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Fold3.com - Mexican War Service Records - Pennsylvania
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Military service records for the Mexican War (1846-1848) are comprised of cards created from muster, pay, receipt and other rolls for soldiers and sailors who served in the war. The information includes name, service dates, terms of service, monthly pay, where they served, and notes of interest. Original source: M1028: Compiled Service Records of Volunteer Soldiers who Served During the Mexican War in Organizations From the State of Pennsylvania, RG 94.
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Grand Army of the Republic Civil War Museum and Library
Philadelphia.
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History of the 54th Regiment P.V.
Recruited in Cambria, Somerset, Dauphin, Northampton, and Lehigh Counties.
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History of the Pennsylvania Volunteers 1861-5
Links to the 5 volumes of the History of Pennsylvania Volunteers in the Civil War. Includes text search.
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Korean Conflict State-Level Casualty Lists - Pennsylvania
The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration.
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Written by Samuel Penniman Bates, state historian, and published in 1876; this is a transcription of the entire book.
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PA Civil War Soldiers - Civil War era Newspaper Transcriptions from Pennsylvania
PA Civil War era newspaper transcriptions that cover such topics as letters home, lists of draftees, killed & wounded, and POWs.
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Pennsylvania 34th Regiment (5th Reserves)
The companies comprising the 34th Regiment were recruited in the counties of Centre, Lancaster, Huntingdon, Lycoming, Northumberland, Clearfield, Union and Bradford.
[The original link is broken. This link points to an archived copy on the Wayback Machine] -
Pennsylvania 62nd Infantry Regiment
Regimental History, with special attention to Company D.
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Pennsylvania Civil War Conscientious Objectors | Genealogical Society of PA
Database of names of Pennsylvania men who refused military service during the American Civil War for reasons of conscience. Arranged by surname and by county.
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Pennsylvania Civil War Veterans
The 128th & 151st PA Infantry Regiments and the 1st PA Cavalry Regiment.
[The original link is broken. This link points to an archived copy on the Wayback Machine] -
Pennsylvania Commandery, Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States (MOLLUS)
The Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States is the nation's oldest Civil War society, founded April 15, 1865 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania by Union officers who pledged their loyalty and allegiance to the Federal government in the dark hours following the assassination of President Lincoln. The contemporary Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States perpetuates that tradition, promoting popular interest and scholarship in the Civil War and Abraham Lincoln.










