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OHIO
ONE HUNDRED and FOURTH INFANTRY
(Three Years)
Organized: Camp Massillon, OH on
8/1/62
Mustered Out: 6/17/65 at
Greensboro, NC
Officers Killed or Mortally
Wounded: 3
Officers Died of Disease,
Accidents, etc.: 4
Enlisted Men Killed or Mortally
Wounded: 46
Enlisted Men Died of Disease,
Accidents, etc.: 130
(Source: Fox, Regimental Losses)
One Hundred and Fourth Infantry. -
Cols., James W. Reilly, Oscar W. Sterl;
Lieut.-Cols., Asa S. Mariner, William J. Jordan; Majs., Lawrin D. Woodworth,
Joseph F. Riddle. This regiment was
organized at Camp Massillon, Aug. 30, 1862, to serve for three years. It left for Cincinnati on Sept. 1 and on
its arrival was taken across the Ohio river to Newport, going into camp 3
miles out on the Alexandria turnpike.
A few days later it was transferred to Covington and sent out to Fort Mitchel, at which point the advanced pickets of the
Confederate forces were met and skirmished with, the regiment losing 1 man
killed and 5 wounded. It continued to
operate in Kentucky, watching and checkmating the movements of the
Confederate forces, until the following summer, when it joined Gen.
Burnside's army in East Tennessee.
Nothing of importance occurred until the siege of Knoxville, during
which the regiment occupied various important positions under fire and lost
several men wounded. It remained in
that portion of Tennessee until early in April, 1864, when it was ordered to
Cleveland, Tenn., where troops were assembling preparatory to the Atlanta
campaign. The regiment formed part of
that grand army, participated in all its general engagements, and in the
desperate assault at Utoy creek lost 26 killed and
wounded. It followed Hood into
Tennessee and at Columbia had a skirmish with a force of Confederate
cavalry. The engagement at Franklin
was the most severe the regiment had ever participated in, its loss there
being 60 killed and wounded. It bore
an honorable part in the battle of Nashville, then pursued the enemy to
Clifton, Tenn., and from there was ordered to North Carolina. It skirmished with the Confederates at Fort
Anderson, charged the enemy at Town creek, where it captured a number of
prisoners and a quantity of small arms, with a loss of 2 killed and 20
wounded. It was mustered out on June
17, 1865.
Source: The Union Army, vol. 2
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