hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Joseph T. Derry , A. M. , Author of School History of the United States; Story of the Confederate War, etc., Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 6, Georgia (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 11 1 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 1, Mass. officers and men who died. 6 0 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 2 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 19 results in 9 document sections:

Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 1, Mass. officers and men who died., List of Massachusetts officers and soldiers killed in action. (search)
th Mass. Inf.,Winchester, Va.,Sept. 19, 1864. Bailey, George M.,2d Mass. Inf.,Gettysburg, Pa.,July 3, 1863. Bailey, S. Henry, Capt.,36th Mass. Inf.,Spotsylvania, Va.,May 12, 1864. Baker, Adam N. Name and rank. Private understood when not otherwise stated.Command.Engagement.Date. Baker, Adam N.,15th Mass. Inf.,Antietam, Md.,Sept. 17, 1862. Baker, Charles,5Gth Mass. Inf.,Wilderness, Va.,May 21, 1864. Baker, Frederick,39th Mass. Inf.,Weldon Railroad, Va.,Aug. 19, 1864. Baker, John H., Sergt.,12th Mass. Inf.,Petersburg, Va.,June 18, 1864. Baker, Noah,52d Mass. Inf.,Port Hudson, La.,June 14, 1863. Baker, Rudolphus L.,27th Mass. Inf.,Cold Harbor, Va.,June 2, 1864. Baker, William H.,13th Mass. Inf.,Manassas, Va.,Aug. 30, 1862. Balcom, Myron L.,2d Mass. Inf.,Antietam, Md.,Sept. 17, 1862. Baldwin, Hubbard H., Sergt.,26th Mass. Inf.,Winchester, Va.,Sept. 19, 1864. Baldwin, Joseph,19th Mass. Inf.,Fair Oaks, Va.,June 25, 1862. Ball, Charles M.,25th Mass. Inf.,Petersbur
Baker, Adam N. Name and rank. Private understood when not otherwise stated.Command.Engagement.Date. Baker, Adam N.,15th Mass. Inf.,Antietam, Md.,Sept. 17, 1862. Baker, Charles,5Gth Mass. Inf.,Wilderness, Va.,May 21, 1864. Baker, Frederick,39th Mass. Inf.,Weldon Railroad, Va.,Aug. 19, 1864. Baker, John H., Sergt.,12th Mass. Inf.,Petersburg, Va.,June 18, 1864. Baker, Noah,52d Mass. Inf.,Port Hudson, La.,June 14, 1863. Baker, Rudolphus L.,27th Mass. Inf.,Cold Harbor, Va.,June 2, 1864. Baker, William H.,13th Mass. Inf.,Manassas, Va.,Aug. 30, 1862. Balcom, Myron L.,2d Mass. Inf.,Antietam, Md.,Sept. 17, 1862. Baldwin, Hubbard H., Sergt.,26th Mass. Inf.,Winchester, Va.,Sept. 19, 1864. Baldwin, Joseph,19th Mass. Inf.,Fair Oaks, Va.,June 25, 1862. Ball, Charles M.,25th Mass. Inf.,Petersburg, Va.,Aug. 20, 1864. Ball, Henry C., 1st Sergt.,15th Mass. Inf.,Gettysburg, Pa.,July 3, 1863. Ball, Levi,25th Mass. Inf.,Roanoke Island, N. C.,Feb. 8, 1862. Ball, Nehemiah F.,20th M
497 Bacon, W. B., 330 Badeau, Adam, 116 Badger, A. H., 330 Badger, Stephen, 330 Badigan, John, 497 Bagley, J. C., 440 Bagley, Thomas, 497 Bailey, A. F., 330 Bailey, G. A., 330 Bailey, G. H., 440 Bailey, G. M., 330 Bailey, George, 330 Bailey, Horace, 440 Bailey, L. F., 440 Bailey, Ransom, 497 Bailey, S. H., 120, 330 Baker, A. N., 331 Baker, C. K., 440 Baker, Charles, 331 Baker, Daniel, 436 Baker, E. D., 34 Baker, E. E., 497 Baker, Frederick, 331 Baker, George, 440 Baker, J. H., 331 Baker, J. J., 149 Baker, Noah, 331 Baker, O. A., 323 Baker, R. L., 331 Baker, W. H., 331 Baker, Winslow, 497 Balcom, Joseph, 440 Balcom, M. L., 331 Baldoe, Louis, 497 Baldwin, C. B., 75, 98, 150 Baldwin, H. H., 331 Baldwin, James, 440 Baldwin, Joseph, 331 Baldwin, W. F., 440 Baldwin, W. H., 497 Ball, C. M., 331 Ball, D. E., 497 Ball, E. G., 440 Ball, G. S., 142 Ball, H. C., 2d Mass. Inf., 440 Ball, H. C., 15th Mass. Inf., 331 Ball, Levi, 331 Ball, N. F., 331 B
Joseph T. Derry , A. M. , Author of School History of the United States; Story of the Confederate War, etc., Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 6, Georgia (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Chapter 2: (search)
ommanding at Charleston; in the spring of 1862 served on the Georgia coast with distinction on Whitemarsh island, and was sent back to Virginia with Lawton's brigade in time to take part in the Seven Days battles. From that time it served in the army of Northern Virginia until the close of the war. Upon the death of Colonel Ector early in 1862, Marcellus Douglass was appointed colonel. He was killed at Sharpsburg while gallantly leading his regiment and was succeeded by James M. Smith. John H. Baker, at that time major of the regiment, was promoted to lieutenant-colonel and afterward was commissioned colonel. Other organizations of this early period were the Georgia legion, commanded by Col. Thomas R. R. Cobb, with P. M. B. Young as lieutenant-colonel and Ben C. Yancey, major. It was composed of seven companies of infantry, four of cavalry and one of artillery. A similar legion was organized and commanded by Col. William Phillips. The First Georgia battalion was organized unde
Joseph T. Derry , A. M. , Author of School History of the United States; Story of the Confederate War, etc., Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 6, Georgia (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Chapter 9: (search)
the vessels approached, Capt. Arthur Shaaff, commanding the First battalion sharpshooters, lined the river bank with his men, prepared to annoy the enemy if the obstructions were passed. Martin's light battery and Captain McAllister's troop were held in reserve; two rifle guns of the Chatham artillery, under Lieutenant Whitehead, were placed in pits on a bluff a mile to the rear, and the guns of the Nashville were taken out and mounted about seven miles up the river under the command of Captain Baker, while the steamer was put in readiness to be sunk if necessary to keep her from capture by the enemy. The Federal monitor took position at a distance of 800 to 1,000 yards, while the wooden boats lay two miles east. The fort opened fire and for five hours the combat continued. According to the Federal report, the Confederate fire was accurate and the monitor was hit forty-six times, but the weight of metal thrown at her was not sufficient to do harm. Colonel Anderson's official acco
Joseph T. Derry , A. M. , Author of School History of the United States; Story of the Confederate War, etc., Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 6, Georgia (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Chapter 10: (search)
ns; Twenty-third, Col. Emory F. Best; Twenty-seventh, Col. C. T. Zachry; Twenty-eighth, Col. Tully Graybill; another in D. H. Hill's division, commanded by Brig.-Gen. George Doles—Fourth regiment, Col. Philip Cook; Twelfth, Col. Edward Willis; Twenty-first, Col. J. T. Mercer; Forty-fourth, Col. J. B. Estes; and last, the Lawton brigade, in Early's division, now commanded by John B. Gordon, promoted brigadier-general from the colonelcy of the Fifth Alabama infantry— Thirteenth regiment, Col. J. H. Baker; Twenty-sixth, Lieut.-Col. J. S. Blain; Thirty-first, Col. C. A. Evans; Thirty-eighth, Col. J. D. Matthews; Sixtieth, Col. W. B. Jones; Sixty-first, Col. J. H. Lamar. The artillery commands from Georgia at Chancellorsville were: Sumter battalion, Lieut.-Col. A. S. Cutts, (A) Ross' battery, (B) Patterson's battery, (C) Wingfield's battery; Fraser's battery (Pulaski artillery) and Carlton's battery (Troup artillery), of Col. H. C. Cabell's battalion; and Milledge's battery of Col. Will
Joseph T. Derry , A. M. , Author of School History of the United States; Story of the Confederate War, etc., Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 6, Georgia (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Chapter 16: (search)
igade, and Pettus' Alabama brigade. Maj.-Gen. Stewart's division, composed of Stovall's Georgia brigade, Gibson's Louisiana brigade, Clayton's Alabama brigade, and Baker's Alabama brigade. Wheeler's cavalry corps: Maj.-Gen. W. H. Martin's division, including the Alabama brigade of Gen. J. T. Morgan and the Georgia brigade of Gll assaults. On the next day there was a vigorous Federal attack, which fell upon the brigades of Pettus and Brown at the angle on Rocky Face, on Stovall's and Baker's on the ridge, and on Bate in the gap, but the gallant Confederates held their ground with firmness, and the enemy suffered severely. The fight, said Sherman, ation, unfortunately, through a confusion of orders, attacked consecutively by brigades, on the right, against the angle at Logan's left—first Gibson's brigade, then Baker's, both of which were repulsed with loss of half their numbers, including a number of gallant officers. Walthall, with the divisions of Reynolds and Cantey, attac
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 3 (search)
Jubal A. Early Commanding. Gordon's division. Major-General John B. Gordon. Hays's brigade. constituting York's brigade. Fifth Louisiana, Colonel Henry Forno. Sixth Louisiana, Colonel William Monaghan. Seventh Louisiana, Colonel D. B. Penn. Eighth Louisiana, Colonel A. DeBlanc. Ninth Louisiana, Colonel William R. Peck. Gordon's brigade. Evans's brigade, Colonel E. N. Atkinson commanding, and containing Twelfth Georgie Battalion. Thirteenth Georgia, Lieutenant-Colonel J. H. Baker. Twenty-sixth Georgia, Colonel E. N. Atkinson. Thirty-first Georgia, Colonel C. A. Evans. Thirty-eighth Georgia, Colonel J. D. Mathews. Sixtieth Georgia, Colonel W. H. Stiles. Sixty-first Georgia, Colonel J. H. Lamar. Pegrarm's brigade. in Ramseur's division. Brigadier-General John Pegram. Thirteenth Virginia, Colonel J. E. B. Terrill. Thirty-first Virginia, Colonel J. S. Hoffman. Forty-ninth Virginia, Colonel J. C. Gibson. Fifty-second Virginia, Colonel James H
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 12. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 73 (search)
L. Prados. Ninth Louisiana, Colonel William R. Peck. Stafford's brigade. these brigades united under command of Brigadier-General Zebulon York. Colonel Eugene Waggaman. First Louisiana, Captain Joseph Taylor. Second Louisiana, Lieutenant-Colonel M. A. Grogan. Tenth Louisiana, Lieutenant-Colonel H. D. Monier. Fourteenth Louisiana, Lieutenant-Colonel David Zable. Fifteenth Louisiana, Captain H. J. Egan. Evans' brigade. Colonel E. N. Atkinson. Thirteenth Georgia, Colonel John H. Baker. Twenty-sixth Georgia, Lieutenant Colonel James S. Blain. Thirty-first Georgia, Colonel John H Lowe. Thirty-eighth Georgia, Major Thomas H. Bomar. Sixtieth Georgia, Captain Milton Russell. Sixty-first Georgia, Captain E. F. Sharpe. Twelfth Georgia Battalion, Captain James W. Anderson. Terry's brigade. composed of the fragmentary remains of fourteen of the regiments of Edward Johnson's division, most of which was captured by the enemy May 12, 1864. Brigadier-General W