Browsing named entities in 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. You can also browse the collection for Frank A. Haskell or search for Frank A. Haskell in all documents.

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nel Philemon P. Baldwin, 6th Indiana, Chickamauga. Colonel Edward H. Phelps, 38th Ohio, Missionary Ridge. Colonel William R. Creighton, 7th Ohio, Ringgold. Colonel Lewis Benedict, 162d New York, Pleasant Hill. Colonel Patrick E. Burke, Mortally wounded. 66th Illinois, Rome Cross Roads. Colonel Orlando H. Morris, 66th New York, Cold Harbor. Colonel Lewis O. Morris, 7th New York (H. A.), Cold Harbor. Colonel Henry Boyd McKeen, 81st Pennsylvania, Cold Harbor. Colonel Frank A. Haskell, 36th Wisconsin, Cold Harbor. Colonel Jeremiah C. Drake, 112th New York, Cold Harbor. Colonel Richard Byrnes, Mortally wounded. 28th Massachusetts, Irish Brigade. Cold Harbor. Colonel Patrick Kelly, 88th New York, Irish Brigade. Petersburg. Colonel William Blaisdell, 11th Massachusetts, Petersburg. Colonel Simon H. Mix, 3d New York Cavalry, Petersburg. Colonel Calvin A. Craig, 105th Pennsylvania, Deep Bottom. Colonel Nathan T. Dushane, 1st Maryland, Weldo
ough the Carolinas to toe Grand Review at Washington. Thirty-Sixth Wisconsin Infantry. McKeen's Brigade — Gibbon's Division--Second Corps. (1) Col. Frank A. Haskell (Killed). (2) Col. John A. Savage, Jr. (Killed). (3) Col. Harvey M. Brown. (4) Col. Clement E. Warner. companies. killed and died of wounds. died ridge; Appomattox. notes.--Recruited under the call of February 1st, 1864, for 500,000 more men. It was organized at Madison leaving Wisconsin on May 10th; Colonel Haskell was transferred from the Sixth Wisconsin, in which he was serving as an Adjutant. Immediately after arriving in Virginia the regiment joined the Army of the and 5 missing. The brigade commander, Colonel H. B. McKeen. of the Eighty-first Pennsylvania, was killed in that assault, whereupon the command devolved upon Colonel Haskell, who fell dead a few minutes later. Colonel Savage succeeded to the command of the regiment, but fell mortally wounded in the assault on Petersburg, June