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Browsing named entities in William F. Fox, Lt. Col. U. S. V., Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865: A Treatise on the extent and nature of the mortuary losses in the Union regiments, with full and exhaustive statistics compiled from the official records on file in the state military bureaus and at Washington. You can also browse the collection for William R. Terrill or search for William R. Terrill in all documents.

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. K. Zook Killed at Gettysburg. Brevet Major-General Frederick Winthrop Killed at Five Forks. Brevet Major-General Thomas A. Smyth Mortally wounded. Killed at Farmville. Brigadier-General Nathaniel Lyon Killed at Wilson's Creek. Brigadier-General Robert L. McCook Shot by guerrillas, while lying sick in an ambulance. Killed at Decherd, Tenn. Brigadier-General Henry Bohlen Killed at Freeman's Ford. Brigadier-General George W. Taylor Killed at Manassas. Brigadier-General William R. Terrill Killed at Chaplin Hills. Brigadier-General Pleasant A. Hackleman Killed at Corinth. Brigadier-General George D. Bayard Mortally wounded. Killed at Fredericksburg. Brigadier-General Conrad F. Jackson Killed at Fredericksburg. Brigadier-General Joshua W. Sill Killed at Stone's River. Brigadier-General Edward P. Chapin Killed at Port Hudson. Brigadier-General Stephen W. Weed Killed at Gettysburg. Brigadier-General Elon J. Farnsworth Killed at Gettysburg.
Missionary Ridge, Tenn.; Buzzard Roost, Ga.; Rome, Ga.; New Hope Church, Ga.; Sherman's March; Savannah; The Carolinas. notes.--Organized at Steubenville, O., August 20, 1862. It left the State immediately, and moved into Kentucky, where it was assigned soon after to the Thirty-fourth Brigade, Tenth Division, McCook's Corps, Army of the Ohio, in which command it fought at Chaplin Hills, October 8, 1862. Colonel Webster, who was in command of the brigade, was killed in this battle. General Terrill, who commanded the other brigade in this division, and General Jackson, the dlivision commander, were also killed, while the regiment lost in this, its baptism of fire, 35 killed, 162 wounded, and 32 missing; a total of 229, out of 822 present for duty that day. The Ninety-eighth moved into Tennessee and was stationed successively at Franklin, Shelbyville, and Wartrace during the spring and summer of 1863, after which it joined in Rosecrans's advance to Chickamauga, having been assigned