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Alvin S. Wiggin, of Manchester.

Transferred to Company L.

James H. Baker, of Farmington.

Mustered out June 21, 1864.

Henry A. Flint, of Farmington.

Cashiered Feb. 4, 1865.

Gilman T. Gould, of Peterborough.

Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

Second Lieuts.-H. D. F. Young, of Lancaster.
Promoted to First Lieut. July 11, 1862.

Norton R. Moore, of Goffstown.

Died Aug. 29, 1862.

James H. Baker, of Farmington.

Promoted to First Lieut. June 18, 1863. Alvin S. Wiggin, of Manchester.

Promoted to First Lieut. July 4, 1863.

James H. Swain.

Wounded May 9, 1864. Mustered out June 21, 1864. Joseph Lemmons, of Manchester.

Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

Co. G.-Captains-Ephraim Weston, of Hancock.

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First Lieuts.-Evarts W. Farr, of Littleton.

Promoted to Captain Jan. 1, 1862.

Sylvester Rogers, of Nashua.

Killed at Bull Run, Aug. 29, 1862.

David Steele, of Antrim.

Severely wounded at Gettysburg, July 2, 1863. Promoted to Captain July

8,1863.

George M. Shute, of Concord.

Transferred to Company B.

Hiram K. Ladd, of Haverhill.

Mustered out June 21, 1864.

James E. Saunders, of Peterborough.

Promoted to Captain July 10, 1864.

Charles A. Locke, of Loudon.

Honorably discharged May 11, 1865.

James W. Felt, of Winchester.

Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

Second Lieuts.-Sylvester Rogers, of Nashua.

Promoted to First Lieut. Jan. 1, 1862.

David Steele, of Antrim.

Promoted to First Lieut. Aug. 1, 1862. Edmund Dascomb, of Greenfield.

Died of wounds July 13, 1863.

John McDonald, of Portsmouth.

Transferred to Company K.

Rufus L. Bean, of Portsmouth.

Dismissed May 7, 1864.

John E. Hartwell, of Chester.

Promoted to First Lieut. Sept. 20, 1865.

Freeman F. Sanborn, of Portsmouth.

Promoted to First Lieut. Nov. 1, 1865.

Co. H.-Captains---Ichabod Pearl, of Great Falls.

Resigned Aug. 12, 1861.

Joshua F. Littlefield, of Somersworth.
Transferred to Company B, May 23, 1862.

Joab N. Patterson, of Hopkinton.

Severely wounded at Gettysburg, July 3, 1863. Promoted to Lieut. Colonel June 21, 1864.

Albert J. Hanson, of Great Falls.

Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

Promoted to Captain May 23, 1862.

First Lieuts.-Joab N. Patterson, of Hopkinton.

Harrison D. F. Young, of Lancaster.

Promoted to Captain Aug. 20, 1862.

John D. Cooper, of Concord.

Promoted to Adjutant June 18, 1863.

Andrew G. Bracy, of Somersworth.

Mustered out June 21, 1864.

Albert J. Hanson, of Great Falls.

Promoted to Captain, Nov. 3, 1864.

Edward Clark, of Hooksett.

Promoted to Captain, July 11, 1865.

Henry C. Tyler, of Portsmouth.

Not mustered. Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

Second Lieuts.-Wm. H. Prescott, of Concord.
Promoted to Captain U. S. Army, Aug. 7, 1861.

John F. Holman, of Somersworth.

Promoted to First Lieut. Sept. 2, 1862.

Andrew G. Bracy, of Somersworth.

Promoted to Captain, June 18, 1863.

William Montgomery, of Hopkinton.

Mustered out June 21,

James Thompson, of Portsmouth.

1864.

Not mustered. Died at Warsaw, Va., Nov. 10, 1865.

George C. Stephens, of Jaffrey.

Not mustered. Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

Co. I.-Captains-Edward L. Bailey, of Manchester. Promoted to Major, July 26, 1862.

Joseph A. Hubbard, of Manchester.

Transferred to Company B, Oct. 12, 1862.

George W. Gordon, of Allenstown.

Slightly wounded at Gettysburg, July 2, 1863. Killed at Cold Harbor, June 3, 1864.

Thomas E. Marshall, of Mason.

Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

First Lieuts.-J. A. Hubbard, of Manchester.

Promoted to Captain, July 26, 1862

Oscar A. Moar, of Manchester.

Died of disease, July 31, 1863.

Hiram K. Ladd, of Haverhill.

Transferred to Company G.

Alvin S. Wiggin, of Manchester.

Mustered out June 21, 1864

Thomas E. Marshall, of Mason.

Promoted to Captain, April 27, 1865.

Robert C. Sides, of Portsmouth.

Promoted to Adjutant, Nov. 1, 1865.

Freeman F. Sanborn, of Portsmouth.

Not mustered. Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

Second Lieuts.-J. A. Hubbard, of Manchester.

Promoted to First Lieut. July 29, 1861.

George W. Gordon, of Allenstown.

Promoted to Captain, Sept. 1, 1862

Charles Vickery, of Manchester.

Taken prisoner at Gettysburg, July 2, 1863. Died of wounds July 10, 1863.

Robert L. Miller.

Transferred to Company A.

David M. Perkins, of Manchester.

Promoted to First Lieut. May 25, 1864.

George T. Carter, of Concord.

Promoted to Captain, June 24, 1864.

Richard W. Robinson, of Concord.

Not mustered. Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

Co. K.-Captains-William O. Sides, of Portsmouth. Resigned July, 1861.

Hiram Rollins, of Dover.

Severely wounded at Bull Run, July 21, 1861. Honorably discharged on account of wounds, Oct. 14, 1862.

Samuel O. Burnham, of Pembroke.

Transferred to Invalid Corps, Sept., 1863.

Albert M. Perkins, of Exeter.

Transferred to Campany D.

George E. Sides, of Portsmouth.

Slightly wounded at Gettysburg, July 2, 1863. Mustered out June 21, 1864. James I. Locke, of Portsmouth.

Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

First Lieuts.-J. S. Godfrey, of Hampton Falls.

Appointed Quartermaster, June 4, 1861.

Edwin R. Goodrich.

Promoted to Commissary of Subsistence, U. S. Vols. Sept., 1861.

John S. Sides, of Portsmouth.

Resigned Jan. 7, 1863.

George E. Sides, of Portsmouth.

Promoted to Captain, April 18, 1863.

Charles H. Shute, of Concord.

Transferred to Company D, April 18, 1863.

William H. Colcord, of Exeter.

Wounded at Cold Harbor, June 5, 1864. Mustered out June 21, 1864.

James I. Locke, of Portsmouth.

Promoted to Captain, April, 1, 1865.

Alexander Frazer, of Bow.

Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

Second Lieuts.-James S. Sides, of Portsmouth.
Promoted to First Lieut. Aug. 1, 1861.

George E. Sides, of Portsmouth.

Promoted to First Lieut. Aug. 1, 1862.

Charles N. Patch, of Portsmouth.

Wounded at Gettysburg, July 2, 1863. Died of wounds July 10, 1863.

John S. McDonald, of Portsmouth.

Mustered out June 21, 1864.

George H. Coleman, of Piermont.

Mustered out Dec. 19, 1865.

GENERAL GILMAN MARSTON.

Gen. Gilman Marston is a native of Orford, and the son of a farmer. He comes of fighting stock; of his ancestors more than one took the field, during the early hostilities of the province, and his grand-father, one of the first settlers of Orford, served with much credit as a captain, in the old French war.

Ilis boyhood was passed upon his father's farm, where he formed a practical acquaintance with all the operations of husbandry, and a taste for agricultural pursuits, which has never left him. But he had a strong desire for a collegiate education, and with true New England independence, determined that he would acquire it, without imposing any burden upon his father. By employing his winters in school-teaching, he succeeded in his purpose, and graduated at Dartmouth College in 1837. The next year and a half he was in charge of an academy in Indianapolis, Ind., and then pursued the study of the law in the office of Judge Wilcox, in Orford, at the Dane Law School, at Cambridge, and finally in the office of Messrs. Hubbard and Watts, in Boston.

In 1841 Mr. Marston was admitted to the bar, and at once opened an office in Exeter, where he has since resided. Going there without acquaintance or capital, it required no small degree of courage and resolution to strive for a position in a bar which numbered among its members such men as Levi Woodbury, Ichabod Bartlett, James Bell and Daniel M. Christie. To add to the difficulties which Mr. Marston had to encounter, he was soon attacked by a serious illness, which endangered his life, and disabled him for business, for a considerable time. But his resolution never failed him, and in spite of all discouragements, he steadily made his way in the confidence of the community.

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