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JOSEPH
MILLER McLEAN -
CSA,
CO F 13TH GA REGIMENT

(Confederate)
J. McLane
Co. F, 13 Regt, Ga.
Appears on a Register of
Receiving and Wayside Hospital,
or General Hospital No. 9
Richmond, Virginia
March 19, 1863
Transferred to Chimborago Div. No. 2
Confed. Aarch., Chap. 6, File No. 114, Page 196
(sig) J. P. Johnson copyist
***These items were included as part of the record for his brother, J. F. McLean; there was also included in this file records which are most likely for John Morgan McLean as it concurs with other information found on him, a third brother out of 4 that served in the same company and regiment.******
Notes from Tom McLean after searching NARA in DC.
J. McLean appears at Chimbirazo Hospital No. 2, Admitted March 19, 1863; Diagnosis: Chronic Diarrhea; Died April 7, 1863;
Information from National
Park Service Civil War Soldiers & Sailors System
Website -
McLane,
J.M.
Confederate
Infantry
13th Regiment, Georgia Infantry
(These
records could be for either Joseph Miller McLean or his brother, John Morgan
McLean as they were both in Co. F, 13th GA Regt.)
J.M. McLane
Regiment Name 13 Georgia Infantry.
Side Confederate
Company F
Soldier's Rank_In Private
Soldier's Rank_Out Private
Alternate Name
Notes
Film Number M226 roll 41
CONFEDERATE
GEORGIA TROOPS
13th Regiment, Georgia Infantry
13th Infantry Regiment [also called Bartow Light Infantry] completed its
organization in June, 1861, at Griffin, Georgia. Its members were recruited in
the counties of Pike, Randolph, Early, Muscogee, Meriwether, Fayette, and Troup.
This regiment first served in Western Virginia, then in December was ordered to
Charleston, South Carolina, where it reported to General R.E. Lee. During the
spring it fought at Whitemarch Island and soon moved back to Virginia. Brigaded
under Generals Lawton, John B. Gordon, and C.A. Evans, it served with the Army
of Northern Virginia from the Seven Days' Battles to Cold Harbor. The regiment
was then involved in Early's Shenandoah Valley operations and the Appomattox
Campaign. The unit lost 9 killed and 19 wounded at Second Manassas, had 48
killed and 166 wounded at Sharpsburg, and sustained 13 casualties at Second
Winchester. Of the 312 engaged at Gettysburg, more than forty percent were
disabled. It surrendered 12 officers and 161 men. The field officers were
Colonel John H. Baker, Marcellus Douglass, Walton Ector, and James M. Smith;
Lieutenant Colonels S.W. Jones and Richard Maltbie; and Majors James A. Long and
John L. Moore.
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