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 Thomas Duffy or search for Thomas Duffy in all documents.

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,340 pounds; fodder, 13,860 pounds. There have been, as above stated, forty-seven head of cattle captured by the regiment, and turned over to the brigade commissary, the net weight of which would be about fourteen thousand pounds. Casualties from September second to December twenty-second inclusive: Privates, Thomas Benham, Co. A, taken prisoner October thirteenth; William Adlum, Co. B, taken prisoner October thirteenth; William Hoerhold, Co. B, committed suicide October twentieth ; Thomas Duffy, Co. C, taken prisoner October twenty-third; sergeant Edward Tuttle, Co. A, accidentally shot in hand November ninth; privates, Gilbert Shaw, Co. B, taken prisoner November eighteenth; John H. Stroker, Co. B, taken prisoner November eighteenth; George Snyder, Co. B, taken prisoner November eighteenth; Frederick F. Dewy, Co. C, taken prisoner November twenty-second; William H. Foster, Co. G, taken prisoner November twenty-second; Augustus Kuhfuss, Co. G, taken prisoner November twenty-seco
eral Elzey was in position to strengthen either wing. About ten, the enemy felt along my front with skirmishers, and shortly after posted his artillery, chiefly opposite mine. He advanced, under cover, on General Trimble, with a force, according to his statement, of two brigades, which were repulsed with such signal loss that they did not make another determined effort. General Trimble had been reinforced by the Thirteenth and Twenty-fifth Virginia regiments, Colonel Walker and Lieutenant-Colonel Duffy, of General Elzey's brigade. These regiments assisted in the repulse of the enemy. General Trimble, in turn, advanced and drove the enemy more than a mile, and remained on his flank ready to make the final attack. General Taylor, with the Eighth brigade, composed of Louisiana troops, reported about two P. M., and was placed in the rear. Colonel Patton, with the Forty-second and Forty-eighth regiments, and Irish battalion, Virginia volunteers, also joined, and with the remainder
ve the honor to make the following report of the operations of this division under my command in the reduction of Harper's Ferry.: On the ninth of September, I was instructed by General Lee to proceed from the Monocacy Junction, near Frederick, Maryland, to the mouth of the Monocacy, and destroy the aqueduct of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. We arrived at the aqueduct about eleven o'clock, P. M., and found it occupied by the enemy's pickets, whose fire, as they fled, severely wounded Captain Duffy, of the Twenty-fourth North Carolina troops, of Brigadier-General Ransom's brigade. Working parties were at once detailed and set to work to drill holes for blowing up the arches; but after several hours of labor, it was apparent that, owing to the insufficiency of our tools and the extraordinary solidity and massiveness of the masonry, the work we had undertaken was one of days instead of hours. The movement of our main army from Frederick toward Hagerstown, which I had been officiall