The Sword and Gun. R. C. Eden
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R. C. Eden
The Sword and Gun
A History of the 37th Wis. Volunteer Infantry
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066137410
Table of Contents
CHAPTER II. THE SIEGE OF PETERSBURG .
CHAPTER III. THE CAMPAIGN OF 1865 .
ORIGINAL ROSTER OF FIELD, STAFF AND LINE OFFICERS
ROSTER OF THE 37TH WIS. VOLS. AT ITS FINAL MUSTER OUT.
Preface | 5 | |
History— | Chapter I | 7 |
Chapter II | 17 | |
Chapter III | 39 | |
Table of Gain and Loss | 69 | |
Roster and Muster Rolls | 70 | |
List of Deaths | 110 | |
Final Roster | 117 | |
L'Envoi | 118 |
PREFACE.
I have attempted, in this small volume, to give a true and impartial history of the brief but glorious career of our Regiment. Though called into the field at a late hour, the services of the Regiment have been arduous and severe, in the extreme, and, participating, as it has done, in the last closing scenes of the rebellion, it has shared in the honor and glory of winding up the secession movement.
These memoirs have been mostly compiled from memory, with the assistance of the regimental and company records, and the reminiscences of my brother officers.
For the literary excellence of the work, I claim no merit, as I have not endeavored to accomplish more than the title of the work sets forth: a plain "History of the 37th Regiment Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry." As such a record, it may, I hope, be kindly received among those whose deeds it sets forth; further than that I care little for its fate.
A few years, and the scenes of this rebellion will become misty and indistinct, through the veil of years; a few more, and it will have become a matter of history, minor details and incidents being lost and absorbed in the great broad facts of the period. Then, the author has a hope, a vain one if you will, but springing from the pardonable vanity of a parent in the offspring of his brain, that such records as this will be prized as this generation is passing away, and those who have shared in the stirring events of the time it treats of, may,
—— dying, mention it within their wills,
Bequeathing it, as a rich legacy,
Unto their issue.
[Julius Cæsar, Act III, Scene 2.
CHAPTER I.
In the spring of 1864, a call having been made by the President for 500,000 fresh troops, his Excellency, James T. Lewis, issued an order for the raising of a regiment to be designated the 37th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry.
To Sam. Harriman, of Somerset, St. Croix county, Captain of company A, 30th Wisconsin, was entrusted the charge of raising this regiment, and a commission as Colonel issued to him on the 7th of March.
The work of recruiting was immediately entered into with vigor, and, on the 13th of April, 1864, the first company, (company, B, Capt. R. C. Eden,) was mustered into the service of the United States, at the rendezvous at Madison,