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Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 73 5 Browse Search
The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Volume 10: The Armies and the Leaders. (ed. Francis Trevelyan Miller) 44 4 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Volume 10: The Armies and the Leaders. (ed. Francis Trevelyan Miller). You can also browse the collection for William Starke Rosecrans or search for William Starke Rosecrans in all documents.

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how accurately, after examining a number of the war photographs of every description, one may distinguish in From the army to the White House: Garfield in 1863—(left to right) Thomas, Wiles, Tyler, Simmons, Drillard, Ducat, Barnett, Goddard, Rosecrans, Garfield, Porter, Bond, Thompson, Sheridan. War-time portraits of six soldiers whose military records assisted them to the Presidential Chair. Brig.-Gen. Andrew Johnson President, 1865-69. General Ulysses S. Grant, President, 1869-77, C. S. A., entered as private; Lieut.-Col., 1861, Maj.-Gen., 1864. Brevet Brig.-General Thomas T. Eckert, superintendent of Military Telegraph; Asst. Sec. Of War, 1864-66. Maj.-General Grenville M. Dodge, wounded before Atlanta; succeeded Rosecrans in the Department of Missouri. —naturally emphasizes, in its personal mentions and portrayals, the men of the respective specialties. The editors, therefore, determined to devote an entire volume to the consideration of the personnel of th
all the following day, and the majority of the Confederates did not know they had been defeated there until after the war. At Sharpsburg, their victory cost the Federals not twenty, but twenty-three per cent., and the Confederates held fast to their position all the next day. At Chickamauga, their victory cost the Confederates twenty-seven per cent., and the Federals, inflicting this loss, retreated; but General Thomas, the Rock of Chickamauga, still held fast to prevent pursuit, and Rosecrans' army was ready to fight the next day. At Waterloo, the entire loss in killed and wounded, of the French, was thirty-one per cent. Officers of a western fighting regiment—the 36th Illinois: a regiment that lost 14.8% in killed alone. Officers of the 36th Illinoisof the Illinois regiments the Thirty-sixth fought in every important battle of the entire war in Western territory, and suffered in killed alone a loss of no less than 14.8 per cent., a figure exceeded among Illin
the Eleventh and Twelfth Corps to reinforce Rosecrans at Chattanooga. On November 24th, in the baa and the Carolinas. replace by Major-General W. S. Rosecrans, and the Fourteenth Corps was reorentucky, November 19, 1898. Major-General William Starke Rosecrans (U. S.M. A. 1842) was born 2. From June 26th until the end of October, Rosecrans was Pope's successor in the Army of the Missaign and afterward of a Department. William Starke Rosecrans, commander of the Army of the Ohio (C, who was succeeded, June 26th, by Major-General W. S. Rosecrans. This army consisted of five diviof the Cumberland, and was chief-of-staff to Rosecrans in October, 1863. In December, he was put i the troops of the Mountain Department under Rosecrans and Fremont, and had been led by Sigel in thed of the Fourteenth Army Corps, with Major-General Rosecrans at its head. In November, the Fourteens from April to July, 1861, and then under Rosecrans. At Cedar Mountain, Manassas, and Antietam,[2 more...]
Northwest. This was the force that opposed McClellan and Rosecrans in West Virginia, and was defeated at Rich Mountain and or, 1862, and after his retreat therefrom, was defeated by Rosecrans at Stone's River (January, 1863). He in turn defeated RosRosecrans at Chickamauga, but was driven from Chattanooga by Grant in November, 1863. Bragg was now relieved of the Army of TenAfter the battle of Chickamauga, it made a famous raid on Rosecrans' communications, October, 1863. It also operated on the Wheeler. When Bragg advanced from Chattanooga to oppose Rosecrans, the Army of Middle Tennessee became identified with a di, Van Dorn's troops joined the Army of the West to oppose Rosecrans' activities in northern Mississippi, and the combined foras driven into Arkansas at the end of November by Major-Generals Rosecrans and Pleasanton, and the Army of the Missouri agaif recruits from the independent bands in that State. But Rosecrans drove him back to Arkansas. After the war he became inte
r. 2, 1867. Morris, Wm. W., Mar. 13, 1865. Mower, J. A., Mar. 13, 1865. Newton, John, Mar. 13, 1865. Nichols, Wm. A., Mar. 13, 1865. Ord, Ed. O. C., Mar. 13, 1865. Parke, John G., Mar. 13, 1865. Pennypacker, G., Mar. 2, 1867. Pleasonton, A., Mar. 13, 1865. Pope, John, Mar. 13, 1865. Ramsey, Geo. D., Mar. 13, 1865. Rawlins, John A., April 9, 1865. Reynolds, J. J., Mar. 2, 1867. Ricketts, J. B., Mar. 13, 1865. Ripley, Jas. W., Mar. 13, 1865. Robinson, J. C., Mar. 13, 1865. Rosecrans, W. S., Mar. 13, 1865. Rousseau, L. H., Mar. 28, 1867. Rucker, D. H., Mar. 13, 1865. Russell, David A., Sept. 19, 1864. Sackett, Delos B., Mar. 13, 1865. Schofield, J. M., Mar. 13, 1865. Schriver, E., Mar. 13, 1865. Seymour, T., Mar. 13, 1865. Sherman, T. W., Mar. 13, 1865. Shiras, Alex., Mar. 13, 1865. Sickles, Daniel E., Mar. 2, 1867. Simpson, M. D. I., Mar. 13, 1865. Smith, Andrew J., Mar. 13, 1865. Smith, Chas. H., Mar. 21, 1867. Smith, John E., Mar. 2, 1867. Smith, W. F., M