366 History of Hingham. 



little else is known than the fact of their being recruited, and 

 that they were either natives of Hingham or served upon its quota. 



Edwin Allen, three years, Thomas Griffin, three years, 



Louis Anderson, Edward Hackett, three years, 



Calvin R. Baker, Mark Hall, 



John Baker, three years, Otis C. Hardy, three years, 

 Joseph Barstow, served with Kit James Hayes, 



Carson, William Hillarston, 



George W. Boen, three years, Edward Bourne Hinckley, Clergy - 

 George H. Bonney, three years, man, 



Edwin Booth, Henry A. Hitchcock, three years. 



John Brown, three years, Jeremiah Hurley, 



Melzar W. Clark, Edward Kelley, 



John Collins, three years, Joseph B. Kelsey, 



Thomas Collins, three years, Kittredge, 



William Colman, William H. Lane, three years, 



Barney Conaley, Jacob Lowe, 5th (U. S.) Artil. 



Charles Cook, three years, John C. Maguire, Co. G, 5Gth 

 Henry Daggett, three years, Mass. 



Horatio M.Dallas, one year, Cap- Patrick Mahoney, 



tain in frontier service, Michael McGrane, 9 months, 



Thomas D. Dalton, three years, Charles H. Muschatt, three years, 



Albert Damon, George H. Osborn, 



James Dempsey, three years, Edwin Poiney, three years, 



Henry B. Downes, three years, Edward L. Preston, Co. A, 5th 

 Josiah Edson, Cavalry, 



West D. Eldredge, three years, William Randall, 



Lenclal Hanscom Ewell, Co. H, Edward Roach, three years, 



4th Rcgt. David P. Robinson, 



Thomas M. Farrell, Albert Sawyer, 



John G. Gorman, Franklin Simmons, 



Timothy Gordon, Capt. Co. G, William T. Sprague, three years, 



4th Regt. William Thompson. 

 James Gorman, 21st Regt. 



The roll of honor which Hingham cherishes with love and pride 

 for its record of bravery and devotion contains the names of four 

 hundred and seventy-three soldiers and sailors who served upon 

 her quota, besides nineteen who marched with the Lincoln Light 

 Infantry in the first days of the war and did not subsequently 

 appear on the lists ; making four hundred and ninety -two different 

 men furnished by the town for the defence of the country. To 

 this number should be added twenty-eight Hingham men who 

 joined regiments in other States, bringing the whole number up 

 to five hundred and twenty. The number re-enlisting cannot 

 perhaps be accurately ascertained, but the aggregate of enlist- 

 ments from Hingham during the war, and not including the mem- 

 bers of the Lincoln Light Infantry, is stated in " Hingham in the 



