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John Mead Gould was born on December 15, 1839, in Portland, Maine. When the Civil War broke out in April, 1861, he joined the Portland Light Guards, a local militia company which, along with nine other Maine militia companies was inducted on May 3rd into Federal service as the 1st Maine Volunteer Infantry Regiment, under the command of Nathaniel J. Jackson. Later, as a member of the 10th Maine Regiment, he fought in the battle of Antietam, in what was called "the bloodiest day of the Civil War." When the Confederacy was defeated, Gould was appointed Provost Judge for a portion of occupied South Carolina. He left military service on March 18, 1866, and went on to author two books, The History of the First, Tenth and Twenty Ninth Maine Regiment and How to Camp Out. He died on January 1st, 1930 at his home in Portland, Maine, at the age of ninety.
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