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 July 20th or search for July 20th in all documents.

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enty of hard fighting left for the Seventeenth Corps. It was engaged with honor in the battle of Atlanta, July 22nd, which was one of the hardest contested fields in that campaign. General Gresham was badly wounded in this action, Wounded, July 20th. and General Giles A. Smith succeeded to the command of the Fourth Division. After the fall of Atlanta, Fuller's Division of the Sixteenth Corps was transferred to the Seventeenth, becoming its First Division, to the command of which General JTwentieth Corps started, May 4, 1864, on the Atlanta campaign, and during the next four months participated in all the important battles, its hardest fighting occurring at Resaca, May 15th, at New Hope Church, May 25th, and at Peach Tree Creek, July 20th. It was also actively engaged in the investment and siege of Atlanta, sustaining losses daily in killed and wounded while occupying the trenches. During the four months fighting from Chattanooga to Atlanta, it lost over 7,000 men killed, woun
er General Long, to attack Fayetteville, in which affair six companies of the regiment lost 16 killed, 87 wounded, and 112 captured. The garrison fell back, abandoning the Kanawha Valley to the enemy, who held it until the return of Cox's Kanawha Division from Antietam. In 1863, the regiment served as mounted infantry, fighting as such at Wytheville, where Colonel Toland was killed; in July, 1864, it was dismounted, and, serving again as infantry, fought under General Crook at Winchester, July 20th and 24th, Lieutenant-Colonel John W. Shaw being killed in the latter action. On the 26th of February, 1865, the organization of the Thirty-fourth was discontinued, and the men were transferred to the Thirty-sixth Ohio. Thirty-Sixth Ohio Infantry. R. B. Hayes's Brigade — Duval's Division--Eighth Corps. (1) Col. George Crook, W. P., R. A.; Bvt. Major-Gen. U. S. A. (3) Col. Ebenezer B. Andrews. (2) Col. Melvin Clark (Killed). (4) Col. William G. Jones, W. P., R. A. (Killed
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, Chapter 14: the greatest battles of the war — list of victories and defeats — chronological list of battles with loss in each, Union and Confederate. (search)
anta Campaign, Ga Killed 4,423 Wounded 22,822 Missing 4,442   Total 31,687 1,458 7,436 405 9,299 June 1-30 Includes Dallas, June 1-4 (900); Pine Mountain, June 14-19 (1,100); Culp's House, June 22 (700); Kenesaw Mountain, June 20-30 (1,200); Assault on Kenesaw, June 27 (3,000); Lattimore's Mill; Powder Springs, etc.Atlanta Campaign, Ga 1,125 5,740 665 7,530 July 1-31 Includes Nickajack Creek, July 2-5 (450); Chattahoochie, July 6-10 (850); Peach Tree Creek, July 20 (2,200); Atlanta, July 21, 22 (4,200); Ezra Chapel, July 28 (850); and others.Atlanta Campaign, Ga 1,110 5,915 2,694 9,719 Aug. 1-31 Includes Utoy Creek, Aug. 5, 6 (800); and Siege of Atlanta.Atlanta Campaign, Ga 453 2,318 466 3,237 Sept. 1 Jonesboro and Lovejoy's Station.Atlanta Campaign, Ga 277 1,413 212 1,902 May 5-7 Wilderness, Va 2,246 12,037 3,383 17,666 May 8-21 Includes Alsop's Farm, May 8 (loss about 1,800); Po River, Laurel Hill, and Upton's Charge, May 10