. Norwich University, 1819-1911; her history, her graduates, her roll of honor . ged in the following battles;second Battle of Bull Run, Antietam,Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Get-Col. Jacob Parker Gould, tysburg, Wilderness, Petersburg,\\eldon Railroad, Poplar Spring Church, Hatchers Run, and the He was wounded, July 30, 1864, at the Mine Explosion and sent to CityPoint Hospital, where it was found necessaiy to amputate a leg, on accountof a compound fracture of the left knee joint, caused by a bullet wound. Hewas transferred to Officers at Philadelphia, Penn., w


. Norwich University, 1819-1911; her history, her graduates, her roll of honor . ged in the following battles;second Battle of Bull Run, Antietam,Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Get-Col. Jacob Parker Gould, tysburg, Wilderness, Petersburg,\\eldon Railroad, Poplar Spring Church, Hatchers Run, and the He was wounded, July 30, 1864, at the Mine Explosion and sent to CityPoint Hospital, where it was found necessaiy to amputate a leg, on accountof a compound fracture of the left knee joint, caused by a bullet wound. Hewas transferred to Officers at Philadelphia, Penn., where he arrivedAugust 20th, suffering greatly from the effects of the amputation. On thefollowing morning a large ai-tery burst in the wound, and although the bleedingwas soon checked, he had not strength to recover from the shock, but graduallysank away, and died August 21, 1864. The respect and love in which he was held by his comrades-in-arms can-not be better expressed than by giving the following resolutions on his death,which were passed by the officers of his 1849] SKETCHES OF ALUMNI AND PAST CADETS. 449 Headquarters 59th Regiment Massachusetts iNFANTRy. Bricks Station, Va., September 13, 1864. At a meeting of the officers of this regiment convened at regimental head-quarters this 13th inst., of which Lieutenant-Colonel Joseph Colburn waspresident, and Second Lieutenant Charles P. Welch, secretary, the followingresolutions were unanimously passed. Whereas, it has pleased God in the mysteries of His providence to re-move from our midst one of our most valued and best loved officers, therefore: Resolved, That in Colonel Gould we all recognize a man of more thanordinary conscientiousness, guided in all his actions by the highest priciples towhich he always adhered, a brave, able, and faithful officer, a patriot in thehighest and broadest significance of the term, a Christian gentleman, andthat in him the service has lost one of its staunchest adherents and most t


Size: 1412px × 1770px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidnorwichunive, bookyear1911