Lee mervin
Cadet
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2019
Hi,
I would be very grateful if anyone could help me interpret some service records belonging to my Great Grandfather's brother William Wedgwood, originally from Staffordshire England, who emigrated to New York in the mid 1840s.
After being invalided out of the 40th New York Infantry regiment in June 1862 due to chronic rheumatism, he reenlisted with The 133rd New York Infantry Regiment in September 1862.
The particular document I would like some help on seems to be records of his whereabouts at the time roll calls were taken. (See attached).From July to November 1864 he is described as being Absent Without Leave - finally turning up in a Field Hospital in Sandy Hook in December 1864.
He doesn't seem to have been disciplined for his absence and was mustered out in June 1865.
Was it common for soldiers to be lost track of for so long? And does anyone know what the reference to Stragglers in the entry for July 1864 might mean?
Many Thanks
I would be very grateful if anyone could help me interpret some service records belonging to my Great Grandfather's brother William Wedgwood, originally from Staffordshire England, who emigrated to New York in the mid 1840s.
After being invalided out of the 40th New York Infantry regiment in June 1862 due to chronic rheumatism, he reenlisted with The 133rd New York Infantry Regiment in September 1862.
The particular document I would like some help on seems to be records of his whereabouts at the time roll calls were taken. (See attached).From July to November 1864 he is described as being Absent Without Leave - finally turning up in a Field Hospital in Sandy Hook in December 1864.
He doesn't seem to have been disciplined for his absence and was mustered out in June 1865.
Was it common for soldiers to be lost track of for so long? And does anyone know what the reference to Stragglers in the entry for July 1864 might mean?
Many Thanks
