124 HISTORY OF CLAY COUNTY troops for three months he had raised at his home a company,but the call was filled and he was compelled to disband his company. From that time until he became an active solider at the front he was engaged in raising troops.The first engagement in which he participated was the battle og Richmond, Kentucky, August 30, 1862, on which date he and a large number of the regiment were captured, the battle resulting in defeat to the Union troops. After the prisoners had been paroled the regiment went to Camp Dick Thompson at Terre Haute Indiana, and remained there until the last of December 1862. An exchange of the prisoners was effected in the procceding September, and the regiment again went into active service. At Richmond Kentucky, Major William Conkling had been killed and on the 13th on December,1862,there occurred a remark- able incident of commissioning a private solider to the command of the battalion Private Carter being thus promoted over the heads of commis- sioned and non-commissioned officers to the rank of major. From Jan- uary.1863,until the 4th of July the regiment was stationed at Indian- apolis guarding rebel prisoners. It was then recruited and became the Sixth Indiana Cavalry. When Morgan made his raid into Indiana and Ohio, the Seventy-first Indiana was sent to the Ohio river to intercept the movement. During the succeding September and October the battalion was stationed at Mount Sterling, Kentucky, and in November at Somerset and in December in eastern Tennessee, where they suffered greatly on ac— count of insufficient food and clothing. They then returned to Mount Sterling and a afterward procceded to Paris and to Camp Nelson, becoming a part of General Sherman's army, joining the main army near Dalton, Georgia, about the 10th of May, 1864. Major Carter’s command re- mained with General Sherman’s forces until they reached Atlanta,partici— pating actively in most of the great battles of that memorable campaign, after which they returned to Nashville. There orders came to procced to Pulaski, Tennessee, where they participated in a hotly contested engage- ment with the Confederates under General Forrest. Major Carter there commanded a brigade and was complimented for his gallantry on the field by General Croxton. Major Carter returned to Nashville, but soon afterward became ill and for several weeks was confined to his bed at home. He rejoined his command soon after the battle of Nashville and in March, 1865, was ordered with his regiment from Edgefield to Pulaski, where, on the last day of June, they were mustered out and sent home. Major Carter was a brave and gallant officer, inspiring his men with his own valor and loyalty. Returning to the north after the close of the war, Major Carter resumed the practice of law in Bowling Green and attained prominence in other lines. In 1868 he was the Republican candidate for congress and was defeated by a very small vote, running far ahead of the party ticket. In 1868 he became a law partner of Hon. Silas D. Coffey, which continued until March, 1881. In May, 1877, they removed to Brazil, which became the county seat of Clay county. In 1878 he was the Republican nominee for representative, He was always recognized as one of the prominent members of his party and stood loyally by its interests, although he well knew that it was the party of the minority in Clay county. On the 5th of April, 1883, he was appointed and commissioned by President Arthur as collector of internal revenue for the Seventh district of Indiana. The position is a most responsible one, but Major Carter discharged its duties with the same ability and dispatch which marked him as an able soldier.