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Kentucky Ancestors, Volume 46, Number 2 - Kentucky Historical ...

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Wildcat is preserved and accessible to visitors.<br />

• They were dispatched to Cumberland Gap<br />

to secure the historic gateway in the spring of<br />

1862. Colonel Garrard fought in skirmishes at<br />

Cumberland Gap, from 21-23 March 1862. 43<br />

He occupied the Cumberland Gap until 16<br />

September 1862, 44 when Confederate Generals<br />

Bragg and Kirby Smith invaded <strong>Kentucky</strong>. 45<br />

Colonel Garrard retreated to Greenupsburg<br />

[present Greenup] on the Ohio River. <strong>46</strong> He<br />

remained in southern Ohio from 16 September<br />

1862 to 3 October 1862. 47<br />

• The Seventh was sent on an expedition to the<br />

Kanawha Valley of Virginia [later West Virginia]<br />

on 21 October 1862; 48 they remained there until<br />

10 November 1862, when they were ordered to<br />

Memphis, Tennessee. 49<br />

• Finally, they did duty at Memphis, Tennessee,<br />

from 10 November 1862 until 20 December<br />

1862. 50 They joined Major General Sherman<br />

and participated in the Yazoo expedition between<br />

20 December 1862 and 2 January 1863; 51 they<br />

saw duty at Chickasaw Bayou, Mississippi, 26-28<br />

December 1862, 52 and Chickasaw Bluff on 29<br />

Dec 1862. 53<br />

Private George Thompson Baker became ill in<br />

January 1863. 54 He was treated aboard a Mississippi<br />

River hospital steamer. 55 He never returned to<br />

active duty. 56 His Compiled Military Service Record<br />

(CMSR) chronicled his last six months. Muster rolls<br />

revealed that he was sick aboard a hospital boat in<br />

January and February 1863; that he had smallpox;<br />

that he was treated at the general hospital near<br />

Milliken’s Bend, Louisiana, in March and April 1863;<br />

that he was “sick and sent up the river” by May 1863;<br />

that he died aboard the U.S. hospital steamer R. C.<br />

Wood on 21 June 1863. 57 Casualty records indicated<br />

that his cause of death was dysentery; that his<br />

personal effects were inventoried; and that his name<br />

was entered on the Death Roll. 58 He was mustered<br />

out of service, posthumously, on 5 October 1864,<br />

at Louisville, <strong>Kentucky</strong>. 59 The Seventh <strong>Kentucky</strong><br />

Infantry Regiment lost a total of 319 men to battle<br />

and disease. 60<br />

The Whitley County, <strong>Kentucky</strong>, tax rolls indicate<br />

62 | <strong>Kentucky</strong> <strong>Ancestors</strong><br />

Muster-out roll for Private George T. Baker (NARA microfilm)

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