Enlisting at Springfield, Sept. 6, 1861, in Company I, 27th Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteer infantry, Mr. Chapin served with this company for the balance of the war, re-enlisting Dec. 23, 1863 as a veteran volunteer, this enlistment giving him an honorable discharge from his first enlistment.
The regiment was attached to Foster's brigade of Burnside's Expeditionary corps in 1862 and took part in may battles and skirmishes. Mr. Chapin was on active service with his company excpet for about six months when he was on detached duty at Norfolk, VA, detailed as a guard at the "Hard Labor Prison".
At Ford's Mills, NC, in March, 1865, the regiment was surrounded by greatly superior numbers of Confederate troops and most of those on duty at the time were killed or taken prisoner. Mr. Chapin was one of the prisoners, and was marched to Kingston, from where he was taken to Goldsboro, also in North Carolina, on a flat car; he was confined in a stockade at Goldsboro for one day, but at this time Gen. Sherman's army was approaching, and the prisoners were hastily transported to Richmond.
Here Mr. Chapin spent three days in Libby Prison, but was paroled and sent to a parole camp, from where he was given a 30-day prisoner's furlough. He used the furlough to come to Fond du Lac, where his mother was residing at the time, and at the expiration of the leave, applied for transportation back to the front. Hostilites having ceased in the meantime, his furlough was extended to May 15, 1865, when he was mustered out and given an honorable discharge at Madison.
He married Maryette Amelia Burtch on 25 Aug 1866. They had 6 children and lived the rest of their married life in Fond du Lac, WI.
William H. Chapin died at age 99 on 2 Dec 1930.
Enlisting at Springfield, Sept. 6, 1861, in Company I, 27th Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteer infantry, Mr. Chapin served with this company for the balance of the war, re-enlisting Dec. 23, 1863 as a veteran volunteer, this enlistment giving him an honorable discharge from his first enlistment.
The regiment was attached to Foster's brigade of Burnside's Expeditionary corps in 1862 and took part in may battles and skirmishes. Mr. Chapin was on active service with his company excpet for about six months when he was on detached duty at Norfolk, VA, detailed as a guard at the "Hard Labor Prison".
At Ford's Mills, NC, in March, 1865, the regiment was surrounded by greatly superior numbers of Confederate troops and most of those on duty at the time were killed or taken prisoner. Mr. Chapin was one of the prisoners, and was marched to Kingston, from where he was taken to Goldsboro, also in North Carolina, on a flat car; he was confined in a stockade at Goldsboro for one day, but at this time Gen. Sherman's army was approaching, and the prisoners were hastily transported to Richmond.
Here Mr. Chapin spent three days in Libby Prison, but was paroled and sent to a parole camp, from where he was given a 30-day prisoner's furlough. He used the furlough to come to Fond du Lac, where his mother was residing at the time, and at the expiration of the leave, applied for transportation back to the front. Hostilites having ceased in the meantime, his furlough was extended to May 15, 1865, when he was mustered out and given an honorable discharge at Madison.
He married Maryette Amelia Burtch on 25 Aug 1866. They had 6 children and lived the rest of their married life in Fond du Lac, WI.
William H. Chapin died at age 99 on 2 Dec 1930.
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