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Browsing named entities in a specific section of 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. Search the whole document.

Found 443 total hits in 186 results.

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George W. Roberts (search for this): chapter 4
ers, whose gallantry and ability had won the admiration and respect of all. Killed in action. Brigade commanders, with rank of Colonel. Colonel Edward D. Baker, 71st Pennsylvania, Ball's Bluff. Colonel Julius Raith, Mortally wounded. 43d Illinois, Shiloh. Colonel 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 Hampshi
Thomas A. Smyth (search for this): chapter 4
omas G. Stevenson Killed at Spotsylvania. Brevet Brigadier-General James A. Mulligan Mortally wounded. Killed at Winchester (1863). Brigade commanders. Major-General George C. Strong Mortally wounded. Killed at Fort Wagner. Brevet Major-General Alexander Hays Hays commanded a division on the Gettysburg campaign. Killed at Wilderness. Brevet Major-General S. K. Zook Killed at Gettysburg. Brevet Major-General Frederick Winthrop Killed at Five Forks. Brevet Major-General Thomas A. Smyth Mortally wounded. Killed at Farmville. Brigadier-General Nathaniel Lyon Killed at Wilson's Creek. Brigadier-General Robert L. McCook Shot by guerrillas, while lying sick in an ambulance. Killed at Decherd, Tenn. Brigadier-General Henry Bohlen Killed at Freeman's Ford. Brigadier-General George W. Taylor Killed at Manassas. Brigadier-General William R. Terrill Killed at Chaplin Hills. Brigadier-General Pleasant A. Hackleman Killed at Corinth. Brigadier
Hans C. Heg (search for this): chapter 4
vania, 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, 38th Ohio, Missionary Ridge. Colonel William R. Creighton, 7th Ohio, Ringgold. Colonel Lewis Benedict, 162d New York, Pleasant Hill. Colonel Patrick E. Burke, Mortally wounded. 66th Illinois, Rome Cross Roads. Colonel Orlando H. Morris, 66th New York, Cold Harbor. Colonel Lewis O. Morris, 7th New York (H. A.), Cold Harbor. Colonel Henry Boyd McKeen,
John Gibbon (search for this): chapter 4
New York Hooker's Third 18 81st Pennsylvania Barlow's Second 18 145th Pennsylvania Barlow's Second 18 31st Maine Potter's Ninth 18 20th Massachusetts Gibbon's Second 17 14th Connecticut Gibbon's Second 17 62d Pennsylvania Griffin's Fifth 17 63d Pennsylvania Birney's Third 17 5th Michigan Birney's Third 16 Gibbon's Second 17 62d Pennsylvania Griffin's Fifth 17 63d Pennsylvania Birney's Third 17 5th Michigan Birney's Third 16 16th Massachusetts Humphreys's Third 16 61st New York Barlow's Second 16 126th New York Barlow's Second 16 82d Ohio Schurz's Eleventh 16 100th Pennsylvania Stevenson's Ninth 16 6th Wisconsin Wadsworth's First 16 Heavy Artillery. 1st Maine Birney's Second 23 8th New York Gibbon's Second 19 A heavy aGibbon's Second 19 A heavy artillery regiment had just twice as many line officers as an infantry regiment. The largest regimental loss of officers killed in any one battle, occurred in the Seventh New Hampshire at the assault on Fort Wagner, the regiment losing 11 officers killed or mortally wounded in that bloody affair. Among the killed was Col. Putna
Thomas Williams (search for this): chapter 4
Major-General Jesse L. Reno Killed at South Mountain. Major-General Israel B. Richardson Mortally wounded. Killed at Antietam. Major-General Amiel W. Whipple Mortally wounded. Killed at Chancellorsville. Major-General Hiram G. Berry Killed at Chancellorsville. Brevet Major-General James S. Wadsworth Killed at Wilderness. Brevet Major-General David A. Russell Killed at Opequon. Brigadier-General William H. Wallace Mortally wounded. Killed at Shiloh. Brigadier-General Thomas Williams Killed at Baton Rouge. Brigadier-General James S. Jackson Killed at Chaplin Hills. Brigadier-General Isaac P. Rodman Mortally wounded. Killed at Antietam. Brigadier-General Thomas G. Stevenson Killed at Spotsylvania. Brevet Brigadier-General James A. Mulligan Mortally wounded. Killed at Winchester (1863). Brigade commanders. Major-General George C. Strong Mortally wounded. Killed at Fort Wagner. Brevet Major-General Alexander Hays Hays commanded
Philemon P. Baldwin (search for this): chapter 4
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, 38th Ohio, Missionary Ridge. Colonel William R. Creighton, 7th Ohio, Ringgold. Colonel Lewis Benedict, 162d New York, Pleasant Hill. Colonel Patrick E. Burke, Mortally wounded. 66th Illinois, Rome Cross Roads. Colonel Orlando H. Morris, 66th New York, Cold Harbor. Colonel Lewis O. Morris, 7th New York (H. A.), Cold Harbor. Colonel Henry Boyd McKeen, 81st Pennsylvania, Cold Harbor. Colonel Frank A. Hask
Simon H. Mix (search for this): chapter 4
, Cold Harbor. Colonel Lewis O. Morris, 7th New York (H. A.), Cold Harbor. Colonel Henry Boyd McKeen, 81st Pennsylvania, Cold Harbor. Colonel Frank A. Haskell, 36th Wisconsin, Cold Harbor. Colonel Jeremiah C. Drake, 112th New York, Cold Harbor. Colonel Richard Byrnes, Mortally wounded. 28th Massachusetts, Irish Brigade. Cold Harbor. Colonel Patrick Kelly, 88th New York, Irish Brigade. Petersburg. Colonel William Blaisdell, 11th Massachusetts, Petersburg. Colonel Simon H. Mix, 3d New York Cavalry, Petersburg. Colonel Calvin A. Craig, 105th Pennsylvania, Deep Bottom. Colonel Nathan T. Dushane, 1st Maryland, Weldon Railroad. Colonel Joseph Thoburn, Thoburn commanded a division during the entire Shenandoah campaign, and was in command of it at the time of his death. 1st West Virginia, Cedar Creek. Colonel Louis Bell, 4th New Hampshire, Fort Fisher. In each regiment there were officers whose duties did not require that they should go into
Walton Dwight (search for this): chapter 4
oup: a gray-haired Chaplain and his two sons. The official reports make frequent mention of Chaplains whose gallantry and zeal had attracted the notice of their general. In the Chancellorsville reports, General Berdan, commander of the famous Sharpshooters, states that Chaplain Barber, of the Secondl Regiment, took a rifle and went in with the skirmishers, with his usual bravery. At Antietam, Gen. J. R. Brooke mentions in his report the brave Chaplain of the Sixty-sixth New York, Rev. Mr. Dwight, who was constantly in the field, in the thickest of the fight. Gen. Giles A. Smith, in his report of the battle of Atlanta (July 22d), states that Chaplain Bennett, of the Thirty-second Ohio, carried his musket and fought all day in the ranks. which I learn is his custom on all such occasions. The officers of a brigade petitioned that Chaplain H. C. Trumbull, of the Tenth Connecticut, be brevetted a Major; stating that, always at his post in time of danger, he has, on two occasi
stance is found in the Confederate federate Army in the case of Bishop Polk, a corps-general, who fell while on the Atlanta campaign. The musicians formed a numerous class among the non combatants. Although their legitimate duty in time of battle was confined to that of stretcher-bearers, they often participated in the fighting. At Shiloh, the band of the Forty-eighth Ohio laid aside their instruments, procured rifles, and went into the fight, where two of their number were killed. Major John a. Bering: History of the Forty-eighth Ohio Volunteers. Still, it must be confessed that the dead drummer-boy was not so common a feature on the field as might be inferred from the work of battle-field artists. The frequent loss of life among the stretcher-bearers attests the faithful work of the men employed in that duty, most of whom were musicians. At the battle of the Weldon Railroad, the ambulance train of the Fifth Corps lost 2 sergeants killed and 6 stretcher-men wounded: 8 hors
Orlando H. Morris (search for this): chapter 4
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, 38th Ohio, Missionary Ridge. Colonel William R. Creighton, 7th Ohio, Ringgold. Colonel Lewis Benedict, 162d New York, Pleasant Hill. Colonel Patrick E. Burke, Mortally wounded. 66th Illinois, Rome Cross Roads. Colonel Orlando H. Morris, 66th New York, Cold Harbor. Colonel Lewis O. Morris, 7th New York (H. A.), Cold Harbor. Colonel Henry Boyd McKeen, 81st Pennsylvania, Cold Harbor. Colonel Frank A. Haskell, 36th Wisconsin, Cold Harbor. Colonel Jeremiah C. Drake, 112th New York, Cold Harbor. Colonel Richard Byrnes, Mortally wounded. 28th Massachusetts, Irish Brigade. Cold Harbor. Colonel Patrick Kelly, 88th New York, Irish Brigade. Petersburg. Colonel William Blaisdell, 11th Massachusett
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