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Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 11. (ed. Frank Moore) 58 2 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 21. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 4 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: October 22, 1864., [Electronic resource] 3 1 Browse Search
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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 C. C. Cox or search for C. C. Cox in all documents.

Your search returned 30 results in 7 document sections:

ap between his left and Newton, and Judah's and Cox's divisions of Schofield's corps came up in theke in the giving or reception of the order, General Cox's division failed to get up in time, and Juff officers in vain rode for hours in search of Cox's division through the thick underbrush in whicIn the meantime the gap in the line was filled, Cox took his position, and for an hour the incessan a slight skirmish fire. The division of General Cox, which finally turned up on Judah's left, fil they gained their first line of rifle-pits. Cox soon dislodged them and sent them back howling ir more formidable breastworks. At this moment Cox found that he was out of ammunition, and by somcorrespondent did the greatest injustice to General Cox's division, in the account he gave of the be any battery had come up. The artillery of General Cox's division cut their own road through the wces, are entirely true. The statement that General Cox acted independently of orders, or in violat
4 Twentieth Army Corps. Colonel Benjamin Harrison, commanding.         First Battalion Lieutenant-Colonel McManis 8 399 407   Second Battalion Major Haskins 6 304 310 717   Lieutenant-Colonel Banning, commanding.         Eighteenth Ohio Volunteer Infantry Captain Henderson 9 316 325   Third Battery, Fourteenth A. C. Major Roatch 8 311 319 644 Seventeenth Army Corps. Colonel A. G. Malloy, commanding.         Field and Staff   3   3   Twentieth Illinois Battery Captain C. C. Cox 1 126 127   Thirtieth Illinois Battery Captain J. Kemmitzer 1 208 209   Thirteenth Iowa Infantry Captain C. Haskins 1 186 187   Third Battery, Twentieth A. C. Captain Hurlbut 6 290 296 822 Total 55 2922 2977 2977 December 11. My command was increased on and after the sixth instant by the assignment of recruits arriving from the rear, amounting in the aggregate to two thousand three hundred and twenty-seven enlisted men, which were properly armed and dis
command. commanding officer. officers. men. aggregate. total. Fourteenth Army Corps. Colonel J. G. Mitchell, commanding.         First Battalion Lieutenant-Colonel F. W. Lister 8 526 534   Second Battalion Lieutenant-Colonel William O'Brien 4 256 260 794 Twentieth Army Corps. Colonel Benjamin Harrison, commanding.         First Battalion Lieutenant-Colonel McManis 8 399 407   Second Battalion Major Haskins 6 304 310 717   Lieutenant-Colonel Banning, commanding.         Eighteenth Ohio Volunteer Infantry Captain Henderson 9 316 325   Third Battery, Fourteenth A. C. Major Roatch 8 311 319 644 Seventeenth Army Corps. Colonel A. G. Malloy, commanding.         Field and Staff   3   3   Twentieth Illinois Battery Captain C. C. Cox 1 126 127   Thirtieth Illinois Battery Captain J. Kemmitzer 1 208 209   Thirteenth Iowa Infantry Captain C. Haskins 1 186 187   Third Battery, Twentieth A. C. Captain Hurlbut 6 290 296 822
tend beyond the enemy's main force; that of General Cox, however, encountered opposition. The Sande. This battery was posted on the right of General Cox's division. A short time before the battn advanced. Soon after the Third division (General Cox) left his position and began to follow up tand wounded. During the preceding night, General Cox's division, of the Twenty-third corps, was s not yet been developed. The rebel cavalry in Cox's front consisted of two divisions, commanded bfore four, General Schofield sent orders to General Cox to have his skirmish line in readiness, andy A, Twelfth Kentucky infantry, Bird's brigade, Cox's division, Twenty-third Army Corps. The sato make a charge upon the enemy's works. General Cox, with staff, was on the field, and gave dir day long to be remembered by the troops of General Cox's command. Sherman's troops have advanceo relieve the brigade of Colonel Reilly, of General Cox's division of the Twenty-third Army Corps. [4 more...]
on our intrenched position, but was repulsed with severe loss, and fell back during the night. On the fourteenth the Neuse river was crossed and Kinston occupied, and on the twenty-first Goldsboroa was entered. The column from Wilmington reached Cox's bridge, on the Neuse river, ten miles above Goldsboroa, on the twenty-second. By the first of February General Sherman's whole army was in motion from Savannah. He captured Columbia, South Carolina, on the seventeenth; thence moved on Goldsbnty-first the enemy retreated to Smithfield, leaving his dead and wounded in our hands. From there Sherman continued to Goldsboroa, which place had been occupied by General Schofield on the 21st (crossing the Neuse river ten miles above there, at Cox's bridge, where General Terry had got possession and thrown a pontoon bridge, on the twenty-second), thus forming a junction with the columns from Newbern and Wilmington. Among the important fruits of this campaign was the fall of Charleston, S
out one hundred and twenty men of the Thirty-ninth Missouri volunteer infantry, raw recruits, and, after stampeding their horses, shot every man, most of them in cold blood. Anderson, a few days later, was recognized by General Price, at Boonville, as a Confederate captain, and, with a verbal admonition to behave himself, ordered, by Colonel McLane, chief of Price's staff, to proceed to North Missouri and destroy the railroads, which orders were found on the miscreant when killed by Lieutenant-Colonel Cox, about the twenty-seventh of October ultimo. On the twenty-eighth, when information of Ewing's fight and Price's presence at Pilot Knob came to hand, General Smith, discovering the enemy in his front, moving to west and north, in pursuance of his orders to hold the most advanced position compatible with the certainty of keeping between the enemy and St. Louis,determined to leave De Soto and retire behind the Meramec, a stream which, at from ten to fifteen miles south of St. Louis
officer and seven men captured. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, D. E. Livermore, Major Commanding Third Volunteer Ohio Cavalry. Major Robert Burns, A. A. A. G., Second Brigade, Second Division C. E., M. D. M. headquarters Third Ohio Volunteer cavalry, Macon, Georgia, April 30, 1865. Major — I have the honor to forward herewith the battle-flag of the Twelfth Mississippi cavalry, Confederate States of America, which was captured, with the commanding officer of the regiment, Major Cox, on the fifteenth instant, about six miles from Tuskegee, Alabama by John H. Shoup, private, Company H, Third Ohio cavalry. He is very desirous of retaining it, if he can be allowed to do so, I am, very respectfully, your obedient servant, D. E. Livermore, Major Commanding Regiment. headquarters Fourth Ohio Volunteer cavalry, Selma, Alabama, April 5, 1865. Major — I have the honor to report that this regiment was not engaged in the action of the first instant. On the second ins