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Roll of Honor
(No. XXI)
Names of Soldiers
Who Died in
Defense of the American Union
Interred in the
National Cemeteries
At
Memphis, Tennessee and Chalmette,
(Near New Orleans,) Louisiana
"Ah, never shall the land forget
How gushed the life-blood of her brave--
Gushed warm with hope and courage yet,
Upon the soil they fought to save!"
ROLL OF HONOR NO. XXI
GENERAL ORDERS}
QUARTERMASTER GENERAL'S OFFICE
NO --
}
Washington, D. C., June 11, 1869.
The following Roll of Honor, prepared in this office by Brevet Brigadier
General Alex. J. Perry, quartermaster United States Army, containing the record
of 23,016 deceased Union soldiers interred in the national cemeteries at
Memphis, Tennessee, and Chalmette, (near New Orleans,) Louisiana, is published
by authority of the Secretary of War for the information of their surviving
friends and comrades.
MISSISSIPPI RIVER NATIONAL CEMETERY, NEAR
MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
This cemetery is located on the Memphis and Ohio railroad at its intersection
with the Memphis and Raleigh plank-road, six miles from the city of Memphis,
Tennessee.
It contains 38 acres, and is inclosed by a wood picket fence. The
arrangement of burials of known dead is by States, the dead of the United States
army and navy occupying sections by themselves.
The grounds are neatly laid out with graveled walks and drives. A
portion of the cemetery is shaded by forest trees, a large number of which have
been left standing; and throughout the cleared portion, and along the borders of
the drives, young trees have been extensively planted.
The site for this cemetery was selected by a board of officers consisting of
Chaplain Wm. E. Earnshaw, Brevet Lieutenant Col. A. W. Wills, assistant
quartermaster, and Brevet Major G. W. Marshall, assistant quartermaster.
In the center of the monumental site a heavy gunboat mortar has been mounted,
and four large-siege guns, mounted upon stone pedestals, have been set as
monuments in different portions of the cemetery. A fine flag-staff with
shrouds and top-mast has been erected at a conspicuous point near the entrance.
A comfortable lodge for the accommodation of the keeper stands near the main
gate.
The designation of "Mississippi River National Cemetery" has been applied to
this cemetery, in recognition of the fact that by far the largest portion of the
burials are of those originally interred at various points on the banks of the
Mississippi River from Hickman, Kentucky, to Helena, Arkansas, including New
Madrid, Island No. 10 and Fort Pillow.
The whole number interred , as will be seen from the recapitulation, is 13,
962, of which 9,754 are white and 4,208 colored. Thirty-two States and
organizations are represented, and 537 regiments.
The victims of the Fort Pillow massacre, and those who subsequently died in
the occupancy of that fort, have all been removed to this cemetery and buried by
themselves in what is called the Fort Pillow section. The total number so
removed is 248. Of the 34 known names in this list only three are names of
victims of the massacre, and all efforts to obtain a list of the names of others
have been thus far unsuccessful.
The post office address of the superintendent of this cemetery is Memphis,
Tennessee. |
27th Regiment Iowa Volunteer Infantry
Roll of Honor
Mississippi River National Cemetery,
Memphis, Tennessee
| No. |
Name |
Rank |
Co. |
Died |
Sect. |
No. of
Grave |
Original Place
of Interment |
| 1890 |
Allen, Jacob C. |
Pvt. |
D * |
June 9, 1864 |
2 |
439 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 1915 |
Baldwin, James |
Pvt. |
E |
June 28, 1864 |
6 |
2034 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 1930 |
Beall, James |
Pvt. |
I |
Feb. 19, 1864 |
2 |
81 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 1935 |
Beck, George |
Pvt. |
D |
Feb. 8, 1863 |
1 |
113 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 1939 |
Bement, Sylvester |
Pvt. |
G |
June 9, 1864 |
1 |
262 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2007 |
Churchill, John |
Pvt. |
B |
June 25, 1864 * |
2 |
373 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2019 |
Cole, Charles |
Pvt. |
A |
July 26, 1864 |
2 |
353 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2028 |
Cooksey, Alexander F. |
Pvt. |
A |
July 9, 1864 |
2 |
338 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2055 |
Davidson, Ole |
Pvt. |
K |
June 21, 1864 |
2 |
428 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2092 |
Ellsworth, Job |
Pvt. |
B |
July 27, 1864 |
2 |
416 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2135 |
Goslin, John L. |
Pvt. |
E. |
June 21, 1864 |
2 |
414 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2150 |
Hale, Francis B. |
Pvt. |
B |
July 3, 1864 |
2 |
383 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2164 |
Hardy, Lewis S. |
Pvt. |
K |
Mar. 8, 1864 |
1 |
234 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2234 |
Jewett, David N. |
Pvt. |
C |
July 2, 1863 |
1 |
72 |
Near Moscow, Tenn. |
| 2243 |
Jones, William D. |
Pvt. |
F |
June 29, 1864 |
2 |
337 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2254 |
King, Willard H. |
Pvt. |
C |
July 5, 1864 |
2 |
334 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2276 |
Lineger, Frederick * |
Pvt. |
E |
July 5, 1864 |
2 |
403 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2295 |
McClaskey, James W. |
Pvt. |
A |
July 25, 1865 |
2 |
329 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2322 |
Marsh, Edwin L. |
Pvt. |
C |
May 10, 1864 |
1 |
268 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2345 |
Miller, Milton D. |
Pvt. |
A |
May 27, 1864 |
1 |
209 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2346 |
Milligan, William |
Pvt. |
C |
June 29, 1964 |
2 |
333 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 496 |
Moody, S. W. |
Cpl. |
I |
Dec. 1, 1862 |
? |
? |
Elmwood Cem, Memp. |
| 2372 |
Nielson, Jacob |
Pvt. |
B |
June 26, 1864 * |
2 |
418 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2380 |
Olar, John |
Pvt. |
H |
May 12, 1864 |
1 |
297 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2385 |
Osborn, James |
Pvt. |
A |
Aug. 4, 1864 |
2 |
422 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2397 |
Patterson, Junius C. |
Pvt. |
A |
Oct. 24, 1863 |
1 |
192 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2410 |
Perry, Elijah |
Pvt. |
A |
April 5, 1864 |
1 |
69 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 497 |
Pinkerton, James |
? |
I |
Nov. 30, 1862* |
? |
? |
Elmwood Cem. Memp. |
| 2470 |
Roving or Remig, Henry H. * |
Pvt. |
C |
May 23, 1864 * |
1 |
284 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2510 |
Sodestrom, Andrew |
Cpl. |
B |
Aug. 10, 1865 |
1 |
48 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2518 |
Stanley, James |
Pvt. |
I |
Nov. 7. 1863 |
2 |
359 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 2548 |
Thompson, Francis O. |
Pvt. |
F |
June 23, 1864 |
2 |
447 |
Memphis, Tenn. |
| 519 |
Wise, Samuel |
Pvt. |
G |
Jan. 8, 1863 * |
? |
? |
Elmwood Cmt., Memp. |
| * Indicates a discrepancy between the Roll of Honor
and The Iowa Roster and Records of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the
Rebellion. I recognize the difference, but have no way of knowing
which (if either) is correct. |
The following were not found in the Roll of Honor.
However, they were listed in the
Iowa Roster and Records of Iowa Solders in the War of
the Rebellion
as buried in the Mississippi River National Cemetery, Memphis, Tenn.
| No. |
Name |
Rank. |
Co. |
Died |
Sect. |
No. of
Grave |
Original Place
of Interment. |
|
Bouck, Warren |
. |
C |
Mar. 16, 1864 |
1 |
159 |
Unknown. |
  
Roll of Honor
(No. XXII)
Names of Soldiers
Who Died in
Defense of the American Union
Interred in the
National Cemeteries
At
National Cemetery at Nashville, Tennessee.
"Here let them rest;
And summer's heat and winter's cold
Shall glow and freeze above this mould--
A thousand years shall pass away--
A nation still shall mourn this clay
Which now is blest"
ROLL OF HONOR NO. XXII
Quartermaster General's Office
Washington, D. C., August 4, 1869
The following Roll of Honor, prepared in the cemeterial branch of this office,
under the direction of Brevet Brigadier General Alex. J. Perry, Quartermaster
U.S.A. and containing the record of sixteen thousand four hundred and
eighty-five (16,485) graves of deceased Union soldiers interred in the national
cemetery at Nashville, Tennessee, is published by authority of the Secretary of
War, for the information of their surviving comrades and friends.
M.C. Meigs,
Quartermaster Genera, Brevet Major General U.S. A.
NASHVILLE NATIONAL CEMETERY
This cemetery is situated on the Gallatin pike, six miles from Nashville,
Tennessee, and is intersected by the Louisville and Nashville railroad, which
divides it into nearly equal parts. It comprises about fifty-eight acres
of beautifully undulating ground, a part of which is covered with a grove of
stately forest trees. The avenues, nearly four miles in extent are
macadamized and graveled so as to form pleasant and delightful drives. A
natural rivulet running through the grounds has been widened and deepened, and
neatly walled up to form an outlet for drainage, as well as to serve as an
ornamental water-course. The whole grounds are surrounded by a substantial
picket fence.
The total number of dead interred in the cemetery is sixteen thousand four
hundred and eighty-six, of which twelve thousand four hundred are known, and
three thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine are unknown. Of white soldiers
there are fourteen thousand five hundred and seventy-seven, and of colored one
thousand nine hundred and nine. The number of regiments represented is
seven hundred and thirty, and of states and independent organizations
thirty-one.
The bodies interred in this cemetery have been gathered from an extensive
region of country, along the Cumberland River from Carthage on the east to
Clarksville on the west; from the line of the Louisville and Nashville railroad
as far as Mumfordsville, Kentucky; from the Nashville and Northwestern Railroad
to the tennessee River at Johnsonville; from the Edgefield and Kentucky and the
Memphis branch of the Louisville and Nashville railroad; from Bowling Green to
Clarksville; from the Nashville and Chattanooga railroad to Lavergne; and from
all intermediate and adjacent country; from the Nashville battle-field, and many
of the skirmish grounds in Southern Kentucky, comprising those originally
collected and buried at Tompkinsville.
The number of distinct burial places from which these bodies were taken is
two hundred and fifty-one. A very large proportion of the dead in this
cemetery, however, were transferred from the hospital burial grounds in and
around the city of Nashville.
A full and complete record of all interments in this cemetery, together with
a complete copy of all burial sheets, has been deposited at the cemetery for the
information of friends and visitors.
Plats of the cemetery, showing the arrangements of the grounds and the
precise location of each grave, with the number to each, will be found on
deposit in the office of the Quartermaster General, at Washington, and also a
duplicate copy of the burial sheets.
Persons desiring to visit this cemetery can reach it by railroad from
Louisville or Nashville, stopping at the Madison station, or by private
conveyance from Nashville over the Gallatin pike.
The superintendent in charge of this cemetery may be addressed through the
Nashville post office.
|
27th Regiment Iowa Volunteer Infantry
Roll of Honor
Nashville National Cemetery, Tennessee
| No. |
Name |
Rank |
Co. |
Date of Death |
Sec. |
No. of
Grave |
Original Place of
Interment |
| 3838 |
Peterson, Abraham |
Pvt. |
B |
Dec. 7, 1864 |
E |
2741 |
Nashville, Tenn. |
  
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