Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 123rd Ohio Infantry was organized at Camp Monroeville in Huron County, Ohio, and mustered in for three years service on September 24, 1862, under the command of Colonel William Tecumseh Wilson. The regiment was attached to Railroad Division, West Virginia, to January 1863.
F and G Companies of 2-123 performed admirably and were given awards after the mountain fighting. The 33rd Infantry Division and the 37th Infantry Division from the Ohio Army National Guard reached the outskirts of Baguio and the 123rd moved out of the mountains and into the valley near Tuba. G Company, sent to protect the regiment's left flank ...
119th Ohio Infantry-failed to complete organization: men transferred to 124th OVI; 120th Ohio Infantry [143] 121st Ohio Infantry [144] 122nd Ohio Infantry [145] 123rd Ohio Infantry [146] 124th Ohio Infantry [147] [148] 125th Ohio Infantry [149] 126th Ohio Infantry [150] 127th Ohio Infantry See 5th Regiment United States Colored Troops; 128th ...
67th Ohio Infantry Regiment; 68th Ohio Infantry Regiment; 69th Ohio Infantry Regiment; 70th Ohio Infantry Regiment; 71st Ohio Infantry Regiment; 72nd Ohio Infantry Regiment; 73rd Ohio Infantry Regiment; 74th Ohio Infantry Regiment; 75th Ohio Infantry Regiment; 76th Ohio Infantry Regiment; 77th Ohio Infantry Regiment; 78th Ohio Infantry Regiment
Once Levi Coman had related the exploits of the army in his letter April 27, 1862, he continued with more personal issues. “Now while I think of it when you have an opportunity to send me more ...
This force consisted of the 123rd Ohio Infantry and the 54th Pennsylvania Infantry, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Horace Kellogg of the 123rd Ohio, and three companies (80 troopers) of the 4th Massachusetts Cavalry under Colonel Francis Washburn. The cavalry reached the bridge before the main Confederate force, chased away some poorly armed ...
He was appointed lieutenant colonel of 123rd Ohio Infantry Regiment on September 9, 1862, and colonel of the regiment on September 26, 1862. [1] Wilson was captured at the Second Battle of Winchester in June 1863 and spent ten months in Libby Prison before being paroled in time to participate in General David Hunter's Lynchburg Campaign in 1864.
The next letter from Levi Coman is dated April 29, 1862. Coman, along with the 76th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, marched with their division from the camp at Pittsburg Landing toward Purdy, Tennessee.