. Officers of the army and navy (volunteer) who served in the civil war . W. Lindsey as colonel ; G. \V. Monroe,lieutenant-colonel, and Wesley Cook, major. The regi-ment was immediately ordered to service in the field, andwith his command Colonel Lindsey participated in thecampaigns under General Garfield in the Big Sandy Val-ley, and under General G. W. Morgan in the capture ofand around Cumberland Gap; from there up the Kanawha ;from there to Memphis, Tennessee, where he was placedpermanently in the command of a brigade, and with itparticipated in the campaigns and battles thereof underGener


. Officers of the army and navy (volunteer) who served in the civil war . W. Lindsey as colonel ; G. \V. Monroe,lieutenant-colonel, and Wesley Cook, major. The regi-ment was immediately ordered to service in the field, andwith his command Colonel Lindsey participated in thecampaigns under General Garfield in the Big Sandy Val-ley, and under General G. W. Morgan in the capture ofand around Cumberland Gap; from there up the Kanawha ;from there to Memphis, Tennessee, where he was placedpermanently in the command of a brigade, and with itparticipated in the campaigns and battles thereof underGenerals Sherman, McClellan, and Grant against Ar-kansas Post, Vicksburg, and Jackson, Mississippi; amithence under General Ord, commanding the corps, theThirteenth was transferred to the Gulf Department,where, his health having become impaired by continuousservice in the field, and being required by medical adviceto transfer to a more northern climate, he, on October14, 1863, resigned his command to accept the positionof inspector-general of Kentucky, to which he was com-. missioned October 31, [863. In the summer of 1S64 hewas commissioned adjutant-general of Kentucky, andheld the position until the fall of 1867. In January,1868, he resumed the practice of law in Frankfort, inwhich he has continued up to the present, being con-nected in the practice with his father until the death ofthe latter in November, 1877. He is closely identified with the business interests of hiscity ; has been since July, 1868, a director of the BranchBank of Kentucky, and since July, 1884, its was for man) years a member of the City Council,is president of the Capital Gas and Flectric-Light Com-pany, president of the Frankfort Water Company, vice-president of the Kentucky Midland Railway Company,and a director in the Kentucky River Twine-Mills. He was married January, 1864, to Katherine McllvainFitch. Three sons, Thorn,is Noble, Henry Fitch, andDaniel Weisiger, Jr., and one daughter, Katie F


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