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Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., The opposing forces at Fredericksburg, Va. (search)
Maj. Moses B. Houghton; 5th Mich., Lieut.-Col. John Gilluly (k), Maj. Edward T. Sherlock; 1st N. Y., Col. J. Frederick Pierson; 37th N. Y., Col. Samuel B. Hayman; 101st N. Y.. Col. George F. Chester. Brigade loss: k, 19; w, 144; m, 2 == 165. Artillery, Capt. George E. Randolph: E, 1st R. I., Lieut. Pardon S. Jastram; F and K, 3d U. S., Lieut. John G. Turnbull. Artillery loss: k, 2; w, 8 == 10. Second division, Brig.-Gen. Daniel E. Sickles. First Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Joseph B. Carr: ist Mass., Lieut.-Col. Clark B. Baldwin, Col. Napoleon B.. McLaughlen; 11th Mass., Col. William Blaisdell; 16th Mass., Col. Thomas R. Tannatt; 2d N. H., Col. Gilman Marston; 11th N. J., Col. Robert McAllister; 26th Pa., Lieut.-Col. Benjamin C. Tilghman. Brigade loss: k, 11; w, .68; m, 2 == 81. Second Brigade, Col. George B. Hall: 70th N. Y., Col. J. Egbert Farnum; 71st N. Y., Maj. Thomas Rafferty; 72d N. Y., Col. William O. Stevens; 73d N. Y., Col. William R. Brewster; 74th N. Y., Lieut.-Col. William
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., Repelling Lee's last blow at Gettysburg. (search)
ence by the side of his guns. Cool, brave, competent, he fought for an hour and a half after he had reported to me that he was wounded in both thighs. Iv. By L. E. Bicknell, Lieutenant, 1st Mass. Sharp-Shooters. upon the excursion of Massachusetts veterans to Gettysburg, I found a monument in Ziegler's Grove to the 88th Pennsylvania Volunteers. It marks the spot where our infantry were being rapidly cut down by the enemy's sharp-shooters in their front on the morning of the 3d of July, the third day's fight. In fact, when, with twenty of the 1st Company of Massachusetts sharp-shooters, I entered the grove, our infantry were virtually driven from it. We held the grove, to the right and left of the monument, until the heavy cannonading checked the sharp-shooting. A shattered remnant of some regiment, perhaps the one which had suffered so in front of and in the grove, lay along the remnants of a stone wall in our rear, and during the heavy cannonading which preceded the many