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Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3. 717 1 Browse Search
Admiral David D. Porter, The Naval History of the Civil War. 676 8 Browse Search
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 7. (ed. Frank Moore) 478 10 Browse Search
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 10. (ed. Frank Moore) 417 3 Browse Search
General Joseph E. Johnston, Narrative of Military Operations During the Civil War 411 1 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 2: Two Years of Grim War. (ed. Francis Trevelyan Miller) 409 3 Browse Search
Benson J. Lossing, Pictorial Field Book of the Civil War. Volume 2. 344 0 Browse Search
Horace Greeley, The American Conflict: A History of the Great Rebellion in the United States of America, 1860-65: its Causes, Incidents, and Results: Intended to exhibit especially its moral and political phases with the drift and progress of American opinion respecting human slavery from 1776 to the close of the War for the Union. Volume II. 332 2 Browse Search
William Tecumseh Sherman, Memoirs of General William T. Sherman . 325 5 Browse Search
Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant 320 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in William F. Fox, Lt. Col. U. S. V., Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865: A Treatise on the extent and nature of the mortuary losses in the Union regiments, with full and exhaustive statistics compiled from the official records on file in the state military bureaus and at Washington. You can also browse the collection for Vicksburg (Mississippi, United States) or search for Vicksburg (Mississippi, United States) in all documents.

Your search returned 122 results in 12 document sections:

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is Shiloh Hurlbut's ------ 70 73d New York Gettysburg Humphreys's Third 70 147th New York Gettysburg Wadsworth's First 76 16th Connecticut Antietam Sturgis's Ninth 70 93d Illinois Champion's Hill Crocker's Seventeenth 70 22d Iowa Vicksburg (May 22) E. A. Carr's Thirteenth 70 97th Pennsylvania Bermuda Hundred Ames's Tenth 70 203d Pennsylvania Fort Fisher Ames's Tenth 69 6th Vermont Wilderness Getty's Sixth 69 5th New Hampshire This regiment appears again in this sam This regiment appears again in this same list. Fredericksburg Gibbon's First 51 26th New York Antietam Ricketts's First 50 64th New York Fair Oaks Richardson's Second 50 83d Pennsylvania Malvern Hill Morell's Fifth 50 12th Missouri Vicksburg (May 22) Steele's Fifteenth 50 2d Minnesota Chickamauga Brannan's Fourteenth 50 24th Indiana Champion's Hill Hovey's Thirteenth 50 There are certain regiments which do not appear in the foregoing table, and yet they were regiments w
tysburg Barnes's 218 29 13+ 17th Michigan Spotsylvania Willcox's 226 30 13+ 22d Michigan Chickamauga Steedman's 584 88 15+ 24th Michigan Gettysburg Wadsworth's 496 94 18+ 1st Minnesota Gettysburg Gibbon's 262 75 28+ 12th Missouri Vicksburg (May 22) Steele's 360 39 10+ 2d New Hampshire Manassas Hooker's 332 37 11+ 2d New Hampshire Gettysburg Humphreys's 354 48 13+ 3d New Hampshire Deep Bottom Terry's 198 28 14+ 5th New Hampshire Fredericksburg Hancock's 303 In HancoManassas Hatch's 511 87 17+ 2d Wisconsin Gettysburg Wadsworth's 302 46 15+ 3d Wisconsin Antietam Williams's 340 41 12+ 4th Wisconsin Port Hudson Paine's 222 45 20+ 10th Wisconsin Chaplin Hills Rousseau's 376 52 13+ 14th Wisconsin Vicksburg (May 22) McArthur's 256 30 11+ 15th Wisconsin Dallas T. J. Wood's 160 26 16+ 19th Wisconsin Fair Oaks (1864) Marston's 197 26 13+ 26th Wisconsin Chancellorsville Schurz's 471 53 11+ 26th Wisconsin Gettysburg Schurz's 508 61 12+ 3<
olonel Everett Peabody, 25th Missouri, Shiloh. Colonel George Webster, 98th Ohio, Chaplin Hills. Colonel John A. Koltes, 73d Pennsylvania, Manassas. Colonel William B. Goodrich, 60th New York, Antietam. Colonel George W. Roberts, 42d Illinois, Stone's River. Colonel Frederick Schaefer, 2d Missouri, Stone's River. Colonel George C. Spear, 61st Pennsylvania, Marye's Heights. Colonel David S. Cowles, 128th New York, Port Hudson. Colonel George B. Boomer, 26th Missouri, Vicksburg. Colonel Edward E. Cross, 5th New Hampshire, Gettysburg. Colonel George L. Willard, 125th New York, Gettysburg. Colonel Eliakim Sherrill, 126th New York, Gettysburg. Colonel Haldinand S. Putnam, 7th New Hampshire, Fort Wagner. Colonel James E. Mallon, 42d New York, Bristoe Station. Colonel Edward A. King, 68th Indiana, Chickamauga. Colonel Hans C. Heg, 15th Wisconsin, Chickamauga. Colonel Philemon P. Baldwin, 6th Indiana, Chickamauga. Colonel Edward H. Phelps, 38
William F. Fox, Lt. Col. U. S. V., Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865: A Treatise on the extent and nature of the mortuary losses in the Union regiments, with full and exhaustive statistics compiled from the official records on file in the state military bureaus and at Washington, Chapter 5: casualties compared with those of European wars — loss in each arm of the service — deaths from disease — classification of deaths by causes. (search)
were 199,720 of the Union Army who died of disease — in camp, in hospitals, or at home — before their term of enlistment had expired. Part of this extraordinary loss was due to the severity of the campaigns. The extent of territory marched over was immense; some of the campaigns were made under a tropical sun, and some of the battles were fought amid the snows of winter. The Ninth Corps fought on the Carolina Coast, and then moved a thousand miles westward to the fever-smitten camps at Vicksburg. The Twelfth Corps, after fighting for two years in Virginia, moved to Tennessee, from whence it fought its way through Georgia to Atlanta; marched from Atlanta to the Sea, and thence northward to its old battle grounds, having encircled half a continent. Men from the woods of Maine encamped two thousand miles distant along the bayous of Louisiana. Men from the prairies of the Northwest toiled and battled among the everglades of Florida, and along the Gulf. Human endurance was often te
e officers, being absent on recruiting service or other duty. When attacked the garrison was driven back to the river, where two gunboats came to their assistance. The troops then made a counter charge, regaining possession of their works and capturing several prisoners. The fighting was desperate in the extreme, many of the combatants on each side falling by bayonet thrusts or blows from clubbed muskets. The loss, as officially stated by the Assistant Secretary of War, who was then at Vicksburg, amounted to: Regiment. Killed. Wounded. Total. 9th Louisiana 62 130 192 11th Louisiana 30 120 150 1st Mississippi 3 21 24 23d Iowa (white) 26 60 86 With the wounded are included those who were mortally wounded. Captain Miller, of the Ninth Louisiana, Brown: Negro in the Rebellion. states that his regiment had only 300 men engaged, and that the whole force of the garrison was about 600 men. The next action in which colored troops were engaged was the grand assa
the support of Grant, who was then besieging Vicksburg, and proceeding there promptly, it participas); Champion's Hill Big Black River Bridge Vicksburg assault, May 19th Vicksburg assault, May 22 retreat of the enemy, the corps returned to Vicksburg, and in the following month, (August, 1863) k Bayou Snyder's Bluff Jackson assault on Vicksburg, May 19th assault on Vicksburg, May 22nd VVicksburg, May 22nd Vicksburg Trenches Clinton Jackson Brandon Cherokee Tuscumbia Lookout Mountain Missionary Ridorps was engaged, next, in the investment of Vicksburg. In the assault of May 19th, it lost 134 kiThird Division (Tuttle's) was left behind at Vicksburg, and it never rejoined the corps. Its placekson (May 14th); Champion's Hill assault on Vicksburg, May 19th assault on Vicksburg, May 22d); FVicksburg, May 22d); Fort Hill Vicksburg Trenches Siege of Jackson Meridian Expedition Missionary Ridge Big Shanty panied Sherman's Army on the expedition from Vicksburg to Meridian, Miss., and on the return. Soon[22 more...]
th Corps joined Grant's army, then besieging Vicksburg, but returned in August to Kentucky. The sp. 15 Guerillas, S. C., Feb. 28, 1865 1 Vicksburg, Miss. 5 Sherman's March 1 Present, also, Present, also, at Fredericksburg, Va.; Vicksburg, Miss.; Jackson, Miss.; Lenoir Station, Tenn.; Selsh's), Ninth Corps, with which it moved to Vicksburg and took part in the siege. Companies I andake Providence, La., proceeding in August to Vicksburg, in which vicinity it was encamped until theas then under command of General Lauman. At Vicksburg, the regiment was in Pugh's (1st) Brigade, Lay 14, 1863) 1 Kenesaw Mountain, Ga. 9 Vicksburg, Miss. 1 Atlanta, Ga. 10 Jones's Ford, Miss. re 121 killed or wounded. In the assault on Vicksburg, May 19th, it lost 4 killed and 12 wounded; It took a prominent part in the assault on Vicksburg, May 22, 1863, in which Major Gustavus Lighton Vicksburg, May 19th 2     2 Assault on Vicksburg, May 22d 5 5   10 Siege of Vicksburg, Mis[46 more...]
20 90 28 138 29th Wisconsin Hovey's Thirteenth 19 92 2 113 Big Black River, Miss.             May 17, 1863.             23d Iowa Carr's (E. A.) Thirteenth 13 70 -- 83 21st Iowa Carr's (E. A.) Thirteenth 13 88 -- 101 assault on Vicksburg.             May 19, 1863.             4th West Virginia Blair's Fifteenth 27 110 -- 137 13th U. S. Inf., 1st Batt'n Blair's Fifteenth 21 49 -- 70 116th Illinois Blair's Fifteenth 6 64 1 71 95th Illinois McArthur's Seventeenth 8 54 -- 62 assault on Vicksburg.             May 22, 1863             22d Iowa Carr's Thirteenth 27 118 19 164 8th Indiana Carr's Thirteenth 22 95 -- 117 12th Missouri Steele's Fifteenth 26 82 -- 108 77th Illinois A. J. Smith's Thirteenth 19 85 26 130 21st Iowa Carr's Thirteenth 16 87 10 113 59th Indiana Quinby's Seventeenth 11 99 1 111 95th Illinois McArthur's Seventeenth 18 83 8 109 7th Missouri Logan's Seventeenth 10 92 -- 102 99th
l of 1862 while stationed in the vicinity of Baton Rouge, Vicksburg, and New Orleans. New York.--The Empire State furnishe's Division of the Fifteenth Corps, and in the assault on Vicksburg--May 19th and 22d--lost 156 in killed and wounded. Ohid. Including the mortally wounded. It served, also, at Vicksburg (then in the 3d Div., 15th A. C.), in the Red River campa Including the mortally wounded. and 21 missing; and, at Vicksburg — assault of May 22d--14 killed, 79 wounded, Including the frontier. The 4th sustained its principal losses at Vicksburg, and at Allatoona Pass. One company (B) of the 5th MinMinn., August 18, 1862. This regiment fought at Corinth, Vicksburg, in the Red River campaign, at Tupelo, and, at Spanish FoGrove 45 145 3 193 5th Iowa Iuka 37 179 1 217 22d Iowa Vicksburg 27 118 19 164 6th Iowa Shiloh 52 94 37 183 23d Iowa Bithe regiment suffered from small pox. It was organized at Vicksburg in August, 1863, and was mustered out May 20, 1866. Its
William F. Fox, Lt. Col. U. S. V., Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865: A Treatise on the extent and nature of the mortuary losses in the Union regiments, with full and exhaustive statistics compiled from the official records on file in the state military bureaus and at Washington, Chapter 13: aggregate of deaths in the Union Armies by States--total enlistment by States--percentages of military population furnished, and percentages of loss — strength of the Army at various dates casualties in the Navy. (search)
River -- -- -- 125 June 28 Fleet Farragut Vicksburg 15 30 -- 45 July 15 Carondelet Walke VickVicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 4 10 -- 14 July 15 Tyler Gwin Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 8 16 -- 24 Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 8 16 -- 24 July 15 Hartford Wainwright Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 3 6 -- 9 July 15 Wissahickon De Camp VicVicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 3 6 -- 9 July 15 Wissahickon De Camp Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 1 4 -- 5 July 15 Winona Nichols Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 1 2 -- 3 Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 1 4 -- 5 July 15 Winona Nichols Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 1 2 -- 3 July 15 Sciota Lowry Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. -- 2 -- 2 July 15 Richmond Alden Vicksburg Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. 1 2 -- 3 July 15 Sciota Lowry Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. -- 2 -- 2 July 15 Richmond Alden Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. -- 2 -- 2 Oct. 3 Commodore Perry Flusser Blackwater 2 11 -- 13 Dec. 27 Benton Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. -- 2 -- 2 July 15 Richmond Alden Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. -- 2 -- 2 Oct. 3 Commodore Perry Flusser Blackwater 2 11 -- 13 Dec. 27 Benton Gwin Drumgold's Bluff 2 8 -- 10 1863.               Jan. 1 Fleet Renshaw Galveston -- -- -- 1Vicksburg Ram, Arkansas. -- 2 -- 2 Oct. 3 Commodore Perry Flusser Blackwater 2 11 -- 13 Dec. 27 Benton Gwin Drumgold's Bluff 2 8 -- 10 1863.               Jan. 1 Fleet Renshaw Galveston -- -- -- 150 Jan. 10 Louisville Owen Arkansas Post 6 25 -- 31 Jan. 10 De Kalb Walker Arkansas Post J Pemberton 3 3 -- 6 April 16 Fleet Porter Vicksburg -- 13 -- 13 April 29 Benton Greer Grand G May 27 Cincinnati Sunk in action. Bache Vicksburg 5 14 15 34 July 7 Monongahela Read
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