Enlisted from Embden, Somerset County, Maine and mustered in on 21 December 1861, 4th Battery, 1st Battalion, Maine Light Artillery as a Private; promoted to Corporal in 1862; promoted to Sergeant in 1863; died due to disease on 16 July 1863 in the Lexington Avenue Hospital at New York City.
"Clinical Record of the Continued Fevers. -- Typhus Fever. -- Case- 10. — Sergeant Ebenezer C. Talcott, 4th Me. Battery; age about 35; was admitted July 11, 1863, in a semicomatose condition ascribed doubtfully to typhus fever. A companion stated that the patient was delirious when put on board the boat at Sandy Hook, Md. The stupor gradually became more profound and death took place on the 16th. — Act. Ass't Surg. John H. Hinton, U. S. A., Hospital, Lexington Ave, New York City." -- The Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion. Part III, Volume I. (3rd Medical volume) by U. S. Army Surgeon General's Office, 1888.
Enlisted from Embden, Somerset County, Maine and mustered in on 21 December 1861, 4th Battery, 1st Battalion, Maine Light Artillery as a Private; promoted to Corporal in 1862; promoted to Sergeant in 1863; died due to disease on 16 July 1863 in the Lexington Avenue Hospital at New York City.
"Clinical Record of the Continued Fevers. -- Typhus Fever. -- Case- 10. — Sergeant Ebenezer C. Talcott, 4th Me. Battery; age about 35; was admitted July 11, 1863, in a semicomatose condition ascribed doubtfully to typhus fever. A companion stated that the patient was delirious when put on board the boat at Sandy Hook, Md. The stupor gradually became more profound and death took place on the 16th. — Act. Ass't Surg. John H. Hinton, U. S. A., Hospital, Lexington Ave, New York City." -- The Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion. Part III, Volume I. (3rd Medical volume) by U. S. Army Surgeon General's Office, 1888.
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