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 December 21st, 1864 AD or search for December 21st, 1864 AD in all documents.

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Savannah, Georgia, January 4, 1865. Lieutenant-Colonel H. W. Perkins, Assistant Adjutant-General: Sir: I have the honor to submit the following report of prisoners of war, captured during the late campaign from November fifteenth to December twenty-first, 1864: Moses White, Colonel, Thirty-seventh Tennessee infantry: J. H. W. Clinch, Colonel, Aid General Hardee; George P. Harrison, Colonel, militia; Thomas F. Wells, Lieutenant-Colonel, Georgia militia; A. D. Taylor, Captain, Post Quartermn took possession of the city early in the morning. The Third and First divisions arrived during the day. Memorandum list of ordnance and ordnance stores captured from the enemy in the campaign from Atlanta to Savannah, ending December twenty-first, 1864: Captured and destroyed by the left wing, at Milledgeville, Georgia. 2300 rifle muskets, calibre, 69; 5000 lances, 1500 cutlasses, 30,000 rounds of small-arm ammunition, 5470 rounds of artillery ammunition, 20,000 pounds of powde
Fourteenth army corps, I beg leave to make the following report of casualties in regiments composing the Third brigade, First division, Fourteenth army corps, from October third, 1864, up to and including the fall of Savannah, Georgia, December twenty-first, 1864: Command.Commander.enlisted men. Killed.Wounded.Prisoners of War.Total. Headq'rs 3d Brigade,Lieut.-Col. D. Miles,     21st Ohio Vol. Inf.,Lt.-Col. A. McMahan,211417 38th Ind. Vol. Inf.,Captain J. H. Low,  22 74th Ohio Vol. Inf.s eight men wounded, three of whom afterward died. The list of casualties by name is appended. List of wounded in Third division, Fourteenth army corps, on the campaign from Kingston, Georgia, November 12th, 1864, to savannah, Georgia, December 21st, 1864. No.Name.Rank.Company.Regiment.Seat of Injury.Nature of Injury.Date of Death. 1.Ragan, Patrick,Private,G,17th Ohio,Face,Gunshot.  2.Ferret, Henry N.,Musician,1st Brig.,Band,Chest,Gunshot.  3.Forbes, John,Private,K,31st Ohio,Ches
that of the occupation of Savannah, December twenty-first, 1864. From the second of September unhe occupation of Savannah, Georgia, December twenty-first, 1864: During the occupation of Atlant the downfall of Savannah, Georgia, December twenty-first, 1864. Respectfully submitted, John Fday of November, 1864, until the twenty-first day of December, 1864: Seventy-third Pennsylvania vifteenth day of November to the twenty-first day of December, 1864, inclusive. November 15th.--Mon, Twentieth army corps, Savannah, Ga., December 21, 1864. Captain W. T. Forbes, Assistant Adjutan864, to the occupation of Savannah, December twenty-first, 1864: September 3d, 1864.--On Septembhe occupation of Savannah, Georgia, December twenty-first, 1864, dividing the same into two parts, 864, to the occupation of Savannah, December twenty-first, 1864. September 2.--A report has alree occupation of Atlanta, to the twenty-first day of December, 1864, so much of said time as the reg[2 more...]
mpaign just closed. expenditure of ammunition. Ten-Pounder. Case Shot.Fuse Shell.Perc. Shell.Total.Date. 294762138December 12, 1864. 13  13December 18, 1864. 3  3December 19, 1864. 10121032December 20, 1864. Thirty-Pounder.  9413December 21, 1864. Casualties, none. All of which is respectfully submitted. Charles E. Winegar, Captain First New-York Artillery. headquarters battery I, First New-York artillery, Savannah, Ga., December 25, 1864. Lieutenant W. H. Mickle, Acting A pontoon-bridge from Argyle Island to the main South-Carolina shore. Worked all night boating my material to the point, and had the bridge half completed, when orders were received to take it up and march into Savannah on the morning, December twenty-first, 1864. My command, consisting of about nine hundred men and six hundred mules, started from Atlanta with four days forage and twenty days rations. My men and mules lived well throughout the whole campaign, and had been in Savannah severa
eft wing, Army Georgia, on the march from Atlanta to Savannah, commencing November Fifteenth, 1864, and ending December twenty-First, 1864. date. 1864.Left Camp.Arrived in Camp.Miles.Hndths.Place of Arrival.Weather.Condition of Roads.remarks. Ty of Georgia, and of animals killed and lost on the march from Atlanta to Savannah, from November Fifteenth to December twenty-First, 1864. COMMANDSOFFICERS.Animals captured.Animals lost and killed.Forage taken from the country on the marcholonel Ninth Pennsylvania Cavalry. Lieutenant-Colonel Jones's Report. headquarters Eighth Indiana cavalry, December 21, 1864. Captain Beggs, Assistant Adjutant-General, First Brigade, Third Cavalry Division: I have the honor to report th Kentucky cavalry, First brigade, Third cavalry division, military division of the Mississippi, King's Bridge, Ga., December 21, 1864. Captain James Beggs, Acting Assistant Adjutant-General: sir: I have the honor to submit the following report of
on the fifteenth day of November, and. ending on the twenty-first day of December, 1864: I. On the morning of the third of September, the er second, 1864, to the occupation of Savannah, Georgia, December twenty-first, 1864: The regiment entered Atlanta the evening of Septembents of my regiment, from the second of September to the twenty-first of December, 1864: Upon entering the city of Atlanta, the regiment wasapture of Atlanta, Ga., September second, 1864, to the twenty-first of December, 1864, when the regiment entered the city of Savannah, Ga. nemy, where we had six men wounded and one killed, until December twenty-first, 1864, when the enemy had evacuated the night before, and the nt New-York veteran volunteers, from September second to December twenty-first, 1864: First. From the second to the fourteenth of Septembnsylvania veteran volunteers, from November fifteenth to December twenty-first, 1864: November 15, 1864.--Left Atlanta, Georgia, at seven