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Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces at Petersburg and Richmond: December 31st, 1864. (search)
Smith; 117th N. Y., Col. Rufus Daggett; 142d N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Albert M. Barney. Second Brigade, Col. Galusha Pennypacker: 47th N. Y., Capt. Joseph M. McDonald; 48th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. William B. Coan; 76th Pa., Col. John S. Littell; 97th Pa., Lieut. John Wainwright; 203d Pa., Col. John W. Moore. Third Brigade, Col. Louis Bell: 13th Ind. (5 co's), Capt. Samuel M. Zent; 9th Me., Col. G. Frederick Granger; 4th N. H., Capt. John H. Roberts; 115th N. Y., Maj. Ezra L. Walrath; 169th N. Y., Col. Alonzo Alden. Third division, Brig.-Gen. Charles Devens, Jr. First Brigade, Lieut.-Col. John B. Raulston: 11th Conn., Lieut.-Col. Randall H. Rice; 13th N. H., Lieut.-Col. Normand Smith; 81st N. Y., Capt. Edward A. Stimson; 98th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. William Kreutzer; 139th N. Y., Capt. Theodore Miller; 19th Wis., Maj. Samuel K. Vaughan. Second Brigade, Col. Joseph H. Potter: 5th Md., Lieut.-Col. William W. Bamberger; 10th N. H., Lieut.-Col. John Coughlin; 12th N. H., Lieut.-Col. Thomas E. Barker
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The defense of Fort Fisher. (search)
emains to be chronicled. The next morning after sunrise a frightful explosion occurred in my reserve magazine, killing and wounding several hundred of the enemy and some of my own wounded officers and men. The magazine was a frame structure 20 x 60 feet and 6 feet high, covered with 18 feet or more of sand, luxuriantly turfed, and contained probably 13,000 pounds of powder. It made an artificial mound most inviting to a wearied soldier, and after the fight was occupied for the night by Colonel Alden's 169th New York and by some of my suffering soldiers. Two sailors from the fleet, stupefied by liquor which they had found in the hospital, and looking for booty, were seen to enter the structure with lights, and a moment after the green mound blew up. The telegraph wires, running from a bomb-proof near this magazine across the river to Battery Lamb, gave rise to the impression that it had been purposely exploded from the opposite shore, but an official investigation traced it to the d
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces at Fort Fisher, N. C.: January 13-15, 1865. (search)
re A. Elfwing; 76th Pa., Col. John S. Littell, Maj. Charles Knerr; 97th Pa., Lieut. John Wainwright; 203d Pa., Col. John W. Moore, Lieut.-Col. Jonas W. Lyman, Maj. Oliver P. Harding, Capt. Heber B. Essington. Third Brigade, Col. Louis Bell, Col. Alonzo Alden: 13th Ind., Lieut.-Col. Samuel M. Zent; 4th N. H., Capt. John H. Roberts; 115th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Nathan J. Johnson; 169th N. Y., Col. Alonzo Alden, Lieut.-Col. James A. Colvin. Second Brigade, First Division (temporarily attached to SeconCol. Alonzo Alden, Lieut.-Col. James A. Colvin. Second Brigade, First Division (temporarily attached to Second Division), Col. Joseph C. Abbott: 6th Conn., Col. Alfred P. Rockwell; 7th Conn., Capt. John Thompson, Capt. William S. Marble; 3d N. H., Capt. William H. Trickey; 7th N. H., Lieut.-Col. Augustus W. Rollins; 16th N. Y. Heavy Artillery (detachment), Lieut. F. F. Huntington. Third division, twenty-Fifth Army Corps (colored troops), Brig.-Gen. Charles J. Paine. Second Brigade, Col. John W. Ames: 4th U. S., Lieut.-Col. George Rogers; 6th U. S., Maj. A. S. Boernstein; 30th U. S., Lieut.-Col.