linna-an Society of New York, and member of the University Club; has been dean of the New York College of Dentistry for twenty- six years; professor of dental hyslology, surgery and therapeutics; ex-president of the National Association of Dental Faculties; ex-president of the American Dental Association ; is the author of several microscopically illustrated monographs upon dental subjects, and a treatise upon dental pathology and practice; is a member of Lafayette Post, G. A. R. Its History and Its Heroes 23 ALBERT MONFORT CUDNER was born in VVappingers Falls, N. Y. , November 27, 1840, and lived there till the spring of 1853, when his parents moved to Cold water, Mich., where he remained till early in 1S60, when he engaged in the grocery business in Rockford, 111. On the 6th of August, 1862, he enlisted as a private in Co. K, 74th Illinois Vol. Infantry, for three years, and September 28 left with his regi- ment for Louisville, crossing the river at New Albany, on pontoons, at midnight, the command A. M. CUIJNKK reporting to Gen. D. C. Buel. For a time the regiment served in the 14th and 20th corps, and after the reorganization of the army under Gene- ral Rosecrantz, became part of the ist brigade, 2d division, 4th corps, Army of the Cumberland, and continued as such till the close of the war. The division was commanded in the Kentucky campaign by Gen. Jeff. C. Davis; at Cliattanooga and in the assault of Mission Ridge by General Sheridan, and in the Atlanta campaign by Gen. John Newton. Comrade Cudner was in the ranks with his regi- ment in all its battles, charges and skirmishes, from Perrysville, Ky. , October 8, i8C)2, to the investment of Atlanta, in August, 1864, At the battle of Stone River (Murfreesboro), December 31, he was wounded, captured and for a short time confined in Libby prison. Was e.xchanged in the summer following and returned to his regiment, then at Chattanooga. In the assault and capture of Missionary Ridge he was in Sheri- dan's 2d division, 4th corps, which had orders to take the works at the foot of the ridge; but instead of stopping at the foot, the corps, with- out orders, pressed on, stormed the ridge itself, and took it. After this the corps was sent to the relief of Burnside, who was besieged at Kno.xville by Longstreet, and remained in East Tennessee until May 7, 1864, when the Atlanta campaign was opened. In that memorable part of the great struggle Comrade Cudner was in the bat- tles of Tunnel Hill, Rocky Face Ridge, Dalton, Resaca, Calhoun, New Hope Church, Lost Moun- tain, Kenesaw Mountain (in which the regiment lost 31 per cent in killed and wounded — 33 killed and 30 wounded, out of 201, the numerical strength of the regiment when it went into the fight), Vining's Station, Peach Tree Creek and Atlanta. On leaving home September 28, 1862, the regi- ment numbered 950, officers and men; but at tlie battle of Peach Tree Creek, July 20, 1864, the muster roll showed less than 130 of all grades, Co. K numljering only si.x. After the ca[Uure of Atlanta, Comrade Cudner was commissioned second lieutenant and assigned to the 42d U. S. Colored Infantry, then at Chat- tanooga; was promoted to first lieutenant, and appointed adjutant, holding that position till mustered out of the service January 31, 1866. He is a member of Lafayette Post and of the Loyal Legion. At present is in the real estate business in New York city. ALEXANDER PHCENIX KETCHUM (born in New Haven, Conn., May 11, 1839,) is the son of Edgar Ketchum and Elizabeth Phoenix, and thus descended through both lines from dis- tinguished New York families. Through his grandparents on his father's side (John Jauncey Ketchum and Susanna Jauncey who were cousins), a double line comes down through the Jauncey famih* from Guleyn Vigne and Adri- anna Cavilge; as also from Cornelius Van Tienhoven, secretary of New Netherlands, and "one of the largest contributors to the defenses of New Amsterdam in the list of 1665." Through his mother he is descended from Jacob Pha'nix Till-: Grand Army ok the Retuulk and Anna \'aii \'lec Seluyn's list of the I graiulfatlier was Re his great-grand fathc Daniel Phci-nix, who tion of merchants in of welcome on the inauguration, and wl of the city of New nearly a quarter of a k, wiio appear in Dominie )utch Church in i6S6. His V. Alexander Plux-nix; and r the illustrious metchaut, , as chairman of the delega- 1789, delivered the address occasion of Washington's 10 was the first comptroller York, which office he held centurv. Al.KXANDKK P. KkICHUM Colonel Alexander Phunix Ketchum gradu- ated with honors from the College of the City of New York in 1858, after having won prizes for natural history, drawing, mathematics and oratory. He served a year as tutor in drawing and mathematics in his alma mater, and in i860 graduated from the Albany Law School, and was the same year admitted to the bar. The civil war then breaking out, he became con- nected with the department of the South, and as a staff officer of the military governor of South Carolina. General Rufus Saxton, was active in the conduct of affairs on the southern coast. Transferred to the staff of Major-General O. O. Howard in 1865, he served as acting assistant adjutant-general in Charleston, and later in Washington. In September, 1867, he resigned from the army with the rank of brevet-colonel. In 1S69 Colonel Ketchum was appointed by President Grant assessor of internal revenue for the Ninth district of New York; later on col- lector for the same district; in 1874 was trans- ferred to the customs service as general ap- praiser of the Port of New York; and in 1883 was api)ointed by President Arthur chief ap- praiser of the same port, which office he vacated in 1885 upon the accession of President Cleve- land. P"rom that time Colonel Ketchum has devoted himself exclusively to the practice of the law, buihiing up a large and lucrative lousi- ness along the lines in which his father was so successful — the charge of estates and convey- ancing, and in connection with important cus- toms suits in the United States courts, having also a considerable general practice. As a resident of Harlem since 1839, Colonel Ketchum has been active in the development of upper New York. He was one of the founders of the Mount Morris P>ank, and its first presi- dent. In 1890 and 1891 he was president of the Presbyterian Union of New York city, while he has been prominent in connection with the Young Men's Christian Association and various benevolent and educational projects. He has done considerable literary work and has de- livered many public addresses, that on Garfield, delivered before the students of West Point, being especially notable. Besides being a mem- ber of Lafayette Post, Colonel Ketchum was for four years president of the Alumni Association of the College of the City of New York; is pres- ident of the City College Club; and member of the Military order of the Loyal Legion, the City and State Bar Associations, the Numismatic and Arch.neological Society, New England Society, Phi Betta Kappa Society, and the Re[)ublican, Harlem Republican, Harlem, Quill, University, and Alpha Delta Phi Clubs, and the New York, Atlantic, Larchmont, New Rochelle, Riverside and Rhode Island Yacht Clubs. EDGAR KETCHUM (brother of Alexander P. Ketchum, subject of the foiegoing sketch,) was born July 15, 1S40, in New York city. Graduated from the College of the City of New York in i860, with the degree of A. R., and subsequently received that of A. M. ; and from the Columbia College Law School in 1862, Its History and Its Heroes 25 with the degree of LL. B. His first military experience was as a member of Company C, Seventh New York National Guard. He was subsequently commissioned second lieutenant, Signal Corps, U. S. A., with rank as such from March 3, 1863, and at once entered the camp of instruction at Georgetown, D. C. His first assignment to active duty was in the Twenty- fourth Army Corps, Army of the James, then in front of Richmond. He had the special honor EiicAR Ketchum to be highly commended in the report of his superiors for services rendered during the en- gagements there. In January, 1865, he was assigned to the staff of General C. J. Payne who commanded a division of the second -expedition against Fort Fisher, and after landing through the surf, assisted in establishing a line from the Atlantic coast to Cape Fear River to cut off the communications of General Hoke with the fort, an enterprise of great difficulty, owing to the marshy condition of the land, and the facilities the enemy possessed for a concealed attack upon our men. Was signal officer with General Alfred H. Terry at the capture of the fort, and during the battle from 3 to 10 p. m., was con- stantly engaged in transmitting signals to Admiral Porter commanding the fleet, and so directing the fire of the gunboats, being exposed to the combined assault of the artillery, musketry and sharp-shooters. He entered the fort with General Terry, and was placed in command of the signal station established on the northeast pararpet The following morning the large mag- azine of the fort, containing some 13,000 pounds of powder, was accidentally exploded, killing nearly 200 men. The signal station being only about 100 feet distant, was covered with earth to a depth of two feet, and Lieutenant Ketchum narrowly escaped suffocation. He remained on duty at the fort until early in February, when General Terry was reinforced by General Scho- field and the twenty-third corps. General Scho- field assuming the command in the movement against Fort Anderson and Wilmington, and Lieutenant Ketchum was assigned to his staff. Later on he was assigned to the staff of General y. D. Cox, as chief signal oflRcer, and acted in that capacity till after the capture of Wilming- ton, February 22, 1865, performing valuable services in connection with the capture of Fort Anderson, and all the other fortifications on the west side of the Cape Fear River south of Wilmington. Shortly after the capture of Wilmington, Sherman's army being supposed to be at, or near Fayetteville, N. C, an effort was made to open communication with him by way of the Cape Fear River, and Lieutenant Ketchum accom- panied the expedition on a small gunboat. The trip was made exceedingly difficult by the nar- rowness and irregularity of the river, its sharp bends, and the frequency with which torpedoes were planted along its course. Sherman not having reached his objective point, the expedi- tion proved fruitless, and Lieutenant Ketchum returned to General Terry's staff, and remained with him till after the battles of Averyboro and Bentonville, between the 17th and 20th of March, after which he was again ordered to the army of the James, remaining on duty after the capture of Richmond, and until honorably dis- charged August II, 1865. For gallant and mer- itorious service at the capture of Fort Fisher he received the rank of brevet first lieutenant, and for similar service during the war, the rank of brevet captain. On his return to New York, a short term of service being necessary to comjilete his seven years in the Seventh Regiment, he resumed duty TiiK Gkani) Akmv of the Ri;runi.ic therewith, ami was made a non-commissioned officer. On completing his full term, in recogni- tion of services performed in the army, he was appointed engineer with rank of major, on the staff of General William G. Ward, First Brig- ade, New York National Guard, and held the position for three years, after which he resigned and was honorably discharged. On his return from the army he resumed his law practice, which he has continued ever since. Besides being a member of Lafayette Post, he belongs to the military order of the Loyal Legion, the Society of the Army of the Poto- mac, the War Veterans of the Seventh Regiment and the \'eteran Signal Corps Association. His father, Edgar Ketchum, a distinguished lawyer of New York, was collector of internal revenue, appointed by President Lincoln at the outbreak of the war, and w^as afterwards ap- pointed register in bankruptcy by Chief Justice Chase, and held that position at the time of his death in 1882. Comrade Ketchum is the great grandson of Daniel Phitni-x, the first city treasurer and chamberlain of New York, which offices he held for more than twenty years. He was also a member of New York's first chamber of com- merce, and one of the city's most prominent and respected citizens one hundred years ago. FRED C. WAGNER.— Not all the important service rendered the country in her hour of peril was performed at the front, as is shown by the record of Comrade Fred C. Wagner, who, though commissioned captain of cavalry by President Lincoln in May, 1863, was attached to no regi- ment, but was appointed provost marshal for the seventh district, state of New York, and served as such till December, 1865, in the city of New York, which, of course, was not only a highly important point for the enlistment of recruits, but large bodies of troops were frccjuently quar- tered here, and others were often passing through, affording opportunities for desertion that had to be counteracted by alert work on the part of the provost marshal. During the draft riots matters assumed a still more serious turn, and altogether the duties assigned to Captain Wagner were not only arduous, but delicate and exacting. That they were well and faithfully performed his rec- ord is convincing proof. Comrade Wagner was born in New York in 1831. His parents died in his infancy. His maternal grandfather, Joseph Runyan, was a soldier from New Jersey in the war of 1812, and died a soldier's death at New Orleans. Before the late war Mr. Wagner was in the India rubber business with Horace H. Day, and he is now a real estate broker and appraiser at 52 Broadway. He held the office of school trustee of the lylh Fked C. Wagner ward, wiiich capacity he served acceptably for si.xteen years. He joined Lafayette Post in 1888 and is one of its most respected members. FRED COCHEU. As indicated by the name, the father of Fred Cocheu was a Frenchman; his mother was born in New York city of par- ents of American descent for six generations, and Comrade Cocheu himself, also born in the same city March 30, 1832, is as true an Ameri- can as wears the button of the G. A. R. Obliged to earn his own living since the time he was eight years old, he was self-educated, as well as self -supported. When the war broke out he promptly resigned a lucrative position, and enlisted as a private, together with three of his brothers, in the early May of 1S61. In Oc- ^^ i^ * FRED. COCHEU Its History and Its Heroes 29 tober following he was made a captain of H Co., 53d New York Vols., and although subse- quently twice elected lieutenant-colonel and once a colonel, refused promotion, but remained a captain till the end. His first experience was one of extreme peril on the Burnside expedition in which the regi- ment was shipwrecked off Cape Hatteras, and for forty-eight days he was one of 800 on board the ship John Trucks, with only twelve days' provisions. Notwithstanding the 53d was a three years regiment, it was, owing to the suffering of the men, honorably mustered out of service by order of the war department, JMarch 26, 1862. A hurried trip to Albany, and four days later Cocheu had received from Gov. Morgan a com- mission as captain in I Co., 85th New York Vols., and in three days was with that regiment at Fortress Monroe. He was through the whole campaign with the army of the Potomac to Harri- son's Landing; was then sent with his brigade to Norfolk and Suffolk, Va., and in Januar\-, 1S63, to New Berne, N. C. through the Dismal Swamp canal. He was made chief of the ambulance corps of the i8th A. C, till relieved and sent back to his regiment, at his own request, in April. Soon afterwards he was sent with his own company and five others (one from each regiment in the brigade) to take charge of Roanoke Island, N. C, where the captain was in command with over 75,000 negroes to provide for. Late in this year, his father having died, and one brother being killed in battle, Capt. Cocheu was compelled to resign in order to at- tend to imperative private business. As soon as this could be arranged he once more re-enlisted and was made captain of I Co., 6ist New York Vols., and was with Grant from Stevensburg to Petersburg, in all serving over three years, and participating in thirty-four regular battles, and skirmishes innumerable. He was wounded three times. Comrade Cocheu's record in the Grand Army is of twenty-six years standing, during which time he has commanded a post twelve terms, served one term as inspector-general of the department, and held various positions of honor and trust on the staffs of department and national com- manders. He also had the honor of being grand marshal of the thirty-two posts of Kings county for the year 1885, and on tiie occasion of the burial of Gen. Grant. Comrade Cocheu has been a republican ever since there was a republican party, and in 1872 was elected member of assembly from the 7lh district of Kings county by a handsome uiajority, although the district was usually democratic by 5,800. JOHN ADOLPHUS KAMPING was born March 29111, 1842, in the kingdom of Hanover, and came, when three or four years of age, to America, where his family settled in Cincin- JouN A. Kamping nati, Ohio. He received his early education in the public schools of that city, being at the age of ten admitted to the high school, where he continued for two years, after which he engaged in business until the age of seventeen. He be- gan as a teacher in the public schools, and in three years worked himself up to the position of principal of the third district school of Cincin- nati, which position he attained at the age of nineteen and held for five years, when he resigned to engage in business in New York city. On the outbreak of the war he joined, in con- nection with other teachers of the schools of Cincinnati, a company of the National Guard, T,0 The Grand Army of The REPrisLic known as the Teachers' Company, which during the four years of the war performed services in defense of tiie city as they were required. It was an agreement between the members of this company, that in case the general government siiould call upon them at any time for active ser- vice to the front, that they would respond in person, and in the spring of 1864, when Presi- dent Lincoln called upon the governors of Penn- sylvania, Ohio and Indiana for 40,000 additional troops for active duty, to finish the war, these governors furnished them in a very short period of time, the Teachers' Company forming Co. K of the 138th Ohio regiment, Colonel S. S. Fisher commanding. The company were sent to Petersburg and vicinity, when, having accom- plished the purposes for which the call was made, they were discharged. It is to the credit of tiiat company that out of the whole number who be- longed to it, only two or three remained at home, the rest having fulfilled their promise made at the beginning of the war to serve in the front when called upon. Circumstances in liusiness making it desirable for Mr. Kam[)ing to enter the profession of law in 1877, he was admitted to the bar, in which profession he has continued ever since. It has been his established habit, founded upon an early conviction of life's duty, that everyone should make some step in advance, of mental improve- ment each and every year of life, and this principle has been practiced with unremitting constancy, so that at the end of the year he could truthfully say that he had added one more ac- quirement of the mind to the store of knowledge previously obtained, thus carrying into practice the French saying "That a proper life consists in the art of employing one's time properly." He became a member of Lafayette Post in 1892. JOHN J. CLANCY is a native of the city of Dublin, where he was born on February 8th, 1843. He was brought to America when two and a half years old, and ever since has made his home in New York city. He enlisted Sep- tember 18, 1862, in the 165th New York, which first saw active service under General N. P. Banks, in the Nineteenth Army Corps, Depart- ment of the Gulf, taking part in the expedition through the Teche country preliminary to the siege of Port Hudson ; also in the series of engagements which took place around that stronghold before it fell, July 8, 1863. After the surrender the regiment went on the Red River expedition, and after that campaign to Sabine Pass, Tex. ; thence to Algiers opposite New Orleans. From there they were trans- ported to the coast, and to Fortress Monroe, from which they were ordered up the James River to Deep Bottom to build pontoon bridges, and then to Harper's Ferry, where they took John J. Clancy part in all the engagements that took place in that vicinity; then to Winchester and Cedar Creek under General P. A. Sheridan. After Appomattox the regiment had four months to serve, and were sent to Charleston, where they were mustered out in the fall of 1865. Comrade Clancy was with the regiment all the time, serving in the ranks as private and after the second year as corporal. Since the war he has engaged in the real estate business in New York city, where he resides, and is vice-president of the Riverside Bank. He is a member of La- fayette Post, and wholly in sympathy with its aims and methods. Its History and Its Heroes 31 WILLIAM COURTENAY was born in Bal- timore, Md., August 7, 1837, and was educated ill the schools of his native city. He held clerical positions, and engaged in various manufacturing enterprises, in the west and elsewhere until April, 1S61, when, at the breaking out of the war, he enlisted in the 71st New York and did duty with the regiment till the following August. After the battle of Bull Run he was mustered out, and acted on the staff of Gen. Henry Brewer- ton in the construction of field works around the #?» 1^ T^-' >. Wl William Courtenay city of Baltimore until 1862, when he was trans- ferred to Portland, Maine, as Civil Assistant in the Corps of Engineers in the construction of permanent fortifications and field works, includ- ing Forts Gorges, Preble, Scammel, Knox, Pop- ham, and at different points along the coast, all in the department of Maine. On leaving the government service in Novem- ber, 1865, he returned to Baltimore and engaged in mercantile pursuits until 18 70, when he removed to New York, and has been a resident of that city ever since. He is largely interested in manufac- turingenterprises, being president of several large corporations. Is a member of the Lawyers' Club, Sons of the Revolution, and Veterans' Association of the 71st Regiment, and for a term of three years after the war was Quartermaster of that regiment. Has been a member of Lafayette Post since 1885. >^ VINCENT MEIGS WILCOX, late colonel i32d Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteer Infan- try, was born in Madison, New Haven county, Ct., October 17, 1828, and is the son of Zenas and Lovisa Meigs Wilcox. On both his father's and his mother's side he is descended from and connected with some of the oldest families in New England. The genealogical records of the Wilcox family show it to have existed in Britain even prior to the Norman Conquest. William Wilcox, a lineal descendant of Sir John Wilcox, a noted knight of the time of Edward III, settled in Stratford, Ct., in what was then known as the New Haven Colony, as early as 1639. He was prominent in the affairs of the colony, and in 1647 ^'^'as a repre- sentative of the General Court at Hartford. His son Obadiah, when he became of age, settled at East Guilford, now known as Madison, Ct., and from him Colonel Wilcox descends in the fifth generation. On his mother's side he descends from Vincent Meigs, who also settled in Guilford about the year 1638 and laid the foundation for a long line of distinguished descendants, who have made a name in the educational, judicial, political, medical and military affairs of our country. His maternal grandmother, who was Mrs. Mary Field Meigs, daughter of Timothy Field, a captain and distinguished officer in the Revolutionary war, an ancestor of the Field family that includes such illustrious names as David Dudley Field and Cyrus W. Field. Colonel Wilcox was educated at Lee's Academy, in his native place, and on leaving school followed the occupation of teacher for three years. Soon after he engaged in the mercantile business and became prominent in the local affairs of the town. In i860 he removed to Scranton, Pa., and was extensively engaged in the mercantile business in that city when the war broke out and the North was aroused. While residing in his native town he became an active member of the 2d Regiment, Connecticut State Militia, and a lieutenant in the Madison Light Guard. While acting in this capacity he received a course of tactical instruc- tion under General Hardee, author of " Hardee's Tactics," and afterwards a noted Confederate general. >1- TiiE Grand Akmv ok tiif. Rki'uiu.ic At the call to arms Mr. Wilcox responded at once and joined a company of young men, hastily organized in Scranton, to prepare for service in the army. His military knowledge was soon discovered and he was induced to instruct his associates in the art of war. So successful was he in his instruction that forty-eight out of the seventy-five members of the company became officers in the Union army, serving with distinc- tion in many a hotly contested battle. On May 13, 1862, Lieutenant Wilcox was appointed brigade judge ndvoc^itf" on the staff of ViNi KM -M. W'li.ri Brigadier-Gen. A. N. Meylert, with the rank of major. I'pon the formation of the i32d Regi- ment, Pennsylvania Vols., he was made lieuten- ant-colonel. On the 19th of August, 1862, the regiment moved to the front and encamped at Fort Corcoran, where the regiment received a course of instruction in necessary military tactics. On September 2, 1862, it made a march of twenty- two miles to Rockville, Md., and was assigned to Kimball's brigade of French s division, Sumner's corps. On the 13th of September they made a forced march of thirty-three miles, reaching the battlefield of South Mountain just as the battle was over. On the morning of the 17th, at the battle of Anti'etam, the regiment met the enemy at close quarters and for the first time was under direct fire. Placed in an important position, they held it for four Injurs. While the line of battle was being formed, Colonel Oakford, who led the regiinent, was mortally wounded and the command devolved upon Lieut. -Colonel Wilcox. At an important crisis in the battle Colonel Wil- cox received orders from General Kimball to hold the ground to the last extremity. When this order was received, the aiDmunition was found to be exhausted. Colonel Wilcox at once conceived the idea of using that in the cartridge boxes of the dead and wounded, and was thus enabled to keep up the fight. When the last shot had been fired, he received orders to charge the enemy. Fixing bayonets, the regiment, under his lead, rushed forward with such fierce- ness that the Confederates were driven from their position and a colonel and several men were captured. At the close of the battle Lieut. - Colonel Wilcox was promoted to a full colonelcy. In October, 1862, his regiment participated in the reconnaissance to Leesburg. The fatigue attending this forced march resulted in a severe illness (with typhoid fever) for Ct)lonel Wilcox, and for a time he was confined to the Oflicers" Seminary hospital near Washington. Partially recovering, he presented himself for duly, but the examining surgeon refused to accejA liini as a well man, and reluctantly he retired from active service. Lieut. Colonel Albright, writing from camp at Belle Plains, Va., November 28, 1S62, said: "I should like to see you here, as I know all the boys would, but, believe me, I am afraid to have you come on account of your health. Vou are known to be a brave, capable and efficient officer and beloved by all, and you can do nothing that will make you more so." After recovering his health, he came to New York and accepted a responsible position with P.. & H. T. Anthony & Co., manufacturers and importers of photographers' supplies. In 1870 he was admitted as a partner, and eventually became secretary, vice-president and president of the corporation. Comrade Wilcox became a member of Lafayette Post in March, 1889. He is also a member of the Loyal Legion. He is also an elder in the Phillips Presbyterian church on Madison avenue and one of the executive committee of the Presbyterian Union. Colonel Wilcox is a man of fine presence and a fine speaker, and his annual atldresses to his old regiment have been frequently published and are full of enthusiasm and patriotic principles. Its History and Its Heroes 33 ALEXANDER B. CRANE The combination of iawj-er and soldier afforded in the life and public services of Alexander B. Crane is an in- teresting illustration of the kind of material of which the Union army, was in part, composed. Born in Berkley, Mass., April 23, 1833, and graduated at Amherst in 1854, he removed to Terre Haute, Ind., there studied law in the office of Richard W. Thompson (secretary of the navy under President Hayes), was admitted to the bar in 1856, and speedily worked into a large and important practice, first as a member of the firm Alexander B. Ckane of McLean & Crane, and afterwards as Scott & Crane. He came still further into prominence in the county where he resided, by being elected its prosecuting attorney. From the birth of the republican party in 1856, he was one of its most hopeful, energetic and enthusiastic members, working with all his might for the cause of free speech, free soil. Fremont, and when the war broke out, and for a few weeks it was a question whether Indiana would be disrupted, or arrayed in support of the government, he exerted all the eloquence and personal magnetism at his com- mand to strengthen the spirit of patriotism in that state. But those were times in which words alone were not the highest proof of loyalty, and obtaining from Gov. Morton a commission as lieutenant, and autliority to recruit a company, Comrade Crane with his command joined the 85th Indiana Volunteers, and was mustered in as lieutenant-colonel. While stationed at Nicholasville, Ky. , he was made provost marshal, and one of his first official acts was to put a stop to a sale of negroes by the sheriff. Soon afterwards a military commission was convened to test the authority of a military commander in punishing a slave-holder for shooting at one of his slaves, an act committed within the federal lines. Col. Crane was ap- pointed judge advocate, and the commander W'as fully sustained. In the winter of 1863 the 85th was sent to Tennessee, and stationed at Franklin. In the following March, while on a foraging and fight- ing expedition together with four other regi- ments, a battery of artillery, and a troop of cavalry, they fell in with Van Dorn"s division of six brigades.the battle of Thompson's Station was fouglit, and the four regiments were captured. The men were soon exchanged, but the officers remained in Lil)by prison and spent nine long weeks in confinement. They were then ex- changed, and Col. Crane at once returned to his regiment for duty. He remained in Tennessee with Gen. Rosecrans's army (of which the lamented Garfield was adjutant-general) till August, 1863, when he was detailed as a member of a board to examine officers as to their com- petency to command colored troops, who were then being enlisted at Nashville. After serving in this capacity for six months, he returned to his regiment, then at Laverne, Tenn. In the spring of 1864 they were marched over the Cum- berland mountains to Chattanooga, and joined Gen. Sherman's army, being assigned to the 3d division, 20th corps, and thereafter participated in all the battles fought by Gen. Sherman to the close of the war. While at Atlanta Col Crane was in command of the 2d brigade, 3d division, 20th corps, for several weeks. In the fall of 1864 Col. Crane went home on a twenty days' leave of absence, and while there was nominated for the state senate, for the pur- pose of organizing the republican party in Sul- livan county, at that time the camping ground of the Sons of Liberty, who had organized to forcibly resist the draft. Although Col. Crane preferred to return to his command. Gov. 34 The Grand Army of the Repuiu.ic Morton feeling that the state of Indiana was the hattle-ground on whicli the reelection of Lincoln was to be decided, and deeming Col. Crane's personal influence and oratorical acquirements of great importance, obtained for him from the war department an extended leave of absence, together with a request from John P. Usher, then a member of Lincoln's cabinet (secretary of the interior) that he remain in the state until after the October election, whicii lie did, tlic republicans gaining the victory. After this he returned to his command and was with it constantly through Georgia, the Carolinas and so to Washington. In July, 1864, he was commissioned colonel of his regiment, lull never mustered in as such. At the close of the war Col. Crane came to New York city, married, and became a member of the law lirmof Mitchell & Crane, whicli lasted till the death of Mitchell, his father-in-law, in 187S. He is still in practice as senior member of the (irm of Crane & Lockvvood. Besides being a member of Lafayette Post he belongs to the I'nion League, Loyal Legion, United Service Club, 1). K. li. Clul), and Sons of the Rev(ilutii- tiif. Rkpuhmc friends easily and keeps them permanently, and works enthusiastically in the various organiza- tions with which he is connected. He is a mem- ber of the Brooklyn Young Republican Club, the Brooklyn Institute, Lafayette Post 140, G. A. R., the Aldine Club of New York, and others. For seven years, and especially during the two Low campaigns, he was a member of the execu- believes in a cheerful Christianity. Dolefulness has no place in it in his estimation. Lieutenant Dingman enlisted as a private in Company B, 37lh Regiment, before its formation as a regiment, and was in a few weeks elected corporal, and then sergeant. He went, May 28, 1862, with the regiment, under Colonel Charles Roomc, in its three months' campaign, to Camp JOHN H. DINGMAN tive committee of the Brooklyn Young Republi- can Club, and was one of the three of that com- mittee who would not desert the committee or the club during the Blaine campaign. Lieutenant Dingman has also a strong relig- ious nature, and from early life has worked earnestly in that field. When but nineteen years old he was elected superintendent of a Sunday school in New York, of which Rev. Drs. Bethune and Vannest were pastors, and has continued in other places in the same congenial work. He Belgcr, Baltimore, Md. With his captain, A. M. Smith, he worked laboriously in the enlistment of men for that campaign, and the regiment de- parted with full numbers. On .lune 18, 1863, the regiment departed again from New York on its second period of service. This, the Pennsylvania campaign, though of but thirty days' duration, was in detail full of all the excitements of war, and during the entire month was in arduous and dangerous service. It arrived at Ilarrisburgh amidst the treinendous excite- Its History and Its Hkroes 41 ment of the invasion of Pennsylvania by Lee's army. Second Lieutenant Dingman, whose ap- pointment as such was announced in general orders at "Camp Seymour," opposite Harris- burgh, June 24, tool; charge of the men who were digging the rifle pits at tiiat point during the night of June 29, and the next morning, without talcing sleep, moved with the regiment toward Carlisle, meeting with the regiment, at Sporting Hill, his first baptism of fire with cool- ness and unflinching courage. A bullet from the rifle of a rebel sharpshooter passed into a board of the fence near which he and his captain, John Stevenson, were standing, and when the captain suggested that they had better move, he smilingly replied that "Lightning never strikes twice in the same spot." A second shot coming immediately, however, and within a few inches of their heads, led the other to say, "but it comes mighty near it," and they moved a few feet, though still fully exposed to the rebel's aim. Towards the end of that day, after a march of over ten miles under a scorching sun, he was one of fifteen of Company B, tlie color company, who, ahead of the rest of the regiment, carried the colors into Carlisle and placed them upon the court house. The rebels, 9,000 mounted infantry under General Stuart, were slowly retir- ing from Carlisle towards Gettysburg, and they captured a few of our men. The 37th, however, captured some of theirs in return. At S o'clock that evening Lieutenant Dingman was in conver- sation with General William F. Smith (" Baldy Smith"), when there was brought before the latter a rebel, with a flag of truce and a message demanding the surrender of the troops in Carlisle. "Tell your general to go to h — 1, I never surren- der," was the profane but emphatic answer, and the rebel was sent back with haste. He must have signaled the fruitlessness of his errand in some way, for he had hardly been released before there came crashing into the columns of the court house, near which the regiment was sta- tioned, a cannon ball, which seemed to carry witli it the anger of the ungratified "rebs. " Lieutenant Dingman served through this cam- paign, as through the former one, with an earn- estness borne of his love for the Union, and continued with the 37th for several years after the war was over, but resigned before the regi- ment was united with and merged into the famous " 7 ist. " GEORGE M. CURTIS was born in Worcester, Mass., in 1843, of Irish, Scotch and Italian ances- try. He was educated in the Worcester high school, and at the Baptist academy. While hardly more than a school boy he yielded to the patriotic impulses of the hour, and in 1S61 went to the front as a volunteer in the 3d Battalion, Massachusetts Rifles, under Major, afterwards Major-General Charles Devens, and served with credit till the expiration of his term of enlistment. He then entered the law office of Hon. John W. AshmeatI, in New York city, and by reporting George M. Curtis for the newspapers and contributions to literary periodicals managed to support himself till fitted for examination and admission to the bar. He was barely twenty-one when first elected to the assembly of the state of New York, being one of the youngest representatives New York city ever sent to Albany. He was re-elected to the same office in 1865, and during both terms attracted special attention by his eloquence in debate, which was only exercised upon important mat- ters, particularly in defense of Governor Seymour from political traducers. In 1865-6 he was assist- ant corporation attorney of New York city, and in 1867 was elected judge of the Marine (now City) court, being a very young man to occupy 42 TiiK Gkani) Akmv ok THF, RkPUI!I.IC so important a position on tiie bencii, which he did for six j'ears. Declining a renomination, he entered into the active practice of the law which he has continued to the present time, with marked success, having, as a recent sketch says, "argued cases in nine states of the Union, saved thirty- eight persons from the scaffold and, on account of his remarkable success in the litigation of estates, become known as the ' will smasher.' He is the was in the battles of Yorklown, Hanover Court- house, Gaines Mill, Malvern Hill, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Aldie, Gettys- burg, Jones Cross-roads, Rappahannock Station, Mine Run, The Wilderness, Spottsylvania, North Anna, Betlicsda Church, Weldon Railroad, Petersburg, and many minor engagements. At Rappahannock, November 7, 1S63, he re- ceived a bullet, which he carries to the present ROBERT H. McCORMIC only lawyer at the New York bar who ever l)roke a will by verdict of a jury." Comrade Curtis joined Lafayette Post in Sep- tember, 1 89 1. ROBERT H. McCORMIC was born October 25, 1839. His army life began September 1, 1861, when he enlisted as a private in the 44th New York, widely known as the famous Ells- worth Regiment, named, of course, after the young hero whose life was so early sacrificed in the great struggle. Private McCormic was pro- moted to sergeant, sergeant-major, first lieu- tenant, and then captain, under which rank he was mustered out at the e.xpiration of his term of service, at Albany, October 11, 1864. He time, and at Bethesda Church, June 3, 1864, he was also wounded. Captain McCormic joined Lew Benedict Post 5, Albany, May g, 1868; was transferred about ten years ago, and is now a member of Lew O. Morris Post 121, of the same city. Besides other offices in the order, he has been junior vice-commander and assistant adjutant-general of the department, and aide on the department and national staffs and, as he was a good sol- dier, he is also a good Grand Army man, active, enthusiastic, and loyal always. He is widely known, and just as widely liked. No man in the department is better informed as to its practical workings and personnel than Comrade McCormic. Its History and Its Heroes 43 ANTHONY CLINCHV was born in Ireland August 26, 1842. The family came to New York while he was an infant. In 1867 his father, a man liberal in his ideas and methods, died and the boy, leaving school, was for three years in a wool house and then apprenticed to the plumb- ing trade. Meantime he had joined Company D, Sth N. Y. militia, which regiment responded to the first call for troops. They were stationed first at Annapolis and then at the Relay House. When the 6th Massachusetts was fired upon in Baltimore tlie Sth New York was sent to report to General Anthony Clinchy Butler, company D being part of the detail. They remained a few days till quiet was restored, then returned to headquarters and were soon sent to Georgetown and to Arlington Heights, where they remained till the first battle of Bull Run, in which they participated, losing a num- ber of men, among them some of Clinchy's most intimate friends and acquaintances. After the retreat the regiment returned to Arlington and, their term of service having expired, were mus- tered out, Clinchy bringing home with him the germs of typhoid fever, from which he was laid up for a long time. In 1862 he began business for himself as a plumber, in which line he has been engaged up to the present time with highly satisfactory re- sults. He has made many friends among the prosperous and influential, and has been actively engaged in democratic politics. On the 30th of March, 1892, he was appointed by Governor Flower state inspector of gas meters, and a searching investigation by a legislative commit- tee, instituted by his political opponents, sTved to bring forth the most flattering testimonials as to his ability and character, and letters from many republicans asking for his retention in office. He is a thirty-second degree Mason, member of the Mystic Shrine, of the Sth Regiment Vet- erans, Veteran Firemen's Association, New York Democratic Club, Tammany Hall, Columbian Order, Hoboken Turtle Club, Masonic Veterans and Craftsmen's Club, He is also a member of Lafayette Post. *^ HENRY H. ADAMS. There is reason to suppose that the military ardor and patriotic spirit which early burned in the heart of Com- rade Henry H. Adams were part ot his inherit- ance; for being born of the famous Massach- usetts family in one of whose cradles two presidents were rocked, he can point with pride to a father who was a soldier in the war of 181 2; to a grandfather who responded to the alarm at Lexington, " where the enibattl'd farmers stood, And fired the shot heard round the world ;" and to another ancester killed in King Philip's war — not to speak of a line of descent through Sir John ap Adam, of England, and Princess Gundred, back to William the Conquerer. Be this as it may, Comrade Adams who was born in CoUamer, Ohio, in 1844, was so stirred by the assault upon Fort Sumpter, that he could scarcely wait till he had reached the requisite age but exerted himself in recruiting other men for the service till Nov. 15, 1862, when he en- listed in the 125th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, for three years. He was offered a commission of second lieutenant, but owing to delicate health at the beginning of his service, was induced by Col. Emerson Opdycke to accept a position in the department of public mails, on detached ser- vice. Bv special permission he joined his com- mand at intervals, and in the battle of Franklin, Tenn., according to the testimony of officers of his regiment, he led the advance in the charge 44 The Gkan'd Army oi- iiif Rktuhik across the " Lilile Harpetli," dislodging Van Dorn's forces, then occupying the south i)anl(. In order to do this, the 125th was ordered in the keen winter weather to " double i|uick " across the river where the water was up to the arm-pits. The confederates were successfully driven out of Franklin, and tl\e 125111 stood on picket from three in the afternoon till nine next morniiiLj .vitli their wet clothes frozen on itiem. with guerillas, bushwackers and rebel raiders. V'oung Adams, with an escort of ten scouts, made tri-weekly trips by night through the wilderness, and over Raccoon Mountains, fre- quently encountering the rebel forces and bands of guerillas. On September 20, 1864, while in this service, he was captured at Athens, Ala , by Gen. Forest, and with seventeen men taken to Cahaba, Ala., and there remained for three HENRY H. ADAMS Comrade Adams also participated in the battles of Chicamauga, Rocky Face Ridge, Resaca, New Hope Church, and Kenesaw Mountain. During the operations of the 4th corps at New Hope Church and Kenesaw, he did valuable service in charge of the courier lines of communication between these points and Big Shanty, the latter being the scat of supplies. This service was one of great danger, the army being stationed forty miles southwest of Big Shanty, and the intervening country infested months a prisoner, enduring untoltl hardships, the only food being black mouldy corn meal that had bt'en condemned as horse feed. In No- vember he was exchanged at Vicksburgh, and reported for duty on the morning of the battle of Nashville He served the remainder of his time on special duty, at ting as aide on the staff of Gen. Emerson Opdycke. Owing to impair- ment of health consequent u[)on his sojourn in southern prisons, he was discharged March 10, 1865, at Nashville, Tenn. Its History and Its Heroes 45 Engaging in the iron business in Cleveland, O. , and in ore and grain transportation on the upper lakes, he remained in that city till 18S2, when he removed to New York where he is identified with important iron interests. Joining Lafayette Post, 140, in 1S91, he im- mediately gave practical evidence of being em- bodied with the spirit of enterprise which is characteristic of that organization, and which has found in him a most intelligent promoter, as well as representative. Being in Paris on Dec- oration day, 1892, he was delegated by the post to decorate the grave of Lafayette, and delivered an address and carried out the details of the cere- mony with such brilliancy of effect as to win the complimentary approval of representatives of the French government, the American minister, descendents of Lafayette, and of practically the whole American colony there assembled. In the now national movements which origi- nated with Lafayette Post, for placing the American flag on the public schools, and for the introduction of the military drill, Comrade Adams has been especially active and especially successful. Not only in his own city and through the west has he made able speeches in favor of the idea, but it was through his efforts that a conference of governors was held in New York in January, 1895, for the purpose of obtain- ing concerted action in the several states towards the introduction of the drill in the public schools. For this far-reaching innovation much credit must always devolve upon H. H. Adams, com- mander (in 1895) of Lafayette Post, 140, and history may yet record, that much as he and his comrades anticipated from its influence in the promotion of the highest Americanism among the rising generation, they " builded better than they knew. " HENRY CLAY COOKE was born in Water- ville, Oneida County, N. Y., September 10, 1842. After attending the Oneida and Jefferson county public schools he was clerk for a while in a drug and grocery store in Brownsville. He enlisted March 9, 1S61, in Co. K, 3Sth New- York, for two years and went with the regiment to the front, where it formed part of the Army of the Potomac during its term of service, par- ticipating in the battles of Cedar Mountain, Groveton, second Bull Run, Manassas, Chantilla, South Mountain, Antietam and Fredericksburgh, and was mustered out at Elmira, June nth, 1863. After a visit liome young Cooke vi'ent to Detroit and enlisted in the reorganization of the iith Michigan infantry. Colonel Keegan com- manding. Was made first lieutenant of Co. B, and after arriving at Chattanooga under General Steadman, his regimental quartermaster was made brigade quartermaster, and Cooke made assistant quartermaster of the regiment. Soon ^■■♦^ Hknkv Clay Couke afterwards the regiment was ordered to report to General Thomas at Nashville, and became part of the second brigade, army of the Cum- berland, with headquarters at Cleveland, Tenn., holding the front from there to Knoxville. Lieutenant Cooke was detailed as assistant adju- tant general on the brigade staff. Colonel La Fever commanding, and served in that capacit}' till the brigade was disbanded in 1865, when he was ordered to report to Major-General Stone- man at Knoxville, and made assistant quarter- master of the post. After settlement with the government he returned to Detroit and was mustered out September 27, 1865. He returned to Utica and on a visit to a married sister in New York determined to locate in that citv, which he 46 The Grand Army of the Repuiu.tc c Chakles J. Wright He was commissioned lieutenant-colonel 39th I'. S. Colored Troops, April 19, 1864, and com- manded the 27th V. S. Colored Troops in the campaign of the Wilderness, was wounded in the assault on the fortifications around Petersburg; again ([uite seriously at Fort Fisher, and was breveted colonel on March 13, 1865, "for gal- lant and meritorious services during the war." Colonel Wright is a member of the Loyal Legion, Sons of the Revolution, Society of the Army of the Potomac and United Service Club; he is a graduate of Ilobart College, with the degree of A. M., and president of the New York Military Academy at Cornwall-on-Hudson, N.Y. JOHN C. SHOTTS 5: TiiK Grand Akmv ok tiii: Rkimhi k JOHN C. SHOTTS. commander of the De- partment of New York in 1894, was born August II, 1844, in West Farms (now the 23d ward of the city of New York). He enlisted at Yonkers April 16, 1861, for two years, and was sworn into the United States service May 22 following as a member of Co. A, 17th New York \'olunteers, known as the Westchester Chasseurs. He was discharged June 2, 1863, in New York, having carried a musket in the ranks through all the term for which he volunteered. He was at the siege of Yorktown, and engaged in the battles of Mechanicville, Hanover Court House, Cold Harbor, Whitehouse Junction, Second Bull Run, Antietam, Sheperdslown, Fredericksburg, Rich- ard's Ford, Chancellurville, and United States Ford. At the battle of Hanover Court House the 17th New York and 83d Pennsylvania cap- tured two guns belonging to Latham's celebrated New Orleans battery, which were the first guns taken in battle by the Army of the Potomac. The charge of the 17th New York was very hand- somely made, their superior drill being manifest in the solid front which they presented in mov- ing forward. Comrade Shott's company (A), being on the skirmish line, he was one of the first to reach and take possession of the gun in behalf of the company and regiment. Wherever placed he proved himself to be of the stuff which makes good soldiers, and which saved the Union. After his discharge Comrade Shotts went into the market business, and since 1883 has been engaged in the wholesale commission business, operating at present three refrigerator houses, one each at Yonkers, Tarrytown and Mount Vernon. He has served one five year term as water commissioner of the city of Yonkers, and has recently been appointed for another five years. Comrade Shotts is a member of Kitching Post No. 60, having been mustered in 1879. He was elected commander of the Post in 1880, and in 1886 was re-elected and served eight consecutive terms. He has for several years been the chair- man of the Yonkers memorial committee; in 1893 was a member of the department council of administration, and on February 22, 1894, was elected department commander and held office till May 16, 1895. The fidelity with which he attended to his duties is suggested by the fact that in their discharge he journeyed over 22,000 miles and received the fraternal grasp from 20,000 comrades. His sym[)aihy with the private soldier led him to much active endeavor in the halls of legislation, which was not with- out result. CHARLES W. SPOONER was born in Cin- cinnati, O., in 1845. He received his appoint- ment as Acting Master's Mate in the volunteer navv of the L'niled States, June 1. 1X63, and was Charles W. Si'oo.nek assigned U> the Flagship "Moose," commanded by Lieutenant-Commander LeRoy Fitch, com- manding the Ohio Fleet, under Rear Admiral David D. Porter, commanding the Mississippi Squadron. He was promoted to Acting Ensign February 12, 1864, and assigned as executive officer aboard the United States steamer " Rein- deer," which vessel he soon after commanded. He took an active part in the engagements at and above Buffington Island, in pursuit of Gen- eral John Morgan and his band of marauders in their attempted raid into Indiana and Ohio, which resulted in the capture of that famous rebel, and the destruction of his forces; also in Its History and Its Heroes 53 the engagements with the confederate batteries below Nashville in co-operating with General Thomas against the advancing forces of General Hood, destroying his pontoons, and attacking and silencing his batteries; conve3'ing troops from point to point on the Tennessee river, and capturing transports, all of which contributed largely to the demoralization of Hood's armv. He was actively engaged during 1863-4 in patroling the Ohio, Tennessee, Cumberland and upper Mississippi rivers, in keeping open naviga- tion, putting down guerillas, protecting loyal citizens and destroying the projierty of disloyal persons. At the close of the war in 1865, he resigned his commission and entered upon the study of the law. He graduated from the Cincinnati Law school in 1867, and from the law depart- ment of Harvard college in 1868. He practiced his profession in Cincinnati until 1870, and then left for Europe on a three years' tour of study and travel. Upon his return in 1873, he became a member of the New York Bar, and has since then uninterruptedly practiced his profession in New York city, where he now- resides. He is a Comrade of the Alexander Hamilton Post, G. A. R., and a Companion in the New Yurk Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, in both of whicii organizations he takes an active interest. United States quartermaster at Camp Chase, and was wagon-master there for three months. On the 2d of January, 1863, he was commissioned master's mate of the Prairie Bird No. 11, of the Mississippi gunboat squadron, carrying 100 men, 12 officers and 8 guns. Tiiree months later, after competitive examination, he was promoted to acting ensign and, owing to the accidental death of the captain, was executive officer for a year. He took an active part in the siege of Vicks- burg, where he was detailed to command the WILLIAM M. ERNST. Various metlmds were adopted during the war to show apprecia- tion of ability and meritorious conduct, but it was not often that this was done through revok- ing a resignation after it had been accepted for several months, as was the case with Comrade William M. Ernst, a native of Cincinnati, born March 24, 1842, who first enlisted in July, 1861, in Co. A, 34th Ohio (Piatt's Zouave regiment), commanded by a brother of Don Piatt. The regiment was sent to West Virginia and the companies were detached, Co. A remaining at Winfield all winter. Ernst having been pro- moted from corporal to second lieutenant, was sent to Cincinnati on recruiting service, in which he was so successful as to earn a first lieutenancy and was assigned to the 52d Ohio. He soon after resigned and joined his fatlier, who was \ViLi.i.\.\i M. Ernst mortor boats which were used in shelling the citv. An incident that he recalls with interest vvas the ruse employed a night or two after the rebels had captured a ram and two other boats from us. It was very dark when suddenly the enemv dis- cerned a mysterious looking craft bearing down upon the city She was silent, but was thought all the more dangerous on that account, and every battery that could be trained upon her opened fire, while the infantry were hurried to the river bank and blazed away as rapidly as possible She neither replied nor stopped, but moved straight on, while the whole city was ablaze willi the firing of the rebel guns and the 54 The Grand Akmy ok tiik Rkpuhlic burning of the captured ram and other boats, affording just the needed liglit for our artillery to shell the town. Later on the silent vessel was picked up by our boys below the city. She was an old barge with barrels for smokestacks, guns made of wood, and a pile of coal in the bottom furnishing the smoke. Curiously enough only two shots from the enemies batteries had struck her, although she was riddled with bullets. A much sadder circumstance was the sinking of the large river steamer B. F. Runyan, with a portion of ths 8th Micliigan Cavalry and many refugee men, women and children, 750 in all. Ensign Ernst and his crew saved all they could, working all night to minister to their distress and burying 278 bodies that were recovered. After Vicksburg Ensign Ernst went up the Yazoo river and discovered Fort Pemberton that had prevented the gunboat fleet from passing through the bayou to the rear of the city. The fort was made of cotton, covered with earth. The cotton was confiscated by the Prairie Bird and another boat, the crews of which received prize money. On the return trip to Yazoo City the other boat was captured and the Prairie Bird, being unable to work both her engines, could not go to her relief and siie was burned. The Bird also had to lay up, and was finally extri- cated by the gunboat Vindicator. At Gaine's Landing a masked battery of eigiit guns opened on the Prairie Bird, putting twenty- six shots through her in about fifteen minutes. Two shrapnels burst in the first division, which was commanded by Ernst. Of the nineteen men composing this division five were killed and the rest all wounded except one. Ernst was struck on the chest by a splinter of wood, and after his wound was dressed commanded his battery while sitting in a chair and till the enemy was driven off. In June, 1865, Ernst resigned, returned to Cin- cinnati and was out of the service till August, when, as stated, his resignation was revoked and he was ordered back to duty. It seems that it was the intention to fit out cruisers for river ser- vice, and the ablest men that could be found were to be designated for their command, but although the idea was subsequently abandoned by the government, the very unusual compliment was none the less real. Comrade Ernst was finally discharged December 24, 1865. He joined Lafayette Post in May, 1885. JOHN 15. JOHNSON was horn in Middlesex county, New Jersey, March 23, 1841; has been for thirty-two years in New York in the building material business and in real estate. He is a prominent member of the Knights of Honor, Royal Good Fellows, F. & A. M., and of Alexan- der Hamilton Post, G. A. R. He enlisted in September, 1861, in the 4th New York Independent Battery and was after- wards transferred to the 5th New York Inde- pendent Battery in December, 1863, and pro- jollN B. JoHNSO.N moled to second lieutenant. He was in the Army of the Potomac from its organization, and participated in all its battles until after the battle of Spotsylvania Court House in May, 1864, when his battery, the 5th N. Y. Indepen- dents, was sent to the defense of Washington for about six weeks, and for a short time he was in command of Fort Tillinghast. From there he joined General Sheridan in the Shenandoah Val- ley and was engaged in all the battles that took place in that campaign. He was promoted on the battlefield of Gettysburg for meritorious conduct. Was wounded at the battle of Williams- burg, Va., May 5, 1862. Was honorably mustered out on December 10, 1864, after three years and three months of about as hard service as fell to the lot of many of the Boys in Blue. Its History and Its Heroes 55 GEORGE H. DEAN was born in Putnam county, N. Y., where he livecl till he was sixteen years old. He afterwards engaged in the manu- facturing business in Bloomfield, N. J., where he was living when the war broke out. Embued with patriotic ardor he promptly enlisted in July, 1861, in the First New York Mounted Rifles, under the command of the gallant Colonel Kilpatrick, and before proceeding to the front had used his influence so successfully as to have enlisted seventeen others for his com]iany, a folk and were there three months, taking part in the capture of Suffolk. Comrade Dean was engaged with his regiment in many skirmishes against the enemy's outposts, and was faithful in the discharge of every duty that devolved upon him till the expiration of his term of service. Returning to New York, he engaged in the real estate business, which he has conducted successfully to the present time. He is a mem- ber of Alexander Hamilton Post No. 182, and takes a heart-felt interest in all that pertains to the welfare of the Grand Army of the Republic. ^ ^ George H. Dean service which was recognized by promoting him to quarter- master sergeant of Co. B, when the company was mustered into the United States service under the command of General Wool, at Fortress Monroe, August 31, 1861. He was transferred to Co. A September 10, 1S61 ; ap- pointed battalion quarter-master sergeant Jan- uary 6, 1862; regimental commisary sergeant March 21, 1862, and then commissioned captain by Governor Edwin E. Morgan. Companies A and B served much of the time during the early part of the war as body-guard to General Wool, reconoitering and making raids into the enemy's company, capturing live stock and stores that were necessary for the maintenance of the troops. They entered Nor- WATSON A. FOX was born in Erie county, N. Y., January 17, 1819; was educated in Buffalo, and serving as a clerk for fifteen years became well acquainted with the grocery and ship chand- lery business, in 1853 went into that branch of trade as a member of the firm of Fo.x & Bruce, which lasted for ten years; then engaged in the transportation business, owning and sailing ten vessels and three steamers on the great lakes and thirty-one canal boats on the Erie canal. He was one of the organizers of the Buffalo Board of Trade. In 1854 he became active in military affairs and in connection with Col. John M. Griffith, Lieut. -Col. John Bliss, Capt. Daniel B. Bidwell and Capt William F. Rogers and others organ- ized the 74th Regiment, N. G. S. N. Y., Fox being major, afterwards lieutenant-colonel and finally colonel. In 1861, having on his roll about 700 men, tendered to Governor Morgan the ser- vices of the regiment for government service, which were accepted, and the command ordered to move May i, 1861. This, however, was coun- termanded and the regiment assigned to duty in Buffalo and along the frontier line, thus prevent- ing several attempts of rebels in Canada from crossing the Niagara river into the state of New York at Buffalo. In June, 1863, the regiment was ordered to Harrisburg and Mount Union, Pa., for the Gettysburg campaign, and there mustered into the United States service, and at that place guarded several iron bridges of the Pennsylvania railroad and an aqueduct of the Pennsylvania canal, which crosses over the Juniata river at that point, and which the rebel forces had been sent to destroy. Their object was defeated by the alertness of Colonel Fox. The Grand Akmv oi the Republic In July lie was ordered to Clear Springs, Md., to hold a pass over the mountains leading from Boonsboro to that place. General Kelley was then on his way to the pass to unite our forces and prevent Lee from crossing the Potomac. Colonel Fox found the p>ass held by about 600 Rebel cavalry, repulsed them and held the position until the arrival of General KclIey with 10,000 L'nited States troops. He was ne.xt ordered to Louden and there re- ceived a telegram from (ieneral Couch directing Waison a. Fu.\ him and his command to proceed with all possible dispatch to New York city, where they arrived July 14, and were one of the first regiments to participate in quelling the great draft riots of 1863, during which it is believed that 800 men were killed and wounded. Colonel Fo.x had detachments of his command, which included the 65th and 74th, mustering in all, about 1,400 men, to garrison the post-ollice, treasury build- ing, custom house, Atlantic docks Brooklyn, Hotchkiss shell factory, etc. ; also one company at Fort Hamilton and Lafayette and one in Jer- sey City. After the trouble in New York was over, Colonel Fox was ordered to do duty in Buffalo similar to that performed by him before, both the state and national government realizing the imjiortance of having an officer on this line who could be depended upon in an emergency It was at this time a plot was formed by rebels in Canada to attack, shell and burn Buffalo. Under guise of merchandise, bills of lading consigned to a merchant in Chicago, cannon and ammuni- tion w^ere to be shipped in boxes from St. Cath- erines, Canada, where they were stored, on board a steamer, which, in passing through the Welland canal, was to be seized by rebels going aboard just before the steamer entered Lake Erie; on getting outside the harbor the cannon to be unpacked and limbered up, tlie steamer to run down the lake (only twenty miles), heave to off Buffalo and demand $3,000,000, which, if not paid, they would shell and burn Buffalo, or rob its banks. The governor-general of Canada, gaining knowledge of what was contemplated, informed our government, and General Dix, in command of the department, was ordered to Buffalo. Colonel Fox being in command of the post and having men under him well schooled in artillery practice, procuretl some twelve-pound Napo'eon guns from the arsenal and was soon prepared for any attack that might be made He also sent a trusted man to disable a lock in the Welland canal, a short distance below St. Catherines. The expected steamer collided with and disabled a lock so that all boats were delayed four ui five days, and thus the plot was frus- trated. Colonel Fox's agent was on board the steamer and in the pilot house with the wheel- man at the time of the collision. They were the only persons who knew how or why the lock was injured. Meantime the 74th kept recruiting all the time and many of the men, anxious for more active service in the field, joined other commands. The regiment furnished over 300 officers for other regiments during the war, among them Gen. Daniel D. Bidwell of the 49th Volunteers, sixth corps. Gen. VV. F. Rogers, 21st Volunteers, and Col. A. R. Root, 94th Volunteers. At the close of the war Colonel Fox resigned and went into the insurance business, removing to New York in 1883. While establishing a bat- tery at Mount Union, Pa., his foot was perma- nently disabled by the wheel of a gun carriage passing over it. He became a member of La- fayette Post in 1894 and died January 20, 1896. LIBRORY OF CONGRESS 111