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General Jacob Ammen
was distinguished during the Rebellion, was
a native of Virginia, a graduate of West Point in 1831, had resigned
to engage in teaching and engineering, and, when the war broke out,
re-entered the service as a colonel of the Twenty-forth Ohio; as a
brigadier-general he served with great bravery in the West1
Jacob Ammen,

soldier, was born in Botetourt co., Va., 7 Jan. 1808.
He was graduated at West Point in 1831, and served there as
assistant instructor in mathematics, and afterward of infantry
tactics until 31 August 1832. During the threatened "nullification"
of South Carolina he was on duty in Charleston harbor. From 4
October 1834, to 5 November 1837, he was again at West Point as an
instructor, and he resigned from the army, 30 November 1837, to
accept a professorship of mathematics at Bacon College, Georgetown,
Ky. Thence he went to Jefferson College, Washington, Miss., in 1839,
to the University of Indiana in 1840, to Jefferson College again in
1843, and returned to Bacon College in 1848. From 1855 to 1861 he
was a civil en-grocer at Ripley, Ohio, and on April 18 of that year
became captain in the 12th Ohio volunteers. He was promoted
lieutenant-colonel 2 May and participated in the West Virginia
campaign (June and July) under McClellan, where the first
considerable federal successes of the war were gained. After the
campaigns in Tennessee and Mississippi he was promoted to be
brigadier-general of volunteers 16 July 1862, and was in command of
camps of instruction in Ohio and Illinois until 16 December 1863.
From 10 April 1864, to 14 January 1865, when he resigned, he was in
command of the district of east Tennessee.2
Jacob Ammen is buried at the
Spring Grove cemetery
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