Died at New Orleans, La., June 16, 1863, of chronic diarrhœa.
Absent sick at Armory Square Hospital, Washington, D. C.
Died at New Orleans, La., July 10, 1863, of diarrhœa.
Taken prisoner at Cedar Creek, Va., Oct. 19, 1864; paroled and mustered out, July, 1865.
Wounded in action, at Port Hudson, La., June 14, 1863; discharged, Dec. 18, 1863.
Killed in action, at Port Hudson, La., May 27, 1863. Mr. Tucker had but recently graduated from Harvard, and was preparing for the ministry at the breaking out of the war. With no taste for military pursuits, or ambition for military honors, he entered the ranks from unmixed motives of duty, bore the privations of the service with a cheerfulness which excited the admiration of all who witnessed it, and died regretted by every man in the regiment who enjoyed the privilege of his acquaintance.
Died at Brashear, La., May 30, 1863.
Enlisted, Jan. 6, 1864; transferred to 26th Reg. Mass. Vols., June 22, 1865.
Enlisted, Dec. 28, 1863; died at New Orleans, La., July 26, 1864, of malarial cochexia.
Enlisted, Jan. 27, 1864; captured by Mosby’s Guerillas, in Shenandoah Valley, Nov. 1864; died at Barnet, Vermont, April 10, 1865, from effects of starvation, while prisoner of war.