This is mnoGoSearch's cache of http://files.usgwarchives.net/ma/middlesex/military/civilwar/rosters/chapter57nmt.txt. It is a snapshot of the page as it appeared during last crawling. The current page could have changed in the meantime.

Last modified: Thu, 06 May 2010, 16:00:32 EDT    Size: 21288
Middlesex County MA Archives Military Records.....Chapter 5 
Civilwar - Rosters 
************************************************
Copyright.  All rights reserved.
http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm
http://www.usgwarchives.net/ma/mafiles.htm
************************************************

File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by:
Joy Fisher http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00001.html#0000031 May 6, 2010, 8:18 pm

Chapter 5
V.
1862.
NINE MONTHS' MEN.

 In Freedom's name our blades we draw,
  She arms us for the fight! For country, government, and law,
  For Liberty and Right. The Union must — shall be preserved,
Our flag still o'er us fly !
That cause our hearts and hands has nerved
And we will do or die.
George P. Morris.
" We are coming, Father Abra'am, Three hundred thousand more, From Mississippi's
winding stream And from New England's shore."


    On the 4th of August, 1862, President Lincoln issued his proclamation
calling for three hundred thousand (300,-000) more troops, to serve for nine
months; a draft to be made if the quotas were not filled by volunteers by the
15th of August.

    The proportion assigned by the War Department to Massachusetts was nineteen
thousand and eighty (19,080) men. The quota of Melrose was seventy-nine (79) men.

  To this call, as heretofore, Melrose responded promptly, sending its full
quota of seventy-nine (79) men into the field in eight different regiments.

    A war meeting was called and held at the vestry of the Orthodox Church on
the evening of August 11th, to consult in relation to supplying these additional
troops. Colonel John H. Clark was chosen Chairman, and Mr. Charles H. Isburgh,
Secretary. Speeches were made by Colonel Clark, Mr. George F. Stone, and several
other citizens; and a vote was passed recommending that the Town pay a bounty of
one hundred and fifty dollars ($150) to each and every person that should enlist
and enter the service for nine months.

    A warrant for a Town Meeting was immediately issued, to be held August 21st,
to take the matter into consideration. Colonel John H. Clark was chosen
Moderator. As will be seen by the following vote, offered by Mr. Stephen W.
Shelton, the recommendation of the citizens' meeting was fully indorsed and
adopted:

    Voted, That the Town raise an amount of money equal  or equivalent to the
sum of one  hundred and fifty dollars ($150) per man, for every man who is, or
who may be required from this Town to answer to the recent call of the President
of the United States for additional troops for nine months' service, to serve in
the army of the United States; and that the Treasurer is authorized and
required, under the direction of the Selectmen, to borrow that amount of money
and pay the same to such parties who may volunteer, and are properly and legally
accepted by the proper and legal authorities for such service. It was also
voted, on motion of Mr. Rums Smith, That a Rallying Committee of twenty-five men
be appointed by the Chairman of this meeting, with full powers to call meetings
 and perform   such other duties as they may deem necessary; and that an
appropriation of three hundred dollars ($300) for incidental expenses be made by
the Town, to be expended under the direction of said Committee.

    The following citizens were appointed to serve on that Committee:

Rufus Smith,              R. Watson Emerson,
Michael A. MeCafferty,    Frank A. Messenger,
Nelson Cochran,           Napoleon B. Bryant,
Moses Parker, M. D.,      Isaac Emerson, Jr.,
Samuel O. Dearborn,       Joel Snow,
Henry A. Norris,          George W. Emerson,
Henry B. Newhall,         Philip B. Holmes,
Fernando C. Taylor,       Levi S. Gould,
John S. Sewall,           Walter Babb,
Daniel Norton, Jr.,       Allen C. Goss,
Josiah P. Mendum,         Addison W. Banfield,
George A. Bacon,          Isaiah A. Young,
             Stephen W. Shelton.

    The Selectmen were afterwards joined to this Committee.

    Several large and spirited war meetings were held at various places in the
town, under the auspices of this Rallying Committee. The first one took place on
Monday evening, August 25th, at Lyceum Hall. Good music was furnished by the
Maiden Band, and some fine singing by a quartette. Addresses were made by
Lieutenant-Colonel Wardwell, of the Thirty-Eighth Massachusetts Regiment, Hon.
Daniel W. Gooch, Hon. Elihu C. Baker, Messrs. George W. Copeland, Guppy, and
others.

  Meetings were also held on Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday evenings of this
week, at which addresses were made by our citizens, and by speakers from abroad;
and volunteers came rapidly forward, and this quota of seventy-nine (79) was
filled.

    The last week of August was almost wholly given up to recruiting purposes.
The Governor recommended a suspension of business during the afternoons, and the
recommendation was very generally complied with.

    Owing to the measures taken at these various meetings, the following paper —
whereby the signers agreed to pay their just proportion of all taxes, and to
indemnify all town officers for any action taken in carrying out the wishes of
the town — was circulated among the citizens for signatures:

AGREEMENT.

    Be it remembered, that whereas the Town of Melrose, at several meetings
called for that purpose, have, with great unanimity, passed sundry votes
providing for the payment of bounty to our volunteers, and for the support of
their families, and other incidental war purposes, which votes may, upon nice
and technical grounds, be regarded as invalid in law, — Now, therefore, we the
undersigned, Tax-payers in the Town of Melrose, hereby waive all objection to
the form, substance, or validity of said proceedings; and agree to pay all taxes
assessed against us respectively arising from said votes.

    And we severally hereby release any present or future officer of said Town
from all actions, or causes of action, on account of the assessment or
collection of the aforesaid tax; all of which we feel in duty bound to do, as
true and loyal citizens, revived to make any sacrifice necessary for the most
vigorous prosecution of the war, and for the honor and dignity of our glorious
flag.

    Of our nine months' volunteers, twenty-nine enlisted in the Forty-Second
Massachusetts Regiment, all but one of them being in Co. G; and they experienced
the sad fate of falling into the hands of the rebels, at the "Battle of
Galveston," January 1st, 1863. But they were not, thank God! destined to undergo
the horrors of an "Andersonville,"  "Salisbury," or "Belle Isle," as they were
soon afterward paroled.

    The following are the names of our nine months' men, with their regiment and
company:

FIFTH REGIMENT. [1]

Co. A.
PRIVATE.
CHASE, EDE K. 
Mustered out with the regiment, July 2, 1863.

Co. H.
PRIVATE.
SUMNER, STEPHEN. 
Mustered out with the regiment, July 2, 1863.

FORTY-SECOND REGIMENTS 
Co. G.
CORPORAL.
BUTTRICK, JOHN W. 
Taken prisoner at "Battle of Galveston," Jan. 1, 1863; in prison at Houston,
Texas; paroled while on steamer "General Quitman," near Alexandria, La., Feb.
18, 1863; mustered out with the regiment, Aug. 20, 1863.

MUSICIAN.
IRESON, DAVID A. [3]

WAGONER.
TUDKINS, ROLAND C. [3]

PRIVATES.
BARRETT, CHARLES. [3]

BARRETT, CHARLES L. [3]

BARNARD, JOHN M., JR. [3]

BOARDMAN, CHARLES. [3]

BRIDGES, HENRY.
Deserted at New York City, Dec. 6, 1862; non-resident.

BRYANT, THOMAS O. [3]

BURNHAM, PASCHAL E. 
Discharged March 27, 1863, for disability.

CLARK, FREDERICK F. [3]

CORSON, FREDERICK U. [3]

DAVIS, JOHN E. [3]

DAVIS, JAMES L. [3] [4]

DOUBLE, EDMUND B. [3]
Wounded in hand at "Battle of Galveston," Jan. 1, 1863.

EMERSON, JAMES G. [3] [4]

HETON, JOHN. [3]

HYDE, GEORGE S. [3]

IRESON, ALONZO D. [3]

LYNDE, AMOS W. [3] [4]

LYNDE, CHARLES B. [3]

MARSTON, JAMES M.
Deserted Dec. 6, 1862, at New York City; non-resident.

SWEETSER, THOMAS T. [3]
Wounded in the mouth at "Battle of Galveston."

MARSHALL, SAMUEL. [3]

UPHAM, CHARLES H. [3]

VINTON, EDWIN A. [3] [5]

YORK, JOSIAH R. [3] [4]

YORK, WILLIAM B. [3] [4]

Co. H.
PRIVATE.
WILDE, BENJAMIN F. 
Deserted Nov. 25, 1862, at New York City.

FORTY-THIRD REGIMENT. [6]

Co. A.
PRIVATE.
SMITH, WAYLAND R. 
Mustered out with the regiment, July 30, 1863.

FORTY-FOURTH REGIMENT [7]

Co. D.
PRIVATE.
SIMONDS, JOSEPH W. 
Mustered out with the regiment, June 18, 1863. [8]

Co. E.
PRIVATE.
ROBERTS, CHARLES K. Discharged Jan. 14, 1863, for disability.

Co.  G.
PRIVATE.
HART, ABNER B. 
Mustered out June 18, 1863.

Co. H.
PRIVATE.
DAWES, RICHARD C. 
Mustered out June 18, 1863. [9]

Co. I.
PRIVATES.
ANDERSON, LEONARD B. 
Mustered out June 18, 1863.

CROCKER, JOSEPH C. 
Mustered out June 18, 1863. [10]



  
FORTY-FIFTH REGIMENT. [11]

Co. A.
MUSICIAN.
FREELAND, JOSEPH V. 
Mustered out with the regiment, July 7, 1863; non-resident.

Co. D.
SERGEANT.
BARRY, ROYAL P. 
Promoted Corporal Sept. 27, 1862; Sergeant, June 19, 1863; mustered out July 7,
1863.

PRIVATES.
CUTTING, WILLIAM H., JR. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863.

EVANS, THOMAS C. 
Wounded in both hands and leg at "Battle of Kinston," Dec. 14, 1862; discharged
Feb. 27, 1863. 

FOSS, JAMES T. 
Wounded at "Battle of Kinston," Dec. 14, 1862; mustered out July 7, 1863.

LEIGHTON, WILLIAM F. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863.

CHIPMAN, GEORGE A. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863. [12]

MARSHALL, JAMES. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863.

MCLAUGHLIN, GEORGE W.
Mustered out July 7, 1863. [13]

PERKINS, JOHN, JR.
Wounded in thigh at "Battle of Kinston," Dec. 14, 1862; discharged May 21, 1863.

JUNKINS, EDWIN W. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863.

Co. I.
PRIVATES.
DORRING, JOHN. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863; non-resident.

FOSS, GEORGE A. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863; non-resident.

FERGUSON, JOHN. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863; non-resident.

HARRIS, JOHN. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863; non-resident.

MYARS, JOHN. 
Mustered out July 7, 1863; non-resident.

FORTY-EIGHTH REGIMENT. [14]

Co. D.
SERGEANT.
TODD, THOMAS.
Mustered out Sept. 3, 1863; non-resident.

MUSICIAN.
RICHARDSON, ALFRED C. 
Died Aug. 8, 1863, at Baton Rouge, La.; non-resident.

PRIVATE.
CRANE, WILLIAM P., JR. 
Mustered out Sept. 3, 1863; non-resident.

Co. G.
SERGEANT.
HARE, ANDREW.
Mustered out Sept. 3, 1863.

FIFTIETH REGIMENT. [15]

Co. D.
SERGEANT.
ROWELL, STEPHEN P. 
Mustered out with the regiment, Aug. 24, 1863.

MUSICIAN.
NICHOLS, WILLIAM R. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863; non-resident.

Co. E.
PRIVATES.
BARRON, ELLIOT F. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863.

BROWN, JONAS G. 
Died June 18, 1863, in  Regimental  Hospital at   Baton Rouge, La., of malarial
fever. [16]

COX, JAMES P. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863.

DIX, JOSEPH O. [17]
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863.

FARRELL, MICHAEL. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863.

FULLER, GEORGE P. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863.

LYMAN, HENRY H. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863.

MCALLISTER, GEORGE H.
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863.

O'DONAGHUE, JOHN. 
Deserted Nov. 22, 1862, at New York City; non-resident.

PRENTICE,  CHARLES. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863.

SHELTON, THOMAS. [18]
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863.

SIMONDS, CHARLES  H. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863; non-resident. [19]

HAMILTON, ROBERT.
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863; non-resident.

HARRINGTON, CHARLES T.
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863; non-resident.

HAWKES, JOHN. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863; non-resident. 

KINGMAN, WILLIAM W. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863; non-resident.

KNIGHTS, HENRY C. 
Mustered out Aug. 24, 1863; non-resident.

Co. F.
PRIVATES.
GALLAGHER, JOHN. 
Deserted Oct. 20, 1862, at Boxford, Mass.; non-resident.

WILSON, JOHN.
Deserted Oct. 20, 1862, at Boxford, Mass.; non-resident.

    At the commencement of the year 1863, Massachusetts had sent into the field
forty-six thousand nine hundred and twenty (46,920) three years' men, sixteen
thousand eight hundred and thirty-seven (16,837) nine months' men, and three
thousand seven hundred and thirty-six (3,736) three months' men; making a total
of sixty-seven thousand four hundred and ninety-three (67,493) men; thirteen
thousand six hundred and eighteen (13,618) men had also entered into the naval
service of the United States, for which Massachusetts had received no credit,
making a total number of men furnished by Massachusetts of eighty-one thousand
one hundred and eleven (81,111).

    General Schouler says of Massachusetts at this time:

    She had given martyrs to the great cause on nearly every battlefield; many
had their limbs severed from their bodies; many households had been made
desolate; many stood by the butts of their muskets, keeping watch and ward,
facing the enemy from the falls of the Potomac to the delta of the Mississippi.
Some were in prison, some were in hospitals, some were in tents, some swinging
in their hammocks at the mouths of rivers, to prevent blockade runners from
supplying the enemy.

    And Governor Andrew, in his address to the Legislature at the beginning of
1863, eloquently refers to the part taken by Massachusetts men; after
recapitulating the many battlefields from "Big Bethel" and "Cedar Mountain" to
"Baton Rouge" and "Antietam," he continues:

    Through all the capricious fortunes of the war the regiments of
Massachusetts have borne her flag by the side of the banner of the Union. And,
beyond the Atlantic slope, every battlefield has drunk the blood of her sons,
nurtured among her hills and sands, from which in adventurous manhood they
turned their footsteps to the West. Officers and enlisted men have vied with
each other in deeds of valor. The flag, whose standard-bearer, shot down in
battle, tossed it from his dying hand, nerved by undying patriotism, has been
caught by the comrade, who in his turn his closed his eyes for the last time
upon starry folds as another hero-martyr clasped the splintered staff and
rescued the symbol at once of country and of blood-bought fame.

    How can fleeting words of human praise gild the record of their glory? Our
eyes suffused with tears, and blood retreating to the heart, stirred with
unwonted thrill, speak with the eloquence of nature, uttered but unexpressed.
From the din o the battle they have passed to the peace of eternity Farewell!
warrior, citizen, patriot, lover, friend, - whether in the humbler ranks or
bearing the sword of official power, whether private, captain, surgeon or
chaplain, for all these in the heady fight have passed away, - hail! and
farewell! Each hero must sleep serenely on the field where he fell in a cause
"sacred to liberty and the rights of mankind."

    Melrose had sent into the service up to this time -January 1, 1863,-one
hundred and twenty-six (126) thee years' men, five (5) of whom were commissioned
officers, seventy-nine (79) nine months' men, and five (5) three months men; and
had also furnished seven (7) men for the navy; one of whom had been transferred
from the army; one discharged and enlisted in the army, and four of whom were
commissioned officers; making a total number furnished of two hundred and
sixteen (216) men. The officers in the army were: Second Lieutenant Gurdon
McKay, of the Twenty-Second Regiment; Second Lieutenant George T. Martin, of the
Thirty-Eighth Regiment; First Lieutenant Archibald Bogle, of the Seventeenth
Regiment; Captain Joseph R. Simonds, of the Seventeenth Regiment, and First
Lieutenant J. Wesley Jones, of the Twelfth U. S. Infantry. In the navy, Acting
Master's Mate N. Mayo Dyer, Acting Ensign James F. Perkins, Acting Ensign Edward
A. Small, and Lieutenant Smith W. Nichols, Jr.

    The total quota of Melrose to this date, of three years' and nine months'
men, was one hundred and eighty-four (184), and we had furnished two hundred and
ten (210) men for those periods of service.

    On the 22d of September of this year,— 1862, — was issued the great
Proclamation by President Lincoln, declaring that the slaves of all persons in
States which, on the 1st day of January, 1863, should be in rebellion, "shall be
thenceforth and forever free." Concerning this act it has been eloquently said:

    "As yet the policy of the Nation was undefined. Nor did it reach the dignity
of positive justice, clearly pronounced, until, by the great Proclamation of
Liberty, the Government became anchored to an immortal thought, and decreed
Emancipation. By that act the President ascended a height more lofty than
Federal Hill. He rose to the serene heights of Zion, received light and
knowledge and power from an Eternal Source, fixed by a word the moral judgment
of mankind in sympathy with our national cause, secured the verdict of history
and the prayers of the good in every land, and humbly awaited 'the gracious
favor of Almighty God.' "

END NOTES Chapter V

[1] The Fifth Massachusetts, — which served in the three months' campaign at the
beginning of the Rebellion,—now volunteering for nine months, left Boston Oct.
22, 1862, for New Berne, N. C. Its period of service was passed in the
"Department of North Carolina," and it was in the following engagements:
Whitehall, Kinston, Goldsboro', New Berne, Blount's Creek, and Moseley Creek,
besides numerous expeditions and reconnoissances, marching six hundred miles
over the poor roads of North Carolina, during its term of service.

[2] The Forty-Second Massachusetts left the State Nov. 21, 1862, for the
"Department of the Gulf." Three companies—D, G and I — were in the "Battle of
Galveston," Jan. 1, 1863, and taken prisoners; afterwards paroled, but not
exchanged; therefore did not perform any more active service. The balance of the
regiment served in the Louisiana campaigns. "When Colonel Burrill offered his
sword to the officer designated by General Magru-der to receive the surrender,
he was desired to keep it, in respect to his brave and able defence of his
position against such an overwhelming force; and, on being informed that the
little band that stood before them were all the troops there, the rebels could
scarcely believe it, and were surprised they had held their position so well and
so long."

[3] Same military history as that of Corporal Buttrick.

[4] Also served ninety days in Seventh Un. Co. Infantry, in 1864; see chap. VIII.

[5] Also served one hundred days in Eighth Regiment in 1864; see chap. VIII.

[6] The Forty-Third Massachusetts was in the "Department of North Carolina," and
was in the battles of Kinston, Whitehall, and several marches and skirmishes.

[7] This regiment was also in the "Department of North Carolina," and was in the
Tarboro' expedition, the battles of Kinston, Whitehall, Goldsboro' and Siege of
Washington, N. C. It had in its ranks the astronomer Tuttle, of Cambridge, the
two brothers Cobb, artists, and Rev. Mr. Gibbs, who relinquished the pastorate
of the Universalist Church in West Cambridge. The following " army song " was
written by " Selim," and dedicated to the Forty-Fourth:
[Lyrics not transcribed]

[8] Also served one hundred days in the Eighth Regiment, in 1864; see chap. VIII.

[9] Appointed Acting Ensign in the navy Dec. 16, 1863, but he was then living in
Brookline. He served until Jan. 11, 1867, when he was honorably discharged.

[10] Also served nine months as clerk in the Quartermaster's Department,
Headquarters 18th Army Corps, Army of the James.

[11] The Forty-Fifth Massachusetts was in the "Department of North Carolina,"
and in the battles of Kinston, Whitehall, and several skirmishes and
reconnoissances.

[12] Also served one hundred days as Lieutenant, Co. A, Sixth Regiment, in 1864;
see chap. VIII.

[13] Was a minor at time of enlistment. For form of parent's consent in such
cases see Appendix C.

[14] The Forty-Eighth Massachusetts left New York for the "Department of the
Gulf," Jan. 4, 1863, and was engaged in the "Siege of Port Hudson," and marches
and skirmishes in that Department.

[15] The Fiftieth Massachusetts was in the "Department of the Gulf," and left
the State Nov. 19, 1862. Took part in Siege of Port Hudson, and marches and
expeditions in that Department.

[16] For obituary sketch, see "Roll of Honor."

[17] Also served three months in 1861, in Co. B, Fifth Regiment, from South
Reading.

[18] Also served one hundred days in the Eighth Regiment in 1864; see chap. VIII.

[19] Resident of Maiden; re-enlisted in Co. K, Fifty-Ninth Regiment; lost a leg
before Petersburg, June 17, 1864.


Additional Comments:

Extracted from:

THE MELROSE MEMORIAL 
THE ANNALS OF MELROSE COUNTY OF MIDDLESEX, MASSACHUSETTS IN 
THE GREAT REBELLION OF 1861 - 65 
BY ELBRIDGE H. GOSS

PRIVATELY PRINTED BY SUBSCRIPTION 1868

ALFRED MUDGE & SON,
PRINTERS,
34 SCHOOL STREET, BOSTON.


File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ma/middlesex/military/civilwar/rosters/chapter57nmt.txt

This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/mafiles/

File size: 20.8 Kb