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A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion (Des Moines, IA: Dyer Pub. Co.), 1908. Funk, Arville L. A Hoosier Regiment in Dixie: A History of the Thirty-eighth Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment (Chicago: Adams Press), 1978. Griffin, Daniel. My Dear Mollie: Letters of Brig. General Daniel Griffin, 38th Indiana Infantry (Bedford, IN: JoNa Books ...
The Civil War Archive, Union Regimental Histories, Indiana , accessed 17 May 2007; Corridor H - Parsons, West Virginia Division of Highways, Corrick's Ford Battlefield Archived 2003-03-24 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 17 May 2007; Liggett, Kristopher and Larry, Indiana, in the Civil War, 9th Regiment Indiana Infantry, accessed 17 May 2007
Soldiers from Indiana were present on most of the Civil War battlefields, beginning with the first engagement involving Hoosier troops at the Battle of Philippi (West Virginia) on June 3, 1861, to the Battle of Palmito Ranch on May 13, 1865. [23]
A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion (Des Moines, IA: Dyer Pub. Co.), 1908. Grose, William. The Story of the Marches, Battles and Incidents of the 36th Regiment Indiana Volunteer Infantry (New Castle, IN: The Courier Company Press), 1891. Lussenden, Lucille H. Civil War Letters of the Gantz Family (Baltimore: Gateway Press), 2002.
The 18th Independent Battery Indiana Light Artillery, also known as Lilly's Hoosier Battery and Lilly's Battery, was a civil war regiment formed in Indiana during the American Civil War. The regiment was formed at the end of 1860 by 22-year-old Eli Lilly, an Indianapolis pharmacist. He had recruitment posters placed around the city and ...
David Enoch Beem (June 24, 1837 – October 23, 1923) was a prominent lawyer, banker, and American Civil War veteran from Spencer, Owen County, Indiana.Beem, who attained the rank of captain of Company H, 14th Indiana Infantry Regiment, fought in numerous battles in the eastern United States before he mustered out of the Union army in June 1864.
The Black Civil War Soldiers of Illinois: The Story of the Twenty-ninth U.S. Colored Infantry. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1998. Morris, William S. History of the 31st Regiment Illinois Volunteers, Organized by John A. Logan. Evansville, Indiana: Keller Printing & Publishing Co., 1902. Morrison, Marion.
[2] [3] This could explain why one of the soldiers buried in the grave is an unknown soldier.The Civil War Memorial Grave historical marker at the site erected by the Indiana Civil War Centennial Commission in 1965. Ironically one of the first vessels to arrive at the disaster was Steamboat USS Argosy No.27.