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General James Longstreet, From Manassas to Appomattox, Chapter28: Gettysburg-Third day. (search)
Mass., Lieut.-Col. Waldo Merriam, Capt. Matthew Donovan; 12th Mass., Capt. John F. Langley; 11th N. J., Col. Robert McAllister, Capt. Luther Martin, Lieut. John Schoonover, Capt. William H. Lloyd, Capt. Samuel T. Sleeper; 26th Pa., Maj. Robert L. Bodine; 84th Pa., Guarding corps trains, and not engaged in the battle. Lieut.-Col. Milton Opp. Second Brigade, Col. William R. Brewster; 70th N. Y., Col. J. Egbert Farnum; 71st N. Y., Col. Henry L. Potter; 72d N. Y., Col. John S. Austin, Lieut.-Col. John Leonard; 73d N. Y., Maj. Michael W. Burns; 74th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Thomas Holt; 120th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Cornelius D. Westbrook, Maj. John R. Tappen. Third Brigade, Col. George C. Burling; 2d N. H., Col. Edward L. Bailey; 5th N. J., Col. William J. Sewell, Capt. Thomas C. Godfrey, Capt. Henry H. Woolsey; 6th N. J., Lieut.-Col. Stephen R. Gilkyson; 7th N. J., Col. Louis R. Francine, Maj. Frederick Cooper; 8th N. J., Col. John Ramsey, Capt. John G. Langston; 115th Pa., Maj. John P. Dunne. Art
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., The opposing forces in the Chancellorsville campaign. (search)
st Mass., Col. Napoleon B. McLaughlen; 11th Mass., Col. William Blaisdell, Lieut.-Col. Porter D. Tripp; 16th Mass., Lieut.-Col. Waldo Merriam; 11th N. J., Col. Robert McAllister; 26th Pa., Col. Benjamin C. Tilghman (w), Maj. Robert L. Bodine. Brigade loss: k, 52; w, 387; in, 65=504. Second Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Joseph W. Revere, Col. J. Egbert Farnum: 70th N. Y., Col. J. Egbert Farnum, Lieut.-Col. Thomas Holt; 71st N. Y., Col. Henry L. Potter; 72d N. Y., Col. William O. Stevens (k), MIaj. John Leonard; 73d N. Y., Maj. Michael W. Burns; 74th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. William H. Lounsbury (w), Capt. Henry M. Alles (w), Capt. Francis E. Tyler; 120th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Cornelius D. Westbrook. Brigade loss: k, 26; w, 160; m, 131 = 317. Third Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Gershom Mott (w), Col. William J. Sewell: 5th N. J., Col. William J. Sewell, Maj. Ashabel W. Angel (w), Capt. Virgil M. Healy; 6th N. J., Col. George C. Burling (w), Lieut.-Col. Stephen R. Gilkyson; 7th N. J., Col. Louis R. Francine, Lieut
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., The opposing forces at Gettysburg, Pa., July 1st-3d, 1863. (search)
Capt. Matthew Donovan; 12th N. H., Capt. John F. Langley; 11th N. J., Col. Robert McAllister (w), Capt. Luther Martin (w), Lieut. John Schoonover (w), Capt. William H. Lloyd (w), Capt. Samuel T. Sleeper, Lieut. John Schoonover; 26th Pa., Maj. Robert L. Bodine; 84th Pa.,) Lieut.-Col. Milton Opp. Brigade loss: k, 121; w, 604; m, 65 = 790. Second Brigade, Col. William R. Brewster: 70th N. Y., Col. J. Egbert Farnumn; 71st N. Y., Col. Henry L. Potter; 72d N. Y., Col. John S. Austin (w), Lieut.-Col. John Leonard: 73d N. Y., Maj. Michael W. Burns; 74th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Thomas Holt; 120th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Cornelius D. Westbrook (w), Maj. John R. Tappen. Brigade loss: k, 130; w, 573; m, 75 =-778. Third Brigade, Col. George C. Burling: 2d N. H., Col. Edward L. Bailey (w); 5th N. J., Col. William J. Sewell (w), Capt. Thomas C. Godfrey, Capt. Henry H. Woolsey; 6th N. J., Lieut.-Col. Stephen R. Gilkyson; 7th N. J., Col. Louis R. Francine (n w), Maj. Frederick Cooper; 8th N. J., Col. John Rams
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)
t Mass., Col. N. B. McLaughlen; 16th Mass., Lieut.-Col. Waldo Merriam; 5th N. J., Col. William J. Sewell; 6th N. J., Lieut.-Col. Stephen R. Gilkyson; 7th N. J., Maj. Frederick Cooper; 8th N. J., Col. John Ramsey; 11th N. J., Lieut.-Col. John Schoonover; 26th Pa., Maj. Samuel G. Moffett; 115th Pa., Maj. William A. Reilly. Second Brigade, Col. William R. Brewster: 11th Mass., Col. William Blaisdell; 70th N. Y., Capt. William H. Hugo; 71st N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Thomas Rafferty; 72d N. Y., Lieut.-Col. John Leonard; 73d N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Michael W. Burns; 74th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Thomas Holt; 120th N. Y., Capt. Abram L. Lockwood; 84th Pa., Lieut.-Col. Milton Opp. artillery Brigade, Col. John C. Tidball: 6th Me., Capt. Edwin B. Dow; 10th Mass., Capt. J. Henry Sleeper; 1st N. H., Capt. Fred. M. Edgell; G, 1st N. Y., Capt. Nelson Ames; 4th N. Y. Heavy (Third Battalion), Lieut.-Col. Thomas R. Allcock; F, 1st Pa., Capt. R. Bruce Ricketts; A, 1st R. I., Capt. William A. Arnold; B, Ist R. I., Capt.
ist in the skirmish. Our troops followed up the success for some distance, but the rebels having mules attached to their artillery, succeeded in eluding capture or destruction. It is thought the enemy must have lost some men in killed and wounded, but nothing positive respecting that is known. On our side one man was severely wounded. A Minie ball passed directly through his left arm, below the elbow, shattering it badly, and probably necessitating amputation. He was a private, named John Leonard, of Capt. Duffy's company A, and resides in New-Haven. After the gallant fellow was shot, he picked up his gun with his right hand, and leaning it on the stump of a tree, fired one more shot at the rebels. Drs. Gallagher and Avery, of the Ninth, are doing their best for the unfortunate man, and hope to save his arm. As the rebels fled they attempted to burn a bridge over a small piece of water, lying between their camp and the place of the skirmish; but our troops were too fast for t
Lieutenant Hainey, Murray's battalion, attached to the Thirty-eighth Tennessee regiment; Lieutenant Wade and Color-bearer Bland, of the Fifty-first and Fifty-second Tennessee regiments; Captain Whaley and Lieutenant Craig, of the Twenty-eighth Tennessee regiment, and Lieutenant Van Vleck, Carnes' battery. Among the wounded were Colonels John H. Anderson and D. M. Donnell; Lieutenant-Colonel J. G. Hall, and Major T. G. Randle; Captains Puryear, Callum, and Bonds, and Lieutenants Cunningham, Leonard, Flynn, and Shaw, Eighth Tennessee regiment; Lieutenants Potter, Owen, and Worthington, Sixteenth Tennessee regiment; Captain McDonald, and Lieutenants Apple, Dauley, and Taylor, Twenty-eighth Tennessee regiment; Adjutant Caruthers, Lieutenants Banks and Ridout, Thirty-eighth Tennessee regiment, and Captain Burton, Lieutenants Billings, Chester, White, Hainey, Tillman, and Wade, Fifty-first and Fifty-second Tennessee regiments. All the field officers of the brigade, and the officers of the
ommanding Ninth Kentucky Regiment. Report of Captain Cobb. Report of Killed and Wounded in Captain R. Cobb's Company of light Artillery, in the Action near Hartsville, Tennessee, on Sunday, the seventh December, 1862. Killed: Sergeant W. E. Etheridge; Privates David Watts and Sanderfer. Total 3. Wounded and left on the field on account of severity of wounds:--Corporal James Donoh; Privates T. C. Carnhill, B. F. Perdue, Henry Williams. Total 4. Wounded and not left :--Private John Leonard (slightly), John Thomas, R. F. Lear. Total 3. Total killed and wounded, 10. Respectfully submitted, R. Cobb, Captain, commanding Battery. Killed, Wounded, and Missing. command.killed.wounded.missing.total. Ninth Kentucky Regiment610117 Second Kentucky Regiment864678 Colonel Gano's Regiment of Cavalry  11 Colonel Clarke's Regiment of Cavalry224632 Colonel Chenault's Regiment of Cavalry14 5 Colonel Bennett's Regiment of Cavalry13 4 Cobb's Battery37 10 General
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 10. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Battle of Johnsonville. (search)
lance of the unpleasantness. No wet or mud, all comfortable and dry, and as we steamed along through the heavy mist that had settled like a fog on the river, I built castles in the air all in the next few hours to be dissolved in smoke. Sergeant John Leonard, the only officer I had, remarked, just before we arrived at Johnsonville, how silent the artillery was. In passing the point designated by General Forrest, not a sound was heard nor a light to be seen. I gave the artillery credit for thce, saluting me as they arranged themselves side by side, heading toward me. I backed down stream; they came head on. The distance between us was about half a mile, about good point-blank range. I had given the entire command below decks to Sergeant Leonard, instructing him to fire as rapidly as possible. I was giving instructions to my pilots and watching the bank for our artillery, when my attention was attracted by the violent gestures of William Weaver, an Ohio river pilot and a member of
John Leonard Lt.-Col. 72d N. Y. InfantryJan., 1864, to Feb., 1864. 2d Brigade, 2d Division, Third Army Corps, Army of the Potomac
Arrests. --The following parties were arrested by the Provost Marshal yesterday: H. P. Derby, treasonable language, Richmond; Thomas A. Case, ditto, ditto; Joseph Dawson, Union man; D. Francisco, selling wine and brandy; Dennie Cusick, paroled prisoner, drunk; Wm. Divine, Fluvanna county, disloyalty; Jas. R. Miller and John Leonard, Richmond, for selling liquor.
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