. History of the 118th Pennsylvania Volunteers Corn exchange regiment, from their first engagement at Antietam to Appomattox. To which is added a record of its organization and a complete roster. Fully illustrated with maps, portraits, and over one hundred illustrations, with addenda . tunate as to be allotted thenew guns were seen mov-incr along- the dead andwounded replacing themwith a weapon they knewall about. Among the losses otherthan those previously re-ferred to were CaptainCharles M. Young,Company K, mortallywounded; LieutenantsJohn Scott, Company A, __^^_ _ and Henry Conner, Com- l^^


. History of the 118th Pennsylvania Volunteers Corn exchange regiment, from their first engagement at Antietam to Appomattox. To which is added a record of its organization and a complete roster. Fully illustrated with maps, portraits, and over one hundred illustrations, with addenda . tunate as to be allotted thenew guns were seen mov-incr along- the dead andwounded replacing themwith a weapon they knewall about. Among the losses otherthan those previously re-ferred to were CaptainCharles M. Young,Company K, mortallywounded; LieutenantsJohn Scott, Company A, __^^_ _ and Henry Conner, Com- l^^^j^^^^^SBi^^^^^^^^^^jpany C, wounded; Ser- ^geant George VV. Haines,of Company F, was shotin the head, and privatesJacob Swartz, BenjaminI. Stevens, AlexanderMcCay and Thomas Hart, of Company F, were killed. The regiment had moved out in the morning with an aggre-gate of i6i. It returned at eleven oclock in the evening tothe same position it had left with fifty-six less, all of whom hadbeen either killed or wounded. With this severe loss, the con-duct of officers and men had been most commendable, andCaptain Wilson, for his courageous and skilful managementthroughout the whole affair, had won a lasting reputation forfitness and capacity as a commanding officer. He was brevetted. CAPTAIN CHARLES M. YOUNG. — 522 — to a majority for gallant service at Peebles Farm. The fightof the morning became known as Peebles Farm and that ofthe afternoon as Pegrams Farm. On the morning of the ist of October the division returnedto the position which it had sought the day before and beganthe construction of works laid out for the permanent works were maintained until the operations about Peters-burg were concluded. Near this vicinity the line of the 6th Corps


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Keywords: ., bookauthorunitedstatesarmypenns, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900