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The 49th Ohio Infantry Regiment (or 49th OVI) was an infantry regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War. The regiment served as part of the Horn Brigade for most of its service. Service
Of note, the 49th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment, commanded by COL Bidwell, brought 414 men into action, but lost only two enlisted men wounded. This was because Neill's 3rd Brigade of VI Corps was one of the last to reach the battlefield on Thursday, July 2, and was held in reserve on the Baltimore Pike at Rock Creek.
The regiment was constituted 15 May 1917 in the Regular Army as the 49th Infantry. It was organized 1 June 1917 at Syracuse, New York, from personnel of the 23rd Infantry . It moved to France in July 1918 and was attached to the 83rd Division 12 August 1918.
True history of Company I, 49th Regiment, North Carolina Troops, in the great Civil War between the North and South. Printed at the Enterprise Job Offices, Newton N.C. Civil War Letter From Colonel LeRoy M. McAfee, CSA; Written by the members of the respective commands. Walter Clark, Lt.Col. 17th regiment NCT (ed.).
The 49th Illinois Infantry was organized at Camp Butler, Illinois and mustered into Federal service on 31 December 1861. The regiment was mustered out on September 9, 1865. Total strength and casualties
The 49th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry was a regiment of infantry that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War.It was one of the 18 Massachusetts regiments formed in response to President Abraham Lincoln's August 1862 call for 300,000 men to serve for nine months.
The 49th Virginia Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment raised in Virginia for service in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. It fought mostly with the Army of Northern Virginia. The 49th Virginia completed its organization in July 1861.
After the war was president of Boston University. David K. Noyes was major but spent much of the time assigned to a military commission. Earlier in the war he had served as an officer in the 6th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment and lost a foot at Antietam. Hugh Porter was a corporal in Co. F. After the war he became a Wisconsin legislator.