Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 9. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for Sharpe or search for Sharpe in all documents.

Your search returned 7 results in 4 document sections:

er of rounds of artillery ammunition, 21,763. Small Arms.--183 various kinds. Infantry Ammunition.--8000 musket cartridges, calibre, 59 ; 7500 musket buck and ball cartridges, calibre, 69; 11,000 elongated ball cartridges, calibre, 57; 3000 Sharpe's rifle; 18,000 rifled iron ball, calibre, 52; 4000 buck and ball cartridges, calibre, 75. Total infantry ammunition, 51,500. Expenditures of Ammunition during the Campaign. Artillery Ammunition.--2099 pounds for 3-inch gun, 1218 pounds fr 30-pound Parrott gun, 229 pounds for 20-pound Parrott gun ; total artillery ammunition, 3576. Small Arm Ammunition.--950,915 elongated ball cartridges, calibre, 57; 141,396 Spencer rifle cartridges, 56,000 Burnside carbine cartridges, 62,000 Sharpe's carbine cartridges, 21,000 Smith's carbine cartridges, 8600 Colt's army pistol cartridges, 4800 Colt's navy pistol cartridges, 500 Henry rifle cartridges; total small-arm ammunition, 1,245,211. T. G. Baylor, Captain and Chief of Ordnance, M. D
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 9. (ed. Frank Moore), Captured and destroyed by the left wing, at Milledgeville, Georgia. (search)
er of rounds of artillery ammunition, 21,763. Small Arms.--183 various kinds. Infantry Ammunition.--8000 musket cartridges, calibre, 59 ; 7500 musket buck and ball cartridges, calibre, 69; 11,000 elongated ball cartridges, calibre, 57; 3000 Sharpe's rifle; 18,000 rifled iron ball, calibre, 52; 4000 buck and ball cartridges, calibre, 75. Total infantry ammunition, 51,500. Expenditures of Ammunition during the Campaign. Artillery Ammunition.--2099 pounds for 3-inch gun, 1218 pounds fr 30-pound Parrott gun, 229 pounds for 20-pound Parrott gun ; total artillery ammunition, 3576. Small Arm Ammunition.--950,915 elongated ball cartridges, calibre, 57; 141,396 Spencer rifle cartridges, 56,000 Burnside carbine cartridges, 62,000 Sharpe's carbine cartridges, 21,000 Smith's carbine cartridges, 8600 Colt's army pistol cartridges, 4800 Colt's navy pistol cartridges, 500 Henry rifle cartridges; total small-arm ammunition, 1,245,211. T. G. Baylor, Captain and Chief of Ordnance, M. D
total, two commissioned officers and thirty enlisted men. Died of disease, one enlisted man. J. T. Forman, Captain Commanding Regiment. Station: in the field, Georgia. Date: December 18, 1864. Report of Government property lost and captured since November fourteenth, 1864, of Second regiment, Kentucky cavalry: Horses: abandoned, one hundred and forty-two; lost in action, thirty-eight; captured and foraged, one hundred and twenty-four. Arms: Spencer rifles and carbines, twenty-six; Sharpe's carbines, three;--fifteen; pistols — Colt's navy, eleven; Colt's army, nine; sabres, sixty-one. Horse-equipments: saddles, fifty; bridles fifty; halters, fifty; blankets, fifty. J. T. Forman, Captain Second Kentucky Cavalry, Commanding Regiment. Station, in the field, Georgia. Date, December 18, 1864. Lieutenant-Colonel King's Report. headquarters Third Kentucky cavalry, near Savannah, Ga., December 16, 1864. Captain James Beggs, Acting Assistant Adjutant-General First Brigade,
eers. Among the wounded were the following officers: Lieutenant Cothran, of Orr's rifles; Lieutenant-Colonel McCready, of the First South Carolina volunteers; Lieutenant-Colonel McCorkle, Captain Bookter, Captain Grist, and Lieutenants Dunlop, Sharpe, Bingham, Dornin, Gwinn, White, Thode, Hankle, and Rollins, of the Twelfth South Carolina volunteers; Colonel Edwards, Lieutenant-Colonel Farron, Major Brockman, Captain R. L. Boudon, Captain P. A. Eichelberger, Captain J. W. Meetze, and Lieutenautenants Terrell and Cussons, rendered the most valuable service, discharging every duty faithfully and gallantly. Lieutenant Cussons was captured by the enemy while on a reconnoissance in front of the lines. Privates Smith, Fourth Alabama, and Sharpe, Hampton legion, acting as officers, also contributed valuable assistance. The following is a recapitulation of the loss in the several regiments composing the brigade, as shown by the accompanying lists of casualties:  Killed.Wounded. Fou