iiTini ri« nn ntin ni >i mi ii ¦ ii mii Yale University Library III ll ' ll 1 III III II " II III ll ll III ll i '' nil 1 III ¦1 'll II III 39002002964121 YALE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 1937 HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE Sixty-Eighth Regiment INDIANA VOLUNTEERS. ITS COMMANDERS, OFFICERS AND tdEN, WITH Short Biographies of Corps, Division AND Brigade Commanders, RUSHVILLE, IND , The Republican Co., Printers and Binders. 1887. 100 PE^EFASE, Comrades: A quarter of a century has passed since w^e rallied together and marched southward to help in putting down the rebellion. Since then, more events of in terest have occurred for the well-being of the human race than in any century. How strange it all seems, now that we have been woven into the various call ings of civil life. North, South, East and West, as farmers, merchants, lawyers, doctors, preachers and in the various trades. It is a romance in real life, a grand transformation scene. Wherever our lot has been cast, we all look back to the days when we marched shoul der to shoulder, and endured toils, trials and dangers together, and thus cemented ties of friendship which, we hope, will last into eternity. "Sometimes the friends who've left us, Joined the army gone before. Almost seem to bridge the river 'Twixt the near and farther shore." Time has flown by so rapidly, and the daily duties and cares of life have so occupied our time, that many incidents have escaped our memories. The following brief history and biographies have been 'compiled for presentation to you in order that all may have in a convenient form the dates of our service and short sketches of the men who led us to victory. "Oh ! it was glorious, grand, heroic. Rushing over hill and plain; With its mighty recollections. How the heart leaps up again "How they cheered, and how they rallied. How they charged 'mid shot and shell. How they bore aloft the banner, How they conquered, how they fell. "Fell ? Who shall tell the story ? There, among the brave and best, Who went down 'midst the battle," King, Price, Reese and the rest. "This the cost of human freedom Weary hearts that long and wait, Shadows on a thousand households. Sanctified, but desolate." The accompaning map and portrait of Gen. Wood are presented by permission of the National Tribune, Washington, D. C, and from plates furnished by its editor. The Roster of the regiment is copied from the oflScial report of W. H. H. Terrell, Adjutant General of Indiana (1866}. J. H. Mauzy, Capt. Co. "D." Rushville, Ind., August 19, 18S7. ERRATA. The sketch of Major-General Thomas J. Wood, should have in cluded the statement thathe was Chief Mustering Officer and Post Commander at Indianapolis, from May to October, 186 1. On page 61, line 19, for Hill Springs, read Mill Springs. TABLE OF SONTRNTS. PAGE. Sixty-Eighth Indiana I Indiana in the War 26 The Losses in the War 28 Enlistments by States 30 Losses in the Revolutionary War 31 Comparative Losses 31 The Battle of Missionary Ridge _. 34 The Regimental Flag 38 Col. Edward A. King 40 Col. Daniel W. McCook 49 Gen. August Willich 51 Gen. James B. Steedman 53 Gen. Joseph J. Reynolds 57 Gen. Thomas J. Wood 59 Gen. George H. Thomas 60 Anti-Compromise Resolutions 62 Regimental Roster Field and Staff 64 Company A 64 Company B 66 Company C 68 Company D 7° Company E 74 Company F ^(> Company G 78 Company H 80 Company 1 82 Company K 84 List of Engagements 86 BATTLE OF NASHVILLE, DEC. 15-16, 1864. 68th J^BGIMEBT IBDIAM IEFAETI^Y. OUTLINE HISTORY. Not until the summer of 1862, when the rebels in large force were threatening to invade the North ern States at many places, was the Government or the people fully aroused to the magnitude of the Rebellion. Then all felt the necessity of prompt action to stay their onward course, and for the protection of our homes. Everywhere there was a "hurrying to and fro," and men organized into companies for short and long terms of service, and were hurried rapidly to the front. The 68th Regiment was organized at Camp Logan, near Greensburg, by Lieutenent-Colonel B. C. Shaw, and in less than seven days was confronting the enemy in Kentucky. Only a few outlines of the move ments ofthe armies with which it served can be given in this short sketch, and all who wish can read in his tories of the war the details of the campaigns, battles, and the general results of each. A regiment was a small part of the great machineiy of war — conse- 2 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE quently its service is of interest to the general pubhc only as part of a great army. To the survivors, after twenty-five years, their families and friends, it may recall many forms, faces and incidents, and of times and places nearly forgotten. At Camp Logan there was so much to do, the novelty of the situation, the coming and going of friends and relatives, the manner of living, and the exercise of "squad" drilling, made the few days there pass quickly away, and on Sunday night, August 17, we boarded the cars and arrived at Indianapolis in the night, and marched to the old State House, where we slept until morning. Governor Morton made us a speech next day, and asked us if we would go into Kentucky, as we were much needed there, without the bounty nrioney in advance, as prom ised, and we agreed almost unanimously to go. The 68th Regiment was mustered into the United States service next day, August 19, 1862, and, the Governor having made a loan, twenty-five dollars ot the bounty money was paid to each man, and the regi ment left at midnight on the cars for Louisville, Ky. There were forty-one commissioned officers and eight hundred and sixty-four men. During its term of ser vice there were sent to it one hundred and four re cruits. At Louisville, August 22, we received Spring field rifles and accoutrements, and were put to drilling almost all the time. Lieutenant-Colonel Edward A. King, of the 19th Regulars, was put in command as Colonel, and on the 25th of August we drew forty rounds of ammunition and marched southward. On 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRYr 3 the 28th the "long roll" beat the first midnight alarm to us, near Bardstown. It was a false alarm this time; but the feelings it causes of a sudden attack and all that implies, makes this the most serious of all calls. September i, at Springfield, the citizens gave us a dinner, the only time the regiment ever received such attention in the South. That evening we joined the forces under Brigadier-general E. Dumont, at Lebanon. There, and at Lebanon Junction, we cut down forests, and worked almost constantly, constructing fortifica tions and .breast-works, and performing other duties to resist the attacks of the enemy, who were threatening us daily and nightly. September 15, all ofour regimfent who were not on picket duty — five hundred and twenty -five in number — were ordered to take three days' rations and get into some box-cars which had been used to ship cattle in, and had not been cleaned. This being a new experience in our service, there were more comments than would have been made later on in our service, when, after long, weary, dusty or muddy marches, any chance to ride would have been hailed with delight. The train moved slowly along to Bacon Creek, where the rebels had burned the bridge and a train of cars, and the fires were yet blazing. Soon after, on our march, we met guards with the body of Major Abbett, of the 67th Indiana, who was killed at Munfordville the day before, and in the night we arrived there and slept on our arms in an open field. We learned afterwards the rebels had allowed us to pass through their troops. OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE 4 knowing we were going into their trap. During the night we changed position into an old orchard between two small forts. About 9 a. m. the rebels opened up with artillery and musketry, and began to close in on us, when we were ordered into the western fort, to support the troops and artillery there engaged. AU through the day cannon balls, pieces of shell, grape shot and small balls fell about us, but doing little in jury. When a white flag of truce would appear, the firing would cease, and all would watch its approach with great interest. Greatly to the surprise of most of us, who did not understand the situation and thought there had been treachery, it was announced before daylight that we had surrendered. Early on the morning of the 17th, we marched out and laid down our arms "with the honors of war;" and when we saw the whole rebel army, and learned they had forty thousand men and sixty pieces of artillery in position, we became more reconciled to the situation. Colonels Wilder, King, Dunham, Owens and Murray refused to surrender unless they were allowed to see and know that there was no hope of a successful resistance, and General Bragg allowed them, after re peated demands and- refusals to surrender, to send Colonel Wilder to see his arrangements for the assault. When he returned he advised an honorable surrender. Under the terms of capitulation we were to retain our side arms, haversacks, canteens and blankets, and were " paroled," agreeing not to take up arms until ex changed. Colonel King saved our flag by wrapping 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRY. 5 it about his body, under his clothing; some of his rebel officer acquaintances remarking that he was getting aldermanic in the size of his body, butthey did not sus pect the cause. What a ridiculous show was made of our prepara tions to put down the Rebellion, when we threw a large wagon-load of bowie knives, revolvers, dirks and pistols into a pile for the rebels to divide up as trophies. How foolish the carrying of such arms was considered by old soldiers. The troops surrendered were the larger parts of the 50th, 60th, 67th, 68th and Sgth Indiana Infantry, two coinpanies of the 74th Indi ana Infantry, one company of the 78th Indiana Infan try, 204 recruits for the 17th Indiana, ten pieces of In diana Artillery, one company of Kentucky Cavalry, and one company of the Eighteenth Regulars — in all four thousand one hundred and twenty-nine. The resist ance at Munfordville for four days, served the purpose of retarding the enemy's march on Louisville, and allowed General Buell's army to come up with him. It also permitted such arrangements there for defense that, when he made the demand for its surrender and was refused, he marched his army away .southward, and was overtaken at Perryville, October 8. Septem ber 18 we were given four days' rations out of our own captured stores, one cracker and one-third pound of side meat each, and we thought if they could go four days on that amount of food they would starve us out. Under a flag of truce and a small rebel escort, we marched out through the pickets of the rebels and into 6 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE General Buell's army, being delayed several hours by the pickets fighting. Colonel King made a strong effort to get our regiment exchanged, and we were delayed several hours while they were conferring with the rebel authorities. The soldiers almost universally censured General Buell for not attacking their rear in force while we were in Munfordville, but military critics say that it would not have done to jeopardize so much. If defeated, the enemy would be between him and the North. We marched for eight days through a country which both armies had passed over and eaten out, through the sparsely-settled, woody hill region of Western Kentucky, suffering the pangs of hunger and the weariness of long marches, exposed night and day to rains and frosts. This exposure wrought more destruc tion on us than any other march we -were called on to endure. Many of our strongest men were broken down, and shortly after discharged. Later on in our service we became used to hardships and exposures, but this came so soon after leaving comfortable homes that it was felt the more. Our route took us through Bowling Green, where seventeen brass bands, that had been discharged from Buell's armj-, joined us. We passed on through Brownsville, Litchfield and Tar Springs to Branderburg, on the Ohio River. Here we crossed and marched to New Albanj- and JefTerson- ville, arriving there on the 2Sth. Governor Morton made a speech to us, which was both complimentary and cheering to our drooping spirits. That same even- 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRY. 7 ing it was reported that he whipped General Boyle, and General Jeff. C. Davis shot and killed General Nelson. The rebel army under Bragg was near, and Buell's army was arriving. These events altogether made "exciting times then and there." We arrived at Indianapolis on the 30th, and were furloughed to our homes until October 27. At that time we reported at the State capital and went into Camp Dumont, w^here we were kept busy preparing for further service when we should be exchanged. This occurred before December 26, and on that date a part of the regiment left for Louisville, the remainder following on the 30th. January 7, 1863, we marched to Portland, and next day Companies C, D, E, and H went on board the steamer Ft. Wayne, and the other companies on the Horizon. A large fleet loaded with supplies was to be guarded up the Cumberland River to Nashville. The sides of the boats were boarded up, to protect the pilots, machinery and guards from the attacks of the enemy along the river banks. The water was low, and the delaj'S on sand bars, heavy snows, guerrilla at tacks, and finally heavy rains, made the voyage of thir teen days trying to our nerves and patience. A flock of geese that had been fired into would not make more stir in comparison, than did our fleet when, from be hind rails and logs, the enemy fired into our boats. There was blowing of whistles, ringing of bells, back ing and running wildly about, until we got our guns to work and drove them from their hiding places. But 8 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE this was done not until they had burned two of our steamers. The boats were lashed together in pairs, and one gun-boat went ahead and one behind, and the fleet would often be several miles in length. On the 20th we left the boats at Nashville, and went into camp in the suburbs, in the slushy snow and mud. The weather was cold and foggy, and the change from boat life was so great that many sickened and died. On the 25th, while Company D was out on picket duty, the regiment was ordered to march at once, to hunt up some rebel raiders. The company was not relieved for two days, until their return. Such orders came often, and when not on such expeditions all were kept busy with picket drill and camp duties. While at Nashville we were attached to Colonel Dan. McCook's brigade. April 2, the regiment marched to join the main army, under General Rosecrans. It arrived at Mur freesboro on the 3d, and was assigned to the 2d Brigade, 5th Division, 14th Army Corps. In June our division number was changed to the 4th, in the re- organization before the advance. The 2d Brigade was made up of the 68th, 72d, 75th and loist Indiana regiments, the 105th Ohio, the 19th Indiana Battery, and the Soth Illinois, but the latter was on detached service, and never joined the brigade. Colonel A. S. Hall, of the 105th Ohio, commanded the brigade, Major-General J. J. Reynolds the division, and George H. Thomas the corps. April 17, the regiment went on a general recon- 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRY. 9 noisance with General Reynolds and a force of four thousand infantry and tv^ thousand six hundred cav alry, which destroyed the railroad from Manchester to McMinville, and captured a large amount of supplies. The mounted troops took about two hundred prisoners and a large number of horses and mules. The regi ment marched one hundred and thirty-three miles in eleven days, besides taking part in the work of destroy ing property. From this time until the army moved we were kept busy making necessary preparations. Shelter tents were issued and all things made ready for rapid marching. Colonel Hall died June 10, 1863, of a fever. He was a favorite, and had done brave ser vice with his command, on the 18th of March, defeat ing General Morgan after a hard fight. Colonel M. S. Robinson, of the 75th Indiana, being the next officer in rank present, took command of the brigade. Col onel King was absent, sick. On the 24th of June, the 14th Army Corps in the centre, joined in the grand forward movement, march ing out on the Manchester turnpike, with our division in the advance. In the evening, at Hoover's Gap, a narrow passage way three miles long, between high hills, the enemy attacked our advance. Our regiment was rushed forward to support the 19th Indiana Bat tery, and- there was some lively work for a short time. Our regiment lost one killed and six wounded. The next day we skirmished with the enemy, who gradually retired before us, as we pushed forward. On the 26th they again offered battle, but did not resist long. IO OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE They kept their retreat supported by heavy skirmish lines of infantry, artillery and cavalry. Wewerenextin advance to the mounted troops into Manchester early in the morning of the 27th, and surprised the place, captur ing their mails and some prisoners. During all this time the rain poured down in torrents; little streams had to be waded and mud pulled through, and it was a source of great rejoicing to all when, on the 30th, we marched into the rebel camps at Tullahoma, which they aban doned so hastily that much of their camp equipage was left behind. Pressing on in pursuit, we waded Elk River, July 4, and on the 6th went into Camp Wini fred, among abundant blackberries. To the free use of this fruit here, many attribute their recovery from jaun dice and diarrhoea, which had been brought on by being soaked so long in the rains of summer — steaming in the heat of the day time, and chilling in the coolness of the night, combined with the fatigues and exposures of the march. But a great number died, many were discharged, and others were sent to the Invalid Corps. After a few days rest the regiment was sent to Decherd, and set to work unloading cars and distributing supplies for the army. July 29 we marched to University Heights, and went into the most healthful and beautiful camp we ever had. July 30 Colonel King arrived, and assumed command of the brigade. August 17 we broke camp, moved out thir teen miles to Sweden's Cove, and thence, with little opposition, went to Jasper on the 2 ist, where we halted until the 30th. A large library was appropriated here^ 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRY. ii and standard literature laid round loosely in the camps. On the 30th, the regiment crossed the Tennessee River at Shellmound, and during the night marched to Whiteside Station, supporting a cavalry raid. We found that the bridge there, 106 feet high, and a long one, had been burned by the rebels. The 2d East Tennessee ran the rebels to within five miles of Chat tanooga. Next day we returned, and went into camp near the entrance to Nick-a-Jack Cave. September 3 we marched into Georgia, and slept in the narrow gorge in the road when the night became too dark to march. At daylight we moved on over the Raccoon Mountains, catnping near Trenton. On the loth our camp was near the Vulcan Iron Works. Our objective point was the possession of Chatta nooga, and the news of the evacuation of that city caused great rejoicing among the troops. Our forces were greatly scattered, and the point was to get them together and into that city. On the evening and night of the nth, we climbed Lookout Mountain, and the road was so steep and rough the men had almost to carry up the artillery and wagons. We could hear heavy and rapid cannonading on the other side of the mountain, and next morning were rushed down the other side and camped in line of battle, beside General Negley's and Bayard's divisions, which had been forced back by overpowering numbers. On the 13th we were in line of battle until nearly dark, and early next morning marched to Pond Springs. Some skirmishing took place, the enemy being close. Our pickets re- 12 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE pulsed an attack on the night of the 15th. There was more skirmishing during the i6th. We were in line of battle all the 17th, and until the evening of the iSth. Then we marched, when not halting for obstructions ahead of us, all the night by the light of burning fences, logs, trees and brush. Next morning we could hear the sounds of the great battle which had commenced, and soon came into the woods where stray bullets fell about us. A little after noon we were in the thickest of the fray, and being overpowered by Liddell's divi sion of Walker's Corps, had to fall back, leaving our dead and some of the wounded in the hands of the enemy. Our ranks were reformed, and about dark we took our places in the line of battle for the next day, Sunday, September 20. The night w^as cool, and the morning opened up smoky and foggy. About 9 a. m. the rebels began the contest, and the terrible carnage, the roar of cannon and musketry, with falling limbs from the trees above, made us feel like we were in the midst of a hurricane. The roar was continuous, and only the sound of the heaviest guns could be heard above the din of the conflict. Colonel King was killed about 4 p. m., a ball striking him in the forehead. He was brought off the field on a caisson. His courage and bravery won the admiration of all, and had he lived high promotion would have been his reward. Colonel M. S. Robinson, of the 75th Indiana, being next in rank, then took command of the brigade. Early in the night the scattered fragments of the army were concentrated at Rossville, and placed in position 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRY. 13 for defense, the men sleeping in line of battle. The mere figures of the losses cannot make the terrors of the two days' battle of Chicamauga appear in the least to those who were never in a battle. We had com rades slain, and others wounded and left on the field, and the tortures of uncertainty in regard to their fate filled our minds with the saddest thoughts. It was well the veil was not lifted for us to gaze upon the horrible scenes of suffering in those dark and gloomy woods duringthe next few days after the battle. There were three hundred and fifty-six officers and enlisted men of the 68th in the battle, and over one- third of them were killed or wounded. The loss of the regiment was one hundred and thirty-five. Lieu tenant Robert J. Price, formerly editor of the Rush ville yacksonian, was among the number killed. Com pany D had thirty-seven men in the battle, under the command of ist Lieutenant William Beale. (Captain J. H. Mauzy was in the battle as Brigade Inspector on the staff of Colonel King.) Of these, one was killed; one wounded, missing, never heard from; and twenty wounded, thirteen of whom fell into rebel hands. Several other companies had equal losses. During the night of the 21st our army withdrew into Chattanooga. Our regiment and brigade, marching in the rear to cover the retreat, repelled all attacks by the enemy while we were withdrawing from Rossville. Cist's History of the Army of the Cumberland thus sums up this battle: "All things considered, the battle of Chicamauga, for the forces engaged, was the 14 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE hardest fought and bloodiest battle of the rebellion. Hindman, who fought our right at Horseshoe Ridge, says in his official report that he had 'never known Federal troops to fight so well,' and that Jie 'never saw Confederate soldiers fight better.' The largest number of troops Rosecrans had, pf all arms, on the field during the two days' fighting, was 55,000 effective men. Rose crans' losses were: Killed, 1,687; wounded, 9,394; missing, 5,255 — total loss, 16,336. Bragg had about 70,000 effective troops in line. His losses, in part esti mated, were 2,673 killed, 16,274 wounded, and 2,003 missing — a total of 20,950. A full report of the rebel losses was never made." In Chattanooga the work of strengthening our position was carried on night and day, until we felt secure from any assault. An entire brigade was sent on duty from our division each day. Until October 4 we had conversation and interchange of papers with the enemy's pickets on our front, the two picket lines being about one hundred yards apart. After that date orders forbade any communication. Almost every day the rebels would cause a stir in our lines by throwing in large shot and shell from their artillery on Lookout Mountain. On the nth of October our brigade was broken up, and the 68th Indiana was assigned to the ist Brigade, General WilHch; 3d Division, General Woods; 4th Army Corps, General Gordon Granger, commander. The brigade was made up of the 15th Wisconsin, Sth Kansas, 25th, 35th and S9th Ilhnois, 32d and 68th Indiana, 15th and 49th Ohio — all infantiy 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRY. 15 regiments. After this we moved over and camped with our new brigade, on the east side of the city, near Ft. Wood. Often our pickets and those of the rebels would get mixed up together in the dense fogs, when going on duty, but each treated the other courteously, and tried to point out their proper places. About the the ist of November our rations ran to the lowest point, and mule meat became a luxury — the pangs of hunger were felt by many as never before, and our prospects seemed very gloomy. About the middle of November the short line of communication with Stevenson, Ala., was opened up by reinforcements from other armies, and preparations were rapidly made to break out of the pen in which we were confined. There was only one way out — by crossing the river to the North. Almost every day our troops would drill in front of the line of fortifications, and when we went out on the 23d, the rebels were somewhat surprised to see us march steadily forward, drive in their pickets, and never halt until we had possession of their rifle-pits. Our brigade was in the advance, on the left, and half our regiment on the skirmish line that night. The forward movement was characterized in the official reports as having been done "in the most gallant style." That night we slept in line of battle. On the 24th we remained quietly in our places, and from our position could see both sides in the great battle near the top of Lookout Mountain — " Hooker's fight above the clouds." It was a beautiful sight. The subhmity and grandeur i6 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE of that living panorama will always be a memory of joy, for it was a "famous victory." About lo a. m. on the 25th, our picket lines were ordered forward again, and it was a sight long to be remembered by those engaged, to see how the "Johnnies" went over their line of breastworks at the foot of Mission Ridge, like a drove of sheep on a stampede, and how disappointed we were when orders came for us to fall back and reform our lines. No mention of this part of the fight is given by General Grant or Van Horne in their histories, although it was certainly an important move. At 3:30 p. m., by the firing of six cannons in rapid succession on Orchard Knob, near us, an advance was ordered of our corps. We were in the center. Steadily we again drove them back to their line of works at the foot of the Ridge, and the storm of leaden hail, of shot and shell and grape, that came down upon and about us, thinned and disordered our ranks very much as we pressed on up the Ridge to the summit, about dark; and then on our front many fought to the death rather than surrender. Our regiment lost many brave men. Five officers and seventy-seven enlisted men were killed and wounded, ist Lieutenant John Reese, of Company C, and Samuel S. Bodine, of Company D, were killed in the charge. Both were great favorites. Our division (Wood's) was the first to reach the top of the Ridge, losing one hundred and fifty killed and eight hundred and fifty-one wounded; total 1,001. Van Horne, in his History of the Army of the Cumber land, says: 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRY. 17 "The peculiar features of the field revealed to the enemy the transcendent array of the National troops. The battle had opened with the splendid charge of Wood's division, and Lookout Mountain had been wrested from his hands in such a way as to change the martial tone of each army. Those assaulting Mission Ridge had Chicamauga to avenge and Lookout Moun tain to surpass. The dashing, yet firm and resolute sweep of the assaulting column, for more than a mile, expressed in advance the resistless character of the attack. The loss of more than twenty per cent, in Sheridan's and Wood's divisions, in a contest of less than an hour, shows that the enemy did not yield his position without a struggle." All our movements could be seen by them. When the top was gained, it took a little while to get together around our old flags. Notwithstanding our terrible losses, we cheered and sang and embraced one another for joy, while the tears filled our eyes for comrades slain. The scene was intensified by the rebels burning such stores and property as they could not get away with, so that the heavens were illuminated. We felt the prestige of victory again. The memory of Chicamauga was a sad one, and we all felt that it was nearly a defeat — a drawn battle. But this was a glorious victory, giving us renewed hope, and we marched on ever after in full confidence of a final victory. The rebels had the strongest position, and fought heroically to hold it, dying in heaps by their guns. i8 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE In the night our corps received orders to get ready and move at once to the relief of Burnside, at Knox ville, over one hundred miles away. He was there besieged Jay Longstreet with a large army. We went in the lightest marching order, carrying our rations in our haversacks, with one blanket for bedding, and one rubber poncho to each man for tent and protection against the winter weather. We marched all day and sometimes nearly all night, th-rough rain and mud, resting by the roadside wherever the column was halted. Parched corn was a luxury, and was chiefly our diet for days together. The rebels, learning of our ap proach, made a most desperate assault on Fort Saun ders, November 29, 1863, before we could get there. They were repulsed with terrible slaughter, and re treated. Our brigade marched beyond, to near Straw berry Plain, and went into camp in the woods among the rocks. Here we got a much-needed chance to wash and clean up, for we had worn and slept in our clothes for two weeks. The "cold New Year's day" (January i, 1864,) found us working on a high bridge over the Holston River, with short rations and sleeping in the pine thickets among the rocks. Often the snows and cold, chilly rains would make us think of better comforts. The exposure sent hundreds to hospitals with diseases. When the foraging parties returned, well loaded, there was much good cheer in camp. December 27, 1863, General Wheeler attacked a train of wagons under escort of Laibolt's brigade, at Calhoun, Tenn., but was 68th regiment INDIANA INFANTRY. 19 routed with great loss, ist Sergeant James A. Smith, " the tall Orderly of Company D," (68th Indiana) was wounded while assisting in repelhng the assault. On the 15th of January our division advanced and drove the rebels out of Dandridge, Tenn. But the enemy persisted in trying to bring on a general engagement, by massing a large force, and skirmishing was kept up for two days. On the evening of the iSth a brisk fight took place, and during the night our forces retreated, after a council of war, at which Generals Granger, Sheridan, Wood, Willich, Hazen, Beatty and others, were present. Next day we burned the bridge which we had undergone such hardships to build, and after a few days fell back to Marysville. Mihtary jealousy between some of our prominent Generals was the cause of much trouble in the Department of the Ohio at this time, as they did not work harmoniously together. In February, 1864, our command was again moved up to Morristown, and was kept busy with raids from the enemy and consolidating of regiments. The time of enlistment of many of the older regiments having expired, only the recruits of many remained. Com pany D had men assigned to it for muster from every regiment in the brigade, February 29. In April our command returned to Cleveland, Tenn., and at the consolidation for the Atlanta campaign, our regiment was one of eight selected to garrison Chattanooga. The responsibilities of the duty made us think very highly of the honor, it being the key position and con taining more stores and valuable property than any 20 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE other post. The regiment reported to General James B. Steedman, at Chattanooga, April 28, 1864, and was assigned a place on the south front of that city. When Sherman's army advanced on the Atlanta campaign, General Steedman's command from Stevenson, Ala., was placed at the front, and called " The District of the Etowah." The duties required of us were of the most varied character. Besides picket, camp and gar rison duty there were details to guard trains, to take bounty jumpers, cattle and supplies to the army at the front, and to Knoxville, and the taking of prisoners back and forth. Often all the regiment that was in camp would be ordered to march at once to repel an attack somewhere on our long line of railroad, and we would not get back for days. Details were raade to take prisoners to Nashville, for provost duty, and to guard and help boats through the " Suck," a narrow place in the Tennessee River, a few miles below the city. Some of the men who had trades were put to work in the repair shops. On the night of August 14, 1864, we were called to go to Daltoii at once, where Wheeler's cavalry had driven our garrison into their fortifications and taken the town. At daylight General Steedman, in command of our force, ordered a charge to be made into the town, and, with a rush, swept the enemy from the place. Here Captain Charies C. Wheeler, of Company B, re ceived a mortal wound, from which he died in a few days. All felt very sad for the loss of so brave an officer. Five enlisted men were wounded in the charge 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRY. 21 of our regiment. Iteturning to Chattanooga on the i8th, the regiment was ordered to Athens, Tenn., but the rebels had left, and we returned on the 20th, very weary of marching so rapidly. September i the regi ment went to Tullahoma, but returned in a fewdays, and in the same manner every few days to some point on the different roads threatened by Hood's advance cav alry, on their way to the North. After Sherman left Atlanta for the sea, the regi ment arrived back from one of these expeditions on the 26th, and before daylight on the 27th they were off for Decatur, Ala., where the regiment assisted in repelling the attack of Hood's army. Our regiment supported the 14th U. S. Colored Infantry, who made such a gallant charge on the 28th of October, 1864. The colored regiment lost forty men killed and woun ded, among the number three officers killed. Our regimental loss was five wounded. After campaigning about the country for some time, we returned to Chat tanooga, November 10. On the 12th our regiment re ceived orders to go to Resacca, Ga., where it remained several days, guarding men tearing up the railroad tracks. November 29 the regiment went on picket duty at Chattanooga, in the morning, but was relieved, and left on the cars for Decatur, Ala. From then and until after the battle of Nashville, December 15 and 16, 1864, and until the pursuit of Hood's army had been abandoned near Tuscumbia, Ala., the regiment was with General Steedman's command, on the march all the time, receiving great credit with the other troops 22 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE of his in the battle at Nashville— the regiment losing one killed and five wounded. When the pursuit ceased many of our men were shoeless and ragged, being out forty-three days without any change of clothing. Many were without blankets and overcoats, fighting and marching through the cold rains and mud, and sometimes over frozen ground. At one time they were five days and nights on the cars — boxcars — from fifty to sixty men in a car, without fire, and so closely packed they could not lie down without crowding one another. December 27 they waded a bayou, near Decatur, Ala., before daylight, which was hip deep. The regiment returned to their camp at Chatta nooga, January 11, 1865, and from that time until the close of the war, there w^as only enough vitality left in Hood's army to make a guerrilla warfare on our lines of communication, or on places that had few troops. January 29 the regiment went to Athens, Tenn., to repel a raid there, but the rebels left on our approach. February 4 we moved our camp over the river, at the end of the bridge, and were assigned to provost duty. The great floods which nearly submerged our camp and the boating experiences will long be remembered as something very unusual. The water ran through the streets and for miles over the valley. April 10 the news of Lee's surrender was made the occasion ofa wonderful demonstration. Every bell was rung, every whistle blew, the cannons roared, and men cheered until they were hoarse. The countrj' people 68th REGIMENT INDIANA INFANTRY. 23 came into the city or hid away in alarm at such a bedlam reaching through the mountains. On the 14th, when the news of the assassination of Lincoln was received, the reaction was so great that men wept, and all wondered what would happen next. But the news of the capture of Jeff. Davis, the same day, caused our spirits to revive. On the i8th Cerro Gordo Williams and a large number of troops came in and surrendered. As they were flush with gold and silver from the Treasury of the Confederacy, which they were escorting outof danger, and which they paid out freely to the sutlers for luxuries they had not tasted for years, their money soon got into circulation, and we enjoyed the getting of a little hard cash very much, until the novelty wore off. And so until the end of our service there were events of thrilling interest, daily, because it was our side that was victorious. No one who has never experienced the despondency of defeat, can ever feel the full measure of joy in victory. On the 17th of June General Steedraan made us a farewell speech, in which he complimented us highly on our services to the country. We then left for Nash ville, arriving there next day. On the 20th of June, 1865, we were mustered out of the service ofthe United States at that place. The recruits in our regiment were transferred to the 44th Indiana Infantry, with which they served until discharged, September 14, 1865. We arrived at Indianapolis on the 22dof June, were furloughed for eight days, and took part in a public reception given at the Tabernacle to the returned 24 OUTLINE HISTORY OF THE troops, which was addressed by Lieutenant-Governor Conrad Baker. After being paid off we at once re sumed our places as citizens, each going his way in the pursuit of happiness, and to such duties as should fall to his lot in the ever changing cares of Hfe. Nearly a quarter of a century has passed since we first assembled together at Camp Logan, but I leave it to the comrades to reflect over the events which have occurred since then. How stranger than fiction have been the destinies of many ; our hearts are now saddened when we think of those comrades slain, or who died in hospitals, or in those saddest of all places, the rebel prisons. Let us think of these things, and resolve to do all we can to honor their memory and for the country they died to save. Our first service was in the Department of the Ohio. The Department of the Cumberland vras ordered by the War Department, October 24, 1862, and was afterward organized with the 14th, 20th and 21st Army Corps, commanded in the order named by Major-Gen erals George H. Thomas, McCook and Crittenden. There were four divisions in the 14th Corps until after the battle of Chicamauga, viz.: ist division, Baird's; 2d, Negley's; 3d, Brannan's; 4th, Reynold's. ' The 4th division was composed of the following brigades: ist brigade, Wilder's; 2d, Ed. A. King's; 3d, Turchin's. A reorganization of the entire army was made after the battle of Chicamauga, under the name of the Mili- 68th regiment INDIANA INFANTRY. 25 tary Division of the Mississippi, and commanded by General U. S. Grant. Under the new arrangement the Army of the Cumberland was composed of the 4th, nth, i2th and 14th Corps, Major-General George H. Thomas commanding. The 4th Corps was made by consolidating the 20th and 21st, under Major-Gen eral Gordon Granger. The nth was commanded by Major-General O. O. Howard, and the 12th by Major- General Slocum — the last two corps being under Major- General Hooker. The 14th was commanded by Major- General George H. Thomas, who was next in rank to General Grant, until the arrival qf Major-General W. T. Sherman, with reinforcements, in November. There were three divisions in the 14th Corps: ist division, Major-General Palmer; 2d, Major-General Phil. H. Sheridan; 3d, Major-General Thomas J.Wood; and three brigades in Wood's division — ist Brigade, Brigadier-General August Willich; 2d, Brigadier-Gen eral W. B. Hazen; 3d, Brigadier-General Samuel Beatty. After the battle of Chattanooga, on the march to Knoxville, General W. T. Sherman was in command of all the forces going to the relief of Burnside. After getting there, the enemy having retreated, all his com mand returned, except the 4th Corps, Major-General Gordon Granger, which remained, and while there was in the Department of the Ohio, Major-General J. G. Foster commanding, until the reorganization in April, 1864, for the Atlanta campaign, when we were as signed to the garrison of Chattanooga, Major-General 26 INDIANA IN the WAR. James B. Steedman, commanding. It was composed as follows: ist Separate Brigade — Sth Kentucky In fantry, 15th, 29th, 44th, 51st and 68th Indiana Infantry, 3d and 24th Ohio Infantry. Engineer Brigade — 18th Ohio Infantry, 13th, 21st and 22d Michigan Infantry. Pioneer Brigade — 58th Indiana Infantry, ist and 2d Pontoon Battalion. In addition there was a large number of batteries of U. S. and' other artillery. INDIANA IN THE WAR. From the Adjutant-General's Reports of Indiana, we have the following figures in regard to the num ber of troops furnished by Indiana: 30 Days. 60 Days. 3 Months 100 Days. 6 Mo. I Year. 3 Years. Totals. Infantry.. Cavalry... Artillery. 1,874 587 6,308 7.415 539 203 ::i.33i 104207 133.640 21,298 10,779 175.776 21,605 10,886 Totals. 1,874 587 6,308 7.415 742 21,642 165,617 208,367 These forces were organized into one hundred and twenty-nine regiments of infantry, thirteen regiments of cavalry, one regiment of heavy artillery, and twenty- six batteries of light artillery, besides independent companies. MISGELLANY. The ist, 2d and 3d Indiana Infantry were raised under the administration, of Governor Whitcomb, in 1846, to serve in Mexico; and in 1847 the 4th and 5th were raised for the same service. To avoid historical confusion, when the Rebellion came on the new regi ments were numbered, commencing with the 6th, Col onel T. T. Crittenden, which went to West Virginia, and on the 3d of June, 1861, took part in the first battle of the war, at Philippi. So, also, did the 7th Regi ment, Colonel Ebenezer Dumont, and the 9th Regi ment, Colonel R. H. Milroy. There were six regi ments of three months' troops raised in Indiana under the President's first call for 75,000 volunteers, and the nth. Colonel Lewis Wallace, was the last. So great was the enthusiasm that after filling the quota, enough more troops remained for five regiments, which were organized into the service of the State, May n, with a surplus of six^companiesin camp. The i6th. Colonel P. A. Hackleman, was one of these regiments, and it was the first to march through Baltimore after the firing on the 6th^Massachussetts Regiment, in April. It served to the end of their one year's enlistment, in 28 INDIANA TROOPS. the Army of the Potomac. The regiment was then reorganized and mustered into the three years' service, August 19, 1862. The 37th Indiana Infantry was mustered in September iS, 1S61, for three years; the 54th Indiana Infantry, in October, 1862, for one year; the 6Sth Indiana Infantry, August 19, 1862, for three years; the 123d Indiana Infantry, March 9; 1864, for three years; the 134th Indiana, May 25, 1S64, for one hundred days; the 19th Indiana Battery, August 5, 1862, for three years; and the 22d Indiana Battery, December 15, 1862, for three years. THE LOSSES IN THE WAR. The following extract from a speech delivered at Chattanooga, by General Joseph E. Wheeler, will serve to show the magnitude of the war of the Rebelhon: It takes but a few figures to show that it was one of the greatest and most momentous wars ever waged among civilized people. Official returns show that about 2,900,000 soldiers enlisted during the war. Re ports show that the Northern and Southern armies met in over 2,000 skirmishes and battles. In 148 of these conflicts, the loss on the Federal side was over 500 men, and in at least ten battles over 10,000 men were reported lost on each side. The killed, wounded and missing on both sides, reported at Shiloh, numbered 24,000; Antietam, 38,000; Stone River, 37,000; Chan cellorsville, 28,000; Gettysburg, 54,000; Chicamauga, 33,000. Official statistics show that of all the men enlisted, the LOSSES IN THE WAR. 29 there were killed in battle, during the war, 44,238; died of wounds, 49,205; died of disease, 186,216; died of unknown causes, 24,184 — total 303,843. To this num ber should be added, first, 26,000 men who are known to have died while in the hands of the enemy, as prisoners of war, and many others in the same manner, whose deaths are unrecorded, and thousands who died at home on furlough, and were buried in private cemeteries. The Nation's dead are buried in seventy-three Na tional cemeteries, of which only twelve are in the North - ern States. Among the principal ones in the North are Cypress Hill, with its 3,786 dead; Finn's Point, N. J., which contains the remains of 2,644 unknown dead; Gettysburg, Pa., with its 1,967 known and 1,608 unknown dead ; Mound City, 111., with 2,505 known and 2,721 unknown graves. In the South, near the scenes of terrible conflicts, are located the largest de positories of the Nation's heroic dead, viz.: Chatta nooga, Tenn., (seventy-five acres), 12,843, from 655 regiments and twenty-three States, of which 5,167 are unknown; Nashville, Tenn., 16,526, of which 4,700 are unknown; Stone River, Tenn., 6,121, of which 2,474 are unknown; seven cemeteries in Tennessee, (over 233 acres) in which are buried 56,817 soldiers. In all, the remains of three hundred thousand men, who fought for the stars and stripes, find guarded graves in our Na tional cemeteries. Two cemeteries are mainly devoted to brave men who perished in the loathsome prisons of the same name — Andersonville, Ga., which contains 30 ENLISTMENTS BY STATES. 13,714 graves, and Sahsbury, N. C, with its 12,126 dead, of whom 12,032 are unknown. In all the ceme teries 145,000 rest in graves marked unknown. ENLISTMENT BY STATES. The following table shows the number of men furnished by each State: Maine 71.745 New Hampshire 34.605 Vermont 35.256 Massachusetts 151.785 Rhode Island 24,711 Connecticut 52.270 New York 455,568 New Jersey 79. 511 Pennsylvania 366,326 Delaware 13.651 Maryland 49.73° West Virginia 30.003 District of Columbia 16,872 Ohio 3'7,i33 Indiana 195,147 Illinois 258,217 Michigan 90,119 Wisconsin 96,118 Minnesota 25,024 Iowa 75,860 Missouri 108,778 Kentucky 78,540 Kansas 20,097 Total 2,653,062 COMPARATIVE LOSSES. 31 LOSSES IN THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR. As the following table will show, there were greater losses in one battle of the Rebellion than in all the battles of the American Revolution, on both sides: Dates and Months. British Loss. American Loss. Lexington Bunker Hill Flatbush White Plain Trenton Princeton Hubbardsto wn . . . . Bennington Brandywine Stillwater Germantown Saratoga Red Hook Monmouth Rhode Island Briar Creek Stony Point Camden King's Mountain. Cowpens Guilford C. H.... Hobkirk's Hill... Eutaw Springs.... Yorktown Total ^Surrendered. April 19, 1775. June 17, " Aug. 12, 1776. Aug. 26, " Dec. 25, " Jan. 5, 1777. Aug. 17, " Aug. 16, " Sept. II, " Sept. 17, " Oct. 6, " Oct. 17, " Oct. 22, " June 25, 177S. Aug. 27, " March 30, 1779. July 15, 1780. Aug. 16, " Oct. I, " Jan. 17, 1781. March 25, " April 25, " Sept. " Oct. 19, " 274 1,054 400 400 1,060 400 180 800 5fo 600600 *5,752 500 400 200 18 600375950800532 400 1,000 »7,072 84 453 200 400 9 100 800 100 1,200 35° 1,200 32 130 211 400 100 600 96 72 40040c 550 24,851 7.897 COMPARATIVE LOSSES. Waterloo was one of the most desperate and bloody fields chronicled in European history; and yet Welhng- 32 COMPARATIVE LOSSES. ton's casualties were less than twelve per cent.— his losses being, 2,432 killed and 9,528 wounded out of over 100,000 men. At Shiloh one side lost in killed 9,740 out of 34,000, while their opponents report their killed and wounded at 9,616, making the casualties about thirty per cent. At Lodi, Napoleon lost one and one-quarter per cent., and at the great battles of Mar engo and Austerlitz, sanguinary as they were. Napo leon lost an average of less than fourteen and one-half per cent. At Magenta and Solferino, in 1S59, the aver age loss of both armies was less than nine per cent. At Koenigratz, in 1866, it was six per cent. At Werth, Mars-le-Tour, Gravelotte and Sedan, in 1S70, the average was less than twelve per cent. At Perryville, Stone River, Chicamauga, Atlanta, Gettysburg, Mission Ridge, the Wilderness and Spottsylvania, the loss frequently reached (and some times exceeded) forty per cent., and the average ofthe killed and wounded on the one side or the other was over thirty per cent. From the discovery of America to 1861, in all wars with other nations, the record gives the deaths in battle of but ten American Generals; while from 1861 to 1865, both sides being opposed by Americans, more than one hundred general officers fell while leading their triumphant columns. In the battle of Hohenlinden, which was the ground work for the following stirring poetry. General Moreau lost but four per cent., and the Archduke John lost GENERAL COX'S ORATION. 33 but seven per cent., in killed and wounded. Ameri cans would scarcely call this a lively skirrnish. * * * * * * * "Where rushed the steeds of battle driven, And louder than the bolts of heaven, Far flashed the red artillery-; Where furious Frank and fiery Hun Were mixed in sulphurous canopy; Where rushed to glory or the grave, And Munich all her banners waved, And charged with all her chivalry; Where snow became their winding sheet, And every turf beneath their feet Became a soldier's sepulchre." The following extract is from an oration by General J. D. Cox, at Chicago : , A full knowledge of all the circumstances of war will only make a civihzed nation strive more wisely, for peace: and as the improvements in the efficiency ot arms make nations more careful how they invoke the judgment of the god of battles, so an acquaintance with all the cost and all the horrors which follow in the train of great military expeditions, may make a people more and more averse to strife unless the cause be one as holy as that which called upon us in 1861 — the preservation of the Nation itself! With ail our sad experience of comrades fallen, of a country desolated, of homes destroyed, of labors and sufferings of all kinds endured, and of unexampled burdens to be borne, I believe there is no veteran who would hesitate to draw the sword again to avert a like- peril from our land. - ,' 34 MISSIONARY RIDGE. THE BATTLE OF MISSIONARY RIDGE. BY GENERAL H. V. BOYNTON. A storming party twenty thousand strong, frora the Army of the Cumberland, stood facing Missionary Ridge. For two days great battle scenes had been passing before the eyes of the men composing it. Half of them had taken part in that swift advance from Chattanooga, which, almost before the enemy had corrected the mistake of regarding it as a general review, swept a mile out into the plain and captured his entire line of advanced works. All of them had stood the day before watching and cheering as HooJ^er's line on Lookout, radiant with the flag they worshiped, swept around the point of the mountain, and seemed to roll over the lines ofthe stars and bars and crush them back ward and down the steeps. The cheers of the armies below, the music of all their bands, and the rush and roar of the battle on the slopes above, were yet ringing in their ears, and to those living are ringing still. All of them at daybreak had gazed intently toward Lookout to see if it could be determined who held the summit. And all of them, with brimming eyes and thankful and exultant hearts, had cheered and cheered, and cheered till voices failed, that banner of stars, which, as the sun touched the point of the mountain, stood revealed on its highest crag. And now, after this long and exciting waiting, MISSIONARY RIDGE. 35 stirred to the depths of soldier feeling by the swift and magnificent sweep of the spectacle which they had witnessed, they stood a storming army facing the slopes of Missionary Ridge. From earthworks at its base, from a second hne half-way to the summit, and from works along the crest, an army of rebellion waited under the shelter of half a hundred guns, and waved its battle flags in defiance. It was a mile across the plain to the lower line of earthworks. It was a half mile further up the rough and tangled slopes. Eighty- seven Union regiments, each with its flags, for most carried two, stood formed in two lines with proper reserves, most impatiently awaiting the signal for ad vance. At length it came — six guns from Orchard Knob — boom — boom — boom — boom — boom — boom ! Who of those who heard will ever forget ? As the firing progressed every soldier with that bated breath had counted one — two — three — four — five — six — with only pause enough to see that no seventh followed, and that this was really the signal of six guns, and in stantly all rifles went up to the shoulder and flags to the belts of the standard-bearers. All officers cried " forward," and with mighty cheers those double lines of blue, so clearly marked and still further relieved by their beautiful flags and gleaming rifles, burst forward into the plain as if shot arrow-like from the terrible restraint which had held them so long. The Union front was two miles and a half. There were four divisions; in all eleven brigades. This magnificent array had scarcely advanced into the plain from the light 36 MISSIONARY RIDGE. timber Which partially concealed it, before the summit of the ridge was wreathed with the smoke of fifty guns, and the air was alive with missiles raining onthe attacking columns. But there was no wavering in that long line of flags, or in the ranks of the army that was pushing them forward. In ten minutes the lines were under musketry fire from the works at the base of the ridge. Though the list of Union killed and wounded grew- at every pace, those lines swept up to and over the earthworks at the foot of the slopes, and under the batteries above. With a brief pause at points for cor recting the lines, the climbing of the heights began. Shell and canister, and the sleet of rifles poured down from the crest, but only the killed and wounded were halted by any or all of these. The lines s vfept on and up, and that wonderful and never-to-be-forgotten panorama of the flags unfolded itself in the clear sunlight. Let the reader look at it from among the wounded toward the base of the ridge, who seemed to forget even home and eternity, which was so near, as they lay there gazing on the wonderful scene and cheering their com rades on. The lines had scarcely begun the ascent when far as the eye could reach the flag-bearers were rushing in advance, and each regiment crowding towards its colors, had taken the shape of an inverted V, the flags at the angle, and these wedge-shaped battalions were cleaving their way under murderous fire toward the summit. The eye could not run down the lines with out seeing a flag-bearer fall. For some regiments five MISSIONARY RIDGE; 37 or six were killed or wounded before the flag of stars took the place of stars and bar on the crowning works of the ridge. The whole face of the mountain^ for it was little less — was soon covered with soldiers in blue. The front lines were rushing for the top. The second lines and the reserves broke against the entanglement at the base, and the rocks, ravines and fallen timber in their course. And yet the general formation was pre served. Baird's men on the left, were climbing where horses could not be ridden. Wood, to the left, was under the fiercest fire, but his flags went on with all the rest. Sheridan and his staff were in full view of bbth armies, riding in advarice with his headquarter colors straight on the batteries near Bragg's head quarters ; and the flags of Johnson on the extreme left showed that there also the flood-tide of the blue sea of Union men with all its flags advanced was about to pour over the crest. ' One moment, and the rebel battle flags waved everywhere along the summit, the stars and bars fioated from the staff at Bragg's-tentSy- fifty guns poured death upon that storming army, and rifle pits, filled with the men who made those splendid assaults on the Union lines at Chicamauga, flamed unceasingly in the faces of the men who were pushing arid supporting the flags. The next, Baird's troops had scaled the cliff which ran along the summit above them. Wood had carried the crest along his whole front. Sheri dan with his staff and his lines was among the guns on top, and Johnson beyond stood in the rebel 38 THE REGIMENTAL FLAG. works. From right to left the sun shone clear and bright only on the flags before which the banners of treason had fallen. Fifty-five minutes had passed from the firing of the signal guns. It was exactly an hour to the time when the cheers of victory had run down the Union lines — Only an hour with the flags! How the mind rushes on to all the other hours, and days, and months, and years in which the Union armies advanced their own banners and captured the emblems of treason! More than one-fifth of that storming party were killed and wounded. A single division lost one hun dred and twenty-three officers and 1,179 men. Another lost over 2,000. There were twenty-five rebel flags captured. Behold the cost ! Is it strange that the men who took them, and the loyal communities who sent these soldiers forth and sustained and encouraged them, are stirred to the depth of their souls with emo tions which can not be controlled when sacrilege is attempted with such trophies ? It would be a sad day for the Republic if such feelings were dead. THE 68th REGIMENT'S FLAG. Colonel John S. Scobey, in answer to a letter of inquiry, writes as follows from Greensburg, Ind., under date of June 2, 1887: * * * ''Of the flag of which you write (the one returned to Mrs. E. H. M. Berry), it was presented to the regiment by the ladies here, the presentation speech being made by Mrs. Berry, and she also made THE REGIMENTAL FLAG. 39 • the reception speech on its return. I have no copy of the remarks I made, nor of hers. Her speeches were very nice and eloquent. At the capture of Munford ville, in September, 1862, Colonel King took the flag from the staff and wrapped it around his body, and there carried it until the regiment got to Indiana. And thus it was saved from going into the hands of the rebels. All honor to the memory of Colonel Edward A. King. He was a brave and good man." Mrs. Berry, who has the flag in her keeping, says that the money to buy the flags for the 7th and 6Sth was made up by a popular twenty-five cent collection in one day, at Greensburg, and that Mr. Forsythe bought both the flags, paying out of his own money any balance. BIOGI^APHY. COL. EDWARD A. KING. [From the Biographical Cyclopaedia of Distinguished Men of the State eff Ohio; ] BY J. FLETCHER BRENNAN. Edward A, King, who, as Colonel commanding the 1st Brigade of a division of the 14th Army Corps, was killed at the battle of Chicamauga, was born in Cambridge, Washington county. State of New York, in 1S14. He was a descendant of James King, who settled in Suffield, Connecticut, in the year 1678. In early life he emigrated with his fathers family to Ohio, where he subsequently studied law at Columbus and Cincinnati. But his predilections were decidedly of a military character, and during the Texan struggle for independence, he raised a company in the city of New Orleans, reported with his command to General Sara. Houston, and served in Texas until her independence was acknowledged. In this service his health became seriously impaired, and he returned to the United States, and took up his permanent residence in Dayton, Ohio. COLONEL EDWARD A. KING. 41 In 1S44 he went to Europe, where he remained until the breaking out of the war with Mexico, when he returned and offered his services to his country. President Polk appointed him captain in the 15th Regi ment, United States Infantry, in which he served w^ith distinction until the close of the war. He was with a detachment of his regiment and other troops, under command of Colonel Mcintosh, in the severe guerrilla fight at Tolome, on the 6th of June, 1847; and in the fight under General Cadwallader, at the National bridge, June II and 12, 1847. He afterward participated with his regiment in the several bloody battles in the valley of Mexico, under General Scott, resulting in the cap ture of the City of Mexico. Colonel George W. Mor gan commanded the regiment, and General Franklin Pierce the brigade, to which he belonged. After the treaty of peace with Mexico, Colonel King returned to Ohio, and in the spring of 1849, crossed the plains to California. Returning again, he was appointed post master at Dayton by President Pierce, and after the election of President Buchanan the position was again conferred upon him. So general was the satisfaction given in the discharge of his official duties, there was no competing applicant for the place. For many years, both before and after the Mexican war. Colonel King took an active part in all important matters connected with the militia of Ohio, and at the outbreak of the late War of the Rebellion, was Colonel of the ist Regi ment of Ohio Volunteer Militia, at Dayton, which city sent several organized and equipped companies into the field. 42 COLONEL EDWARD A. KING. On the 17th of April, 1861, the day of the procla mation of the Governor of Ohio, calling loyal men to the defence of their country, Colonel King reported to Governor Dennison, and was immediately placed in command of Camp Jackson (near Columbus), then-in a chaotic state, but which he soon reduced to form and discipline. He was subsequently transferred to Camp Chase, where he remained in command until, without solicitation on his part, he was appointed by President Lincoln Lieutenant-Cotonel of the 19th Regiment United States Infantry. His headquarters were estab lished at Indianapolis, where he proceeded to organize and superintend the recruiting of the regiment. While thus engaged, in the summer of 1862, when Kirby Smith invaded Kentucky, he took, at the request of Governor Morton, the temporary command of the 68th Regiment Indiana Volunteers (all new^ recruits) to re sist the enemy. After a brief but severe campaign, he was sent to the assistance of Colonel Wilder, at Mun fordville, Ky., and participated in that severe engage ment. He was surrendered with his regiment and the other bodies of Federal troops, to an overwhelming force. It fell to his lot to deliver the surrender to the enemy, and the rebel General Buckner, who, while a prisoner of war, had been in his charge at Indianapolis, treated him with marked consideration. A beautiful incident connected with this capitulation was afterward developed. When the 6Sth Regiment was sent to the field, the ladies of Greensburg, Ind., presented it with a rich silken flag. It was highly prized, and the regi- COLONEL EDWARD A. KING. 43 ment was loath to part with it. When it was deter mined to surrender. Colonel King wrapped the precious colors around his body, under his clothing. He wore them thus for thirteen days, saved them, and the regi ment bore them in the bloody fight at Chicamauga. After the 6Sth Indiana Regiment was exchanged, the command was again pressed on Colonel King, who (obtaining leave from the War Department for the pur pose) accepted it. In the Summer of 1863, his health, which had been seriously impaired, becoming somewhat re-established, he again took the field, and was placed in command of the ist Brigade, General Reynold's division, 14th Army Corps, commanded by General Thomas, at the head of which he distinguished himself during the ad vance from Tullahoma to northw^estern Georgia, and in the effective crossing of the Tennessee River (his brigade being the flrst troops to cross), and capture of Shellmont, in the face of the enemy. At the battle of Chicamauga his brigade was conspicuous for its high state of discipline and gallantry. He fell at the close of the second day's fight, shot in the forehead by a sharpshooter, when our army fell back upon Chatta nooga. Colonel King's body was buried outside our hnes, and the grave carefully marked, and after the battle of Mission Ridge his remains were recovered and brought home to Dayton for interment. On the 29th and 30th of January, 1864, his body lay in state at the court house, in a handsome casket, resting on a catafalque, prepared for the occasion by the members of the Day- 44 COLONEL EDWARD A. KING. ton Light Guard, with which the deceased had long been associated. The four sides of the catafalque were respectively inscribed: "Contreras," "Molino del Rey," "Chepultepec," "Chicamauga." It was visited by thousands, who called to pay their respects to the memory of the gallant dead. On the 31st of January his body was buried at Woodland Cemetery with military honors, the 2d Regiment Ohio Volunteer Militia acting as escort. The pall-bearers were cora posed of officers of the Mexican War and the War of the Rebellion. The funeral was by far the largest ever before witnessed in Dayton. Few men ever more thoroughly commanded the confidence and respect of all who knew him than Col onel Edward A. King. He was a gallant soldier, a ripe scholar, a good citizen, a man of noble character and high sense of honor, and whose love of country was so true that he laid down his life at her call. Just before his death he had been promoted to the Colonelcy of the 6th Regiment United States Regular Infantry. The following tribute to Colonel King was written by his friend, General H. B. Carrington, of the Regular Army, on the receipt of the news of his death: Edward A. King has fallen in battle. His memory should be held precious in Indiana as in Ohio. He was a soldier by taste as well as profession. In the Mexican War he held a Captain's commission in the 15th In fantry, and achieved distinguished mention. Return- COLONEL EDWARD A. KING. 45 ing to his home at Dayton, Ohio, he identified himself with the State Militia, and organized the first complete and fully uniformed regiment under the State system. Its companies started for Washington, leaving Colum bus, Ohio, within sixty hours after notice of the first call for 75iOOO men. He was at once selected by the Ohio military authorities as the proper person to com mand Camp Jackson, the camp of rendezvous and drill for the nine regiments of Ohio three month's men, called into service by the act of the General Assembly of that State. At a time when experience in the man agement of large camps was a novelty. Colonel King earned just credit in the display of unusual talent for the position; and it is worthy of note that western Virginia was saved, and the lines of railroad to Grafton were occupied by these troops, assisted by the ist Vir ginia, before the United States troops at Camp Denni son had even received arms. Colonel King's merit was rewarded by a commission as Lieutenant-Colonel of the 19th Regular Infantry, with headquarters at Indi anapolis. In the Kirby Smith campaign, when the Ohio border as well as the State of Kentucky was in danger. Colonel King sought active duty. Leave of absence was obtained for the purpose, and Governor Morton gave him the Colonelcy of the 68th Regiment Indiana Volunteers. He took command on the even ing of August 19, 1S62; his regiment was mustered into service, received the bounty, and marched the same night. At Munfordville his cool gallantry was the theme of high encomium. During the parole of his 46 COLONEL EDWARD A. KING. regiment, its camp was a model of discipline and good order, and he afterward joined the Army of the Cum berland with the eager desire to share its fortunes. Although just recovering from a severe attack of typhoid fever, he led his brigade into action with his usual address and spirit. He has fallen! One who has been closely asso ciated with him in military duties for seven years can share the grief of nearer friends in this bereavement, but cannot find words to fill the measure of the loss. Edward A. King was a true gentleman. His sense of honor was delicate and constant, and in every civil and social relation, he was true to family, friend and country. Instinctively generous and pure, no person ever came in his contact without feeling, at once, that a true man was found. Confidence in him was never misplaced. Appeals to his justice, -his integrity, his honor, brought quick and true response. They whomethim, honored, and they who knew him, loved. Edward A. King was a soldier. Cool, dispassion ate and clear-headed, he was no less prompt, keen and energetic. Danger only lifted him into the sphere of life he loved. N.o disaster disheartened; but, when most tried, his fitness for the profession of arms shone forth most clearly. He was a strict disciplinarian, an exact scholar, a martinet in the enforcement of regu lations and tactics; but he had also a large heart, and commanded the affection of his men, while he shaped them by perfect models and incited them to personal development in the art of war. His personal character COLONEL EDWARD A. KING. 47 gave weight to his authority, while his devotion to the comfort and well-being of his men, gave new zest to their obedience. Such was Edward A. King. They that knew him will fill up this faint outline with num berless characteristics that endeared him. Those tittle facts in his daily life that most of all mark the man, are lodged in the breasts of those he loved, and their balm will be grateful, while years go by ; but the world's heart can only feel their preciousness through those uncounted tender memories that have made the interior life of departed ones most sacred to mourning friends. The following is an extract from a letter of General Thomas J. Wood, concerning Edward A. King's death, written to his wife from Chattanooga, Tenn., Septem ber 23, 1863: "It is with great grief I have to give you the sad intelligence of the death of your Uncle Edward. He was killed in the great battle of Sunday. I met Gen eral J. J. Reynolds on Monday, and learned from him the circumstances of his death. At the time he was killed there was a perfect cessation in the fighting. Your uncle walked to the front to look out for move ments of the enemy, when he was shot by a sharp shooter. The ball struck him just above the right eye, passed through his brain, and of course killed him instantly. General Reynolds had his body brought away in the retreat Sunday night, and buried at Ross ville, six miles from Chattanooga. The General told 48 COLONEL EDWARD A. KING. me he had the grave distinctly marked, so that when there is an opportunity the body can be removed." Extract from a letter of Chaplain David Monfort: "The fearless, brave, noble, patriotic Colonel Ed. A. King, the glory of whose achievements should be a household word, the impress of whose masterly skill and discipline has given glory to our regiment. We who knew him, loved him. My children name the name of Colonel Ed. A. King with respect and affiec- tion; for he was a protector of their home and country I would teach others the debt of gratitude we owe such men, who have sealed the covenant of liberty with their blood." The body of Colonel King was the only one brought from the fatal field of Chicamauga, on the night of the 20th of September, 1863. "He saved their flag, and they saved his body!" The following is from the Dayton, Ohio, Trans cript, of 1847: " Captain King's Company of Volunteers from Dayton, had the honor of being the first company of the " ten regiments " which landed at Vera Cruz. The company arrived there on the 24th of May, and were to have taken up their march for Jalapa and Pueblo on the 26th." COLONEL DANIEL W. McCOOK. 49 COLONEL DANIEL W. McCOOK. Colonel Daniel W. McCook commanded the brigade in which our regiment served, from January to May, 1S63. He was the sixth son of Major Daniel W. McCook, who entered the service at the age of sixty- five, and was killed at Buffington Island, Ohio River, leading Ohio Militia, in defence of his State against Morgan's raiders. The eldest son was Latimer McCook, surgeon of the 31st Illinois Regiment. He was badly wounded, and served until the end of the war. The next younger. Colonel George W. McCook, took three Ohio regiments to the field, and finally a fourth, which he commanded until the close of the war. The next son, John J. McCook, was a midshipman, and died on the U. S. ship of the line Delaware, and w^as buried at Rio Janeiro. The next brother was the famous Gen eral Robert L. McCook. In 1S61 he was a partner at law with Judge J. B. Stallo, at Cincinnati, now Minis ter to Italy. He entered the army at the first call for troops, and raised and commanded the 9th Ohio. He commanded a brigade in the division of General George H.Thomas, was wounded in the battle of Mill Springs, Ky., and killed near Athens, Ala., by guerrillas, while sick, riding in an ambulance. The fifth son was Major- General Alexander M. McCook. He w^as a graduate from West Point in 1852, served in Indian wars on the frontier with distinguished bravery, and during the War of the Rebellion was five times brevetted in the Regular 50 COLONEL DANIEL W. McCOOK. Army for " gallant and meritorious conduct." Colonel " Dan.," the sixth son, was in 1861 a partner at law with W. T. Sherman and General Thomas Ewing, at Leaven worth, Kan. He was a Captain in the ist Kansas In fantry in the three months' service, afterwards Cap tain and A. A. G. of the 2d Division, Army of the Ohio, during the Shiloh and Corinth campaign. In 1S62 he was commissioned Colonel of the 52d Ohio Regiment, and at Perryville commanded a brigade in Sheridan's division. He was killed in the assault on Kennesaw Mountain, while leading his brigade on a charge. His was a brilliant career, as a soldier and a leader. He was made a Brigadier the day he was killed. The seventh brother, Edwin S. McCook, entered the army in 1861, as Captain in the 31st Illi nois Regiment. He was afterwards Colonel and brigade commander in the Army of the Tennessee, and was wounded half a dozen times. The eighth son was Charles M. McCook. He left Gambler College and entered the army at the age of sixteen. He went with the 2d Ohio Regiment, and was killed at Bull Run in July, 1861. The ninth brother was John J. McCook. He left Gambler College and enlisted at the age of fif teen, as a private in the 19th Ohio Regiment, and served in West Virginia. Afterwards he was appointed a Lieutenant of Ohio Cavalry, and later Captain and Aid-de-Camp to Major-General T. L. Crittenden. He fought in the campaigns of the Army bf the Cumber land and Army of the Potomac, and was wounded at Cold Harbor. Every one of these McCooks, father GENERAL AUGUST WILLICH. 51 and sons, was a Douglas Democrat, and every one served in the Army or Navy. GENERAL AUGUST WILLICH. He was born in 1810, at Gorzyn, Prussia. His father was a Captain of Hussars, in the Prussian ser vice during the Napoleonic war of 1813 and 1815, was wounded and placed on the retired list, and died when August was three years old, when he found a home in the house of the famous theologian Schleiermacher, a distant relative. Twelve years old, he entered the school of cadets at Potsdam. At fifteen he graduated and went to the " School of War," at Berlin. When eighteen years old (182S) he received his commission as 2d Lieutenant of Artillery. In 1841 he was made Captain of Artillery. Up to 1S48, when he resigned his commission, he had taken active part in all the campaigns for twenty years. In the Revolution of 1848 he joined with Sigel, Carl Schurz, Hecker, and others, and took a foremost part in that excited, bloody, courageous struggle to revolutionize Germany, and to proclaim and establish a Republic. The noble attempt failed, their armies were routed and its members fled to all parts of the world. Willich went to Switzer land, thence to England, where he remained until 1853 and then to America, where at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, he found employment as a carpenter. Soon his thorough knowledge became known, and he was enabled to enter the Coast Survey Service at Wash- 52 GENERAL AUGUST WILLICH. ington, under Captain Maffitt, who afterwards com manded the ironclad "Florida," in the Confederate Navy. In 1858 he made the acquaintance of Judge Stallo, of Cincinnati, and was persuaded by him to come to that city and edit the Ger^man Republican, until 1S61, when the war broke out, and he, with two hundred Germans, enrolled as privates in the ist German Regi ment of Cincinnati (9th Ohio.) Willich was appointed Adjutant by Colonel "Bob" McCook, and in May was commissioned Major. In August, 1861, he was ap pointed Colonel of the 32d Indiana Infantry, (a German regiment) by Governor Morton. At Rowlett's Station he met and defeated Terry's Texan Rangers in Decem ber. This victory brought him into public notice, and his career from then until the end of the war was as one of the heroes of the Army of the Cumberland. He was severely wounded twice, and was captured at Stone River. He was appointed Brigadier-General by President Lincoln, July 17, 1862. Willich remained with the Army of the Cumberland until the end of the war, in the last act of which drama — the " March to the Sea," — he was as prominent an actor as he had been from the first. He returned to Cincinnati, where, in 1866, he was elected County Auditor, which office he held until 1869. At the outbreak of the Franco-Ger man war, he was on a visit to his old home in Germany. He offered his sword and services to the King of Prus sia; the same King, whom, when Crown Prince, he had twenty-one years before, actively opposed in arms GENERAL JAMES BLAIR STEEDMAN. 53 in the battle of Landau. His offer was not accepted, and he found consolation — then sixty years old — in attending a regular course of lectures on philosophy at the University of Berlin. He returned to this country, and went to St. Marys, Ohio, where he lived the quiet retired life of a philosopher until his sudden death, by paralysis, on the 23d of January, 1878, beloved, re spected and mourned by all who knew him. GENERAL JAMES BLAIR STEEDMAN. James Blair Steedman was born in Northumber land County, Pennsylvania, July 29, 1817. Whilea boy his parents both died, and he was left with other chil dren to struggle for their support. At fifteen he was apprenticed in a country newspaper office. In two years he became an efficient printer and went West. He was at work in the office of Prentice's Louisville Journal when the Texan War broke out, and he joined Sam. Houston's army in Texas. Afterward he returned to Ohio, bought a newsjpaper, married, was a contrac tor of work on the Wabash & Erie Canal, and also of the Toledo, Wabash & Western Railroad. In 1847 and 184S he was elected for two terms to the lower house of the Ohio Legislature. In politics he was a Democrat. The next year, when the gold fever broke out, he crossed the plains to California, but soon after returned to his old home in Ohio, and was elected a member of the Board of Pubhc Works, for several terms. In 1857 he was 54 GENERAL JAMES BLAIR STEEDMAN. elected Pubhc Printer by the Congress of the United States. In i860 he was chosen a delegate to the Na tional Democratic Convention, which first met at Charleston, South Carolina, and afterward adjourned to Baltimore, He was a firm supporter of Douglas throughout the long and bitter struggle. He was a Major-General in the Ohio Militia, and held the office until he took the field, at the head of a regiment in 1861. He was also the publisher of the Times, the only Democratic paper in Toledo, where he practiced law. The moment the news came that Fort Sumter had been fired on, his paper was ablaze with warlike ardor, and he began at once to raise the 14th Ohio In fantry, and within nine days after the surrender of Fort Sumter, his regiment was in camp at Cleveland, being drilled and organized. They foughtat Philippi, Laurel Hill and Carrick's Ford in the three months' service. The regiment re-enlisted for the war, and in the Autumn of 1861 was sent into Kentucky. July 17, 1862, he was appointed Brigadier-General of Volun teers, and took part in the battle of Perryville. It was at the battle of Chicamauga that General Steedman displayed most conspicuously the energy, courage and tenacity which formed a part of his character. His division had been posted at Red House Bridge, and he was ordered to hold that point at all hazzards. The battle raged hotter and hotter, and no enemy appeared to threaten his position. He knew that the army was hard pressed. The fight on the 19th was indecisive. Next day Longstreet's Corps, fresh from Virginia, came GENERAL JAMES BLAIR STEEDMAN. 55 into action with fierce and relentless ardor. Soon the right of the Union Army was pierced, and the com mander, carried away by the flying mass, retired to Chattanooga. The center and left, under General Thomas, held its own with indomitable tenacity. Again and again it repelled the fiercest assaults made upon it. At last, without any other orders than those which came to them from the sounds of battle, the Reserve Corps, Steedman's division leading, marched to the aid of the imperiled veterans, who were having a life and death struggle with the enemy. About 3 p. m. they came up on the right, where the contest was raging hottest, and at once, w^ith loud cheers, rushed into the thickest of the fight. He drove the enemy from his position and occupied both the ridge and the gorge. Here the slaughter was frightful. The victory was won at a fearful cost, but the army was saved, and he won the title of "Old Chicamauga," and was pro moted to be a Major-General. In the reorganization which preceded the Atlanta campaign. General Steedman was assigned to the command of the District of the Etowah, including the lines from the Tennessee to the Etowah Rivers, with Chattanooga as the headquarters. It was a command which required the exercise of great energy, activity and skill; for on his success in maintaining the lines of communication depended not merely the welfare, but the very existence of the grand army under General Sherman. There was never a time during his four months campaign that the army wanted anything nec- 56 GENERAL JAMES BLAIR STEEDMAN. cessary for its operations. When it became evident, in November, 1864, that the rebel army under Hood, meant to invade Tennessee, General Steedman gathered together all the troops that could be spared in his dis trict, and joined General Thomas at Nashville. In the battle of Nashville his troops opened the fight, and the next day was among the first to break over the enemy's works, when the rebel left gave way, in the afternoon, and pursued the retreating foe until after dark. His troops were made up in about equal num bers of white and colored regiments. He used to indulge in sarcastic laughter as he remembered his presence at the Charleston convention, and to wonder how his Southern Democratic friends would enjoy seeing him "fighting a nigger division." In the pur suit of Hood's army, he led his troops through a hard and difficult march to Tuscumbia, and then returned to Chattanooga. After the fighting was over, he was assigned to the command of the State of Georgia, holding his position until in July 1866, when he re signed. He was appointed by President Johnson Collector of Internal Revenue at New Orleans. After this he was elected for two years to the State Senate in Ohio. In 1873 he was a member of the constitu tional convention of the State. In his last years he edited the Toledo Democrat, and was also chief of the pohce of that city at the time of his death. Few men have had a wider or more varied public experience. His military career was especially brilliant, and whatever faults he may have had, he was, by nature, frank, generous, brave and earnest. MAJOR-GENERAL JOSEPH J. REYNOLDS. 57 MAJOR-GENERAL JOSEPH J. REYNOLDS. Major-General Joseph J. Reynolds, our Division Commander from March to October, 1863, and in the battles of Hoover's Gap and Chicamauga, was born in Kentucky. He graduated from West Point in 1843, and was an Assistant Professor there from 1846 to 1855. He was promoted ist Lieutenant of the 3d Artillery in March, 1847; resigned, Februar)' 28, 1857; was Professor of Mechanics and Engineering in Washington University, St. Louis, from 1S56, to i860. When the Rebellion began he was in business at New Orleans, and his patriotism was aroused to the highest pitch by the scenes he witnessed. He was sought by Governor Morton, who appointed him Colonel of the loth Indiana Infantry on the 27th of April. He was made a Brigadier-General of Volunteers by the Presi dent on the 17th of May, 1S61, and Major-General of Volunteers, November 29, 1S65. General Reynolds was assigned to the command of the 1st Brigade of the Army of Occupation on the 24th of July, 1S61, numbering about 6,000 men, and defeated General Lee in the Cheat Mountain Campaign. The great Confederate strategist was defeated in his combi nations by the genius of General Reynolds. In Novem ber and December, 1862, he was in command of forces in Kentucky. In January, 1863, his division was ordered to Murfreesboro. In April, with a large force, he made a successful raid on the enemy, and in the 58 MAJOR-GENERAL THOMAS J. WOODS. Summer and Fall campaign his division took a most active part. After the battle of Chicamauga, General Reynolds was Chief of Staff, with General George H. Thomas, in the Department of the Cumberland, frora from October to December, 1863. He was assigned to the command of the 19th Corps, July 7i 1864, and organized the forces for the capture of Mobile and Forts Gaines and Morgan. He commanded the Depart ment of the Arkansas from November, 1864, to April 25, 1866. March 2,- 1867, he was brevetted Brigadier- General and Major-General in the U. S. Army, for ser vices at Chicamauga and Missionary Ridge. He was made Colonel of the 26th U. S. Infantry, July 28, 1886, and transferred to the 3d Cavalry, December 16, 1870. He is now a General in the Regular Army. MAJOR-GENERAL THOMAS J. WOODS. Major-General Thomas J. Woods was our Division Commander from in October, 1863, to April, 1864. He was born in Munfordville, Ky., September 25, 1825. Graduated at West Point in 1845, being assigned to the Corps of Topogi'aphical Engineers, with orders to re port to General Taylor at Corpus Christi, in Mexico. He took part in the battles of Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma, and was especially commended in the official reports of General Taylor. At Monterey he was transferred to the 2d Dragoons. Hewas brevetted for gallant conduct at Buena Vista. From 1848 to MAJ. GEN. THOS. J. WOOD. MAJOR-GENERAL THOMAS J. WOODS. 59 1S54 he served on the frontiers of Texas with his regi- iTient — five years of the time as Adjutant. In 1855 he was transferred to the ist Cavalry, as Captain, and served on the Western frontier and in Indian wars until 1859. Then, getting a leave of absence, he trav elled a year in Europe. October 11, 1861, he was ap pointed Brigadier-General of Volun feers, ordered to report to General Sherman, and was given command of a division at Bardstown, Ky. He campaigned in eastern Kentucky and Tennessee. By rapid marching he was in the battle at Shiloh, on the 7th of April, 1862; was at Corinth, and campaigned in Mississippi, Tennessee and Kentucky, in pursuit of Bragg's army; at Perryville in the pursuit, his division holding its position at Stone River. The rebel General Polk, in his report of that battle, says: "The position was well selected and well defended by General Woods' divi sion of the Federal army." General Woods was wounded by a rifle ball in the left foot about 10 a. m., on the 31st, but he remained on horseback, and did not leave the field until 7 p. m. He was then sent in an ambulance to Nashville, and detained from active duty about forty days. He was offered the command of that Post, but preferred to be with his division in active field duties. His division wasthe first to occupy Chat tanooga, in September, 1863. At Chicamauga his horse was shot under him. Mounting an Orderly's horse, he placed himself at the head of his troops, and drove back the enemy, just before dark on Saturday. On Sunday, for six long hours the enemy assaulted his 6o MAJOR-GENERAL GEORGE H. THOMAS. division, and w^as repulsed. General Woods, with his division, advanced and captured Orchard Knob, Nov ember 23, 1863, being in the advance of the centre of the army until Missionary Ridge was gained, capturing many pieces of artillery and hundreds of prisoners Immediately after he went to the relief of Knoxville, and campaigned in east Tennessee during the winter, experiencing the severest w^eather, with limited pro tection and supplies, and undergoing many privations In the Atlanta campaign, at Lovejoy's Station, Sep tember 2, 1864, General Wood was severely wounded by a rifle ball passing through his left foot. More than six months passed before he could walk without the aid of crutches. At Franklin, General Stanley being slightly wounded. General Woods took command of the 4th Corps, and in the great battle of Nashville he was assigned the most difficult work — that of attack ing and carrying the enemy's centre. Never was an army so perfectly overthrown. The 4th Corps cap tured in the battle of Nashville twenty-four pieces of artillery and nearly 3,000 prisoners, and continued the pursuit over a hundred miles. He w^ent with his corps to Texas in July, 1865, and later was given command of the Department of the Mississippi. Now, (July, 1887,) he is a Major-General in the United States Army, on the retired list, and resides at Dayton. Ohio. MAJOR-GENERAL GEORGE H. THOMAS. He was born in Southampton County, Virginia, July 31, 1816; and was appointed a Cadet to West MAJOR-GENERAL GEORGE H. THOMAS. 6i Point from that State, in 1836. In 1840 he was com missioned 2d Lieutenant, 3d Artillery. He received brevets for gallantry in the wars against the Florida Indians in 1841 and 1849, and in the war against Mex ico, in 1S46-4S, at Monterey and Buena Vista. He was instructor of artillery and cavalry in the Military Academy from 1851 to 1854; on frontier duty in Cali fornia and Texas; and at the breaking out of the war, at the age of forty-five, he had arisen to the rank of Major of the 2d Cavalry. Albert S. Johnston was its Colonel, and Robert E. Lee, Lieutenant-Colonel. Earl Van Dorn was the other Major. How great should be his credit, that he stood fast by the Union amid such surroundings, and when his family and State ties had to be given up, and to take up arms against them? He commanded a brigade July 2, 1861, in action at Hoke's Run, Virginia; was made Brigadier-General U. S. Volunteers, August 17, 1861, and sent to the Depart ment of the Cumberland. January 19, 1862, at Hill Springs, Ky., he commanded and won the first com plete victory of the war. He was commissioned Major-General April 25, 1862; commanded the right wing of the army before Corinth. His division was with Buell in Alabama, Tennessee and Kentucky. At Stone River he commanded the "centre," and in the middle Tennesse campaign; at Chicamauga the "left," and earned the title of the " Rock of Chicamauga." October 27, 1S63, he was appointed Brigadier-General U. S. Army, and relieved General Rosecrans of the command of the department- He commanded the 62 ANTI-COMPROMISE RESOLUTIONS. "centre" in the battles about Chattanooga, taking Missionary Ridge. In the Spring campaign of 1S64, Thonias' army comprised three-fifths of Sherman's active command, and assisted in the four months' fight ing that ended when, at Jonesboro, his troops cap tured Atlanta. Sherman, when he decided to " march to the Sea," left him to contend with Hood's army. The battle of Nashville was his crowning glory. December 15, 1864, he was promoted to be Major-Gen eral in the United States Army. From 1865 to 1S69 he commanded several different departments. He wrote three weeks before he died, when asked to be a candidate for the Presidency: " My services are now, as they have always been, sub ject to the call of the Government in whatever mili tary capacity I may be competent to fill, and will be cordially undertaken whenever called upon to render them. All civil honors and duties I shall continue to decline." He died at San Francisco on the 28 day of March, 1870, on duty in command of the Military Division ofthe Pacific. ANTI-COMPROMISE RESOLUTIONS. In February, 1S63, nearly all the regiments of Indi ana soldiers in Rosecrans' army adopted a strong series of resolutions against any armistice or compromise, to be sent to the General Assembly of Indiana, which was "wavering in the balance." For some reason the name of the 68th Regiment does not appear in the num- ANTI-COMPRIMISE RESOLUTIONS. 63, ber signing the resolutions. February 22, 1863, at Nashville, Tenn., Major John S. Scobey read the reso lutions to the regiment while on dress parade, and they were adopted without a dissenting voice. Colonel Edward A. King made an eloquent and patriotic speech, which was received with great applause, and our enthusiasm was aroused to a high pitch. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 68TH INDIANA INFANTRY. Mustered Into the United States Service August 19, 1862. FIELD AND STAFF. Colonel— King, Edward A., mustered in Aug. 19, '62; from Lieut.-Col. Uth U.S. Infantry; liilled in battle at Chickamauga, Ga., Sept.20, '63. lAeutenant- Colonels — Shaw, Benjamin C, mustered in Aug. 19, '62; was promoted from Major of the Tth Ind. Infantry; resigned Junel, '63, fordisability. Scobey, John S., mustered in July 8, '63; resigned Nov. 13, '63, for disability. Espy, Harvey J., mustered in Nov. 14, '63. Majors— Scobey, John S., mustered in Oct 22, '62; promoted. Innis, James W., mustered in July 8, '63; resigned Aug. 13, '63. Finn, Edmund, mustered in Nov. 13, '63. Adjutant- Goodwin, Cyrus B., mustered in Aug. 19, '62. Quartermctsters — Miller, Elias W., mustered in Aug. 19, '62; resigned March 14, '64. Remy, William H., mustered in March 18. '64. Chaplain— Monfort, David, mustered in Dec. 18, '62; resigned September 2, '63; disability. Surgeon — Wooden, John L., mustered in Aug. 19, '62. Assistant Surgeons — Hodgl^ins, Lewis W., mustered in Aug. 19, '62. Meredith, Marion, mustered in Dec. 6, '62. COMPANY A.— From Decatur County Captains— ,1^ bcobey, John S., promoted Major. T^ White, Giles E., raustered in Oct. 22, '62; promoted from 1st Lieut. ~f Pirst lAeutenant — Jones, Reuben W., mustered in Oct. 22, '62; promoted from2dLieut. Second lAeutenant — --. , , Swan, James C, mustered out June 20, '65. Wagoner— Lemaster, Reuben, discharged Nov. 12, '62; disability. Privates— Alley, James, discharged Dec. 8, '62, by civil authority. Armstrong, James W., transferred to U. S. A., Nov. 20, '62. Archcraft, Ivin, discharged Nov. 19, '62; disability. Barker, John, discharged Sept. 23, '63; disability. Belville, William, transferred to V. K. C, July 27, '63. Brooks, Nehemiah, discharged Dec. 23, '62; disability. Bruner, William^, mustered out May 28, '65. ' „ ,_ Burns, John H., died at Richmond, Va., prison, Feb. 19, ''64. Corl, Henry, discharged, disability. Chambers, George P., discharged May 30, '63; disability. Champ, Thomas, discharged May 30, '63; disability. Cheney, Frank, killed at Hoover's Gap, Tenn., Juue 24, '63. Clark, Albert, mustered out June 20, '85. Clever, Frederick, discharged March 24, '64; wounds. Cones, William H., mustered out June 20, '65. Dement, George G., died Dec. 14, '62. Dilks, Henry H., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Dilks, Leonard , discharged Sept. 9, '63; disability. Dougherty, Benjamin, mustered out .lune 20, '65. Davis, Isaac, mustered out June 20, '65. Druce, Levi, discharged Deo. 16, '62, by civil authority. Eggleston, John N., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Flowers, Thomas. Flowers, Alfred, discharged Sept. 25, '63; disability. Fortune, James, discharged Nov. 13, '62; disability r^ Gervon, Dudley, mustered out June 20, "65. Hannapry, James, mustered out June 20, '65. Hesler, Frank, mustered out June 20, '65. Hervey James H., discharged Nov. 14, ,63; disability. Hunt, Omer, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Hurt, William, transferred to U. S. A., Dec. 19, '62. Jenkins, William, mustered out June 27. '65. Jones, David S., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Jones, Thomas W., mustered out June W, '65. Kappas. Jonn, Kitcher. William, transferred to V. R. C, Nov. 23, '63. ""Lane, Francis M., mustered out June 20, '65. /_< Lawson, Nathan, mustered out J une 20, '65. Lemasters. Fielding, transferred to V. R. C, April 22, '64: mustered out July 29, '65. Lewis, James, died at Deckard. Tenn., July 31, '63. Lewis, John, discharged Dec. 23, '62, by civil authority. Lowe, John, discharged Dee. 27, '62, by civil authority. 66, 'REQI^MENTAL RpSTER. 'Maple, Francis M., traj»^ferred U. S. A.,^ov. 20, '6l Maple, Jasper, mustered out June 20. '65. i/\ I. Marlin, William, transferred Co. "F." Matthews. John, transferred 19th U. S. Infantry. , ' , MoCune, George F.. discharged Dec. 7, '62, by civil authority. , McCune, Robert, discharged Dec. 7, '62, by civil authority/^ . .^/TIM McShane, Frank, mustered out June 20. '65, as Corporal. 'f'*''*''^ ' Miller, William, mustered out June 20, '65' as Corporal. "^ Mitchell, William B., discharged Nov. 19, '62; disability. Myers, Harmon, discharged Dec. 26, '62, by civiU authority, Nisely, James R., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Nolan, Joseph L., died at Louisville Ky., Sept. 26, '63. y Potter, William M. M.. discharged Dec. 9, '62, by.civil/auUiority. - Renegan, John H„ mustered out J une 20, '65. Rex, David, mustered out June 20. '65. Scott, Joseph M., transferred llth U. S. Infantry, Dec. 19, '62. Sloan, James L., mustered out June 7. '65. Spencer, James H., transferred llth U. S. Infantry, Dec. 19, '62. Wiley, Andrew J., mustered out June 7, '65. Williams. John W. , mustered out Jnly 20, '65. Williamson, Andrew, discharged Dec. 11, '62, by civil authority. Wilson, Aaron, transferred V. R. C. Woods, Cornelius, transferred 18th U. S. Infantry, Nov. 19, '62.'. Woodford. Robert, died at Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 16, '64. Wires, John, transferred 18th U. S. Infantry, Nov. 21, '62. Recruits— Bland, George W., transferred 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Eggleston. William H., muetered out July 5, '65. Hooten, Thomas, died at Pennington Farm, Tenn., July 20, '63. Hime, Samuel, died in Andersonville prison, July 14. '64. Hainey, Thomas D., transferred 44th Regiment, June 20 '65. Judd, George, mustered out June 20, '65, Level, Solomon, mustered out July 5, '65. McConnell, Janaes, mustered out June 20, '65. Rex, Emanuel, transferrrd 44th Regiment, June 20. '65. Scott, William, transferred V. R. C.,; discharged Feb. 27, '65; disa bility. Townsend, George W., transferred 44th Regiment, June 20,, '65. Thomas, William H., transferred 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. COMPANY B.— From Ripley County, Versailles and Osgood. Captains— Boswell, Daniel, mustered in Aug. 19, '62; resigned March 24, '63; incompetency. O'Connor, Hiram, mustered in May 1, '63; resigned Oct. 30, '63. Wheeler, Charles u., mustered in Jan 1, '64; died Aug. 22, '64, of wounds, at Dalton, Ga. Foreman, George W., mustered in Nov. 27, '64. Mrst lAeutenant — Huffman, John W., mustered in Nov. 27, '64. JFirsi Sergeant — Dickerson, William S., discharged March 7, '63; disability. Sergeants— Sanders. John M., mustered out June 20, '65, as private. Hyatt, James H., died at Nashville, Tenn., March 20, '63. Jones, Joseph, transferred 1st U. S. Cavalry, Dec. 17, '62. Mullen, Thompson D., trantferred V. R. C; wounds. Corporals— Vyooley, Alfred M., mustered out June 20, '65. Hancock, Prancis M., mustered out June 20, '65. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 67 Foreman, George W., promoted 2d Lieutenant. Albright, John, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Pendergast, Milton, mustered out .lune 20, '65, as 1st Sergeant. Huifman.John W., promoted 1st Lieutenant. Preble, James M., died at Indianapolis, Dec. 22, '62. Hyatt,..Calvin. mustered out June 20, '65. Musieiaris- Hair, William, mustered out June 20, '65, as Principal Musician. Hair, Francis C., musl ered out Junp 20, '65. TP'agoner— Muir, Joseph H., mustered out June 20, '65. Privates- Atkinson, Andrew, discharged Dec. 5, '62, by civil authority. Alcorn, John H., mustered out June 20, '65. Atkinson, John M., discharged Dec. 17, '62; disability. Boswell, Elijah, discharged March 5, 'fri; disability. Black, William H., mustered out June 20, '65. Borders, Augustus, discharged Deo. 18, '62, by civi] authority. Borders, Jacob, died at University Heights, Tenn,, March 5, '63. Boswell, William, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Buckingham, Lewis, died at Nashville, Tenn., March 29. '63. Bear, william, mustered out June 20, '65. Black, Benjamin T., mustered out June 20, '65. Brown, Oliver H., mustered out Juue 20, '65. Brown, William, discharged May 20, '65; disability. Breeden, Joseph A., killed at Chickamauga, Sept. 19, '63. Cassidy, Stephen A., died at Indianapolis, Nov. 24, '62. Cleaston, Harmon H., mustered out June 20, '65. Colman, Daniel T., discharged; disability. Carter, David, transferred to V. R. C, April 30, '64; mustered out June 30, '65. Cady, David N., mustered out June 20, '65. Cady, Andrew P., killed at Chickamauga, Sept. 20, '63. Dermit, Josiah, discharged Dec. 18, '62, by civil authority. Davis, Joshua, died Nov. 27, '63, wounds received at Chickamauga. Fiedler, Ludwick E. H., died at Nashville, Tenn., Feb. 15, '63. Folsom, James M., killed at Chickamauga, Sept. 19, '68. Fergason, George H., died at Nashville, Tenn., March 5, '63. Glaze, John W., deseited Nov. 3, '62. Green, Richard L., transferred to V. R. C. Gaddis, James G., discharged Nov. 19, 62: disability. Hyatt, Starling, mustered out June 20, '65. Herndon, Thomas, mustered out June 20, '65. Hardesty, Francis M., transferred to V. R. C. Henderson, John died in prison at Richmond, Va. Hontz, Godfried, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Johnson, Wells, mustered out June 20, '65. Jackson, Amos, discharged Sept. 5, '63; disability. Eing, Cephas C, killed at Chickamauga Sept. 19, '63. King, Peter B., died at Nashville, Tenn., June 4, '63, Laswell, Thomas D., discharged June 20, '63; disabilty. Lipperd, John W., mustered out May 31, '65. Michael, Jacob, mustered out June 20, '65. Moxley, Constant G., mustered out June 20, '65. Martin, Patrick, mustered out May 3), '65 Martin, Jeremiah, died at Cowan, Tenu,, Sept, 1, '63, MoCrede, William H., mustered out June 20, '05. Morris, William, deserted Nov. 3, '63. Miles, John L., mustered out June 20, '65. Monroe, Allen W., discharged Nov. 10, '63; disability. McKittrick, Robert, discharged April 10, '65; wounds. Nicholas, Benjamin S., mustered out J une 20, '65. 68 REGIMENTAL ROSTER. Nicholas, Philip P., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Overturf, Samuel, transferred to 1st U. S. Cavalry, Dec. 17, '62. Puilim, William, transferred to 1st U. S. Cavalry, Dec. 13, '62. Parsons, Ephraim, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Rankin, Albert, died at Lebanon, Ky., Sept. 12, '62; accidental wounds. Robertson, Mark, mustered out June 20, '65. Robertson, Joseph, discharged March 22, '65; disability. Rosety, Samuel, killed iu railroad accident May 27, '65. Rozzell, Elliotl W., mustered out June 20, '65, Ratakin, Jonathan, discharged Nov. 28. '64; disabilit . Shaw, Wilson, discharged May ;<1, '63; dlsa,bility. Stark, William G., discharged Jan. 16, '63; di ability. Stark, James, discharged Jan. 16, '63; disability, Stewart, William, died at Murfreesboro, May 26,'63. Simpson, Charles, died at Nashville, Tenn , Feb. 6, '65. Stevens, Jacob, mustered out June 20, '65. Smith, William F., transferred to U. S. Colored Troops Dec. 16, '62. Stricklin, David, deserted Oct. 2 , '62 Sutton, Thomas W., musl ered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Turl, Joshua, killed at Chickamauga Sept. 20, '63. Tyre, William, died at Indianapolis Dec. 19, '62, Wooley, Daniel, died at Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 10, '63 VVhitaker, Thomas, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Wooley, Cory A., transferred to V. R. C , Feb. 15, '64. Wooley, William B , transferred to V. R. C, Feb. 15, '64; mustered out June 30, '65. Williams, Eli., mustered out June 20 '65. Reai'uits- Alcorn, William P., discharged Nov. 10, '63; disability. Hyatt, James W., transferred to 44th Regiment June 20, '65. Hyatt, Wilson, transferred to 44th Regiment June 20, '65. Hodshier, Victor D., transferred to 44th Regiment Jane 20, '65 Jennings, Jesse, transferred to 44th Regiment June 20, '65. Lattimore, John, transferred to 44th Regiment June 20, '65. Short, Alfred P., transferred to 44th Regiment June 20, '65. COMPANY C— Prom Franklin County, Laurel and Mbtamora. Captains Smith, William H., mustered in A.ug. 19, '62; resigned Nov. 17, '62. Leeson, Richard L., mustered in Dec. 27, '62; promoted from 1st Lieutenant, First lAeutenants— Reese, John, mustered in Dec. 27, '62; killed in battle at Chatta nooga, Tenn.. Nov. 25, '63. Kennedy, John R., mustered in Jan. 3, '64. Second Lieutenants — Kibbe, Moses H , mustered in Dec, 27, '62; resigned Feb. 18, '63, Burkhart, John, mustered in May 1, '63; resigned Nov, 17, '63, for incompetency. First Sergeant— Kibby, Moses H., promoted 2d Lieutenant. Sergeants — Burkhart, John, promoted 2d Lieutenant. Kennedy, John, promoted 1st Lieutenant. Jlnlrs, Richard, died at Nashville Tenn., April 9, '63. Milton, Curry, mustered out June 3, '65, as Corporal. • Corporals— Butsch, Thompson P., mustered out June 20, '65. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 69 McWhorton, Lynn, mustered out June 6, '65, as private, Stally. Peter, mustered out June 6, '65, as Com, Sergeant. Conner, Daniel H., died at Nashville, Tenn., March 16, '63. Miller, Eliphalet B., mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant, Burris, Charles W., mustered out June 20, '65. Murry, Samuel J., transferred to V. R. C, , '63. Doty, Ilaniel, mustered out June 20, '65, 'Wagoner— Ferris, James, discharged May 2, '63; disability, Privates— Allison, George W,, deserted Nov, 28, '62, Applegate, William H. H., deserted Jan. 10, '63. Allison, William, discharged April lu, '63; disability. Alley, Andrew, mustered out June 20, '65. Abrahams, Benjamin, mustered out June 20, '65. Applegate, James, discharged Dec, 16, '62, by civil authority. Armstrong, William, dLscliarged Dec. 8, '62, by civil authority Armstrong, Milton, discharged Nov. 12, '63; disability. Bedoli, Alexander, discharged Dec. 80, '62, disability, Blozier, George W., mustered out June 20, '65. Bunyard, William W., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Bunyard, Henry W., mustered out June 20, '65. Brooks, David, transferred to V, R, C, , '63; mustered out July 5, '65, Brooks, George, mustered out June 20, '65. Brunger, Stephen, mustered out June 20, '65. Brooks, Nicholas E., discharged Jan. 9, '61; disability. Clark, Robert, transferred to V. R. C, , '64; mustered out Juue 30, '65, Chapman, Neunham, discharged Dec. 11, '62, by civil authority. Crowell, Harrison, mustered out June 20, '65. Cooksey, James B., mustered out June 20, '65. CoUyer, Wesley, died at Indianapolis Aug. 8, '63. Davis, Henry P., discharged Nov. 4, '62; disability. Dearaond, Conrad, mustered out June 20, '65. Daniels, George W., mustered out June 20, '65. Daniels, John W., mustered out June 20, '65. Fey, Philip, mustered out June 20, '65. », Green, Jonathan, died at New Albany, Ind., Oct. 8, '62. Gross, John, discharged July 23, '63; disability Green, John, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Gordon, William F., mustered out June 20, '65, as Q. M. Sergeant. Green, George W., deserted Aug. 19, '62. Gordon, Clinton, discharged Dec. 8. '62, by civil authority. George, William, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Horsley, Isaac, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. High, Edwin W., mustered out June 20, '65 Horny, Elisha, died at Chattanooga, Tenn., April 7, '64. Hillman, Edwin, mustered out Tune 20, '65, as Corporal. Johnson, Albert, discharged Nov. 24, '62, by civil authority. James, William H. H., mustered out June 20, '65. Johnson, James A., mustered out June 20, '65. Jones, Samuel I., mustered out June 20, '65. Kay, .fohn L., died at Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 3, '63. Langslev. Francis M., mustered out June 20, '65, Lewis, Eliphalet, discharged Dec. 18, '6i; disability. Leish, Francis, died in rebel prison, Danville, Va., Dec. 7, '63. Mlllun, John C, discharged Nov. 4, '62; disability. Moslander, George, mustered out June 20, '65. McGlin, James, mustered out June 20, '65. Morford, Elisha. mustered out June 20, '65. Milliner, Amos 0., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. yo REGIMENTAL ROSTER. Osborne, James P., mustered out June 8, '65. Pugh, George L., mustered out June 2ii, '65, as Sergeant. Patterson, George E., deserted Nov. 12, '62. Potts, Stephen M., mustered out June 20. '65. Patterson, John, discharged Jan 15, '63; disability. Patterson, William J., discharged March 26, '63; disability. Ricord, Martin, mustered out June 2(i, '65. Reed, Stewart, mustered out June 20, '65. Smith, John H., discharged Dec. 30, '62, hy civil authority. Solyers, George D , discharged Dec. 20, '62, by civil authority. Shafer, Claudius, mustered out June 20, '65. Shafer, Ira, mustered out June 20, '65. Sherwood, Francis M., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Sutton, George, died at Chattanooga Jan. 26, '64. Scott Joel, mustered out June 7. '65 Swift, Richard, discharged Dec. 8, '62; disability. Smith, Nathaniel, died at Chattanooga, 'lenn., Jan. 20, '64. Snyder, Georse, mustered out June 2J, '65. Vincent, William A., discharged May 31, '63; disability. Walker, Alexander, discharged Dec. 18, '62, by civil authority. Worden, Zenas M., mustered out June 25, '65. Welsh, Joseph, died at Louisville, Ky., July 2, '63. White, John I., died Sept. 25, '63; wounds. Whitlock, Bailey J., mustered out June 20, '65, Wilson, Squire H., discharged Nov. 24, '62; disability. Wier, John, died Oct. 10, '62 Wier, Jonathan, deserted Dec. 16, '62. Worden, Isaac C, mustered out June 20, '65, as 1st Sergeant. Wildridge. James, died at Indianapolis Nov. 24, '62. Yates John P., discharged Dec. 18, '62, by civil authority. Banes, Charles W., mustered out Maj 17, '65. Bedoli, A lexander J., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65 Cl.ark, James W,, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Chance, Jolin W., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Dunlop, John R., transferred to 41th Regiment, June 20, '65. Dunlop, John, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. High, Jenks B., transferred to 44lh Regiment, June 20, '65. Murray, Coburn. transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Potts, James S., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Reese, Ortho, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Schillman. John, deserted May 1, '65. Smith, William, deserted Jan. 12, '64. Smith, George W., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. I'.yner, George, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Whitelock, Charles W., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. COMPANY D.— From Rush County. Captain — Innis. James W., mustered in Aug. 19, '62; promoted Major June 2, '63; resigned Aug. 13, '63, and died soon affer. He was Orderly Sergeant of Company F., I6t.h Indiana Infantry, in '61-2. First lAeutenant — Mauzy, James H., promoted Captain June 2, '63. Address: Rush ville, Ind. Second Lieutenant— Beale. William, promoted 1st Lieutenant June 2, 63; wounded at Chickamauga Sept. 19, '63; honorably discharged May 20, '64. Address; Rushville, Ind. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 71 Iirst Sergeant— Smith, James A., promoted to 1st Lieutenant, and transferred to Company F., 100th U. S. O. Infantry, in July '64; was wounded at Calhoun, Tenn , Dec. 27, '63; died in Tenn. since the war. Sergeants— 2d. Cohn, Gabriel, mustered out. A money-making Jew, who re moved south after the war, and assisted lu restoring it to pros perity 3d. Richie, George T., mustered out as private; killed by the falling of a tree March 20, '68. He was a Corporal in Company F., 16th Indiana Infantry, in '61-2. 4th. Burns, William, deserted Jan. 7, '63. 5th. Snider. George W., promoted Hospital Steward, Dec. 12, '62; mustered out as such. Address: Indianapolis, Ind. Corporals— 1st. Richie, James W., mustered out as private; wounded and taken prisoner in the battle ot Chickamauga, Ga., Sept. 19, '63; escaped from the rebels in South Carolina, while being trans ferred on the cars from Danville, Va., to Macon, Ga., and re turned to his Company and Regiment at Chattanooga. Tenn., June 15, '64. He was in Company B'., Wth Indiana Infantry, in '61-2. Address: Cambridge City, Ind. 2d. Innis, William, mustered out as private. Address: Milroy, Rush county, Ind. 3d. Woods, William, discharged Deo. 24. '62; diaahility. 4th. Smith, James W. C, discharged Nov. 18, '62; disability. Sth. Thomas, Daniel L., promoted 1st Sergeant Sept. 1, '64; 2d Lieutenant June 1, '65; not mustered; wounded at Chicka mauga. Address: Rushville, Ind. 6th. Souder, William M., promoted Sergeant Nov. 1, '64; mus tered out. Address: Kokomo, Ind. 7th. Caldwell, Harve.v, wounded and taken prisoner iu the battle of Chickamauga, Ga , Sept. 19, '63; was sent to Libby prison, Richmond, Va., Oct 21, '63; exchanged Nov- 17, '63, and sent to St. Johns Hospital, Annapolis, Md. ; the ball remains in his lelt lung; served the remainder of his time with Co. C., 17th V. R.C. Address: Rushville, Ind. 8th. Hurst, Isaac C, transferred to V. R. C, May 31, '64. Address: Frankfort, Ind. Privates— Aldridge, William F., mustered out. Address: Milroy, Rush county, Ind. Alexander, James H., transferred to Invalid Corps July 1, '63; dis charged Aug. 8, '63; disability. Address: Minneapolis, Minn. Bramblett, Thomas E., transferred to 7th Regiment, V. R. C. ; mus tered out June 28, '65, at Washington, D C. Address: Milroy, Rush county, Ind. Burns, Michael, deserted Aug. 20, '62 Brown, John D., promoted Corporal May 1,'65; mustered out. Bosley, James R., wounded at Chickamauga and taken prisoner; mustered out. Address: Jonesport, Daviess count.y, Mo. Bradburn. James, discharged May 18, '63, at Murfreeslioro, Tenn. ; disability. Beetem, Hugh, wounded at Chickamauga; mustered out. Ad dress: Detroit, Dakota. Bodine, Samnel S., killed In battle at Mission Ridge, Chattanooga, Nov, 25, '63. Bosley, Thomas, wounded in battle at Mission Ridge, Nov. 25, '63; discharged at Madison, Ind., Sept. 10. '64, on accountof wounds. Address: Edinburg, Mo. Billings, Abraham S., promoted Corporal Dec. 31, '62; missing in action in the battle of Chickamauga; he was shot in the abdo- mtn, and likely died on the field. 72 REGIMENTAL ROSTER. Baker, Pemberton S., deserted Sept. 7, '62. Buzan, William H. C, wounded at Chickamauga, Ga., and taken prisoner Sept. 19, '63; discharged July 20, '64, at Columbus, Ohio. Address: Cicero, Hamilton county, Ind, Chalfant, Wesley, discharged Sept. 8, '64, at Indianapolis; disabil ity Address: Elwood, Madison count.v, Ind. Callender, John, died at Nashville, Tenn., April 24, '63; pneumonia. Cohee, Benjamin P., mustered out. Address: Frankfort, Ind. Conrad, Henry, discharged Aug. 23, '64, at Madison, Ind.; disa bility. Delashmit, Noah, deserted Sept. 7, '62. Dale, Isaac, wounded and taken prisoner at Chickamauga, Sept. 19, '63; mustered out; died about '85. David, James B., wounded and taken prisoner at Chickamauga, Ga., Sept. 19, '63; died in rebel prison at Andersonville, Ga., March 19, '64. Danner, William H., wounded and taken prisoner at Chicka mauga, Ga., Sept. 19, '63; dieii in rebel prison at Richmond, Va., April 25, '64. Delashmit, James T., deserted Dec. 1, '62. Eagy, Charles, discharged Nov. 19, '62; disability; died about '68 or '69. Earnest, Amos W., was detailed with Bridge's Battery, Illinois Light Artillery, in the Allanta campaign; mustered out. Ad dress: Arlington, Rush county, Ind. Farlow, Alfred, discharged June 11, '63, at Nashville, Tenn.; disa bility. Address, Carthage, Mo. Francis, John, promoted Corporal Nov. 1, '64; mustered out. Ad dress: Sheridan, Hamilton county, Ind. Fleehart, David S., promoted Corporal Sept. 1, '64; Sergeant Nov. 1, '64; mustered out; was in all the battles and all the marches with the Regiment. Address: Rushville, Ind. Goodwin, Leander, promoted Corporal Nov. I, '64; mustered out. Address: Curtis, Tipton county, Ind. Griflan, William, killed in battle at Chickamauga, Ga., Sept. 19, '63. Gates, Arthur J., promoted Corporal Dec. 31, '62; wounded at Chickamauga Sept. 19, '63; mustered out. Address: Homer, Rush county, Ind. Grubb, Oliver J., discharged at Louisville, Ky., May 13, '63; disabil ity. Address: ShelbyviUe, Ind. Grisselback, Prank, wounded at Chickamauga; mustered out. Ad dress: Alexandria, Madison count.v, lud. Hendricks, William, discharged March 21, '63, at Nashville, Tenn.; disability. Junk n, Charles, mustered out. Addre.ss: Nebraska. Junk\ti, Edward A., promoted Corporal; mustered out. Address: Arlington, Rush county, Ind. Jones, Samuel B., woundt-d at Chickamauga; discharged July 29 '64; wounds and amputation. Address: Sweetwater, Tenn. Lingenfelter, Deliscus, promoted Corporal Nov. 22, '62; Sergeant, Dec. 31, '62; 1st Lieutenant Aug. 28, '64. Address: Indianapolis, Ind. Lester, Charles, promoted Sergeaut Aug. 20, '62; mustered out. Ad dress: Berea, Ky. Lytle, John, discharged Dee. 9, '62, by civil authority; not of age— 18 years. Lange, Walter S., died at Murfreesboro, Tenn., May 19, '63. Llptrop, James K., deserted Dec. 27, '62. Long, Charles, mustered out. Address: Milroy, Rush county, Ind. Lee, Caleb C, died Sept. 24, '63; wounds received at Chickamauga, Sept. 19, '63. Maxey, Mason, transferred to V. R. C, Jan. 14, '64. Address: Rushville, Ind. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 73 Mavity, Uriah J., discharged Nov. 19, '62; disability. Mohler, John J., transferred to V. R. C, Feb. 11, '64. Mohler, Oliver H., mustered out. Address; Peru, Ind. Miller, Lemon, deserted Nov. 11, '62. Nipp, William, discharged Dec. 9, '62, bj' civil authority; not of age— 18 years. O'Toole, John, discharged Oct. 25, '62; disability. Address; Morris town, Shelby county, Ind. Pegg, Samuel C., mustered out. Address: Milroy, Rush county. Pierce, Manlius W., appointed musician Aug. 25, '62; died since the war. Poppino, Silas C, wounded at Chickamauga; mustered out. Ad dress: Chanute, Kansas. Patterson, Thomas T., mustered out. Address; West Liberty, How ard county, Ind. Ploughe,Noah T., appointed musician Aug. 25, '62; mustered out. Address: Thompsonville, Jefferson county, Kansas. Pierce, Llewellyn, died at Murfreesboro, Tenn., May 26, '63; chronic diariboea. Roberts, James H., mustered out. Address: Cimarron, Kansas. Roberts, John A., discharged June 25, '63; disability. Address: Hebron. Robinson, John, deserted Nov. 14, '62. Richey, Asbury, discharged Nov. 18, 62; disability. Address: Mil roy, Rush county, Ind. Rogers, Isaac, wounded at Decatur, Ala., Oct. 28, '64; shot through both thighs; discharged April 25, '65, at Jefferson Barracks, Mo. Silvers, Isaac, wounded in battle at NashviUe, Dec. 16, '64; mus tered out. Address: JoUiette, Ind. Simmonds, John, wounded at Chickamauga; transferred to V. R.C. Stewart, Luther T., mustered out. Address; Milroy, Rush county, Ind. Short, Frederick W., wounded at Chickamauga; transferred to V. R. C, Nov. 24, '63. Sailors, Oliver H., mustered out. Address: Garfield, Chafee county, Colorado. Smith, George, mustered out. Address; Hatrodsburg, Monroe county, Ind. Simpson, Daniel W.. mustered out; was detailed by the Chief Com missary Military Division of the Mississippi, Col. A. Beck with, and went with General Sherman's army on the great march. Address: West Liberty, Howard county, Ind. Trimbly, Jefferson E., died at Chattanooga, Tenn., Oct. 22, '63, from wounds received at Chickamauga, Sept. 19, '63. Trevillion, Martin, mustered out. Address: Knightstown, Henry county, lud. Wilson, Allen B., discharged Nov. 25, '62; disability. Address: El wood, Madison county, Ind. Wilson, John L. T., appointed Wagoner Jan. 1. '63; mustered out. Address: Charlottesville, Hancock county, Ind, Walters, Payton H., shot through the left leg at Chickamauga and taken prisoner; transferred to Company K., 19th Regiment, V. R.C, May 31, '64, at Washington, D. C. Address: Indianapolis, Ind. Widner, Jeremiah A., transferred to V. R. C, Sept. 16, '63; died since the war at the Soldiers' Home, Dayton, Ohio. Widner, David S., transferredto 17th Reeiment, V. R. O, Whiteley, Enoch, promoted Corporal Sept. 1, '64; mustered out. Address; Jamestown, Boone county, Ind. 74 REGIMENTAL ROSTER. Chalfant, Matthias, mustered in Nov. 1, '62; died at Nashville, Tenn., April 1, '63; typhoid fever. Cox, David A., mustered in Nov. 3, '62; transferred to 44th Regi ment, June 20, '65. Forbes, John W., mustered in Nov. 3, '64; transferred to 44th Regi ment, June 20, '65. Smith, John, mustered in Nov. 3, '64; transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Vale, Leander, mustered in March 6, '65; transferred to 44lh Regi ment, June 20, '65. White, Henry C, mustered in Nov. 3, '64; transferred to 44th Regi ment, June 20, '65. [From Co. B.,6th Ind. Inf.; assigned to Co. D., 68th Ind,, March 6. '65.] Murphy, Jnab P., mustered in Aug. 26, '62; transferred to 44th Regi ment, June 20, '65. Mullen, Otis, mustered in Jan. 7, '64; transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Ogden, Joshua D., mustered in Dec. 26, '63; transferred to 44th Eegi ment, June 20, '65. Peacock, Moses D., mustered in Dec. 26, '63; transferred to 44th Eeg iment, June 20, '65. Eust, Francis M., mustered in Dec. 26, '63; transferred to 44th Eegi ment, June 20, '65. In January and February, '64, there were transferred to Co. D., 68th Ind , by order of Col. N. Odine, 36 Sergeants, Corporals and pri vates from the 15th Ohio Inf., Sth Kansas Inf., 15th Wisconsin Inf., 32d Indiana Inf.. and 49th Ohio Inf., and 28 of them were present and mustered with the Company at Morristown, Tenn., Feb. 29, '64. COMPANY E.— Prom Dearborn County. Captains— Beckman, Alexander, mustered in Aug. 19, '62; resigned Nov. 23, '62. Bryant, Charles H., mustered in Nov. 24, '62; promoted from 1st Lieutenant. First Lieutenants — Sheldon, George W., mustered in Nov. 24, '62; resigned Jan. 31, '63. Price, Robert T., mustered in April 1, '63; killed in battle at Chick amauga, Ga., Sept. 19, '63. Liddell, Oliver B., mustered in Nov. 11, '63. Second Lieutenant — Glardon, Peter F., mustered in Nov. 24, '62; resigned June 3, '63. First Sergeants— Liddell, Oliver B., promoted 1st Lieutenant. Sergeants- Crist, Hiram C, transferred to 1st U. S. Cavalry, Dec. 4, '62. Robbins, Jeremiah, died at Lawrenceburg Oct. 3, '62. Neff, Charles, mustered out June 20, '65, as private. Terhune, James, transferred to V. R. C; mustered out Aug. 19, '65. Corporals — Sinith, George W., mustered out Juue 20, '65, as musician. Lewis, Albert, transferred to 1st U. S. Cavalry, Dec. 4, '62. Babcock, Worden, transferred to V. R. C, May 1, '64. Alfred, Simeon, discharged Jan. 24, '65; disabilily. Stoclsinan, Lewis C, died in Ander.sonville prison, Aug. 14, '61. Eckert, Michael, discharged April 22, '63; disability. Wade, Luallen J., mustered June 2 , '65, as Sergeant. Wardell, Francis, deserted Oct. 27, '62. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 75 Musician— Goebler, Adair, transferred to V. R. C, Sept. 12, '62. 'Wagoner— McCright, Austin, mustered out June 20, '65. Privates— Alfred, Joseph, died at Dillsboro, Ind., Nov. 1, '62. Baines, James, transferred to V. R. C, Feb. 11, '64; wounds Babcock, Lemuel, died at Nashville, Tenn., March 28, '63 Beggs, Lafayette, died at Louisville, Ky., Oct 1, '63. Bolander, Chris. W., deserted July 9, '63. Borden, Michael, deserted Aug. 19, '62. Beames, Henry, deserted Oct. 27, '62. Callahan, William, discharged May 7, '64; disability. Clark, Hiram R., died at Indianapolis, Nov. 29, '62. Claspil, Martin, discharged Jan. 16, '63; disability. Cady, Rooert M., transferred to 18th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 9 '62. Campbell, James S., died at Nashville, Tenn., March 28, '63. Donner, John, transferred to 18th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 17, '62 Davern, Michael, deserted Nov. 10, '62. Darrogh, Charles, mustered out June 25, '65. Daniels, Richard, deserted Nov. JO, '62. Eubank, Robert J., discharged Nov. 29, '62; disability. Eubank, John A., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal Goodwin, John, transferred to V. R. C, Feb. 15, '64. Godfrey, Jacob, mustered out June 20, '65. Glarden, Peter P., proraoted 2d Lieutenant. Gould, Richard H., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Gould, Joseph, discharged Dec. 23, '62, by civil authority. Graham, Alonzo, discharged Sept. 6, '63; disability. Gibbs, Asa, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Gibbs, Theodore, transferred to V. R. C; wounds. Gruber, Joseph, transferred to 18th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 27, '62. Haynes, Jesse, drowned at Lawrenceburg, Ind, Oct. 15, '82. Hohn, Joseph, mustered out June 20, '65. Hamel, Nelson, mustered out June 20, '6-. Hendrickson, Abram, transferred to V. R. C., April 10, '64. Hall, Thomas L., mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. HaU, William, died at Nashville, Tenn., June 9, '63. Klinemaii, WiUiam, mustered out June2li, '65, as Corporal Koh, John W., discharged Nov. 19, '62; disabUit.y. Knowler, Amasa C, died at Louisville, March 10, '63. Lyon, Charles, mustered out June 8, '65. Moore, Marcus, transferred to V. R. C, July 27, '63. Morley, John, transferred to 18th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 3, '62. Neff, Rudolph, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Probst, Jacob, mustered out June 20, '65. Eudleson, Michael, mustered out June 20, '65. Rinerson, John, died at Chattanooga, Nov. 6, '63. Eoss, Jolin, deserted Kov. 15, '62. Eockaway, William, deserted Oct. 27, '62. Sohn, Rudolph, deserted Aug. 19, '62. Skelton, John, mustered out June 20, '65. Shafer, Michael, discharged Dec 22. '63: disability. Smith, George, mustered out June 20, '65. SuUivan, Johu R., transferred to lst IJ. S. Cavalry, Dec. 4, '62. Smith, William F., died at home, Aug. 11, '63. Snell, Charles, mustered out June 20, '65. Smith, James A., mustered out June20, '65, aa Corporal. Schmidt, Jacob, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Schmidt, George, mustered oat June 20, '65. Swan, Levi B., transferred to V. R. C, Jan. 15, '64. Snell, Abram, discharged Dec. 8, '62; disability. 76 REGIMENTAL ROSTER, Texter, Christopher, transferred to V. R. C. Tuley, WiUiam, died at NashviUe, Dec. 27, '64. Taylor, Elias, died at Murfreesboro, June 27, '63. Tuley, James, mustered out June 20, '65. Walters, Hiram G., deserted Dec. 18, '62. Walters, William Q., deserted Nov. lo, '62. Weigart, Benjamin F., mustered out June 20, '65. Wyneman, Jaoob, transferred 18th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 17, '62. Ward, William, deserted Aug. 19, '62. Wilson, John, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Recruits— Bennelt, James, mustered out March 27, '65. Crawford, John R., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Dutton, Stephen A., mustered out June 20, '65, as 1st Sergeant. Dyke, William H., mustered out June 20, '65. Ewbank, Robert W., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Grove, John W., mustered out June 20, '65. Irish, Charles, mustered out June 20, '65. Laine, Jesse L., discharged Peb. 27, '65; disability. Mavity, John A., mustered out June 8, '65. Noble, Robert J., mustered out June 8. '65 Parker, Deforest, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Smith, John L., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Tull, Isom, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Weatherford, David, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. York, Caswell, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. . COMPANY P.— From Napoleon, Ripley County. Captains- Espy, Harvey J., mustered in Aug. 19, '62; promoted. Hicks, John, mustered in Jan. 1, '64; promoted from 1st Lieutenant. First Lieutenant — Culver, Mo.ses A. mustered in Jan. 1, '64. Second lAeutenants — Bankirk. Jemison, mustered in Aug. 19, '62; resigned Feb. 18, '63. Arnold, Joseph W., mustered in May 1, '63; resigned Oct. 6, '63. First Sergeant— Showers, David D., discharged Feb. 4, '63; disabiUty. Sergeants— McKee, James, transferred to V. R. C. Standitord, James A., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Culver, Moses A., promoted 1st Lieutenant. Eaton, Hiram, died Oct. 3, '63; wounds recieved at Chickamauga. Corporals— Thackery, James B., mustered out Juue 20, '65. Parker, James, deserted Dec. 6, '62. Eaton, David L., mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Arnold, Joseph W., promoted 2d Lieutenant. Bare, Thompson, deserted Nov. 19, '62. Johnson, Benjamin C, discharged Nov. 25, '62; disability. Brunt, William H., killed at Nashville Dec. 16, '64. . Nicolai, Henry, mustered out Juue 20, '65, as Sergeant. Mumiian,s — McFatridge, Henry C, died at Indianapolis, Nov. 27, '62. Lyons, David, discharged Dec. 6, '62, by civil autI*ority. Privates— Arnold, James, mustered out June 20, '65. Arnold, Yewlis, mustered out June 20, '65. Beasic, Celestine, discharged Nov. 18, '62. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 77 Belanger, William, mustered out June 20, '65. Brunt, Samuel, transferred to V. R. C, July 27, '63. Betener, Charles, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Becroft. John T., died at Nashville, March 3, '63. Castor, Robert, mustered out June 20, '65, as corporal. Castor, Gabriel, discharged Nov. 28, '63; disability. Castor, William, mustered out June 20, '65. Castor, Lorenzo D., discharged April 16, '63; disability. Castor, cienjamin, discharged Dec. 8, '62; disability. Crowe, Henry, discharged May 26, '63; disability. Cole, Henry H., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Dubois, Benjamin F., discharged May 31, '63; disability. Davis, Isaac, transferred to Co, "A.," Jau, 1, '63, Denny, Ambrose, discharged Nov. 25, '62; disability. Day, David A., mustered out June 20, '65. Eaton, Arnold P., discharged Oct. 14, '63; disability. Fulmer, David, died at Murfreesboro, May 29, '63, Glaus, Nicholas, transferred V. R. C. Gursllng, George, deserted Sept, 2, '62, Hausman, Charles, died at Chattanooga, Jan. 14, '65. Hiner, John, discharged Dec. 29, '62; disability, Harrel, Joshua, deserted Nov, 19 , '62. Houck, Franklinrmustered out June 20, '65. Hardy, Henry, discharged Dec. 8, '6?, by civil authority. Holloway, James L., transferred V. R. C, July 27, '63. Jones, James, mustered out June 20, '65. Kermickle, John, died at Indianapolis. Deo. 18, '62. Lewis, Nathan W., discharged Dec. 8, '62, by civil authority. Lines. David O., discharged Nov. 15, '62; disability. lewis, Isaac, transferred V. R C, Aug. 11, '63. Lines, Enocli, mustered out, June 7 '65, as Sergeant. Lozia, Martin B., deserted Nov. 19 '62. Lutz, Michael, mustered out June 20, '65. Lyons, William H., deserted Jan 10, '63. Luxx, George, deserted Aug. 26, '62. Lamb, Michael, discharged Nov. 24, '62; disabiUty. McQuaue, Andrew, mustered out June 20, 65. McKee, Homer B., died at Indianapolis, Dec. 7, '62. McLaughlin, John U., mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Moore, Stephen J., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Mace, Fleming, discharged , '63; disability. Pollman, John, discharged May 25, '63; disability. Parker, Stephen A., killed at Chicamauga, Sept. 19, '63. Porter, Robert L., died at Murfreesboro. July 8, '63; accidental w'ds. Parker, Harvey J., mustered out Jnne 20, '65, as Corporal. Peteman, Lewis, discharged June 18, '63; disability. Ralph, George W. A. J., died in Ander.sonvUle prison, Aug. 19, '64. Beinier, James L., died at Indianapolis, Nov. 25, '62. Runion, Johu H., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Shill, Joseph, mustered out June 20, '65, as 1st Sergeant. Shackleford, Erastus, discharged May 31, '63; disability. Showers, Benjamin, transferred V. R. C, Sept. 12, '63. Stackhouse, George H., discharged Dec. 20, '62, by civil authority. Skinnims, James, mustered out June 20, '65. Skinner, Joseph, discharged Dec. 8, '62, by civil authority. Thackery, Thomas B., mustered out June 20, '65 Thackery, Thomas E., mustered out June 20, '65. Thackery, Jaco,b C, mustered out June 2ii, '65 Thackery, Stephen, discharged April 3, '63; disabUity. Toy, Ephraim, discharged May 17, '63 disability. Victory, John, mustered out Jun ¦ 20, '65. White, Seth, mustered out June 20, '65. 78 REGIMENTAL ROSTER. WilUams, WilUam G., deserted Nov. 19, '62. Waters, John, transferred V. R. C. Wantling, William, discharged Dee. 2, '62, by civil authority. Winkleman, Johu K., mustered out J une 2u, '65. Williams, William, transferred V. R. C. Recruits — fdkins, George W., transferred 44th Regiment, June 20, '65, lliott, John B., transferred 41th Regiment, June 20, '65. Fortune, Lewis, transferred 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Leeman, Charles, died at Nashville, Sept. 15, '83. Martin, William M., transferred llth IT. S. Infantry, Dec. — , '62. Steele, John S., mustered out June 20, '65. Stackhouse, David, died at Indianapolis, Nov. 17, '62. COMPANY G.— From Franklin County, Beookville and Fairfield. Captains — Lynn, Lawrence V. G., mustered in Aug. 19, '63; resigned March 4, '63. Claypool, George W., mustered in May 1, '63; promoted from lst Lieutenant; dishonorably dismissed April 27, '65; cause: con duct unbecoming an ofiicer; dismissal revoked Aug. 18, '65, and honorably discharged to date April 27, '65. First Lieutenants — Clark, Joseph R., mustered in May ], '63: promoted from 2d Lieu tenant; dishonorably dismissed Aug. 9, '63. Hoisted, Oliver B., mustered in Aug. 29, '64. Second Lieutenants — Webb, Austin, mustered iu Aug. 19, '62; resigned Nov. 29, '62. Moore, Climpson B., mustered in May 1, '63; resigned Dec. 2, '63. First Sergeant — Clark, Joseph R., promoted 2d Lieutenant. Sergeants- Wilson, George, discharged June29, '63. Moore, Climpson B., promoted 2d Lieutenant. Smith. Edward C, discharged Dec. 22, '62. McReady, Samuel, transferred V. R. C. ; mustered out July 5, '65. Corporals — Best, William, died at NashvUle, Tenn., Oct. 29, '63; wounds. Burnett, Thomas J., killed at Chicamauga. Sept. 19, '63. Stephens, Isaac, Jr., discharged Nov. 8, '62. Hubbard, James A., mustered out June 20. '65. Dukate, James, died at Nashville, Tenn., Jau. 27, '63. Trusler, John N., discharged Sept. 19, '63. Ryman. Alanson. mustered out June 20, '65, as 1st Sergeant. Swift, Franklin, died at Chicamauga, Sept. 20, '63; wounds. Musicians — Lynn, Prince Albert, discharged Dec. 11, '62, by civil authority. Hibbard, Marion B., mustered out June 20, '65. 'Wagoner- Bright, Ezekiel A., mustered out June 20, '65. Privates — Bell, Thomas H., died at BrookvlUe, Dec. 26, '63. Barton, Caleb S., transferred to V. R. C, Jau 14, '64. Bresler, William H , discharged June 26, '63. Craver, George, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeaut, Cheney, Edmund J,, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Castle, James, mustered out June 20, '65. Davis, George M.D, discharged Dec. 11, '62, by civil authority. Dukate, John B., discharged Dec. 11, '62, by civil authority. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 79 Donough, Andrew, mustered out June 20, '65. Filer, Charles E., discharged Dec. 3, '62. Higgs, James M., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Halstead, Oliver, promoted 1st Lieutenant. Hickson, Charles H., discharged Sept. 30, '63. Hayward, Elihu, died at Indianapolis, Jan. 3, '63. Hayward, Thomas B., mustered out June 20, '65. Hall, Theodore, mu.stered out June 20, '65. Jones, William, mustered out Juue 20, '65, as Corporal. Jamison, Jacob, died at Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 13, '63. Larimore, Isaac, mustered out June 20, '65. Line, Dennis B., transferred to 19th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 12; '62. Loper, Elmere, died at Jasper, Tenn., Aug. 27, '63. Monroe, Liblus, discharged May 29, '63. Macombs, James, discharged Dec. 12, '62, by civil authority. McCready, Jacob A., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Minson, Entiles, mustered out June 20, '65. Moore, James C, discharged Dec. 12, '62, by civil authority. McCormick, Theodore, deserted Oct. 31, '62. Miller, Lewis C, discharged Dec. 6, '62. Marlatt, Charles E., mustered out June 20, '65. Masters, Jacob K., mustered out June 20, '65. Moore, Andrew, mustered out, June 20, '65. McFaU, John, dlscharsed Nov. 8, '62. Masters, David W., died at Knoxville, Tenn., Jan. 24, '64. Mcllvaine, James P., discharged Dec. 12, '62, by civil authority. Masters, John W ., died at Knoxville. McDonald, Ambrose, died at LouisviUe, Jan. 7, '63. Marlatt, Hezekiah R., mustered out June 20, 'f>5, as Corporal. Oliphant, Francis M. J., mustered out June 20, '65. Ogden, Charles W., died at Murfreesboro, May 27, '63. Pippin, Joseph, discharged April 25, '64. Pierson, John R., died at Uecherd, Tenn., July 26, '68. Poe, Chester, mustered out June 20, '65. Parrott, Nimrod, mustered out June 20, '65. Ryman, Jarrad C., discharged Dec. 12, '62, by civil authority. Risk, Charles B., discharged Dec. 12, '62, by civil authority. Roberts, WilUam P., died at horae Nov. 2, '62, Eemy, Williara H,, promoted Quartermaster. Eyman, Cineas, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Eose, Hezekiah. discharged Nov. 20, '62. Roberts, Lafayette, mustered out June 20, '65. Staut, John, died at Evansville, Ind,, Jan, 23, '64. Stilwell, David, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Skinner, Theodore, mustered out June 20, '65. Shepperd, Thomas C, promoted Quartermaster 146th Regiment. Stephens, Isaac J., mastered out June 20, '65. Sims James L., discharged Dec. 6. '62. Templeton, Oliver G., discharged Sept. 30, '63. Van Metre, Joseph N., died at Murfreesboro, July 13, '63. Warne, Elijah, died at LouisviUe, April 14, '64. Wallace. William J., mustered out Jure 20, '65. WhUe, Melville B., discharged Dec. 7, '62. West, Andrew H., raustered out June 20, '65. Weaver, WiUiam H., transferred to llth U. S. Infantry, Nov. 22, '62. Wright, Puller, discharged Feb. 4, '63. Yates, Thomas B., mustered out June 20, '65. Yates, Daniel, mustered out June 20, '65. Armstrong, Williara F., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Bird, WUUam A., discharged Dec, 8, '64; wounds. Coil, John E., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. 8o REGIMENTAL ROSTER. Glover, Lafayette, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Gall, Raphael, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. ' Higgs, George W.. transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Howard, Thomas J., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Lewis, Isaac, transferred to 41th Regiraent, June 20, '65. Moulton, George W., mustered out July 21, '65. McCarty, William, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Reed, Zachariah, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. ' Smith, Jeremiah W., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Swift, Richard M., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Smith, Henry, transferred to 44th Regiment, Juue 20, '65. Smith, James, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. COMPANY H.— From Franklin County, Beookville and Mt. Carmel. Captains— Finn, Edmund, mustered in Aug. 19, '62; promoted Major. Wilkinson, Prancis M., mustered in Jan. 1, '64; promoted from 1st Lieutenant. First Lieutenant — Davis, John M., mustered in May 28, '64. Second LieiUenants — Buckingham, Levi W., mustered iu Aug. 19, '62; resigned Feb. 18, '63. Case, Elijah H., mustered in May 1, '63; resigned March 14, '64. FKrst Sergeant — Washburne, William S., mustered out June 20, '65, as private. Sergea.nts— Case, Elijah H., promoted 2d Lieutenant. Stringer, Shadrack, mustered out June 20, '65, as 1st Sergeant. Davis, John M., promoted 1st Lieutenant. Jeffries, Lycurgus, mustered out June 7,.'65, as private. Corporals — Blew, Samuel, transferred to V. R. C, April 28, '64. Johnson, Nicholas V., discharged Nov. 15, '62; disability. Davis, Nathan, discharged Nov. 22, '62; disability. Jones, John M., died at home, Dec. 9, '62. Backhouse, Theo. P., mustered out June 20, '65. Bradburn, Henry, deserted Nov. 12, '62. Harrell, John C,, died at Nashville, Tenn., July 20, '63. Lyons, Zachariati, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Musicians — Harper, Rufus, mustered out June 20, '65. Baker, Samuel R., discharged March 9, '63; disability. Privates — Alvey, William, deserted Sept. 1, '62. Baker, David G., died at Chattanooga, Oct. 2, '63; wounds. Budemeyer, Dietrich, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Bickle, Henry, transferred to V. R. C, May 31, '64; wounds. Baker, WUliam M., discharged Nov. 23, '62; disability. Baker, David, Jr , discharged Dec. 18, '63, by civil authority. Barber, John, died at Knoxville, Tenn., Jan. 16. '64. Best, William H., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Barricman, Martin C, deserted Dec. 29, '62. Burns, Thomas, mustered out June 20, '65. Burth, John, transferred to V. R. C, July 27, '63. Campbell, George W., mustered out June 20, '65. Cummins, Elbert M„ transferred to V. R. C, May 31, '64; wounds. Carson, James B., mustered out June 20, '65. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. Crocker^Wesley, discharged April 21, '63; disability. Oregar, Elmore W., died at Nashville Juue 2, '63. Dunham, Aaron, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Feary, Charles, mustered out June 20, '65. Farmer, John A ., transferred to V. R. C. ; mustered out June 28, '65 Ferguson, Thomas A., transferred to 18th U. S. Infantry, Oct. 9, '62! Gleason, William, mustered out June 20, '65. Oage, Benjamin, mustered out June 29, '65, as Sergeant. Greger, John H., discharged April 2, '63; disability. Grimes, Patrick, transferred to 18th U. S. Infantry, Oot. 9, '62. Grimes, William, discharged Nov. 25, '62; disability. Harris, William H., discharged Dec. 10, '62; disability. HoweU. George W., discharged Dec. 6, '62; disability, Holliday, John, transferred to V. R. C, July 25, '64. Hopkius, Isaac, mustered out June 20, '65. Heep, John, died at Chickamauga, Sept. 19, '63; wounds. Jacques, Joseph, discharged May 27, '63: disabiUty. Jenkins, Alhanan W., raustered out June 20, 65, as Sergeant. Kilgore, Elwood, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Kennedy, Johu S., mustered out June 20, '65. Long, Joseph, mustered out June 20, '65. Larue, Brison, mustered out June 20, '65. Laforge, James L., discharged Sept. 14, '63; menial imbecility. Lee, Gabriel, died at Indianapolis, Dec. Ik, '62. Lee, William, discharged June 11, '63; disability. Morford, Joseph, mustered out June 20, '65. Maley, Michael, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Miller, Henry H., discharged Dec. 24, '62; disability. Meyncke, Christopher C, died at home, Dec. 1, '62. MuUin, Joel, died at Nashville, March 23, '63. Millspaugh, Peter B., mustered out June 20, '65. Maley, Patrick, mustered out June 20, '65. Parvis, Jonathan, mustered out June 20, '65. Price, Robert J., promoted 1st Lieutenant. Proctor, Johu, discharged Nov. 14, '62; disability. Quick, James M., mustered out June 20, '65. Eunyan, John R., died at Indianapolis, Dec. 1, '62. Eaymond, Lewis, discharged Dec. 16, '62, by civil authority. Eogers, Martin, deserted Nov. 28, '62. Eogers, Peter, deserted Nov. 28, '62; mustered out Dec. 2, '65. Eoe, John P. A., mustered out Juue 20, '65. Eobeson, Johu, discharged Nov. 21, '62; disability. Eust, Herbert L., discharged Jan. 4, '64; disability. Scoonovcr, Benjamin P., mustered out June 7, '65. Serring, SUas W., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Serring, William H., transferred to V. R. C, May 31, '64. SprodUng, WUUam N., died at Indianapolis, Dec. 8, '62. Smithj Benjamin A., discharged Nov. 22. '62; disability. Sprodling, Elisha, discharged Nov. 15, '62; old age. SIckler, Neheraiah, died at Palestine, Ind., Nov. 23, '62. Taylor, Charles A., mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Teegarden, Daniel, transferred to V. R. C., July 1, '63. Taylor, John W., mustered out June 20, '6.5, as Corporal. Valandlgham, Lewis J., discharged Nov. 7, '63; disability. Vessendorf, Henry, died at Chattanooga, Oct. 1, '63; wounds. Withers, Jerome J., discharged Nov. 6. '62, by civil authority. Washington, Isaac, discharged Dec. 18, '62, by civil authority. Woodworth, Adelbert C. C. discharged Dec. 2, '62, by civil authority. Recruits — Chamberlain, Francis M., transferred to 44th Regiment, Juue 20, '65. Hensler, Albert, transferred lo44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Koehler, August, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65, 82 REGIMENTAL ROSTER. Meyncke, James, died at University, Tenu., Aug. 4, '63. Newman, Jacob, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. O'Byme, George P., transierred to 44th Regiment, June 20 '65. Peterman, Henry C, discharged Feb. 13, '65; wounds. Raymond, liCwis, died at Dalton, Ga., Aug. 15, '64; wounds. Sraart, William P., transferred 44lh Reg't, June 20, '65. Williams, David, transferred 44th Reg't, June 20, '65. Washingion, James E., transferred 44th Reg't, June 20, '65. Washington, Isaac, transferred 44th Reg't, June 20, '65. COMPANY I.— From Rush and Decatur Counties, Richland and Sardinia. Captains — Patterson, Reuben F., mustered in Aug. 19, '62; resigned April 20, '64. Patton, Nathaniel S., mustered in Aug. 28, '64; promoted from 1st Lieutenant. First Lieutenant — Carson, George, mustered in Aug. 28, '64; promoted from 2d Lieut. Second Lieutenant- Brehenney, William, mustered in Aug. 19, '62; resigned April 2, '63. First Sergeant — Carson, George, promoted 1st Lieutenant. Sergeants — Showalter, Franklin P., died af University, Tenn., Aug. 8, '63. Haukins, George G., killed at Chicamauga. Sept. 20. '63. Wood, John W., mustered out June 20, '65, as 1st Sergeant. Stout. Joab H., discharged Maich 7, '63; disability. Corporals— Bolton, Robert W., ti-ansferred to 19th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 8, '62. May, Thomas T., discharged Aug. 3, '63; disability. Alexander, Israel C, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant, Smisor, Jacob, transferred V. R C, April 6, '64; mustered ont June 30, '65, Alexander, Elbert S,, discharged Jan. II, '64; wounds. Wynn, James, died at Nashville, Tenn., March 26. '63. Stage, Hiram P., mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant, Webb. William B., discharged Dec. 30, '62; disability. Musician — Shumin, John P., died at NashvUle, Tenn., April 20, '63. "Wagoner— Plough, John, discharged Nov. 4, '62; disability. Privates— Byons, John H., transferred lo 19th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 10, '62. Burous, Newton J., mustered out June 20, '65. Booth, WilUam A., mu.stered out June 20. '65. Brehenney, James, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Clendenning, Thoraas, died at Nashville, Tenn., March 6, '64. Childers, Jesse, mustered out June 20, '65. ChildiTS, Joseph H., transferred to 19th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 10, '62. Cox, James H., raustered nut June 2ii, '65. Christy. Henry P., raustered out May 19, '65. Critcher, John, transferred to Wth U. S., Infantry, Dec. 10, '62. Carson, Jovl, mustered out May 27, '65, Davis, Thomas C-, raustered out June 20, '65. Fieber, Williara M„ discharged June 3, '63; disability. Grant, Giles, transferred to I9th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 10, '62. Gard.-Oli ver P., deserted Dec. 28, '62. Gard, Williara J., deserted Dec. 1, '62. Gard, Samuel M.. died at ludlauapolis, Nov. H, '62. Gilmore, John W„ missing, Mission Ridge, Nov. 25, '63; supposed killed. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 83 Gilmore, Andrew J., died in the field, Tenn., July 10, '63. Goldsmith, William H. O., transferred to Regular Army, Dec. 13, '62. Humes, Worthington, mustered out June 20, '65. Humes, John C, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Hood, James N., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Hughes, David M., discharged Dec. 20, '62, by civil authority. Hlaberlin, Andrew J., transferred to 19th U. S. Infantry, Deo. 20, '62. Hibbard, Clayburn W., discharged Dec. 30, '62; disability. Heckloger, John, mustered out June 20, '65. Herring, Isaac, mustered out June 20, '65. Howell, Cliarles W., mustered out June 17, '65. Higgs, George W., died at University, Tenn., Aug. 8, '63. Irwin, Ovid, discharged Dec. 23, '62; disability. Klapp, "William, M., died Oct. 4, '63; wounds received at Chicka mauga. Littell, Elias, transferred to 19th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 11, '62. Letforge, Ephraim, mustered out June 7, '65. Lyon, Johu V. T., transferred to V. R. C, April 10, '64. Lansberry, William V., mustered out June 20, '65. Matherl}', William W., mustered out June 20, '65, as Musician. Mollvain, Ira, mustered out June 20. '65, as Sergeant. McUvain, William W., mustered out June 7, '65. Murray, John D., died at Murfreesboro, Tenn., May 8, '63. McMann, WeUington, deserted Dec. 25, '62; died in Canada, Moncrief, WUson L., mustered out June 20, '65. Moncrief, John C, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Moncrief, Perry, discharged Jan. 20, '63; disability. MitcheU, Newton, mustered out lune 20, '65. Manson, Patrick, mustered out Juue 20, '65. McCune, John W., mustered out June 30, '65. May, Jeremiah, transferred to V. R. C, Sept, 26, '63; mustered out June 28, '65, McCorkle, Alexander P,, discharged Jan, 25, '64; wounds. Moor, Peter, mustered out June 20, '65. Moor, George, died at Nashville, Tenn., March 5, '63. Moor, Anderson S., discharged Jan. 21,' 64; disability. Moor, Edraond M., discharged Sept. 10, '64; wounds. McDowell, Oliver P., mustered out June 20, '65. >, Ogden, Wiiliam R., discharged Dec. 26, '62, by civil authority M W;' Patrick, Andrew J., mustered out June 20, '65. . ^«i't Patrick, Solomon H., killed at Chickamauga, SeptflS, '63. /:'" Plymote, Alfred H., discharged March 19, '63; disability. Eeed, Henry, deserted Dec. 28, '62; died aJ Nashville, June 6, '64 Eunyan, Reuben A., died at NashvilleVMarch — , '63. Eoberts, Calvin T., discharged Dec. 26, '62, by civil authority. Eeed, David C, mustered out July 1, '65, as Musician. Eeed, Eeason, transferred to V. R. C., , '63. Eeed, John H., mustered out June 25, '65. Stage, Paul R., discharged March 21, '65; disability. Stafford, John W., died in Andersonville prison, June 25, '64. Shafer, John W., mustered out June 20, '65. Sheara, William, died at Nashville, Jul.y 8, '63. Sherra, James, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Spriggs, Riley, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Swope, Russell, mustered out June 20, '65. Thompson, John P., died at Cowan, 'Tenn., Aug. 15, '63. Thompson, John W., mustered out Juue 20, '65, as Corporal. Viley, Joseph, transferred to V. R. C, Sept. 1, '63; mustered out J uly 24, '65. Webb, James G., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. 84 REGIMENTAL ROSTER. Wright, Joy, transferred to V. R. C, Feb. 11, '64; mustered out June 30, '65. Wynn, WUliam, discharged Aug. 5, '63; disability. Wiley, Francis M., transferred to 19th U. S. Inlantry, Dec. 10, '62. HcGT uits • Covert, Lucas, transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65 Eglin, Francis M., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. May, John Q. A., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20. '65. Pool, James B., transferred to V. R. C, March 17, '64; wounds COMPANY K.— From Dearborn and Ripley Counties, Moore's HILL. Captain- „ Moore, Hanson D., mustered in Aug. 19, '62; Moore's Hill. Brewlugton, Robert P., mustered in Aug. 19, '62; resigned May 25, '63; Knightstown. Wood, Edward W., mustered in Aug. 1, '63; Milan. Second Lieutenant — Gould, George H., mustered in Aug. 19, '62; resigned June 4, '63. First Sergeant— Pierce, William O., discharged Dec. 3, 62; disability. Sergeants — Dawson, John H., mustered out June 20, '65, as 1st Sergeant. Wood, Edward W., promoted 1st Lieutenant. Arnold, Omar A., mustered out June 20, 65. Wood, Robert W., mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant Major. Corptrrats— Johnson, Edward P., mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Kelley, Constantine, discharged Aug. 20, 63; disability. Abbott, Monroe, discharged May 20, '62; wounds. Wilson, Oliver C., died at Murfreesboro, Tenn., May 2, '63. Moore, Benjamin P., mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeaut. Duncan, Joshua, mustered out June 20, '65, as Sergeant. Gualt, David H., discharged June 20, '65; disability. Todd, Robert, mustered out June 20, '65. Musicians- Riggin, Mell vin M., mustered out June 20, '65. Moore John W., discharged June 20, '63; disability. Wagoner— Loyd, Harvey S., mustered out June 20, '65. Privates— Arnold, George C, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Arnold, William S.. mustered out June 2i', '65. Arnold, Milton, transferred to V. R. C, .\ug. 11, '63. Arnold, Itniel S,, mustered out June 20, '65, Auston, Samuel L., raustered out June 20, '65. Austen, Williara, discharired Dec. 10, '62; disability. Abbott, Isaac M., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Buhrlege, George L., discharged Dec. 26, '62, by civil authority. Beggs, William G., mustered out June iO, '65. Bowen, Williara W., died at horae, Oct. 26, '62. Brooks, John E., discharged Sept. 16, '63; disabUity. Burlingame, Stephen, discharged April 21, '63; disability. Bohmer, Henry, discharged Dec. 10, '62; disability. Gannon, Charles. CorneUj^WUIiam H., mustered out June 20, '65. Carrv'Momas, discharged April 3, '63; disabiUty. Cravejp, Allen, died g-t Murfreesboro, Tenn., Jan. 1, '63. Childs,''Bpnjamln, discharged Nov. 1, '62; di.sabllity. Darby, Thomas, discharged Dec. 10, '62, oy civil authority. REGIMENTAL ROSTER. 85 Frazier, William H., discharged May 30, '63; disability. Grow, Michael, muslered ont Jnne 20, '65. Gray, Josiah, discharged Nov. 23. '62; disability. Gualt, Elton H., discharged Dec. 6, '62; disability. Gualt, James H., died at Murfreesboro, Tenn., April 15, '63. Halt, Samuel, discharged Dec. 10, '62, by civil authority. Herndon, Jonathan, discharged Dec. 10, '62, by civil authority. Hancock, Curtis, discharged Dec. 9, '62, by civil authority. Johnson, John W., discharged Dec. 10, '62, by civil authority. Jones, Johu H., killed at Mis.sIon Ridge, Nov. 25, '63. King, Geo., transferred to Mississippi Marine Brigade, March 11, '63. Knott, John P., mustered out June 20, '65. Kidwell, John W., mustered out June 20, '65. Laughlin, David, discharged Dec. 9, '62, by civil authority. Lewis, William 8., mustered out June 20, '65. Losey, William F., transferred to V. R, C, Jan. 14, '64. Lippard, Columbus, discharged Dec. 11. '62; disability. McGehan, William, died at Chickamauga, Sept. 19, '63; wounds. Mulvaney, John M., transferred to V. R. C; mustered out June 30, '65. Mills, Benjamin, discharged Nov, 1, '62; disability. Mackey, John, transferred to M:ississlppi Marine Brigade, March 11, '63. McKinley, James H., discharged Nov. 26, '62; disability. Nelson, Samuel B., mustered out Jnne 20, '65. Punnal, William, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Eobbins, Montervllle, mustered out June 20, '65. Shuman, Thomas S., transferred to V. R. C, Sept. 26, '63. Shafer, Conrad, raustered out June 20, '65. Shnckley, John, mustered out June 20, '65. Stevenson, William T., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Smith, John, discharged July 16, '63; disability. Strastinger, Henry, mustered out June 20. '65. Sutton, Henry P., mustered out July 20, i65. Snper, Francis A., discharged Dec. 9, '62, by civil authority. SItzger, Joseph, mustered out June 20, '65. Slautsman, Adam F. Sedwick, William P., discharged April 30, '62; disabiUty. Todd, John, mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Tanner, Martin L., killed at Charleston, Tenn., Dec. 28, '63. Tower, Alvah W., mustered out June 20, '85, as Corporal. Taylor, Eobert K., transferred to Mississippi Marine Brigade, March 11, '63. Truet, Thomas J., mustered out June 20, '65. Wilson, Arvah D., discharged Oct. 4, '62; disability. Wilson, Moses P., discharged Nov. 10, '63; wounds. Wood, Henry E., mustered out June 20, '65, as Corporal. Recruits- Curry, Archibald, transferred to 44th Regiraent, June 20, '65. Hall, Jared W., transferred to 44th Regiraent, June 30, '65. Malott, Williara H., transferred to 44th Regiraent, Juue 20, '65; Sergeant. Stautsman, Adam P., transferred to 44th Regiment, June 20, '65. Smith Jaraes H., mustered out June 2 ), '65. Tucker, William H., raustered out June 20, '65. UNASSIGNED RECRUITS. Hester, Frank. * '• Hixon, Charles H. Kiser, WilUara. McArty, William, Speake, Jaraes E,, promoted Adjutant 148th Regiment. List of Engagements In Which Indiana Troops Participated, with a List of Regiments and Batteries Participating Therein. ATLANTA, Georgia, (Siege,) July 21, to Sept. 2, '64.— Infantry— 6th, 9th, 10th, I2th, 22d, 2M, 25th, 27th, SOth, 3lst, 32d, 33d, 35lh, 37th 38th, 40th, 42d, 53d, 57th', 63d, 65th, 66th, 70th, 74th, 75th, 79th, 80th, 81st, 82d, 83d, 84th, 85th, 86th, S7th, 88th, 91st, 97th, 99th, 100th, lOlst, 120th, 123d, 124th, 128th, I29th, LSOth. Light Artillery— 5th, 7th, llth, 15th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 22d and 23d Batteries. APPOMATTOX C. H., Va., April 7-8, '64.— Cavalry— Righti Wing Third (45th) Regiment. ANTIETAM, Maryland, Sept. 17, '62.— Infantry— 7th, Uth, 19th, 27th. Cavalry— Right Wing 'Third (45th) Regiment. Light Artillery— 16th Battery. AVERYSBORO, North Carolina, March 16, '65.— Infantry— 22d, 33d, 38th, 42d, 85th. Cavalry— Eighth (39th) Regiment. ASHBY'S GAP, Virginia, November 2, '63.— Infantry— 7th. ATCHAFALAYA, Louisiana, July 28, '64.— Infantry— 8th, 47th. ALLEGHENY, Virginia, Dec. 13, '61 .— Infantry— 9th, 13th. Light Artillery— 26th Battery. ARKANSAS POST, Arkansas, Jan. 11, '63.— Infantry-16th, 46th, 49th, 54th, 60th, 67th, 69th, 83d. ATHENS, Alabama, Oct. 1-2, '64.— Infantry— 73d. ABERDEEN, Arkansas, July 9, '62.— Infantry— 34th. AUSTIN, Mississippi, August — , '62.— Infantry— 8th. ANDERSON TURNOUT, Virginia, August — , '62. -Cavalry —Eight Wing Third (45th) Regiment. ADAIRSVILLE, Georgia, May — , '64.— Infantry— 86th, lOlst. Light Artillery— 5th Battery. BEVERLY FORD, Virginia, July 9, '63.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third (45th) Regiment. LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. 87 BEAVER CREEK FORD, Maryland, July 9, '63.— Cavalry-Eight Wing Third (45th) Regiment. BARBER'S CROSS ROADS, Virginia, November 4, '63.— Cavalry- Right Wing Third (45lh) Regiment. B0ON8BORO, Maryland, July 8, '63.-Cavalry— Right Wing Third (4Sth) Regiment. BLOUNTSVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 22, '63.— Infantry— 65th. Cavalry- Fifth (OOth) Regiment. BEAN STATION, Tenn., Dec. 14, '63.— Infantry-65th, 1171 h. Cavalry- Fifth (90th) Regiment. Light ArtiUery— 24th Battery. BLUE SPRINGS, Tenn., Oot. 10, '63.— Infantry- 115th, ll6th. BIG SHANTY, Georgia, June 14, '64.— Infantry— 7th, 22d, 97th, 99th. BUFFALO MOUNTAIN, Indian Territory, Oct. 25, '63.— Light Artil lery— 2d Battery. BEISTOW STATION, Virginia, Oct. 14, '63.— Infantry— Wth. BLACK RIVER BRIDGE, Mississippi, May 17, '63.— Infantry— Sth, 16th, 18th, 49th, 54th, 60th, 67th, 69th. Light Artillery— 1st Battery, 6th Battery. BROWNSVILLE, Mississippi, Sept. 17, '63.— Infantry -93d. BENTONVTLLE, North Carolina, March 19, '65.— Infantry— 12th, 22d, 23d, 25th, 33d, 38th, 42d, 48th, 53d, 75th, 82d, 83d, 85tb, 88th, 97th, 99th, 100th. Cavalry— 8th (39th) Regiment. Light Artillery— 19th Bat tery. BETHESDA CHURCH Virginia, May 30-31, '64.— Infantry— 7th BALL'S BLUFF, Virginia, Oct. 21-22, '61. -Infantry— 16th. BUFFINGTON ISLAND, Ohio' River, July 19, '63.— Cavalry— Fifth (90tb) Regiment. BAYOU DE GLAISE, Louisiana, May 18, '64.— Infantry— 89th. BRANDY STATION, Virginia, Aug. 22-24.— Light ArtiUery— 16th Battery. Cavalry— Right Wing Third i.45th) Regiment. BATON ROUGE, Louisiana, Aug. 5, '62.— Heavy Artillery— 1st (21st) Eegiment. BEOWN 'S FERRY, Tennessee, Oct. 27, '63.— Infantry-6th. BLOUNT'S FARM, Alabama, May 2. '63.— Iufantry-51st, 73d. BUZZARD Roost, Georgia, May 8, '64.— Infantry-6th, 9th, 82d, 88th. BATON ROUGE, Louisiana, (Siege) Jau. — , '64.^Infantry— 18th. BALD KNOB, Georgia, May — , '64.— Infantry-81st. BELLE PLAIN ROAD, Georgia, June—, '64.— Infantry— 17th. CHAPIN'S BLUFF, Virginia, , .— Infantry— 13th, 20th CROOKED CREEK, Alabama, April 30, '63.— Infantry— 51st, 73d. COEINTH, Mississippi, (Siege) April 11 to Mav 30, '62— Infantry— 6th, 9th, 10th, llth, 15th. 17th, 22d, fed, 24th, 25t.h, 29th, 30lh, 31st. 32d, 36lh, 44th, 48th, 51st, 52d, 53d, 57th, 58th, 59th. Cavalry— Second (41st.) Reg iment; Left Wing Third (45th) Regiment. Light Artillery— 4th, 6th, 7th, Sth, 9th, 10th, nth, 12th. 14th Batteries. CASSVILLE. Georgia, May 19, '64.— Infantry— 9th, 33d 79th. 85th, 87th 101st. Cavalry— Sixth (71st) Regiment. Light Artillery— 5th, 18th, 19th Batteries. 88 LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. GULP'S FARM, Georgia, June 22, '64.— Infantry— 33d, 85th. CORINTH, Mississippi. (Defense) Oot. 3-4, "62.— Infantry— 18th, 59th. CHICAMAUGA, Georgia, Sept. 19-20, '63.— Infantry— 6th, 9th, 10th, 17th, 29th, 30th, 31st, 32d, 35th, 36th, 37th, 38th, 40th, 42d, 44th. 58t.h, 68th, 72d (mounted), 74th, 75th, 79th, 81st. 82d, 84th, 861 h, 87th, 88th, 101st. Cavalry— Eighth (39th) Regiment, Left Wing Third (45th) Regiment, Fourth (77th) Regiment. Light Artillery— 4th, 5th, 7th, 8th, llth, 18th, 19th, 21st Batteries. CHICAMACOMICO, North Carolina, Oct. 4, '61.— Infantry— 20th. CRAIG'S MEETING-HOUSE, Virginia May 5, '64.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third (45tb) Regiment. CHESTER STATION, Virginia, May 10, '64.— Infantry— ISth. CEDAR CREEK, Virginia, Oct. 19, '64.— Infantry— 8th. llth, 18th. Cavalry— Right Wing Third (45th) Regiment. Light ArtiUery— 17th Battery. CHEAT MOUNTAIN, Virginia, Sept. 12-13, '6L— Infantry— 13th, llth. CUMBERLAND GAP, Kentucky, June 18, '62.— Infantry— 33d, 49th. CARRICK'S FORD, Virginia, July 12, '61.— Infantry— 6th, 7th, 9th. CHESTER GAP, Virginia, July 22d, '63.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third (45th) Regiment. CARRION CROW BAYOU, Louisiana, Nov. 3, '64.— Infantry— 34th, 60th. COLD HARBOR, Virginia, June 3, '6-,— Infantry— 7th 13th, Uth, 19th, 20th. CHANTILLY, Virginia, Sept. 1, '62.— Infantry— 20th. CLOVER HILL, Virginia, April 9, '65.— Infantry— 20th. CHANCELLORSVILLE, Virginia, May 2-3, '63.— Infantry- 7th, 14lh, 20th, 27th. CEDAR MOUNTAIN, Virginia, Aug. 9, '62.— Infantry— 7th, 27th. Light ArtiUery— Mth Battery. CHARLESTOWN, Virginia, Oct. 18, '63.— Light ArtUlery- 17th Bat tery. CAMP STERLING, Louisiana, SepI. 29, '63.— Infantry— 26th. CROSS KEYS, Virginia, June 8, '62.— Light ArtiUery— 26th Battery. CAMDEN, Arkansas, April 17, '64.-Infantry— 43d, 50th. Light Artil lery — 2d Battery. COTTON GAP, Arkansas, Sept. 1, '63.— Light Artillery— 2d Battery. CANE HILL, Arkansas, Nov. 27, '62.— Light Artillery— 2d Battery. COTTON PLANT, Arkansas, July 7, '62.— Infantry— 8th, 18th. COLLIERVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 11, '63— Infantry— Detachment of Wth. CHATTAHOOCHIE RIVER, Georgia, July 7, '64.— Infantry— 17th, 22d, 33d, 87th, 40th, 74th, 86th, 100th. CONCORD, Tennessee, Nov. 16, '63.— Light Artillery- 15th. 24th Bat teries. CAMPBELL'S STATION, Tenn., Nov. 16, '63.— Light Artillery-15th, 24th Batteries. LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. COLUMBIA, Tennessee, Nov. 26, '64.— Infantry— Oth, 33d, 65th, 128th, 129th. Cavalry— Fourth (77th) Regiment. Light Artillery— 15th, 21st, 22d, 23d, 24ih Batteries. CHICKASAW BAYOU, Mississippi, Dec. 27-31, '62.— Infantry- 16th, 49th, 44th, 69th, 83d. CHAMPION HILLS, Mississippi, May 16, '63— Infantry— 81 h, llth, 12th, 18tn, 23d, 21th, 34th, 46th, 47th, 48th, 49th, 59th, 60th, 67th, 69th, 83d. Light Artillery— 1st Battery. COENET BRIDGE, Louisiana, Dec. — , '62.— Heavy ArtiUery— 1st (21st) Eegiment. CdUCHERViLLE, Louisiana, May —, '64.— Light Artlllery—3d, 9th Batteries. CANE EUN, Louisiana, May — , '64.— 3d, 9th Batteries. CLINCH VALLEY, Tennessee, Jan. — , '64.- Infantry— 79th. * COOSAVILLE, Georgia, Oct. — , '63.— Infantry- 17th. COUETLAND, Tennessee, Dec. — , '64. Cavalry— Tenth (125th) Regi ment. DUG GAP, Georgia, Sept. 11, '63.— Infantry— 37th, 74th, 88th. Light ArtiUery— 4th Battery. DANDRIDGE, Tennessee, Jan. 17, '64.— Cavalry— Fifth (90th) Regi ment. Light Artillery— 18th, 24th Batteries. DAVIS' MILLS, Mississippi, Dec. 21, '62.— Infantry— Detachment of 25tb. DOBBINS' FORD, Tennessee, Dec. 9, '62.— Infantry— 35th. DALTON, Georgia, August 15, '64.— Infantry— 68th. DECATUR, GEORGIA, July 19, '64.— Infantry— 91st, 99th, 100th, 123d, 124th, 129th, 130th. DALLAS, Georgia, May 27, '64.— Infantry— 6th, 9th, 10th, 12th, 22d, soth, 32d, 35th, 37th, 40th, 63d, 65th, 66th, 74th, 7oth, 79th, 81st, 82d, 83d, 84th, 85th, 88th, 97th, 99th, 100th, lOlst, 128th, 129th. DUVAL'S BLUFF, Arkansas, June 10, '63.— Infantry--16th. DBCATUE, Alabama, Oct. 26-30, '64.— Infantry— 68th, 73d. Cavalry- Detachment Tenth (125th) Regiment. DESERTED FARM, Virginia, Jan. 30, '63.— Infantry— 13th. DES ALLEMANDS, Louisiana, Sept. 8, '62.— Heavy Artillery— 1st (2l8t) Eegiment. DEEP BOTTOM, Virginia, Sept. 18, '64.— Infantry— 13th, 20th. DAY'S GAP, Alabama, AprU30, '63.— Infantry— 51st, 73d. ELKWATEE, Virginia, Sept. 12-13, '61.- Infantry— 13th , 15th, 17th. Light Artlllery-26th Battery. EDGEFIELD JUNCTION, Tennessee, Aug. 20, '62.— Infantry— De tachment of soth. EBENEZER CHURCH, Alabama, April 1, '65.— Infantry— 17th, 72d (mounted). Cavalry— Fourth (77th) Regiment. Light Artillery— 18th Battery. E8YPT STATION, Mississippi, Feb. — , '64.— Cavalry— Seventh {119th) Regiment. 90 LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. FLINT RIVER, Tenn., Dec. — , '64.— Cavalry— Teuth (125th) Regi ment. FLAT ROCK, Georgia, Oct. — , '63,— Infantry— 17th, FORT FISHER, North Carolina, Jan. 14-15, '65.— Infantry— 13th, 63d, 65th, soth, 9lst, 140lh. Light Artillery— 15th Battery. FORT DE RUSSY, Louisiana, March 14, '61.— Infantry- 52d, 89th. Light Artillery- 1st, 3d, 9th Batteries. FRANKLIN, Tennessee, Nov. 30, '64.— Infantry— 9lh, SOth, 31st, 35th, 40th, 57th, 63d, 65lh, 79th, soth, 81st, 84th, K6th, 91st, 120th, 124lh, 12Sth 129th. Cavalry— Detachment of Eighth (39th) Regiment, Ninth (121st) Regiment, Eleventh (1261h) Regiment. Light ArtiUery— 15th, 18th, 22d, 23d Batteries. FORT ANDERSON, North Carolina, Feb. 19, '65.— 13th, 63d, 65th, soth, 91st, 140th. Light Artillery— 15th Battery. FAIR GARDEN, Tennessee. Peb. 19, '65.— Cavalry— Second (41st) Regiment, Fourth (77th) Regiment. Light Artillery— iSth Battery. FORT PILLOW, Tennessee, June 5, '62.— Infantry— 43d, 46th. FORT DONELSON. Tennessee, Feb. 13-16, '62.— Infantry— llth, 25th, Sist, 44th, 52d. PORT HENRY, Tennessee, Feb. 7, '62.— Infantry— 23d. FORT GILMORE, North Carolina, Sept. 20, '64.— Infantry— 13th, 20th. FISHER'S HILL, Virginia, Sept. 22, '64.— Infantry— 8th, llth, 18th. Light ArtiUery— 17th Battery. PORT MCALLISTER, Georgia, Dec. 13, '64.— Infantry— 83d, 99th. Light Artillery— 19lh Battery. POSTER'S PARM, Virginia, May 20, '64.— Infantry— ISth. FORT ESPARANZA, Texas, Nov. 27, '63.— Infantry— Sth, 18th. PUNKSTOWN, Maryland, July 10, '63.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third (45th) Regiment. FALLING WATERS, Virginia, July 14, '63.— Cavalry— Right Wing ' Third (45th) Regiment. FREDERICKSBURG, Virginia, Dec. 11-13, •62.— Infantry-7th, lllh 19th, 20th. FORT WAYNE, Arkansas, Oct. 28, '62.— Light Artillery- 2d Battery. FAIR OAKS, Virginia, May 31 to June 1, '62.— Infantry— 20th. FORT BLAKELY, Alabama, April 9, '65.— Infantry— 24th, 52d, 69th, 93d. Cavalry— Tenth (125th) RpfimenI, Twelfth (1271h) Regiment, Thirteenth (ISlst) Regiment. Light Artillery— 3d Battery. FREDERICKTOWN, Missouri, Oct. — , '61.— Cavalry— Pirst (28th) Regiment. FORT MORGAN, Alabama, Aug. ,n-13, '64.— Infantry- 67th. Heavy Artillery— 1st (21st) Regiment. PORT GAINES, Alabama, Aug. 5-8, '64.— Infantry— 67th. Heavy Artillery— Ist (21st) Regiment. FARMINGTON, Tennessee, Oct. 7,, '63.— Infantry— 17th. Light Ar tillery— ISth Battery. " FJRONT ROYAL, Virginia, May 23, '62.-Infantry-27th. June 12, FIVE FORKS, Virginia, April 2, '65.-Cavalry-Right Wing Third (45th) Regiment. LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. 91 FITZHUGH'S CROSSING, Virginia, April 29, '63.— Infantry— 19th. FORT WAGNER, South Carolina, Sept. 7, '64,— Infantry— 13th. FORT SMITH, Arkansas, July 29-31, '64.— Light Artillery— 2d Bat tery. FRANKLIN, Missouri, Oct. 1, '64.— Infantry— 52d. GOLGOTHA CHUECH, Georgia, June 15, '64.— Infantry— SSd, 85th. GETTYSBURG, Pensylvania, July 1-S, '63.— Infantry— 7th, 14th, 19th, 20th, 27lh. Cavalry— Right Wing Third (45th) Regiment. GEEENBEIER, Virginia, Oct. S, '61.— Infantry— 7lh, Oth, 13th. Uth, 15th, 17th. GAINES' MILL, Virginia, June 27, '62.— Infantry— 20th. GAINESVILLE, Virginia, Aug. 28, '62.--Infantry— 19th. GLENDALE, Virginia, June 28, '62,— Infantry— 20th. GRISWOLDVILLE, Georgia, Nov. 23, '64.-^Infantry— 12th. GALLATIN, Tennessee, Aug. 21-27, '62.— Cavalry— 2d (41st) Regiment. GUNTOWN, Mississippi. June 10, '64.— Infantry— 93d. Cavalry— Sev enth (119th) Regiment. Light ArtUlery— 6th, Uth Batteries. GRAND COTEAU, Louisiana, Nov. 3, '63.— Infantry— 46th, 17th, 60th, 67th. GRAYSVILLE, Georgia, Nov. 27, '6S.-Infantry— SSth, 97th, 100th. GOSHEN, Georgia, Oct—, '64.— Infantry— 17th. HATCHIE RIVER, Mississippi, Oct. 5, '62.— Infantry— 25th, 53d. HURRICANE CREEK, Mississippi, Aug. 13, '64.— Infantry— 52d. HARPER'S FERRY, Virginia, Sept. 13-15, '62.— Light Artillery— 15th, 26th Batteries. July 6, '63, 17th Battery. HOOVER'S GAP, Tennessee.— Infantry— 17th, 68th, 72d (mounted), 74th, 7.5,1 h, 82d, 87th, SSth, 101st. Light Artillery— 4th, ISth, 19th, 21st Batteries. HENDERSON'S HILL, Louisiana, Nov. 21, '64.— Infantry— 18th. Light Artillery— Oth Battery. HARTWELL, Tennessee, Dec. 7, '62.— Light Artillery— 13th Battery. HEifDEESON'S MILL, Tennessee, Oct. 11, '63.— Cavalry— Fifth (90fb) Eegiment. HANOVER COURT HOUSE, Virginia, May 30-31, '64.— Cavalry- Eight Wing Third (45th) Regiment. HELENA, Arkansas, July i, '63.— Infantry— 43d. HILLSBORO, Georgia, July Sl, '64.— Cavalry— Detachment Fifth (9uih) Regiment. HUNTSVILLE, Alabama, Oct. 1, '64.— Cavalry— Detachment Twelfth (127th) Regim nt, Detachment Thirteenth (131st) Regiment. HALLTOWN, Virginia, Aug. 24, '64.— Light Artillery— 17th Battery. HATCHER'S RUN, Virginia, April 2, '65.— Infantry— 20th, 28th U. S. Col. Reg. HURST'S STATION, Georgia, June — , '64.— Light Artlllery-5th Battery. lUKA, Mississippi, Sept, 19-20, '62.— Infantry— 23d, 48th. ISLAND No. 10, Mississippi River, March 10 to April 7, '62.— In fantry— 34th, 43d, 46th, 47th, 59th. 9z LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. JACKSON, Mississippi, May 14, '63.— Infantry-8th, 23d, 47th, 4Sth, 59tii,93d. JACKSON, Mississippi, (Siege) July 9-16, '63.-Sth, 12th, Wth, S4th, 46th, 49th, 53d, 54th, 6Uth, 67th, 69th, SSd, 93d, 97th, 99th, 100th. Light Artillery— 1st, 6lh Batteries. JONESBORO, Georgia, Sept. 1, '64.— Infantry— 9th, 12th, 22d, 23d, 25th, , 38th, 42d, 57th, 66th, 74th, 75lh, 79th, 81st, 82d, 83d, 84th, 86th, 87th, 97tb, 99th, lUOth, 101st, 120th, 128th, 130th. Cavalry- Eighth (39th) Regiment., Left Wing Third (45th) Regiment, JONESBORO, Georgia.— Light Artillery— 5th, 15th, Wth, 20th Bat teries. KIRKSVILLE, Missouri, Aug. — , '62.— Light Artillery— Sd Battery. KINGSTON, Georgia, June — , '64.— Infantry— 82d, 84th, 86th. Light Artillery— 5th Battery. KENESAW MOUNTAIN, Georgia, June 27, '64.— 6th, Oth, 10th, 12th, 17th, 22d, 23d, 27th, SOth, 31st, 32d, SSd, 35th, SOth, 37th, SSth, 40th, 42d, 53d, 57th, 63d, 65th, 66th, 70th, 74th, 75th, 79th, SOth, 81st, S2d, SSd, 84th, 85th, 861 h, 87th, SSth, 91st, 99th, lOOlh, 101st, 120th. 123d, 124th, 128th, 129th, 130th. Cavalry— Sixth (71st) Regiment. Light Artillery— 5th, 7th, llth, 15th, 19th, 22d, 23d, 24th Batteries. KNOXVILLE, Tennessee, Nov, 17 to Dec. 4, '63.— Cavalry— Sixth (71st) Regiment. Light Artillery— 15th, 23d, 24th, 26th Batteries. KELLY'S ISLAND, Virginia, June 26, '61.— Infantry— llth. KINGSTON, Tennessee, Nov. 7, '63.— Infantry— 80th. Light Artillery —15th Battery. LITTLE RIVER, Georgia, Oct. 26, '64.— Infantry— 97th, 99th. LOVEJOY'S STATION, Georgia, Sept. 2, '64.— Infantry— 9th, 79th, 81st, S4th, seth, 99th, 100th. Cavalry— Eighth (SOth) Regiment. LIBERTY GAP, Tennessee, June 26, '63.— Intantry- 22d, 29th, 30th S2d, Sist, Cavalry— Eighth (39th) Regiment, Light Artillery— 5th Bat tery. LA MAVOO, Mississippi, Aug. 18, '64.— Cavalry— Detachment Sev enth (119th) Regiment. LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN, Georgia, Nov. 24, '63.- Infantry— 9th, SSth, 40th, 42d, soth, SSth. Light Artillery— 4th Battery. LITTLE OGEECHEB RIVER, Georgia, Dec. 8, '64.— Infantry— 97th 99th. LONE JACK, Missouri, Sept. 9, '62.— Light Artillery— 2d, 3d Batteries. LEXINGTON, Tennessee, Dec. 18, '62.~Light Artillery— Detachment llth Battery. LEWINSVILLE, Virginia, Sept. 11, '64.— Infantry— 90th. LAUREL HILL, Virginia, May 8, '64. Infantry- 7th, Oth, 19th. LAB'OERCHE CROSSING, Louisiana, June 21, '63.— Heavy Artillery —Detachment 1st (21st) Regiment. LOST MOUNTAIN, Georgia, June 17. '64.— Infantry— 74th, 123d, 124th, 128th, ISOth. Cavalry— Sixth (71st) Regiment. Light Artillery— 18th Battery. LOCUST GROVE, Virginia, Nov. — , '63.- Infantry— 2Cth. LEESBURG, Georgia, Aug.—, '64.— Infantry- 17th. LAVERGNE, Tennessee, Dec. 27, '62.— Infantry— SSth. LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. 93 LITTLE HARPETH, Tennessee, Dec. —, '61.— Cavalry— Tenth (125th) Eegiment. MOOEE'S HILL, Missouri, Aug. — , '62.— Light Artillery— 3d Battery. MOUNT HOPE, Tennessee, Deo. — , '64.— Cavalry— Tenth (125th) Reg iment. MUNFORDSVIIiLE, Kentucky, Sept. 11-16, '62.— Infantry— SOth, 60th. Detachment (Recruits) 17th (mounted), 67th, 68th, 74th, 89th, Light Artillery— 13th Battery. MISSION RIDGE, Georgia, Nov. 25, '63.— 6th, 9th, 10th, 12th, 15th, 22d,32d, SSth, SSth, 40th, 42d, 44th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 68lh, 74lh, 75th, 79th, 82d, SSd, 86th, 87th, SSth, 97th, 99th, loOth, 101st, Cavalry— Left Wing Third (15th) Regiment, Light Artillery— 4th, 7th, Sth, 10th, llth, 12th, 19th, 21st Batteries. MOBILE, Alabama, (Siege) March 27 to April 11, '65,- Infantry— 24th, 26th, 47th, soth, 52d, 67th, 69th, K9th, 93d. Cavalry— Tenth (125lh) Eegiment, Twelfth (127th) Regiraent, Thirteenth (131st) Regiment. Light Artillery— 1st, 3d, llth Batteries. Heavy ArtiUery— Pirst (21st) Regiment. MARIETTA, Georgia, July 3, '64.— Infantry— 6th, 9th, 17th, SSd, 70th. MEADOW BRIDGE, Virginia, May 12, '64,— Cavalry— Bight Wing Third (45th) Regiment. MOSSY CREEK, Tennessee, Jau. 12,'64.— Infantry- 79th, SOth. Cav alry-Fourth (77th) Regiment, Fifth (90th) Regiment. Light Ar tUlery— ISth, 24th Batteries. MUSTANG ISLAND, Texas, Nov. 17, '63.— Infantry- Sth, 18th. MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Maryland, July 1, '61.— Light Artillery- nth Battery. MINE RUN, Virginia, Nov. 30, '63.— Infantry— 7th, llth, 19th, 20th. MORRISVILLE. North Carolina, April — '65.— Cavalry- Eighth (39th) Eegiment. McMINNVILLE, Tennessee, Aug. 9, '62.— Cavalry— Second (list) Regiment. Aug. 30, '62.— Light ArtiUery— Sth Battery. Oot. 4, '63.— Inlantry— 17th. Light Artillery— 18tb Battery. MAEKS' MILLS, Arkansas, April 30, '64.— Infantry— 13d, SOth. Light Artillery- 2d Battery. MADISONVILLE, Kentucky, Aug. 28, '62.— Infantry— 65th. Oct. 5, '62 —Cavalry— Fourth (77th) Regiment. MORTON'S FORD, Virginia, Feb. 10, '61.— Infantry- llth. MALVERN HILL, Virginia, July 1, '62.— Infantry— 20th. Mcdowell, Virginia, May 8, '62.— Light ArtUlery— 26th Battery. MILL SPRINGS, Kentucky, Jan. 19, '62.— Infantry— 10th. MULDRAUGH'S HILL, Kentucky, Aug. 28, '62.-Cavalry— Sixth (7l8t) Eegiment. MONTEREY, Kentucky, March — , '62 —Light ArtiUery— 13th Bat tery. MANASSAS GAP, Virginia, July 23, '63.— Infantry— 20th. MOORE'S PLANTATION, Louisiana, May 7, '61.— Infantry— 52d> 89th. Light Artillery— 1st, Sd, Oth Batteries . MOORESVILLE, Alabama, Nov. 31, '63.— Infantry- 72d (mounted^ MILTON, Tennessee, March — , '6S.—Infantry— 101st. 94 LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. MURFREESBORO, (Defense of) Dec. 7, '64.— Infantry— 140th. MACON, Georgia, April 20, '65.— Infantry-17th, 72d (mounted). Light Artillery- ISth, 24th Batteries. NEW MARKET, Tennessee, Dec.—, '63.- Infantry— 79th. NASHVILLE, Tennessee, Dec. 15-16. '64.— Infantry— Oth, SOth, 31st, ,35th, X6th, 40lh, 51st. 52d, 57th, 63d, 65lh, 68tb, 79lh, SOth. 81st, 84th, 86th, 89th, 91st, 9;ld. 120ih, 12S.I, 124th, 128th, 129th. 130th. Cavalry- Sixth (71st) Regiment. Tenth (125th) Regiment, Eleventh (126th) Regiment, Detachment Thirteenth (131st) Reginient. Light Artil- lery- 2d, 3d, Oth, 12th, 14tli, 15th, ISth, 20th, 21st, 22d, 23d, 21th, 25th Batteries. NBWNAN, Georgia, July Sl, '61.— Cavalry— Second (list) Regiment, Fourth (77th) Regiment. Light Artillery— 18th Battery. NEW HOPE CHURCH, Georgia, May 25, '64.— Infantry— 6th, 9th, 12th, 17th, 27th, 31st, .".Sd, 36th, 40th, 57th, 70lh, 79th, SSd, 9lst, 97th 100th, 12Sth. Light Artillery— Sth Battery. NBWTONIA, Missouri, Oct. 10, '62.— Infantry— 26th.— Light Artillery 2d Battery. NOTTOWAY C. H., Virginia, June — , '61.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third (15th) Regiment. NORTH ANNA RIVER, Virginia, May 25, '61.- Infantry— 7th, llth, 19th, 20th. NEW MARKET, Virginia, Sept. 23, 'Ol.-Infantry-Sth, llth, ISth. Light Artillery— 17th Battery. NEW MADRID, Missouri, (Siege) March 3-11, '62.— Infantry— Slth, 13d, 16th, 17th, S9th. ' ^ " > n • OLD OAKS, Louisiana, May — , '64.— Light Artillery— 3d Battery. OKOLONA, Mississippi, Feb. 22, '64.— Cavalry— Seventh (119th) Regi ment. OVERALL'S CREEK, Tennessee, Deo. — . '64.— Cavalry— Twelfth (127th) Regiment, Detachment Thirteenth ilSlst) Regiment. OPELOUSAS, Louisiana, Oct. 21, '63.— Infantry— llth. ORCHARDS, Virginia, June 25, '62.— Infantry— 20th. OPEQUAN Virginia, Sept. 19, '64.-Infantry-8lh, lllh, ISth. Cav- Baftery'^ '*^''''' Regiment. Light Artillery-17th ^m'en^'**°^^' "^'""S'"*^' ^°'^- 1' '63--Rlght Wing Third (15th) Regl- PORT REPUBLIC, Virginia, June 9, '62.-lnfautry-7th. PICKETT'S MILLS, Georgia, Juue -, '64.-Infantry-S6th PUMPKINVINE CHURCH, Vireinia, June -, '61.-Infantry-17th PINE MOUNTAIN, Georgia, June-, '61.- Light ArtUiery-Sth Bat- PORT GIBSON, Mississippi, May — . '63.— In fant rv— sth ii.h ksh, Jst*kftt"Vy!''''' *"'' '''^^^'''' ^""'' s'th' fis'h^.'TTg^^^'iil^i^y^ PLEASANT HILL, Louisiana, April 9. 'R4 —InrBntTrr ariy. ,i^*v, , Detachment of 52d, 89th. Ligh't ArtlUer;-lst,3d,9thlM& ' PALMETTO RANCHE, Texas, May 13, '65.-Infantry-34th. PERRYVILLE, Indian Territory, Aug. 28, '63— Lie^ht Ariiii^™ Detachment of 2d Battery. ^'" ArtUlery- LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. 95 POET HUDSON, Mississippi, (Siege) May 21 to July 8, '63.— Heavy ArtUlery— 1st (21st) Regiment. PEACH TREE CREEK, Georgia, July 20, '64.— Infantry— 9th, 22d, 27th, 32d, SSd, 37th, 401 h, 42d, 43d, 57th, 70th, 74th, 75th, 82d, S4th, 85th 86th S7th, SSth, 91st. Light Artillery— Sth, 19th Batteries. PRAIRIE LEON, Arkansas, April 10, '64.— Infantry— 43d, SOth. Light Artillery— 2d Battery. PULASKI, Tennessee, Sept. 27, '61.— Cavalry— Sixth (71st) Regiment, Tenth (125th) Regiment. Eleventh (126th) Regiment. PEEEYVILLE, OR CHAPLIN HILLS, Kentucky, Oct. S, '62. -In fantry— 9th, 10th, 15th, 22d, SSth, SSth, 42d, 44th, 57th, 79th, 80th, 87th, SSth. Cavalry— Second (41st) Regiment. Light Artillery— 4th, Sth, 7th, Sth, 19th Batteries. PETERSBURG, Virginia, (Siege) June 16, '64 to April 3, '65.— Infantry —7th, 13th, Detachment Uth, 19th, 20th, 2Sth U. S. Colored Regi ment, POWDER SPRING GAP, Tennessee, Dec, 15, '63.— Infantry— 6Sth. PEA RIDGE, Tennessee, April 15, '62.— Cavalry— Second (41st) Regi ment. PARKER'S CROSS ROADS, Tennessee, Dec. Sl, '62.— Infantry— SOth. PRAIRIE GROVE, Arkansas, Dec. 7, '62,— Infantry— 26th, Light ArtUlery— 2d Battery. PEA RIDGE, Arkansas, Nov. 6-8, '62,— Infantry— Sth, 18th, 22d. Light Artillery— 1st Battery, PHILIPPI, Virginia, June 3, '61.— Infantry— 6th, 7th, Oth. PO RIVER, Virginia, May 10-12, '^4.— Infantry— 7th, llth, 19th, 20th. EOUND LAKE, Louisiana, May — , '64.— Light Artillery— 3d Battery. REYNOLD'S HILL, Tennessee, Dec. — , '61.— Cavalry— Tenth (12Sth) Regiment. EOME, Georgia, May 17, '64.— Infantry— 17th , 22d. RAYMOND, Mississippi, May 12, '63.— Infantry— 23d, 48th, 49th. EOCK SPRINGS, Georgia, Sept. 12, '63.— Infantry- 72d (mounted). RED OAK STATION, Georgia, Aug. 20, '64.— Infantry- 22d. EED MOUND, Arkansas, April 17, '64.— Infantry— 43d, SOth. Light Artillery— 2d Battery. BOCKY FACE RIDGE, Georgia, May 9, '64.— Infantry— 22d, 57th, 63d, 81st, S4th, 86th, 87th, 99th, 123d, 130th. Light Artillery— Sth, loth, 19th Batteries. RINGGOLD, Georgia, Nov. i7, '63 . -Infantry— SSth. ROUND HILL, Arkansas, July 7, '62.— Cavalry— First (2Sth) Regi ment. ROWLETT'S STATION, Kentucky, Dec. 17, '61.— Infantry- Detach- . ment32d. EHEATOWN, Tennessee, Oot. 11, '63.- Infantry— 65th. EICHMOND, Kentucky, Aug. 29-30, '62.— Infantry— 12tb, 16th, 66th, 69th. Cavalry— Sixth (71st) Regiment. RUSSELLVILLE, Kentucky, Sept. 30, '62.— Infantry— 70th. RICH MOUNTAIN, Virginia, July 1, '61.— Infantry— Sth, 10th, 13th. 96 LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. RAPPAHANNOCK STATION, Virginia, Aug. 1, '6S.— Cavalry— Right WingThird (15th) Regiment. RIDDLE'S SHOP, Virginia, June 13, '61.— Cavalry— Right WingThird (15th) Regiment. ROANOKE STATION, Virginia, June —, '61.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third (15th) Regiment. ROMNEY, Virginia, June 11, '61.— Infantry— llth. RESACA, Georgia, May 15, '64.— Infantry— 6th, Oth, 12th, 22d, 27th, Snth, 31st, 32d, 33d, 35th, .36th, 371h, SSth , lOl h , 42d , 57th, 63d, 65th, 66th, 70lh, 75th, 79th, 8(ith, SUt, 8'2d, S4ih, SSth, 86th, 87th, SSth, 97th, 99th, KlOth, 101st, 120th, 123d, 124tii, 12Sih, 129th, ISfith, Cavalry— Sixth (71st) Regiment, Light Artillery-Sth, 7Lh, llth, 15th, ISth, 19th, 22d, 2Sd, 24th Batteries. RIVERS' BRIDGE, South Carolina, Feb. 2-3, '65.— I;jfantry— 25th. SUGAR CREEK, Tennessee, Dec. — , '61.—Cavalry— Tenth (125th) Regiment. HONE MOUNTAIN, Georgia, July — , '61— Infantry— 17t.b. SELMA, Alabama, April 2, '65.— Infantry — 17th, 72d (mounted). Cavalry— Fourth (771h) Regiment. Light Artillery— ISth Battery. SPANISH FORT, Alabama, cSiege) March 27 to April 19, '65.— Heavy Artillery— 21st. Inlantry— 26th, SOth, 52d, 9Sd. Cavalry— Tenth (125th), Twelfth (127th) and riiirteenth (131st) Regiments. Light Artillery— 1st and Uth Batteries. SNAKE CREEK GAP, Georgia, October IS, '64.— Infantry— 25th. SALEM CHURCH, Virginia, June 3, '64.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third (15th) Regiment. SAILOR'S CREEK, Virginia, Apiil 2, '65.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third clSth) Regiment. STONEY CRKEK, Virginia, April 2, '65.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third (ISih) Regiment. SKAGG'S MILLS, Tennessee, December 15, '63.— Infantry— 6Sth. SCOTTSVILLE, Alabama, April 2, '65.— Cavalry— Second (list) Regiment. ST, CHARLES, Arkansas, June 17, '62.— Infantry— 16th. SUNSHINE CHURCH, Georgia, Julj 31, '61,— Light ArtUlery- 21th Battery. STONE RIVER Tennessee, Decen ber 31, '62 to January 2, '63.— Inlantry— 61h. 9th, l,5tli, 22d, 29tli, :Wili, 3l-",.S2d, asth, 3«th, S7lh, SSth 40th, 42d, 44th, 51st, 57th, 58i.h, 73il, 79th, Xis', 82.1, 86tli, SSth. Cavalry — Eighth (SOth) Regiment, Lel'T Wingl'liird (45th} Regiment. Light ArtUlery— lib, 5th. 7th, Sth and lOlh Batteries. SHILOH, Tennessee, April 6 7, '62.— Infantry— 6th, 9lh, Uth, 15th, 231, 24lh, 25th, 29ih, mth, Slsi, 32.l,:^6lb, 44th and 57th. Cavalry- Eighth (39th) Regiraent. Lijlit Ar iller.v— 6th and 9th Batteries. SAVANNAH, Georgia, (Si. fii ) I'liiniltr 10-21, '64.— Infantry— 12th, 22d, 25th 42d. SULPHUR BRANCH TBfS'LF, Alubama, September 25, '64.-^ Cavalry— DetHChment of Niiitli ( 2lsi) Ilfgiment. SNICKER'S GAP, Virginia, November 11, '63.— Light Artillery- 16th Battery. SECONn BULL RUN', Virsint i, August 28-;-.0, '62.— In fan try— 7th, 19th, 20th, 63d. Light AiMli'i-.v— 6tli Battery. LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. 97 SPOTTSYLVANIA, Virginia, MayS-10, '64.— Infantry— 7th, Uth, 19th, 2Uth. Cavalry— Right Wing Third (45th) Regiment. STRAWBERRY PLAINS, Virginia, Septeraber 15, '64.— Infantry —13th, 20th. SABINE CROSS ROADS, Louisiana, cor Mansfleld) April 8, '64.— Infantry— 16th, 46th, 47th, 60lh,67ih. Light Artillery— 1st Battery. Heavy ArtiUery— Twenty-First (1st) Regiment. SUFFOLK, Virginia, (Defense) April 10 to May S, '64.— Infantry— 13tb. SUMMERVILLE, Virginia, May 7, '62— Infantry— 13th. SOUTH MOUNTAIN, Maryland, September 11, '62.— Infantry- 19th. Cavalry— Right Wing Third (15th) Regiment. Light Artillery —16th Battery. SAVAGE'S STATION, Virginia, June 29, '62.— Infantry— 20th. TAYLOR'S RIDGE, Georgia, May — , '61,— Infantry— Oth, TUSCUMBIA, Alabama, May 31, '62,— Cavalry— Second (41st) Reg iment. TALBOTT'S STATION, Tennessee, December 29, '68.— Cavalry- Second (41st) Eegiment. TUPELLO, Mississippi, June U, '64.— Infantry-52d, S9th, 93d. Light Artillery— 3d, 6th and 9th Batteries. TUNNELLHILL, Georgia, May 7, '64.— Infantry-6th, 9th, 22d, 48th 84th. Light Artillery-Sth Battery. THOMPSON'S COVE, Tennessee, October 3, '63.- Infantry— 17th. Light Artillery— 18th Battery. TRIUNE, Tennessee, June 11, '63.- Infantry— 84th. Cavalry— Sec ond (41st) Regiment. THOMPSON'S HILL, Mississippi, May—, '63.— Infantry— 23d. TERRE NOIR, Arkansas, April 2, '64 —Infantry— 43d, SOth. Light Artillery— 2d JBattery. TOWN CREEK BRIDGE, North Carolina, February20,'6S.— Infantry —13th, 63d, 65th, SOth, 91st, I40th. Lignt Artillery- 15th Battery. THOMPSON'S STATION, Tennessee, Maroh 5, '63 —Infantry— SSd, 85th. THE WILDERNESS, Virginia, May 5-6, '64.— Infantry-7th, llth, 19th, 20th. UNION,Virginia, Nov. 2, '63.— Cavalry— Right Wing 3d (15th) Regi ment. UPPERVILLE, Virginia, Nov. 3, '83.— Cavalry-Right Wing Sd (15th) Eegiment. June 21, '61.— Right Wing 3d (45th) Regiment. VINEGA.R HILL, Kentucky, Sept. 22, '62.— Cavalry— Secoud (41st) Regiment. VICKSBURG, Mississippi, (Siege.) May IS to Juiy 4, '63.— Infantry— Sth, llth, 12th. 16th, 18th, 23d, 24th, 26th, 34th, 16th, 17th, 18t.h, lOth, 63d, 64th, 59th, 60th, 67th, 69th, SSd, 93d, 99th, 100th. Light Artillery- 1st Battery. VERNON, Mississippi, Dec. 28, '61.— Cavalry— 7th (119th) Regiment. VANDERBURG, Kentucky, Sept. 12, '62.— Infantry — Detachment 65th Regiment. 98 LIST OF ENGAGEMENTS. VARNELL'S STATION, Georgia, May 9, '64.— Cavalry— Second (41st) and Fourth (77th) Regiments. VAN BUREN, Arkansas, Dec. 29th, '62.— Inlantry— 26th. Light Ar- tillery- 2d Battery. VERSAILLES, Kentucky, Oct. 5, '62.— Light ArtUlery— ISth Battery. WILD CAT, Kentucky, Oct. 21, '61.— Infantry— SSd. WEST POINT, Georgia, April 16, '65.— Infantry— 72d (mounted). Cavalry— Second (41st) Regiment. Light Artillery— ISth Battery. WALKER'S FORD, Tennessee, Dec. 2, '63.— Infantry— 65th, 116th, 118th. Cavalry— Fifth (90th) Regiment. WILKINSON'S PIKE, Tennessee, Dec.—, '64.— Cavalry— Twelfth (127th) and Detachment Thirteenth (ISlst) Regiments. WHITE OAK SWAMP, Virginia, June 30, '62.— Infantry— 20th. June 13, '61.— Cavalry— Right 'Wing Third (15th) Regiment. WINCHESTER, Virginia, March 22-2.3, '62.— Infantry— Tth, 13th, llth. May 25, '62.— Infantry— 27th. WILLIAMSPORT, Maryland, July 11, '63.— Cavalry— Right Wing Third (45th) Regiment. WISE'S FORKS, North CaroUna, March 10, '65.— Infantry— 120th, iSSd, 121th, 128th, 129th, 130th, WATHEL JUNCTION, Virginia, May 7, '64,— Infantry— 13th. YELLOW BAYOU, Louisiana, May 18, '64.— Infantry — 52d, SOth. Light Artillery — 1st, Sd and 9th Batteries. YELLOW HOUSE, Virginia, Aug. 19-21, '64,— Infantry— 7th, Detach ment of 191 h, ZOLLICOPFER, Tennessee, Sept. 20, '63.- Infantry— 65th. Cavalry- Fifth (90th) Regiment. YALE UNIVERSITY a39Q02