hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 9. (ed. Frank Moore) 7 1 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

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 T. H. Holcomb or search for T. H. Holcomb in all documents.

Your search returned 4 results in 3 document sections:

,Laws's,Hood's,67177 Washington artillery,  1910 6th Virginia,Mahone's,Anderson's,124961 12th Virginia,Mahone's,Anderson's,96069 16th Virginia,Mahone's,Anderson's,84755 41st Virginia,Mahone's,Anderson's,83442 48th Georgia,Wright's,Anderson's,105161 22d Georgia,Wright's,Anderson's,135063 3d Georgia,Wright's,Anderson's,22931 44th Georgia,Wright's,Anderson's,52227 2d Florida, Anderson's, 66 8th Florida, Anderson's,5914 30th Virginia, Anderson's,3811 14th Alabama, Anderson's,34447 Holcomb's Legion,Evans's, 24131155 18th South-Carolina,Evans's, 2786113 Carried forward,  49729123411 Brought forward,  49729123411 23d South-Carolina,Evans's, 27122149 17th South-Carolina,Evans's, 18161179 Lee's battalion artillery,   66 2d Virginia,Winder's,Jackson's,47377 4th Virginia,Winder's,Jackson's,197897 5th Virginia,Winder's,Jackson's,1491105 27th Virginia,Winder's,Jackson's,42327 33d Virginia,Winder's,Jackson's,2481105 Batteries,Winder's,Jackson's,224 1st Virginia
the road, and in rear, some one hundred and fifty or two hundred yards, the enemy not pursuing, having left dead upon this field, in the battery and its vicinity, in front and in rear beyond it, Captain J. H. M. Wath, Captain S. E. Bell, Captain T. H. Holcomb, Captain W. M. Reatton, Lieutenant A. B. Cohen, commanding company. Lieutenant A. N. Steele and Lieutenant Michie, commanding company, were both mortally wounded, and since dead. Captain J. C. C. Saunders and Captain W. C. G. Parker sev Lieutenant Norris, of company K, fell mortally wounded, (since dead,) while nobly leading his company after his captain had fallen. Lieutenants John B. Sloan, of company D ; Fullerton, of company F; Pratt, of company G; Cheshire, of company K; Holcomb, of company A; Dixon, of company C; Mace, of company H, who passed through uninjured, deserve great credit for the coolness and bravery displayed by them throughout the engagement. To Lieutenant Robertson, company B, commander of the infirmar
e markets of the world. The two armies that had fought each other with such resolute determination fraternized on the day of the surrender, without manifestations of hostility or hatred. A common valor had given birth to a feeling of mutual respect. Brigadier-General T. W. Sherman was 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 p