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Emilio, Luis F., History of the Fifty-Fourth Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry , 1863-1865 3 1 Browse Search
A Roster of General Officers , Heads of Departments, Senators, Representatives , Military Organizations, &c., &c., in Confederate Service during the War between the States. (ed. Charles C. Jones, Jr. Late Lieut. Colonel of Artillery, C. S. A.) 1 1 Browse Search
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talionInfantry    6thArkansasBattalionInfantryMajor D. G. White   7thArkansasBattalionInfantryMajor F. W. Desha   8thArkansasBattalionInfantry    9thArkansasBattalionInfantryMajor John H. Kelley   10thArkansasBattalionInfantryLt. Col. R. Scott   11thArkansasBattalionInfantryMajor Trumbull   1stSeminole IndiansBattalionInfantryLt. Col. Jumper   1stFioridaRegimentCavalryCol. G. T. MaxwellNov. 4, 1862.  Col. W. G. M. Davis1861.Promoted Brigadier-General. 2dFioridaRegimentCavalryCol. Carraway SmithNov. 4, 1862.  1stFloridaRegimentInfantryCol. W. K. Beard   2dFloridaRegimentInfantryCol. L. G. PylesNov. 22, 1862.  Col. E. A. Perry1861.Promoted Brigadier-General. 3dFloridaRegimentInfantryCol. W. S. DilworthJuly 25, 1861.  4thFloridaRegimentInfantryCol. W. L. L. BowenSept. 2, 1862.  Col. J. P. Hunt1861.  5thFloridaRegimentInfantryCol. T. B. LamarJuly 6, 1863.  Col. John G. Hately1862.  6thFloridaRegimentInfantryCol. J. J. FinleyApril 14, 1862.Promoted
nemy were in force beyond, and truly predicted our defeat; but their words were little heeded. Near an old mill beyond Sanderson, Henry's men came upon a few cavalry of the enemy, who fled when fired upon. Henry halted there until Hawley's infantry and Hamilton's battery came up, when the advance was resumed, the Seventh Connecticut, as skirmishers, leading. Meanwhile, General Finegan at Olustee, receiving word that we were approaching in small numbers, sent out his cavalry under Col. Carraway Smith, with orders to skirmish and draw us on to the works at Olustee. As support he sent the Sixty-fourth Georgia and two companies of the Thirty-second Georgia. Moving forward two miles, where the wagon-road crossed the railroad, the infantry halted, the cavalry proceeding until near a point where the railroad recrossed the country road. The intervening ground, between the two crossings, was the battlefield of Olustee. The Confederates call the action the battle of Ocean Pond, from t
, 108, 116, 125, 131,147, 151, 197, 261, 285, 307, 317. Sickles, Daniel E., 218. Siege of Savannah, Jones, 252. Silliman, William, 212, 254, 257, 258, 259, 260. Silva, Charles, 111. Simington, Thomas H., 160. Simkins, Battery, 108, 129, 141, 206. Simkins, J. C., 88. Simmons, Robert J., 59, 90, 93. Simpkins, William H., 7, 34, 55, 56, 57, 59, 60, 61, 67, 73, 83, 89, 90, 91, 96, 103. Sims, Thomas, 32. Singleton plantation, 296, 298, 299, 300, 306. Slack, Charles W., 23. Smith, Carraway, 159, 171. Smith, Gerrit, 11, 16. Smith, Giles S., 269. Smith, Gustavus W., 240, 242, 244. Smith, J. B., 12. Smith, Orin E., 20, 34, 81, 90, 93, 103, 132, 149,183. Smith, Peter, 16. Smith, Washington, 197. Soldier's remains, 173, 305. Sonoma, gunboat, 237. Soule, Charles C., 251. South Carolina, 267, 272. South Carolina Railroad, 310. South Carolina Troops (Union). Infantry: First (colored), 1, 52. (See also 33d U. S. Colored Troops). Second (colored), 36, 37, 38, 39,