. Philander P. Lane, colonel of volunteers in the Civil War, Eleventh Ohio Infantry . 1863-1864: November — June Closing Career of Eleventh Ohio — Grants Cam-paign of Chattanooga — Great Victory at Mission-ary Ridge — Eleventh Ohio Engaged — BattleAbove the Clouds — Thomass CampaignAgainst Johnston — Battle of Buzzard Roost —Shermans Campaign Against Atlanta — Battle ofResaca, Last Engagement of Eleventh Ohio — Endof its Three-years Term — Sent to Ohio and Mus-tered-out — Veterans and Recruits Remain asEleventh Battalion Ohio Volunteers — Served toEnd of the War—Mustered-out at Washington,June


. Philander P. Lane, colonel of volunteers in the Civil War, Eleventh Ohio Infantry . 1863-1864: November — June Closing Career of Eleventh Ohio — Grants Cam-paign of Chattanooga — Great Victory at Mission-ary Ridge — Eleventh Ohio Engaged — BattleAbove the Clouds — Thomass CampaignAgainst Johnston — Battle of Buzzard Roost —Shermans Campaign Against Atlanta — Battle ofResaca, Last Engagement of Eleventh Ohio — Endof its Three-years Term — Sent to Ohio and Mus-tered-out — Veterans and Recruits Remain asEleventh Battalion Ohio Volunteers — Served toEnd of the War—Mustered-out at Washington,June, 1865 288 XXI Colonel Lane After the War 295 MAPS OPPOSITEPAGE 1. A part of West Virginia, to show the movementsdescribed and the places mentioned in the four Kanawka campaigns of 1861-1862 ... 40 Chattanooga and its region, to show the move-ments of General Rosecrans in his ChattanoogaCampaign in August-September, 1863 . 200 3. Chickamauga: The field of the battles of Sep-tember 19 and 20, 1863, with the adjacentcountry including Chattanooga 216. s Colonel Lane (From a photograph taken in 1863, age 41) PHILANDER P. LANE 1861: April — July The Guns of Sumter — Enlistment Under the Three-Months Call — Organization — Camp Dennison — Re-enlistment for Three Years — Reorganization ofEleventh Ohio Infantry Volunteers The call of President Lincoln, April 15, 1861, for75,000 men was instantly followed in Ohio, as in all theother free States, by a rush of volunteers, far more thanthe number called. The quota of Ohio was 10,153, butwithin a week twenty regiments of infantry and manysmaller bodies for cavalry and artillery were in campsfor organization or offered and awaiting orders, thewhole number being more than double the quota. Andstill there were many companies, raised at the same timeand temporarily organized at their home towns andoffered to the Governor, which could not be acceptedbecause too many. In fact the Governor had alreadymuch


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectsoldier, bookyear1920