.
Died, Mar., 1871.
Perkins, Rollin.
Born in Vermont.
Corporal, 6th Infantry, M. V. M., in service of the U. S., Aug. 31, 1862, to June 3, 1863.
Private and Corporal, July 7 to Oct. 27, 1864. First Lieutenant, 24th U. S. Colored Infantry, Apr. 11, 1865.
Mustered out, Sept. 30, 1865. Second Lieutenant, 8th U. S. Infantry, Feb. 23, 1866. First Lieutenant, July 28, 1866.
Retired, June 10, 1868.
Perry, Leonard B.
Born in Massachusetts. Second Lieutenant, 55th Mass. Infantry, July 14, 1863. First Lieutenant, Feb. 7, 1864.
Captain, Assistant Adj. General, U. S. Volunteers, Mar. 28, 1865.
Mustered out, Oct. 12, 1865.
Pettee, Lemuel.
Born in Massachusetts.
Private and Sergeant, 11th U. S. Infantry, Oct. 25, 1861, to Oct. 6, 1862. Second Lieutenant, Sept. 25, 1862. Brevet First Lieutenant, U. S. Army, July 2, 1863. First Lieutenant, Apr. 26, 1864. Brevet Captain, Mar. 13, 1865.
Transferred to 29th U. S. Infantry, Sept. 21, 1866.
Captain, 29th U. S. Infantry, Nov 2,
1866.
(Letter, War Dept., Dec. 19, 1894.)
Fitzgerald, Edward M.
Corporal, 26th Mass. Infantry, Sept. 23, 1861.
Discharged, Sept. 25, 1863, to be Captain, 14th La. Infantry, or 14th Corps d'afrique, afterward 86th U. S. Colored Infantry.
Mustered out as Captain, 86th U. S. Colored Infantry, Apr. 10, 1866.
Fletcher, John W.
Second Lieutenant, 43d Infantry, M. V. M., in service of the U. S., Sept. 16, 1862.
Mustered out, July 30, 1863.
Captain, 36th U. S. Colored Infantry, July 14, 1863.
Resigned, May 14, 1864.
Folsom, Norton.
Born at Boston, Mass., Apr. 15, 1842. Medical Cadet, U. S. Army, Oct. 19, 1861, to Oct. 18, 1862. Acting Assistant Surgeon, U. S. Army, Nov. 14, 1863, to Nov. 28, 1863.
Major, Surgeon, 45th U. S. Colored Infantry, Apr. 10, 1864. Brevet Lieut. Colonel, U. S. Volunteers, Mar. 13, 1865.
Mustered out, Nov. 11, 1865.
Foster, Daniel.
Chaplain, 33d Mass. Infantry, Aug. 13, 1862.
Discharged, Nov. 16, 1863, for promotion as Captain, 37th U.
cols. 1, 2, p. 4, cols. 1, 3; Aug. 28, p. 4, cols. 1-8.
Boston riot,
July 14, 1863.
Compared with that of New York.
Boston Evening Journal, July 17, 1863, pin the North End; sympathetic with New York riots.
Boston Evening Journal, July 14, 1863, p. 2, col. 5, p. 3, cols. 6, 7; July 15, p. 2, col. 4, p. 3, cols. 5, 7.
n; war story.
Atlantic, vol. 10, p. 694.
Cooper Street riot, Boston,
July 14, 1863. Boston Evening Journal; July 15, 1863, p. 2, col. 4, p. 4, cols. 1, 5, 6; ss. Atlantic, vol. 13, p. 364.
—Relief work on field of Gettysburg, July 10-14, 1863. John Y. Foster.
Harper's Mon., vol. 28, p. 381.
—Sanitary Commission, at in the North End; sympathetic with New York riots.
Boston Evening Journal, July 14, 1863, p. 2, col. 5, p. 3, cols. 6, 7; July 15, p. 2, col. 4, p. 3, cols. 5, 7.
— – Riot at Cooper Street Armory, July 14, 1863. Boston Evening Journal, July 15, 1863, p. 2, col. 4, p. 4, cols. 1, 5, 6; July 16, p. 2, col. 4, p. 4, col. 3.
l, again suspended, Nov. 5, 1862
Commenced in Boston, by districts, May 12, 1863
Caused a great riot in Boston, July 14, 1863
Drainage
on the surface began on Tremont street, Sept., 1866
The great sewer to Moon Island commenced, 187ark square, 1843
On Copp's hill removed to Cooper street, Oct., 1827
Cooper street attacked by a mob in a riot, July 14, 1863
H.
Habeas Corpus
suspended in military arrests, Sep. 24, 1862
Hancock, John
one of the Selectmen of Bo
At Lynn, Shoemakers' ; Boston police sent, Jan. 24, 1860
Conscription Act, Cooper street; thirty persons killed, July 14, 1863
At a political meeting, Faneuil Hall; eighteen arrests, Sep. 28, 1864
Orangemen's, New York City; sensation in , 1862
On the Common, Sundays, 1862
Held by wards, July 31, 1862
The draft culminated in Cooper street riot, July 14, 1863
Lee's Army surrendered to Grant, war ended, Apr. 10, 1865
News, between Russia and Turkey, received, Apr. 26, 1
er 20, 1862,in North Carolina11,07412,207Major-Gen. D. H. Hill, from July 17, 1862, to July 1, 1863.
January, 1863, in North Carolina26,95831,273
February 20, 1863, in North Carolina15,90419,894
March l, 1863, in North Carolina20,733
April 10, 1863, in North Carolina7,5018,385
May 10, 1863, in North Carolina4,8516,590
May 31, 1863, in North Carolina22,14926,838
June 30, 1863, in North Carolina18,60122,822
July 30, 1863, in North Carolina8,5569,900Major-Gen. W. H. C. Whiting, from July 14, 1863, to October 16, 1863.
August 31, 1863, in North Carolina7,3918,867
September 30, 1863, Defences of Wilmington3,8664,618
October 31, 1863, Defences of Wilmington5,2716,251
November 30, 1863, Defences of Wilmington5,8306,669Major-Gen. George T. Pickett, from October 16, 1863, to April 21, 1864.
December 31, 1863, Defences of Wilmington6,4857,299
January 31, 1864, Defences of Wilmington5,4306,181
February 29, 1864, in North Carolina12,70315,252
March 30, 1864, District of Cape Fear6
of Lancaster—were each wounded on the day of the surrender.
Rion's battalion.
Colonel Rion, as we have seen, went into the service first as colonel of the Sixth.
He resigned this command in June, 1861, but he could not keep out of the service, and in 1862 he raised a company in Fairfield, and with Colonel P. H. Nelson, of Kershaw, formed a battalion, with Colonel Nelson as lieutenant-colonel and himself as major.
With this battalion he served during the rest of the war. On the 14th July, 1863, he was complimented in general orders by General Beauregard for leading successfully an attack on Morris Island in which he was wounded by a bayonet.
Going to Virginia with Hagood's brigade in the spring of 1864, on the 14th May, preceding the battle at Drury's Bluff, he drove back a line of battle with his skirmishers.
He was wounded in the battle on the 16th May, but continued on the field during the whole day. At Petersburg, on 14th June, he again led, at night, a line of skirmishe