JOURNAL HISTORY OF THE TWENTY -NINTH OHIO VETERAN VOLUNTEERS, 1861--1865. ITS VICTORIES AND ITS REVERSES. And the campaigns and battles of Winchester, Port Re- public, Cedar Mountain, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Lookout Mountain, Atlanta, The March to the Sea, and the campaign of the Carolinas, in which it bore an honorable part. BY J. HAMP SECHEVERELL, . LATE COMPANY B, - On the twentieth anniversary of the organization of the Twenty-ninth regiment Ohio Veteran volunteer infantry, Comrade J. H. SeCheverell was instructed to prepare a history of the same, and the undersigned were appointed a committee to supervise its publication. Comrade SeCheverell, after months of perplexing labor, conlpleted the manuscript which was examined by us in Cleveland, July 19, 1882. It was then decided to issue fifty proof copies of the work to be put into the hands of members of the regiment for such additions or corrections as should be found necessary. This was done, and, after the return of the proofs and the incorporation of whatever corrections they contained, Comrade SeCheverell visited Akron, and spent seteral days with Colonel Schoonover, to whom was intrusted the corrections for that vicinity, and it is with no small degree of satisfaction that we now present the work to the comrades and friends of the regiment with our hearty endorsement, believing it as complete and perfect as it is possible to make it. DAVID W. THOMAS, THOMAS W. NASH, THADDEUS E. HOYT, ERWIN F. MASON, CHAUNCEY H. COON, CLEVELAND, OHIO, February I, I883. -- AUTHORS PREFACE. -- In the following pages no attempt at literary gush is made, the design being simply to preserve from oblivion the record of the valiant deeds of this, thebravest of the brave regiments from the Buckeye State, that in the dim, distant future, when-each comrade shall have answered to his last earthly roll-call and gone to the grand review with the many whose bones now repose in that far away country of the orange and the magnolia, those left behind may not forget the sacrifices made, and the untold dangers endured for that flag, the beautiful, starry emblem of a now united people, whose supremacy pre- served for them the blessings of this great country, the . best beneath the ethereal vault of heaven. The data from which the jourhal portion of the volume is composed was obtained from members of the regi- ment, who certify to its correctness. Colonel Jonas Schoonover furnished, from Atlanta to Washington. The reader will mark the entire absence of personal laudation so common in works of this class, and the crowding of a few favored ones to the front to the exclu- sion of the hundreds of equally brave and meritorious men in perhaps lowly positions. That the fortunes of war brought many forward with flattering prominence is most true, and that thousands who wore the simple blouse of blue and carried the musket were possessed of merit as great is also true. To have been a member of the Twenty-ninth Regiment Ohio Veteran Volunteers is glory enough for a lifetime. If you did your duty, it is well if you failed, printers ink will not make a hero of you. Then let each be content with the happy assurance that he did what he could for the flag. The writer would acknowledge in an especial manner his obligations to L. D. Drum, adjutant-general of the United States army, for the very complete casualty list at the close of the volume also, to SamuelB. Smith, adju- tant-general of Ohio, Hon. E. B. Taylor, Colonel Edward Hayes, Jonas Schoonover, Captain R. H. Baldwin, George W. Holloway the members of the very efficient revisory committee, Captains D. W. Thomas, T. W. Nash, Lieutenant T. E. Hoyt, Sergeant E. F. Mason, and C. H...