In the great exchange of men and officers from the 27th Michigan Infantry to the 2nd Michigan Infantry he was transferred to the Second. He came to the regiment as a Captain and was appointed Lieutenant Colonel on April 1, 1864.
Lt. Col. March was wounded before Petersburg on June 18th 1864.
He was commissioned Colonel on September 30th 1864.
He resigned his commission on April 4th or 7th 1865.
He appears in the 1894 Michigan State Census - United States Soldiers of the Civil War Residing in Michigan, June 1, 1894
There is a collection at the Bentley Historical Library. This includes...
John C. Boughton, of Constantine, Mich. One letter (Apr. 4, 1865) written from Petersburg, Va. He tells Colonel March of the 2nd Michigan Infantry's entry into the city and how he put the regiment's colors on the Custom House. Boughton was in Company G, 2nd Infantry, and rose from sergeant, 1861, to lieutenant colonel in 1865. He was made brevet major for conspicuous gallantry in the assault on Fort Stedman, Va.
Timothy R. Fish, of Battle Creek, Mich. One letter (July 6, 1863) written from Washington, where he was on guard duty, to Colonel March. He gives news of the men in the regiment and of their promotions. Fish was in Company C, 2nd Michigan Infantry, 1861-1865, and rose from corporal to captain. He was wounded in action in March, 1865.
Dorus M. Fox, of Lyons, Mich. Twenty letters (1864) written to Lieutenant Edwin J. March concerning recruiting and equipping companies. Fox was a major in the 9th Michigan Infantry and colonel in the 27th. He was wounded in action near Petersburg, Va.
Frederick Schneider, of Detroit, Mich. Two letters to Colonel March. (June 3 and 25, 1865) in which there is news of his regiment encamped in Washington, a description of a colorful evening parade of his division in which lighted candles were stuck in the muzzles of the guns, and of the attention created by names of the regiment's twenty-six battles on their colors in the grand review. Schneider served all through the war in the 2nd Michigan Infantry and rose from corporal to colonel. He was wounded in action, and a prisoner in several Confederate prisons, 1864-1865.
The collection also includes one letter (July 11, 1862) from Dan to his brother Cal. Dan was a member of Company E, 1st Michigan Infantry, and wrote from Harrison Landing, Va. He describes the regiment's retreat on the Peninsula and encourages Cal not to enlist. Dan may have been Daniel Cook of Branch County, Mich., or Daniel Mintline of Calhoun County, Mich.
Richardson, Israel B. | ||||
Poe, Orlando M. | ||||
Humphrey, William *** | ||||
March, Edwin J. | ||||
Schneider, Frederick *** | ||||
Chipman, Henry L. | ||||
Larned, Sylvester | ||||
William, Adolphus W. | ||||
Dillman, Louis *** | ||||
Hayden, Charles B. *** | ||||
Byington, Cornelius *** | ||||
Daniels, Henry H. *** | ||||
Lyster, Henry F. | ||||
May, Frank W. | ||||
Ethridge, Annie *7 | ||||
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