Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 10. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for Wells or search for Wells in all documents.

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gage her. It was then growing dark; the ram steamed up to the Roanoke River, and the firing soon ceased on both sides. The officers and men of this ship behaved with great coolness, and did their whole duty. Enclosed you will please find carpenter's and gunner's reports. Casualties, none. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, Charles A. French, Acting Volunteer-Lieutenant, commanding. Captain M. Smith, U. S. N., Senior Naval Officer, Sounds North Carolina. Report of Acting Master Wells. United States steamer gunboat Miami, May 6, 1864. Sir: I have the honor to submit the following report of ammunition expended on the fifth instant, in the action with the iron-clad ram Albemarle, in the Albemarle Sound. Seventy-six (76) thirteen-pound nine-inch cartridges. Seventy-six (76) solid nine-inch shot. Forty-one (41) ten-pound six-inch cartridges; one hundred-pounder rifle. Forty-one (41) solid six-inch shot, (chilled ends,) four long, and thirty-seven sh
Kentucky, and Colonel Knefler, commanding Seventy-ninth Indiana, distinguished themselves by the vigor of their assault on Mission Ridge, and the ardor with which they attacked the rebels after the crest had been gained. To the members of my personal staff, Captain Bestow, Assistant Adjutant-General, First Lieutenant Yargan, Fifty-eighth Indiana, and Second Lieutenant Shaffer, Ninety-third Ohio, Aides-de-Camp, Captain Bartlett, Forty-ninth Ohio, Inspector-General of the Division, and Captain Wells, Eighty-ninth Illinois, Assistant Commissary of Musters, who accompanied me on the field throughout the entire operations, my thanks are especially due for much valuable assistance, promptly and intelligently rendered. They all bore themselves with signal gallantry. Captain Bestow was slightly wounded by the fragment of a shell in the assault on Mission Ridge. To the members of my staff who were not immediately on the field, Captain Bradley, Sixth Ohio battery, Chief of Artillery; Cap
of the Seventh and Twenty-ninth brigades, Schultz's, Marshall's and Wells' batteries, was posted on a rolling slope of the west bank of Stonet destructive. Houghtaling's, Schultz's, Marshall's, Bush's, and Wells' batteries were all ordered into action in my front, pouring destruthat the artillery practice of Schultz's, Mendenhall's, Standart's, Wells', Marshall's, and Stokes' batteries, which were acting temporarily he Eleventh Michigan, Nine-teenth Illinois, Thirty-seventh Indiana, Wells' section (Kentucky) battery, and Spears' Tennessee brigade. I wiry B, First Ohio artillery. Lieutenant A. A. Ellsworth, commanding Wells' section Kentucky artillery. Lieutenant W. H. Spence, Wells' secWells' section Kentucky artillery. Lieutenant H. Terry, Third Ohio cavalry. Secretaries-Sergeant H. B. Fletcher, Company K, Nineteenth Illinois volattery275564 11  154 1  Marshall's Battery,31101166 5 5 143412 4  Wells' Battery247403 1 3 6186411 Artillery,723221213 718 2157224
of the following regiments, viz., Third Mississippi, Colonel Davidson, Lieutenant-Colonel Wells commanding; First Mississippi, Colonel Simonton, Lieutenant-Colonel Hathe head of the column was fired upon. I immediately sent an order to Lieutenant-Colonel Wells to face his right wing to the right, and wheel it to the right, so tha), but by some misunderstanding of the order, or its being miscarried, Lieutenant-Colonel Wells charged his front forward on first company, breaking my line at the leif they had been on review. I at the same time despatched an order to Lieutenant-Colonel Wells to occupy the position on the left of the Eighth Kentucky. (I make thhe field officers under my command without doing injustice to others. Lieutenant-Colonel Wells, assisted by Captains Kennedy and Wells, of the Third Mississippi; LieWells, of the Third Mississippi; Lieutenant-Colonel Lyon, assisted by Major Henry of the Eighth Kentucky; Colonel Gregg, Lieutenant-Colonel Clough, and Major Granbury of the Seventh Texas; Lieutenant-C