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Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 9. (ed. Frank Moore) 3 1 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 9. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for James B. Chapin or search for James B. Chapin in all documents.

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W. Farnsworth, company C; First Sergeant Corydon D. Bevans, and private Clark D. Harding, company E; Corporal George H. Peaslee, company H; private Washington J. Smith, company I. Wounded and missing: Privates George Brewer and William Shearer, company B; private Andrew Brigham, company G; private John Pope, company I. Wounded: Sergeant Albert G. Hunt, First Sergeant Henry Durant, Corporal Edward Frygang, and private William F. Ingham, company B.; Corporal Lewis Kimball, and privates James B. Chapin, Henry W. Wallace, and Orin Case, company C; Corporals Isaac Laurer and Albert G. Leach, company E; private Albert R. Pierce, company G; privates Rollin 0. Crawford and John Eaton, company H; privates Joseph Markling and Andrew Clark, company I; Quartermaster Sergeant Herman D. Pettibone. Seven killed, four wounded and missing, sixteen wounded. Total casualties, twenty-seven. Eighth cavalry, Missouri volunteers: John E. Mode, company I, killed;----Buckner, company I, missing.
seriously wounded in the assault of the twenty-seventh of May, and Brigadier-General Paine on the fourteenth of June. Among those killed during the siege were Colonel Bean, of the Fourth Wisconsin; Colonel Holcomb, of the First Louisiana; Colonel D. S. Cowles, of the One Hundred and Twenty-eighth New York; Lieutenant-Colonel Rodman, of the Thirty-eighth Massachusetts; Lieutenant-Colonel Lowell, of the Eighth New Hampshire; Colonel Smith, of the One Hundred and sixtieth New York Zouaves; Colonel Chapin, of the----Massachusetts; Major Hafkill and Captain Luce, of the engineers; Lieutenant Wrotnowski, and many other gallant officers, whose names, in the absence of official records, it is not in my power to give, who gave their lives to the cause of liberty and their country. In this campaign we captured ten thousand five hundred and eighty-four prisoners, as follows: Paroled men at Port Hudson, exclusive of the sick and wounded, five thousand nine hundred and fifty-three; officers, fo