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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)
illery: 4th N. J., Capt. George T. Woodbury; B, 1st U. S., Capt. Samuel S. Elder; D, 1st U. S., Lieut. John S. Gibbs. Third division, Brig.-Gen. Adelbert Ames. First Brigade, Col. Richard White: 8th Me., Lieut.-Col. Henry Boynton; 4th N. H., Col. Louis Bell; 55th Pa., Lieut.-Col. Frank T. Bennett; 97th Pa., Col. Henry R. Guss. Second Brigade, Col. Jeremiah C. Drake: 13th Ind., Col. Cyrus J. Dobbs; 9th Me., Col. Sabine Emery; 112th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. Elial F. Carpenter; 169th N. Y., Col. John McConihe. Artillery: 33d N. Y., Capt. Alger M. Wheeler; C, 3d R. I., Capt. Martin S. James; E, 3d U. S., Lieut. Joseph P. Sanger. unattached troops: 1st N. Y. Engineers (8 co's), Col. Edward W. Serrell; 4th Mass. Cav. (First Battalion), Capt. Lucius Richmond. Eighteenth Army Corps, Maj.-Gen. William F. Smith. first division, Brig.-Gen. William T. H. Brooks. First Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Gilman Marston: 81st N. Y., Col. Jacob J. De Forest; 96th N. Y., Col. Edgar M. Cullen; 98th N. Y., Col. F
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces at Cold Harbor. June 1st, 1864. (search)
N. H., Col. Edward L. Bailey; 12th N. H., Maj. John F. Langley; 148th N. Y., Col. George M. Guion. Third division, Brig.-Gen. Charles Devens, Jr. First Brigade, Col. William B. Barton: 47th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. C. R. Macdonald; 48th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. D. W. Strickland; 115th N. Y., Maj. Ezra L. Walrath; 76th Pa., Col. John:C. Campbell. Second Brigade, Col. Jeremiah C. Drake: 13th Ind., Col. Cyrus J. Dobbs; 9th Me., Capt. Robert J. Gray; 112th N. Y., Capt. J. S. Mathews; 169th N. Y., Col. John McConihe. Third Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Adelbert Ames: 4th N. H., Col. Louis Bell; 3d N. Y., Col. Samuel M. Alford; 117th N. Y., Col. Alvin White; 142d N. Y., Col. N. Martin Curtis; 97th Pa., Col. Henry R. Guss. artillery Brigade, Capt. Samuel S. Elder: B, 1st U. S., Capt. S. S. Elder; L, 4th U. S., Lieut. Henry B. Beecher; A, 5th U. S., Lieut. James E. Wilson. On the 1st of June the Army of the Potomac, at and about Cold Harbor, numbered 103,875 present for duty, and General W. F. Smith brough
n nominated in 1863 as Union candidate for Secretary of State, he responded that his neighbors had intrusted him with the lives of their sons, and he could not leave them while the War lasted. He was but one among thousands animated by like motives; but none ever volunteered from purer impulses, or served with more unselfish devotion, than Peter A. Porter. Lewis O. Morris, and F. F. Wead; all of New York. Cols. Edward Pye, 95th N. Y., O. H. Morris, 66th N. Y., J. C. Drake, 112th N. Y., John McConihe, 169th N. Y., Edwin Schall, 51st Pa., and F. A. Haskell, 36th Wise. Brig.-Gen. R. O. Tyler was among the severely wounded. Brig.-Gen. Doles was the only Rebel officer of note reported as killed. Col. Lawrence M. Keitt, formerly a conspicuous M. C. from South Carolina, had fallen the day before. Our army had suffered terribly in this battle; but it had lost blood only. The fighting closed with our front advanced on several points and forced back on none; but Lee, overestimating th
ment at Spotsylvania were 12 killed, 66 wounded, and 14 missing; total, 92. Mustered out July 15, 1865. One Hundred and Sixty-Ninth New York Infantry Drake's Brigade — Ames's Division--Tenth Corps. (1) Col. Clarence Buell. (2) Col. John McConihe; Bvt. Brig.-Gen. (Killed). (3) Col. Alonzo Alden; Bvt. Brig.-Gen. companies. killed and died of wounds. died of disease, accidents, in Prison, &c. Total Enrollment. Officers. Men. Total. Officers. Men. Total. Field and Staff 1 1y, 1864, it moved with the Army of the James to Bermuda Hundred. The regiment disembarked there with Butler's Army, and hard fighting, with its consequent heavy losses, immediately ensued. At Cold Harbor it fought in Martindale's Division; Colonel McConihe was killed in that battle. The One Hundred and Sixty-ninth held a perilous position in the trenches before Petersburg, losing men there, killed or wounded, almost every day. While there, on the evening of June 30, 1864, the brigade (Barton
1865. Livingston, R. R., June 21, 1865. Ludington, M. J., Mar. 13, 1865. Ludlow, Benj. C., Oct. 28, 1864. Lyle, Peter, Mar. 13, 1865. Lyman, Luke, Mar. 13, 1865. Lynch, Jas. C., Mar. 13, 1865. Lynch, Wm. F., Jan. 31, 1865. Lyon, Wm. P., Oct. 26, 1865. McArthur, W. M., Mar. 13, 1865. McBride, J. D., Mar. 13, 1865. McCall, W. H. H., April 2, 1865. McCalmont, A. B., Mar. 13, 1865. McCleery, Jas., Mar. 13, 1865. McCleunen, M. R., April 2, 1865. McClurg, A. C., Sept. 18, 1865. McConihe, John, June 1, 1864. McConihe, Sam., Mar. 13, 1865. McConnell, H. K., Mar. 13, 1865. McConnell, John, Mar. 13, 1865. McCook, A. G., Mar. 13, 1865. McCormick, Chas. C., Mar. 13, 1865. McCoy, Daniel, Mar. 13, 1865. McCoy, Robert A., Mar. 13, 1865. McCoy, Thos. F., April 1, 1865. McCreary, D. B., Mar. 13, 1865. McCrillis, L., Sept. 4, 1864. McDougall, C. D., Feb. 25, 1865. McEwen, Matt., Mar. 13, 1865. McGarry, Ed., Mar. 13, 1865. McGowan, J. E., Mar. 13, 1865. McGregor, J. D., Mar