•
Oscar Bartlett, chief surgeon, was a Wisconsin state legislator before the war. •
Henry Bertram, 1st lieutenant in Co. A, later became colonel of the
20th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment and received an honorary brevet to brigadier general. After the war he became a Wisconsin state legislator and sheriff. •
Edwin E. Bryant, sergeant major, was commissioned and appointed adjutant to Colonel Ruger in 1862. In 1864, he returned to Wisconsin as a draft commissioner, and was later commissioned lieutenant colonel of the
50th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment. After the war, he served as private secretary to Governor
Lucius Fairchild and became a Wisconsin state legislator. •
Horace O. Crane, assistant surgeon, was appointed surgeon-in-charge for the field hospital at
St. John's College, Annapolis. In 1863 he returned to Wisconsin as an examining surgeon for the Union Army enrollment board. •
Charles L. Dering, 1st lieutenant in Co. B, later served in the
Wisconsin State Senate. •
John A. Haggerty, private in Co. A, later became a Wisconsin state legislator. • Byron H. Kilbourn, son of Milwaukee co-founder
Byron Kilbourn, was 2nd lieutenant in Co. D. •
Bertine Pinckney, major, later became colonel of the
20th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment, but suffered a stroke in 1862. Before the war, he had served in the
Wisconsin State Senate. After leaving the Army, he was elected mayor of
Ripon, Wisconsin, and served in the
Kansas House of Representatives. •
Asher Clayton Taylor, corporal in Co. D, later became the regiment's sergeant major and served as Colonel Hawley's
adjutant at the close of the war. He remained in the U.S. Army and served in the
15th U.S. Infantry Regiment in the Indian Wars. He was a colonel during the
Spanish–American War and retired with the rank of brigadier general. ==See also==