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James D. Porter, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 7.1, Tennessee (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 1 1 Browse Search
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ing 168 uninjured wagons; 16 pieces of artillery, with the caissons and limber, harness and fixtures, and a full supply of ammunition; 300,000 rounds of ammunition for small-arms, and 3,000 muskets and carbines abandoned by the flying enemy. General Sturgis reported a loss of 215 killed, 379 wounded. The Confederates lost 492 killed and wounded, of whom 96 were killed. Among the latter were Capt. John Bell, of the staff of Bell's brigade; Capt. J. R. Hibbitt, Fifteenth Tennessee; Lieuts. J. Robert Arnold and J. P. Revely, Sixteenth Tennessee; Lieut. E. P. Hooper, Nineteenth Tennessee. Among those mortally wounded was Cadet William H. Porter, of the regular army of the Confederate States, on staff duty with Bell's brigade. This young and gallant officer had his own horse killed under him, when, instantly mounting the horse from which his comrade, Capt. John Bell, had just fallen, in another moment he received a shot, from which he died in forty-eight hours. No official reports of t