Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 9. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for November 7th, 1864 AD or search for November 7th, 1864 AD in all documents.

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h. During the entire campaign the officers and men of the battery performed their duty well in every respect. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, Joseph R. Channel, First Lieutenant Command'g Battery C, First Illinois Artillery. Report of killed, wounded, and missing in battery C, First Illinois artillery, since the fall of Atlanta, Georgia: Killed, none; wounded, none; missing, (3) three-one sergeant and two privates taken prisoners near Kingston, Georgia, on the seventh of November, 1864. J. R. Channel, First Lieutenant Commanding Battery. Savannah, Georgia, January 6, 1865. Report of Animals Captured on the late Campaign from Atlanta to Savannah, Georgia, by the First Division Fourteenth Army Corps. Date. 1864.By whom Captured.Horses.Mules.Total. Nov. and Dec.,Q. M. Dep't, First Division,204060 Nov. and Dec.,First Brigade,194261 Nov. and Dec.,Second Brigade,405090 Nov. and Dec.,Third Brigade,325688 Nov. and Dec.,Ambulance Corps,51621  Total,116
Doc. 10. naval reports. And despatches. Mississippi squadron, flag-ship Black Hawk, Mound City, ill., Nov. 7, 1864. No. 11. Sir: I inclose for the information of the Department a copy of a confidential cipher telegram from General Sherman to Captain Pennock, dated nine P. M.., November third. Lieutenant-Commander Shirk was here to-day, and reports too little water in the Tennessee for the Peosta, a tin-clad, with a good battery, now at Paducah, and waiting for the rise in the river. It is now raining, and the Tennessee is rising. I am pushing the repairs of the iron-clad Cincinnati, now repairing here, with all practicable despatch, and shall go up the Tennessee in her the moment she is ready for service and the stage of water in the Tennessee will permit. I have sent down the Mississippi to bring up the iron-clad Neosho. The loss of the services of the four monitors sent from this squadron to Rear-Admiral Farragut will be much felt, especially as several of t