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ird Brigade. No. 71.-Lieut. Col. Robert A. Fulton, Fifty-third Ohio Infantry. No. 72.--Col. Ralph P. Buckland, Seventy-second Ohio Infantry, commanding Fourth Brigade. No. 73.-Lieut. Col. Job R. Parker, Forty-eighth Ohio Infantry. No. 74.-Col. Joseph R. Cockerill, Seventieth Ohio Infantry. No. 75.-Maj. Ezra Taylor, First Illinois Light Artillery, Chief of Artillery Fifth Division. No. 76.-Capt. Samuel E. Barrett, Battery B, First Illinois Light Artillery. No. 77.-Lieut. John A. Fitch, Battery E, First Illinois Light Artillery. No. 78.-Brig. Gen. B. M. Prentiss, U. S. Army, commanding Sixth Division. No. 79.-Col. Francis Quinn, Twelfth Michigan Infantry, commanding Sixth Division. No. 80.-Col. David Moore, Twenty-first Missouri Infantry (of the First Brigade). No. 81.-Lieut. Col. Humphrey M. Woodyard, Twenty-first Missouri Infantry. No. 82.-Lieut. Col. Robert T. Van Horn, Twenty-fifth Missouri Infantry. No. 83.-Col. Benjamin Allen, Sixteenth Wisco
, Lieutenant-Colonel J. F. Marsh, commanding; company E, First Illinois light artillery, Captain John A. Fitch, commanding; section Sixth Indiana battery, Captain M. Miller, commanding. Second bri bridge a short distance back and cutting us off. Battery E, First Illinois light artillery, Captain Fitch, and the Ninth Minnesota infantry, Lieutenant-Colonel Marsh commanding, were held in reserveon our right was being driven back by the Ninth Minnesota and Thirteenth Indiana, I directed Captain Fitch to put one section of his battery in position on the Guntown road and sweep it with grape anere fast closing round us. I therefore determined to retire, and in order to do so, directed Captains Fitch and Chapman to open a rapid fire, with grape and canister, along the roads and through woodsEaton, commanding Seventy-second Ohio; Lieutenant-Colonel Marsh, commanding Ninth Minnesota; Captain Fitch, commanding light battery company E, and Captain Miller, commanding section of Sixth Indiana