MILITARY: One Hundred and Fiftieth Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, Second Regiment, Bucktail Brigade, Chapter 15 Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by JRB & JP Copyright 2006. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm Table of contents for the book with graphics, may be found at http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/1pa/military/cw/150-bucktails/150-bucktails.htm ________________________________________________ HISTORY OF THE ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH REGIMENT PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS, SECOND REGIMENT, BUCKTAIL BRIGADE. BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL THOMAS CHAMBERLIN, HISTORIAN OF THE SURVIVORS ASSOCIATION. REVISED AND ENLARGED EDITION, WITH COMPLETE ROSTER. PHILADELPHIA: F. McMANUS, JR. & CO., PRINTERS, 1905. PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS 149 CHAPTER XV. GETTYSBURG, TO A FINISH. ON the morning of the 2d, which opened with a drizzling rain, several missing men came in, and George A. Dixon, of Company A, and three or four others having arrived from Camp Convalescent the evening before, the aggregate for duty was increased to one hundred and nine. After the fighting began the regiment was posted, with the rest of the brigade, in support of some batteries on Cemetery Hill, and some of the men assisted in passing the ammunition, as the artillery was short-handed. About six P. M. the brigade was double-quicked to the left, down the Taneytown road, halting at the right of the Third Corps, where the situation was at the time alarming. Humphreys's division had been forced back from its advanced position at and beyond the Emmittsburg road, and the rebels were making a bold push to gain possession of Cemetery Ridge at this point and on the left of Hancock's (Second) corps. The brigade formed line of battle in rear of Humphreys, and bayonets were fixed for a charge; but the enemy was repulsed by the front line, and the order to charge was withheld. A little later the 149th and 150th were ordered to advance to the Emmittsburg road and develop the enemy's position. Deploying as skirmishers, with the 149th in support, the 150th moved forward, and presently secured two guns which had been taken by the enemy during the afternoon. General Doubleday, in his official report, after mentioning the recovery of four guns of a regular battery by a portion of the 13th Vermont, adds, "Shortly afterwards I sent out the 149th and 150th Regiments Pennsylvania Volunteers, who sent in two additional guns 150 ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH taken from the enemy, after a short and spirited engagement close to his line of battle". The regiment continued its advance in the growing darkness until the right impinged on the Emmittsburg road, a little to the left of the Codori House, when it was fired upon, and after exchanging a few rounds, fell back by order. Under fresh instructions, the two regiments remained on the field as pickets, again advancing until the right of the line rested on the Emmittsburg road. Sergeant George Hopkins, of Company F, relates that while on duty that night he talked with a badly wounded rebel, who said that he belonged to a Florida regiment which had been raised as State troops; but when General Lee was preparing for the invasion of Pennsylvania, every man and boy upon whom hands could be laid, and who could walk and carry a gun, was forwarded to swell his army. Before the encounter at Gettysburg, their officers told them they must fight hard and not be taken prisoners, as the Pennsylvania troops were killing all captives. He seemed greatly surprised, on learning that we were Pennsylvanians, that we did not despatch the wounded. At dawn of the 3d the 150th was subjected to a sharp fire of shells from two guns posted in an orchard to the left front, which was continued at intervals until the pickets were relieved. In returning to the lines, between seven and eight o'clock, the regiment moved left in front, and Company A suffered severely from the artillery fire, losing Privates Harvey Morris and Joseph F. Durborrow, killed, and Alfred Lees, mortally wounded. On reaching the position assigned the regiment in line, Sergeant Evans, of Company F, and several others were wounded by an exploding shell. The cannonade which preceded Pickett's charge, in the afternoon, is remembered by all who were exposed to it as something frightful and altogether unexampled. While it was in progress the r 5oth lay back of the brow of the hill, not far from PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS 151 the clump of trees which served as a guide to the rebel advance, and hugging the ground closely, it met with comparatively few casualties. When the enemy's movement was developed, the regiment occupied a position along the east side of what is now Hancock Avenue, a little southeast of the point known as "High Water Mark", forming a part of the second line of defence. Here it was joined on the right by a detachment of Berdan's sharpshooters; and when the assaulting column struck the first Union line, these and the right companies of the regiment were sufficiently unmasked by the troops in front to open an effective fire and assist in the final repulse. It is not the aim of this history to try to give a full account of this battle, or of any of the prominent actions of the Army of the Potomac, as that has been done exhaustively by men of military training who were associated with that army, and whose own deeds are an important part of the record. The scope of this work is more modest, restricting itself to a simple, straightforward narrative of the part taken by the 150th in the several campaigns in which it shared. With the decisive repulse of Pickett's ill-fated column, which had endeavored to pierce the left centre of the Union line on the afternoon of the 3d, the battle of Gettysburg was over. Whether it should have ended here is a matter which ever since has been the subject of much controversy. The writer, who, with other wounded Union officers, was within the enemy's lines, at the seminary, on that eventful day, and improved each opportunity to converse with members of Lee's and Ewell's staffs, can testify to the confident - almost exultant - tone of the latter up to the moment of the general advance which marked the beginning of Pickett's hopeless undertaking. Not one of these officers, when courteously interrogated on the subject, hesitated to fix the number of Lee's forces at ninety thousand or upwards, or to declare that at a given hour they would simply "walk over" Meade's army. The time for this 152 ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH boasted performance was unaccountably delayed; and when in the twilight the rebel lines fell back to Seminary Ridge, their movement was characterized by such an appearance of alarm, and such obvious confusion, that the Union wounded in and near the seminary were in no doubt as to the result of the fight, and looked with confidence for a countermovement on the part of Meade. For half an hour bedlam reigned in the neighborhood. Fences were torn down, out-buildings demolished, board-walks knocked to pieces, and everything seized upon that could contribute to the formation of breastworks behind which to resist an expected advance of the Union army. If a strong column of such troops as were least engaged on Cemetery Hill had been pushed forward vigorously to the attack at that moment, there is reason to believe that resistance would have been short-lived, and the rebel lines would have melted away in hasty effort to reach and cross the Potomac. General Meade, however, best knew the condition and capabilities of his own forces, and his signal success in resisting the determined assaults of a hitherto victorious enemy, equally strong, if not superior, in men and guns, should perhaps free him from criticism - certainly from censure - if in his best judgment he decided to "let well enough alone". Still, there are many who, recalling what other great generals accomplished under similar conditions, will not cease to regret that no immediate effort was made to deliver a crushing return blow. On the night of the 3d the retreat of the rebels began, Ewell's division vacating the town and taking position with the rest of Lee's forces behind Seminary Ridge, while the ambulance and supply trains were hurried off by the Chambersburg turnpike and Hagerstown road towards Waynesborough. On the morning of the 4th the bands of the Union army, which had been silent for some days, broke the stillness of the battlefield, and the sweet strains of the "Star-Spangled Banner", "Hail Columbia", and other national airs, penetrating to the PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS 153 enemy's lines, must have been as depressing to them as they were inspiriting to the federal ranks. On that day Adjutant Ashhurst, who had been hospitably received and cared for at the farm-house of a Mr. Bushman, succeeded in visiting the front, where he found Captain Jones in command of the little remnant of the regiment, and, to his surprise, met also Captain Pine, who had arrived only that morning, having started from the hospital at the first news of the battle. The adjutant made strenuous efforts on the 2d and 3d to reach the command, but without avail, pain and excessive weakness from loss of blood defeating his intentions. On the same day Frank Elvidge, of Company A, made the entry in his pocket diary, "On the road to Richmond, a prisoner. Marched about six miles. Raining very hard. All the wagon-trains are making for the rear, and I think are on the skedaddle. . . . Poor Fourth of July!" During the night of the 4th, Lee's army withdrew from Seminary Ridge, and at dawn of the 5th the last vestige of the gray-coated host had disappeared, except a few stragglers who voluntarily surrendered. As early as the morning of the 4th, scattering members of the 150th, mostly wounded, who had either remained hidden in the town or had imposed upon the enemy by artifices which had caused them to be classed among the dangerously hurt, began to report to the regiment, and were sent to hospital or treated by the regimental surgeon, according to their needs. Captain Sigler, of Company I, by binding a bloody handkerchief around his slightly injured limb and assuming an air of great exhaustion, managed to escape a journey to Richmond, and rejoined his company in serviceable condition. Captains Widdis and Gimber, and Lieutenants Carpenter and Chatburn, who were cut off in the retreat of the first day, formed a part of the column of prisoners which started for the rebel capital on the 4th. 154 ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH When Captain Jones's company went into action as skirmishers on the morning of July 1, the men had exhausted their drinking water, and many of them were suffering from thirst. Calling Private Rodearmel to him, the captain ordered him to take a number of canteens and fill them at a rivulet a few rods in the rear. "Rody" started on his errand, but failed to return during the day; nor was he seen until the morning of the 4th, when he presented himself before the captain on Cemetery Ridge with a large collection of freshly filled canteens, and with inimitable assurance said, "Captain, here's the water! I knew you wanted good water, so I thought I'd go back to Germantown for it; but the provost guard stopped me at Baltimore". True enough, he had started for home, but was arrested on the way and returned to the army under guard. While a few well-authenticated instances of shirking came to light after the battle, the conduct of the mass of the rank and file of the regiment in this long-continued and most exhausting engagement was beyond reproach. Even though reduced to scarcely more than one-fourth of its usual strength by its frightful exposure on the first day, and almost entirely deprived of officers, the little battalion responded to each call for its services, on the second and third, with the same courage and alacrity which had distinguished it at the opening of the fight. In his written reminiscences of the war, Sergeant Charles A. Frey, of Company D, who was detached and serving at division headquarters, says: "The loss in my own company was very heavy, and a few days after, while following up the retreating enemy, I met my regiment. They were a sad looking set of men. There were only about one hundred and twenty-five left, and my own company, which went into the fight with fifty-two men, was reduced to twelve or fifteen. I first inquired for my three old messmates. They were all gone, - Henning, killed; Himmelreich and Hauck, wounded. PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS 155 Eight of my company were left dead upon the field, twenty were wounded and five taken prisoners. A few were absent on 'French leave'. "Of two brothers, Corporals Samuel and Joseph B. Ruhl, one was killed in the battle, and the other had to march away leaving him upon the field. Word was sent to the family that Joseph was killed. His sister Sarah, on receiving the sad news, said she would go and bring him home. Ordering two horses hitched to a spring wagon, she started on her mournful journey, and by night of the same day on which she received the news of his death she was many miles on her way towards Gettysburg. Reaching the battlefield, she began the search for his body - or, rather, his grave, as he had been buried in the meantime. After a long search she found it, had the body unearthed, and placing it in a coffin conveyed it home, where it was laid to rest in the quiet graveyard by the side of the fields through which he roamed in boyhood days". In his official report to army headquarters, referring to the important position held by the Bucktail Brigade, General Doubleday says, "I relied greatly on Stone's brigade to hold the post assigned them, as I soon saw I would be obliged to change front with a portion of my line to face the northwest, and his brigade held the pivot of the movement. My confidence in this noble body of men was not misplaced, as will be shown hereafter. They repulsed the repeated attacks of vastly superior numbers at close quarters, and maintained their position until the final retreat of the whole line. Stone himself was shot down, battling to the last. The gallant Colonel Wister, who succeeded him, was also wounded, and the command devolved upon Colonel Dana, of the 143d Pennsylvania Volunteers. This brigade, in common with almost every regiment in the Third Division, were Pennsylvanians, and were actuated by a heroic desire to avenge the invasion of their native State". 156 ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH Further on he states, "The rebels now advanced from the northwest to flank the two regiments in the road (149th and 143d), but the 150th Regiment, under Lieutenant-Colonel Huidekoper, changed front forward and met the enemy precisely as Dwight had met them, with two volleys of musketry and a gallant bayonet charge, led by Colonel Wister in person. This dispersed them. Another desperate onslaught came from the north, passed the railroad cut and almost reached the road, only, however, to encounter another defeat from the irresistible bayonets of our men. The next attack came from the west, but was again repulsed by the indomitable 150th Regiment". Colonel Stone, in his official report, pays the highest tribute to the troops of his command, saying, "No language can do justice to the conduct of my officers and men on the bloody first day - to the coolness with which they watched and waited, under a fierce storm of shot and shell, the enemy's overwhelming masses; to their ready obedience to orders, and prompt and perfect execution, under fire, of all the tactics of the battlefield; to the fierceness of their repeated attacks and to the desperate tenacity of their resistance. They fought as though each man felt that upon his own arm hung the fate of the day and the nation. Nearly two thirds of my command fell on the field. Every field-officer, save one, was wounded. Not one of them left the field until completely disabled. Colonel Wister, while commanding the brigade, though badly wounded in the mouth and unable to speak, remained in the front of the battle, as did also Lieutenant-Colonel Huidekoper, commanding the 150th, with his right arm shattered and a wound in the leg, and Lieutenant-Colonel Dwight, commanding the 149th, with a dangerous gunshot wound through the thigh". General Rowley, commanding the Third Division, calls to the notice of the commanding general - among others - Adjutant Ashhurst, Colonel Wister, Lieutenant-Colonel Huidekoper, PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS 157 and Major Chamberlin, of the 150th Pennsylvania Volunteers, "as being distinguished for bravery". If Colonel Wister, in like manner, had named all of the officers and men of his command who commended themselves by their good conduct, the list must necessarily have embraced the greater part of the regiment! The following are the names of the killed and mortally wounded of the 150th in the battle of Gettysburg: - KILLED OR MORTALLY WOUNDED. Company A. Corporal Samuel Keyser, killed July 1. Private Thomas P. Boyce, killed July 1. Private Joseph F. Durborrow, killed July 3. Private Alfred Lees, mortally wounded July 3; died July 12. Private Enos Miniger, mortally wounded July 1; died July 20. Private Harvey Morris, mortally wounded July 3; died Aug. 3. Private George Pollard, mortally wounded July 1; died July 20. Private John Swint, killed July 1. . . . . . . . . . . 8 Company B. First Lieutenant Henry Chancellor, Jr., mortally wounded July 1; died August 7. Second Lieutenant Charles P. Keyser, killed July 1. Private Joseph Keen, killed July 1. . . . . . . . . . . 3 Company C. Private John G. Coyle, killed July 1. Private Nathaniel P. Gowen, mortally wounded July 1; died September 24. Private George Kimmey, killed July 1. Private Alonzo Platt, killed July 1. Private Hosea Smith, killed July 1. Private Samuel H. Spargo, mortally wounded July 1; died July 4. Private William P. Swaney, killed July 1. Private Simon Trainer, killed July 1. . . . . . . . . . 8 158 ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH Company D. Second Lieutenant Elias B. Weidensaul, killed July 1. Corporal Joseph J. Gutelius, killed July 1. Corporal William E. Henning, killed July 1. Corporal Joseph B. Ruhl, killed July 1. Private Henry A. Fees, killed July 1. Private E. A. McFadden, killed July 1. Private John May, killed July 1. Private William R. Miller, killed July 1. . . . . . . . . 8 Company E. Corporal James P. Lukens, killed July 1. Corporal Jesse Rex, killed July 1. Corporal Edward Rockhill, killed July 1. . . . . . . . . 3 Company F. Private John Boyer, mortally wounded July 1. Private Zacharias T. Fink, mortally wounded July 1. Private Charles F. Gibson, mortally wounded July 1. Private Jonathan J. Miller, mortally wounded July 1; died August 18. Private Frank E. Northrup, killed July 1. Private John W. Waddle, killed July 1. Private George W. Young, mortally wounded July 1; died July 9. . . . 7 Company G. Sergeant Lorenzo Hodges, mortally wounded July 1; died July 16. Corporal William J. Holmes, mortally wounded July 1; died July 23. Private Asher M. Beckwith, mortally wounded July 1; died July 20. Private Fulton Bee, killed July 1. Private John Benson, killed July 1. Private Nathan Hand, killed July 1. Private Wesley Merrick, mortally wounded July 1; died July 20. Private Isaac Pilgrim, mortally wounded July 1; died July 25. . . . 8 PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS 159 Company H. Private Frederick Fulk, killed July 1. Private Joseph Redmond, killed July 1. Private Amos P. Sweet, mortally wounded July 1; died July 12 . . . 3 Company I. Sergeant Samuel Peiffer, killed July 1. Sergeant Henry A. Mudge, killed July 1. Corporal Fred. Sisco, wounded July 1; died November 14. Private Charles Clyde, mortally wounded July 1; died August 5. Private Alva H. Fish, mortally wounded July 1; died July 30. Private Hiram Fones, mortally wounded July 1; died August 5. Private George W. Franklin, killed July 1. Private James Morris, mortally wounded July 1; died July 18. Private Jacob J. Mough, mortally wounded July 1; died July 19. . . . 9 Total killed or mortally wounded. . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Colonel Fox, in his book entitled "Regimental Losses in the Civil War", fixes the number of the killed and mortally wounded in the 150th, at Gettysburg, at fifty-seven, with which the foregoing list agrees. At this late day it is, of course, impossible to obtain a complete roll of the wounded, the number of whom, as returned by the Adjutant-General's Office and inscribed upon the regimental monument, was one hundred and thirty-four. The subjoined list has been made up with great care, and is probably correct as far as it goes: - WOUNDED. Field and Staff. Colonel Langhorne Wister, mouth and face. Lieutenant-Colonel H. S. Huidekoper, loss of right arm; leg wound. Major Thomas Chamberlin, shoulder and chest. Adjutant R. L. Ashhurst, shoulder. Sergeant-Major Thomas M. Lyon, chest. . . . . . . 5 160 ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH Company A. Second Lieutenant Lyman M. Kilgore. Sergeant John N. Mitchell. Corporal Samuel Barnes. Corporal Samuel J. White. Private H. C. Boyd. Private Henry H. Folwell. Private Stephen P. Harmer. Private Paul Hoffman. Private Jacob Keyser. Private Thomas C. Maguire. Private Isaac R. Martindell. Private Jacob Myers. Private Conrad Redifer. Private Michael Sheehan. Private Edward Steere. . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Company B. Sergeant William Kulp. Corporal William Buchanan. Private Matthew Alberts. Private James Wilson. . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Company C. First Lieutenant Gilbert B. Perkins. Sergeant Duffy B. Torbett. Sergeant Wilson N. Clark. Corporal John W. Amy. Corporal Rodney Conner. Corporal George L. Gilmore. Corporal Cress Hellyer. Corporal Charles H. Snyder. Corporal Newell E. White. Musician Peter Snyder. Private Perry C. Allen. Private William G. Barr. Private James C. Barton. Private Lucian J. Childs. Private Isaiah Clark. Private Michael Dobbs. Private Oscar B. Fuller. Private Samuel Hood. PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS 162 Private Cyrus Parker. Private Samuel H. Roberts. Private George P. Ryan. Private Charles W. Shaver. Private Levi Sturdevant. Private George N. Waid. Private Jonathan Williams. Private Henry Yochum. . . . . . . . . . . 26 Company D. Captain William P. Dougal. Sergeant John A. Hauck. Sergeant Samuel H. Himmelreich. Sergeant Samuel C. Ransom. Corporal James W. Marshall. Private Aaron Ammon. Private John S. Bird. Private John Hafer. Private Samuel F. Hassenplug. Private Charles E. Mader. Private Henry Masters. Private David Paige. Private Henry Prowant. Private Joel Reedy. Private Jonathan Seaman. Private William Stahl. Private Henry Wittenmyer. Private Isaac Zellers. . . . . . . . . . . 18 Company E. Sergeant George H. Crager. Sergeant George W. Pastor. Corporal Patrick Donohue. Private Lorenzo Keech. . . . . . . . . . . 4 Company F. First Lieutenant Chalkley W. Sears. Sergeant Henry B. Evans. Sergeant John C. Kensill. Corporal George W. Bates. Corporal Joseph A. Edeline. Corporal Edward K. Hess. Corporal Francis M. James. 162 ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH Corporal Edward Kates. Private Andrew Batzel. Private Jonathan Carr. Private Edward B: Fowler. Private William A. Garrett. Private George P. Grubb. Private John K. Himes. Private David T. Jenkins. Private Garrett C. Kean. Private Edward McGinley. Private Levi Munshower. Private James Stevenson. Private Samuel Walker. Private John S. Weber. . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Company G. Sergeant Cyrus W. Baldwin. Sergeant J. Leonard Beers. Corporal H. L. Burlingame. Corporal Colby C. Tripper. Corporal Herman A. Young. Private Merritt J. Baldwin. Private Joseph D. Ball. Private Merritt M. Catlin. Private Albert L. Lamphere. Private John Mead. . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Company H. Sergeant James T. Reed. Corporal Melville L. Boslough. Corporal Roe Reisinger. Corporal James W. Slocum. Private Lorenzo Abbott. Private Edward Bailey. Private George Bartholomew. Private George Berrier. Private John W. Clark. Private Jonathan Deross. Private Abraham Foreman. Private George Galmish. Private John Garlow. Private John D. Gilbert. Private Andrew T. Harvey. PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS 163 Private James M. Hill. Private Andrew McDermott. Private Francis Nelson. Private William L. Perry. Private John A. Slocum. Private Jacob Stein. . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Company I. Captain John W. Sigler. First Lieutenant Miles F. Rose. Corporal Sylvanus D. Guion. Corporal Daniel Pauli. Private Orren B. Edgett.* Private Robert J. Edmonds. Private Smith Hubbell. Private Philip Karch. Private Orson K. Karr. Private John F. Mayer. Private H. Banning Odell. Private Henry W. Proctor. Private John Rader. Private James F. Stevens. Private John B. Sweet. . . . . . . . . . . 15 Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139 *Private Edgett, though one of the youngest members of the regiment, being but sixteen years old when he entered the service, was one of the hardiest, and gained many friends by his pleasing personality. No one enlisted from more patriotic motives, or accepted the manifold and often trying duties of the soldier with a more willing spirit, than he. The same cheerful disposition and devotion to duty distinguished him through life. He was born in Warren, Pa., January 18th, 1846. and died at Beaumont, Texas, February 20th, 1904. The following is an imperfect list of the prisoners who were taken to Richmond and other places in the South, many of them having sturdily refused to be paroled on the field. The large percentage of deaths among them speaks more eloquently than words of the privations which they underwent in captivity, 164 ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTIETH and of the wretched sanitary conditions which prevailed in the "prison-pens". - - - Company A. Captain Cornelius C. Widdis. Sergeant Henry Laut. Corporal John Hausman. Corporal Lewis Vogel. Died at Andersonville. Private Frank H. Elvidge. Private Herbert Elvidge. Private Melville H. Freas. Private Charles Grant. Died at Richmond. Private George Shingle. Died at Richmond. Private Israel H. Thomas. Musician Philip W. Hammer. Died at Richmond. . . . 11 Company B. Sergeant E. L. Dickinson. Private William Diggle. Died at Andersonville. Private Richard Dunckley. Private John Gore. Died at Richmond. . . . . . . 4 Company C. Sergeant James H. Winings. Died at Andersonville. Private Isaiah Clark. Private Oscar B. Fuller. Private Samuel Hood. Private George P. Ryan. Private Henry T. Smith. Died at Richmond. Private William Waid. Died at Richmond. . . . . . 7 Company D. Private Amos Prowant. Private Isaac Eisenhower. Private John M. Hunt. Private Jacob Nees. Private John Suydam. Died at Richmond. . . . . . 5 Company E. First Lieutenant J. Q. Carpenter. Sergeant George H. Crager. PENNSYLVANIA VOLUNTEERS 165 Sergeant Charles W. Robinson. Died at Andersonville. Private George W. Cattell. Died at Richmond. Private James E. Graham. Died at Richmond. Private John Pyott, Jr. Died at Richmond. . . . . 6 Company F. Captain Henry W. Gimber. Second Lieutenant Joseph Chatburn. Private David Ashalter. Musician Charles E. Zebley. . . . . . . . . 4 Company G. Private Melville Baldwin. Died at Richmond. Private Willard Cummings. Private Luther F. Haven. Private Oscar Moody. Died at Richmond. Private John Tyler. . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Company H. Sergeant George Fry. Died at Andersonville. Private Harvey Chisholm. Died at Andersonville. Private Allen Scott. Died at Andersonville. . . . 3 Company I. Corporal Frederick Sisco. Died at Richmond. Private Charles H. Coyle. Died at Richmond. Private Levi Ross. Died at Richmond. Private Gothold Sisco. Died at Richmond. . . . . 4 Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49