Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 11. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for January 16th, 1865 AD or search for January 16th, 1865 AD in all documents.

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. S. C. Infantry   8 8   35 35 2 37 39 2 80 82 Companies A and D, Fourteenth U. S. C. Infantry   2 2   5 5   18 18   25 25 Detachment One Hundred and Fifteenth Ohio Volunteer Infantry   2 2   6 6         8 8 Total   12 12   46 46 2 55 57 2 113 115 I am, sir, respectfully, your obedient servant, L. Johnson, Colonel, commanding. Lieutenant Jno. E. Clellan, A. A. A. G., Colored Brigade, First Separate Division. Colonel T. J. Morgan's report. Chattanooga, Tennessee, January 16, 1865. S. B. Moe, Assistant Adjutant-General, District Etowah. Major: I have the honer to submit the following report of the part taken by the forces under my command in the recent campaign: On November twenty-ninth, 1864, by order of Major-General Steedman, I assumed command of the Fourteenth United States colored infantry, Lieutenant-Colonel Corbin; the Sixteenth United States colored infantry, Colonel William B Gaw, and the Forty-fourth United States colored infantry, Colonel
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 11. (ed. Frank Moore), Doc. 54. the capture of Fort Fisher. (search)
y, your obedient servant, C. B. Comstock, Lieutenant-Colonel and Brevet Brigadier-General, Chief Engineer. Major A. Terry, A. A. G. It may be added that in thirty bomb-proofs and magazines and their passages there were fourteen thousand five hundred feet of floor-space, not including the main magazine, which was exploded, and whose dimensions are un known. C. B. C. Brigadier-General Ames' report. headquarters Second division, twenty-Fourth Army corps, Fort Fisher, N. C., January 16, 1865. Captain A. Terry, Assistant Adjutant-General: I have the honor to submit the following report of the late movements and operations of this division: On the night of the second the division, which had just returned to its camp from a demonstration against this point, received orders to prepare for a second expedition. It left camp on the third, and embarked on ocean transports at Bermuda Hundred, between the hours of seven and nine P. M., on the fourth instant. The transport f