. History of the Eighteenth New Hampshire Volunteers, 1864-5 . end of each month of the regiments service(March missing). Month Companies Present Absent Present For Duty ^ Sick In arrest Total Sick Otherwise AND Absent October 6 477 23 500 IS 41 559 November G 412 63 475 44 2 521 December 6 373 60 433 87 520 January 6 425 25 450 67 2 519 February 7 487 53 540 63 4 607 April 9 670 9 1 GSO 106 76 862 IVIay 9 568 60 1 629 124 14 767 * Including extra and special duty. After Muster Out At the close of the Civil War in 1865 the Union armynumbered nearly one million men. The quick disbandmentof this


. History of the Eighteenth New Hampshire Volunteers, 1864-5 . end of each month of the regiments service(March missing). Month Companies Present Absent Present For Duty ^ Sick In arrest Total Sick Otherwise AND Absent October 6 477 23 500 IS 41 559 November G 412 63 475 44 2 521 December 6 373 60 433 87 520 January 6 425 25 450 67 2 519 February 7 487 53 540 63 4 607 April 9 670 9 1 GSO 106 76 862 IVIay 9 568 60 1 629 124 14 767 * Including extra and special duty. After Muster Out At the close of the Civil War in 1865 the Union armynumbered nearly one million men. The quick disbandmentof this great host and the mingling of its members with thecommunities at home in orderly fashion and without disturb-ance, gave demonstration on an unprecedented scale of thecivic virtue of volunteer soldiers. As if their peaceful courseshad not be n interrupted, the famer returned to his fields,the mechanic to his bench, the smith to his forge, and theclerk to his books. This was true in a notable measure ofthe Eighteenth New Hampshire, and it can be said of the.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectuniteds, bookyear1904