Hi The National Archives have pension records for civil war veterans and they require a specific retrieval form which should be available on the net. Since Nicholas Snow died in service the pension application would have been in the name of his wife which I believe you have. Virtually all applications for pensions by Armstrong County veterans and survivors were granted since politically Armstrong County was instrumental in electing the Pension Officer in Pittsburgh. When you receive the form you will note 3 options exist relative to data you may access. That is: military record, bounty land warrants or pension. The info you seek will be in the pension record. Pension records contain military service info but military records do not provide the pension data. Contained in the pension file will be the date of marriage, maiden name of wife and often the place of marriage and sometimes the name of the parents of the man or woman. Also, if there were any children under the age of 16 they will be named and birthdates will be included. There are numerous books written about Andersonville Prison and a relatively recent film produced by Turner, I believe, titled "Andersonville". Recently one of the contributors mentioned having the Regimental History of the 103rd. who may be willing to assist you if you are seeking specific experiences of members of that regiment in Andersonville. I will check my data base for a specific location of the Nicholas Snow family and advise you of what I find. The pension record will likely give you the place of enlistment although if I recall correctly the members of Company B were recruited from the Northwest part of the county My apologies to the group for not sending this directly to Maureen but as I recall there were others interested in this family as well. Fred Brient