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Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Volume 2. 1 1 Browse Search
D. H. Hill, Jr., Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 4, North Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 1 1 Browse Search
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Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Volume 2., The opposing forces in the Maryland campaign. (search)
= 567. Shepherdstown, w, 7. Early's Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Jubal A. Early, Col. William Smith (w): 13th Va., Capt. F. V. Winston; 25th Va.,----; 31st Va.,----; 44th Va.,----; 49th Va., Col. William Smith; 52d Va., Col. M. G. Harman; 58th Va.,----. Brigade loss: Antietam, k, 18; w, 167; m, 9 = 194. Trimble's Brigade, Col. James A. Walker (w): 15th Ala., Capt. I. B. Feagin; 12th Ga., Capt. James G. Rodgers (k); 21st Ga., Maj. Thomas C. Glover (w); 21st N. C. (1st N. C. Battalion attached), Capt. F. P. Miller (k); Va. Battery, Capt. John R. Johnson. Brigade loss: Antietam, k, 27; w, 202; m, 8 = 237. Shepherdstown, w, 1. Hays's Brigade, Col. H. B. Strong, Brig.-Gen. Harry T. Hays; 5th La.,----; 6th La., Col. H. B. Strong (k) ; 7th La.,----; 8th La.,----; 14th La.,----; La. Battery, Capt. Louis E. D'Aquin. Brigade loss: Antietam, k, 45; w, 289; m, 2 = 336. Artillery, Maj. A. R. Courtney: 1st Md. Battery, Capt. William F. Dement; Md. Battery (Chesapeake Art'y), Capt. William D. Brown; Va
eir bayonets in action, which they did at the command of General Hood, who was riding up and down the line. We broke their line and held our place for awhile, but the enemy was bringing up fresh columns and overlapping our left, and we were forced back. The enemy seemed to be overcoming us until our left was reinforced by troops ordered from our right. They engaged the enemy and drove them back of the Dunker church, and our lines were re-established. The Twenty-first, commanded by Capt. F. P. Miller, who was killed during the battle, along with the Twenty-first Georgia, was posted by Colonel Walker, commanding Trimble's brigade, behind a stone fence, and, says General Early, concentrating their fire upon a part of the enemy's line in front of the latter [regiment], succeeded in breaking it. Colonel Thruston, of the Third North Carolina, gives this picture of the part of Ripley's brigade in the action on the left: The house being passed, the Third North Carolina infantry mount