San Diego County CA Archives Military Records.....ALLUM, LEROY W. Civilwar Co. C 22 Iowa Inf. ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ca/cafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Michael Harris mikesearch@cox.net February 15, 2013, 6:03 pm Heintzelman Post #33 G.A.R. BORN: Penn. OCCUPATION: Publisher Member Heintzelman Post #33 G.A.R. MUSTER INTO G.A.R.: February 14, 1889 START MILITARY SERVICE: August 2, 1862 ENTRY RANK, UNIT: Private, Co. C 22 Iowa Inf. END MILITARY SERVICE DATE: October 5, 1865 DISCHARGE RANK, UNIT: Color Sergt. 22 Iowa Inf. Additional Comments: LEROY W. ALLUM, San Diegos first assistant Postmaster, is a veteran. He and his father, Mr. Thomas Allum, both enlisted at the beginning of the war. His father enlisted in Company C, Twenty-second Iowa Infantry, but was discharged at Vicksburg on account of sickness. He recovered and recruited a company of 100-day men, Company D Forty-eighth Iowa, August, 1864. He was promoted to First Lieutenant, and served until the close of the war. He married Miss Matilda A. Allum, a distant relative, of Scotch-English descent, and had a family of ten children, of which the subject of this sketch was the third. The family came to Iowa in 1853, and settled in Davenport. In 1856 Leroy went to Hazel Dell Academy, which he left October 2, 1862, at the age of eighteen, to enlist in Company C, Twenty-second Iowa, the same company in which his father first enlisted. He went all through the war, and came back without a wound, although in many places of great danger. He was in the following battles: Port Gibson, Champion Hill, Black River, and at the siege of Vicksburg. It was his regiment, under Colonel William M. Stone (afterward Governor of Iowa), that planted the flag upon the works, when twenty-eight men were killed in a few minutes, and some captured. They were obliged to withdraw, but they brought the colors back with them Vicksburg was taken the 4th of July following. After this the regiment was in the battle of Jackson, Mississippi, and was in New Orleans and Texas, and on the Red River campaign. They were also in the Shenandoah valley, Fish Hill, Cedar Creek and Winchester. In 1866, he, with his bunk and messmate, Thomas M. Rogers, started the Republican, a newspaper, at Newton, Iowa, which he continued until 1878, when he moved to Oakland, California where he published the Vidette, a Republican paper (daily and weekly), and continued there nine years. He was married to Miss Alice G. Israel, daughter of Mr. Mc. C. Israel, a merchant of Monroe, Iowa, and has three children, all boys; Leroy M. born November 6, 1875; Ralph L., born September 11, 1878, and Fred M., born August 11, 1883. He is a Knight Templar in the York rite, and thirty-second degree in the Scottish rite Masonry, and is a member of the G. A. R. He belongs to Heintzelman Post, No, 33, of San Diego. An Illustrated History of Southern California: Embracing the Counties of San Diego, San Bernardino, Los Angeles and Orange, and the Peninsula of Lower California, from the Earliest Period of Occupancy to the Present Time.... - Chicago: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1890. pp 348 File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ca/sandiego/military/civilwar/other/allum361gmt.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/cafiles/ File size: 3.5 Kb