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Knoxville, but my troops derived little comfort from this fact, for the train was stopped by General Foster, who had succeeded Burnside in command of the department, its contents distributed pro rata its appropriation for general distribution, like the preceding invoice, was very remote. General Foster had decided by this time to move his troops to Dandridge for the twofold purpose of threatenme to go along and see him do it. I declined, however, for being now the senior officer present, Foster, Parke, and Granger having remained at Knoxville and Strawberry Plains, their absence left me innd so informed them. My communication brought Parke and Granger to the front without delay, but Foster could not come, since the hardships of the winter had reopened an old wound received during the advance extended only as far as Blain's crossroads, whence it was soon withdrawn. Meanwhile General Foster had superseded Burnside, but physical disabilities rendered him incapable of remaining in th
es Patchell. One Hundred and Thirty-ninth Pennsylvania, Lieutenant-Colonel John G. Paxt. Second brigade: (1) Brigadier-General Lewis A. Grant (2) Lieutenant-Colonel Amasa S. Tracy. (3) Brigadier-General Lewis A. Grant. Second Vermont (1), Lieutenant-Colonel Amasa S. Tracy. Second Vermont (2), Captain Elijah Wales. Second Vermont (3), Lieutenant-Colonel Amasa S. Tracy. Third Vermont (battalion), Major Horace W. Floyd. Fourth Vermont (1), Major Horace W. Floyd. Fourth Vermont (2), Colonel George P. Foster.[Corps officer of the day at the beginning of the battle; later, rejoined brigade and commanded the left of its line.] Fifth Vermont, Major Enoch E. Johnson. Sixth Vermont (battalion) (1), Captain Edwin R. Kinney. Sixth Vermont (battalion) (2), Captain Wm. J. Sperry. Eleventh Vermont (First Heavy Artillery), Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Hunsdon. Third brigade: (1) Brigadier-General Daniel D. Bidwell. (2) Lieutenant-Colonel Winsor B. French. First Maine (Veteran), Major Stephen C
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces at the beginning of Grant's campaign against Richmond. (search)
Col. Joseph E. Hamblin; 67th N. Y., Col. Nelson Cross; 122d N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Augustus W. Dwight; 82d Pa. (detachment). Second division, Brig.-Gen. George W. Getty. First Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Frank Wheaton: 62d N. Y., Col. David J. Nevin; 93d Pa., Lieut.-Col. John S. Long; 98th Pa., Col. John F. Ballier; 102d Pa., Col. John W. Patterson; 139th Pa., Lieut.-Col. William H. Moody. Second Brigade, Col. Lewis A. Grant: 2d Vt., Col. Newton Stone; 3d Vt., Col. Thomas O. Seaver; 4th Vt., Col. George P. Foster; 5th Vt., Lieut.-Col. John R. Lewis; 6th Vt., Col. Elisha L. Barney. Third Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Thomas H. Neill: 7th Me., Col. Edwin C. Mason; 43d N. Y., Lieut.-Col. John Wilson; 49th N. Y., Col. Daniel D. Bidwell; 77th N. Y., Maj. Nathan S. Babcock,: 61st Pa., Col. George F. Smith. Fourth Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Henry L. Eustis: 7th Mass., Col. Thomas D. Johns; 10th Mass., Lieut.-Col. Joseph B. Parsons; 37th Mass., Col. Oliver Edwards; 2d R. I., Lieut.-Col. S. B. M. Read. Third division
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces at Cedar Creek, Va., Oct. 19, 1864. (search)
B. Hamilton; 93d Pa., Capt. David C. Keller; 98th Pa., Lieut.-Col. John B. Kohler, Capt. Gottfried Bauer; 102d Pa., Maj. James H. Coleman, Capt. James Patchell; 139th Pa., Lieut.-Col. John G. Parr. Brigade loss: k, 36; w, 189; m, 4=229. Second Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Lewis A. Grant, Lieut.-Col. Amasa S. Tracy, Brig.-Gen. Lewis A. Grant: 2d Vt., Lieut.-Col. Amasa S. Tracy, Capt. Elijah Wales, Lieut.-Col. Amasa S. Tracy; 3d Vt. (batt'n), Maj. Horace W. Floyd; 4th Vt., Maj. Horace W. Floyd, Col. George P. Foster; Corps officer of the day at the beginning of the battle; later rejoined brigade and commanded the left of its line. 5th Vt., Maj. Enoch E. Johnson; 6th Vt. (batt'n), Capt. Edwin R. Kinney, Capt. William J. Sperry; 11th Vt. (1st Heavy Artillery), Lieut.-Col. Charles Hunsdon. Brigade loss: k, 34; w, 209; m, 41 =284. Third Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Daniel D. Bidwell (k), Lieut.-Col. Winsor B. French: 1st Me. (Veteran), Maj. Stephen C. Fletcher; 43d N. Y. (batt'n), Maj. Charles A. Millik
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)
. Fisk; 121st N. Y., Capt. James W. Cronkite; 95th Pa. (6 co's), Maj. John Harper. Third Brigade, Col. Thomas S. Allen: 37th Mass., Maj. Rufus P. Lincoln; 49th Pa., Lieut.-Col. Baynton J. Hickman; 82d Pa., Lieut.-Col. James R. Neiler; 119th Pa., Lieut.-Col. Gideon Clark; 2d R. I. (6 co's), Capt. Elisha H. Rhodes; 5th Wis., Lieut.-Col. James M. Bull. Second division, Brig.-Gen. George W. Getty (on leave), Brig.-Gen. Lewis A. Grant. First Brigade, Col. James M. Warner (on leave), Col. George P. Foster: 62d N. Y., Maj. William H. Baker; 93d Pa., Lieut.-Col. Charles W. Eckman; 98th Pa., Capt. Peter Beisel; 102d Pa., Lieut.-Col. James Patchell; 139th Pa., Lieut.-Col. John G. Parr. Second Brigade, Lieut.-Col. Charles Hunsdon: 1st Vt. Heavy Art'y, Maj. Aldace F. Walker; 2d Vt., Maj. Enoch E. Johnson; 3d and 4th Vt., Lieut.-Col. Horace W. Floyd; 5th Vt., Capt. Ronald A. Kennedy; 6th Vt. (6 co's), Maj. Sumner H. Lincoln. Third Brigade, Col. Thomas W. Hyde: 1st Me., Lieut.-Col. Stephen C.
ay 8th, 5 on May 10th, and 80 on May 12th, at the Bloody Angle. It may be urged that, these being three different affairs, the losses should not be consolidated. If they had occurred at different places, as, for instance, South Mountain and Antietam, the criticism would hold good; but this fighting was done at one place, and the continuous nervous strain made it as heroic as if the lose had occurred in one brief charge. This regiment crossed the Rapidan May 5th, with 444 effective men. Foster: New Jersey in the Rebellion. It sustained but a slight loss at the Wilderness, and took 432 officers and men into action at Spotsylvania, of whom 116 were killed or died of wounds — a loss of 26 per cent. Within nine days after breaking camp, it was reduced to 5 officers and 136 men available for action. Next, in percentage of killed in particular engagements, is the Twenty-fifth Massachusetts at Cold Harbor, then in Stannard's Brigade, Martindale's Division, Eighteenth Corps. This loss
en. (2) Col. Charles B. Stoughton. (3) Col. George P. Foster; Bvt. Brig. Gen. companies. killHatteras Inlet on February 6, 1862. It was in Foster's (1st) Brigade, and was engaged at Roanoke Issailed for North Carolina. It was assigned to Foster's (1st) Brigade, and fought under Burnside at xpedition to North Carolina. It was placed in Foster's (1st) Brigade, and was engaged at Roanoke Is was publicly acknowledged at its close by General Foster, in words of extreme praise. At that battle it was in Stevenson's (2d) Brigade, Foster's (1st) Division. In April, 1864, the Tenth joined ther, 1862, the regiment was ordered to join General Foster's troops in North Carolina, where it remaiment became a part of Plaisted's (3d) Brigade, Foster's (1st) Division, Twenty-fourth Corps. At theevere loss by disease. In June, 1863--then in Foster's Brigade of Getty's Division — the regiment m it was transferred to Osborn's (1st) Brigade, Foster's (1st) Division, Twenty-fourth Corps. In the[6 more...
---------- 11 89 -- 100 45th Massachusetts Foster's ---------- 18 59 -- 77 9th New Jersey FosFoster's ---------- 5 86 4 95 103d Pennsylvania Peck's ---------- 16 53 -- 69 23d Massachusetts Fard's Eighteenth 15 85 5 105 117th New York Foster's Tenth 15 76 33 124 13th New Hampshire Staolman's Eighteenth 5 45 -- 50 142d New York Foster's Tenth 8 90 5 103 117th New York Foster's Foster's Tenth 6 42 4 52 9th Maine Foster's Tenth 3 43 3 49 89th New York Heckman's Eighteenth 4 37 98 nft's Ninth 21 93 21 135 199th Pennsylvania Foster's Twenty-fourth 22 92 1 115 15th New York Hiles's Second 18 86 10 114 10th Connecticut Foster's Twenty-fourth 13 91 -- 104 39th New Jersew York Miles's Second 9 72 -- 81 11th Maine Foster's Twenty-fourth 9 69 34 112 53d Pennsylvanilvania Potter's Ninth 13 61 25 99 67th Ohio Foster's Twenty-fourth 8 65 -- 73 39th Illinois FoFoster's Twenty-fourth 20 52 -- 72 7th Wisconsin Crawford's Fifth 11 59 11 81 2d New York H. A. [5 more...]
e year. 6 67 73   44 44 117 Griffin's Fifth. Nov., ‘64 199th Pennsylvania Enlisted for one year. 2 30 32   52 52 84 Foster's Twenty-fo'rth Sept., ‘64 200th Pennsylvania Enlisted for one year.   30 30   24 24 54 Hartranft's Ninth. Aug.,Enlisted for one year.   3 3   33 33 36     Sept., ‘64 203d Pennsylvania Enlisted for one year. 4 70 74   72 72 146 Foster's Tenth. Sept., ‘64 205th Pennsylvania Enlisted for one year. 3 37 40   17 17 57 Hartranft's Ninth. Sept., ‘64 2y's Twenty-sec'd.   Light Batteries.                   Oct., ‘61 1st Wis. Reenlisted and served through the war. Foster's   5 5 1 22 23 28 Osterhaus's Thirteenth. Oct., ‘61 2d Wis. Reenlisted and served through the war. Herzberg's   f the war were Indianians: Generals Lew. Wallace, Hovey, Jefferson C. Davis, Meredith, Wagner, Jos. J. Reynolds, Kimball, Foster, Cruft, Harrow, Colgrove, Miller, Cameron, Gresham, Coburn, Hascall, Harrison, Veatch, Manso
William F. Fox, Lt. Col. U. S. V., Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865: A Treatise on the extent and nature of the mortuary losses in the Union regiments, with full and exhaustive statistics compiled from the official records on file in the state military bureaus and at Washington, Chapter 13: aggregate of deaths in the Union Armies by States--total enlistment by States--percentages of military population furnished, and percentages of loss — strength of the Army at various dates casualties in the Navy. (search)
try Port Hudson 6 21 -- 27 Mch. 14 Mississippi Smith Port Hudson 25 39 -- Includes some missing ones; the vessel was blown up.64 Mch. 19 Hartford Palmer Grand Gulf 2 6 -- 8 Mch. 19 Albatross Hart Grand Gulf Mch. 11 Chillicothe Foster Fort Pemberton 2 11 -- 13 Mch. 16 Chillicothe Foster Fort Pemberton 4 16 -- 20 Mch. 16 De Kalb Walker Fort Pemberton 3 3 -- 6 April 16 Fleet Porter Vicksburg -- 13 -- 13 April 29 Benton Greer Grand Gulf 9 19 -- 28 April 29 TuscumFoster Fort Pemberton 4 16 -- 20 Mch. 16 De Kalb Walker Fort Pemberton 3 3 -- 6 April 16 Fleet Porter Vicksburg -- 13 -- 13 April 29 Benton Greer Grand Gulf 9 19 -- 28 April 29 Tuscumbia Shirk Grand Gulf 6 24 -- 30 April 29 Pittsburg Hoel Grand Gulf 6 13 -- 19 April 29 Lafayette Walke Grand Gulf -- 1 -- 1 May 4 Albatross Hart Fort De Russy 2 4 -- 6 May 27 Cincinnati Sunk in action. Bache Vicksburg 5 14 15 34 July 7 Monongahela Read Mississippi 2 4 -- 6 Sept. 7 Clifton Crocker Sabine Pass 10 9 -- 19 Sept. 7 Sachem Johnson Sabine Pass 7 Wounded not stated. -- 7 1864.               Feb. 1 Underwriter Westervelt Neuse River 9 20 19 48 April 2
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