. New history of the 99th Indiana Infantry : containing official reports, anecdotes, incidents, biographies and complete rolls . he farm and was married January 1, 1866, toMiss Thirza H. Dyer, of Wheaton, 111. They have five children)four girls and one bo^. He is still on the farm, and his address isLowell, Indiana. flyers, William, Company F. Born October 24, 1834, in Ger-many; enlisted August, 1862, and served through the war. MarriedJanuary 13, 1867, at Michigan City, Indiana; has family of fourboys and three girls; has lived in Carroll county, Indiana, since thewar. Is by occupation a farm


. New history of the 99th Indiana Infantry : containing official reports, anecdotes, incidents, biographies and complete rolls . he farm and was married January 1, 1866, toMiss Thirza H. Dyer, of Wheaton, 111. They have five children)four girls and one bo^. He is still on the farm, and his address isLowell, Indiana. flyers, William, Company F. Born October 24, 1834, in Ger-many; enlisted August, 1862, and served through the war. MarriedJanuary 13, 1867, at Michigan City, Indiana; has family of fourboys and three girls; has lived in Carroll county, Indiana, since thewar. Is by occupation a farmer. Address, Pittsburg, Indiana. McQregor, John C, lieutenant Company K. Born April 21,1845, near Zanesville, Ohio; came to Cass county with his parentsin 1849; worked on the farm until the war began; enlisted in 1861 ina Missouri regiment and was in campaign with Generals Lyon andFremont; was engaged in battle at Wilson Creek, August 10, 1861,where General Lyon was killed; was also in the engagement at PeaRidge, March 8, 1862, after which he was discharged and returned 184 New History of the Ninety-Ninth Indiana COLONEL ALEXANDER FOWLER. At various places in the body of this history will be found inci-dents of Colonel Fowlers history, so I need only make a shortsketch of his life since the war. At its close, in partnership withtwo other gentlemen, he went down on the Arkansas river and raiseda crop of cotton, making- a great strike in a financial way. Thenext year, just as they were ready to pick the cotton, the levee abovethem broke and their cotton went down the river and all was a totalloss. His money gone, he returned to South Bend and sold hisproperty there for $2,000, and with that as his capital, went into thelumber business at Fort Scott, Kansas, in 1868. He did well andmade money until the grasshoppers came and ate Kansas sales stopped as well as collections, and although heowned fifteen houses in Fort Scott, he could not get enough out ofthem to


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