Beauty And Islam Aesthetics In Islamic Art And Architecture Valrie Gonzalez

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Beauty And Islam Aesthetics In Islamic Art And Architecture Valrie Gonzalez
Beauty And Islam Aesthetics In Islamic Art And Architecture Valrie Gonzalez
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v
The Institute of Ismaili Studies
The Institute of Ismaili Studies was established in 1977 with the object
of promoting scholarship and learning on Islam, in the historical as well
as contemporary contexts, and a better understanding of its relation-
ship with other societies and faiths.
The Institute’s programmes encourage a perspective which is not con-
fined to the theological and religious heritage of Islam, but seeks to
explore the relationship of religious ideas to broader dimensions of so-
ciety and culture. The programmes thus encourage an interdisciplinary
approach to the materials of Islamic history and thought. Particular at-
tention is also given to issues of modernity that arise as Muslims seek to
relate their heritage to the contemporary situation.
Within the Islamic tradition, the Institute’s programmes seek to pro-
mote research on those areas which have, to date, received relatively
little attention from scholars. These include the intellectual and literary
expressions of Shi‘ism in general, and Ismailism in particular.
In the context of Islamic societies, the Institute’s programmes are in-
formed by the full range and diversity of cultures in which Islam is
practised today, from the Middle East, South and Central Asia and Af-
rica to the industrialised societies of the West, thus taking into

beauty and islam
vi
consideration the variety of contexts which shape the ideals, beliefs and
practices of the faith.
These objectives are realised through concrete programmes and ac-
tivities organised and implemented by various departments of the
Institute. The Institute also collaborates periodically, on a programme-
specific basis, with other institutions of learning in the United Kingdom
and abroad.
The Institute’s academic publications fall into several distinct and
interrelated categories:
1. Occasional papers or essays addressing broad themes of the relation-
ship between religion and society in the historical as well as modern
contexts, with special reference to Islam.
2. Monographs exploring specific aspects of Islamic faith and culture,
or the contributions of individual Muslim figures or writers.
3. Editions or translations of significant primary or secondary texts.
4. Translations of poetic or literary texts which illustrate the rich heritage
of spiritual, devotional and symbolic expressions in Muslim history.
5. Works on Ismaili history and thought, and the relationship of the
Ismailis to other traditions, communities and schools of thought in
Islam.
6. Proceedings of conferences and seminars sponsored by the Institute.
7. Bibliographical works and catalogues which document manuscripts,
printed texts and other source materials.
This book falls into category six listed above.
In facilitating these and other publications, the Institute’s sole aim is
to encourage original research and analysis of relevant issues. While every
effort is made to ensure that the publications are of a high academic
standard, there is naturally bound to be a diversity of views, ideas and
interpretations. As such, the opinions expressed in these publications
must be understood as belonging to their authors alone.

List of Illustrations
iKing Solomon and the Queen of Sheba from a manuscript of
al-®abarí’s Ta’ríkh al-rusul wa’l-mulïk (Courtesy of the Freer
Gallery of Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
[F1957.16 folio 79 v])
iiThe Great Mosque, Aleppo, Syria 11th–12th century ce (Photo:
Valérie Gonzalez)
iiiThe Mirador of Lindaraja, Alhambra, 14th century ce (Photo:
Claire de Virieu)
ivThe Comares Tower and the Court of the Myrtles, Alhambra,
14th century ce (Photo: Claire de Virieu)
vInside the Comares Hall or Hall of Ambassadors, Alhambra
(Photo: Institut Amatller d’Art Hispànic, Barcelona)
viThe Ceiling of the Comares Hall, Alhambra (Photo: Institut
Amatller d’Art Hispànic, Barcelona)
viiGeometrical Star Pattern, Alhambra (Photo: Claire de Virieu)
viiiGetty Tomb, Frank Stella, 1959 (Los Angeles County Museum
of Art [M.63.21], Contemporary Art Council Fund)
ixCupola of the Hall of the Abencerrajes, Alhambra (Photo:
Peter Sanders)
xCupola of The Great Mosque of Isfahan, Saljuq Art of the 12th
century ce
xiCourt of the Lions, Alhambra (Photo: Peter Sanders)

xiiDecorated Arcades of the Patio of the Court of the Lions,
Alhambra (Photo: Claire de Virieu)
xiiiDetail from the Court of the Myrtles, Alhambra (Photo:
Peter Sanders)
xivNo. 46 [Black, Ochre, Red over Red], Mark Rothko, 1957 (The
Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, The Panza
Collection. Photo: Squidds & Nunns)
xvAbstract Tile Pattern, Court of the Myrtles, Alhambra (Photo:
Claire de Virieu)
xviCupola of the Hall of the Two Sisters, Alhambra (The Aga Khan
Trust for Culture. Photo: Suha Özkan)
xviiThe Royal Bath, Alhambra (Robert Harding Picture Library)
xviiiCourt of the Lions, Alhambra (Photo: Peter Sanders)
xixSilver Pot, Herat, 12th century ce (The Hermitage,
St Petersburg)
xxBowl, Nishapur, Iran, 9th–10th century ce (The Nasser D.
Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, pot 183. Photo: The
Nour Foundation)
xxiBowl, Nishapur, Iran, 10th century ce (The Nasser D. Khalili
Collection of Islamic Art, pot 1492. Photo: The
Nour Foundation)
xxiiBowl, Nishapur, Iran, 10th–11th century ce (The Nasser D.
Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, pot 294. Photo: The
Nour Foundation)
xxiiiMiniature from the Maqåmåt of al-Harírí, Baghdad, 634/1237
(Bibliothèque Nationale, Ms. Arabe 5847, fo.26)
xxivCity, Edward Ruscha, oil on canvas, 1968, 139.7x121.9 cm.,
Twentieth Century Purchase Fund 1969.722 (Photo: The Art
Institute of Chicago)
xxvMiniature, from Nizåmi’s Khusraw and Shirín, Tabriz, early 15th
century ce (Courtesy of the Freer Gallery of Art, Smithsonian
Institution,, Washington, D.C., F1931.34)
xxviMiniature, Shåhnåma, Tabriz c. 1370 ce (Topkapi Palace,
Istanbul, 2153fo.65b)

xi
Foreword
Following the seminal works of great scholars of Islamic art such as Oleg
Grabar and Richard Ettinghausen, and the fateful textual studies of sen-
ior historians such as A.I. Sabra, a new era in the wider field of Islamic
studies seems to have begun – an era these very scholars helped usher
in. From Gülru Necipo@lu’s rigorous studies of geometry and ornament
in Islamic architecture, for example, a work that opened many new vis-
tas, through Antonio Fernandez Puertas’ significantly fresh examination
of the Alhambra, we have seen the publication of a major work by José
Miguel Puerta Vílchez which throws into sharp relief several fundamen-
tal questions of a cultural, philosophical and methodological kind,
effectively calling into question what had hardened as a scholarly ortho-
doxy among many art historians in the general field of Islamic intellectual
history.
Valérie Gonzalez refers in her work to the writings of all these schol-
ars, and draws heavily upon Puerta Vílchez. But this book, based largely
on a series of lectures delivered at The Institute of Ismaili Studies in
London, stands not only as an emblem of a new era in the field of Is-
lamic art, but also breaks much new ground, mapping out yet another
direction in a new and robust scholarly milieu. Breaking the older mould
of studying Islamic art exclusively in historical, sociological and
enumerative perspectives, Gonzalez takes a substantive and daring

beauty and islam
xii
methodological leap. She uses aesthetics both at the meta- and the object-
level, and both as theory and method, to explicate not only Islamic texts
containing conceptual discourses on beauty, as Puerta Vílchez has so
ably done, but also to analyse in the framework of aesthetic phenom-
enology the actual embodiment of the works of art themselves. It is here
that she adds her own new dimension to the study of Islam’s artistic
production.
But more than this, in her aesthetic analysis, Gonzalez uses modern
Western tools and applies them to Islamic data, thus pulling down the
dilapidated wall of methodological and cultural separation. The reader
is likely to agree with me that she has in this way brought in a breath of
fresh air and a good deal of illumination. One of the most significant
consequences of bringing together what have typically been considered
two disparate realms—namely, Islamic data and modern Western meth-
odology—is that it re-positions the study of Islamic art in the mainstream
of contemporary intellectual and cultural discourse, rather than relegat-
ing it to ‘area studies’, ‘minority studies’, or studies of ‘foreign cultures’.
This is precisely what Oleg Grabar had pioneered, but in the other di-
rection.
The range of synthesis in this book is impressively, and unusually,
wide. We meet in its pages not only Ibn Sínå, Ibn Rushd, Ibn al-Haytham
and many other medieval Muslim sages, but also modern Western phi-
losophers such as Wittgenstein and Nelson Goodman, phenomenologists
such as Bachelard and Husserl, artists such as Yves Klein and Mark Rothko,
and even contemporary thinkers such as Jacques Derrida—all fully inte-
grated into the book’s narrative. It is a wonderful and meaningful
experience to see a Derrida or a Wittgenstein being called upon in the
course of an explication of a Qur’anic verse; or to witness a Husserl be-
ing approached in an aesthetic analysis of the Islamic marvel called the
Alhambra. This is nothing less than a rehabilitation of Islamic studies
into the scholarly mainstream of our contemporary concerns.
Gonzalez deals with several fundamental aesthetic issues in the course
of her analysis—both of texts and of concrete artistic forms. There is a
fascinating discussion in the book of a Qur’anic verse which relates the
story of the Queen of Sheba’s visit to the palace of the Prophet-King

foreword
xiii
Solomon, a visit in which the Queen mistakes the crystal-clear glass floor
of the palace for real water. Here textual analysis goes hand in hand
with an aesthetic analysis, considering optical questions, such as that of
isotropy, along with semantic and semiotic questions. In her narrative,
Gonzalez articulates the important distinction between the aesthetic
concepts of resemblance and of representation, speaking of the ‘dialec-
tical tension’ generated by the formal process of resemblance between
artefacts (Solomonic device) and their models in nature (water). From
all this emerges a very significant aesthetic and metaphysical conclusion—
the artefact and its model are not to be confused; nature and art do not
admit of permutation, nor of the substitution of one for the other. This,
of course, contravenes the Aristotelian view of art as essentially mimetic:
we learn from Gonzalez that the Qur’an, at least in the verse under ex-
amination, manifests an absolute ‘non-recognition’ of imitative or
mimetic artistic creation. The author has in this way been able to pro-
vide us with a powerful characterisation of the Qur’an’s aesthetic ethos.
This whole, and very fruitful, question of representation is raised again
when Gonzalez turns to the analysis of an artistic creation, the Comares
Hall of the Alhambra. She challenges the standard view that the visual
forms here formulate in the physical substance what the parietal inscrip-
tions say in words, and that the Comares dome is a representational
embodiment of the seven Islamic heavens. Dismissing this view on fairly
rigorous phenomenological grounds, she demonstrates that in the for-
mal territory of the Alhambra there is no concrete localisation of textual
iconology; they constitute two autonomous aesthetic fields. The Alhambra,
Gonzalez concludes, embodies a dynamic system of visual and textual
metaphors. All this amounts to a welcome freshness of analysis and the
opening up of many new and illuminating issues.
Gonzalez also takes the question of geometric ornament, tackled in a
masterly fashion by Necipo@lu, into new and uncharted territory. She
constructs an aesthetic phenomenology of geometric ornament in the
Alhambra, and discusses its purpose as well as its logic in the ‘language
of material expression’. Here again, the harvest is plentiful. And in the
same vein—that is, in the spirit of a discoverer than of an expounder—
Gonzalez concludes the book with a chapter on the aesthetic system of

beauty and islam
xiv
inscriptions. For this final discourse, she builds upon the methodological
ground that she has prepared in the preceding chapters. Having cogently
argued that inscriptions constitute an autonomous artistic sphere in Is-
lam, she now has the justification and the prospects for studying
inscriptions in their own aesthetic right. The book in this way reaps its
own fruit, becoming its own proof.
I am sure that this work will delight not only scholars of Islamic art
and those interested in the wider area of Islamic studies, but also histori-
ans and practitioners of art in general, as well as contemporary
philosophers.
S. Nomanul Haq
Rutgers University and University of Pennsylvania

xv
Preface
Four of the chapters in this book (the exception being Chapter 4 on
geometry in the Alhambra) are based on a seminar series held at The
Institute of Ismaili Studies, which now does me the honour of publish-
ing them. For this I would like to thank all those who have shown interest
in my work, and made this book possible: Miriam Ali de Unzaga who
initiated my visit to the Institute and organised the seminar; Professor
Azim Nanji, the Director, who invited me and showed much kindness;
Dr Farhad Daftary, Head of the Department of Academic Research and
Publications who supported the project; Kutub Kassam who provided
assistance in preparing it for publication, and Patricia Salazar who ed-
ited the text and found the pictures. I would like also to thank Professor
Oleg Grabar of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and Pro-
fessor Jean-Claude Garcin of the University of Aix-en-Provence, who gave
me continual advice and scholarly as well as friendly encouragement in
my research on Islamic art and aesthetics, and Professor Robert Ilbert,
Director of the Maison Méditerranéenne des Sciences de l’Homme, who
extended both intellectual and cordial help, as well as practical support
for my research.
All translations into English in the book are my own.
Valérie Gonzalez
Ecole d’Architecture de Marseille-Luminy

The sap of trees runs within his eyes, limpid, live, green
— a wellspring of splendour and dreams.

1
Introduction
This work deals with what is usually called ‘aesthetics’ in the framework
of Islamic civilisation. Aesthetics is ‘the branch of philosophy that exam-
ines the nature of art and the character of our experience of art and of
the natural environment…’
1
Aesthetics can also be ‘applied’ in the sense
that its object of examination can be a specific and concrete work of art,
not only an artistic concept or question. More accurately, the book con-
cerns the particular discipline known as ‘aesthetic phenomenology’,
insofar as it means—to borrow a clear statement by Eliane Escoubias—
‘to understand how the mode of access to art, the mode of access to
what the work of art contains in terms of art, is a phenomenological
mode, is first of all to understand that art has always been and will always
be phenomenological’.
2
Aesthetics, and particularly aesthetic phenom-
enology, forms a specific and new field, which is still not taken into
account in the realm of Islamic studies, although it is fully integrated
into contemporary analytical works on art and art theory.
Two things are at the root of this situation. The first, of an epistemo-
logical order, concerns aesthetics itself as a science and mode of thought
which seems to emanate from the philosophical tradition of the mod-
ern Western world. Thus it is considered as more or less intrinsically
linked to the rules, principles and logic of this tradition and, conse-
quently, not truly adaptable to the thinking and the arts of other

beauty and islam
2
civilisations. The second, of a cultural order, deals with the Islamic con-
cept of the practice of the arts, or more accurately, what this is commonly
considered to be. On the one hand, this concept carries—as everyone
knows—some normative constraints (against the representation of liv-
ing things in visual forms) and, on the other hand, it has no clearly
defined rules or doctrine outlined in texts and treatises, as in the West-
ern world.
One might quickly deduce from such evidence that, as a specialised
branch of thought, aesthetics did not properly exist in Islam. Except for
a few rare attempts indicating a desire to find aesthetic elements in Is-
lamic written sources, this idea was commonly held until the recent
publication of a major book by the Spanish scholar José Miguel Puerta
Vílchez.
3
In his book Vílchez outlines a history of aesthetics in classical
Arabic thought that clearly demonstrates the existence of this branch of
philosophy in the Islamic, as well as in the Latin Middle Ages. From this
point of view, Puerta Vílchez’s work joins the renowned anthology on
Christian aesthetics written by Edgar de Bruyne.
4
But beyond this field
of philology and textual analysis, it is still generally thought that the
Islamic arts themselves can only really be considered from the histori-
cal, sociological and descriptive points of view. Very few scholars take
the initiative to use aesthetics as theory and method in order to under-
stand the conceptualisation and the forms of works of art. Nevertheless,
as in the abstract sphere of pure thought, there is much to learn about
Islamic artistic creation through the aesthetic approach. My aim in this
book is to demonstrate this and to thus encourage works of the same
kind in the future. What then, does this approach consist of?
The field of aesthetics falls into two interconnected but distinct
spheres: primary aesthetics, or ‘meta-aesthetics’ we should say, which
consists of philosophical activity whose object is the beautiful and the
experience of beauty; and aesthetics in the modern and specialised sense
which is both a practical and a theoretical knowledge of artistic crea-
tion. Naturally, by virtue of its purpose and/or its ability to produce
beauty, art involves both kinds of cognitive practice since it is basically
the tangible result and the expression of a certain concept of the beau-
tiful. Therefore, there are two paths towards an understanding of

introduction
3
aesthetics: the study of texts through which one defines the concept of
beauty and the doctrine of the creation of art; and the direct observa-
tion of artistic forms as meaningful things and the experience they
induce. These paths clearly constitute separate subjects for reflection.
However, though it is far from easy to relate texts and arts in the frame-
work of Islam, the former necessarily contain useful material for the
grasp of the latter. The next chapter, dealing with sura al-Naml (Qur’an
27:44) in the light of aesthetic analysis, shows that there remains a sub-
stantial number of unexamined Islamic sources conveying elements of
art theory, including the founding book itself, the Qur’an.
In other respects, the question is the method itself on which the aes-
thetic analysis of both textual and visual matters relies. The original
Islamic sources, indeed, shed some light on aesthetics as constituting
both a philosophical theory and a concept of artistic practice. In par-
ticular aesthetics provides the tools for understanding the intellectual
context from which they are generated and wherein the works of art are
produced. Nevertheless, these sources alone cannot supply the neces-
sary methodology for dealing with complicated aesthetic problems like
the specific question of representation, since, as already mentioned, epis-
temologically these problems proceed from centuries of Western thought
and artistic endeavour. It therefore means that one has to use tools which
do not belong a fortiori to the cultural area under observation. Taking
this necessity into account, part of my work has consisted in gathering
new methodological and intellectual material that is used in the study of
other arts in other cultural contexts; namely the very rich and diversi-
fied body of contemporary material. The latter includes works by artists
from recent times, such as Yves Klein or Mark Rothko, writings of theo-
reticians of art like Arthur Danto or Nelson Goodman, and also the works
of philosophers of various schools like the logician Wittgenstein, the
phenomenologists Gaston Bachelard and Edmund Husserl, and con-
temporary thinkers such as Jacques Derrida and Michel Serres, among
others. Phenomenological works, in particular, allow a deeper grasp of
the primordial meanings of forms and intelligibles that, in the frame-
work of the visual arts, help to reveal the essence of being of an object as
it appears to the sight, providing an invaluable source of knowledge. All

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must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
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Fritsche,
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out Aug. 21, 1865.
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William,
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Island, S. C.
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Edward,
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expired.
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Haller, George,New Haven, ” Discharged Oct. 19, 1863, by
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Henninger,
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Waterbury, ” Killed June 17, 1864, Bermuda
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Godfrey,
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March 15, 1864.
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Michael,
  ” ” Died June 5, 1862, Hilton Head,
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  ” ” Discharged, disability, Dec. 21,
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disab. July 18, 1865.
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Feb. 22, ’63, Beauf’t.
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Head.
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Dec. 21; m. o. Aug. 21, ’65.
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term expired.
Kung, George,   ” ” Re-en. Vet.; must. out Aug. 21,
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Kapmeyer, John,  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
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Necker, Joseph,  ” ” Wound. June 17, ’64; died Aug.
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expired.
Ringwald, Jacob,  ” ” Discharged Sept. 12, 1864;
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must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
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Hilton Head.
Schmidt, Fred.,  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Striby, Fred.,   ” ” Transferred to Invalid Corps,
Sept. 1. 1863.
Schmeisser,
Frank A.,
  ” ” Drummed out of Service, Nov.
21, 1862.
Schœnwether,
Gus.,
  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Schenk, George,  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Standt, George,Norwich, ” Deserted June 12, 1863.
Stinel, Herman,New Haven, ” Killed July 18, 1863, at Fort
Wagner, S. C.
Schemp, John,Hartford, ” Discharged Sept. 12, 1864;
term expired.
Schmidt, Jno. W.,New Haven, ” Discharged Sept. 12, 1864;
term expired.

Schmuder, John,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 21, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Schneder, Jacob,  ” ” Discharged, disability, Dec. 7,
1862.
Shleicher, Jos.,  ” ” Discharged, Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Stark, Michael,Southington, ” Wd. July 18,’63; killed June 17,
’64 at Ber. Hun., Va.
Spoehal,
Rudolph,
New Haven, ” Wd. May 20, 1864; discharged
May 29, 1865.
Schwartz,
Simeon,
Waterbury, ” Re-en. Vet. March 7, 1864;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Sill, William, Hartford, ” Died June 9, 1864; Richmond,
Va.
Tarrasoviez,
Stephen,
New Haven, ” Transferred to Invalid Corps,
Sept. 1, 1863.
Volkman, Ferd.,Norwich, ” Died Oct. 21, 1862, Beaufort,
S. C.
White, Frank,   ” ” Killed July 18, 1863, Fort
Wagner, S. C.
Wieprecht, Felix,Hartford, ” Wound. July 18, 1863;
discharged Sept. 12, 1864.
Wieser, Matthias,New Haven, ” Wound. July 18, 1863;
discharged Sept. 12, 1864.
Williams, Peter.  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
RECRUITS FOR INFANTRY COMPANY “C.”
*Abel, George,Norwalk, Oct. 7, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Adams, William,Danbury, Feb. 9, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Beick, Detlef, East
Haddam,
Sept. 5, ’63,Wound. May 20, ’64; died Apr.
3, ’65, Wilmington, N. C.
*Belchmer,
Christ.,
Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Killed May 20, 1864, Drury’s
Bluff, Va.

*Bode, Henry, East
Haddam,
Sept. 5, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Brady, James,Hartford, Nov. 10, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Baron, Charles,Danbury, Feb. 20, ’65,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Carr, Henry, Bridgewater,Nov. 12, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Deming,
Edward,
Voluntown,July 21, ’63,Wound. disch. disab. March 15,
1865, David’s Island.
*Dufour,
Francois,
Redding, Nov. 2, ’63,Deserted Nov. 7, 1864.
*Dorsing,
Charles,
New Haven,Mch. 15,
’65,
Died Aug. 18, 1865, New
Haven.
*Fisher, August,Norwalk, Oct. 6, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Frazier, Henry, Eastford, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Galvin, James,Middletown,Sept. 27,
’64,
Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New York.
*Gallagher,
James G.,
Windsor, Nov. 10, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Grandipau,
Jules,
New Haven,Mch. 10,
’65,
Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Hanson, Peter,Hartford, Jan. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Hampe, Henry
Otto,
  ” Feb. 29, ’64,Mustered out June 26, 1865,
Goldsboro, N. C.
Juergens,
Theodore,
Ridgefield,Oct. 16, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 16, 1865,
New Haven.
*Kapft, Frederick,Stamford, Oct. 12, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Lauffer,
Rudolph,
Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Died Jan. 2, 1865, Salisbury,
N. C.
*Lenoir, Eugene,New Haven,Mch. 10,
’65,
Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Meyer, Henry,Norwalk, Oct. 5, ’63,Deserted Nov. 9, 1864.
*Mohr, William,Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Discharged disab. May 22,
1865, New Haven.

*Mulle,
Augustus,
  ” Aug. 22,
’63,
Mustered out June 20, 1865,
Smithville, N. C.
Muller, Charles,  ” Aug. 1, ’63,Deserted Nov. 7, 1864.
Meyer, Charles,Hartford, Jan. 17, ’65,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Mertius, John,New
Canaan,
June 20,
’65,
Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Miller, Charles,Bridgeport,Feb. 3, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Payne, Chas.
W., Jr.,
New London,July 16, ’63,Wound. May 16, ’64; must. out
Aug. 21, ’65, N. Haven.
*Palmer, John,Danbury, Jan. 11, ’65,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Ringe, Henry,Southington,Sept. 21,
’63,
Killed May 16, 1864, Drury’s
Bluff, Va.
*Ruff, Anthony,Ridgefield,Oct. 22, ’63,Wd. Aug. 16, 1864; must. out
Aug. 21, 1865, N. Haven.
*Rice, John, Bridgeport,Feb. 3, ’65,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Reneis, Jacob,Woodbury,Feb. 7, ’65,Mustered out July 20, 1865,
Goldsboro, N. C.
*Ruors,
Christian,
Waterbury,Feb. 15, ’65,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Richardson,
James,
Montville, Dec. 3, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Schumaker
Henry,
Norwalk, Oct. 7, ’63,Shot for desertion April 17,
1864, Hilton Head.
*Searing, Peter,Hartford, Sept. 4, ’63,Wound. Aug. 16, 1864; disch.
disab. June 10, 1865.
*Salbach, Frank,Norwalk, Oct. 9, ’63,Deserted Nov. 7, 1864.
*Smith, Charles,Woodstock,Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Stockwell, John,Bridgeport,Feb. 3, ’65,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Schkilzger,
Louis,
Hartford, Feb. 22, ’65,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Sonnewald,
Aug. E.,
Milford, Dec. 20,
’64,
Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.

*Vogel, George,Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Missing May 16, 1864, Drury’s
Bluff, Va.
*Wooster,
Luman,
Middletown,Jan. 4 ’65,Mustered out Aug. 14, 1865,
New York City.
Note—* Substitutes and Drafted.

INFANTRY COMPANY “D.”
Rank. Residence.
Date of
Muster
REMARKS.
Captain.
Lorenzo Meeker,Stamford, Sept. 5, 1861,Pro. Lieut. Col.; wd. May 16,
1864; res. Sept. 13, 1864.
1st Lieutenant.
Chas. H.
Nichols,
Stamford, ” Pro. Captain; wd. May 16,
1864; disch. Jan. 4, 1865.
2d Lieutenant.
John Stottlar, Stamford, ” Pro. Capt. Co. B.; wd. Aug.
16, 1863; m. o. Dec. 2, ’65.
Sergeants.
Wm. H. Meeker,Stamford, ” Pro. 2d Lieut.; resigned Feb.
10, 1863.
Martin Stottlar,  ” ” Wd. July 18, 1863; pro. 1st
Lieut.; res. March 17, 1864.
Norman Provost,  ” ” Re-en. Vet.; wd.; pro. 1st
Lieut.; disch. Sept. 29,
1864.
John
Vandervault,
  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Giles Carey,   ” ” Discharged disability, Feb. 15,
1863, Fort Trumbull.
Corporals.
Robert Wilson,Stamford, ” Wd. Oct. 22, 1862; trans. to
Invalid Corps, Sept. 30, ’63.
Wm. H. Bailey,Greenwich, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Thomas Scriber,Stamford, ” Wd. May 15, 1864; disch. Oct.
12, ’65; term expired.

Wm. H. Hyde,Greenwich, ” Promoted 1st Lieut. S. C.
Vols., Nov. 14, 1862.
George W.
Finch,
Stamford, ” Wd. May 20, 1864; disch.
Sept. 6, 1864; term
expired.
George W.
Youngs,
Stamford, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Wm. H. Inness,  ” ” Discharged disability, Jan. 7,
1863, Beaufort, S. C.
Edward J. Bing,Stamford, ” Died April 3, 1862, Hilton
Head, S. C.
Musicians.
George Lord, Stamford, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Chas. H.
Lockwood,
  ” ” Transferred to Invalid Corps,
July 1, 1863.
Wagoner.
Frederick Bates,Stamford, ” Re-en. Vet. Jan. 4, 1864;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Privates.
Anderson, Geo.
W.,
Stamford, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out May 13, 1865.
Anderson,
Joel L.,
  ” ” Wd. May 20, 1864; disch.
disab. June 28, 1864.
Arrents,
Edwards,
  ” ” Transferred to Invalid Corps,
Sept. 1, 1863.
Bing, Charles,Greenwich, ” Discharged, disability, Feb. 9,
1863, New York.
Botts, John M.,Stamford, ” Re-en. Vet.; wd.; pro. 1st
Lieut.; must. out Aug. 21,
’65.
Bouton, Seth S.,  ” ” Discharged Dec. 23, 1863;
term expired.
Bouton, Wm. L.,New Haven, ” Wd. May 16, 1864; disch.
Sept. 6, 1864; term
expired.
Bohan, John, Stamford, ” Discharged disab. May 24,
1863, Hilton Head.

Bryson, Frank,  ” ” Re-en. Vet.; died of wds. May
19, ’64, Point Lookout.
Buckley,
Edmund,
Greenwich, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Buckley,
Thomas,
  ” ” Discharged disability, Aug. 10,
1864.
Burns, Dennis,Stamford, ” Wd. Oct. 22, 1862; disch.
Sept. 12, 1864; term
expired.
Clark, John S.,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
missing Aug. 16, 1864.
Clark, John,   ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Coyne, Wm. H.,  ” ” Re-in. Vet. deserted April 16,
1864.
Craw, Thomas,Bridgeport, ” Re-in. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Crocker,
Albert W.,
Stamford, ” Wd. Oct. 22, 1862; re-en.
Vet.; must. out Aug. 21,
’65.
Dixon, Alonzo,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Drew, John,   ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
deserted Nov. 9, 1864.
Finch, David,   ” ” Transferred to Invalid Corps,
Sept. 1, 1863.
Finch, Chas. E.,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
discharged Aug. 21, 1865.
Freeman,
Daniel,
  ” ” Died July 12, 1862, Hilton
Head, S. C.
Grady, John,   ” ” Wd. July 18, 1863; disch.
Sept. 22, 1864; term
expired.
Hasseman, J. F.,Greenwich, ” Wd. Oct. 22, 1862; re-en.
Vet.; deserted Oct. 27,
1864.
Hobby, Horace,Stamford, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.

Hounsloy, Roper,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Hoyt, George,  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Hoyt, Henry W.,  ” ” Died Oct. 30, 1862, of
wounds rec’d at Pocotaligo.
Hoyt, John L.,  ” ” Discharged; enlisted in
U. S. A., Nov. 6, 1862.
Hyde, Albert A.,Greenwich, ” Re-en. Vet. Jan. 4, 1864;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Jones, James,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 23, 1863;
deserted Nov. 9, 1864.
Jones, Joseph,New Canaan, ” Re-en. Vet. died of wounds
June 9, 1864.
June, Chas. H.,Greenwich, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Kent, Geo. W.,Stamford, ” Discharged disab. April 22,
1863, Beaufort, S. C.
Lockwood,
Ebgert,
Greenwich, ” Wd. July 18, 1863; disch.
Sept. 11, 1864; term
expired.
Lockwood, Jas.
L.,
Stamford, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
missing June 17, 1864.
Lower, Lewis,   ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Lowa, William,  ” ” Wd. and missing July 18,
1863, Fort Wagner.
McDonald,
Robert,
  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
McGee, James,Greenwich, ” Wd. July 18, 1863; Re-en.
Vet.; must. out Aug. 21,
’65.
Miles, John, Stamford, ” Died March 30, 1864,
Richmond, Va.
Morgan,
Michael,
  ” ” Wd. July 25, 1863; disch.
Sept. 11, 1864; term
expired.
Morehouse,
Wm. A.,
  ” ” Killed at Morris Island, July
18, 1863.

Northrop, Silas,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
O’Brien, Frank,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
deserted April 19, 1865.
Pratt, Wm. S.,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
wd.; must. out Aug. 21, ’65.
Picker, Thomas,  ” ” Discharged March 20, 1865;
term expired.
Picker, Patsy,   ” ” Died Oct. 5, 1863; Hilton
Head, S. C.
Potts, James A.,Chester, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, ’63; died
Dec. 4, ’64, on transport.
Pratt, Edgar L.,Stamford, ” Re-en. Vet. Jan. 4, 1864; wd.;
must. out Aug. 21, ’65.
Provost,
Andrew,
  ” ” Wd. Oct. 22, 1862; disch.
disab. March 28, ’63, N. Y.
Provost, Chas.
E.,
  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, ’63; died
Feb. 23, ’65, An’polis, Md.
Reynolds, Wm.
H.,
N. Castler,
N. Y.
” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, ’63; wd.;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Schofield,
Henry,
Stamford, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, ’63; wd.;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Schofield,
Smith,
  ” ” Wd. May 16, 1864; disch.;
Sept. 4, 1864; term
expired.
Searles, Edward,Chester, ” Re-en. Vet.; wd.; trans. Vet.
R. C.; disch. Jan. 9, 1865.
Searles,
George E.,
Stamford, ” Re-en. Vet.; Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out July 5, 1865.
Seely,
Edward M.,
  ” ” Wd. July 18, 1863; missing
June 17, 1864.
Seely, John, New Canaan, ” Died Aug. 10, 1862, Beaufort,
S. C.
Sniffen,
Irving L.,
Greenwich, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Snyder,
Oscar E.,
  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out June 8, 1865.
Sherwood, Wm.
H.,
  ” ” Wound. Oct. 22, 1862; disch.
disab. Feb. 18, 1863.

Sparks, John S.,Stamford, ” Disch. disab. April 22, 1863,
Beaufort, S. C.
Shattel, Geo. C.,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
killed Sept. 22, 1864.
Thorn,
Marenus W.,
  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
deserted Feb. 27, 1863.
Tonar, Barney,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out. Aug. 21, 1865.
Tœpher, Jos. A.,W’msburg, L.
I.,
” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
wd.; must. out. Aug. 21,
1865.
Vernal,
Oliver W.,
Stamford, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
wd.; must. out. Aug. 21,
1865.
Walters, Chas.
C.,
  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
wd.; must. out. Aug. 21,
1865.
Walters,
Edward H.,
  ” ” Transferred to Invalid Corps,
March 15, 1864.
Ward, John D.,Suffield, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
missing Aug. 16, 1864.
Weed, Chas. H.,Stamford, ” Wd. Oct. 22, ’62; Re-en. Vet.;
wd, ’64; tr. V. R. Corps.
Youngs, John R.,  ” ” Discharged, disability, May 24,
1863, Hilton Head.
RECRUITS FOR INFANTRY COMPANY “D.”
*Akins, James,New Milford,Nov. 14, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Berry,
Henry C.,
Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Brigham,
Chas.,
New Milford,Aug. 12, ’63,Deserted Nov. 9, 1864.
*Bougue, Rich.
M.,
Norwich, July 13, ’63,Died Feb. 23, 1865.
*Bradley, Geo.
M.,
Plymouth, Aug. 3, ’63,Mustered out June 1, 1865,
Hartford, Conn.

*Bradly, James,Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Brooks,
Rienzi J.,
Brookfield, Oct. 22, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Bruce, James,Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Deserted, Aug. 1, 1864.
Bush, Harry, Stamford, Feb. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
Hartford, Conn.
*Brennan, Peter,Ellington, Nov. 15, ’64,Deserted Feb. 6, 1865.
*Brown, Chas.,Guilford, Nov. 14, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 12, 1865,
New York City.
*Brown, Wm.,New Haven,Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Bruce, Robert,  ” Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Burke, Michael,Plymouth, Nov. 16, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Burns, Wm.,Middletown,Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Cunningham,
Jas.,
Stamford, Dec. 31, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Cassaday,
Wm.,
Danbury, Nov. 15, ’64,Deserted June 13, 1865.
*Clark, James,New Haven,Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Clark, John,   ” Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Collins, James,Danbury, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Degeneres,
Chas.,
Ridgefield, Oct. 22, ’63,Deserted Nov. 7, 1864.
*Duffy, Henry,Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Deserted Nov. 17, 1864,
Dinger, Isaac,Stamford, Feb. 20, ’64,Wd. May 16, 1864; must. out
Aug. 8, 1865, Washington.
*Duck, George,Meriden, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Dies, George,Trumbull, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Dietz, Gehard,Bloomfield, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,

New Haven.
*Duberle, Peter,Montville, Nov. 16, ’64,Deserted March 2, 1865.
*Edwards,
Henry,
Windham, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Ellis, William,Washington,Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Fox, Patrick, Bridgeport, Nov. 6, ’62,Wd. May 14, ’64; died Nov. 6,
’64, Andersonville, Ga.
*Foula, Prosper,Danbury, Aug. 22, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Farrel, Michael,New Haven,Nov. 15, ’64,Deserted May 30, 1865.
*Fitzgerald, Jno.
A.,
Durham, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Fitzgerald,
Jno.,
Guilford, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Flanaghan,
John,
New Haven,Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Goodman, John,Bridgeport, Dec. 19, ’64,Wd. June 17, 1864; mustered
out June 30, 1865.
Gilbert, Chas.,Ridgefield, Oct. 22, ’63,Deserted Oct. 27, 1864.
*Goodhardt,
Jno. H.,
Greenwich, Dec. 30, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Gardiner, Wm.,East Haven,Nov. 16, ’64,Deserted Dec. 15, 1864.
*Gillispie, Jas.
L.,
Ellington, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Granger, Wm.,Meriden, Nov. 16, ’64,Deserted Jan. 13, 1865.
Haight, John J.,Stamford, Dec. 9, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Harting, Ed. M.,New Canaan,Feb. 19, ’64,Killed Aug. 16, 1864, Deep
Run, Va.
Halpin, William,Stamford, Sept. 6, ’64,Mustered out June 26, 1865,
Goldsboro, N. C.
*Haggarty, Wm.,New Haven,Nov. 14, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Harris, Jas., Enfield, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Hesel, John, New Haven,Nov. 14, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.

*Hogan,
Andrew,
N. Stonington,Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Harris,
Bernard J.,
Ellington, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Jerman, Jas. H.,Bridgeport, Sept. 8, ’62,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Jones, David,Danbury, Oct. 23, ’63,Discharged June 8, 1864, by
order War Department.
*Jones, George,East Granby,Nov. 15, ’64,Deserted Feb. 6, 1865.
*Jackson, Thos.,Vernon, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Johnson, John,New Haven,Nov. 16, ’64,Deserted May 22, 1865.
*Johnson, Wm.,Watertown,Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Keller, August,Danbury, Oct. 22, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Kennedy, John,  ” Oct. 22, ’64,Wd. May 20, 1864; must. out
Aug. 21, 1865, New Haven.
*King, Joseph,  ” Oct. 22, ’64,Deserted April 28, 1864.
*John Kelley, Clinton, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Laurence,
Alfred,
Brookfield, Oct. 22, ’63,Wd. Aug. 16, 1864; must. out
Aug. 21, 1865, N. Haven.
Le Broeg,
Samuel,
Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Died of wds. Jan. 3, 1864,
Hampton Hospital.
*Les, Joit, Ridgefield, Oct. 22, ’63,Wd. May 10. 1864; must. out
Aug. 21, 1865. N. Haven.
*May, William,Danbury, Oct. 30, ’63,Deserted April 10, 1864.
Palmer, Isaac,Greenwich, Jan. 27, ’64,Mustered out June 23, 1865,
Hartford.
Palmer, Walter,  ” Jan. 27, ’64,Mustered out June 2, 1865,
Fort Monroe, Va.
Raymond, Jos.
E.,
  ” Feb. 23, ’64,Died March 5, 1865,
Wilmington, N. C.
*Reynolds,
Carlton,
  ” Jan. 28, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Stone, John H.,Bridgeport, Dec. 19, ’62,Discharged; enlisted U. S. A.
Feb. 22, 1863.

Searles,
Clarence E.,
Stamford, Feb. 16, ’64,Wd. Aug. 16, 1864; must. out
June 14, 1865, Hartford.
Townsend,
Orlando,
  ” Feb. 2, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Timpson, Benj.
S.,
  ” Feb. 20, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Taylor,
Nehemiah,
  ” Feb. 23, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Waterbury,
Samuel,
  ” Jan. 2, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Note—* Substitutes and Drafted.

INFANTRY COMPANY “E.”
Rank. Residence.
Date of
Muster
REMARKS.
Captain.
Edward P.
Hudson,
Waterbury, Sept. 4, 1861,Wd. July 18, 1863; resigned
Feb. 19, 1864.
1st Lieutenant.
Wm. H. H.
Wooster,
Waterbury, ” Resigned March 23, 1862.
2nd Lieutenant.
Ed. H.
Hotchkiss,
Prospect, ” Promoted 1st Lieut.; resigned
Dec. 16, 1862.
Sergeants.
James A. Blake,Waterbury, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
missing May 16, 1864.
Edwin L. Cook,  ” ” Transferred Invalid Corps,
Sept. 1, 1863.
Harvey L.
Mathews,
Prospect, ” Discharged, disability, Feb.
14, 1862.
Julius Saxe, Waterbury, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1864;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Orrin N.
Robbins,
  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Corporals.
John W. Hill,   ” ” Discharged, disability, July
30, 1862.
Ralph G.
Robbins,
  ” ” Died Sept. 2, 1862.
Henry P. Dalley,Prospect, ” Wd. Aug. 22, 1864;
discharged Sept. 12, 1864.

Frank Howard,Waterbury, ” Discharged Oct. 14 1863;
enlisted U. S. A.
Wm. D.
Wooding,
Cheshire, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Wm. Berkley,Prospect, ” Wd. July 18, ’63; re-en. Vt.
Feb. 6, ’64; m. o. Aug. 21,
’65.
Cor. J. Rollason,Naugatuck, ” Disch. dis. April 22, ’63,
Beaufort, S. C.
Frank King, Waterbury, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Musicians.
Wm. H.
Cushman,
New Britain, ” Discharged disability, March
6, 1863, Beaufort.
Oliver D. Peck,  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Wagoner.
Fred. Boldgett,Waterbury, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Privates.
Abbot, John,Waterbury, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
trans. V. R. C. Dec. 22,
1864; must. out Aug. 9,
1865, Washington, D. C.
Bagarly,
Thomas,
  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Baldwin,
Luzern,
Naugatuck, ” Wd. Aug. 16, 1864; disch.
Sept. 12, 1864.
Barnes, Seth J.,Farmington, ” Died Jan. 1, 1862, Hilton
Head, S. C.
Barton,
George A.,
Cheshire, ” Died Feb. 11, 1862, Warsaw
Island, Ga.
Bell, Edward,Woodbury, ” Discharged Sept. 12, 1864;
term expired.
Barden,
Nathan W.,
W. Norfolk, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Brown, Chas.
S.,
Waterbury, ” Trans. to Signal Corps,
U. S. A. Oct. 13, 1863.

Brown, John D.,  ” ” Discharged, disability, Feb. 6,
1863, New York.
Bunnel, Joseph,Woodbury, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
died of wds. Oct. 7, 1864.
Campfield,
George,
Winchester, ” Mustered out Aug. 21, 1864,
New Haven.
Carey, Thomas,Waterbury, ” Wd.; Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24,
1863; must. out Aug. 21,
’65.
Chandler,
John W.,
Prospect, ” Discharged, disability, Feb.
14, 1863, Beaufort, S. C.
Clark, James,  ” ” Deserted Sept. 5, 1861.
Cobbe,
George W.,
Norfolk, ” Died Oct. 23, 1862, Beaufort,
S. C.
Colton, Joseph,Waterbury, ” Pro. Quartermaster May 11,
1863; res. Sept. 13, 1864.
Cook, Henry A.,Naugatuck, ” Died Oct. 24, 1862, Beaufort,
S. C.
Doolittle,
Lyman,
Waterbury, ” Discharged disab. Sept. 8,
1862.
Dugal, Wm. H.,Naugatuck, ” Wd. July 18, ’63; disch. dis.
Nov. 16, ’63, Ft. Schuyler.
Downer,
Edwin L.,
Norfolk, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Downer, Wm.
J.,
  ” ” Discharged disab. March 9,
1862.
Dunn, Michael,Waterbury, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Durand, Theo.
G.,
Prospect, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Fahey, John, Waterbury, ” Discharged Sept. 12, 1864;
term expired.
Fenn, Gaius, Plymouth, ” Discharged Sept. 3, 1864;
term expired.
Flanagan,
Francis,
Naugatuck, ” Discharged Dec. 1, 1863, by
order Sec. of War.
Flanagan, John,Cheshire, ” Re-en. Vt. Dec. 24, 1863;
wound.; m. o. Aug. 21,
1865.

Gardner,
Porter L.,
Prospect, ” Re-en. Vt. Feb. 4, 1863; wd.;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Gilbert,
James H.,
Bethlem, ” Died Nov. 29, 1861, Hilton
Head, S. C.
Gough, James,Hartford, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Harrison, Wm.,Enfield, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Horton,
Edward W.,
Naugatuck, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Hotchkiss,
Evans B.,
Prospect, ” Discharged, disability, March
12, 1862.
Jeffre, John E.,Waterbury, ” Discharged by order War
Department, Sept. 7, 1863.
Johnson,
Thomas,
Centerv’le, R. I., ” Killed July 10, 1863, at Morris
Island, S. C.
Lalley, Michael,Waterbury, ” Discharged, disability, July
24, 1862.
Laughlin, Hugh,  ” ” Wd. July 18, ’63; re-en. Vt.
Dec. 24, ’63; kill. Oct. 7,
’64.
Lewin,
Joseph W.,
  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Long, Frank, Baltimore, Md., ” Discharged March 17, 1865;
term expired.
Losaw, Wm. H.,Winchester, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 23, 1864;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Main, John, Waterbury, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
McLavy, Robert,Farmington, ” Prom. 1st Lieut. 4th S. C.
Vols. Sept. 5, 1863.
Miner,
Harris W.,
Orange, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Morris, Peter,Waterbury, ” Deserted May 15, 1863.
Morrow,
John E.,
Cheshire, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Moulthrop,
Horace,
Waterbury, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
died of wds. Oct. 22, 1864.

McIntire,
Eugene,
Watertown, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 25, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Nelson,
Horatio,
Waterbury, ” Transferred to Signal Corps,
U. S. A. Feb. 29, 1864.
O’Connor,
Thomas,
  ” ” Died Jan. 13, 1863, Beaufort,
S. C.
Paul,
Andrew A.,
  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Peck, Abbott,Milford, ” Wd. Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24,
1863; must. out Aug. 21,
1865.
Peck, John W.,Norfolk, ” Died Feb. 9, 1862, Warsaw
Sound, Ga.
Peters, Wm.,Norwich, ” Discharged, disability, July 5,
1863, Folly Is., S. C.
Phalen,
Timothy,
Waterbury, ” Drowned, June 8, 1862.
Rigney, Wm.,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Royce, Chas.
B.,
Prospect, ” Wd. July 10, ’63; killed June
1, ’64, Bermuda Hun., Va.
Rueck, Carl, Waterbury, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Russel, Sam.
S.,
New Haven, ” Discharged July 5, 1863,
Folly Island, S. C.
Ryan, Thomas,Boston, Mass., ” Deserted Sept. 18, 1861.
Sage, Elisha,N. Marlbo., Ms. ” Died June 20, 1862.
Sanford,
Aaron C.,
Plymouth, ” Re-en. Vt. Dec. 24, ’63; wd.
Aug. 16, ’64; disch. dis.
April 27, 1865.
Sandford,
Spencer S.,
Prospect, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
missing Oct. 1, 1864.
Sawyer, James,Waterbury, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Scott,
Albert M.,
  ” ” Wd.; Re-en. Vet. Dec 24,
1863; must. out Aug 21,
’65.
Shannon,
Edward,
  ” ” Wd.; Re-en. Vet. Dec 24,
1863; deserted Nov. 7,

1864.
Smith,
George S.,
Prospect, ” Wd.; Re-en. Vet. Dec 24,
1863; died July 10, 1865.
Smith,
George H.,
Waterbury, ” Wd. July 18, 1863;
discharged Sept. 11, 1864.
Stebbins, Chas.
E.,
New Haven, ” Re-en. Vt. Dec. 24, ’63; died
of wds. Oct. 1, ’64, Ft.
Mon.
Stebbins,
George, W.,
  ” ” Wd. July 10, ’63; re-en. Vt.
Jan. 4, ’64; m. o. Sept. 2,
’65.
Swan, Wm. W.,Waterbury, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Talmadge,
Fred. A.,
Prospect, ” Died Dec. 18, 1861, Hilton
Head, S. C.
Talmadge,
John,
  ” ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Talmadge,
Steph. A.,
  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Welch, George,Waterbury, ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
Welch, Richard,  ” ” Re-en. Vet. Dec. 24, 1863;
must. out Aug. 21, 1865.
West, John, Enfield, ” Discharged Sept. 11, 1864;
term expired.
Wilcox, Jay P.,Waterbury, ” Pro. Capt. Co. “B;” killed May
10, ’64, Chester Sta., Va.
Woods, John,  ” ” Killed May 15, 1864, Drury’s
Bluff, Va.
Officer Appointed since First Muster.
1st Lieutenant.
Eugene
Atwater,
Plymouth, Dec. 2, ’64,Promoted Capt.; must. out
Aug. 21, 1865, New
Haven.
RECRUITS FOR INFANTRY COMPANY “E.”

Arapke,
John H.,
Bethel, Jan. 5, ’64,Wd. May 16, 1864; must. out
Nov. 8, 1865, Wash., D. C.
Anderson,
Walter,
Naugatuck, Mch. 8, ’64,Pro. 1st Lieut. Co. A.;
mustered out Aug. 21,
1865.
*Baker,
Abraham,
East Haddam,Sept. 5, ’63,Deserted Nov. 7, 1864.
Brady, Michael,Waterbury, Mch. 11, ’64,Wounded May 14, 1864;
mustered out Aug. 21,
1865.
Begley,
Thomas,
N. Hartford, Dec. 1, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Brennan,
John,
Guilford, Nov. 16, ’64,Deserted Dec. 7, 1864.
Clough, Ira E.,Waterbury, Feb. 22, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Dillane, Thos.,  ” Nov. 29, ’62,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Doling, Patrick,Naugatuck, Dec. 7, ’63,Killed Aug. 16, 1864, Deep
Run, Va.
Dalton, Patrick,Waterbury, Feb. 2, ’64,Wd. May 20, 1864; must. out
Aug. 21, 1865, New
Haven.
Dunn, Michael,Salisbury, Mch. 9, ’64,Must. out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Dunn, James,Bloomfield, Nov. 17, ’64,Must. out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*DeMars, Wm.,Ellington, Nov. 17, ’64,Deserted December 18,
1864.
*Dunn, Patrick,Waterford, Nov. 12, ’64,Deserted December 9, 1864.
Ferris,
DeForest W.,
Stamford, Mch. 11, ’62,Promoted 2d Lieut. Co. G;
mustered out Aug. 21,
1865.
Finnern, Larrey,Wethersfield,Nov. 11, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Golden, Jas.
B.,
Mansfield, Oct. 9, ’63,Deserted Nov. 9, 1864.
Hale, James,Bridgeport, Feb. 5, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.

Higgins, Daniel,Waterbury, Feb. 25, ’64,Wounded May 10, 1864;
mustered out Aug. 21,
1865.
*Hudson,
George,
Farmington, Nov. 18, ’64,Deserted Dec. 9, 1864.
Jones, Elijah,Waterbury, July 7, ’63, Deserted Nov. 11, 1864.
Jackson, Chas.,Roxbury, Nov. 17, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
Hartford, Conn.
Kreige, Chas.
H.,
Stamford, Jan. 29. ’62,Discharged March 17, 1865,
term expired.
*King, John, East Windsor,Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*King,
James F.,
Stratford, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Kempel, Louis,Orange, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Lynch, John, Waterbury, Jan. 23, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Langdale,
Joseph,
  ” Feb. 29, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Lapoint,
Joseph,
N. Milford, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865;
New Haven.
*Lewis, Henry,Prospect, Nov. 14, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 14, 1865,
New York.
*Lines, Daniel,Roxbury, Nov. 15, ’64,Wounded Jan. 12, 1865;
mustered out Aug. 21,
1865.
*Leonard,
John,
Winchester, Nov. 16, ’64,Deserted Dec. 18, 1864.
Matthews,
Daniel,
Bristol, April 1, ’62,Killed Oct. 22, 1862,
Pocotaligo, S. C.
*Murray, Henry,Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Deserted Nov. 9, 1864.
*McDonnoe,
Henry,
Bridgeport, Nov. 16, ’64,Deserted Feb. 1, 1865.
*Miller, Chas.,New Haven, Nov. 14, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Montey,
Francisco,
  ” Nov. 14, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.

*Murphy,
Michael,
Bristol, Nov. 17, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*McCarty,
Michael,
Huntington, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*McGinnis,
Michael,
New Haven, Nov. 15, ’64,Deserted March 2, 1865.
*McMahon,
James,
Huntington, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*McDonnell,
Thos.,
Bloomfield, Nov. 17, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*McCann,
James,
Bridgeport, Nov. 15, ’64,Deserted Jan. 4, 1865.
*Miller, James,Woodstock, Nov. 10, ’64,Deserted Dec. 12, 1864.
*Newbold,
James,
Norwalk, Oct. 3, ’63,Mustered out Oct. 16, 1865,
Hartford.
*Norris, Chas.
C.,
  ” Sept. 12, ’63,Deserted Nov. 11, 1864.
*O’Brien,
Michael,
Waterbury, Aug. 22, ’63,Killed Oct. 7, 1864, before
Richmond, Va.
*O’Gara,
James,
  ” Aug. 22, ’63,Deserted Nov. 7, 1864.
*O’Donnell,
Simon,
  ” Mch. 9, ’63,Mustered out June 10, 1865,
Hartford.
*Parker, Chas.,Wilton, Aug. 22, ’63,Deserted Nov. 9, 1864.
*Pritchard,
Wm.,
Ridgefield, Oct. 22, ’63,Wd. Aug. 16, 1864; must.
out Aug. 16, 1865,
Cincinnati.
*Quigley,
Thomas,
Stratford, Nov. 17, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Regan,
Patrick,
Ridgefield, Oct. 22, ’63,Deserted Aug. 24, 1864.
Reilly,
Christopher,
Coventry, Jan. 15, ’64,Mustered out July 8, 1865,
Fort Monroe, Va.
*Riley, John, Hartford, Nov. 16, ’64,Deserted Jan. 13, 1865.
*Sanches,
Martin,
Bethel, Oct. 22, ’63,Died Sept. 23, 1864,
Andersonville, Ga.
*Serrahan,
Wm.,
Danbury, Oct. 22, ’63,Discharged Nov. 19, 1864,
order War Department.

*Smith, Wm.,  ” Oct. 22, ’63,Deserted Aug. 16, 1864.
*Stark, Henry,  ” Oct. 20, ’63,Shot for desertion April 17,
1864, Hilton Head.
Stanley, Henry,  ” Oct. 20, ’63,Deserted May 10, 1864.
*Stevens,
James B.,
Enfield, Aug. 20, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*St. Clair,
John W.,
Danbury, Oct. 20, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Smith,
Elmer E.,
Farmington, Nov. 25, ’63,Discharged disability, Feb. 18,
1865, Wilmington, N. C.
Smith, Saml. S.,  ” Dec. 23, ’63,Died from wounds, May 25,
1865.
Stebbins,
James,
New Haven, Feb. 18, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Sullivan,
John O.,
Waterbury, Feb. 25, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Sears, John,   ” Mch. 9, ’64,Discharged disability, Jan. 8,
1865.
Schrupp,
Henry,
Hartford, Mch. 2, ’65,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Smith,
Thomas,
Bridgeport, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Stevens,
George,
N. Milford, Nov. 15, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Sullivan, John,Bloomfield, Nov. 16, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Thompson,
Jas.,
Woodstock, Nov. 14, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Niely, John,Ridgefield, Oct. 21, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Wall, Edward,Danbury, Oct. 20, ’63,Wd. Aug. 16, ’64; disch. Dec.
29, ’64, by order War Dept.
*Walling,
James,
Torrington, Aug. 22, ’63,Missing June 17, 1864.
*Ward,
Henry O.,
Hartford, July 31, ’63,Mustered out June 29, 1865,
Fort Monroe, Va.
*Williams,
Miles,
New Haven, Feb. 9, ’64,Mustered out June 19, 1865,
Hartford.

Wooster, Wm.
H. H.,
Waterbury, Feb. 22, ’64,Prom. Q. Master; must. out
Aug. 21, 1865, New
Haven.
Williams, Geo.,Bethlem, Feb. 27, ’64,Died of wounds June 21,
1864, Hampton, Va.
*Wilson,
James,
East Haven, Nov. 14, ’64,Deserted Jan. 13, 1865.
*Wallace,
James,
Woodstock, Nov. 5, ’64,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
*Wallace,
Michael,
Bloomfield, Nov. 17, ’64,Mustered out May 24, 1865,
New York.
*Zimball, Geo.,Danbury, Oct. 20, ’63,Mustered out Aug. 21, 1865,
New Haven.
Note—* Substitutes and Drafted.

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