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Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: The Opening Battles. Volume 1., The opposing forces at Shiloh. (search)
for mortally wounded; m for captured or missing; c for captured. The Union army. Army of the Tennessee. Brigadier-General Ulysses S. Grant. First division, Major-Gen. John A. McClernand. Staff loss: w, 2. First Brigade, Col. A. M. Hare (w), Col. M. M. Crocker: 8th Ill., Capt. James M. Ashmore (w), Capt. William H. Harvey (k), Capt. R. H. Sturgess; 18th Ill., Major Samuel Eaton (w), Capt. Daniel H. Brush (w), Capt. William J. Dillon (k), Capt. J. J. Anderson; 11th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. William Hall; 13th Iowa, Col. Marcellus M. Crocker; Battery D, 2d Ill. Artillery, Capt. James P. Timony. Brigade loss: k, 104; w, 467 ; m, 9 = 580. Second Brigade, Col. C. Carroll Marsh: 11th Ill., Lieut.-Col. T. E. G. Ransom (w), Major Garrett Nevins (w), Capt. Lloyd D. Waddell, Major Garrett Nevins; 20th Ill., Lieut.-Col. Evan Richards (w), Capt. Orton Frisbie; 45th Ill., Col. John E. Smith; 48th Ill., Col. Isham N. Haynie (w), Maj. Manning Mayfield. Brigade loss: k, 80; w, 475; m, 30= 585.
The Atlanta (Georgia) Campaign: May 1 - September 8, 1864., Part I: General Report. (ed. Maj. George B. Davis, Mr. Leslie J. Perry, Mr. Joseph W. Kirkley), chapter 85 (search)
r line on the 12th instant, took position in line of battle near the river, and remained without important engagements until the 18th. On the 19th at 6 a. m.. the battery was ordered by General Howard into position near Peach Tree Creek. The battery during this day's engagements occupied several positions by sections. During the afternoon the section commanded by Sergt. Clark E. Dodge was especially complimented by Major-General Thomas for its good shots. They were made by gunners Corpl. William Hall and Corpl. John Merriam. On July 21 the battery was placed in a commanding position by division chief of artillery to bear upon the outer line of rebel works around Atlanta; were successful in silencing a very troublesome line of rebel skirmishers and in badly shattering their works. July 22, at 11 a. m. took position, by order of Captain Bradley, in the line before Atlanta, 20 degrees east of north from the city, and at 3 p. m. commenced shelling the rebel works in good earnest.
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Volume 2., Iuka and Corinth. (search)
en. John McArthur: 21st Mo., Col. David Moore, Maj. Edwin Moore; 16th Wis., Maj. Thomas Reynolds; 17th Wis., Col. John L. Doran. Brigade loss: k, 11; w, 67; m, 23 = 101. Second Brigade, Col. John M. Oliver: Indpt. Co.,, Ill. Cav., Capt. William Ford; 15th Mich., Lieut.-Col. John McDermott; 18th Mo. (4 co's), Capt. Jacob R. Ault; 14th Wis., Col. John Hancock; 18th Wis., Col. Gabriel Bouck. Brigade loss: k, 45; w, 108; m, 38 = 191. Third Brigade, Col. Marcellus M. Crocker: 11th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. William Hall; 13th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. John Shane; 15th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. William W. Belknap, Col. Hugh T. Reid; 16th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. Addison H. Sanders (w), Maj. William Purcell. Brigade loss: k, 14; w, 111: m, 24 = 149. Artillery, Capt. Andrew u Hicken-looper: F, 2d Ill., Lieut. J. W. Mitchell; 1st Minn., Lieut. G. F. Cooke; 3d Ohio (section), Capt. Emil Munch, Sergt. Sylvanus Clark; 5th Ohio, Lieut. B. S. Matson; 10th Ohio, Capt. H. B. White. Artillery loss: w, 8. Total Union loss: kille
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Volume 2., The opposing forces at Corinth, Miss., October 3d and 4th, 1862. (search)
en. John McArthur: 21st Mo., Col. David Moore, Maj. Edwin Moore; 16th Wis., Maj. Thomas Reynolds; 17th Wis., Col. John L. Doran. Brigade loss: k, 11; w, 67; m, 23 = 101. Second Brigade, Col. John M. Oliver: Indpt. Co.,, Ill. Cav., Capt. William Ford; 15th Mich., Lieut.-Col. John McDermott; 18th Mo. (4 co's), Capt. Jacob R. Ault; 14th Wis., Col. John Hancock; 18th Wis., Col. Gabriel Bouck. Brigade loss: k, 45; w, 108; m, 38 = 191. Third Brigade, Col. Marcellus M. Crocker: 11th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. William Hall; 13th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. John Shane; 15th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. William W. Belknap, Col. Hugh T. Reid; 16th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. Addison H. Sanders (w), Maj. William Purcell. Brigade loss: k, 14; w, 111: m, 24 = 149. Artillery, Capt. Andrew u Hicken-looper: F, 2d Ill., Lieut. J. W. Mitchell; 1st Minn., Lieut. G. F. Cooke; 3d Ohio (section), Capt. Emil Munch, Sergt. Sylvanus Clark; 5th Ohio, Lieut. B. S. Matson; 10th Ohio, Capt. H. B. White. Artillery loss: w, 8. Total Union loss: kille
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., The opposing forces in the Vicksburg campaign: May 1st-July 4th, 1863. (search)
eut.-Col. Leander Blanden; 14th Wis., Col. Lyman M. Ward; 17th Wis., Lieut.-Col. Thomas McMahon, Col. Adam G. Malloy. Brigadeloss: Vicksburg, assault May 19th, k, 14; w, 110 = 124; assault May 22d, k, 57; w, 275; m, 32= 364. Third Brigade, Col. William Hall, Col. Alexander Chambers: 11th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. John C. Abercrombie, Col. William Hall; 13th Iowa, Col. John Shane; 15th Iowa, Col. William W. Belknap; 16th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. Addison H. Sanders. Brigade loss: Vicksburg, assault May 22d, kCol. William Hall; 13th Iowa, Col. John Shane; 15th Iowa, Col. William W. Belknap; 16th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. Addison H. Sanders. Brigade loss: Vicksburg, assault May 22d, k, 1; w, 2=3. Artillery, Maj. Thomas D. Maurice: F, 2d Ill., Capt. John W. Powell; 1st Minn., Lieut. Henry Hunter, Capt. William Z. Clayton; C, 1st Mo., Capt. Charles Mann; 10th Ohio, Capt. Hamilton B. White, Lieut. William L. Newcomb. Seventh division, Brig.-Gen. Marcellus M. Crocker, Brig.-Gen. Isaac F. Quinby, Brig.-Gen. John E. Smith. Escort: F, 4th Mo. Cav., Lieut. Alexander Mueller. Loss: Raymond, k, 1; w, 1 = 2. First Brigade, Col. John B. Sanborn: 48th Ind., Col. Norman Eddy; 59t
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces in the Atlanta campaign. May 3d-September 8th, 1864. (search)
gar H. Cooper; H, 1st Mich., Capt. Marcus D. Elliott, Lieut. William Justin; 3d Ohio, Lieut. John Sullivan. Fourth division, Brig.-Gen. Walter Q. Gresham, Col. William Hall, Brig.-Gen. Giles A. Smith. First Brigade, Col. William L. Sanderson, Col. Benjamin F. Potts: 32d Ill. (transferred to Second Brigade July 18th), Col. John ron; 41st Ill. (joined July 5th), Maj. Robert H. McFadden; 53d Ill. (transferred to First Brigade, July 18th), Lieut.-Col. John W. McClanahan. Third Brigade, Col. William Hall, Col. John Shane, Col. William Hall, Brig.-Gen. William W. Belknap: 11th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. John C. Abercrombie; 13th Iowa, Col. John Shane, Maj. W. A. WalkerCol. William Hall, Brig.-Gen. William W. Belknap: 11th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. John C. Abercrombie; 13th Iowa, Col. John Shane, Maj. W. A. Walker, Col. John Shane; 15th Iowa, Col. W. W. Belknap, Maj. George Pomutz; 16th Iowa, Lieut.-Col. Addison H. Sanders, Capt. Crandall W. Williams. Artillery, Capt. Edward Spear, Jr., Capt. William Z. Clayton : F, 2d Ill., Lieut. Walter H. Powell, Lieut. George R. Richardson, Lieut. Wendolin Meyer; 1st Minn., Capt. W. Z. Clayton, Lieut. H
essee, with abstracts from the field returns of the several divisions, April 4-5 and April 10-15, 1862. No. 4.-Maj. Gen. John A. McClernand, U. S. Army, commanding First Division. No. 5.-Col. Abraham M. Hare, Eleventh Iowa Infantry, commanding First Brigade. No. 6.-Col. Marcellus M. Crocker, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry, commanding First Brigade. No. 7.-Capt. Robert H. Sturgess, Eighth Illinois Infantry. No. 8.-Capt. J. J. Anderson, Eighteenth Illinois Infantry. No. 9.-Lieut. Col. William Hall, Eleventh Iowa Infantry. No. 10.-Col. Marcellus M. Crocker, Thirteenth Iowa Infantry. No. 11.-Col. C. Carroll Marsh, Twentieth Illinois Infantry, commanding Second Brigade. No. 12.-Lieut. Col. Thomas E. G. Ransom, Eleventh Illinois Infantry. No. 13.-Lieut. Abram H. Ryan, Seventeenth Illinois Infantry, Acting Assistant Adjutant-General, Third Brigade. No. 14.-Lieut. Col. Enos P. Wood, Seventeenth Illinois Infantry. No. 16.-Lieut. Col. Adolph Engelmann, Forty-third I
 57Martha, b. 1775; d. Aug. 11, 1778.  58Susanna, b. Aug. 3, 1778.  59John, b. June 3, 1786.   Rebecca Bradshaw m. Wm. Hall, jun., Feb. 7, 1753.   Mercy Bradshaw m. Joseph Ellis, of Dedham, May 13, 1756.   Mary Bradshaw m. Nathaniel Hall, Apr. 26, 1767; d. Jan. 1, 1849.  53Mary, b. Jan. 27, 1769; m. Samuel Gray, of Salem.  54Joanna C., b. May 18, 1772; m. Nathl. Hall, Nov. 26, 1793. 30-38Jonathan Brooks m. Elizabeth Albree, Sept. 26, 1791; died Mar. 18, 1847. His wife d. Mar. 31, 1826,ril 15, 1848, leaving one son,--  8-18James Bartlett.   Groves, Mathew, son of Mathew and Naomi, b. July 9, 1702.  1Hall, widow Mary, of Cambridge, had lands given her by that town, 1662, when she united with the church. Her children were allife died, July 27, 1808, aged 54. Children:--  107-199 John, b. Jan. 21, 1778;armorer at Harper's Ferry, and known by Hall's Carbine; father of Willard P. Hall, late M. C. from Missouri.  200Martha, b. Oct. 10, 1779.  201Mary, b. D
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), State of Tennessee, (search)
s to be sent to New Orleans to reinforce Wilkinson, and he made a requisition upon Jackson for that number. The latter immediately entered upon that military career which rendered his name famous. On Dec. 10, when the weather in Tennessee was intensely cold and deep snow lay upon the ground, about 2,000 troops assembled at Nashville, bearing clothes for both cold and warm weather. When organized, these consisted of two regiments of infantry of 700 men each, commanded respectively by Cols. William Hall and Thomas H. Benton, and a corps of cavalry, 670 in number, under the command of Col. John Coffee. These troops were composed of the best physical and social materials of the State. On Jan. 7, 1813, the little army went down the Cumberland River in boats, excepting the mounted men, whom Coffee led across the country to join the others at Natchez, on the Mississippi. In a letter to the Secretary of War, General Jackson, alluding to the conduct of some Pennsylvania and New York tro
W. H. Osborn, A. A. Vanderpoel, W. W. De Forrest, A. B. Baylis, Elnathan Thorne, W. B. Maclay, Fred. Kapp, Anson Herrick, Theodore Fowler, Daniel Leroy, S. L. Mitchill, Augustus Schell, Chas. Christmas, J B. Varnum, Wm. Hall, Chas. A. Secor, John T. Hoffman, Hamilton Fish, Luther Bradish, Fernando Wood, A. T. Stewart, Morris Ketchum, Jonathan Sturges, J. J. Astor, John Cochran, Alex. Duncan. Secretaries. J. Smith Homans, John Bigelow, ent, for constitution, for right, for freedom, for-humanity, and in the hope that the banner of my country may advance, and wheresoever that banner waves, there glory may pursue and freedom be established. (Loud and prolonged applause.) [Lieutenant Hall, of Fort Sumter, was here introduced to the audience, and made his bow amidst enthusiastic cheers.] Robert J. Walker's speech. I received the request to address you but a few hours since, and being wholly unprepared, shall therefore de
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