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s to render them utterly unserviceable. Almost an entire new supply of horses had to be obtained. A short time before leaving Atlanta, a still further reduction of the artillery was made. Battery K, Fifth U. S. artillery, Captain Bainbridge; battery I, First Michigan artillery, Captain Smith and Thirteenth New-York independent battery, Captain Bundy, were relieved from duty with the corps and sent to Chattanooga, leaving but four batteries, (2) two twelve pounders and (2) two three-inch Rodman, of four guns each. On the fifteenth day of November, the corps left Atlanta, the batteries being distributed through the column, marching in this manner until reaching the enemy's lines near Savanah. Meeting with but slight resistance on the march, the batteries did not fire a gun; but twice only a section was placed in position, the infantry then driving back the enemy until we reached their lines, about four miles from town, on the tenth of the present month. On the eleventh, the t
tenant-Colonel Commanding. Charles C. Freeguard, First Lieutenant and Acting Adjutant. Station, near King's Bridge, Ga. Date, December 23, 1864. Captain day's Report. Report of Prisoners of War captured, and property captured and destroyed, by Third cavalry division, during the campaign terminating with the occupation of Savannah. date.no.article.remarks. Nov. 14 to Dec. 14233Prisoners of war1 colonel, 1 major, 4 captains, 7 lieutenants, 220 enlisted men. November 162CannonRodman, with carriages and one hundred rounds ammunition. November 163CaissonsCaptured at Jonesboro and burned. November 15140Stand small-armsCaptured from pickets.Total, 865. November 16175Stand small-armsCaptured at Lovejoy, Ga. December 4550Stand small-armsCaptured at Waynesboro, Ga. November 164Boxes fixed ammunitionFor 3-inch regulation gun, destroyed. November 281Battle-flagOf Fourth Georgia Cavalry, captured at Waynesboro, Ga. November 214Miles Macon and Savannah R. RDestroyed at, abo
n 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 power to give, who gave their lives to the cause of liberty and their country. In this campaign we captured ten t