Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 10. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for H. P. Cleve or search for H. P. Cleve in all documents.

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f his staff, to move with my command, and to take position, as well as I now remember, on the right of some part of General Van Cleve's division. Throughout the entire preceding part of the day I had distinctly observed a considerable force in fronn for the scene of the great conflict. As already remarked, the order directed me to take position on the right of General Van Cleve's command, but as I was totally ignorant of his position in the battle, and met no one on my arrival on the field tNegley's division, keeping my left in constant communication with General Brannan's right. Colonel Barnes's brigade of Van Cleve's division was ordered to report to me for service during the day. Placing his brigade on the left, Harker's in the endid fighting they were doing. Early in the afternoon my command was joined by portions of two regiments belonging to Van Cleve's division, the Seventeenth Kentucky, Colonel Stout commanding, and the Forty-fourth Indiana, Lieutenant-Colonel Aldric
. About eight o'clock, when my troops under Van Cleve were crossing the river, as ordered, and wheecalling Van Cleve and stopping the advance; Van Cleve was ordered to leave a brigade to guard the n then threatened near the hospital, and General Van Cleve moved at once and quickly to the right w Nineteenth Ohio, under the direction of General Van Cleve, boldly attacked vastly superior forces fighting in the ranks. Generals Wood and Van Cleve being wounded on the thirty-first, their comrd. On the morning of the first of January, Van Cleve's division again crossed the river, and tooknobly the troops behaved. Generals Wood and Van Cleve, though wounded early in the battle of the tn, the First, and Colonel Beatty the Second, Van Cleve's. To these officers I am indebted for the se the batteries were unlimbering, seeing General Van Cleve close by, I rode up and asked him if he ery respectfully, your obedient servant, H. P. Van Cleve, Brigadier-General. Colonel Beatty's[5 more...]