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the
Regiment, and went back after it, though urged not to do so by the men, but he said, "Yes I will, that sword was given me by my men and I told them I would protect it with my life and never see it dishonored, and I am not going to let them damned rebels get it", so he went back to where his horse lay and got it and returned in safety to the regiment although the enemy was near enough to demand his surrender, and fired at him because he refused.
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Colonel
Morehead's horse was shot from under him, and, falling, held him fast until released by Sergeant Joseph Taylor and Corporals McNeal and Stephen Taylor of Company C. After going some distance to the rear the Colonel found he had lost his sword, a handsome one, that had been presented to him by
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Dyer, Frederick H. A Compendium of the War of the
Rebellion Compiled and Arranged from Official Records of the Federal and Confederate Armies, Reports of the Adjutant Generals of the Several States, the Army Registers, and Other Reliable Documents and Sources. Des Moines, Iowa: The Dyer Publishing
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Almost immediately, Colonel
Morehead was authorized to recruit another regiment, this one for a full three years' service, and on August 21, 1861, only two weeks after being mustered out, he was again mustered in as Colonel of what afterward became the
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General
Morehead was married to Louisa A. Kidd, and had three children born to them, two sons and one daughter. One son and the daughter survived him. His son, Gustavus Kidd, followed in the footsteps of his father, and early entered the
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In
November 1846, he was enrolled in Philadelphia as a captain in command of Company G, First Pennsylvania Regiment, known as the "Jefferson Guards". He took an active part through to the end of the war in Scott's
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Joseph Ripley
Chandler Ward, History of the One hundred and sixth regiment, Pennsylvania volunteers, 2d brigade, 2d division, 2d corps, 1861-1865, F. McManus, Jr. & Co., Philadelphia, 1906, p.105
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Joseph Ripley
Chandler Ward, History of the One hundred and sixth regiment, Pennsylvania volunteers, 2d brigade, 2d division, 2d corps, 1861-1865, F. McManus, Jr. & Co., Philadelphia, 1906, p.428
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in 1875. Like his father he rose to the command of the same company "The
Artillery Corps Washington Grays", by then renamed Company G, First Regiment, National Guards of Pennsylvania.
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General Morehead engaged in the wholesale shoe business until appointed Weigher of the Port of Philadelphia, a position he held for many years. He early entered the
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promotion to brigadier general on March 15, 1865, after he had resigned on April 5, 1864, returning home on account of disabilities caused by disease.
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Morehead shared all the dangers of the men in his 106th Pennsylvania Infantry which went on to serve throughout the whole war. First at
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the Greys voted not to volunteer for service, and Morehead resigned and offered his services to the state.
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broke out, Morehead immediately offered the services of his battalion to the governor of
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Morehead was detailed frequently to the command of different brigades of the
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The 22nd Regiment quickly proceeded to Baltimore, where it served, partly as
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Company, 1908, 22d Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, Three-Month Unit
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Colonel Turner Gustavus Morehead, 106th Pennsylvania Volunteers
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Ward, History of the One hundred and sixth regiment, pp.428-429
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Ward, History of the One hundred and sixth regiment, p.430]
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Ward, History of the One hundred and sixth regiment, p.430]
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Ward, History of the One hundred and sixth regiment, p.429]
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Ward, History of the One hundred and sixth regiment, p.429]
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Ward, History of the One hundred and sixth regiment, p.429]
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American military personnel of the Mexican–American War
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As colonel commanding the Philadelphia Blues when the
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Col. Turner G. Morehead at Antietam, September 1862
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