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Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 11. (ed. Frank Moore) 26 6 Browse Search
The Atlanta (Georgia) Campaign: May 1 - September 8, 1864., Part I: General Report. (ed. Maj. George B. Davis, Mr. Leslie J. Perry, Mr. Joseph W. Kirkley) 1 1 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 11. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for S. B. Moe or search for S. B. Moe in all documents.

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Ohio light artillery; Chief of Artillery, Major S. B. Moe ; Assistant Adjutant-General, Captain A. or my command. I am deeply indebted to Major S. B. Moe, my Assistant Adjutant-General, for his ed, Chattanooga, Tennessee, January 20, 1865. Major Moe. Assistant Adjutant-General, District of the Chattanooga, Tennessee, January 16, 1865. S. B. Moe, Assistant Adjutant-General, District Etowahl Fourteenth United States colored infantry. S. B. Moe, Major and Assistant Adjutant-General. Cn) cavalry, Huntsville, January 10, 1855. Major S. B. Moe, Assistant Adjutant-General, Headquarters Murfreesboro, Tennessee, December 20, 1864. Major Moe, Assistant Adjutant-General, District Etowah Osborn, Captain Twentieth Indiana Battery. S. B. Moe, Major, and Assistant Adjutant-General, comm S. colored Infantry, commanding Brigade. Major S. B. Moe; A. A. G., Dist. of the Etowah, Chattanooh Regiment New York Vet. Vols., commanding Post. S. B. Moe, Major and Assistant Adjutant-General. [2 more...]
aine's place. The following officers of my staff accompanied me on the campaign, and discharged all the duties that devolved upon them in a most satisfactory manner: Colonel C. S. Cotter, First Ohio light artillery; Chief of Artillery, Major S. B. Moe ; Assistant Adjutant-General, Captain A. Mills, Eighteenth United States infantry; Inspector, Captain M. Davis, Fourteenth Ohio volunteers; Aide-de-Camp, Captain W. B. Steedman, Fourteenth Ohio volunteers; Aide-de-Camp, Lieutenant J. G. McAdne Hundred and Twenty-first Ohio volunteers, served me ably as a provost marshal. Captain A. R. Keller, Assistant Quartermaster, reported to me, and rendered me efficient service as quartermaster for my command. I am deeply indebted to Major S. B. Moe, my Assistant Adjutant-General, for his efficient and gallant services on the field, as well as for the valuable aid which his large experience as a railroad man enabled him to render me in pushing through the trains conveying my troops from
creditable mention. My staff consisted of the following officers, viz.: Captain John A. Wright, Assistant Adjutant-General; Captain G. W. Marshall, Assistant Quartermaster; Captain A. C. Ford (Thirty-first Indiana), Acting Commissary of Subsistence; Captain A. Vallander (One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Ohio volunteer infantry), Acting Assistant Inspector-General; Captain L. S. Windle (One Hundred and Thirteenth-Ohio volunteer infantry), Ordnance Officer; Surgeon J. D. Cotton (Ninety-second Ohio volunteer infantry), Medical Director; First Lieutenant J. M. Leonard (Ninth Indiana volunteers), Acting Aide-de-Camp. Each of these officers merits my thanks for the satisfactory manner in which he discharged his duties, and they are all worthy of higher positions than they hold. With my regards to the Major-General commanding district, I am, very respectfully, Yours, etc., Charles Cruft, Brigadier-General United States Volunteers. S. B. Moe, Major and Assistant Adjutant-General.
wo colonels (one of whom was left in consequence of his wounds), two captains and six lieutenants and destroyed, in all, between seven hundred and fifty and one thousand stand of arms, and captured a considerable number of pistols. Our entire loss, one man killed and two wounded--all (of Lieutenant-Colonel Prosser's command) in the charge on Russel's force. The whole of Forrest's cavalry, except Armstrong's brigade, was at Okalona, Mississippi, within one day's march of us when the supply train was captured. He had been sent there as soon as he crossed at Bainbridge on Tuesday evening, to repel our cavalry from Memphis, who had destroyed the railroad for twenty miles near and above Okalona. I do not think General Hood brought across the Tennessee river, at Bainbridge, more than twelve thousand infantry and thirty-five pieces of artillery. I am, very respectfully Your obedient servant, Wm. J. Palmer, Colonel, commanding. S. B. Moe, Major and Assistant Adjutant-General.