. Officers of the army and navy (volunteer) who served in the civil war . of Farmington, Mississippi, and in the advance upon andsiege of Corinth. He was then on sick-leave of absenceto August [3, 1862, when he was engaged in organiz-ing volunteer regiments in Connecticut to September 15,1862. He was then placed in command of Camp Douglas,Illinois, to November 23, 1863, at which time he was ona military commission investigating General Buells cam-paign in Kentucky and May 10, 1863. Hisfield of duty was then changed to the East, and he wasemployed in guarding the Upper Potomac, bei


. Officers of the army and navy (volunteer) who served in the civil war . of Farmington, Mississippi, and in the advance upon andsiege of Corinth. He was then on sick-leave of absenceto August [3, 1862, when he was engaged in organiz-ing volunteer regiments in Connecticut to September 15,1862. He was then placed in command of Camp Douglas,Illinois, to November 23, 1863, at which time he was ona military commission investigating General Buells cam-paign in Kentucky and May 10, 1863. Hisfield of duty was then changed to the East, and he wasemployed in guarding the Upper Potomac, being engagedin the action at Martinsburg, Virginia, and in commandof Harpers Ferry and Maryland Heights when the rebelarmy invaded Pennsylvania ; was then placed in com-mand of the troops at Baltimore, Maryland, and subse-quently of the District of Delaware to April 6, 1864, atwhich time he resigned from the service. After leaving the army, General Tyler was proprietorof the Woodstock Iron Company, Anniston, Alabama,from 1872 to 1882; agent of the bondholders (to fore-cl


Size: 1838px × 1359px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidofficersofarmyna01powe