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Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces at Cold Harbor. June 1st, 1864. (search)
Benjamin F. Rittenhouse. Sixth Army Corps, Maj.-Gen. Horatio G. Wright. Escort: A, 8th Pa. Cav., Capt. Charles E. Fellows. first division, Brig.-Gen. David A. Russell. First Brigade, Col. William H. Penrose: 1st N. J., Lieut.-Col. William Henry, Jr.; 2d.N. J., Col. Samuel L. Buck; 3d N. J., Col. Henry W. Brown; 4th N. J., Capt. Samuel M. Gaul; 10th N. J., Lieut.-Col. Charles H. Tay; 15th N. J., Lieut.-Col. Edward L. Campbell. Second Brigade, Col. Emory Upton: 2d Conn. Art'y, Col. Elisha S. Kellogg; 5th Me., Col. Clark S. Edwards; 121st N. Y., Maj. Henry M. Galpin; 95th Pa., Capt. John G. C. Macfarlan; 96th Pa., Lieut.-Col. William H. Lessig. Third Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Henry L. Eustis: 6th Me., Capt. Theodore Lincoln, Jr.; 49th Pa., Maj. Baynton J. Hickman; 119th Pa., Lieut.-Col. Gideon Clark; 5th Wis., Lieut.-Col. Theodore B. Catlin. Fourth Brigade, Col. Nelson Cross: 65th N. Y., Col. Joseph B. Hamblin; 67th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Henry L. Van Ness; 122d N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Augustus
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., Cold Harbor. (search)
one point a mute and pathetic evidence of sterling valor. The 2d Connecticut Heavy Artillery, a new regiment eighteen hundred strong, had joined us but a few days before the battle. Its uniform was bright and fresh; therefore its dead were easily distinguished where they lay. They marked in a dotted line an obtuse angle, covering a wide front, with its apex toward the enemy, and there upon his face, still in death, with his head to the works, lay the colonel, the brave and genial Colonel Elisha S. Kellogg. Killed on June 1st, the day on which his regiment suffered great loss.--editors. When night came on, the groans and moaning of the wounded, all our own, who were lying between the lines, were heartrending. Some were brought in by volunteers from our intrenchments, but many remained for three days uncared for beneath the hot summer suns and the unrefreshing dews of the sultry summer nights. The men in the works grew impatient, yet it was against orders and was almost certa