Page:Southern Historical Society Papers volume 24.djvu/247

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'/'A.

Privates, 1 1 6 detailed or transferred, 6

Discharged for age or disability. 9

15

Died in service, 20

Wounded, 31

Killed, 20

Total rank and file, - - 145

Killed in battle, 28

Wounded (sometimes twice and more), 47

Died in service, 20

95

Of the enlisted men of i86i-'62, who went through the war, only five escaped unhurt, and two of these were detailed men.

At the battle of Games' Mill and Frazier's Farm the company had thirty-nine out of forty-five killed and wounded.

At the battle of Gettysburg, out of thirty-six, rank and file, eleven were killed and nineteen wounded.

At Sailor's Creek Captain Archer Campbell the fourth and last commander of the company was killed in the act of surrendering.

At Appomattox one lieutenant and several of the men who escaped at Sailor's Creek were included in the surrender.

Colonel R. E. Withers, the first commander of the i8th Regiment, said of this company: "A company which never failed in the hour of trial, and was always 'to be depended on.' '

Colonel H. A. Carrington, successor to Colonel Withers, said of it: " One of truest and most gallant companies which fought through the late war."

Lieutenant-Colonel G. C. Cabell said: "A noble band of Virginia braves, whose gallant deeds reflected undimmed honor on their county, their State, their country, and her cause."

Adjutant Ferguson said: "At the battle of Gettysburg, Company G was deployed as skirmishers, and at the proper time ' assembled ' and took its place in the line, I remember well, it was manoeuvred handsomely.

"As adjutant, I was in a situation to know, and can testify to the admirable conduct of the entire regiment ; how they closed up when large gaps were made in the rank ; how orderly they moved forward, driving the enemy, and how the few scattered ones that remained