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Berry Prentice

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Berry Prentice Veteran

Birth
Adair County, Kentucky, USA
Death
27 Jun 1864 (aged 25–26)
Kennesaw, Cobb County, Georgia, USA
Burial
Marietta, Cobb County, Georgia, USA Add to Map
Plot
I, 9254
Memorial ID
View Source
Berry is still remembered by the Prentice family. We are honored and grateful for his service and the Prentice family's sacrifice for our country.

Berry is the son of John and Dicy Janes Prentice. Brothers William and John also fought for the Union in the Civil War.

His maternal grandfather David Janes was a soldier in the Revolutionary War. The Janes family came from England, settling in Mass in 1637.

*******
U.S. Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles

Name: Berry Prentice
Residence: Woodland, Illinois
Enlistment Date: 16 Aug 1862
Rank at enlistment: Private
State Served: Illinois
Survived the War?: No
Service Record: Enlisted in Company G, Illinois 85th Infantry Regiment on 27 Aug 1862.
Mustered out on 27 Jun 1864 at Kenesaw Mountain, GA.

Sources: Illinois: Roster of Officers and Enlisted Men
*********
History of the 85th Illinois Volunteers
Illinois Volunteer Infantry
by
Henry J. Aten
1901
CHAPTER XXXIII.
Pages 433 - 449

BERRY PRENTICE, aged twenty-five, married, farmer, born in Adair county, Kentucky, and enlisted from Woodland, Fulton county, Illinois. He served with his company through all the battles in which it was engaged, until killed in the assault on Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia, June 27, 1864. Is buried at No. 8671 in the national cemetery at Marietta, Ga.

So many of the young men from the south part of Fulton county had entered the army in 1861 that few were so sanguine as to expect that more than one company could be raised in and around Astoria when recruiting began in the summer of 1862. But by the middle of August enough had enlisted to form two full companies.

Company G was enrolled by the Hon. S. P. Cummings between the 11th and 16th of August, the nucleus of the company being the overflow form Company H, it having been the first organized. At the organization of the company the following commissioned officers were elected: William McClelland, captain; Lafayette Curless, first lieutenant, and John M. Robertson, second lieutenant.

The record shows that 20 of the officers and men belonging to his company were hit with shot or shell in battle, 8 of who were killed, 1 died of wounds, while 11 received wounds which did not prove fatal while in the service, 9 died of disease, 11 were discharged fro disability, 16 were transferred and 36 went home together when the regiment was disbanded.

The company was commanded by officers who were brave and enterprising, and, for genuine loyalty and devotion to duty, Company G was the peer of any organization in the service. While the writer feels that his heart is big enough to take in the whole of the Eighty-fifth, there will always be a warm corner reserved for the "boys of Company G".




Berry is still remembered by the Prentice family. We are honored and grateful for his service and the Prentice family's sacrifice for our country.

Berry is the son of John and Dicy Janes Prentice. Brothers William and John also fought for the Union in the Civil War.

His maternal grandfather David Janes was a soldier in the Revolutionary War. The Janes family came from England, settling in Mass in 1637.

*******
U.S. Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles

Name: Berry Prentice
Residence: Woodland, Illinois
Enlistment Date: 16 Aug 1862
Rank at enlistment: Private
State Served: Illinois
Survived the War?: No
Service Record: Enlisted in Company G, Illinois 85th Infantry Regiment on 27 Aug 1862.
Mustered out on 27 Jun 1864 at Kenesaw Mountain, GA.

Sources: Illinois: Roster of Officers and Enlisted Men
*********
History of the 85th Illinois Volunteers
Illinois Volunteer Infantry
by
Henry J. Aten
1901
CHAPTER XXXIII.
Pages 433 - 449

BERRY PRENTICE, aged twenty-five, married, farmer, born in Adair county, Kentucky, and enlisted from Woodland, Fulton county, Illinois. He served with his company through all the battles in which it was engaged, until killed in the assault on Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia, June 27, 1864. Is buried at No. 8671 in the national cemetery at Marietta, Ga.

So many of the young men from the south part of Fulton county had entered the army in 1861 that few were so sanguine as to expect that more than one company could be raised in and around Astoria when recruiting began in the summer of 1862. But by the middle of August enough had enlisted to form two full companies.

Company G was enrolled by the Hon. S. P. Cummings between the 11th and 16th of August, the nucleus of the company being the overflow form Company H, it having been the first organized. At the organization of the company the following commissioned officers were elected: William McClelland, captain; Lafayette Curless, first lieutenant, and John M. Robertson, second lieutenant.

The record shows that 20 of the officers and men belonging to his company were hit with shot or shell in battle, 8 of who were killed, 1 died of wounds, while 11 received wounds which did not prove fatal while in the service, 9 died of disease, 11 were discharged fro disability, 16 were transferred and 36 went home together when the regiment was disbanded.

The company was commanded by officers who were brave and enterprising, and, for genuine loyalty and devotion to duty, Company G was the peer of any organization in the service. While the writer feels that his heart is big enough to take in the whole of the Eighty-fifth, there will always be a warm corner reserved for the "boys of Company G".






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