Chapter 109. to remove the charge of desertion now standing against Albert Keach
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/statutes-at-large/vol-27/chapter-109-3158899·A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
CHAP. 109.— An Act to remove the charge of desertion now standing against Albert Keach.June 8, 1892. *Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled*,Albert Keach.Charge of desertion removed. That the Secretary of War be, and he is hereby, authorized and directed to correct the record by removing the charge of desertion now standing against Albert Keach, late of Company C, Fourth Regiment Wisconsin Volunteers, and captured by the enemy about August first, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, near Baton Rouge, Louisiana; duly delivered as a paroled prisoner of war to Captain Lazelle at Vicksburg, Mississippi, on September seventh, eighteen hundred and sixty-two; declared exchanged on November nineteenth, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, and ordered to report at Camp Randall, Wisconsin, and, failing to report, was absent without leave until March twelfth, eighteen hundred and sixty-three, when he enlisted under the assumed name of Charles Irving in Company I, in the Sixteenth Wisconsin Volunteers; discharged for disability October twenty-ninth, eighteen hundred and sixty-three; enlisted under his assumed name of Charles Irving on October twenty-first, eighteen hundred and sixty-four, in Company II, in the twentieth Regiment Maine Volunteers, and mustered out with his company on July sixteenth, eighteen hundred and sixty-five.
Approved, June 8, 1892.